Porter v. Deer
This text of 160 F.2d 394 (Porter v. Deer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The appellant, as Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, brought this suit charging the appellee, defendant below, with violating the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq., in the rental of a dwelling house in the Miami, Florida, Defense Rental Area, and praying for an injunction and for statutory damages.
The Rent Regulation in the Miami Defense Rental Area went into effect on November 1, 1943, and froze all rents at the level prevailing on September 1, 1943. Ap-pellee is the owner of a certain house in that area and rented it from October, 1942, to May 1945, at a monthly rental of $50. He registered this house with the Housing Authority as a six-room house on July 27, 1944. In August, 1945, after the tenant had moved, the appellee cálled at the Rental Area Office and requested of an OPA rent examiner information as to the course to be pursued in order to obtain an increase in rent. He stated that he had spent some $1,200 to $1,500 in redecorating and furnishing the house. In the course of the conversation [395]*395it was represented that the dwelling was a seven-room house rather than a six-room house as originally registered,1 and the rent examiner suggested that, if it was a seven-room house, it was not necessary to apply for a rent increase, that the house could be re-registered as a seven-room house. The appellee thereupon re-registered the house as a seven-room house, with a monthly rental of $125; and from that date, August 7, 1945, he charged and collected rent of $125 per month.
The Administrator brought suit after the tenant failed, within the statutory period, to bring suit to recover statutory damages from the appellee for rents collected for the period August 6, 1945, to March 6, 1946, in excess of the maximum rentals established by the Regulation. He also asked fjjr an injunction compelling appellee: (1) to exhibit to the tenants in occupancy, and to each and every future tenant, his stamped copy of the registration statement filed with the Rental Area office on July 27, 1944; (2) to obtain the present tenants’ and all future tenants’ signatures and the dates thereof on the back of such statement; (3) to file with the Rental Area office notices of change of tenancy; and (4) to refrain from directly or indirectly receiving any rent in excess of the maximum rent allowable under the Regulation.
The court below dismissed the suit on the ground that an administrative determination should have been obtained with respect to the two registrations, that is, the registration of the house as a six-room house on July 27, 1944, subject to a maximum monthly rental of $50, and the re-registration as a seven-room house on August 7, 1945, with a maximum monthly rental of $125; and that until it was administratively determined which was the valid registration the court would not take any action. Appealing here, the Administrator urges that in so holding the court erred.
The evidence in the court below indicates that there was no addition of space for dwelling purposes made to the housing unit by the appellee before it was re-registered. The evidence is uncontroverted that the tenant who had rented the premises from October of 1942 to May of 1945 used all seven rooms, hence the tenant in pos[396]*396session on September 1, 1943, apparently rented the same premises as the tenant in possession from August of 1945 to May of 1946. Upon the record as presently made, a justiciable controversy existed which called for court action rather than for administrative action.
If the premises occupied and rented on September 1, 1943, by the then tenant contained seven rooms, there was no justification for the second registration. Whether all seven rooms of the house were rented to the tenant in possession on September 1, 1943, was a fact, therefore, to be judicially determined. The rental in effect on September 1, 1943, remained the maximum rental chargeable until changed by affirmative action by the Administrator or his authorized agent. The rent examiner is not shown to have had authority to fix or to change the rental on. housing accommodations in the Rental Area. Until such authority is' shown, the fact that appellee acted upon the suggestion of the rent examiner in re-registering the house is no defense, even though the advice of the rent examiner was given with full knowledge of the facts. At most, such a showing would establish only the good faith of the appellee and reduce the penalty to the actual overcharge.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
Reversed and remanded.
I concur in Judge Lee’s opinion. This rent was raised one hundred and fifty per cent on the same housing unit, merely on the advice of two “examiners” who advised it might be, ón a misstatement about the additional use of a room, or perhaps a misunderstanding about it. There is nothing in the record that shows these examiners had any authority from the administrator either to fix rents, or to advise landlords. There is only evidence that they examined houses when necessary, and-reported the facts to their superiors. In Bowles, Adm’r, v. Griffin, 5 Cir., 151 F.2d 458, 460, this court assumed that a Regional Director had authority to fix rents because he was doing that work, and the parties were each standing on a rent order he had made. Here by this appeal the administrator is challenging thé advice the examiners undertook to give. I think the most that can be said for the advice is that it tends to show good faith to escape a triple recovery.
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160 F.2d 394, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-deer-ca5-1947.