Pourbabai v. Bednarek

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 2021
Docket18-CV-1143
StatusPublished

This text of Pourbabai v. Bednarek (Pourbabai v. Bednarek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Pourbabai v. Bednarek, (D.C. 2021).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 18-CV-1143

BEN POURBABAI, APPELLANT,

V.

BRYANT BEDNAREK, et al., APPELLEES.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CAB-2410-17)

(Hon. Hiram Puig-Lugo, Trial Judge)

(Submitted February 11, 2021 Decided May 13, 2021 ∗)

Ben Pourbabai, pro se.

Charles F. Pierre, with whom Todd S. Kim, was on the brief, for appellees.

Before EASTERLY, MCLEESE, and DEAHL, Associate Judges.

∗ The decision in this case was originally issued as an unpublished Memorandum Opinion and Judgment. Upon consideration of a motion to publish filed by the District of Columbia Office of the Tenant Advocate, we grant the motion and publish this Opinion. 2

DEAHL, Associate Judge: Appellant Ben Pourbabai appeals the trial court’s

judgment awarding his former tenants $15,000 based on his bad-faith refusal to

refund their security deposit. He also contests the court’s rulings denying his motion

for reconsideration and awarding the tenants just over $100,000 in attorney’s fees

and costs accrued during the protracted legal battle to recover their security deposit.

On appeal, he insists that he was right to withhold the tenants’ deposit because they

caused extensive damage to the rental property. He then adds a host of scattershot

arguments, such as that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, infringed

upon his due process rights, and violated his right to a jury trial. Detecting no error,

we affirm. 1

I.

1 We also deny Mr. Pourbabai’s pending motion to “set aside the entire case” because the tenants “defrauded [the] US Government,” and his motion challenging the trial court’s jurisdiction, as both motions are duplicative of arguments he makes on appeal and are addressed below. As for his remaining motion to “set aside the entire case for attorney abandonment,” styled as a motion for relief from judgment, see Super. Ct. Civ. R. 60(b), we deny that motion as well because it is procedurally improper. A Rule 60 motion seeking relief from judgment must be filed with the trial court in the first instance. 3

Ben Pourbabai leased his townhouse2 to tenants Bryant Bednarek, John

Schryber, Drake Greer, and Reese Williams. Under the lease agreement, the tenants

agreed to pay $5,000 per month for a ten-month term. They also agreed to pay a

$5,000 security deposit at move-in, and Mr. Pourbabai in turn agreed to return that

security deposit—minus any amounts owed—“within forty-five (45) days” of the

tenants vacating the property.

Following a fraught ten-month landlord-tenant relationship, the tenants opted

not to renew the lease. The day after its expiration, at 6:57 a.m., tenant Drake Greer

emailed Mr. Pourbabai:

As requested, we are completely moved out . . . . The house is cleaned and everything is fixed and in better condition than when we signed the lease. We waited all day for you to arrive but were forced to put all 4 keys in the lockbox as you never showed. . . .

[P]lease send the security deposit check to:

Drake Greer

[Address omitted].

2 Contrary to Mr. Pourbabai’s admissions in the trial court that he “is the owner of the property at issue,” he now asserts that he never owned the property. As discussed further in Part II.A below, that late assertion is contrary to the record evidence and provides no basis for relief. 4

Mr. Pourbabai replied hours later, stating that if the house was indeed in the

condition described, the tenants “should not worry about anything.” He assured Mr.

Greer that he would be in contact “within 45 days.” But forty-five days came and

went, and on the forty-sixth day after the lease’s expiration, Mr. Greer emailed Mr.

Pourbabai again:

Given that more than 45 days has passed since our lease with you expired and we moved out, we are operating under the assumption that, by now, you have dispatched a refund of our security deposit. Please confirm by reply email. If you have not yet dispatched a payment, please let me know your intentions in this regard.

Mr. Pourbabai replied that day, stating that he had previously mailed the

tenants “a report through Canada Post,” and he promised to send an electronic copy

shortly. Several hours later, Mr. Pourbabai sent another email attaching a letter, a

purported invoice, and several photos. The letter—dated four days earlier—accused

the tenants of causing more than $10,000 in damage to the property. It further noted

Mr. Pourbabai’s intent to apply the security deposit “toward covering a fraction of

the cost[s]” of repairs. The purported invoice—dated four weeks earlier—indicated

that a contractor Mr. Pourbabai later claimed to have contacted through Craigslist

charged him $4,250 to repair certain property damage and paint the property’s

interior. 5

Tenant Bryant Bednarek initiated this lawsuit in small claims court, seeking

his portion of the security deposit and treble damages on the grounds that Mr.

Pourbabai withheld the deposit in bad faith. Each of his former roommates filed

their own claims, and all four were subsequently consolidated into this action. The

case was then transferred to the Civil Division because the amount in controversy

post-consolidation exceeded the $10,000 cap on small claims matters.3 D.C. Code

§ 11-1321 (2012 Repl.).

During discovery, Mr. Pourbabai produced documents purporting to show that

he paid for necessary repairs in excess of the security deposit amount. The

documents indicated that, through Craigslist, Mr. Pourbabai sought and obtained an

estimate of $4,250 to repair damage to the home. Skeptical of the documents, the

tenants subpoenaed records from Craigslist, which indicated that Mr. Pourbabai had

substantially and materially falsified the purported Craigslist messages he produced.

The Craigslist records reflected an exchange in which Mr. Pourbabai offered $20 an

hour for 8 hours of spot treatment to the walls, not the inflated $4,250 repair estimate

that his apparently doctored documents reflected.

3 When answering the tenants’ complaint, Mr. Pourbabai simultaneously filed a counterclaim against the tenants seeking roughly $25,000 in damages due to the alleged property damages and other supposed violations of the lease. 6

The tenants moved for summary judgment on their security-deposit and bad-

faith claims. Mr. Pourbabai failed to oppose the motion, prompting the trial court to

treat the tenants’ statement of material facts “as conceded where the record [did] not

demonstrate otherwise.” The court then granted the motion on all grounds and

issued a judgment in the tenants’ favor for $15,000 plus interest—$5,000 for the

unreimbursed security deposit, and $10,000 in damages for Mr. Pourbabai’s bad

faith.4 Two weeks later, Mr. Pourbabai asked the court for reconsideration or, in the

alternative, a six-week continuance, but the court denied the motion because it failed

to indicate whether the tenants opposed or consented to it. 5 The tenants subsequently

moved for attorney’s fees and costs, which Mr. Pourbabai again failed to oppose.

The trial court granted it and awarded the tenants $98,973 in fees and $2,082.63 in

costs. Mr. Pourbabai now brings this appeal.

II.

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