Reines v. Woods

192 F.2d 83, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1951
Docket513
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 192 F.2d 83 (Reines v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reines v. Woods, 192 F.2d 83, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687 (eca 1951).

Opinion

192 F.2d 83

REINES
v.
WOODS.

No. 513.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals. Heard and Submitted at Cincinnati, Ohio.

May 22, 1950.

Resubmitted September 28, 1951.

Decided October 31, 1951.

Walter K. Sibbald, Cincinnati, Ohio, for complainant.

Charles P. Liff, Chief, Appeals Section, Washington, D. C., Ed Dupree, Gen. Counsel, J. Walter White, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Field Review and Appeals Branch, Washington, D. C., and Philip Travis, Atty., Silver Springs, Md., all of the Office of Housing Expediter, on the brief, for respondent.

Before MARIS, Chief Judge, and McALLISTER and LINDLEY, Judges.

LINDLEY, Judge.

Complainant, owner of a single-family residence, rented it, on August 7, 1945, for $50 per month. Although this was the first rental, the owner failed to register the property within thirty days thereafter as required by law. However, in May, 1946, after announcement in the local press that the Rent Director proposed to require registration of all rental property in the Cincinnati Defense Area, complainant decided to register and proceeded to do so.

Subsequently, on September 16, 1946, the Director mailed complainant a notice that, on the basis of an investigation indicating that the rent charged by complainant was excessive, he proposed to reduce the maximum rent from $50 to $30 per month, retroactive to the first rental date. Complainant objected that the rent for comparable housing accommodations was not less than $50 per month and, further, that, in any event, the order should not be made retroactive because the "certificate registering said property was filed in the Office of the Rent Director prior to June 1, 1946, and this proceeding was not commenced within three months after date of filing such registration." In support, complainant submitted the affidavit of her husband, who, in addition to averring that, in his opinion, comparable housing accommodations rented for not less than $50 per month, also stated that he had prepared and filed the registration statement "either during the week preceding or during the week following the Cincinnati May Festival, and prior to June 1, 1946 * * *." Complainant also requested that her attorney be given access to the evidence considered by the Director and afforded an opportunity to offer additional proof. Thereafter the Area Office wrote complainant's counsel, listing the properties which the Director regarded as comparables and informing him that the registration was "stamped in our office on June 17, 1946." The attorney, in a telephone conversation with the Examiner, urged that the Director was not justified in holding that the date of the stamp and the date of filing were the same.

On March 5, 1947, a final order was issued reducing the rent on the premises retroactively. Complainant filed an application for review and requested an oral hearing, averring that the information essential to a determination of the questions involved (" (1) when was the registration statement filed and (2) what comparable properties were considered") could not be obtained by affidavits. The Expediter replied that he would not grant a formal oral hearing, "since no written evidence has been submitted showing such hearing is necessary for a proper determination of the facts in the case." The letter pointed out that a list of the comparable housing accommodations on which the Director relied had been furnished complainant and that "No written evidence has been submitted in rebuttal of the Rent Director's comparables nor do you claim the late filing of the application was made without fault." Complainant's attorney protested by letter of July 9, 1947, that the Expediter had "arbitrarily" assumed "that the original registration was filed on June 17, 1946, though this is one of the issues of fact sought to be considered in this review" and insisted that an oral hearing was necessary. Without responding to this letter, the Regional Administrator, on July 17, 1947, issued an order affirming the Director's determination. When complainant failed to comply with the order, an enforcement action was instituted against her in the District Court, which, pursuant to Section 204(e) of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, as amended, 50 U.S. C.A.Appendix, § 924(e), stayed the proceeding and granted to complainant leave to file in this court, a complaint setting forth her objections to the validity of the Director's order.

Complainant's attack on the order of March 5, 1947, rests upon her contentions that, (1), the Rent Director did not commence his proceeding to reduce the rent within three months after registration of the property and was, therefore, precluded from making the order retroactive, (2), the order reducing the rent was arbitrary, (3), the action of the Regional Administrator, in affirming the order was arbitrary, capricious, and without authority in law, and, (4), throughout the proceeding she was denied due process of law. Respondent, on the other hand, insists that the reduction order was lawful in all respects, and that its affirmance by the Regional Administrator was entirely proper.

Since it is admitted that complainant's registration statement was not filed within thirty days of the first rental of the subject property, a retroactive rent reduction order was justified, under the provisions of Section 4(e) of the Rent Regulation, only if the order was "issued in a proceeding commenced by the Administrator within three months after the date of filing such registration statement." Here, the proceeding to reduce the rent was begun on September 16, 1946; consequently, if complainant's registration statement was filed on or before May 21, 1946,1 the retroactive provision in the order of March 5, 1947, was invalid. Complainant, however, although she contends that the proceeding was not begun within the prescribed period, nowhere asserts that the registration statement was filed on or before May 21. Her husband, by affidavit, avers that he personally filed it and that he was not in Cincinnati on June 17, 1946, the date stamped on it, but he does not state that it was filed on or before May 21. In his first affidavit, he avers merely that it was filed "prior to June 1, 1946"; in his second, that an article relative to the registration of rental property appeared in the newspapers "about the middle of May 1946," and that "the next day after that article appeared I procured the forms for registration, filled them out, and took them to the Rent Office within two or three days after the newspaper article appeared." The first business day after the first publication was May 20. It is extremely doubtful that such vague and indefinite testimony, even if uncontradicted, would support a finding that the registration was filed on or before May 21.

The Expediter, in his statement reviewing the order of the Area Rent Director, held that complainant's evidence established no specific date of filing and fell far short of demonstrating that the statement was filed before May 22. Remarking that the newspaper item referred to appeared on Friday, May 17, 1946, and that Reines stated he procured the forms the next day after that article appeared, the Expediter observed that the next business day was Monday, May 20, 1946.

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Bluebook (online)
192 F.2d 83, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reines-v-woods-eca-1951.