Reynolds v. Korman

96 A.2d 362, 1953 D.C. App. LEXIS 132
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1953
Docket1308
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 A.2d 362 (Reynolds v. Korman) 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.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Korman, 96 A.2d 362, 1953 D.C. App. LEXIS 132 (D.C. 1953).

Opinion

CAYTON, Chief Judge.

Some eighty-five tenants who lived in defendant’s apartment buildings filed petitions with the Office of the Rent Administrator seeking adjustments in rent and *364 service. 1 The petitions alleged: That the permissible rent was, due to peculiar circumstances, substantially higher than rent generally prevailing for comparable housing accommodations; that the services supplied were less than the services which should have been supplied under the minimum-service standards; and that the applicable rent ceilings permitted the receipt of unduly high rents. The petitions specifically alleged such things as lack of heat, lack of hot water, Venetian blinds and plumbing out of repair, diminution of laundry and recreational facilities, seedy appearance of halls and buildings in general, poor janitor service, cracks in walls and ceilings left unrepaired, etc. It was also contended that a rent increase of 2 percent per calendar year had not been determined by using the proper basis as provided by law; that taxes charged to petitioners were not properly apportioned; and that there had been improper and inadequate notice of rent increases given by the landlord as provided by agreement between the landlord and petitioners and/or by law.

The petitions came on for hearing before an examiner and evidence was presented by both sides. Thereafter the examiner issued findings and recommended orders which after review, were adopted as the findings and orders of the Rent Administrator.

At the outset we must consider a jurisdictional question: landlord’s claim that the appeal was filed late. This claim is based on the section of the Rent Act which provides that within ten days of the service of examiner’s findings and recommended order, a party may request that such be reviewed by the Administrator, and that if there is no such request within such ten day period the findings and recommended order of the examiner shall be deemed to be the findings and the order of the Administrator. Code 1951, Supp. I, § 45-1608(c). A petition for review of the Administrator’s order must be filed in this court within ten days after the date of such order. Code 1951, Supp. I, § 45-1609(a).

The examiner’s findings and recommended orders were made on January 8, 1952. On January 18, 1952, petitioners filed a multi-purpose motion for a rehearing before the examiner, to have the examiner clarify his findings and recommended orders and make further findings and orders as urged by the petitioners. This motion was denied by the examiner on February 6, 1952, and petitioners filed a petition for review by the Administrator on February 12, 1952. 2 The Administrator’s final order was entered December 24, 1952.

Landlord’s position is that unless a petition for review by the Administrator is filed within ten days of receipt of the examiner’s findings and recommended order then such-findings and order automatically become those of the Administrator, from which an appeal to this court must be made within ten days. Despite the pendency of the motion- before the examiner, respondents contend the examiner’s findings and recommended orders became those of the Administrator on January 18, 1952, that the ten day period for an appeal to this court expired January 28, 1952, and that the petitions filed in this court January 3, 1953 were nearly a year too late.

Landlord overlooks the fact that under the Rent Act hearings are to be conducted in accordance with regulations of the Administrator. 3 Regulation 20 of the Administrator expressly provides that .a party may seek further proceedings by the examiner prior to the effective date of the examiner’s recommended order. When such a request is filed, the effective date of an unchanged order is extended to the fifth day after the disposition of the request. A petition for review by the Administrator may then be filed within that five day period. The record discloses that petitioners’ motions for rehearing and for a review by the Administrator were filed within the times *365 permitted by the regulations. 4 It also discloses that the petition for review was filed in this court within ten days after the Administrator’s final order.' .Accordingly we rule that petitioners were not late in filing their appeal.

Petitioners’ first claim of error, is that the examiner arbitrarily required the hearing to proceed throughout the day and evening, from 9 a. m. until 12:15 the following morning with only a short recess or two and a b.reak of about forty-five minutes in the early afternoon, and with no recess 'for dinner. 5 Several years ago in a jury case we said, “we cannot approve a practice which would hold parties and counsel in court for long hours without a recess and past the dinner hour.” Shapiro v. Vautier, D.C.Mun.App., 36 A.2d 349, 351. But we said that the matter was in the realm of discretion. Generally the same considerations should govern administrative proceedings. We should be slow to attach blame to an examiner.willing to expedite a case by sitting late into the night, for such an attitude tends to still complaints about the law’s delays. On the other hand no hearing should be so protracted and intensive as to detract from the calm and patient approach which should attend all judicial and quasi-judicial hearings. Sound discretion -will usually suggest the course to be followed.

In Jennings v. Gilbertson, D.C.Mun.App., 74 A.2d 839, we .ruled that it was not reversible error for a rent examiner to refuse a continuance of a hearing. Here no continuance was asked, no protest was made against the lengthy session, no dinner recess was requested, and we may reasonably infer from the record that petitioners acquiesced in the protracted hearing. In the circumstances we cannot say there was prejudicial error.

About fifty of the petitions were dismissed by the examiner for the reason that the-petitioners “failed to appear at the hearing and failed to present any evidence in support of the petition and in addition such' general evidence as was adduced on behalf of the petitioner failed to sustain the allegations” of the petitions. The general evidence referred to consisted of the testimony of a heating engineer and, presumably, evidence concerning the general conditions of hallways, etc. At the outset of 'the hearings the examiner announced with reference to petitioners who were not actually present at the hearing that “unless and until they present their own case, of course, there is no case.” A moment later he said, “I still don’t see how there could be a case without the petitioner being here, but we will go into that a little later on.”-

If nothing more were revealed by the record there would perhaps be a question as to whether there was actually an offer of evidence and a ruling against its admissibility. 6

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Bluebook (online)
96 A.2d 362, 1953 D.C. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-korman-dc-1953.