Shenk v. Gaudet

83 A.2d 672, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 224
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1951
Docket1113
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 A.2d 672 (Shenk v. Gaudet) 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
Shenk v. Gaudet, 83 A.2d 672, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 224 (D.C. 1951).

Opinion

CLAGETT, Associate Judge.

Plaintiffs sued their landlady, Sarah Cash, and her rental agents, Harry Shenk and Kay Realty Company, Inc., for double an overcharge in rent from-June to December of 1948 -and for refusal to furnish services and for attorney’s fees. 1 Mrs. Cash cross-claimed against the other defendants for damages on the ground that they had violated their duty to her in negligently permitting a low rent ceiling to be fixed by the Rent Administrator. The other defendants also filed a third-party complaint against Mrs. Cash on the ground that she had not forwarded to them a notice, of the legal rent ceiling. During the trial the Rent Administrator was permitted to intervene. Defendants, Harry Shenk and Kay Realty- Company, Inc., appeal from judgments against them in' favor of plaintiffs and. from judgments against them in favor of defendant Cash entered on her cross-claims. Defendant Cash has not appealed. Judgment by consent for the' defendants was entered against plaintiffs Gaudet and Parady for four months unpaid rent baáed on the ceiling set by the Rent Administrator.

The undisputed evidence at trial revealed the following facts. In March 1948 defendant Cash retained Shenk as her rental agent in managing the premises involved in this action, a furnished apartment. This agency agreement was subsequently assigned to Kay Realty Company, Inc., when Shenk incorporated his business under that name in July 1948. With Sh'enk’s' assistance, Mrs. Cash prepared and filed with the Rent Administrator in her own name a petition for a rent ceiling of $135 a month for the first floor apartment which she was then occupying but from which she was about to move. This application, in accordance with the Administrator’s regulations, set out various "details of the, accommodations .involved. There -had been no previous ceiling for that apartment., In April 1948 Mrs. Cash left the*city for California, turning over to defendant Shenk the management ■ of the property as her agent. On May 15, 1948, she received from the Rent Administrator a forwarded notice, dated May 10, 1948, notifying her that the ceiling on the apartment would be $75 a month. This notice contained a statement that the information furnished had been checked against comparable rents for similar accommodations. It was stated further that unless good cause to" the contrary was shown prior to May 20, 1948, the proposed ceiling would become effective on that date. The notice also stated that if the landlord desired further consideration before entry of the order setting the ceiling, a request in writing, setting forth in detail the nature and source of evidence additional to that previously considered, should be made prior to May 20, 1948, and that failure to furnish this information *674 would result in a denial of the request for reconsideration. Mrs. Cash sent this notice to Shenk and requested that he ask for a hearing before the effective date. Shenk received this letter on May 19, 1948, and immediately mailed to the Rent Administrator a letter in his own name, and without stating his connection with the property or its owner, asking for a hearing. However, in his letter to the Administrator Shenk did not set out any of the additional information required by the notice. This letter from Shenk was received by the Rent Administrator’s office on May 20, 1948, but was never acknowledged or answered by that office. Shenk made no further inquiry as to its disposition.

On May 26, 1948, notice was sent by the rent office to defendant Cash that a ceiling of $75 per month was effective as of that date. Defendants Shenk and the Kay Realty Company, Inc., were not notified that this action had been taken and were not informed of the receipt of the notice by Mrs. Cash until the following February.

'In June 1948 Shenk rented the first floor apartment to' the plaintiffs at $125 per month and collected that amount for that month. In July 1948 he incorporated under the name of Kay Realty Company, Inc., and from July through December that corporation collected the $125 monthly rent which was remitted less commissions to Mrs. Cash. In February 1949 Shenk learned of the final order of May 26 setting the ceiling for the apartment at $75 a month. This action was subsequently commenced by the plaintiffs against Mrs. Cash, Harry Shenk and the Kay Realty Company, Inc. Plaintiffs also sued for double the value of services allegedly denied them by failure of the defendant to furnish them the use of a porch.

It is the position of appellants Shenk and the Kay Realty Company, Inc., in their first assignment of error that since the Rent Administrator had received from Shenk a request for a hearing on the proposed ceiling • on May 20, 1948, which request was neither acknowledged nor answered, the order of May 26, 1948, setting the ceiling at $75 was ineffective and void and therefore could not be the basis for a suit for overcharge in rent. Yet the request did not conform to the requirements set out in the Administrator’s notice of the proposed ceiling. This notice had been forwarded to Shenk by Mrs. Cash and both of them were cognizant of it. The request failed to contain any information or additional evidence which would enable the Administrator to determine' the merit of granting a hearing, although the notice from the Administrator’s office contained in capital letters the warning: “Failure to Furnish this Information will Result in Denial of the Request.”

We rule that it was not denial of due process for the Administrator to issue his order setting a ceiling rent on the premises when the landlord failed to- meet the requirements specified for obtaining a hearing. 2 It would have been better practice' for the Administrator’s office to reply to the Shenk informal request for a hearing, but no such request was received from the owner, Mrs. Cash, and the Shenk letter did “not disclose his connection with the property and did not comply with the Administrator’s requirements.

Defendants Shenk and Kay Realty Company, Inc., also contended in the trial court that since they had no' actual knowledge until February 1949 of the Administrator’s order of September 1948 setting the ceiling for the premises at $75, they acted in good faith in collecting rent during the period alleged. They rely on Code 1940, Supp. VII, section 45-1610(c), which reads in part: “No person shall be held liable for damages or penalties in any court on any grounds for or in respect of anything done or omitted to be done in good faith pursuant to any provision of this chapter or any regulation, order, or requirement thereunder, notwithstanding that subsequently such provision, regulation, order, or requirement may be modified, rescinded, or determined to be invalid.”

However, it is to be noted that the defendants were not relying on any rescinded *675 or modified order or regulation of the Administrator or statutory provision in collecting the overcharge. Therefore the section is not applicable to the situation involved here and the good faith óf the defendants in collecting and receiving the overcharge was not an issue in the case, at least as between plaintiffs and defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
83 A.2d 672, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shenk-v-gaudet-dc-1951.