Snyder v. Reshenk

38 A.2d 803, 131 Conn. 252, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 20, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 803 (Snyder v. Reshenk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Reshenk, 38 A.2d 803, 131 Conn. 252, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 268 (Colo. 1944).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The plaintiff, owner of a three-floor tenement house in the defense rental area of New Haven, brought this action of summary process against the defendant as lessee for one month of the apartment on the third floor. Upon the trial of the ease before the justice of the peace and a jury, a verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendant. The plaintiff lessor, as plaintiff in error, brought a writ of error to the Court of Common Pleas and that court found no error. The plaintiff then appealed to this court. The question which was vital at the trial before the justice and in the Court of Common Pleas, and is fundamental upon this appeal, concerns the meaning of § 6 of the regulation under the federal Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 (56 Stat. at Large, Chap. 26; 50 U. S. C. App. § 901 et seq. [Sup. 1941-1943]), which, when this action was brought, read as follows: “. . . no tenant shall be removed ... by action to evict or to recover possession . . . unless: (6) ... The landlord . . . seeks in good faith to recover possession of such accommodations for immediate use and occupancy as a dwelling for himself.” *254 8 Fed. Reg. 7326. The question is presented by the bill of exceptions relating to rulings, on evidence, the charge and refusal to charge as requested.

In his charge, the justice explained to the jury that the federal act and regulation applied and that one of the exceptions to the regulation concerning the removal of a tenant was that above quoted, and further charged in explanation of it: “The phrase, 'in good faith,’ as used in this exception cannot be given a general definition since it depends upon the particular circumstances of each case. This must be determined by you from the evidence, and such evidence may consist of facts showing the landlord’s general family and home situation, her need or lack of need of housing accommodations under existing circumstances, statements made by her to others concerning her reasons for wishing to evict the tenant, offers made to others to rent the premises of which she seeks possession, a willingness, or unwillingness, on her part to offer the tenant other housing accommodations which are under her control, and a multitude of other factors which may properly be taken into consideration in determining the question of her good faith.”

The plaintiff contends that this charge was erroneous because it permitted the jury, in determining whether she was seeking “in good faith” to recover possession of the tenement for her own immediate use and occupancy as a dwelling, to consider circumstances other than her actual intent to move into the premises and use them as a home, claiming that such circumstances are irrelevant. In short, the plaintiff’s claim is as stated in her brief that “the phrase 'in good faith’ refers simply to the reality of the landlord’s desire . . . to recover possession . . . really for immediate use and occupancy as a dwelling for himself,” and that to give consideration to any other element such as his *255 reason, motive, or the intended effect upon the tenant “is to depart from both the spirit of the act and its language,” that is, to misconstrue the regulation adopted pursuant to it. Even though the construction which she claims be correct, on this record it does not follow that the charge was erroneous on the ground stated.

By the plaintiff’s claims of proof, it appears: As a result of complaints made by the defendant to the Rent Control Administration, the $35 per month rental which the defendant had agreed to pay was ordered reduced to $26, an amount later changed to $28; the mortgagee of the property was exacting increased payments; the plaintiff’s business income had greatly declined; and for these reasons she found it necessary to move from the second-floor tenement which she and her family had been occupying to the third-floor tenement occupied by the defendant in order to permit her to rent the second-floor tenement and so effect a saving of $28 per month. The defendant’s claims of proof were: On May 3, 1943, the Rent Control Board ordered the plaintiff to pay back to the defendant the excess rent of $9 per month for eight months which she had overcharged him; the plaintiff failed to comply with this order and the defendant sued her under the act to recover the overcharge plus penalties; until this repayment was ordered, the plaintiff had never requested the defendant to move or suggested to him that she would like with her family to occupy the third-floor tenement; she never offered to rent the second-floor tenement to the defendant or made any effort to rent it to anyone else; the third-floor tenement is considerably smaller than the one on the second floor; the plaintiff’s family consisted of seven people and it would not be practicable for them to occupy the third-floor tenement, nor could they rea *256 sonably do so; the plaintiff did not in good faith seek possession thereof for her own occupancy; her expressed desire to evict the defendant that she might occupy the tenement herself was merely a scheme for revenge upon him; the summary process action was brought to punish him for bringing the suit against her to recover the amount of rent illegally overcharged; and the plaintiff herself did not desire to occupy the third-floor tenement but brought the action at the instigation of her husband.

A vital issue presented for the jury’s determination upon these conflicting claims, as to which the justice was bound to charge, was whether the plaintiff was seeking possession of the third-floor tenement because of the financial necessity of increasing her income and reducing her expense, as she claimed, or whether her purpose was to revenge herself upon the defendant, as claimed by him. That this was an issue which the plaintiff was urging upon the jury for its consideration and determination is further evidenced by two of her requests to charge. In one of these, the plaintiff used these words: “. . . the owner of these premises is entitled to recover possession since she honestly intends to occupy said apartment herself in order to save her home. . . .” In another, she included this statement: “. . . if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff has an honest intention of using the accommodations as a dwelling for herself and family, because she finds it a great hardship with her present income to maintain said property, and is obliged to obtain a cheaper rental, . , . the present intention to occupy said apartment herself to save her home is sufficient proof of her good faith.” The scope of these requests is not restricted to “the reality of the landlord’s desire ... to recover possession” but is specifically extended to the purpose and the reason for *257 this desire, and the requests suggest a purpose and a reason radically different from those which the defendant claimed to have proved. The record warranted the charge complained of. For like reason, the error assigned in the court’s rulings on evidence and refusal to charge are without merit.

Furthermore, we are satisfied that the narrow construction of the regulation for which the plaintiff contends is not justified.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 803, 131 Conn. 252, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-reshenk-conn-1944.