Sobel v. Trony Associates
This text of 284 N.W.2d 267 (Sobel v. Trony Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
D. F. Walsh, J.
Plaintiffs initiated this class action on May 10, 1974, seeking a declaration from the Washtenaw County Circuit Court that the rent collection practices of defendant violated the Michigan landlord-tenant relationship act, MCL 554.601 et seq., MSA 26.1138(1) etseq. Plaintiffs also sought an [297]*297injunction against continuation of the challenged practices and money damages for past violations of the act.
The circuit court certified the class represented by plaintiffs as those tenants of defendant who had entered into leases with defendant on or after April 1, 1973. The court found that defendant had violated the act and awarded the named plaintiffs 5% per annum on $700 for 10 months and 5% per annum on $350 for one month. The named plaintiffs were ordered to notify the other members of the class. With respect to costs, the court ruled: "There will be no costs allowed as all claimants are represented by Legal Aid.”
Plaintiffs appeal, challenging the trial court’s interpretation of the landlord-tenant relationship act and the court’s computation of damages based thereon, the denial of taxation of costs against defendant, and the order directing plaintiffs to bear the cost of notifying the absent class members.
The admitted practice of defendant was to require, prior to occupancy by the tenants, payment of a security deposit equal to one month’s rent. Also required, prior to occupancy, was payment of rent for the first two months of the rental term. Thereafter, one month’s rent was required to be paid on the fifteenth day of each month, beginning with the initial month of occupancy. Each of these payments represented the rental payment for the month beginning approximately 45 days after the payment.1
The trial court properly held, and ordered in granting partial summary judgment for plaintiffs on February 18,1976, that, except for the first month’s rent, defendant landlord cannot require any tenant to pay any portion of rent prior to the first day of the rental [298]*298period to which the rent is to be applied, unless the prepayment is a security deposit which satisfies the landlord-tenant relationship act. MCL 554.601(e); MSA 26.1138(l)(e), MCL 554.602; MSA 26.1138(2).2
The lower court also properly found that defendant had required advance payments in excess of those allowed by the landlord-tenant relationship act. MCL 554.601 etseq.
The court’s computation of the amount of excess payment required by defendant, however, was incorrect. The court erroneously ruled that "a landlord cannot charge more than one months [sic] rent as a security deposit”. The statute clearly provides that a security deposit may equal 1-1/2 month’s rent. MCL 554.602. The statute also clearly includes within the definition of security deposit any prepayment of rent (other than prepayment of rent for the first full rental period).
Hence, defendant could legally hold, during the term of the rental agreement, an amount equal to 1-1/2 times the monthly rent. In addition, defendant could properly require, prior to the beginning of the term of the lease, payment of the first month’s rent. Thereafter, on the first day of each rental period, defendant could require payment of the rent for that rental period.
Any amounts required to be paid, and actually [299]*299paid, to defendant under the terms of the lease which exceeded the amounts described in the foregoing paragraph were held by defendant in violation of the landlord-tenant relationship act.
The trial court found that plaintiffs’ damages equaled the value of the use of their money for any period during which defendant illegally held that money as an excessive security deposit. We find no error in that finding. Nor do we find error in the court’s determination that the value of that use was 5% per annum.
To justify recovery, therefore, each of defendant’s tenants must prove the terms of his, her or their lease agreement with defendant and the date and amount of each payment made to the defendant under the lease. From these facts it will be possible to determine the amount each tenant paid to the defendant in excess of the amount permitted under the act and the number of days for which each excessive amount was held by the defendant in violation of the act.3 Damages will equal the amount of any excessive payment times .0001374 times the number of days the excessive payment was held by the defendant. Computation of total damages will, of course, require a number of separate calculations.5
[300]*300The trial court refused to award costs to plaintiffs, the prevailing parties, solely because they were represented by a legal aid society. The general rule is [301]*301that costs are awarded in circuit court to the prevailing party. GCR 1963, 526.1, Barnett v International Tennis Corp, 80 Mich App 396, 414; 263 NW2d 908 (1978) . We find the trial court’s denial of taxable costs in this case unreasonable. No statute or court rule prohibits award of costs to parties represented by a legal aid society. Nor do we find any rational basis for such denial.
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[301]*301Finally, plaintiffs challenge the lower court’s order that they bear the burden and cost of notifying the absent class members.6 The circuit court ordered that members of the plaintiff class, after being notified of the judgment entered against defendant, are to present their claims in district court. We find no error in this aspect of the court’s order.7 Notification shall be sufficient if made by first class mail to the most recent address which can be obtained for each missing class member. In district court, defendant shall be allowed to present any counterclaims against those who file claims for refund of excessive security deposits.
We disagree, however, that plaintiffs should be required to bear the cost of notification. A common practice in class actions of this type is to order the defendant to compute from its own records the total [302]*302amount refundable to all possible participants in the plaintiff class and to pay that amount into court for the establishment of a fund from which such claims as may subsequently be proven can be paid. From this fund are first deducted the costs of notification of and distribution to absent class members, reasonable attorney fees, and other nontaxable costs. The claims of absent class members who file in the appropriate forum are paid out of the remainder. See Bond v Ann Arbor School Dist, 383 Mich 693, 705-706; 178 NW2d 484(1970).
In the instant case, however, there has been a delay of more than six years since the effective date of the landlord-tenant relationship act. It can be fairly assumed that many of the 173 leases allegedly affected by this class action involved tenants who were part of a generally transient student population and who have undoubtedly long since left the Ann Arbor area. For many tenants, therefore, current addresses will most probably be unavailable.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
284 N.W.2d 267, 91 Mich. App. 294, 1979 Mich. App. LEXIS 2252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sobel-v-trony-associates-michctapp-1979.