Tenants of 1460 Euclid Street v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission
This text of 502 A.2d 470 (Tenants of 1460 Euclid Street v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission) 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.
Opinion
Petitioner, a tenants association, seeks reversal of the District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission’s decision that a voluntary agreement of the tenants to adjust the rent ceiling at their housing accommodation was valid. We hold that the necessary assent of seventy percent of the tenants was not obtained because the spouse of a leaseholder may not, absent express authority, sign the agreement as the leaseholder’s agent. Accordingly, we reverse.
I
Petitioner is the tenants association of a rent controlled housing accommodation, the landlord of which is N & R Associates. On December 21, 1981, N & R Associates implemented a twenty percent increase in the rent ceiling pursuant to a written voluntary agreement that was assumed to have been signed by seventy percent of the tenants.1 One of the tenants who signed the agreement is the wife of the leaseholder of the apartment in which she and her husband reside. Petitioner argues that under D.C. Code § 45-1526 (1981), the only individual who can voluntarily agree to a rent ceiling increase is the tenant obligated to pay rent, i.e., the leaseholder. Thus, petitioner challenges the validity of the voluntary agreement by questioning the spouse’s authority to agree to the rent ceiling increase because she is not the leaseholder, and the leaseholder did not expressly authorize her to sign as his agent. Without this signature, N & R Associates has not secured the agreement of seventy percent of the tenants that is a prerequisite to the rent ceiling increase.
The Voluntary Agreement provision, D.C.Code § 45-1526 (1981), requires that “70 percent of the tenants of a housing accommodation” sign the agreement approving a rent increase. In a related section, a tenant is defined as any “person entitled to the possession, occupancy, or the benefits thereof of any rental unit [472]*472owned by another person.” Id. § 45-1503(30). This definitional provision recognizes the tenant’s entitlement to such status; it, therefore, confers a legal right “to the possession, occupancy, or the benefits thereof....” Reading the Voluntary Agreement and definitional provisions together, as we must, the Voluntary Agreement provision requires the signature of those individuals who derive certain legal rights from the lease of a rental unit that is owned by another. Clearly, the tenants entitled to and capable of enforcing such rights are leaseholders.
Section 45-1526 also requires that the voluntary agreement specify the “amount of increased rent each tenant will pay” (emphasis added). Because the obligation to pay arises out of a lease, the only one who can agree to such an increase is the leaseholder or one expressly acting as his agent. It would strain logic for us to interpret the term “tenant” in § 45-1526, as the respondent concluded, to include any person who occupies a rental unit. It follows that the Voluntary Agreement provision requires the signing party to be the individual entitled to possess or occupy the rental property and obligated to pay rent. For the purpose of § 45-1526, the term “tenant” inescapably means the leaseholder.2
Furthermore, there is nothing in the record to indicate that the leaseholder had authorized his wife to sign the voluntary agreement. The mere fact that the signatory to the voluntary agreement was the wife of the leaseholder is insufficient to create an agency by implication. See Lo Medico v. Simkowitz, 158 A.2d 681, 682 (D.C.1960) (marital relationship does not create agency per se).
Reversed.
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502 A.2d 470, 1985 D.C. App. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenants-of-1460-euclid-street-v-district-of-columbia-rental-housing-dc-1985.