Thornton v. District of Columbia

647 A.2d 385, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 151, 1994 WL 487318
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 1994
DocketNo. 91-CV-1251
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 647 A.2d 385 (Thornton v. District of Columbia) 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
Thornton v. District of Columbia, 647 A.2d 385, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 151, 1994 WL 487318 (D.C. 1994).

Opinions

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

Three public housing tenants (the tenants) appeal from a decision of the trial court dismissing their civil actions for injunctive and declaratory relief. In their suits, the tenants sought to prevent the District of Columbia Department of Public and Assisted Housing (DPAH) from filing actions for possession against them based partly upon rent owed under leases with DPAH for housing units from which the tenants had been transferred to permit renovation of those units. The dismissal was without prejudice to the tenants’ right to raise appropriate claims as defenses to future possessory actions filed against them in the Landlord and Tenant Branch.

[386]*386On appeal, the tenants argue principally that the District of Columbia may not sue for possession of their current units in the Landlord and Tenant Branch on the basis of rent arrearages under leases no longer in effect. As we rejected a similar argument in District of Columbia v. Suydam, 591 A.2d 856 (D.C.1991), we do so here as well.

I.

The tenants occupy public housing units under a program administered by the District of Columbia government. We summarized aspects of this program of assisted public housing in Suydam, supra. Each tenant transferred to her current housing unit to permit renovation of the unit she had previously occupied. In each case the transfer required that a new dwelling lease be issued between the tenant and the Housing Management Administration. 14 DCMR § 6205.8(b) (1991). DPAH later claimed that, by the time of the transfers in question, each tenant was seriously delinquent in rental payments owed under the previous lease. DPAH therefore sued two of the tenants in the Landlord and Tenant Branch seeking possession of the housing units based on nonpayment of rent.1

The dwelling leases under which the tenants occupy their current units contain the following provision:

If this lease is an extension of occupancy by the Tenant under prior lease or leases with the Administration, any such [rental] amount due under the prior lease or leases may be charged and collected as if the same had occurred hereunder,[2]

Moreover, title 14 of the District’s public housing regulations related to dwelling leases provides in part:

6205.13 Tenants who execute a new dwelling lease as a result of transfer from one (1) unit to another, or as a result of any other requirement for a new lease, shall remain liable for any delinquent rent or other charges relating to the prior lease.
6205.14 The HMA [Housing Management Administration] may unilaterally execute a special supplement to the new lease which assesses the amount due under the old lease against the new lease. [Emphasis added.]

Despite this contractual and regulatory language which appears to treat arrearages under a former lease as the equivalent of rent due under the present lease (“assesse[d] ... against the new lease”), the tenants contended in their suit that the District lacks authority to sue them for possession of their units based on claims for back rent “unrelated to any claim for possession of a current tenancy” (emphasis added). Rather, the tenants argued, while DPAH was free to pursue all monetary claims against them in an action for debt in the Civil Division of the Superior Court, it could base an action for possession only on the tenants’ failure to pay rent on the unit currently occupied. In refusing to order injunctive and declaratory relief, the trial judge implicitly rejected this argument.

II.

This is not the first time we have considered the claim that when the District, as [387]*387landlord administering the public housing program, executes a new lease with a tenant, the earlier tenancy is extinguished under traditional landlord and tenant principles and an action for possession cannot be based on failure to pay rent under the former lease. That was the very issue we considered in Suydam with respect to a “new dwelling lease” that was executed — as required by 14 DCMR § 6205.8(a) — after the status of the head of household had changed by separation, i.e., the tenant-husband had left the dwelling. The new lease, which was for the same dwelling, was signed only by the wife as tenant. We rejected the argument that “the District ... forfeited] its right as landlord to seek dispossession of the tenant for nonpayment of rent merely by issuing her a new lease,” as required by § 6205.8(a). 591 A.2d at 860. We said that “[b]oth the lease itself’ — specifically the provision quoted above treating any arrearage under a prior lease “as if the same had occurred hereunder” — “and, more importantly, the regulatory scheme under which it was issued belie any intent of the parties to nullify the existing tenancy by executing the new agreement.” Id. (footnote omitted); see id. at 859-60.

The tenants would distinguish Suydam as involving only formal changes to a tenancy involving the same dwelling. They assert that, even in the context of the District’s public housing program, we could not have intended a general repudiation of the common law rule that “the making of a new lease operates as a surrender of an older one.” Schwartz v. Brown, 64 A.2d 298, 299 (D.C.1949). But the opinion in Suydam speaks for itself. The trial court in that case had terminated the District’s suit for possession on the authority of Schwartz. We began by stating that the court’s reliance on the Schwartz rule “misconceived the application of that principle to the execution of the new lease in this case under the District’s public housing scheme.” 591 A.2d at 858. We observed that even under general landlord and tenant principles, “ ‘[t]he intention of the parties is the test,’ and not every ‘modification in a contract of lease ... constitute^] a new lease and operate[s] as a surrender.’ ” Id. at 858 (quoting 3A J. GRIMES, Thompson on Real PROPERTY § 1347, at 657 (1981 Repl.)). We concluded that the parties, by executing the new lease made necessary by a change in the head of household, had intended “a continuation of [the existing tenancy]” rather than a surrender of it. Admittedly, in doing so we pointed out that the lease, “executed for the same dwelling, carries forward nearly verbatim the detailed rights and obligations of both landlord and tenant prescribed in the [former] lease.” Id. at 858-59 (emphasis added). But the italicized clause was not focal to our analysis, whose key feature was “the regulatory background against which the new lease was issued,” in particular HMA’s mandatory duty to issue a “new dwelling lease,” 14 DCMR § 6205.8, whenever either of two events occurred. One, which had occurred in Suydam, was a change in the status of the head of household (§ 6205.-8(a)); the other, we pointed out, was “[w]hen a family is transferred from (1) dwelling unit to another” (§ 6205.8(b)). 591 A.2d at 859 & n. 2.3 In either case, we held that “the purpose of the ‘new dwelling lease’ requirement is not to terminate an existing tenancy but to continue it on terms consistent with the goals of the public housing program.” Id. at 859. Indeed, we pointed out that under governing federal law the public housing agency could “

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
647 A.2d 385, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 151, 1994 WL 487318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1994.