Tunnell Companies, L.P. v. Greenawalt

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 14, 2014
Docket14A-01-006 14A-01-007
StatusPublished

This text of Tunnell Companies, L.P. v. Greenawalt (Tunnell Companies, L.P. v. Greenawalt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tunnell Companies, L.P. v. Greenawalt, (Del. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE IN AND FOR SUSSEX COUNTY

TUNNELL COMPANIES, L.P. ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No.S14A-01-006 ) BETTY GREENAWALT, ) JOHN LEYDEN, VINCENT RICE & ) LAKESIDE COMMUNITY HOME ) OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION ) ) Defendants, )

TUNNELL COMPANIES, L.P. ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. S14A-01-007 ) BAYSIDE HOME OWNERS’ ) ASSOCIATION ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Upon Plaintiff’s Appeal from the Delaware Manufactured Home Relocation Authority. Dismissed.

Dates Submitted: August 19, 2014, August 26, 2014 Date Decided: October 14, 2014

Michael Morton, Esq., 1203 N. Orange Street, Wilmington, DE 19801, Attorney for Plaintiff

James McGiffin, Jr., Esq., Community Legal Aid Society, Inc., 840 Walker Road, Dover, DE 19904, Attorney for Defendants

GRAVES, J.

Tunnell Companies, L.P. (“Tunnell”) appeals from the non-binding decisions of the Delaware

Manufactured Home Relocation Authority (“Authority”).1 Pursuant to the Delaware Manufactured

Home Owners and Community Owners Act (“Act”), owners of manufactured communities, after

November 30, 2013, must comply with specific, codified procedures stated in 25 Del. C. §§7042-44

prior to increasing the monthly rent of its homeowners above the annual average increase of the

Consumer Price Index For All Urban Customers in the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City area

(“CPI-U”) for the preceding thirty-six month period.2 The application and review of these provisions

of the Act is a matter of first impression.

DISCUSSION

In order to understand this decision, it is necessary to review the applicable statutes of the

Act, which mandate the manufactured home community owner (“community owner”) “justify an

increase in rent (“rent justification”).

Manufactured housing has become a vital source of affordable housing in Delaware, particularly as a homeownership opportunity for low-income households who otherwise would likely not be able to move into homeownership. In recent years

1 Greenawalt (“Lakeside”) Record on Appeal [hereinafter “LA-__”] at 387-95; Bayside Record on Appeal [hereinafter “BA-__”] at 439-46 . Because both Tun nell Co., LP v. Gre ena walt and Tunnell Co., LP v. Bayside Home Owners’ Association address the same issues and counsel are the same in both cases, the Court has consolidated both matters into a joint decision.

2 See 25 Del. C. §7042 (a)-(c); 79 Del. Laws, c. 63, §6

1 Delaware has experienced a difficult economic climate which has resulted in a crisis in affordable housing availability. Additionally, manufactured home owners make substantial and sizeable investments in their manufactured homes. Once a manufactured home is situated on a manufactured housing community site, the difficulty and cost of moving the home gives the community owner disproportionate power in establishing rental rates. The continuing possibility of unreasonable space rental increases in manufactured home communities threatens to diminish the value of manufactured home owners' investments. Through this subchapter, the General Assembly seeks to protect the substantial investment made by manufactured home owners, and enable the State to benefit from the availability of affordable housing for lower-income citizens, without the need for additional state funding. The General Assembly also recognizes the property and other rights of manufactured home community owners, and seeks to provide manufactured home community owners with a fair return on their investment. Therefore, the purpose of this subchapter is to accommodate the conflicting interests of protecting manufactured home owners, residents and tenants from unreasonable and burdensome space rental increases while simultaneously providing for the need of manufactured home community owners to receive a just, reasonable and fair return on their property.3

A community owner may increase rent for any and all 12 month period rental agreements in

an amount greater than the CPI-U only if the community owner can demonstrate the increase is

justified.4 To justify such an increase, the community owner must demonstrate: (1) it has not had

any health or safety violations that persist more than 15 days after it received notice of the violation

during the previous 12-month period; (2) the proposed increase is directly related to operating,

maintaining, or improving the manufactured home community; and (3) the increase is justified by

at least one of several factors.5

3 25 Del. C. §7040

4 25 Del. C. §7042 (a)

5 25 Del. C. § 7042 (“A community owner may raise a home owner’s rent for any and all . . . rental agreements in an amou nt greater than the . . . CPI-U . . . provided the co mmunity owner can de monstrate the increa se is justified for the following conditions: [t]he community owner, during the preceding 12-month period, has not been found in violation of any provision of this chapter that threatens the health or safety of the residents . . . for more than 15 days, beginning from the day the community owner received notice of such violation; and [t]he proposed rent increase is directly related to operating, maintaining or improving the manufactured home community, and justified by 1 or more factors . . . . 25 Del. C. §7042 (a)(1)-(2).”)

2 One factor to justify an increase in rent is “market rent,” which is “rent which would result

from market forces absent an unequal bargaining position between the community owner and the

home owners.”6 To calculate market rent, a community owner must consider rents charged to recent,

new home owners entering the community at issue and/or consider comparable manufactured home

communities.7 For communities to be “comparable,” they must be within the competitive area and

offer similar facilities, services, amenities, and management.8

When market rent is a factor used by the community owner, the community owner shall provide a range of rental rates from low to high, and when relevant the mean and median; this disclosure shall include 1) whether comparable rents were determined at arms length, each case in which the community owner or related party has an ownership interest in the comparable lot/community; and 2) the time relevance of the data. For purposes of this subsection, “related party” means any of a person's parents, spouse, children (natural or adopted) and siblings of the whole and half- blood. The community owner shall disclose financial and other pertinent documents and information supporting the reasons for the rent increase.9

When a community owner seeks an increase in rent above the CPI-U, it must first comply

with specific statutory procedures. First, the community owner must give written notice to each

affected home owner, the community’s home owners’ association (“HOA”), and the Authority at

least 90 days prior to any increase in rent.10 Second, if the proposed increase is over the CPI-U, there

6 25 Del. C. §7042 (c) (7)

7 Id.

8 25 Del. C. §7042 (c) (“One or more of the following factors may justify the increase in rent in an amount greater than the CP I-U: Market rent. – . . . rent which would result from market forces absent an unequal bargaining position between the community owner and the home owners. In determining market rent relevant considerations include rents charged to recent new home owners entering the subject manufactured home community and/or by com parable manufac tured home com munities. To be co mpa rable, a manufacture d home comm unity must be within the compe titive area and m ust offer sim ilar facilities, serv ices, am enities and ma nagement.”)

9 25 Del. C. §7043(b)

10 25 Del. C.

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Related

§ 70
Delaware § 70
§ 7040
Delaware § 7040
§ 7042
Delaware § 7042(a)(1)
§ 7042-44
Delaware § 7042-44
§ 7042.17
Delaware § 7042.17
§ 7043
Delaware § 7043(g)
§ 7044
Delaware § 7044

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Bluebook (online)
Tunnell Companies, L.P. v. Greenawalt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tunnell-companies-lp-v-greenawalt-delsuperct-2014.