Vito v. Klingbeil Management Group

9 Va. Cir. 498
CourtArlington County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1982
DocketCase No. (Law) 22989
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Va. Cir. 498 (Vito v. Klingbeil Management Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arlington County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vito v. Klingbeil Management Group, 9 Va. Cir. 498 (Va. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

By JUDGE CHARLES H. DUFF

For decision is a Motion in limine filed by the defendants in which they seek to exclude any reference to Section 29-5.8 of the Arlington County Housing Standards Ordinance in the trial of this case. Able argument has been held on the Motion and memoranda submitted and examined.

The defendants posit three grounds upon which they assert the invalidity of the County Ordinance as establishing a duty on their part. First, they say that the Ordinance is contrary to the Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act and is therefore invalid. Second, they contend that the ordinance conflicts with the Uniform Statewide Building Code. Third, that even if the Ordinance is valid, it may not be applied to create liability on the part of the landowner for the criminal acts of third parties. After careful consideration, I am of the opinion that the first two grounds asserted by the defendants must be denied and that the third ground is premature.

The applicable County Ordinance, sec. 29-5.8, was enacted January 1, 1972, as part of the Housing Standards Ordinance. It provides, in short paraphrase, that in multiple dwelling buildings leased to tenants exterior swinging doors shall be equipped with a vertical, bolted [499]*499deadlock. An examination of the preamble to the Ordinance shows that the County Board found the existence within the County of dwellings which were unsafe and that such a condition affected the "health, safety, and welfare of the public" and, further, that adequate protection of the "health, safety, and welfare of the public" (italics mine) required the establishment and enforcement of housing standards. The language as stated above in the preamble of the Ordinance evinces the exercise of the police power to provide adequately for the safety and welfare of the general public.

The Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, section 55-248.2 et seq., was enacted in 1974. In 1977, a provision was added (55-248.13.1) enabling local governments to require deadbolt locks under certain conditions. The intent or purpose of the statute is stated in Section 55-248.3 as being, inter alia, to simplify, clarify, modernize, and revise the law governing the rental of dwelling units and the rights and obligations of landlords and tenants. . . and to establish a single body of law relating to landlord and tenant relations throughout the Commonwealth. The various Articles of the statute outline the landlord’s obligations, the tenant’s obligations, the remedies of both landlords and tenants and a prohibition against retaliatory conduct. The purpose of the statute in the last analysis is to establish a single body of law "relating to landlord and tenant relations throughout the Commonwealth."

Initially then, it appears that the purpose of the County Ordinance and the State statute are different. One looks primarily to the health, safety, and welfare of the general public. The other looks to more uniform laws governing the relationship between landlords and tenants.

In King v. Arlington County, 195 Va. 1084 (1954), it was pointed out that the mere fact that the state had made certain regulations with respect to the subject did not prohibit a locality from likewise dealing with the subject. Both the state and its local governmental agencies may have concurrent jurisdiction over the same subject matter. The opinion quotes from 37 Am. Jur., Municipal Corporations, Section 165, page 787, as follows:

[500]*500The mere fact that the state, in the exercise of the police power, has made certain regulations does not prohibit a municipality from exacting additional requirements. So long as there is no conflict between the two, and the requirements of the municipal bylaw are not in themselves pernicious, as being unreasonable or discriminatory, both will stand. The fact that an ordinance enlarges upon the provisions of a statute by requiring more than the statute requires creates no conflict therewith, unless the statute limits the requirement for ail cases to its own prescription. Thus, where both an ordinance and a statute are prohibitory and the only difference between them is that the ordinance goes further in its prohibition, but not counter to the prohibition under the statute, and the municipality does not attempt to authorize by the ordinance what the legislature has forbidden or forbid what the legislature has expressly licensed, authorized, or required, there is nothing contradictory between the provisions of the statute and the ordinance because of which they cannot coexist and be effective. . . .

Applying these legal principles to the enactments in question it is noted that the State statute is permissive, merely authorizing local governing bodies to require deadlock bolts under certain conditions. The County Ordinance goes much further but a careful analysis reveals that it does not prohibit what the State statute has authorized. Nor does it authorize something that State law has forbidden. As was stated in King:

Obviously, situations may occur in urban and thickly populated communities which may permit and indeed require further local legislation not inconsistent with the provisions in the State law.

Therefore, finding no real contradiction between the statute and the ordinance, the motion must be denied as to this ground.

[501]*501Regarding the assertion that the County Ordinance is contrary to the BOCA Code, I note that the deadbolt lock Section of the Code was enacted August 1, 1978. By its very terms, Section 612.5.5.1 applies to "buildings hereafter erected or converted. . ." Thus, the requirement of that Section would be inapplicable to the buildings in the present litigation.

Finally, the defendants assert that even if the Ordinance is valid it does not create an action for the damages alleged. They cite Baecher v. McFarland, 183 Va. 1 (1944), in support thereof. In that case the defendant landlord had violated an ordinance by stringing barbed wire across the top of a fence. The fence had existed for many years when the plaintiff, a child of five years, climbed it and in jumping off came in contact with a barb of the wire which tore her face. The then Supreme Court of Appeals reversed a plaintiff’s judgment and entered final judgment for defendant, holding that there was no direct causal connection between the presence of the barbed wire and the child’s injury. The fence with its barbed wire merely created a condition or situation which the child used, resulting in the accident. It was also noted that the child was not an invitee, but a trespasser.

Defendants also cite Gulf Reston, Inc. v. Rogers, 215 Va. 155 (1974), for the proposition that the landlord does not owe the tenant a duty of protection from an intentional, deliberate or criminal act by a third person. A careful reading of the decision would indicate that it turned on its own facts. The Court recognized, however, that several recent cases from other jurisdictions had held that a landlord’s appreciation of risk and harm from foreseeable criminal activities of third persons would impose a duty to exercise care to provide adequate protection for tenants. In both cases cited on page 159 of the opinion, large apartment buildings were located where frequent robberies and rapes had been committed and such occurrences in their apartment buildings were known to the landlords. The Court in Gulf Reston

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Related

Hope Windows, Inc. v. Snyder
158 S.E.2d 722 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1968)
Simmons v. Boyd
102 S.E.2d 292 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1958)
King v. County of Arlington
81 S.E.2d 587 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
Gulf Reston, Inc. v. Rogers
207 S.E.2d 841 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1974)
Lynch v. Alderton
20 S.E.2d 657 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1942)
Baecher v. McFarland
31 S.E.2d 279 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Va. Cir. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vito-v-klingbeil-management-group-vaccarlington-1982.