Zeppos v. Lewis

107 A.2d 661, 1954 D.C. App. LEXIS 171
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 1, 1954
DocketNo. 1526
StatusPublished

This text of 107 A.2d 661 (Zeppos v. Lewis) 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
Zeppos v. Lewis, 107 A.2d 661, 1954 D.C. App. LEXIS 171 (D.C. 1954).

Opinion

HOOD, Associate Judge.

On April 19, 1950, appellants, owners of a building known as Hecht’s Hotel, petitioned the Administrator of Rent Control to fix a rent ceiling of $750 a month on the building unfurnished.1 Accompanying the petition was a written statement by appellee that he-was negotiating for a lease of the building and was willing to pay $750 a month. The Administrator, however, fixed a ceiling of $650 a.month and his order became effective May 26,- 1950. On the following day, May 27, appellants leased the building to appellee for a term of ten years beginning June 1, 1950, at a monthly rental of $650, with a provision that such rent would be increased to $750 a month on expiration of the rent control act. The lease provided that the building should be used as a hotel or lodging house and at the same time the lease was executed appellants sold to appellee all of their rights in the “lodging house business” conducted on the premises, including furniture, furnishings and equipment, for a purported price of $31,000. This price was represented by $10,000 cash, two' interest bearing notes secured by a chattel deed of trust and totalling $9,000, and an unsecured, nonnegotiable, non-interest bearing note for $12,000. The $12,000 note was payable $100 a month on the day the rent fell due and contained a provision that it should become null and void on expiration of the rent control act. On July 31, 1953, the date the rent control act expired, appel-lee brought this action, alleging that appellants for 38 months had collected from him excess rent of $100 each month, and asking judgment for double that amount or $7,600.

The trial court found as a fact that the sale price of the lodging house business was $19,000 and that the giving of the $12,000 note was a mere subterfuge to avoid the rent ceiling and that the monthly payments on that note in reality were payments for rent. Accordingly the court gave judgment for appellee for $7,200, representing double excess rent of $100 a month for 36 months.2

There is ample support in the evidence for the court’s finding that the effect of the parties’ arrangement was the payment of $750 a month rent. And the court was correct in ruling that the fact both parties [663]*663knowingly participated in the arrangement was no defense to an action for overcharges under the rent act.3 The only question requiring our consideraton is whether the leased premises for the period in issue were subject to rent control.

There is no doubt that under the original rent act of December 2, 1941, lodging houses were subject to control,4 and no contention otherwise is made. The question is whether amendments to the rent act decontrolled lodging houses. The amend-atory act of April 29, 1948, decontrolled “Any housing accommodations in hotels, which accommodations are used exclusively for transient occupancy, that is, for living quarters for nonresidents upon a short-time basis”.5 The amendatory act of June 30, 1950, contained the following provision:

“After June 30, 1950, the provisions of this Act shall not apply to, and no maximum rent ceiling or minimum service standards shall be prescribed for, any furnished nonhousekeeping housing accommodations which are rented as rooms without kitchen privileges or facilities for cooking (but not in a suite of two or more rooms), and when and for such period as any of the housing accommodations in any building used as a rooming house are decontrolled under this paragraph (a) the provisions of this Act shall not apply to, and no maximum rent ceilings or minimum service standards shall be prescribed for, such building.” 6

The rent act of 1951 excluded from its coverage: “(1) any of the accommodations in a hotel in which more than 60 per centum of the units devoted to living quarters for tenants and guests are used for furnishing accommodations for transients, or the building constituting such hotel; or (2) furnished nonhousekeeping accommodations, whether or not in a hotel, which are rented as rooms without kitchen privileges or facilities for cooking (but not in a suite of two or more rooms); or (3) any building used as a licensed rooming house.” 7

It will be observed that the Act of June 30, 1950, decontrolled nonhousekeeping housing accommodations rented as rooms and any building used as a rooming house when any of the housing accommodations in such building were decontrolled. The Senate Report accompanying the bill stated that one change made in the existing law “removes controls from furnished non-housekeeping rooms.” 8 The statement of the managers on the part of the House of Representatives, accompanying the conference report, said certain changes in the bill were made “to make it clear that where any housing in a building used as a rooming house are decontrolled * * * the building should also be decontrolled.” 9 It seems clear that after June 30, 1950, rooming houses and furnished rooms in such houses were not subject to rent control. The Act of June 30, 1951, made no substantial change. It expressly excluded from control “furnished nonhousekeeping accommodations,” and “any building used as a licensed rooming house.” 10 Therefore, from June 30, 1950, to July 31, 1953, which covers the period for which appellee recovered for alleged overcharges of rent, rooming houses were not subject to rent control. Was Hecht’s Hotel subject to control during that period?

Hecht’s Hotel was not a hotel within the meaning of that word as defined in the rent act. Hotel was defined somewhat differently in the acts of December 2, 1941,:11 [664]*664and April 19, 1949,12 but both definitions used the expression “an establishment operating- under a hotel license”. Hecht’s Hotel operated under- a lodging house license. It had 37 nonhousekeeping furnished rooms and accommodated both transient and permanent guests. No dining room was operated in connection with it.

Neither the original rent act nor any of the amendatory acts used the term “lodging house” although apartments, hotels, rooming and boarding-houses were specifically mentioned. We know of no legal or actual difference between a rooming house and a lodging house. Both serve essentially the same purpose of supplying furnished room accommodations. Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed. Unabridged), defines lodging house as “a house where lodgings are provided and let,” and defines a rooming house as “a house in which furnished rooms, or apartments, are let to lodgers; a lodginghouse.” For licensing purposes the District of Columbia regulations give the following definitions:

“The term ‘rooming house’ means any building or part thereof, other than a hotel, containing sleeping accommodations occupied for a consideration by or offered for occupancy for a consideration to 5 or more persons who are not members of the immediate family of the owner or lessee of such building or part thereof, and which accommodations are not under the exclusive control of the occupants thereof.”

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99 A.2d 755 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1953)
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55 A.2d 88 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 A.2d 661, 1954 D.C. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeppos-v-lewis-dc-1954.