Respondent Lauren Carter sued her landlord, appellant Jerry Cohen, alleging that her rent payments contravened the Los Angeles Rent Stabilization Ordinance (L.A. Mun. Code, § 151.00 et seq.) (RSO). 1 After a jury found that Carter was entitled to damages of $11,590 for overpayment of rent, the trial court awarded her $25,575 in attorney fees under a fee-shifting provision of the RSO. Cohen challenges the award of damages on the ground that the rental agreement was unlawful; in addition, he maintains that the fee award was improper because Carter’s damages were recoverable in a limited civil case. We affirm the judgment in its entirety.
RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2002, Carter entered into a lease agreement with Ree Whitford regarding a guesthouse in North Hollywood. The guesthouse contained two rooms with a kitchen area, and was detached from a house on the same property. The guesthouse had been constructed without building permits, and was not registered under the RSO. From 2002 to 2004, Carter paid Whitford $890 per month in rent.
In September 2004, Cohen, an attorney, bought the house and its guesthouse from Whitford, and increased Carter’s monthly rent to $1,475. A year later, in September 2005, he raised the monthly rent to $1,585. When Cohen increased the monthly rent to $1,685, effective November 1, 2006, Carter gave Cohen a 30-day notice of her intent to move out of the guesthouse, and they fell into a dispute regarding whether Carter’s security deposit should be applied against her final rent payment. Cohen began proceedings to evict Carter, but voluntarily dismissed them after Carter vacated the premises. On November 8, 2006, the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety declared the guesthouse “substandard,” finding “ ‘unapproved occupancy’ ” in a structure “ ‘constructed without the required permits’ ” and “ ‘not designed or intended to be used for such occupancies.’ ”
Carter initiated the underlying action on July 16, 2007. Carter’s complaint alleged, inter alia, that Cohen had increased her rent in contravention of the RSO. Carter asserted two claims under the RSO, seeking disgorgement of the entire rent she had paid to Cohen, or alternatively, the rent she had paid in excess of the limits set by the RSO, together with penalties provided under the RSO (L.A. Mun. Code, § 151.10, subd. A). In addition, she asserted two
Carter’s claims were dismissed or abandoned, with the exception of her claim for disgorgement of the rent she had paid in excess of the RSO limits. On July 16, 2008, a jury determined that Carter’s excess rent payments amounted to $11,590. Carter subsequently sought her attorney fees and the trebling of the jury’s award pursuant to the penalty provisions of the RSO (§ 151.10, subd. A). The trial court awarded Carter $25,575 in attorney fees, but declined to treble the jury’s award; in addition, the trial court awarded $5,427.01 in other costs. 3 On November 14, 2008, judgment was entered in Carter’s favor. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Cohen contends that the trial court erred in (1) permitting Carter to assert a claim under the RSO for excessive rental payments, and (2) awarding attorney fees to Carter under a fee-shifting provision of the RSO.
A. Claim for Excess Rent Payments
Cohen contends that Carter’s claim for excess rent payments under the RSO failed as a matter of law because Carter’s rental agreement was unlawful and the guesthouse fell outside the RSO. He maintains that Carter was entitled to recover her rental payments only to the extent they exceeded the reasonable rental value of the guesthouse. For the reasons explained below, we reject his contentions.
1. RSO
We begin by examining the RSO and other pertinent provisions of the Los Angeles Municipal Code. In 1979, the Los Angeles City Council enacted the RSO in an effort to regulate rent increases due to a housing shortage.
(Klarfeld v. Berg
(1981)
The RSO established measures to regulate rents and created the Rent Adjustment Commission of the City of Los Angeles to enforce them (§ 151.03). Central to the RSO is a provision governing permissible rent adjustments (§ 151.06). Absent special circumstances, the RSO permits a landlord to impose a “maximum adjusted rent” during a given period— determined by a baseline “maximum rent” for a preceding period and an allowable adjustment, which is ordinarily a percentage of the baseline “maximum rent.” (§§ 151.02, 151.06, 151.07.) Regarding such adjustments, section 151.04, subdivision A states: “It shall be unlawful for any landlord to demand, accept or retain more than the maximum adjusted rent permitted pursuant to this chapter or regulation or orders adopted pursuant to this chapter.” Section 151.05, subdivision A further obliges landlords to register rental units, and provides that “after April 30, 1983, no landlord shall demand or accept rent for a rental unit without first serving a copy of a valid registration or annual registration renewal statement on the tenant of that rental unit.”
The RSO also established remedies for its violation (§ 151.10). Pertinent here is section 151.10, subdivision A, which states; “Any person who demands, accepts or retains any payment of rent in excess of the maximum rent or maximum adjusted rent in violation of the provisions of this chapter.. . shall be liable in a civil action to the person from whom such payment is demanded, accepted or retained for damages of three times the amount by which the payment or payments demanded, accepted or retained exceed the maximum rent or maximum adjusted rent which could be lawfully demanded, accepted or retained together with reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs as determined by the court.”
Also relevant to our inquiry are provisions of the Los Angeles Municipal Code not located within the RSO that regulate the occupancy of any structure. Generally, section 12.21 prohibits the use of any structure or building in the absence of “all permits and licenses required by all laws and ordinances.” Section 12.26, subdivision E.l further provides that “no building erected or structurally altered shall be occupied or used until a certificate of occupancy shall have been issued . ...” A certificate of occupancy is issued only when a structure is completed in conformity with the Los Angeles Municipal Code.
(Pope
v.
State Bd. of Equalization
(1983)
2. Underlying Proceedings
Prior to trial, Cohen contended (1) that Carter’s rental agreement was unlawful because the guesthouse had been constructed without the requisite
At trial, the jury heard testimony from Carter and Cohen. Carter testified as follows: She was unaware that the guesthouse was not registered under the RSO until 2004, when Cohen bought the property and proposed to increase her monthly rent from $890 to $1,475. In response to the proposal, Carter contacted the Los Angeles Housing Department, and discovered that the guesthouse was not registered under the RSO. Carter agreed to the rent increase and signed a new lease agreement with Cohen. In 2005, while talking to Whitford, Carter learned that the guesthouse had been constructed without building permits and was, according to Whitford, “not permitted, not legal.” In or around September 2005, when Cohen proposed to increase Carter’s monthly rent to $1,585 upon renewing her lease, Carter filed an online complaint with the Los Angeles Housing Department. She decided not to pursue the complaint due to fear of retaliation, and agreed to the rent increase. A year later, after Cohen sought to increase her monthly rent to $1,685, she notified him of her intention to vacate the guesthouse.
Cohen testified that when he bought the property in 2004, he knew that the guesthouse had been built without permits and that it did not comply with the building code. According to Cohen, Whitford told him the guesthouse had been built “at a time before codes” and was “grandfathered in” for purposes of the building code. Cohen did nothing to make the guesthouse “legal,” and decided to continue renting it to Carter. During Carter’s tenancy, he never tried to register the guesthouse under the RSO because he was unaware of any obligation to do so. In November 2006, the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety ordered him to halt the occupation of the guesthouse because it lacked a certificate of occupancy.
Susan Gosden, an employee working in the Rent Stabilization Division of the Los Angeles Housing Department, testified regarding the rent increases permitted under the RSO from 2004 to 2006. According to Gosden, the guesthouse had never been registered under the RSO. She also opined that the City of Los Angeles would not have allowed a landlord to register the guesthouse because it had been built without the requisite permits.
3. Analysis
The key issue before us is whether the trial court erred in concluding that Cohen was subject to the RSO’s prohibition against the collection of excessive rent. At the outset, we note the narrow scope of our inquiry. Although the trial court made several rulings adverse to Carter regarding her RSO claims, she never noticed an appeal and does not challenge those rulings on appeal. We therefore do not address the rulings, including the determinations that Carter could not recover her rent payments in their entirety and that she was not entitled to trebled damages as a penalty. Our inquiry is limited to whether Carter was entitled to recover her excess rent payments, even though the guesthouse lacked a certificate of occupancy and was not registered under the RSO.
To the extent our examination requires us to interpret the RSO and other provisions of the Los Angeles Municipal Code, we follow established principles. Generally, local ordinances are construed in light of the canons of statutory construction.
(City of San Diego
v.
Rider
(1996)
Under these principles, the RSO, by its plain language, authorized Carter’s recovery of her excess rent payments. As noted above (see pt. A.I.,
ante),
section 151.04, subdivision A states that “[i]t shall be unlawful for any landlord to demand, accept or retain more than the maximum adjusted rent permitted” under the RSO; in addition, section 151.05, subdivision A bars a landlord from “demanding] or accepting] rent for a rental unit” in the absence of a “valid registration or annual registration renewal statement.”
Cohen contends that the trial court erred in permitting Carter to recover her excess rent payments, as this had the effect of enforcing an unlawful rental agreement. He argues that the rental agreement was void and unenforceable because the guesthouse had been built without permits, lacked a certificate of occupancy, and was unregistered under the RSO. For the reasons discussed below, these facts did not preclude Carter’s recovery under the RSO.
Rental agreements involving units that were constructed without building permits or lack a certificate of occupancy are ordinarily regarded as unlawful and void.
(Espinoza
v.
Calva
(2008)
Generally, “the courts . . . will not enforce an illegal bargain or lend their assistance to a party who seeks compensation for an illegal act.”
(Lewis & Queen v. N. M. Ball Sons
(1957)
Nonetheless, the rule barring the enforcement of unlawful contracts is not absolute. Because the rationale for the rule is founded on deterrence, the Supreme Court has made clear that courts “ ‘should not . . . blindly extend the rule to every case where illegality appears somewhere in the transaction. The fundamental purpose of the rule must always be kept in mind, and the realities of the situation must be considered. Where, by applying the rule, the public cannot be protected because the transaction has been completed, where no serious moral turpitude is involved, where the defendant is the one guilty of the greatest moral fault, and where to apply the rule will be to permit the defendant to be unjustly enriched at the expense of the plaintiff, the rule should not be applied.’ ”
(Tri-Q, Inc.
v.
Sta-Hi Corp.
(1965)
One type of situation in which the rule is inapplicable is described in
Lewis &
Queen: “[W]hen the Legislature enacts a statute forbidding certain conduct for the purpose of protecting one class of persons from the activities of another, a member of the protected class may maintain an action notwithstanding the fact that he has shared in the illegal transaction. The protective purpose of the legislation is realized by allowing the plaintiff to maintain his action against a defendant within the class primarily to be deterred. In this situation it is said that the plaintiff is not in pari delicto. [Citations.]”
(Lewis & Queen, supra,
In our view, the principles enunciated by our Supreme Court in
Tri-Q
and
Lewis & Queen
encompass Carter’s claim for excess rent payments under the RSO. As noted above (see pt. A.I.,
ante),
the RSO was enacted to “safeguard tenants from excessive rent increases” (§ 151.01). Although rental agreements regarding units lacking a certificate of occupancy are unlawful, their enforcement by tenants is subject to the principles that we have explained. (See
Espinoza v. Calva, supra,
Cohen’s reliance on the decision of the appellate department of the superior court in Salazar is misplaced. That case addressed a provision of the RSO permitting a landlord to evict a tenant in order to comply with an order directing the landlord to vacate the rental unit due to a code violation, but obligating the landlord to pay the tenant certain relocation fees. The appellate department determined that although the rental agreement at issue was unlawful, the goals of the RSO would be promoted by denying the landlord possession of the unit until he paid the tenant a relocation fee under the RSO. (Salazar, supra, 10 Cal.App.4th at pp. Supp. 4—6.) In a footnote, the appellate department remarked: “[W]hether the tenant is liable for rent [while he or she remains in possession], is not directly raised in this appeal. However, we note that the RSO recognizes that the tenant is not at fault under the circumstances encountered here and provides that the landlord-tenant relationship shall continue until relocation benefits are paid. This relationship gives rise to an obligation to pay the reasonable value of the use and occupancy of the premises . . . , even if the lease agreement is considered void because it contemplates an illegal use of the property.” (Salazar, supra, at pp. Supp. 6-7, fn. 5.)
Cohen argues that
Salazar
establishes his entitlement to “the reasonable value” of the guesthouse while Carter was its tenant
(Salazar, supra,
10 Cal.App.4th at p. Supp. 4, fn. 5), notwithstanding the RSO limits on rent. We disagree. Initially, we note that published decisions of the appellate department are not binding on this court.
(Worthington v. Unemployment Ins. Appeals Bd.
(1976)
Cohen contends that Carter may not seek relief under the RSO because she knew during her tenancy that the guesthouse was unlawful. At trial, the sole source of evidence regarding Carter’s awareness of the guesthouse’s unpermitted status was Carter herself. She testified that she first learned the
When the
Lewis & Queen
exception is applicable, a plaintiff’s awareness that he or she may be participating in improper conduct does not bar relief under a statute if raising such a barrier would defeat the aim of the statute. In
Mendoza v. Ruesga
(2008)
We reach the same conclusion here. Generally, landlords cannot circumvent their obligations under the RSO through the tenant’s acquiescence or agreement.
(Gombiner v. Swartz
(2008)
Cohen also contends that the RSO, by its own terms, does not subject landlords who rent dwelling units lacking a certificate of occupancy to the prohibition against collecting excess rent. As noted above, the definition of “rental unit” under the RSO is qualified by several express exceptions, one of which is for “[hjousing accommodations located in a structure for which a certificate of occupancy was first issued after October 1, 1978.”
6
(§ 151.02.) Cohen does not suggest that this exception encompasses the guesthouse,
The exception upon which Cohen relies does not establish that “rental units” within the scope of the RSO must have a certificate of occupancy. “Exceptions to the general rule of a statute are to be strictly construed and, in interpreting exceptions to the general statute, courts include only those circumstances which are within the words and reason of the exception. [Citation.]”
(Hayter Trucking, Inc.
v.
Shell Western E&P, Inc.
(1993)
In a related contention, Cohen argues that the RSO does not subject landlords who rent dwelling units lacking a certificate of occupancy to the prohibition against collecting excess rent because the RSO contains no express provision to this effect. He notes that the sole express reference in the RSO to such units is found in section 151.09, which obliges landlords to pay relocation fees to tenants evicted from units violating building and zoning ordinances. However, as explained above, the broad language of the RSO definition of “rental unit” encompasses dwelling units, such as the guesthouse, that lack a certificate of occupancy. Accordingly, an express provision imposing the prohibition in question is unnecessary. 7
B. Fee Award
Cohen contends that the trial court erred in permitting Carter to recover her attorney fees under the penalty provisions of the RSO because her recovery of $11,590 in damages was less than required for an unlimited civil action. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 1033, if a plaintiff brings an unlimited civil action and recovers a judgment within the $25,000 jurisdictional limit for a limited civil action, the trial court has the discretion to deny costs to the plaintiff.
(Steele v. Jensen Instrument Co.
(1997)
We see no error in the ruling. As the court explained in
Valentino v. Elliott Sav-On Gas, Inc.
(1998)
Here, Carter initially alleged RSO claims for all the rent she had paid to Cohen, as well as for trebled damages under the penalty provisions of the RSO. Nothing in the record establishes that Carter acted unreasonably or in bad faith in asserting the claims. Although the trial court limited her recovery to her excess rent, as determined by a baseline “maximum rent” of $890 per month, and denied her trebled damages, it recognized that her claims raised issues of first impression. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in issuing the fee award.
C. Attorney Fees on Appeal
Carter seeks an award of her attorney fees on appeal under section 151.10, subdivision A, which authorizes fee awards in actions against landlords who demand rent in excess of the RSO limits. Generally, “ ‘[statutory authorization for the recovery of attorney fees incurred at trial necessarily includes attorney fees incurred on appeal unless the statute specifically provides otherwise. [Citation.]’ ”
(Kirby
v.
Sega of America, Inc.
(2006)
The judgment is affirmed. The matter is remanded to the trial court solely for a determination of the amount of attorney fees to be awarded Carter as the prevailing party on appeal (§ 151.10, subd. A). Carter is awarded her costs on appeal.
Epstein, P. J., and Willhite, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory citations are to the Los Angeles Municipal Code, unless otherwise indicated.
Cohen filed a cross-complaint against Carter that he dismissed with prejudice before trial.
The trial court declined to treble the damages under section 151.10, reasoning (1) that Cohen’s failure to register the guesthouse was not willful, and (2) that a rent control statute (Civ. Code, § 1947.11) permits such damage enhancements only when the landlord’s misconduct is willful or intentional.
We independently review the trial court’s interpretation of the RSO and other determinations of law (see
Home Depot, U.S.A., Inc. v. Contractors’ State License Bd.
(1996)
The definition of “rental unit” expressly exempts “[d]wellings, one family, except where two or more dwelling units are located on the same lot.” (§ 151.02.) The guesthouse falls outside this exception because it shared a lot with a house.
The exception further provides: “This exception shall not apply to individual mobilehome coaches, mobilehome parks, individual recreational vehicles or recreational vehicle parks.” (§ 151.02.)
Cohen suggests that if the term “rental unit” applies to a dwelling unit lacking a certificate of occupancy, the relocation fee provision of the RSO (§ 151.09) is surplusage. He is mistaken. For the reasons we have discussed, the RSO provision related to the collection of rent (§ 151.04, subd. A) bars a landlord from collecting rent in excess of the RSO limits for a dwelling unit lacking a certificate of occupancy. The relocation fee provision imposes an additional obligation on the landlord: when the unit is subject to an order to vacate, the landlord must pay a relocation fee.
Cohen also suggests that the RSO does not apply to unlawful rental agreements because the term “maximum rent” is defined in terms of the “highest legal monthly rate” or “the rent
Cohen argues that because the RSO defines “maximum rent” in terms of “legal” rent, the RSO does not bar landlords from collecting rent arising from unlawful agreements of the sort present here. However, when, as here, there was no “legal” rent, the sole implication of the RSO’s definition of “maximum rent” appears to be that the baseline maximum rent is $0, for purposes of determining the “maximum adjusted rent.” Cohen’s argument thus suggests that his liability for excessive rent payments was potentially greater than the trial court determined it to be. Nonetheless, as Carter has not challenged the trial court’s ruling regarding the amount of the maximum rent, we conclude only that nothing in the definition of “maximum rent” exempted Cohen from the RSO’s prohibition regarding the collection of excess rent.
