Anthony Chibs appeals from the trial court’s dismissal of his claim for repossession of his rental property and its grant of a total rent abatement to his tenant, Arna-ta Fisher, and the District of Columbia Housing Authority. Chibs asserts that the evidence failed to support a total abatement and that the court improperly required him to prove the reasonable “as is” value of the property. Finding no error, we affirm.
I.
District of Columbia residential leases contain implied warranties of habitability, which require landlords to maintain rental property in compliance with the District’s housing regulations.
See
14 DCMR § 302 (1991);
Anderson v. District of Columbia Hous. Autk,
While not directly contesting the trial court’s finding of housing code violations or even of an implied warranty breach, Chibs argues that the evidence did not support a total abatement. We disagree. Credible evidence of housing code violations alone can support a finding that the housing had no reasonable rental value.
See Bernstein v. Fernandez,
Here, the record — including Fisher’s testimony, pictures, the testimony of a District law student, and an April 2003 DCHA inspection report — is replete with evidence of dangerous and deplorable housing conditions: electrical deficiencies, ineffective heating, rotting structures, basement flooding, and rodent infestation. According to the testimony, these conditions, which began almost immediately after Fisher moved in, rendered her home unsafe, unsanitary, and in some rooms, uninhabitable. Though Fisher repeatedly informed Chibs of problems, he neglected to address them. This evidence adequately supported the trial court’s findings that several housing code violations existed shortly after Fisher moved into the house; that the problems created unsafe and unsanitary housing; that Fisher notified Chibs about these problems; and that
Chibs next argues that the trial court erred by requiring him to prove the value of his rental property. In
Davis v. Slade,
we held that despite a void lease, a landlord may recover the reasonable value of the premises under a quasi-contractual theory.
See
But we need not decide this issue here, as the trial court determined that a total abatement was required after concluding that “the extent of the rodent problem, the existence of other substantial defects in the property, and the danger posed to the small children living on the premises mitigate against finding in favor of Mr. Chibs.” It was Fisher’s testimony and proffered evidence that apprised the court of these problems. Chibs failed to rebut this evidence. Though the court accepted his testimony that he had renovated the house and that some form of inspection had taken place before Fisher moved into it (though no report was admitted into evidence), this evidence does not contradict evidence of the conditions for the relevant time period: when Fisher actually lived there. So even if Fisher had the burden of proving that the home had no value, she met that burden.
See id.; Javins, supra,
Accordingly, the order of the trial court is
Affirmed. 3
Notes
. In his brief, Chibs points out that two of the court’s factual findings fail to correspond with the court’s supportive citations to the record. See Aplt. Br. at 2-3 (comparing the trial court order with cited sections of the plaintiff's proposed facts). A review of the record reveals these to be typos: the court cited the plaintiff’s proposed findings of fact instead of the defendant’s proposed findings. The court’s findings, however, do align with the defendant’s proposed findings. Compare Order at 3, with Def’s proposed findings of fact at ¶¶ 12-14. And, as discussed, those are well supported by trial testimony.
. The trial court also properly apportioned the abatement between Fisher and DOHA.
