55 A.2d 924 | D.C. | 1947
The question on this appeal is whether under the District of Columbia Emergency Rent Act
The tenant Jane Hicks, who is appellant here, has occupied an apartment in the Parkside Apartment at 1702 Summit Place, Northwest since 1941, having then gone into possession under a one year lease with: Real Estate Mortgage and Guaranty Corporation which then owned the building. In July 1946, that company sold the building to Gilpin Properties, Inc. and as part of the transaction the Hicks lease was assigned to the new owners. Early this year a plan of cooperative ownership was prepared and the building was deeded to a. corporation known as “1702 Summit PI., N. W., Owners, Inc.” Shares of stock in the new company were offered for sale, first to
Tenant’s contentions may be summarized as follows: (1) that the éntire transaction by virtue of which the plaintiff claims ownership is in violation of the District of Columbia Emergency Rent Act, and (2) that plaintiff is not an owner or landlord entitled to maintain the suit under the Act. These defenses were suitably raised in .the trial court through a motion for directed verdict.
In support of her first main proposition, appellant points to the fact that the Gilpin Company paid $165,000 for the property, and resold it to the cooperative group less than a year.later for $292,250. Appellant argues that this large profit ber speaks bad faith and indicates an intent to circumvent the operation of the Rent Act. Undeniably the profit.was great, but as we have previously pointed out “the,Rent Act does not attempt to regulate profits on the sale of property.”
.Appellant’s next argument is that plaintiff is not entitled to prevail because she is not a “landlord” within the meaning of the Rent Act. That Act, as is now generally well-known, provides that no suit for possession of “housing accommodations” shall be maintainable unless (among other stated exceptions) the landlord séeks possession in good faith for his own immediate personal use and occupancy as a dwelling.
Was the plaintiff a “landlord” within the meaning of the Act for the purposes of this litigation? Section 1611(g) defines a landlord as including “an owner, lessor, sublessor, or other person entitled to receive rent for the use or occupancy of any housing accommodations.” Section 1611 (a), defining housing accommodations, specifically includes apartments. These two definitions seem to fit this plaintiff and this apartment. But we go further and inquire into the origin .of plaintiff’s status as a “landlord” to determine whether she has a right to maintain the suit.
" Appellant insists that plaintiff is nothing more than another tenant, different only from the tenant in possession in that she has a longer term lease. That is probably the pivotal point in the case. Plaintiff, like the others who entered into the cooperative enterprise, signed a “Cooperative Apartment Sale Agreement” by which, upon term's recited therein, she agreed to buy the apartment for $6,750. In that document plaintiff was repeatedly referred to as “buyer” and the Gilpin Company as “seller.” This agreement was dated May 27, 1947. On the same day plaintiff, received a certificate of stock in “1702 Summit PL, N. W., Owners, Inc.” the new cooperative owner of the property. Such certificate was by its terms transferable; but it expressly stipulated that the “Proprietary Lease”, to which we shall refer, would be issuable only by authority of the Board of Directors. On the same day plaintiff was given a “Proprietary Lease” running to December 31, 2047, with the right of one
Looking at all these circumstances we think this plaintiff was entitled to maintain her suit for possession. True, she did not own a fee simple title; but that is not made a condition precedent by the Rent Act. Under the Act, as we have said, she is a landlord ■ under the classification which includes “lessor, sublessor, or other person entitled to receive rent.” As between plaintiff and the cooperative corporation “in form there is a landlord-tenant relationship, but in substance the apartments are owner occupied. The amounts paid by the stockholders as ‘rent’ really represent the cost of operation, maintenance, etc., of their own property.”
There are no appellate decisions in this jurisdiction on the precise question before us. But in two cases involving cooperative apartments, which were before the United States Court of Appeals, that court described cooperative stockholders as "owners” and as having “legal title” to the apartments.
The only applicable decisions in other jurisdictions seem to have arisen in' New York. The courts of that state treat the cooperative corporation as analogous to a partnership and the tenant-purchasers as cooperative owners.
The basic question before us was presented to the Municipal Court in an earlier case, Osborne v. Page, 71 W.L.R. 225. In a memorandum opinion the trial court stated the law substantially as we now declare it. In the opinion, however,
Affirmed.
Code 1940, Supp. V, 45 — 1601 et seq.
Knowles v. Mosher, D.C.Mun.App., 45 A.2d 755, 756.
Code 1940, Supp. V. 45—1605(b) (2).
Osborne v. Page, infra.
Moses et al. v. Boss, 63 App.D.C. 381, 72 F.2d 1005; Wardman Const. Co. v. Flynn, 60 App.D.C. 357, 54 F.2d 831.
1165 Fifth Avenue Corporation v. Alger, 261 App.Div. 608, 26 N.Y.S.2d 671 (reversed on other grounds in 288 N.Y. 67, 41 N.E.2d 461, 141 A.L.R. 1157); Tompkins v. Hale, 172 Misc. 1071, 15 N. Y.S.2d 854; 542 Morris Fark Ave. Corporation v. Wilkins, 120 Misc. 48, 197 N.Y.S. 625.
Penthouse Properties v. 1158 Fifth Avenue, 256 App.Div. 685, 11 N.Y.S.2d 417, 422.
Arsenault v. Angle, D.C.Mun.App., 43 A.2d 709.
Staves v. Johnson, D.C.Hun.App., 44 A.2d 870; Heindrich v. Dimas-Aruti, D.C.Mun.App., 42 A.2d 138; De Bobula v. Coppedge. D.C.Mun.App., 40 A.2d 255.