STATEMENT OF THE CASE
The Smail Claims Division of Monroe Superior Court awarded Linda Alis (Alis) the sum of $1,266.00, such sum representing rent and damages owed by Andrew Noble and Stuart Odle (Noble/Odle) under a one-year lease agreement. Noble/Odle appeal, asserting that the lease was void or voidable because the subject premises was neither registered as a residential rental unit nor had an occupancy permit.
We reverse.
STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
Noble/Odle signed a one-year lease with Alis for an apartment in Bloomington. The lease was to commence on August 16, 1983. In August, prior to their return to Bloom-ington, the tеnants decided not to take possession of the premises and attempted to find a sub-lessee for the apartment. On August 29th, Noble/Odle showed the apartment to prospective sub-lessees and noticed several defects. They contacted the City of Bloomington's Hоusing Code Enforcement Officer, Ken Young, and requested that he informally inspect the premises for Housing Code violations on September 1, 1983. After the inspection, Young informed Noble/Odle that the landlord was in violation of Bloomington Municipal Code Sec. 16.12.080(e) which states "lilt shall be а violation of this chapter for any owner to maintain a rental unit without an occupancy permit". Further, Young advised Noble/Odle that even if the house were registered, it would not pass a housing inspection. Believing they could not legally find a sub-lessee, and that their lease wаs void, Noble/Odle informed Alis on September 1 that they would no longer assume responsibility for locating a sub-lessee. The property was subsequently rent ed to other tenants on September 15.
The premises had been registered as commercial property by Alis when she first leased it from A.B. Burnham, the legal title holder of the property, four or five years earlier. Evidently the property was registered commercial because the building was also used as a site for juvenile counseling. Alis rented part of the premises during the past four years for residential use without registering it residential and without obtaining an occupancy permit. On August 25th, after becoming aware of the property's residential use, Young sent a letter to Burnham requesting that the property be registered as residential. The request was reiterated on August 80 and September 20; thе property was finally registered on October 4. The property was formally inspected on October 17, with 83 violations of the Bloomington Housing Code being cited. Mr. Young testified that the defects were not of a life-threatening nature so the new tenants were not required to movе out of the premises. At the time of the trial, January 26, 1984, the residence had not *111 received an occupancy permit, although Alis testified that most of the inside work had been completed.
STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES
Appellants present a single issue for our review: whether a lease signed by a prospective residential tenant is void or voidable when the apartment to be rented is neither registered as a residential rental unit nor has an occupancy permit, as required by the Bloomington Municipal Code.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Title 16 of the Bloomington Municipal Code covers the Housing Code and Housing Inspection. The relevant portions of this Title are as follows:
"©16.12.060(a) No owner of real estate within the city shall use real estate for the purpose of erecting or maintaining a rental unit thereon without registering such property ...
* # * # * *
16.12.060(e) It shall be a violation of this chapter for any owner to maintain a rent al unit which has not been registered in accordance with this section ...
# * * # # L
16.12.080(b) All rental units shall be required to have a current occupancy permit to be displayed on the inside of the main entrance of the unit ...
* * u *# * *
16.12.080(e) It shall be a viоlation of this chapter for any owner to maintain a rental unit without an occupancy permit."
The purpose of the Housing Code is to protect the public health, safety, and welfare in all existing rental units by:
"1. establishing minimum maintenance standards for existing rental units and their premises for basic equipment and facilities for light; ventilation, space heating and sanitation; for safety from fire; for space, use and location; and for safe and sanitary maintenance of rental units now in existence;
2. fixing the responsibilities of owners, operators and occupants of rental units; and
3. providing for administration, enforcement and penalties."
Bloomington, IN. MUNICIPAL CODE, See. PM-100.2 (1983). Section 16.12.020 articulates the underlying purpose of the Housing Code (incorporated in full into Chapter 16 of the Bloomington Municipal Code), which is to encourage the maintenance and improvement of the quality of housing in the city of Bloomington.
Appellants contend that because Alis and Burnham violated the express provisions of the Bloomington Municipal Code, the lease agreement is void or voidable.
Broadly speaking, the law is that a contract made in violation of a statute is void. Maddox v. Yocum, (1941)
In our opinion, the lease in the instant case is unenforceable. We agree with appellants' contention that the policies of protection of public health, safety, and welfare and encouragement of compliance with the housing code are advanced by the registration and occupancy permit provisions of the Municipal Code. Appellants' brief, pg. 18. The procedure to receive such a permit necessitates compliance with minimum housing standards: once the unit is registered residential, a temporary occupancy permit is issued. Bloomington, IN. MUNICIPAL CODE, SEC. 16.12.080(3). The issuance of the temporary permit triggers an inspection by the Housing Department. Id. After the insрection, an occupancy permit is issued; or, if the unit did not "pass" inspection, additional time is granted to make the repairs necessary to bring the unit into compliance with the code. Bloomington, IN. MUNICIPAL CODE, SEC. 16.12.080(a), (c) and (d) (1979). Clearly, the policy of protecting the public from substandаrd housing is served by the registration-inspection-permit process: until the unit is registered, the Housing Code Enforcement Office is not aware of its existence and thus is unable to check its compliance with the housing standards set down in the code.
Another important factor in our determination that the lease is voidable turns on the specific factual pattern of this case. Here, Noble/Odle never moved into the apartment and thus never benefited in any way from the lease agreement. This case may be distinguished from a situation in which tenants moved into the apartment and then, upon discovering that the apartment was never registered and never received an occupancy permit, attempt to escape future rental payments as well as demand a refund on past payments. In the latter case, the tenаnts' remedy rests on their ability to prove a breach of an implied warranty of habitability, as in Breezewood Management Co. v. Maltbie, (1980) Ind.App.,
In Breezewood, two students entered into a one-year lease for the rental of an apartment in Bloomington. Immediately aftеr they moved into the apartment, they found numerous defects; they soon discovered that the structure was not registered residential, and upon inspection by the Housing Code Enforcement Officer, it was learned that there were over fifty violations, eleven of which were life-thrеatening. Eventually the tenants vacated the premises and Breezewood brought suit for the balance of rent due. The tenants counterclaimed, contending that Breezewood had breached an implied warranty of habit ability, and they sought damages and abatement of rеnt. Breezewood, supra, at 671.
This court upheld the judgment of the trial court awarding damages upon the tenants' counterclaims. We noted that since the Housing Code was in effect and the premises violated many of its provisions, Breezewood breached an implied warranty of habitability. Id. at 675. Such a breach does not, however, suspend a tenant's obligation to pay rent and allow no damages recoverable to the landlord. Id. Instead, the measure of damages is the difference between the rental value of the apartment as warranted and the actual rental value of the apartment in its defective condition. In other words, tenants were obligated to pay the actual rental value of the apartment inasmuch as they derived some benefit from the rental arrangement.
Here, however, thе tenants never entered into possession, and the lease was a voidable agreement on the basis of its noncompliance with several provisions of the Housing Code. Appellee Alis argues that Noble/Odle did not break the lease because of the lack оf an occupancy permit but only discovered the information after the fact and used it to their benefit. This contention is irrelevant. The lease was voidable because it was in contravention of an ordinance designed for the protection of the public welfare. Had Noble/Odle moved into the apartment, derived some benefit *113 from the lease agreement, and then attempted to escape their obligations under the lease on the basis of the lack of the permit, their cause of action would have proceeded in the same manner as the claim., in Breezewood. As a matter of fact, Noble/Odle raised the warranty of habitability issue in their answer, but the court did not find that such warranty was breached. As Alis points out, appellants have not disputed this determination on appeal.
Alis arguеs that if the city of Blooming-ton intended to make void or voidable leases of rental units which are unregistered or without occupancy permits, it would be invading the power of the state and the policy that contract law be uniform statewide. She cites City of Bloomington v. Chucknеy, (1975)
In Chuckney, the First District of the Indiana Court of Appeals upheld a trial court's determination that certain sections of a city ordinance concerning residential rental housing in Bloomington werе ultra vires. Chuckney, supra,
We note further, as appellants do, that the relevant language of the code states only that it is a violation of the code for an owner to maintain a rental unit without complying with registration requiremеnts or without obtaining an occupancy permit. The code does not declare void or voidable lease agreements which have as their subject unregistered and "permit-less" property. Rather, it is our decision which renders them voidable.
In conclusion, the cleаr purpose of the Bloomington Housing Code is to provide minimum standards for rental units to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the public. To that end, Bloomington clearly forbids landlords to rent property for human habitation without complying with the ordinance. Any contrary dеcision by us would render the ordinance a nullity and permit landlords to ignore it and continue to rent substandard housing as before, taking a chance that the renters, ignorant of the ordinance, would not complain.
The decision of the trial court as to damages for rental payments is reversed, and Alis is ordered to return the $830.00 security deposit plus interest accrued at the statutory rate.
Judgment reversed.
