With this opinion, we restate what is already the law in the District of Columbia: Landlords may not include a provision in a lease that requires a tenant to pay
I. Facts
On May 8, 2008, Mr. Pajie entered a twelve-month lease agreement with Foote Properties to rent an apartment at 4275 Foote Street, NE in the District for $1,450 per month. Paragraph 28 of the lease contained a provision purporting to commit Mr. Pajie to pay attorneys’ fees “[sjhould it become necessary for Landlord to employ an attorney to enforce any of the conditions or covenants hereof, including the collection of rentals.”
Foote Properties filed the instant claim in July 2010 as a post-tenancy collection action, asserting that Mr. Pajie breached the lease agreement by failing to pay rent and late fees for several months. Foote Properties sought $11,500 in back rent and late fees, as well as attorneys’ fees pursuant to paragraph 23 of the lease agreement. Mr. Pajie, proceeding pro se, subsequently filed a verified answer and counterclaim, in which he disputed that he owed Foote Properties $11,500 and asserted that he had made a number of rent payments in cash to the property manager, Frank Chambers. Mr. Pajie also asserted that Foote Properties had failed to address issues with the apartment’s air conditioning and plumbing in a timely manner, and that Mr. Chambers had given Mr. Pajie a reduction in rent during the months that the apartment had these habitability issues. Mr. Pajie asserted three counterclaims: (1) breach of contract, for failing to make timely repairs to the problems with the apartment; (2) harassment; and (3) lost wages, pain, and suffering.
After the close of discovery, Foote Properties moved for summary judgment as to both its claim and Mr. Pajic’s counterclaims. Foote Properties also requested attorneys’ fees, which at that point it calculated to be approximately $11,000. The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment as to Foote Properties’ breach of contract claim, but sua sponte converted Foote Properties’ motion for summary judgment on Mr. Pajic’s three
II. The Attorneys’ Fees Award
Although we determine that the trial court erred in granting Foote Properties summary judgment on its claim for unpaid rent and in dismissing Mr. Pajic’s counterclaim for breach of contract, we begin by addressing the challenge to the attorneys’ fees award — the issue that prompts us to issue a published opinion in this case. Such fee awards dramatically up the ante for tenants when they seek relief from the courts in disputes with their landlords and they consequently threaten to chill any such litigation. We determine that inclusion of attorneys’ fees provisions in leases is prohibited by munic-ipaP regulation and consequently, that the award of fees pursuant to Foote Properties’ lease agreement was reversible error.
By its plain language, 14 DCMR § 304.4 expressly bars landlords from placing a provision in a lease shifting to tenants the obligation to pay attorneys’ fees should the landlord deem it necessary to resort to litigation.
Foote Properties violated section 304.4 by including in its lease a provision that required Mr. Pajic — win or lose — to pay “all expenses,” “[sjhould it become necessary for Landlord to employ an attorney to enforce any of the conditions or covenants hereof, including the collection of rentals.”
Foote Properties asserts, however, that section 304.4 has no application either to suits for non-payment of rent after a tenancy has ended or to lease provisions where payment of attorneys’ fees are conditional. Its arguments do not persuade. Nothing in section 304.4 limits its protection to individuals in ongoing tenancies. Rather, the regulation bars landlords from placing any fee-shifting provisions in a lease in the first instance — that is, when the parties have a landlord and tenant relationship. Likewise, section 304.4 contains no exceptions for conditional fee-shifting provisions.
Alternatively, Foote Properties asserts that the attorneys’ fees award was authorized under the second sentence of 304.4, which provides that “[t]his subsection shall not preclude a court from assessing court or legal fees against a tenant in appropriate circumstances.” But Foote Properties never asked the trial court to exercise this authority to award it attorneys’ fees; instead it cited exclusively to paragraph 23 of the lease. And, unsurprisingly, the trial court never referred to section 304.4 and gave no indication that it was making a discretionary award of attorneys’ fees thereunder.
That the fee-shifting provision in the lease was plainly illegal under the D.C. Municipal Regulations and should not have been enforced does not end our analysis. Mr. Pajic, proceeding pro se, did not make this argument in the trial court. In general, this court’s review on appeal is limited to those issues that were properly preserved. District of Columbia v. Helen Dwight Reid Educ. Found.,
discretion, in the interests of justice, to consider an argument that is raised for the first time on appeal if the issue is purely one of law, ... the factual record is complete and a remand for further*146 factual development would serve no purpose, the issue has been fully briefed, and no party will be unfairly prejudiced.
Helen Dwight Reid,
We think this is one such case. Whether paragraph 23 contravenes section 304.4 is a pure question of law that has been fully briefed by the parties. Furthermore, paragraph 23 is not only plainly illegal, it also contravenes clear public policy meant to promote tenants’ access to the courts. Cf. Fairman,
III. The Disposition of Foote Properties’ Breach of Contract Claim and Mr. Pajic’s Counterclaims
We further hold that the trial court improperly granted Foote Properties’ motion for summary judgment on its breach of contract claim and dismissed Mr. Pajic’s counterclaim for breach of contract.
We review the trial court’s order granting Foote Properties summary judgment de novo. Kumar v. District of Columbia Water & Sewer Auth.,
Mr. Pajic put forward his version of the facts in his verified answer and counterclaim as well as his Opposition to Motion for Summary Judgment, which contained, inter alia, portions of his deposition. Rule 56(c) of the Superior Court Civil Rules allows consideration of pleadings, depositions, and affidavits to determine if there is a genuine issue of material fact. In addition, “a sworn complaint ‘is tantamount to an affidavit’ and may therefore be sufficient to raise a genuine issue of fact.” Raskauskas v. Temple Realty Co.,
Turning to the trial court’s dismissal of Mr. Pajic’s counterclaim, our review is, again, de novo. Potomac Dev. Corp. v. District of Columbia,
The trial court ruled that Mr. Pajic had failed to “allege[ ] the breach of any cognizable duty owed to [him] by [Foote Properties].” But in his verified answer and counterclaim, Mr. Pajic alleged that Foote Properties failed to timely repair both his air conditioning, when it broke down in the height of summer, and a leak and hole in his bathroom ceiling. These allegations, if credited (as they must be at the 12(b)(6) stage), constitute violations of the D.C. Housing Regulations, and in turn a breach of the warranty of habitability, which must be read into all leases. 14 DCMR § 301.1 (2012); see also Javins v. First Nat’l Realty Corp.,
The trial judge also dismissed Mr. Pajic’s counterclaim on the grounds that the counterclaim failed to “set[ ] forth money damages suffered by [Mr. Pajic] as a result of any such breach.” But again we find no deficiency in Mr. Pajic’s pleading. “[A] tenant may use breach of the implied warranty of habitability as the basis for an affirmative action for damages in this jurisdiction.” George Washington Univ. v. Weintraub,
IV. Conclusion
We reverse the order awarding attorneys’ fees. We also reverse the order granting summary judgment as to Foote Properties’ breach of contract claim and dismissing Mr. Pajic’s breach of contract counterclaim based on a breach of the implied warranty of habitability. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. In full, paragraph 23 reads:
ATTORNEYS’ FEES. Should it become necessary for Landlord to employ an attorney to enforce any of the conditions or covenants hereof, including the collection of rentals or gaining possession of the Premises, Tenant agrees to pay all expenses so incurred, including a reasonable attorneys' fee.
. This court adopted Iqbal's pleading standard in Potomac Dev. Corp. v. District of Columbia,
. The court expressed concern that this was a large sum and ordered Foote Properties to file a declaration justifying an award of this size; the court subsequently determined it was reasonable to require Mr. Pajic to pay this amount pursuant to the lease agreement.
. Cf. Carlson Constr. Co. v. Dupont W. Condo., Inc.,
. Even so, we fail to see how paragraph 23 is a “conditional” fee-shifting provision. It applies whenever it "become[s] necessary for Landlord to employ an attorney,” i.e., in every instance that Foote Properties incurs legal fees in connection with a particular tenant.
. This jurisdiction follows " ‘the American Rule under which ... every party to a case shoulders its own attorneys’ fees, and recovers from other litigants only in the presence of statutory authority, a contractual arrangement, or certain narrowly-defined common law exceptions.’ ” Nest & Totah Venture, LLC v. Deutsch,
. Cf. Fleischmann Distilling Corp. v. Maier Brewing Co.,
. See District of Columbia Access to Justice Commission, Annual Report 2011-2012, at 10, 14, 16 (2012), http://www.dcaccessto justice.org/files/annuaI/DCATJ_2012_Annual_ Report.pdf (noting a high need for legal assistance in the landlord-tenant court because of the large number of pro se litigants); District of Columbia Access to Justice Commission, Justice for All?; An Examination of the Civil Legal Needs of the District of Columbia’s Low-Income Community, at 74-77, App’x H (2008), http://www.dcaccesstojustice.org/files/ CivilLegalNeedsReport.pdf (noting a dire need for both attorneys and legal assistance for tenants in landlord-tenant proceedings because, in the 2005 calendar year, tenants represented themselves 97% of the time in landlord-tenant disputes that required a court appearance).
.Mr. Pajic has not appealed the trial court’s ruling dismissing his other counterclaims.
. In addition, we note that facts asserted by Mr. Pajic which were undisputed or even conceded by Foote Properties were not accounted for in the court's summary judgment ruling and accompanying judgment. Thus, the court's determination that Mr. Pajic owed $8,200 to Foote Properties does not seem to account for the $1,450 last month's rent payment that Foote Properties did not dispute Mr. Pajic made when the lease was executed. (Foote Properties conceded on appeal that Mr. Pajic should have been given credit for this $1,450 payment but was not.) And, although Foote Properties conceded in its Motion for Summary Judgment that its $8,200 claim should have been reduced by the $500 security deposit, the trial court did not reduce its award of unpaid rent by that amount when it entered the judgment.
. Foote Properties specifically contends that Mr. Pajic's testimony about cash payments should not be allowed because Mr. Pajic initially stated that he kept a record of those cash payments but later failed to produce that record. Although the alleged record might have corroborated Mr. Pajic’s contention, its absence does not preclude him from testifying that he personally handed cash to one of Foote Properties’ agents.
