SHEPARD INVESTMENT GROUP LLC, an Oregon limited liability company, dba Umbrella Properties Management v. Bret Lee ORMANDY, an individual and all other occupants
19LT16199; A173257
Lane County Circuit Court
June 29, 2022
320 Or App 521 | 514 P3d 1125
Argued and submitted February 11, 2021; petition for review allowed, in part, October 20, 2022 (370 Or 404); See later issue Oregon Reports
Reversed and remanded.
Kamala H. Shugar, Judge.
John R. Roberts argued the cause and filed the brief for appellant.
Matthew G. Shepard argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent.
Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Shorr, Judge, and Powers, Judge.
SHORR, J.
Reversed and remanded.
SHORR, J.
In
As we explain below, and upon careful consideration of the statutory text and context, we conclude that
The relevant facts are largely procedural and undisputed. Tenant had rented a residential unit in landlord‘s Fairfield Apartments since 2008. In 2013, landlord notified tenant by letter that it would begin charging a monthly flat fee for several utilities, namely water, sewer, and garbage services. Tenant‘s subsequent rental agreements included a provision to that effect. At all times relevant to this appeal, landlord charged tenant a $40 per month utility fee.
In November 2019, tenant failed to pay that month‘s rent charges, and on November 8, landlord issued a “72-hour notice” communicating its intent to terminate tenant‘s rental agreement for nonpayment of rent. On November 13, landlord initiated an eviction action. In response, tenant filed an answer asserting affirmative defenses and a counterclaim alleging that landlord had violated the utility billing requirements of
The case was tried to the court. The court found that, over the relevant time period, landlord had charged tenant $40 each month for utility services without sending any written or electronic bills for those charges; that landlord had never offered or provided tenant with the underlying utility providers’ bills; that landlord had failed to provide any explanation, in either the rental agreement or in bills, of the manner in which the utility providers assessed their charges; and that landlord had failed to describe, in either the rental agreement or in bills, the manner in which it allocated the utility charges among the Fairfield tenants. The court concluded that landlord had failed to comply with
Landlord appeals, contending in part that the trial court erred in determining the damages award. We do not understand landlord to contest the trial court‘s conclusion that landlord charged tenant for utilities in a manner that did not comply with
We review for legal error. Lopez v. Kilbourne, 307 Or App 301, 307, 477 P3d 14 (2020). Landlord‘s assignment of error presents a question of statutory interpretation to which we employ our familiar methodology, considering the text, context, and any helpful legislative history. State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72, 206 P3d 1042 (2009). It is our duty to identify the statute‘s correct interpretation, regardless of whether that interpretation is asserted by either party. Elk Creek Management Co. v. Gilbert, 353 Or 565, 570, 303 P3d 929 (2013). In doing so, we may not “insert what has been omitted” or “omit what has been inserted.”
We begin with a brief overview of the statute at issue.
“(4)(a) Except for tenancies covered by
ORS 90.505 to90.850 , if a written rental agreement so provides, a landlord may require a tenant to pay to the landlord a utility or service charge or a public service charge that has been billed by a utility or service provider to the landlord for utility or service provided directly, or for a public service provided indirectly, to the tenant‘s dwelling unit or to a common area available to the tenant as part of the tenancy. A utility or service charge that shall be assessed to a tenant for a common area must be described in the written rental agreement separately and distinctly from such a charge for the tenant‘s dwelling unit.“(b)(A) If a rental agreement provides that a landlord may require a tenant to pay a utility or service charge, the landlord must bill the tenant in writing for the utility or service charge within 30 days after receipt of the provider‘s bill. If the landlord includes in the bill to the tenant a statement of the rent due, the landlord must separately and distinctly state the amount of the rent and the amount of the utility or service charge.
“(B) The landlord must provide to the tenant, in the written rental agreement or in a bill to the tenant, an explanation of:
“(i) The manner in which the provider assesses a utility or service charge; and
“(ii) The manner in which the charge is allocated among the tenants if the provider‘s bill to the landlord covers multiple tenants.
“(C) The landlord must:
“(i) Include in the bill to the tenant a copy of the provider‘s bill; or
“(ii) If the provider‘s bill is not included, state that the tenant may inspect the provider‘s bill at a reasonable time and place and that the tenant may obtain a copy of the provider‘s bill by making a request to the landlord during the inspection and upon payment to the landlord for the reasonable cost of making copies.
“(D) A landlord may require that a bill to the tenant for a utility or service charge is due upon delivery of the bill. A landlord shall treat the tenant‘s payment as timely for purposes of
ORS 90.302(3)(b)(A) if the payment is made by a date that is specified in the bill and that is not less than 30 days after delivery of the bill.“(E) If a written rental agreement so provides, the landlord may deliver a bill to the tenant as provided in
ORS 90.155 or by electronic means.”
Generally stated, then, a landlord may require a tenant to pay a monthly utility charge, if the written rental agreement so provides, but must bill the tenant for that charge in writing and must include in that bill either the utility provider‘s bill itself or an offer that the tenant may inspect the provider‘s bill upon request.
Considering those provisions together, several takeaways are immediately apparent. First, a landlord may not charge a tenant for utilities at all if the written rental agreement does not account for such charges, and a landlord “fails to comply” if it charges a tenant a single utility charge under those circumstances. Second,
Before we address those competing arguments, however, we must interpret an aspect of the statute that neither party confronts in their arguments to us: What does it mean under
We turn to our construction of the remedy provision. As discussed above,
However, the provision does account for the possibility that, when a landlord fails to comply with the law on multiple occasions, it may be liable for multiple “wrongful[] charge[s].” The first possible measure of damages limits a tenant to just ”one month‘s periodic rent” if the landlord fails to comply.
Although no Oregon appellate case has yet construed
In sum, we conclude that the proper application of
In the instant case, tenant established that landlord had failed to comply with
Finally, we briefly address landlord‘s two remaining assignments of error. In landlord‘s second assignment of error, landlord contends that the trial court erred in concluding that tenant‘s rental agreement did not permit “nail and mail” service, and in concluding that landlord‘s termination notice was invalid. Even if the trial court indeed erred as to those rulings, however, any error was harmless. In the trial court, the parties originally scheduled trial for November 2019 but stipulated to reset the trial date to December. In doing so, they agreed that only claims and counterclaims that had accrued as of November 2019 would be litigated. In light of that time frame, landlord sought possession for nonpayment of $825 for November‘s rent. Because, as we just determined, tenant is entitled to $960 in damages on his counterclaim, landlord would not have been entitled to possession in any event, even if the court had found its “nail and mail” service of the termination notice to be valid. See
Reversed and remanded.
