TENANTS OF 3039 Q STREET, N.W., Petitioners, v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA RENTAL ACCOMMODATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent, Tribby Properties, Inc., and Thomas D. Walsh, Inc., Intervenors.
No. 11276.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Argued May 19, 1977. Decided Sept. 1, 1978.
391 A.2d 785
Michael A. Cain, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Washington, D. C., with whom Louis P. Robbins, Principal Asst. Corp. Counsel, and John C. Salyer, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for respondent.
Lawrence L. Bell and Rosalyn B. Bell, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for intervenors.
Before KELLY, KERN and HARRIS, Associate Judges.
HARRIS, Associate Judge:
The tenants of 3039 Q Street, N.W., seek review of an order of the Rental Accommodations Commission (Commission).1 In determining the extent of a permissible rent increase for the Q Street property, the
I
The Rental Accommodations Act was promulgated with the goal of stabilizing rents in the District of Columbia by limiting landlords to an eight percent “rate of return” on a rental unit. See
[N]o more than two percent of the assessed market value of the housing accommodation may be deducted in any one year as a depreciation expense, unless and to only the extent any additional amounts are approved by the Rent Administrator pursuant to subsection (c) of section 45-1645.2 [See
id., § 45-1644(a)(3)(B)(4)(iv) .]
Once the net income thus had been computed, the rate of return was to be determined by dividing the net income by the assessed market value. See
A landlord seeking to achieve an eight percent “rate of return” thus was confined to a statutory formula in determining the extent of a permissible rent increase. Under the provisions of the former
II
In this case, intervenor Thomas D. Walsh, Inc., filed a petition for an increase as agent for intervenor Tribby. The tenants contested the request, and an examiner conducted a hearing. In determining whether or not the eight percent “rate of return” had been achieved, evidence as to the building‘s tax depreciation status was introduced. The building was constructed in 1924, and Tribby acquired it in 1930. In the intervening years, the building had been fully depreciated by Tribby for tax purposes.
Both sides appealed to the Commission. The Administrator‘s decision was affirmed in part and reversed in part. The Commission concluded that the landlord was entitled to subtract two percent of the assessed value of both the building and its site as a depreciation expense pursuant to
III
The Commission was created originally to administer the Rental Accommodations Act of 1975. See
IV
The concept of depreciation recognizes the deterioration and lessening in value of an asset arising from age and use. Different methods have been established to determine the rate at which an asset deteriorates. In the instant case, the Act allowed subtraction of a charge for depreciation, but did not make clear the method to be used in calculating that item.
The statute instructed the building owner to subtract from income “depreciation expenses (computed on a straight line basis) . . . .” See
The tenants argue that tax methods of calculating depreciation should be applicable here. They would have us construe the two percent limit as the maximum depreciation deduction available pursuant to
Affirmed.
KELLY, Associate Judge, dissenting:
Respondent Commission argues in this case that the statutory language of
(iv) depreciation expenses (computed on a straight line basis) of no more than two percent of the assessed market value of the housing accommodation may be deducted in any one year as a depreciation expense, unless and to only the extent that any additional amounts are approved by the Rent Administrator pursuant to subsection (c) of section [205] of this act;
Interpretation of this supposedly clear language led the Commission to conclude that a “depreciation expense” should become a “depreciation allowance,” reasoning in a footnote to its decision that
The City Council adopted a policy that apparently trades off the arbitrary two percent for the inclusion of land value in the base from which the “expense” is calculated. Since the value of land is included, depreciation “expense” is actually a misnomer and the Commission prefers to speak of an “allowance” of two percent of the total assessed value. Note, however, that depreciation in excess of two percent as allowed under Section 12.-10 of the Regulations, when documented by showing compliance with Internal Revenue guidelines, does not include depreciation allowance on the land.
Additionally, and inconsistently, the Commission argues on appeal that it is unclear why the parenthetical phrase “(computed on a straight line basis)” was included in the statute;1 hence, that language should be discounted in interpreting the statute.
In my judgment, when the statute speaks of depreciation expenses it speaks in the
history of the Act does not persuade us that it was unreasonable for the Commission not to limit the period during which a depreciation expense should be subtracted in the rent formula to the useful life of the building for tax purposes. Rather, we believe it was wholly reasonable for the Commission to conclude that it would serve the purpose of the amendment creating the depreciation deduction to allow a depreciation expense as long as the building is usable and is actually diminishing in value due to its inevitable physical deterioration over time.
