f 1] By this аppeal the United States of America seeks a modification, small in amount, but of potential importance in rent control, of a judgment it has obtained in the district court against an overcharging landlord. Under the district judge’s findings of fact, which are hot in dispute here, the overcharge of rent for an apartment in New Haven, Connecticut, made by defendant between April 1, 1949, and October 31, 1951 (when tile rent was validly increased), was $497; of this, the amount accruing within the year before the commencement of the Government’s suit was $106. The district court concluded on the evidence that, while defendant’s violation was not willful, it was “the result oí failure to take practicable precautions” against its occurrence since made without attempt to ascertain the law, and hence defendant could not avail himself of the Chandler defense, so-called, limiting all damages to the amount of the overcharge. Housing and Rent Act of 1947, as amended, § 205 (a), 50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 1895(a), superseding Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, as amended, § 205(e), 50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 925(e). But the court also concluded that the defendant’s negligence was self-neutralizing; his failure to acquaint himself with the law had led to his not seeking an increase in the rent, which would have been allowable to an ovеr-all amount substantially as large as the overcharges. While this was irrelevant as a legal defense, it did affect the exercise of judicial discretion, making the case in substance one for restitution, rather than for a penalty. The judge felt himself bound under the statute just cited to award the United States as a minimum the amount of the overcharge for one year, namely, $106; but he then went on to give judgment for the total amount of overcharge, $497, to be disbursed by the plaintiff to the tenant (the latter being found and willing to аccept) and provided that “the payment by defendant of said Four Hundred and Ninety-seven ($497) Dollars shall satisfy the award of damages” first made. It is this last provision which the Government attacks and seeks to have stricken here.
The Government asserts that under thе law the award of $106 is mandatory and no discretion is permitted the judge to pass its benefits on to the tenant. This raises a question purely of law. Had Judge Hincks the power, we do not think the exercise of his discretion could be properly attacked. Here he has held that a novice at the renting of real estate has penalized himself by his ignorance of the law, and that refund to the tenant, who gets this *804 substantial benefit, is all that the law should demand. We turn therefore to the statutes.
The legislative ups and downs оf price control, particularly as applied to rents, have not given us exactly clear-cut provisions with which to deal. From the beginning in 1942 the statutes above cited have provided a penalty for charges above legal ceiling prices. Before the 1947 amendments and after the 1951 amendments the award might be such an amount not more than three times the overcharge (and now at least $50), as the court in its discretion might determine; during the period 1947-1951 it had to be treble the overcharge. Until the 1944 amendment and again from the 1947 to the 1949 amendments the tenant alone could sue, within a year; from 1944 to 1947 and since 1949, if the person overcharged did not sue within thirty days after the violation, the United States could sue at any time within a year. These statutory-variations are described in many cases, e. g., Mattox v. United States, 9 Cir.,
An action for restitution of the overcharge is not in terms authorized in any of these successive Acts. But in the leading case of Porter v. Warner Holding Co.,
Against this background the Government argues very strongly that the two remedies are entirely distinct and that the minimum award of the action “at law” ■must be kept entirely separate — and for governmental coffers alone — from the equitable remedy of restitution. But this, it seems to us, is to compartmentalize the law in ways not specified in the governing statutes or decisions and to a certain extent inconsistent with what has necessarily been held in other situations. Although no express provisions so state, the direction for payment to the tenant by way of restitution of money collected by the Government appears usual and is not challenged herе; and while the Government originally claimed either treble damages for a year or, in the event restitution was ordered, double damages for a year as additional penalty, it appears to recognize, as it must, the right of the district court to limit the аmount of total award against the landlord to single recovery of the overcharge just as was done. The narrow scope of the issue is whether the judge lacks power to direct the Government to pay over to the tenant the amount of thе last year’s overcharge which it recovered as damages. . The question remains the same, of course, if we must employ labels to say that the judge has limited restitution to $391 and awarded damages of $106. For who is to get the damage award?
Here the Government betrays some inconsistency itself in limiting1 its demands—
*805
a policy “always taken,” as it says — to double damages where restitution is being ordered. Judge Magruder for his court lias argued cogently that Congress, in stating tlic limits of statutory damages, has intended to limit all recоvery, even in a willful case, to treble the overcharge. Cobleigh v. Woods, 1 Cir.,
On the other side, restitution was granted without statutory damages in United States v. Leslie Apartments, D.C.E.D.N.Y.,
The Government seeks to distinguish that case because of its prayer for damages, to which Judge Magruder does allude, wherein it had asked for treble the overcharges collected by the defendant within one year “ ‘or, in the event that restitution to said tenant be ordered, that judgment for damages recovered by the plaintiff be reduced by the amount of such restitution.’ ”
*806 But wе think there is a yet deeper objection to the attempted distinction: nowhere in the Acts is such discretion to grant or withhold mercy to a willful or negligent violator committed to the power of the Government officials. Whatever discretion is granted by the statutes is .committed to the courts, and there it should remain. Consent or prayer by the Government should be a matter for the court to consider, but should not control. Indeed, the Government’s argument here seems also somewhat self-defeating. If the court lacks discretion and the amount of the statutory damage is absolutely due the Treasurer of the United States, what power do the price control officials have to consent to payments at variance with what they conceive to he the statutory command ?
Nor does the history of the legislation bear out the rather extreme claim of the Government. As we have seen, courts, including the Supreme Court, have had to work out an operable system of law enforcement employing the equitable principles of restitution in the historic discretion of the chancellor. In the many revisions of the Acts, no reaction against this construction has been noted, or limitation on judicial power suggested. The legislative history in fact points the оther way. Fór a time, e. g., 1947-1949, the tenant, as we have seen, alone could collect the statutory damage. The change in 1949 was not made to bring in some meager accruals to the United States Treasury. It was made because the “provision has not рroven effective in securing compliance with the law. For various reasons tenants are reluctant to report violations or to pursue their remedies under the law. Accordingly the committee has included a provision that if the tenant fails to institute such action within 30 days, the United States may institute the action and thereafter the tenant would be barred from bringing an action for the same violation. This provision should be a deterrent to any black market in overceiling rents.” Sen.Rep. No. 127, 81st Cong., 1st Sess., 2 U.S. Codе Cong.Serv.1949, pp. 1149, 1150. See this statement quoted with other congressional references in United States v. Gian-oulis, 3 Cir.,
The statutory plan therefore seems to us tolerably clear. To stamp out black marketeering, the wrongdoer must face at least a minimum award against him. But Congress has not expressly tied the hands of the court as to disposition of the refunds demanded; on the contrary, it has gone far to uphold the wise discretion of the courts. We think Judge ITincks was correct in holding that such discretion included also the narrow point at issue here.
Affirmed.
