Court Opinion

ID: 2799192
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-05-07 13:05:25.763628+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:23.583736
License: Public Domain

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             DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                                 No. 13-CV-1158

                          CHARLES MINES, APPELLANT,

                                        V.

                          CATHIE GILL, INC., APPELLEE.

                         Appeal from the Superior Court
                          of the District of Columbia
                                (LTB-16989-13)

                     (Hon. Anthony C. Epstein, Trial Judge)

(Submitted October 16, 2014                                 Decided May 7, 2015)

      Charles Mines, pro se.

      Carol S. Blumenthal, was on the brief for appellee.

      Before FISHER and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and BELSON, Senior Judge.

      EASTERLY, Associate Judge: The issue presented in this case is whether a

trial court may grant a landlord (or his agent) judgment of possession and an award

of back rent based on a rent increase which the tenant has objected to and refused

to pay. A landlord of a non-rent-controlled property, who is unconstrained by

lease terms, may certainly seek to rent his property for any amount he thinks the

market will bear; and if the tenant in occupancy refuses to pay the rent a landlord
                                         2

wishes to charge, the landlord may direct the tenant to vacate the apartment so the

landlord may rent to someone else. But, as this court’s precedent makes clear, a

landlord may not unilaterally raise the rent over a tenant’s objection and then

obtain a back rent award for the amount the tenant has refused to pay. Because

Cathie Gill, Inc., improperly received such an award, we now reverse and remand

for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                         I. Facts

      The tenants in this case, Charles Mines and his wife, initially rented the

property in question, an apartment, in June 2011. They signed a one-year lease

setting their rent at $3,000/month. Shortly before the lease expired in 2012, the

two owners of the apartment (“the landlords”) asked the tenants to sign a new one-

year lease with a 3% rent increase. The tenants ultimately declined to sign a new

lease but remained in the apartment; it was their understanding that their expired

lease terms remained in effect. As to the landlord’s understanding of the situation

the record is silent, but there is no indication in the record that the landlords

objected or asked the tenants to leave.         Instead, this arrangement continued,

apparently without incident, for seven months. Then, at the end of 2012, Cathie
                                         3

Gill, a management company hired by the landlords, contacted the tenants. Cathie

Gill informed the tenants that, going forward, it would collect the rent on the

landlords’ behalf, and it gave the tenants notice of a 6% rent increase ($3,180),

effective February 1, 2013. The tenants again declined to pay an increase in rent

and continued to pay $3,000/month, apparently still to the landlord.1 Again, there

is no indication in the record that Cathie Gill (or the landlords) objected to the

tenants’ failure to pay the rent increase or asked the tenants to leave. Five months

later, on June 28, 2013, Cathie Gill filed suit for a judgment of possession and an

award of back rent based on the unpaid rent increase.

      At trial, Mr. Mines proceeded pro se; Cathie Gill was represented by

counsel. The proceedings were informal and took the form of a conversation

between the court, counsel for Cathie Gill, and Mr. Mines. Neither party disputed

the history of their relationship detailed above. Mr. Mines argued that he and his

wife had never agreed to pay more for their apartment and thus they were only

obligated to pay the landlords the $3,000/month as negotiated in the (expired) June

      1
          Cathie Gill presented as an exhibit on appeal a letter from the landlords
sent after the date of the desired rent increase reminding the tenants to send their
payments to Cathie Gill. This is the last communication in the record between the
tenants and the landlords (or Cathie Gill as the landlords’ agent) before Cathie Gill
filed suit.
                                          4

2011 lease.2 To support this argument, Mr. Mines attempted to rely on paragraph

24 of his expired lease addressing “termination/hold-over,” which provided, inter

alia, that “[i]f Tenant shall hold over after the expiration of the term of this Lease,

tenant shall, in the absence of any written agreement to the contrary, be a Tenant

from month to month at the monthly rate in effect during the last month of the

expiring term.”3 Meanwhile, Cathie Gill acknowledged the tenants’ continued

payment of $3,000/month, but argued that the tenants were responsible for paying

the demanded rent increase.

      The trial court ruled for Cathie Gill, explaining to Mr. Mines that once the

lease expired, the landlords, with reasonable notice, were free to raise the rent in

any amount they chose (since the apartment was not rent-controlled) and that Mr.

      2
         Mr. Mines also argued that the landlords could not engage a property
manager not identified in the (expired) June 2011 lease and that they had not
properly registered with the District of Columbia. He has not pursued these
arguments on appeal.
      3
         The gravamen of Mr. Mines’s argument was that he and his wife had not
agreed to the rent increase, and thus this issue was adequately presented in the trial
court and preserved for our review. That said, we have no doubt that the manner in
which this case was litigated by a pro se litigant, and in particular, that Mr.
Mines’s focus on his expired lease and his arguments why he thought the landlords
were not authorized to raise the rent, see supra note 2, obscured the central issue
before the trial court: i.e., whether Cathie Gill, as the landlords’ agent, could
obtain a back rent award based on a rent increase to which the tenants had
objected.
                                         5

Mines and his wife, if they remained in the apartment, were obligated to pay that

amount. The trial court accordingly awarded $1,586 in back rent, late fees, and

court costs to Cathie Gill.

                                   II. Analysis

      We review de novo the following question of law: whether, based on the

facts undisputed by the parties, the tenants had an obligation to pay the demanded

rent increase.4 Mr. Mines, proceeding pro se, argued that he and his wife were

entitled to remain in the apartment, paying the same amount of rent set by the

expired lease.    The trial court determined, however, that Cathie Gill, as the

landlords’ agent, was entitled to raise the rent with reasonable notice, and that the

tenants would be obligated to pay if they remained in possession. In other words,

the trial court adopted Cathie Gill’s argument that the landlord could unilaterally

determine the amount of rent to be paid. As with any type of contract, however,

      4
          See Hart v. Vermont Inv. Ltd. P’ship, 667 A.2d 578, 582 (D.C. 1995)
(reviewing the “substantive rules of contract law” relating to a lease de novo,
specifically whether there was a “meeting of the minds”); cf. Sarete, Inc. v. 1344 U
St. Ltd. P’ship, 871 A.2d 480, 490 (D.C. 2005) (acknowledging that whether
appellants had status of tenant was a legal question properly reviewed de novo).
                                         6

there must be both an offer and acceptance before there is an enforceable

agreement. The record before us establishes that there was no agreement, express

or implied, for the tenants to pay a 6% rent increase for a month-to-month tenancy

after their lease expired in June 2012. And in the absence of such an agreement,

the court could not award the landlords back rent, although it could award the

landlords damages based on fair use and occupancy value (if Cathie Gill presented

such evidence).

        We begin our analysis by clarifying what, if any, agreement the landlords

and the tenants had vis-a-vis the payment of rent at the time that Cathie Gill, as an

agent for the landlord, sought to increase the tenants’ rent in February 2013. Mr.

Mines argued at trial, as he does on appeal, not only that he and his wife did not

agree to pay a 6% rent increase, but also that the June 2011 lease, in particular

paragraph 24 (addressing termination/holdovers), was still operative in February

2013, and froze their rent to the amount bargained for in the lease. But the lease

was only for one year, and it had expired by the time Cathie Gill sought to raise the

rent.
                                          7

      This does not mean, however, that the landlords and the tenants had no

legally recognized agreement with respect to the tenants’ continued occupancy of

the apartment. At the end of a contractual lease term, if a new lease is not signed

but the tenant remains, a landlord has two choices: the landlord may refuse to

allow the tenant to remain in the property5 or the landlord may implicitly agree to

the tenant’s continued occupation of the property and a holdover tenancy may

commence.6 The creation of such a tenancy is a function of statute in the District.7

This is a periodic, month-to-month tenancy, whereby the tenant is bound to the

original lease’s terms, including the amount of rent.8 Each party to this implicit

      5
         See D.C. Code § 42-3201 (2012 Repl.) (“When real estate is leased for a
certain term no notice to quit shall be necessary, but the landlord shall be entitled
to the possession, without such notice, immediately upon the expiration of the
term.”).
      6
         See D.C. Code § 42-520 (2012 Repl.) (“All estates which by construction
of the courts were estates from year to year at common law, as where a tenant goes
into possession and pays rent without an agreement for a term, or where a tenant
for years, after the expiration of his term, continues in possession and pays rent and
the like, and all verbal hirings by the month or at any specified rate per month,
shall be deemed estates by sufferance.”).
      7
          Id.
      8
         See, e.g., Sanchez v. Eleven Fourteen, Inc., 623 A.2d 1179, 1181 (D.C.
1993) (“A holdover tenant is bound by the terms and conditions of the original
lease and is liable to the landlord at least for rent or its equivalent.”); Estate of
Wells v. Estate of Smith, 576 A.2d 707, 712 (D.C. 1990) (“[W]here a tenant holds
over, there is an implied continuation of all the terms of the previous agreement,
including covenants to maintain.”); Friedman v. Sherman, 74 A.2d 57, 58 (D.C.
1950) (“A tenant continuing in possession and paying rent under an expired lease
becomes a tenant at sufferance and such tenancy is impliedly subject to the
(continued . . .)
                                          8

agreement is entitled to a 30-day notice to end this tenancy.9 The landlords in this

case opted not to evict the tenants and thus a holdover tenancy commenced in June

2012.

        The question is what happened to this holdover agreement when, seven

months into the holdover tenancy, Cathie Gill notified the tenants that, in a

month’s time, the rent would increase by 6%. Cathie Gill took the position at trial

that, the tenants’ objection to the rent increase notwithstanding, the fact that the

tenants had remained in the apartment meant that they were obligated to pay the

increased rental amount. Put another way, Cathie Gill argued that the terms of the

holdover tenancy were unilaterally altered by the landlords and that the tenants

were bound by this change. This is not the law.

(. . . continued)
provisions of the expired lease.”); Hampton v. Mott Motors, 32 A.2d 247, 248
(D.C. 1943) (“We think the reasonable construction of Section 820 is that [it] . . .
does not have the effect of releasing either the landlord or the tenant from the
implied obligation that the holding over is subject to all the covenants and terms of
the original lease applicable to the new situation.”).
        9
         D.C. Code § 42-3202 (2012 Repl.) (“A tenancy from month to month, or
from quarter to quarter, may be terminated by a 30 days notice in writing from the
landlord to the tenant to quit, or by such a notice from the tenant to the landlord of
his intention to quit, said notice to expire, in either case, on the day of the month
from which such tenancy commenced to run.”).
                                           9

      “[A] unilateral statement of rent does not per se create a contract.”10 Instead,

all contracts, including contracts to rent property, require offer and acceptance, i.e.,

“a meeting of the minds.”11 The fact that a tenant has remained in an apartment

after a demanded rent increase does not necessarily indicate that such a meeting of

the minds has occurred. As the court explained in Groner, “[i]t is generally agreed

that where a landlord notifies a tenant that he must pay a higher rental if he

remains in possession and the tenant without objecting continues in possession, the

tenant will be regarded as having impliedly agreed to the increase and is bound to

pay it.”12 But “[i]f a landlord insists on one rate of rental and the tenant insists on

another, there is no meeting of the minds. . . . The law will not, by implication,

infer an acceptance by the defendant of the terms which he had so persistently

refused and which plaintiff had so insistently demanded as a condition.”13

      10
            Double H Hous. Corp. v. David, 947 A.2d 38, 43 n.11 (D.C. 2008)
(internal quotation marks omitted). We note that neither party cited Double H to
the trial court.
      11
          Groner v. Townhouse Realty, Inc., 235 A.2d 324, 325 (D.C. 1967). We
note that neither party cited Groner to the trial court.
      12
          Id. at 325 (emphasis added); see Summerbell v. McDonnell, 197 A.2d
150, 151 (D.C. 1964) (“The general rule is that where a tenant has notice from his
landlord that if he retains possession he must pay a higher rent, specified as to
amount, and the tenant remains in possession, he is deemed to have assented to the
increase.”).
      13
         Groner, 235 A.2d at 325 (internal quotation marks omitted); see Double
H, 947 A.2d 38 (declining to hold that a landlord was entitled to recover the
(continued . . .)
                                            10

      It was undisputed at trial that the tenants in this case refused to pay the rent

increase. Mr. Mines explained that he had not agreed to a 3% increase requested at

the end of his lease term and he had not agreed to the 6% rent increase announced

seven months into his holdover tenancy. And indeed Cathie Gill acknowledged

that Mr. Mines had objected by letter to the 6% rent increase and had continued to

pay $3,000 in rent until Cathie Gill filed suit. Under the circumstances, Cathie Gill

could not obtain a judgment for possession or for back rent based on a rent increase

it knew the tenants had refused to pay.14

      The only remaining question, then, is whether Cathie Gill, as the landlords’

agent, was entitled to damages based on fair use and occupancy value.15 More

(. . . continued)
amount of a rent increase from a holdover tenant who had objected to the
demanded rent increase but remained in his apartment paying his old rent).
         This court in Groner was swift to note that our holding did not “mean that
appellant could occupy [the contested property] free of charge.” 235 A.2d at 325.
Rather, the court explained he was “liable for the reasonable value of the use and
occupation of the space.” Id.; see Sanchez, 623 A.2d at 1182 n.5 (explaining that
the “measure of damages for the unlawful detention of leased premises” generally
turns on the fair and reasonable rental value, but also may include consequential
damages).
      14
          Cathie Gill relies on Molla v. Sanders, 981 A.2d 1197 (D.C. 2009), to
argue that landlords may unilaterally increase rent on holdover tenants, but Molla
did not pass judgment on that issue. Id. at 1201-02.
      15
           See supra note 13.
                                           11

particularly, the question is whether Cathie Gill is entitled to recover more than the

$3,000/month the landlords received while the tenants occupied the property.

Damages not having been recognized as Cathie Gill’s only recourse, no evidence

was presented to substantiate a damages award. Nor was Mr. Mines given the

opportunity to fight a damages award, perhaps by demonstrating that the landlords

had received and accepted his payment of $3,000 without reservation, thus

indicating that there had been accord and satisfaction.16 Remand of the case is thus

required to allow the parties to litigate these issues.

      For the reasons set forth above, we vacate the award of $1,586 in back rent,

late fees, and court costs to Cathie Gill and remand the case to the trial court for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.17

      16
          See Double H, 947 A.2d at 43 (finding that where the landlord had for
twelve months accepted payments made by the tenant at the lower rent, there was
accord and satisfaction and that the landlord could not recover for an arrearage
based on the tenant’s failure to pay a demanded rent increase).
      17
          In his brief to this court, Mr. Mines asks us to direct the trial court to
“have the sum total of the rent increase monies I have paid to date returned to me,”
which he represents as $2,846. This request concerns matters outside the record on
appeal and beyond the scope of our review of the trial court’s order awarding
Cathie Gill $1,586 in back rent. Thus we decline to address it.
       12

So ordered.