Court Opinion

ID: 6446677
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:23:02.218665+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:48.564141
License: Public Domain

Williams, J.
This is an action to recover rent paid to the defendant by the plaintiff in excess of the established maximum rent for the occupancy of an apartment in a building at 3 Alder Street, Waltham, owned by the defendant. The action is brought under the provisions of the Federal housing and rent act of 1947, 61 U. S. Sts. at Large, 193, § 205, as amended, which provides that “Any person who demands, accepts, or receives any payment of rent in excess of the maximum rent prescribed under section 204 shall be liable to the person from whom he demands, accepts, or receives such payment . . ..” The plaintiff occupied the apartment from September 17, 1949, until October 16, 1950, and paid to the defendant rent at the rate of $70 per month. During this period the established maximum rent was $33 per month. A judge of the Superior Court to whom the action was fried found for the defendant. The case is here on the plaintiff’s exceptions to the admission of evidence, to the denial of his motion for a new trial, and to rulings of the judge in connection therewith.
In the course of the trial the plaintiff called as a witness the rent director of the rent board of Waltham. On cross-examination he testified that on August 18, 1952, the defendant filed a printed form of petition designated as DIB *547by the office of rent stabilization in Cambridge setting forth that certain improvements were made to the apartment in the fall of 1949 and requesting an increase in the maximum legal rent. Asked if this petition “showed improvements so as to grant an increase to $70 in the establishment, ” he answered that “an increase to $70 per month was the action taken on the petition” and “that an increase was granted dated October 6, 1952, increasing the rent from $33 per month to $70 per month effective August 18, 1952.” The plaintiff duly excepted both to the admission of the question and to the answer. He also excepted to the admission of the petition which contained a list of the improvements which the defendant contended had been made in the apartment prior to the plaintiff’s occupancy, a request for adjustment of the rent, and the record of the resulting action of the board. The judge filed “memoranda” of his subsidiary findings which, so far as material to the plaintiff’s exceptions, were as follows: “On August 18, 1952, the defendant appeared at the office of the rent stabilization board of Waltham, and requested to be allowed an increase for the betterments that had been made in that apartment, and which the plaintiff admitted having received the benefits of; and on August 18, 1952, the said rent stabilization board allowed him to increase the rent from $33 to $70 a month. . . . [T]he original agreement entered into between the parties was made in good faith . . . [and] the defendant was put to great expense in fitting this apartment for use. ”
We think there was reversible error in the admission of the petition and the testimony relating to the consequent action of the board. In view of the findings above quoted, it cannot be said that it had no influence on the judge’s ultimate finding. The adjudication of the board in 1952 had no retroactive effect upon the maximum rent for which the plaintiff could legally be charged at the time of his occupancy or the liability of the defendant to repay such part of the excess which he had received within the year before the commencement of the plaintiff’s action. See *548Hogan v. Coleman, 326 Mass. 770, 776-777. Nor did this adjudication afford the defendant an equitable defence. A landlord “cannot take upon himself to increase the rent to a figure he thinks proper, and then, in defense to a suit for restitution of overcharges, offer to prove in the enforcement court the existence of a set of facts under which he would have been entitled to an increase had he applied for it under the applicable administrative procedures.” “If he does make such an overcharge without petitioning for an adjustment he . . . becomes irretrievably hable to make restitution. ” Dauksewicz v. United States, 194 Fed. (2d) 52, 55, 56 (C. A. 1).
It is unnecessary to deal with the other exceptions which relate to the denial of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

Exceptions sustained.