Pearson v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 20-AA-351
    ROY L. PEARSON, JR., PETITIONER,
    v.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA RENTAL HOUSING COMMISSION, RESPONDENT,
    and
    GARDENIA BROWN, INTERVENOR.
    Petition for Review of Orders of the
    District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission
    (RH-TP-14-30,482, 14-30,555)
    (Submitted February 11, 2021                                 Decided March 3, 2022)
    Roy L. Pearson, Jr., pro se.
    Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L.
    AliKhan, Solicitor General at the time the statement was filed, Caroline S. Van Zile,
    Principal Deputy Solicitor General, Carl J. Schifferle, Deputy Solicitor General, and
    Richard S. Love, Senior Assistant Attorney General, filed a statement in lieu of brief.
    Dorene Haney for intervenor.
    Before EASTERLY, MCLEESE, and DEAHL, Associate Judges.
    MCLEESE, Associate Judge:            Petitioner Roy L. Pearson, Jr. filed
    administrative petitions against his landlord, intervenor Gardenia Brown. Mr.
    2
    Pearson seeks review of decisions of the District of Columbia Rental Housing
    Commission (RHC) granting him some but not all of the relief he sought. Mr.
    Pearson argues that the RHC erroneously affirmed decisions of the Office of
    Administrative Hearings (OAH) (1) limiting Mr. Pearson’s damages to rent amounts
    illegally demanded within three years of the filing of his petitions; (2) declining to
    award treble damages; and (3) refusing to permit additional evidence of damages
    that accrued after the close of an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.
    I.
    Unless otherwise noted, the following appears to be undisputed. Mr. Pearson
    began renting from Ms. Brown in 1999, at a monthly rate of $585. Although Ms.
    Brown had previously claimed an exemption from the rent-control statute, she did
    not provide Mr. Pearson with a copy of the exemption form at the beginning of his
    tenancy. In 2010, Ms. Brown filed a new claim of exemption, which she also did
    not provide to Mr. Pearson. During the rental period, Ms. Brown raised the rent
    multiple times. In 2014, Mr. Pearson filed petitions asserting, among other things,
    that Ms. Brown did not have a valid claim of exemption from the rent-control
    provisions of the Rental Housing Act of 1985 (RHA), 
    D.C. Code § 42-3501.01
     et
    3
    seq. (2020 Repl.), and that Ms. Brown had failed to comply with the RHA’s rent-
    control provisions when raising Mr. Pearson’s rent.
    An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) held an evidentiary hearing. At the
    evidentiary hearing, Mr. Pearson asked that the record be kept open until right before
    the ALJ ruled, so that Mr. Pearson could provide proof of additional damages
    resulting from Ms. Brown’s continuing illegal rent demands. The ALJ denied that
    request. Mr. Pearson subsequently renewed the request, which was again denied. In
    denying the request, the ALJ explained that Mr. Pearson could file a new petition to
    prove damages that occurred after the date of the evidentiary hearing. The ALJ also
    stated that Mr. Pearson had been given the opportunity to amend his pending
    petitions to add claims relating to continued illegal rent demands, but Mr. Pearson
    had declined to do so.
    On the merits, the ALJ determined that Ms. Brown’s claim of exemption from
    rent control was void ab initio, because Ms. Brown did not provide Mr. Pearson with
    notice of her exemption from rent control at the beginning of his tenancy or when
    she filed for another exemption in 2010. Accordingly, the ALJ found that all rent
    increases Ms. Brown took or demanded were invalid.            The ALJ determined,
    however, that the RHA’s statute of limitations (
    D.C. Code § 42-3502.06
    (e) (2020
    4
    Repl.)) prevented Mr. Pearson from obtaining relief with respect to rent increases
    occurring more than three years before Mr. Pearson filed his petitions. Because Mr.
    Pearson’s monthly rent at the time he filed his petitions was $949, the ALJ (1)
    ordered Ms. Brown to refund Mr. Pearson any rent over that amount that Ms. Brown
    had demanded during the three years before Mr. Pearson’s petitions; and (2) reduced
    Mr. Pearson’s monthly rent to $949 until Ms. Brown took a legal rent increase. The
    ALJ declined to order award treble damages, concluding that Ms. Brown had not
    acted in bad faith.
    The RHC affirmed.
    II.
    This court will not disturb [the] RHC’s factual
    findings unless they are unsupported by substantial
    evidence in the record. We also give considerable
    deference to the RHC’s interpretation of the statutes it
    administers and the regulations it promulgates[, and] we
    will sustain the RHC’s interpretation of those statutes and
    regulations unless it is unreasonable or embodies a
    material misconception of the law, even if a different
    interpretation also may be supportable. We are the final
    arbiter of the meaning of our case law, but to the extent
    that the RHC has used our case law to assist it in
    interpreting ambiguities in the RHA and implementing
    regulations, we continue to defer to the RHC in its exercise
    of statutory interpretation.
    5
    United Dominion Mgmt. Co. v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    101 A.3d 426
    , 429 (D.C. 2014) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    A.
    Mr. Pearson argues that he should have been awarded damages in the amount
    of all rent that Ms. Brown demanded during Mr. Pearson’s entire tenancy. Mr.
    Pearson’s theory in support of that argument is that Ms. Brown never validly
    requested exemption from rent control during Mr. Pearson’s tenancy; all of Ms.
    Brown’s demands for rent therefore were unlawful; and the lawful monthly rent
    therefore was $0. The RHC did not accept that argument, concluding, among other
    things, that Mr. Pearson had not timely presented the argument to the ALJ. We
    uphold the RHC’s timeliness ruling.
    Mr. Pearson initially sought damages in the amount of all rents demanded
    above $585 per month, which was the rental amount at the beginning of his tenancy.
    It appears that Mr. Pearson did not explicitly indicate that he was seeking damages
    in the amount of all of the demanded rent until (at the earliest) March 2016, which
    was over two years after he filed his petition and over seventeen months after the
    ALJ held an evidentiary hearing and closed the record in the case.
    6
    Mr. Pearson argues that he did timely raise the issue before the ALJ, in the
    initial petition and in filings in March and August of 2014. We disagree. In none of
    those filings did Mr. Pearson explicitly indicate that he was claiming that the lawful
    monthly rent was $0. To the contrary, Mr. Pearson’s petition requested that the
    lawful monthly rent be determined to be $585, and his August 2014 pre-hearing
    filing made the same request. The March 2014 filing was a motion to compel
    discovery, and it raised the possibility that the lawful monthly rent might be lower
    than $585. That discovery motion was granted in part and denied in part, and Mr.
    Pearson has not challenged that ruling in this court. Thereafter, Mr. Pearson
    continued to argue that the lawful monthly rent should be $585.
    Given those circumstances, we see no basis to overturn the RHC’s conclusion
    that Mr. Pearson did not properly preserve his contention that the lawful monthly
    rent was $0. “In the absence of exceptional circumstances, a reviewing court will
    refuse to consider contentions not presented before the administrative agency at the
    appropriate time.” Goodman v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    573 A.2d 1293
    , 1301 (D.C. 1990). We see no such exceptional circumstances here.
    B.
    7
    Mr. Pearson argues that the RHC erred by limiting his damages to rent
    increases unlawfully demanded within three years of the filing of Mr. Pearson’s
    petitions. We uphold the ruling of the RHC.
    
    D.C. Code § 42-3502.06
    (e) provides in pertinent part that a “tenant may
    challenge a rent adjustment implemented under any section of this chapter by filing
    a petition . . . . No petition may be filed with respect to any rent adjustment . . . more
    than 3 years after the effective date of the adjustment.” The RHC ruled that Mr.
    Pearson was precluded by this provision from challenging rent increases that
    occurred more than three years before the filing of his petitions, because the term
    “effective date” means the date on which a rent increase is implemented, whether or
    not the landlord had properly claimed exemption from rent control.
    The RHC’s ruling finds substantial support in our decision in United
    Dominion, 101 A.3d at 431-33.           In that case, this court upheld the RHC’s
    determination that, for purposes of the RHA’s statute of limitations, the effective
    date of a rent adjustment is “the date on which a landlord issues a notice to the tenant
    that it is increasing the rent charged,” even if the increase was not legally permissible
    8
    at the time the tenant was notified. Id. at 431. In our view, the RHC’s decision in
    this case is a reasonable application of the principle upheld in United Dominion.
    We are not persuaded by Mr. Pearson’s arguments to the contrary. First, Mr.
    Pearson argues that unlawful rent increases cannot properly be viewed as “rent
    adjustments” within the meaning of § 42-3502.06(e). That argument, however, is
    flatly inconsistent with the holding of United Dominion.
    Second, Mr. Pearson argues that this case is different from United Dominion,
    because the RHC in this case determined that Ms. Brown’s claim of exemption from
    rent control was void ab initio, whereas United Dominion involved untimely
    registration of rent-ceiling increases. We do not agree that this difference required
    the RHC to permit Mr. Pearson to recover damages for rent that was demanded more
    than three years before Mr. Pearson’s petitions. It is true that items deemed to be
    void ab initio are often treated as if they never existed. E.g., Wagshal v. Selig, 
    403 A.2d 338
    , 341 (D.C. 1979). That is not a flat rule, however. See, e.g., Brown v. M
    St. Five, LLC, 
    56 A.3d 765
    , 779 (D.C. 2012) (“[I]n some cases, the conclusion that
    a contract is void ab initio does not absolve the party who executed the contract on
    behalf of the nonexistent corporation of the obligations arising thereunder.”).
    9
    In limiting Mr. Pearson’s recovery in this case, the RHC interpreted the three-
    year statute of limitations in § 42-3502.06(e) to broadly “prohibit petitions against
    rent levels put in place more than three years prior to the petitions’ filing.” In support
    of that conclusion, the RHC relied on this court’s decision in Kennedy v. District of
    Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    709 A.2d 94
    , 96-99 (D.C. 1998). In Kennedy, we
    upheld the RHC’s “logical and not unreasonable reading of the purpose underlying
    [the provision now codified at § 42-3502.06(e)]: to simplify rent control litigation
    by confining the inquiry to the three year period immediately preceding the
    commencement of a tenant action, thus relieving the agency of the onerous
    administrative burdens imposed under pre-existing law.” Id. at 99-100. That
    principle can reasonably be applied to cases, such as this one, in which the landlord
    had failed to file a proper claim of exemption from rent control. See Nelson v.
    District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    184 A.3d 864
    , 866-67 (D.C. 2018)
    (RHA’s statute of limitations also applies to claims resting on improper filing of
    rent-ceiling adjustments; “the statute of limitations exists to preclude merits
    arguments, no matter their basis”).
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Mr. Pearson has not demonstrated
    that the RHC’s application of § 42-3502.06(e) in this case was “unreasonable or
    embodies a material misconception of the law.” United Dominion, 101 A.3d at 429.
    10
    C.
    Mr. Pearson argues that the RHC erred by failing to award him treble damages
    under 
    D.C. Code § 42-3509.01
    (a) (2020 Repl.), which provides for treble damages
    if a landlord demands excessive rent knowingly and in bad faith. We affirm the
    RHC’s ruling.
    In declining to award treble damages, the ALJ noted various definitions of
    “bad faith,” including “the intent to deceive or defraud”; “the conscious doing of a
    wrong because of dishonest motive or moral obliquity”; “a deliberate refusal to
    perform without just . . . cause or excuse”; and “a continuing, heedless disregard of
    a duty.” The ALJ then considered the circumstances of Ms. Brown’s demanding of
    illegal rent during the period at issue. In sum, the ALJ concluded that Ms. Brown
    had not acted in bad faith for four reasons. First, Ms. Brown did not know that her
    conduct was unlawful. Second, Ms. Brown’s rent increases were not prompted by a
    bad motive but rather reflected a desire to recoup expenses and charge a market rate.
    Third, although Mr. Pearson did eventually notify Ms. Brown of Mr. Pearson’s claim
    that the rent increases were illegal, Ms. Brown essentially ignored Mr. Pearson’s
    communications on the point, because (a) by that point the relationship between the
    two had become very contentious, (b) the communications “contained insulting
    11
    language and [Ms. Brown] felt bullied and intimidated” by Mr. Pearson’s repeated
    and lengthy communications, and (c) the communications included some legally
    incorrect claims. Fourth, under the circumstances, Ms. Brown’s conduct, though
    imprudent, was not so culpable as to warrant an award of treble damages.
    The RHC affirmed the ALJ’s finding of no bad faith. The RHC explained that
    it would defer to the ALJ’s ruling as long as that ruling was supported by substantial
    evidence. The RHC also noted multiple definitions of “bad faith,” but explained that
    those definitions significantly overlap and do not all apply in all circumstances. In
    the context of the present case, the RHC concluded, the ALJ had appropriately
    inquired into whether Ms. Brown’s conduct was “deceptive, fraudulent, interested,
    sinister, consciously wrong, morally oblique, or otherwise bad.” The RHC then
    concluded that there was substantial evidence to support the ALJ’s finding of no bad
    faith.
    “We owe deference to the [RHC’s] interpretation of bad faith in the specific
    context of the Rental Housing Act.” Bernstein Mgmt. Corp. v. District of Columbia
    Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    952 A.2d 190
    , 198 (D.C. 2008). Given that deference, we
    see no basis to reverse the RHC’s decision affirming the ALJ’s decision not to award
    treble damages. First, we view as reasonable the RHC’s legal conclusion that “bad
    12
    faith” under the RHA can be defined in a variety of overlapping ways not all of
    which would necessarily be applicable in a given case. Cf., e.g., Allworth v. Howard
    Univ., 
    890 A.2d 194
    , 201-02 (D.C. 2006) (stating, in context of contract law, that
    “[t]he phrase ‘good faith’ is used in a variety of contexts, and its meaning varies
    somewhat with the context”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Second, Mr. Pearson contends that treble damages were required if Ms.
    Brown’s conduct was “heedless.” It is not clear that Mr. Pearson is correct on that
    point. See, e.g., Nelson, 184 A.3d at 870 (in upholding RHC’s refusal to award treble
    damages, court describes “bad faith” under RHA as “intent to misrepresent” and
    notes that RHC “applied this standard or one substantially similar to it”) (ellipses
    omitted). In any event, the RHC reasonably explained that “heedless[ness]” in the
    present context should be viewed as equivalent to “malicious thought” or
    “recklessness.” We think it clear that neither the ALJ nor the RHC viewed Ms.
    Brown’s conduct as heedless in that sense.
    Third, we conclude that the substantial evidence noted above supported the
    ALJ’s conclusion that Ms. Brown did not act in bad faith. Cf. Nelson, 184 A.3d at
    870-71 (RHC’s refusal to award treble damages supported by evidence that landlord
    did not intend to deceive tenants).
    13
    D.
    Finally, Mr. Pearson argues that the RHC erred by upholding the ALJ’s refusal
    to permit Mr. Pearson to prove additional damages arising from Ms. Brown’s
    continued unlawful demands for rent after the date of the evidentiary hearing. We
    see no basis for reversal in the circumstances of this case.
    Mr. Pearson argues that the RHC’s ruling in this case contradicts Levy v.
    District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 
    126 A.3d 684
     (D.C. 2015). We
    disagree. In that case, Mr. Levy challenged “the RHC’s practice of limiting damages
    to the date of the last evidentiary hearing,” arguing that the practice “prevents tenants
    from establishing the full measure of their damages in cases in which there is a delay
    between the evidentiary hearing and the ALJ’s ruling.” 
    Id. at 692
    . We “uph[e]ld as
    reasonable the RHC’s general approach of limiting damages to the date of the last
    evidentiary hearing.” Id.; see also Nelson, 184 A.3d at 869 n.5 (“We have affirmed
    the [RHC’s] practice of terminating refunds [as of the date of the last evidentiary
    hearing], even when a housing provider subsequently demands allegedly unlawful
    rent.”).
    14
    We acknowledged in Levy that tenants would be entitled to recover damages
    that accrued after the close of the last evidentiary hearing. 126 A.3d at 692. We
    explained, however, that tenants had ways to address that issue. Id. We noted two
    such approaches: tenants “could request in advance that the ALJ convene a separate
    hearing on damages” or “could file a prompt motion to reopen the proceeding to
    more accurately establish damages.” Id. We did not, however, require ALJs to
    follow either of those two illustrative approaches. Id.
    In the present case, the ALJ suggested two other approaches available to Mr.
    Pearson: filing separate petitions challenging post-hearing damages or amending
    other pending petitions that he had filed against Ms. Brown to include such damages.
    The RHC concluded that the ALJ’s handling of this issue was not an abuse of
    discretion, given that Mr. Pearson had the option of amending other pending
    petitions to include post-hearing damages.
    We review the RHC’s ruling deferentially. See Levy, 126 A.3d at 692
    (reviewing for reasonableness RHC’s decision to limit damages to date of last
    evidentiary hearing). We conclude that the RHC reasonably held that the ALJ acted
    permissibly, by providing Mr. Pearson with the option of amending other pending
    petitions to include post-hearing damages. Mr. Pearson objects to that alternative,
    15
    but he has identified no concrete prejudice he suffered as a result of the ALJ’s ruling.
    To the contrary, Ms. Brown asserts that Mr. Pearson subsequently took that
    alternative and recovered post-hearing damages in connection with a different
    petition that Mr. Pearson had filed. Mr. Pearson objects to that assertion, contending
    that the assertion rests on information outside the record in this case. We need not
    address that issue. Whether or not Mr. Pearson in fact has obtained post-hearing
    damages in connection with another petition, the RHC reasonably concluded that the
    availability of that alternative permitted the ALJ in this case to decline to expand the
    record in this case beyond the record at the close of the evidentiary hearing.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the orders of the RHC.
    So ordered.