Varnum Properties, LLC v. DC Department of Consumer and Reglatory Affairs , 204 A.3d 117 ( 2019 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 16-AA-734
    VARNUM PROPERTIES, LLC, PETITIONER,
    V.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AND REGULATORY AFFAIRS, RESPONDENT.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the
    District of Columbia Office of
    Administrative Hearings
    (DCRA-112-15)
    (Submitted March 1, 2018                                    Decided March 14, 2019)
    Phillip J. Collins was on the brief for petitioner.
    Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim,
    Solicitor General at the time the brief was filed, Loren AliKhan, Deputy Solicitor
    General at the time the brief was filed, and Mary L. Wilson, Senior Assistant
    Attorney General at the time the brief was filed, were on the brief for respondent.
    Before GLICKMAN and THOMPSON, Associate Judges, and NEBEKER, Senior
    Judge.
    THOMPSON, Associate Judge:           On December 7, 2015, the District of
    Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (“DCRA”) revoked a
    building permit (Building Permit No. B1411058, hereafter “the Building Permit”)
    that had been issued to Westend Development LLC (“Westend Development”), the
    2
    trade name of Varnum Holdings, LLC (“Varnum Holdings”).                  Thereafter,
    petitioner Varnum Properties, LLC (“VP”) petitioned the Office of Administrative
    Hearings (“OAH”) for review of the DCRA revocation decision. After the OAH
    Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) raised sua sponte the issue of whether VP had
    standing to appeal the revocation decision, VP responded by filing a motion to add
    Varnum Holdings as an additional petitioner whose participation was “necessary to
    ‘effectively and completely adjudicate the dispute.’” In a May 9, 2016, Final
    Order (the “May 9 Order”), the OAH ALJ denied the motion to add Varnum
    Holdings as a party and dismissed VP’s petition on the ground that VP lacked
    standing to challenge the revocation.1 VP sought reconsideration of that ruling,
    and on July 8, 2016, the OAH ALJ issued an Order Denying Reconsideration of
    1
    The ALJ’s reference to “standing” was a reference to regulatory standing,
    i.e., standing to appeal under 12A DCMR § 105.6.4.1 (2015) (permitting an appeal
    by the “permit holder”), not to Article III-type standing, which requires a “personal
    injury fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct and likely to
    be redressed by the requested relief[,]” Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., 
    568 U.S. 85
    , 90
    (2013) (internal quotation marks omitted), and which must exist “at the time the
    complaint is filed,” 
    id. at 91
     (internal quotation marks omitted). OAH has
    sometimes dismissed cases for lack of actual injury-in-fact, see, e.g., District of
    Columbia for Reasonable Dev. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Consumer &
    Regulatory Affairs, No. 2017-DCRA-00021, 2017 D.C. Off. Adj. Hear. LEXIS 28,
    at *5 (OAH Dec. 11, 2017), but, in the orders in dispute here, the ALJ did not
    suggest (and respondent DCRA does not suggest) that VP lacked standing in that
    sense to challenge the revocation of the Building Permit.
    3
    Final Order (the “July 8 Order”). VP now seeks review of the May 9 and July 8
    Orders. We reverse and remand.
    I.
    The Building Permit authorized construction work at 1521 Varnum Street,
    N.W. (the “Property”) (specifically, the conversion of a single family dwelling into
    two flats). 2 VP asserts that the “underlying zoning” has been changed since the
    Building Permit was issued, with the result that “any new permit application for
    the same project would no longer be permitted.” VP further asserts that DCRA’s
    counsel has informed VP that “the only change to the Building Permit that would
    be considered would be a new application under the revised zoning regulations.”
    According to VP, this means that DCRA will not approve a request by VP to
    transfer the Building Permit to VP. 3
    2
    Elsewhere, the record suggests that the construction project was to
    convert the Property into a “pop-up” seven-unit apartment building, but that aspect
    of the project appears to be the subject of a building permit with a number different
    from the one assigned to the Building Permit in issue here.
    3
    See 12A DCMR § 105.3.8 (2016) (“The holder of a valid active building
    permit shall be authorized to amend it[.]”). DCRA takes the position that the
    revoked Building Permit “is not valid and is not active.” (emphasis removed).
    4
    In petitioning for review of the December 7, 2015, notice of revocation of
    the Building Permit, VP asserted that it was the “successor-in-interest to Varnum
    Holdings, LLC d/b/a Westend Development.” However, in an April 1, 2016, order
    denying VP’s first motion for summary judgment, the ALJ found that there was no
    record evidence that VP was the owner of the Property and no evidence of VP’s
    standing to appeal the revocation notice. As part of a subsequent, renewed motion
    for summary adjudication, VP submitted the affidavit of its managing member,
    Michael Taylor, to support VP’s assertion that VP was formerly known as AMT-
    Varnum, LLC (“AMT-Varnum”); that on or about November 12, 2015 (about three
    weeks prior to the notice of revocation), AMT-Varnum purchased the Property
    from Varnum Holdings, d/b/a Westend Development; and that VP therefore “is the
    current owner of the Property.”
    The ALJ ruled on VP’s renewed motion for summary judgment on April 11,
    2016. Citing 12A DCMR § 105.6.4.1 (2015) (“[t]he permit holder may appeal a
    notice of revocation . . . no later than 10 business days after service of written
    notice of the revocation upon the permit holder[]”), the ALJ explained that
    “[p]etitioner’s right to appeal the [n]otice of the proposed revocation is dependent
    on it being the holder of the permit.” The ALJ acknowledged that DCRA, in its
    opposition to the renewed motion for summary judgment, did not dispute VP’s
    5
    ownership of the Property. What the ALJ found to be decisive, however, was that
    VP “ha[d] not alleged, let alone proved, that the permit in question was transferred
    to it by the permit holder.”4 The ALJ denied petitioner’s renewed motion for
    summary judgment “since [p]etitioner ha[d] not demonstrated that it ha[d] standing
    to appeal the [n]otice and is entitled to the relief it request[s] as a matter of law.”
    Upon that ruling by the ALJ, DCRA on the same day filed a motion to
    dismiss VP’s appeal, echoing the ALJ’s finding that VP “ha[d] not established
    transfer of the permit from the permit holder to petitioner and therefore . . . d[id]
    not have standing” to pursue the appeal from the revocation notice. VP responded
    the next day (April 12, 2016) by moving to add Varnum Holdings as a party. VP
    attached to its motion a “Bill of Sale” reflecting that on that same day, it had
    purchased all of the membership interests in Varnum Holdings.
    4
    The ALJ cited 12A DCMR § 105.5.3 (2015), which states that “[w]here a
    permit holder transfers a premises, including any building or other structure, for
    which an unexpired permit has been issued, . . . the permit may be transferred to
    the new owner, upon application by the new owner in a form specified by the code
    official.” “Permits for installations related to electrical, gas, mechanical,
    plumbing, elevator and fire protection systems are not transferable,” § 105.5.3
    (2015); a restriction whose impact on the viability of the construction work
    planned for the Property is unclear from the record.
    6
    In the May 9 Order, the ALJ denied VP’s motion to add Varnum Holdings
    as a party. The ALJ reasoned that VP had not shown either that it acquired all the
    assets of Varnum Holdings, including the Building Permit, or that the Building
    Permit was properly transferred to it in accordance with 12A DCMR § 105.5.3.
    The ALJ concluded that because the “legal right to the permit” was not with VP,
    VP lacked standing to contest the revocation.
    VP sought reconsideration of the ALJ’s ruling. After a telephonic hearing
    on July 6, 2016, the ALJ issued the July 8 Order, denying the motion for
    reconsideration.   Construing VP’s motion as a motion “to add, or substitute”
    Varnum Holdings as a party, 5 the ALJ found that VP had not stated grounds
    warranting reconsideration under OAH Rule 2828.5 (stating inter alia that an ALJ
    may change a final order if it “contains an error of law[,]” id. § 2828.5(c) (Apr.
    2016). The ALJ reasoned that VP had “not shown how adding, or substituting,
    Varnum Holdings as a party[] would cure the standing issue: namely, by having
    5
    The distinction between substitution and joinder “is essentially technical
    and committed to the discretion of the court.” McDonald v. H & S Homes, LLC,
    No. 5:08-cv-298 (CAR), 
    2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62204
    , at *4 (M.D. Ga. Jul. 21,
    2009); see also id. at *4-5 (choosing to exercise the court’s discretion in favor of
    joinder rather than substitution where the “ultimate interest” was the named
    plaintiff’s and the defendant would not be prejudiced by having the named
    plaintiff’s name “remain in the caption of the case”).
    7
    the appeal brought by the owner of the Property holding in its name the building
    permit.”
    The instant petition for review followed. VP’s primary contention is that the
    ALJ abused his discretion in declining to join Varnum Holdings, which VP asserts
    is “the real party in interest in this matter,” 6 as a petitioner. VP also argues that the
    ALJ abused his discretion in dismissing the appeal for VP’s lack of standing
    without the ALJ’s having conducted an evidentiary hearing (to the extent one was
    necessary to test, for example, VP’s claim of ownership of the Property and of
    100% of the membership interests in Varnum Holdings). VP asserts that the rules
    of joinder “require[d] that the [ALJ] exercise his discretion to allow the joinder of
    the entity that owns the [B]uilding [P]ermit[.]” VP seeks a remand for Varnum
    Holdings to be joined as a party and the appeal to be heard on the merits.
    We review an OAH decision to determine if it was “[a]rbitrary, capricious,
    an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 
    D.C. Code § 2
    -
    510(a)(3)(A) (2012 Repl.).
    6
    VP asserts that “as the owner of the [P]roperty and as owner of the
    company that holds the [B]uilding [P]ermit,” it, too, is a real party in interest.
    8
    II.
    OAH Rule 2816.1 (2016) provides that “[a]fter proper notice and an
    opportunity to be heard, an Administrative Law Judge may substitute a person or
    entity for a named party, or may add parties to a case.” The OAH Rules do not
    prescribe what criteria an ALJ is to use to determine whether to permit the addition
    or substitution of parties, but OAH Rule 2801.1 (2016) provides that “[w]here
    these Rules do not address a procedural issue, an Administrative Law Judge may
    be guided by the District of Columbia Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure to
    decide the issue.” Further, when one of the Superior Court’s “procedural rules is
    nearly identical to or the functional equivalent of a federal procedural rule, [this
    court] look[s] to cases interpreting the federal rule for guidance on how to interpret
    our own.” Estate of Patterson v. Sharek, 
    924 A.2d 1005
    , 1009-1010 (D.C. 2007);
    see also Springs v. United States, 
    311 A.2d 499
    , 500 (D.C. 1973) (“[B]oth the
    advisory note and the cases interpreting the federal rule provide guidance for the
    proper interpretation of the Superior Court rule.”).
    9
    D.C. Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 17(a) (2016) provides that “ [e]very action shall
    be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.”7 To that end, the Superior
    Court Rules of Civil Procedure “allow for liberal modification of the pleadings to
    ensure that the action is prosecuted in the name of the correct party[.]” Jones v.
    Brooks, 
    97 A.3d 97
    , 102 (D.C. 2014). In particular, D.C. Super. Ct. R. Civ. P.
    17(a) (2016) states that:
    No action shall be dismissed on the ground that it is not
    prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest until a
    reasonable time has been allowed after objection for
    ratification of commencement of the action by, or joinder
    or substitution of, the real party in interest; and such
    ratification, joinder, or substitution shall have the same
    effect as if the action had been commenced in the name
    of the real party in interest.
    Rule 17(a) is similar to its federal counterpart, FED. R. CIV. P. 17(a)(3), which “is
    intended to prevent forfeiture when determination of the proper party to sue is
    difficult or when an understandable mistake has been made” and to “insure against
    . . . injustice.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 advisory committee’s note to 1966 Amendment
    (observing that “[m]odern decisions are inclined to be lenient when an honest
    mistake has been made in choosing the party in whose name the action is to be
    7
    “Some courts have described Rule 17’s real-party-in-interest requirement
    as essentially a codification of th[e] nonconstitutional, prudential limitation on
    standing.” Rawoof v. Texor Petroleum Co., 
    521 F.3d 750
    , 757 (7th Cir. 2008).
    10
    filed”). “The real party in interest is the person holding the substantive right
    sought to be enforced, and not necessarily the person who will ultimately benefit
    from the recovery.” United States ex rel. Spicer v. Westbrook, 
    751 F.3d 354
    , 362
    (5th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Gantman v. United
    Pac. Ins. Co., 
    284 Cal. Rptr. 188
    , 191 (Cal. Ct. App. 1991) (“Generally, the person
    possessing the right sued upon by reason of the substantive law is the real party in
    interest.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Here, the record supports that Varnum Holdings is the real party in interest.
    Because it is no longer the Property owner, it is not the entity that would ultimately
    benefit from reinstatement of the Building Permit; but as the holder of the Building
    Permit, it is the entity that possesses the right that may be sued upon (pursuant to
    12A DCMR § 105.6.4.1). Further, the original failure to name Varnum Holdings
    as a petitioner appears to have been not a tactical maneuver, but a mistake, and an
    understandable one, because, at the time the Building Permit was revoked, Varnum
    Holdings no longer owned the Property (and, as discussed infra, even the OAH
    ALJ thought that a petitioner must be the owner of a property to appeal the
    revocation of a permit). In addition, VP filed its motion to join Varnum Holdings
    within a day after the ALJ ruled that VP lacked standing and DCRA moved to
    dismiss VP’s petition. Thus, VP filed its motion to add Varnum Holdings within
    11
    “a reasonable time.” Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 17(a) (2016); cf. HRC Hotels, LLC v.
    Metro. Bd. of Zoning Appeals Div. II, 
    8 N.E.3d 203
    , 208 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014)
    (finding, in a matter involving a petition filed by a hotel’s parent company for
    review of a zoning-variance decision, that a motion to substitute the adversely
    affected hotel as petitioner was brought within a reasonable time where it was filed
    within thirty days after the filing of a motion to dismiss the parent company’s
    petition for lack of standing).
    DCRA argues that VP could not cure its standing problem by adding
    Varnum Holdings as a petitioner given that Varnum Holdings, “the entity sought to
    be joined,” did not file an appeal with OAH within ten business days after service
    of the written notice of revocation (and thus “did not note a timely appeal”). 8 But
    both the language of Rule 17(a) and the weight of pertinent case law support a
    contrary conclusion.     See Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 17(a) (2016) (“[J]oinder, or
    substitution shall have the same effect as if the action had been commenced in the
    8
    DCRA relies on a case, Resident Council of Allen Parkway Vill. v. United
    States Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., 
    980 F.2d 1043
     (5th Cir. 1993), that it asserts
    stands for the proposition that “a party with standing that does not note its own
    appeal may not lend its own standing to appeal to the actual appellant.” But that
    case pertains to appellate court jurisdiction, not to trial court procedural rules
    governing the addition or substitution of parties. Again, OAH Rule 2801.1
    provides for reference to the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, not to rules
    of appellate procedure.
    12
    name of the real party in interest.”); 6A CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT ET , ARTHUR R.
    MILLER, & MARY KAY KANE, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1555 (3d ed.)
    (2010 & 2018 Supp.) (hereafter “WRIGHT, MILLER & KANE”) (observing that a
    conclusion that the relation-back doctrine applies can be “reached solely on the
    basis of the last sentence in Rule 17(a)” and explaining that “a correction in parties
    [under the federal rule similar to Rule 17] is permitted even after the statute of
    limitations governing the action has run”); Link Aviation, Inc. v. Downs, 
    325 F.2d 613
    , 613-15 (D.C. Cir. 1963) (holding that an insurer that was the real party in
    interest could be substituted for the insureds as plaintiffs after the statutory
    limitations period had run, even though “prior to the filing of the suit the insurers
    [had already become] subrogated to all rights and remedies of the original
    plaintiffs” such that “the original action should have been brought in [the insurers’]
    names rather than in the names of the insureds”; reasoning that “[a]ny other rule
    would be highly technical without meaningful purpose”); Freese v. Department of
    Soc. Servs., 
    169 A.3d 237
    , 249, 250, 252 (Conn. App. Ct. 2017) (agreeing that “the
    class of persons eligible to file an administrative appeal [could not be enlarged]
    beyond those qualifying as aggrieved persons under” the relevant state regulation,
    but remanding because “substitution is available to cure lawsuits that . . . were [by
    mistake] commenced by unauthorized parties” “even after the statute of limitations
    has run”; reasoning, too, that “[w]hen a plaintiff is added to the case to correct a
    13
    mistake in ascertaining the real plaintiff in interest, the defendant rarely, if ever,
    will be prejudiced, as long as he was fully apprised of the claims against him and
    was prepared to defend against them” (internal quotation marks and brackets
    omitted)). 9
    9
    See also, e.g., HRC Hotels, 8 N.E.3d at 208 (permitting motion to
    substitute even though the thirty-day period for filing a petition for judicial review
    had expired); Breaker v. United States, 
    977 F. Supp. 2d 921
    , 934 (D. Minn. 2013)
    (permitting the substitution of a corporation as plaintiff in lieu of the corporation’s
    president because the corporation owned the property at the time the special-use
    permit applied for by the president was denied, the suit in the president’s name was
    not the result of tactical maneuvering, and the claims and factual allegations would
    not change upon the substitution); Anderson v. Bristol, Inc., 
    847 F. Supp. 2d 1128
    ,
    1135 (S.D. Iowa 2012) (holding that the error of the administrator of an estate in
    naming the estate rather than herself as plaintiff did not require dismissal of the
    action, because the amendment of the pleading to name the real party in interest as
    plaintiff, done promptly after a motion to dismiss was filed, avoided the statute of
    limitations bar, there was no prejudice to defendants, and the error was
    understandable); Daniel v. Hines, 
    2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155140
    , at *7-9 (D. Md.
    Oct. 4, 2011) (holding, in a case in which two plaintiffs were joined as real parties
    in interest after the passing of the three-year limitations period, that “[t]he ends of
    justice are served by application of the relation-back doctrine”; reasoning that
    “when a defendant has had notice from the beginning that the plaintiff sets up and
    is trying to enforce a claim against it because of specified conduct, the reasons for
    the statute of limitations do not exist, and . . . a liberal rule should be applied”
    (quoting New York Central & H.R.R. Co. v. Kinney, 
    260 U.S. 340
    , 346 (1922)); cf.
    Achievers Invs. v. Karalekas, 
    675 A.2d 946
    , 949 (D.C. 1996) (applying Super. Ct.
    R. Civ. P. 15(c) and stating that “when a plaintiff amends a complaint solely to
    cure a defect in capacity to sue, the amendment relates back to the filing of the
    original complaint”); WRIGHT, MILLER & KANE, § 1555 (noting that “Rule 15(c)
    has been used in conjunction with Rule 17(a) to enable an amendment substituting
    the real party in interest to relate back to the time the original action was filed”).
    14
    In the instant case, it appears that DCRA had notice from the beginning that
    petitioner VP, which is represented by the same counsel who represented Varnum
    Holdings in litigation arising out of DCRA’s previous (August 2015) unsuccessful
    effort to revoke the Building Permit, was continuing the effort to preserve the
    Building Permit that Varnum Holdings d/b/a Westend Development had obtained.
    No one has suggested that the addition or substitution of Varnum Holdings as a
    petitioner would change the claims, factual allegations or arguments to be resolved
    in a challenge to the notice of revocation. We also discern no prejudice to DCRA
    (and DCRA has not identified any prejudice) from the addition or substitution of
    Varnum Holdings as a petitioner.
    The ALJ concluded nonetheless that the addition or substitution of Varnum
    Holdings as a petitioner would not have solved the standing problem and thus
    would not have prevented a forfeiture. The ALJ acknowledged that the permit was
    issued to “Westend Development LLC,” recognized that this was represented to be
    the trade name for Varnum Holdings, and specifically found that Varnum Holdings
    was the permit holder. The ALJ reasoned, however, that Varnum Holdings no
    longer owned the Property and for that reason lacked standing to appeal.
    15
    The ALJ’s reasoning is flawed because it was premised on reading into 12A
    DCMR § 105.6.4.1 a requirement that the regulation does not contain. Section
    105.6.4.1 states that “[t]he permit holder may appeal a notice of revocation”; it
    does not require that the permit holder also be the owner of the property in order to
    have standing to appeal (and indeed such a limitation would be illogical since
    owners are not the only ones who can obtain a building permit in the first
    instance). 10   Thus, the ALJ legally erred in concluding that adding Varnum
    Holdings as a petitioner would not have cured the regulatory standing problem.
    Given that error and all the circumstances mentioned above, we conclude that the
    OAH ALJ erroneously exercised his discretion in denying the motion to add
    Varnum Holdings as a party. 11
    10
    See 12A DCMR § 105.1 (2014) (permitting “an owner or authorized
    agent” to apply for a building permit).
    11
    VP also argues that joinder of Varnum Holdings was required not only
    under Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 17 but also under Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 19(a) (2016),
    which states in pertinent part that “[a] person . . . shall be joined as a party . . . if
    . . . in the person’s absence complete relief cannot be accorded among those
    already parties[.]” See Raskauskas v. Temple Realty Co., 
    589 A.2d 17
    , 21 (D.C.
    1991) (“[W]e join the federal courts and interpret Rule 19 to require a trial judge to
    order joinder whenever possible.”). Given our conclusion described above, we
    need not consider the applicability of Rule 19(a).
    16
    Moreover, because Varnum Holdings sold the Property to VP before the
    notice of revocation was issued and because the notice of revocation kept VP from
    obtaining a transfer of the permit, see supra note 3 and the accompanying text, the
    ALJ’s reading of § 105.6.4.1 meant that no one had standing to challenge the
    revocation — neither the non-owner permit holder (Varnum Holdings); nor the
    owner of the Property (VP, even though by the time DCRA moved to dismiss the
    petition, VP “controlled the entity that held the permit”); nor (it appears) anyone
    else. This is a case in which “[t]o adopt the rule urged by respondent and deny
    standing . . . would insulate decisions such as this from judicial review, a result
    clearly contrary to the public interest.” Har Enters. v. Brookhaven, 
    548 N.E.2d 1289
    , 1293 (N.Y. 1989).
    Wherefore the decisions of OAH dismissing the appeal of the revocation
    notice and declining to reconsider that final ruling are reversed, and the cause is
    remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this decision.
    So ordered.