
ACTION
SETTLES TWO OF ITS INTEREST RATE CASES
ACTION
has settled two of its three interest rate on security deposits
cases with very favorable terms. The cases were filed against
Santa Monica and Los Angeles. In settling these cases ACTIONs
main concerns were: (1) getting each owner of each city a refund
of their money without having to make the owner go through hours
of paper work in collecting proof of overpayment to their tenants
(i.e. checks showing interest payment and bank records showing
interest earned on deposited funds); and (2) getting owners
money back to them without delay (i.e. bringing the litigation
to a close). ACTIONs board decided on a settlement posture
of simply having the cities waive the owner obligation to make
future interest payments to their tenants altogether across the
board, without proof of any payment or bank records of any kind.
To this end the City of Santa Monica has agreed to waive interest
on security deposit for three years (statute of limitations) starting
October 1, 2002 through September 30, 2004 and Los Angeles has
agreed to waive interest for one year. This settlement is advantageous
to owner in another way. In waiving interest, this relieves owners
of having to make out checks to tenants as well. The City of West
Hollywood wants to continue their fight with ACTION, for whatever
reason, and we will be going to trial within a year. ACTIONs
Board is happy to get two of these cases behind us so that we
can now concentrate on other equally important lawsuits. ACTION
filed these lawsuits to protect owner rights. ACTION believed
that a owner should not pay interest on tenants security
deposits in excess of what the owner earned from his or her bank.
The Rent Boards position was that the owner should look
around and place the money at a bank which paid the maximum amount
of interest. This position of course was like the tail wagging
the dog. Banks are seldom chosen for the amount of interest paid
on accounts, rather many more important factors come into play,
such as working relationship between bank and depositor. ACTION
saw this interest on security deposit regulation as just another
attempt by the Board to over regulate and interfere with owners
operation of their business.
ACTIONs initial lawsuit against the Santa Monica Board resulted
in a published opinion by the court of appeal. This published
opinion stated that there is a taking of the owners property
when the owner is required to pay interest to the tenant on security
deposit in excess of the interest the owner earns. This published
opinion has brought relief to thousands of Housing Providers in
all cities of our state. It has been used to convince some cities
not to impose interest on security deposits at all, and in other
cities to limit the interest to only that earned by the owner.
Our fellow owner attorneys in San Francisco are using our decision
to overturn that citys illegal ordinance as well. All in
all ACTION has scored a great win in promoting the cause of owners
rights, and has increased our visibility across the State of California
and the nation for the good work we have performed.
ACTION
is happy to thank Herb Balter for spearheading the lawsuit three
years ago by agreeing to be the class representative for the Santa
Monica and Los Angeles case. As always Herb has untriedly worked
to protect the rights of owners. In addition, equal thanks to
Gordon Gitlen and Matt Millen for also agreeing to be class representatives
in the Santa Monica case.
ACTIONs PENDING
LAWSUITS
ACTION
must continue to promote owners rights. To that end, ACTION
has filed lawsuits (and will file others) against laws and regulations
which ACTIONs Board feels materially interferes with owners
rights to own and operate their properties. Here is an update
on some of the lawsuits:
ACTION
v. State of California
(discrimination, equal rights)
In 2000, Sheila Kuehl sponsored a law which mandated that only
L.A., West Hollywood and Santa Monica owners had to give 60-day
notice. This law became effective 2001. ACTION sued complaining
that this type of political pay-back to her rent controlled constituents,
was a gross injustice to owners in these three cities. We are
not second class citizens. Because of the lawsuit, Kuehl re-introduced
another law, effective 2002 which requires the 60-day notice for
all owner statewide. ACTION however, is continuing the lawsuit
to judgment, hoping to convince the court that because of the
reoccurring nature of the problem, (i.e. these three cities are
forever Ms. Kuehl dumping ground), that a ruling be given even
though the original law has been changed. No matter what, ACTION
has shown Ms. Kuehl that she cannot get away with her cheap political
tricks any more.
ACTION v. City of Santa
Monica (tenant
harassment lawsuit)
ACTION sued the city, claiming that its tenant harassment lawsuit
was unconstitutional in very important respects. Unfortunately,
the trial court disagreed with ACTION, and now we are on appeal
with this lawsuit. We believe that (like in so many other cases
which have come before) ACTION will be vindicated at the court
of appeal level. The tenant harassment law is a very vaguely worded
statute in certain particulars, which imposes criminal and civil
penalties for doing such protected constitutional activity as
filing a civil complaint.
Hackamack
v. Santa Monica Rent Control Board
Can the Board sue a owner to determine if the vacancy registration
filed by the owner is correct? Under SLAPP legislation, ACTION
is maintaining that when the Board does so without probable cause,
that it is liable for malicious prosecution and attorneys fees.
The trial court agreed with ACTIONs position, and now the
Board has taken an appeal. ACTIONs position is that when
a owner files a vacancy registration form, that is protected activity
under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (petitioning
government for redress of grievances). If Hackamack wins his appeal
against the Board, then all owners will be protected from overreaching
Board activity. Oral arguments will be heard on this case in March
2003.
ACTION
v. Rent Control Board
Is rent control constitutional if it limits the amount of rent
that can be charged to rich tenants? What legitimate governmental
purpose is there in protecting rich tenants? Isnt that just
a shift of wealth from owner to the already rich tenant? ACTION
believes that such a system (such as in Santa Monica) is unconstitutional,
and we intend to file a lawsuit challenging it). We must file
in federal court however, in that our own State Supreme Court
has already ruled that rich people need rent control protection
and it is a legitimate governmental restriction to provide it
to them. Hopefully ACTION will be filing this lawsuit in the very
near future. This lawsuit will seek to have the S.M. rent control
law declared unconstitutional.
Borten
v. Laird
On appeal. Does Rent Control protect tenants who do not live in
their units? In other words, can a tenant live some where else,
and keep their unit for storage or for friends use when
they come to town? This issue is now on appeal. The owner argued
in the trial court, that rent control is to protect tenants who
live in their units, but not tenants who only use their units
for storage, or as a hotel room for friends use from time
to time. ACTION has seen many situations where tenants actually
own and live in a home in Santa Monica, and then keep their unit
because the rent is so low. This of course aggravates an already
tight housing market. ACTION is monitoring two other cases currently
at the trial court level which raise similar constitutional arguments.
However, see below, about new pending Board regulations.
NEW S.M. RENT CONTROL REGULATION:
New proposed regulations (Regulation 3304) which hopefully will
be adopted by the time you read this article, are a refreshing
change to the normal Board regulations which seek only to protect
tenants at the expense of affordable housing. These new regulations
actually protect housing in Santa Monica, by freeing up hoarded
apartment units which are being kept off the market by tenants
who live in other cities or residences. There are approximately
5,000 low rent units (according to ACTIONs survey) which
are being rented by tenants who do not live in these units. Rather,
the tenants live either in their own homes near by, or in other
cities. These tenants are holding onto their units because they
are so cheap to rent, that they just would rather not let them
go. Some of these units are used by the tenants for offices, or
storage, or hotel rooms. Now, under the proposed regulation, if
the owner can show that the subject unit is not the tenants
primary residence, then the owner can raise that tenants
rent to market rate. The regulation acknowledges that because
of the serious housing shortage in Santa Monica, when a tenant
keeps a unit off the market and does not live there as his/her
primary residence, the tenant is hoarding the unit and further
harming the housing market. The regulations set up a procedure
whereby the owner will petition the Board for a hearing to make
a finding of fact as to where the tenant really lives. In most
cases, the decision will be an easy one to make.
RECENT CASES TO WATCH
Feldman
v. Superior Court
As you might remember, our very own Michael Koenig (attorney)
representing our very own Jan Feldman (owner) won a great victory
at the appellate court level. However, the opinion was not published,
and ACTION requested that court to publish it since it is far
reaching and helpful to Housing Providers. It deals with the Ellis
Act. It states that the six month times rent penalty is the only
penalty that a tenant can receive if the owner decides to go back
into business two years after Ellising the property. Michael was
successful in overturning Judge Terry Friedmans trial court
decision, which stated otherwise. The Appellate Court refused
to publish its decision, and now ACTION has requested of the California
Supreme Court that it publish the decision in place of the court
of appeal. We will hear about this in the next month.
Travis
v. Santa Clara County
Decertified. At the request of Pacific Legal Foundation, ACTION
filed a request with the California Supreme Court requesting that
court to hear Travis v. County of Santa Clara. Travis, a published
court of appeal decision, held that an owner could not attack
a local law pre-empting Costa-Hawkins, if that owner did not bring
a lawsuit within a very short time period after the law was passed.
This in effect puts a statute of limitations on civil rights.
Could you imagine a doctrine which stated that one could not attack
a segregation law because it was on the books more than a year?
Well the Supreme Court decertified the opinion and agreed to hear
it. ACTION may be filing an amicus brief in the near future, setting
out our position on such a backward legal doctrine.
Drouet v. San
Francisco Still Undecided
Drouet is the last of the California Supreme Court cases which
has still yet to be decided. Drouet discusses what defenses, if
any, tenants can raise if they are being evicted under Ellis withdrawals.
The court of appeal decided that only procedural defects could
be raised, but tenants wanted the court to sanction retaliatory
eviction defenses as well. If the tenants position
is adopted by the court, it will create great expenses in Ellising
a property. However, now that Ellis has been so radically changed
through amendments to its current form, it is unlikely that it
will be the problem that it could have been. 

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