Elyse De Stefano v. Apts. Downtown, Inc.

               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                              No. 14–0820

                           Filed May 6, 2016


ELYSE DE STEFANO,

      Appellant,

vs.

APTS. DOWNTOWN, INC.,

      Appellee.


      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Nancy A.

Baumgartner, Judge.



      A tenant appeals and a landlord cross-appeals a district court

ruling affirming in part and reversing in part a small claims court

decision in a residential landlord–tenant dispute. AFFIRMED IN PART,

REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.



      Christopher S. Warnock, Iowa City, and Christine E. Boyer, Iowa
City, for appellant.



      Robert M. Hogg and James W. Affeldt of Elderkin & Pirnie, P.L.C.,

Cedar Rapids, and C. Joseph Holland, Iowa City, for appellee.
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APPEL, Justice.

      This case is a landlord–tenant dispute that was initially tried as a

small claims matter. The case presents a preliminary question of first

impression, namely, whether an award of attorneys’ fees should be

considered as part of the “amount in controversy” for purposes of

determining the jurisdiction of the small claims court. If there is subject

matter jurisdiction, the case includes several important issues under the

Iowa Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (IURLTA), including

(1) whether a landlord may enter into a contract with a tenant that

requires the tenant to assume the cost of making repairs necessary to

maintain the premises in a fit and habitable condition, (2) whether a

landlord can refuse to approve a sublease based upon the refusal of the

tenant to assume the cost of maintaining the premises in a fit and

habitable condition, (3) whether a landlord may automatically deduct a

fee for carpet cleaning at the conclusion of the lease term, and

(4) whether statutory punitive damages are available for willful violation

of the IURLTA in this case.

      The landlord rented a four-bedroom home to four students in the

college community of Iowa City. An exterior door and door lock to the

premises were damaged due to third-party vandalism, requiring repair in

order to maintain a fit and habitable premises. When the landlord was

informed of the damaged door, the landlord repaired it but billed the

tenants for the cost.   The tenants refused to pay.    When the tenants

subsequently sought to sublease the apartment for two summer months,

the landlord refused to approve the sublease on the ground that the

tenants had failed to pay for the repairs and the penalties assessed for

nonpayment. The tenants still refused to pay. As a result, the landlord
                                    3

refused to approve the sublease, and the premises was vacant for the last

two months of the lease term.

      At the conclusion of the lease term, the landlord then withheld the

tenants’ rental deposit.   The landlord withheld the rental deposit by

asserting that (1) the tenants owed the landlord for the cost of repairing

the damaged door, (2) the tenants incurred penalties under the lease for

failing to timely pay for the damaged door, (3) the tenants were

automatically obligated to pay the landlord for the cost of cleaning the

carpet upon their surrender of the premises at the end of the lease term

regardless of the condition of the carpet, and (4) the tenants owed the

landlord various other relatively minor fees and costs of no relevance to

this appeal.

      One of the tenants, Elyse De Stefano, sued in small claims court,

claiming that the landlord improperly withheld the rental deposit. The

magistrate held for the tenant on most issues and awarded damages of

$4720.    The magistrate did not award attorneys’ fees to De Stefano

because no attorney fee affidavits were filed. The landlord appealed to

district court.

      On appeal, the district court upheld some but not all of the

magistrate’s decision. The district court concluded that under the terms

of the lease, the landlord could charge the tenant for the replacement of

the exterior door that had been vandalized by a person or persons

unknown. The district court also found the landlord properly refused to

allow the proposed sublease in light of the tenant’s refusal to pay for the

exterior door. As a result, the tenant was liable to the landlord for rent

during the two summer months when the premises was vacant.             The

district court found, however, that the landlord’s automatic deduction

from the rental deposit for carpet cleaning violated the IURLTA and that
                                    4

certain late fees imposed by the landlord were improper. In the end, the

district court awarded De Stefano $651.54 for the balance of the deposit

improperly withheld and $200 in statutory punitive damages.

      After trial, the attorneys for De Stefano sought fees under the

terms of the IURLTA and submitted two separate fee affidavits supporting

the fee claims. The district court awarded $1160 in attorneys’ fees, the

sum claimed in a fee affidavit submitted by attorney Christine Boyer.

The district court declined to award attorneys’ fees claimed in a fee

affidavit submitted by attorney Christopher Warnock for $5466.

      Both parties appealed, and we granted discretionary review. For

the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part the decision

of the district court on tenant’s appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in

part the district court’s ruling on the landlord’s cross-appeal. We reverse

and remand the case to the district court.

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      In July 2010, four University of Iowa students—Elyse De Stefano,

Hillary Block, Meghan Crotty, and Jennifer Connelly—rented a four-

bedroom home in Iowa City from Apts. Downtown, Inc., (Apartments

Downtown) under a written lease agreement. The period of the lease was

from July 31, 2010, to July 26, 2011. The collective rent was $1635 per

month, and the tenants paid a rental deposit of one month’s rent.

      The preprinted lease contained seventy tightly-spaced paragraphs

featuring many subparts and considerable detail. In paragraph 30 the

lease provided, “Tenants agree to pay for all damages to the apartment

windows, screens, and doors, including exterior unit doors (including

random acts of vandalism).” The lease also provided in paragraph 33,

“Unless the Landlord is negligent, Tenants are responsible for the cost of

all damages/repairs to windows, screens, doors, carpet, and walls,
                                        5

regardless of whether such damage is caused by residents, guests or

others.”   Additionally, the lease contained a $452–$690 estimated cost

for the repair or replacement of a prehung entry door.

      The lease further provided that Iowa City Maintenance would

perform all repairs “unless written authorization is secured from [the]

Landlord.” It stated that Iowa City Maintenance charges $70 per hour

during regular business hours and $90 per hour during nights and

weekends, with a minimum of one hour per service call.                 Iowa City

Maintenance is an alter ego of Apartments Downtown.

      Furthermore, the lease included an automatic charge for carpet

cleaning at the conclusion of the lease term. Specifically, the lease stated

as follows:

      The carpets throughout the building are professionally
      cleaned each time apartments turn over occupancy. Tenants
      agree to a charge starting at $95 (efficiency) not to exceed
      $225 (6+ bedrooms) being deducted from the deposit for
      professional cleaning at the expiration of the Lease.

      The four student tenants, including De Stefano, took possession

and paid the regular rent on a monthly basis for the duration of the

lease, including for the months of June and July, 2011 after failing to

receive Apartments Downtown’s approval for a sublease.

      On August 25, 2011, the student tenant whose forwarding address

had been provided to the landlord received a “Security Deposit Statement

2011” 1 from Apartments Downtown detailing the following charges to the

tenants’ rental account:

              Carpet Cleaning:                               $ 191.00
              Cleaning Charges:                              $ 280.00

      1This opinion follows Iowa Code section 562A.12(3) in referring to this as a
“rental deposit,” but we consider any reference to a “security deposit” to be
synonymous.
                                          6
              Past Due Rent & Fees on Acct:                      $1,308.45
              Lawn Clean Up:                                     $   60.00
              Screens (Kitchen, BR 2):                           $ 150.00
              Blinds (BR 2, 4):                                  $   99.00
              Removal & Disposal of Tenants Items
                    (Bed mattress in front lawn):                $    50.00

                                    Total Deductions (-)         $2,138.45
                                           Total Due:            $ (503.45)
The past-due rent and fees in the amount of $1308.45 consisted of

charges of $210 for lawn care in June 2011; $598.46, the total cost for a

replacement exterior door; $150 of late fees for failure to timely pay for

the replacement door; and $349.99, the cost of replacing a refrigerator

gasket and two broken screens found during a June 2011 maintenance

inspection. The statement instructed the tenants to pay the $503.45 due

on the account within thirty days.

       The door replacement charge and the subsequent late fees

stemmed from a burglary that occurred at De Stefano’s residence in

October 2010.      De Stefano and the other tenants filed a police report

with the Iowa City Police Department.               The report stated that the

burglary had left the exterior doorframe damaged and the door lock

broken. 2     Apartments Downtown was called to repair the door on

October 11.      It arranged for Iowa City Maintenance, its in-house
maintenance group, to replace the kicked-in door, and the charges were

billed to De Stefano and her roommates. The total cost of the repair and

replacement was $598.46, which included $318.46 for the replacement

door and $280 for four hours of labor. Upon receipt of this charge, one

of De Stefano’s cotenants sent a letter dated November 2 to Apartments

Downtown, contesting the charge and advising that the damage was not

       2The front door was split for a length of approximately twelve inches around the
latch and deadbolt, and the frame was damaged as a result of being “kicked in” during
a burglary. This damage rendered the front door of the house unlockable.
                                     7

caused by any of the tenants and the police investigation was ongoing.

The student tenant, in a letter apparently written with the advice of

counsel, referenced paragraph 30 of the lease agreement which stated:

“Tenants agree to pay all damages to the apartment windows, screens,

and doors, including exterior unit doors (including random acts of

vandalism).”   The tenant said she believed this lease provision to be

unconscionable and thus unenforceable by a court.

     Apartments Downtown responded on November 17,

     By signing the lease agreement you agree to pay for all
     damages to the apartment windows, screens, and doors,
     including exterior unit doors, including random acts of
     vandalism. If . . . the door was broken down during a
     burglary, the destruction of the door is considered vandalism
     . . . . Even though the door was damaged during the break
     in, and not by a guest of the tenants, it still falls under the
     basis o[f] a visitor, whether they were a known guest or
     not. . . . [I]f the police investigation results in the finding of
     the guilty party that was responsible for the damage, then at
     that time we would be more than happy to charge said
     person(s) for the damage. Until then however, the damage
     incurred to the property fall[s] under the responsibility of the
     leased tenants. At this time you currently still have an
     outstanding balance of 598.46 on your account, if this would
     happen to still be current when December[’]s rent comes
     due, it will accumulate the standard $40.00 late charge.

     On December 2, De Stefano emailed Apartments Downtown and

indicated that on the advice of counsel the tenants would not be paying

for the door and that if Apartments Downtown held back their deposit

they would take legal action.        Apartments Downtown, apparently

believing the email to be a request that the $598.46 be taken from the

tenants’ damage deposit at the end of the rental term, responded by

email and referred De Stefano to a provision in the lease agreement

stating that charges needed to be paid immediately or else late fees

would accumulate. The email stated,
                                        8
         [I]f you do not pay this bill, a $40 late charge will be applied
         to your rental account balance, which from now until the
         end of you[r] lease term would amount to an additional
         $320.00 in addition to the door balance.

         In May 2011, De Stefano and the other tenants sought to sublet

their apartment for the summer months.              They located individuals

interested in subleasing their rental property and contacted Apartments

Downtown per the lease agreement, which stated, “[T]enants shall not

sublet the dwelling unit . . . without the written consent of Landlord.”

The lease also provided, however, “Only apartments whose rental

accounts are in good standing may sublease.             All rent/fees on the

account must be paid before Landlord consents to a sublease.” Thus,

Apartments Downtown refused to consent to any sublease because the

tenants’ rental account carried an unpaid balance consisting of the

charges for the replacement door and subsequent late fees for

nonpayment. De Stefano and the other tenants were not able to sublet

their rental property.

         On June 22, Apartments Downtown entered the tenants’ rental

property without proper notice to conduct an annual maintenance tour.

Iowa City Maintenance employees repaired two bent window screens at a

cost of $150 and replaced a torn refrigerator gasket at a cost of $129.99.

Apartments Downtown added the total charge of $349.99 to the tenants’

rental account, and it eventually became part of the “Past Due Rent and

Fees.”

         A month later, De Stefano and the other tenants received an email

from     Apartments     Downtown     containing   move-out    and   inspection

information.      The email also told the tenants, in bolded and capital

letters, “Tenants Only Need to Vacuum Carpet!”           Below, it stated, “As

agreed to in the lease’s addendum there will be a charge of $95-$225
                                       9

deducted from the tenant’s deposit to pay for professional carpet cleaning

at the expiration of the lease.”       On July 26, Apartments Downtown

performed a checkout inspection at the residence. After the inspection,

the company arranged for carpet cleaning to be performed by a local

company for a cost of $191.

      On August 25, Apartments Downtown sent out its statement

disclosing the amounts withheld from the rental deposit and the balance

still owed. De Stefano responded with an email asking for the return of

the deposit and characterizing the landlord’s charges against the account

as illegal and unreasonable.      Apartments Downtown countered with a

letter dated September 8, asserting that the deductions from the rental

deposit complied with Iowa Code chapter 562A, which authorizes

deductions from a rental deposit either for a tenant’s default in payment

of rent or to restore a unit to the condition it had been in at the

commencement of the tenancy.          The letter provided a reason for each

charge and declined to remove any of the charges. The landlord’s letter

further requested that the tenants pay the balance on the account by

September 25 to avoid future collections action. On September 19, the

Apartments Downtown Department of Collections and Litigation sent

De Stefano and the other former tenants individual letters demanding

payment of the claimed $503.45 balance due on the rental account.

      On October 4, De Stefano brought a small claims action against

Apartments Downtown. 3         De Stefano’s notice requested $5000 from

Apartments Downtown as well as attorneys’ fees and court costs.              On

October 28, De Stefano’s case was stayed and consolidated with a


      3De  Stefano’s standing to assert claims on behalf of herself and her three
cotenants is not disputed.
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different case pending against Apartments Downtown in the district

court. The district court denied De Stefano’s motion for partial summary

judgment in the consolidated case on May 17, 2012. De Stefano then

moved to transfer the case back to the small claims division, and the

district court granted the motion on June 8.

      On July 18, the parties appeared for trial in small claims court.

De Stefano presented a number of claims, including (1) that the

automatic carpet-cleaning charges in the lease were illegal, (2) that the

charges for replacement of a door that had been wrecked during the

burglary of the tenants’ residence were unlawful, (3) that the tenants lost

two months’ rent because the landlord wrongfully refused to consent to

their proposed sublease, (4) that punitive damages should be awarded

under the IURLTA for the willful withholding of the rental deposit, and

(5) that reasonable attorneys’ fees should be awarded under the IURLTA.

      The small claims court found that the carpet-cleaning provision in

the lease was unenforceable, the lease provisions making tenants

responsible for the damage to the door caused by a burglary were

unconscionable and thus unenforceable, and punitive damages were

warranted.   The court applied various other deductions to the rental

deposit not relevant to this appeal. The court awarded De Stefano $4520

in damages and $200 in statutory punitive damages for a total of $4720.

      After the trial, De Stefano’s cocounsels Warnock and Boyer filed

two separate affidavits requesting attorney fees in the amounts of $5466

and $1160 be added to the judgment nunc pro tunc.              Apartments

Downtown resisted on the ground that the attorney fee applications were

untimely and would result in damages in excess of the jurisdictional

limits of the small claims court.    The court declined to rule on the
                                    11

applications because by then Apartments Downtown had appealed to the

Johnson County District Court.

      On appeal, the district court reversed in part and affirmed in part.

The district court entered a number of holdings relevant to this appeal.

First, the district court held that Apartments Downtown and its tenants

“were free to reach an agreement holding the tenants financially

responsible for repair of a door damaged by an alleged criminal act” and

reversed that aspect of the small claims court’s ruling. Second, “because

the lease provision regarding the tenant’s financial responsibility for

damage to exterior doors . . . was not prohibited,” the district court found

that Apartments Downtown was free to refuse to consent to the proposed

sublease due to tenants’ failure to pay the door charge, and the court

accordingly reversed on that issue as well. Third, the district court held

that the automatic carpet-cleaning provision in its lease was “an illegal

provision because it does not require the landlord to prove any specific

damage to the carpet” and affirmed the small claims court on that

ground.   Fourth, the district court agreed with the small claims court

that late fees for nonpayment of rent were not supported by actual

evidence. Fifth, the district court concluded that “there was a bad faith

retention of the security deposit based on, at a minimum, [Apartments

Downtown]’s inclusion of the carpet-cleaning fee in the lease.” The court

additionally found that Apartments Downtown retained the rental

deposit in bad faith by assessing late fees for nonpayment of the cost of

the replacement door, when “late fees were only permitted for non-

payment of rent.”

      The court’s holdings reduced the award to De Stefano to $851.54.

This figure was calculated by taking the $1635 deposit and reducing it

by $385 (the deductions authorized by the small claims court and not
                                    12

challenged by De Stefano on appeal) and $598.46 (the charge for the

door replacement), then adding on $200 in punitive damages. Finally,

the district court awarded De Stefano $1160 in attorney fees because

Iowa Code section 562A.12(8) allows for the award of reasonable attorney

fees to the prevailing party.     We granted both parties’ requests for

discretionary review and retained the appeal.

      II. Standard of Review.

      “In a discretionary review of a small claims decision, the nature of

the case determines the standard of review.” GE Money Bank v. Morales,

773 N.W.2d 533, 536 (Iowa 2009). Our review of small claims actions

tried at law is for correction of errors at law. Midwest Check Cashing,

Inc. v. Richey, 728 N.W.2d 396, 399 (Iowa 2007). “A review of statutory

construction is at law.”    GE Money Bank, 773 N.W.2d at 536.            The

district court’s factual findings, however, are binding upon this court if

supported by substantial evidence.       Id.; Barnhill v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 765

N.W.2d 267, 272 (Iowa 2009).      We review the district court’s award of

attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion.     GreatAmerica Leasing Corp. v.

Cool Comfort Air Conditioning & Refrigeration, Inc., 691 N.W.2d 730, 732

(Iowa 2005).

      III. Preliminary Small Claims Court Jurisdictional Analysis.

      A. Introduction.     Apartments Downtown challenges the subject

matter jurisdiction of the small claims court. See Tigges v. City of Ames,

356 N.W.2d 503, 511 (Iowa 1984) (noting that “[s]ubject matter

jurisdiction should be considered before the court looks at other matters

involved in the case”).    “Subject matter jurisdiction is the power ‘of a

court to hear and determine cases of the general class to which the

proceedings in question belong, not merely the particular case then

occupying the court’s attention.’ ” Klinge v. Bentien, 725 N.W.2d 13, 15
                                            13

(Iowa 2006) (quoting Christie v. Rolscreen Co., 448 N.W.2d 447, 450 (Iowa

1989)). Jurisdiction over the subject matter of a claim must be conferred

by a constitutional or statutory grant.              Id.   “The parties themselves

cannot confer subject matter jurisdiction on the court.” Schott v. Schott,

744 N.W.2d 85, 87 (Iowa 2008).

      At the outset, it is important to precisely define the legal issue

behind the subject matter jurisdictional challenge. The question is not a

broad, freewheeling, hermeneutic issue of the meaning of “amount in

controversy” or “cost.”         Instead, the issue is narrow.           The issue is

whether attorneys’ fees that may be awarded pursuant to the IURLTA

should       be   considered     in    determining    whether     the   jurisdictional

limitations of small claims proceedings are exceeded when the issue is

not expressly addressed in the statutes.

      B. Relevant Statutory Provisions.                We begin our jurisdictional

analysis with an overview of relevant statutory provisions.                The small

claims court has jurisdiction over those “civil action[s] for a money

judgment where the amount in controversy is . . . five thousand dollars

or less . . . exclusive of interest and costs.” Iowa Code §§ 631.1(1), .2(1)

(2011). 4 The legislature created this scheme for small claims because it

“thought it was in the public interest to provide a simpler, easier, and

less expensive procedure than was afforded in district court under the

Rules of Civil Procedure.”            Barnes Beauty Coll. v. McCoy, 279 N.W.2d

258, 259 (Iowa 1979); see Iowa Legis. Ct. Study Comm’n, Report to 62d

Iowa General Assembly pt. I, at 4 (1967) (proposing to the legislature a

new court division that would hear claims using a “simple, expeditious,

and inexpensive” procedure).

      4All   Code references are to 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
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      In small claims court, no pleadings are required—a claimant can

begin an action by filling out a simple form. Iowa Code §§ 631.3, .7(1);

Barnes, 279 N.W.2d at 259. Jurisdiction over the case is determined at

the time set for the hearing of the small claim. Iowa Code § 631.9. If at

any time a claim is joined that is not a small claim, the small claims

court may order the entire action tried by regular procedure.               Id.

§ 631.8(4). In the alternative, the court may separate the claims and try

the small claims itself while transferring the others to the district court.

Id.; see also Wilson v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 297 N.W.2d 223, 225 (Iowa 1980)

(noting that the small claims court properly ordered a case transferred

when “the amount in controversy on one side of the case exceeded [the

jurisdictional limit]” and the claims arose out of the same transaction).

      Iowa Code chapter 631 does not provide a statutory definition of

“amount in controversy” or “costs.”      There is a section in the chapter

stating that certain “fees and costs” shall be collected in advance by the

clerk of the district court.   See Iowa Code § 631.6.     The statute also

provides that these items “shall be assessed as costs.” Id. The items are

fees for filings, fees for service of notice, postage, and fees for personal

service. Id. The Code section simply lists items collected in advance by

the clerk which are later assessed as costs under the statute. Attorneys’

fees are not costs incurred in advance and later assessed in litigation,

and as a result, it is not surprising that attorneys’ fees are not mentioned

in this Code provision.

      The IURLTA has a number of provisions related to attorneys’ fees.

Iowa Code section 562A.12(8) provides that “[t]he court may, in any

action on a rental agreement, award reasonable attorney fees to the

prevailing party.” Iowa Code section 562A.11 also has an attorneys’ fee

provision.   “If a landlord willfully uses a rental agreement containing
                                          15

provisions known by the landlord to be prohibited, a tenant may recover

actual damages sustained by the tenant and not more than three

months’ periodic rent and reasonable attorney fees.”                 Id. § 562A.11(2)

(emphasis added).       This section distinguishes between actual damages

and attorneys’ fees that may be awarded by the district court.

       C. Positions of the Parties.              Apartments Downtown did not

challenge subject matter jurisdiction in either the small claims court or

on appeal in the district court. 5         It now maintains, however, that the

judgment below must be vacated because the amount in controversy

exceeded small claims jurisdiction as soon as De Stefano filed attorney

fee applications specifically requesting more than $280 on top of her

$4720 damage award.

       De Stefano sees things differently.          She contends that attorneys’

fees do not count against the $5000 jurisdictional limit in small claims

court. De Stefano has two theories for why attorneys’ fees do not count

against the jurisdictional limit. First, she urges the IURLTA specifically

authorizes attorneys’ fees. The IURLTA provides, “The court may, in any

action on a rental agreement, award reasonable attorney fees to the

prevailing party.” Id. § 562A.12(8). She looks to the IURLTA for support

for her attorneys’ fee argument.

       Alternatively, however, De Stefano argues that the small claims

statute should be interpreted as excluding attorneys’ fees in determining

the amount in controversy. According to Iowa Code section 631.1(1), a

small claims action is a “civil action for money judgment where the


       5Apartments   Downtown did oppose De Stefano’s attorney fee applications on the
ground that they would result in an award in excess of small claims jurisdiction, but
prior to this appeal never asserted that the small claims court (or the district court on
appeal) had actually lost jurisdiction.
                                     16

amount in controversy is . . . five thousand dollars or less . . . exclusive

of interest and costs.”   De Stefano maintains the exclusion for “costs”

applies here because attorneys’ fees should be considered costs under

the statute. De Stefano further argues that, as a practical matter, judges

are reluctant to award attorneys’ fees in landlord–tenant actions, and in

any case such fees would rarely be awarded in amounts which would

cause the total to exceed $5000 except in cases of an egregious violation

of the IURLTA.

      D. Caselaw from Other Jurisdictions. As indicated above, the

precise issue in this case is whether attorneys’ fees awarded pursuant to

the IURLTA should be considered for purposes of determining the

jurisdiction of small claims courts when the underlying statutes do not

expressly address the issue.    There are a number of cases from other

states which address the question.

      A leading case supporting the view that attorneys’ fees should not

be considered in determining the jurisdiction of New Jersey’s version of

small claims court is Lettenmaier v. Lube Connection, Inc., 741 A.2d 591

(N.J. 1999).     In that case, the question was whether an award of

attorneys’ fees under a New Jersey consumer fraud statute should be

considered as part of the amount in controversy in New Jersey’s version

of small claims court.    Id. at 591.     The New Jersey Supreme Court,

among other things, pointed to the underlying provision of the consumer

fraud statute, which grouped attorneys’ fees with “filing fees and costs.”

Id. at 594. In addition, the Lettenmaier court noted that “a majority of

the out-of-state cases which have addressed the issue have held that

counsel fees, not otherwise characterized, are to be considered as costs.”

Id. at 595.
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      Interestingly, the Lettenmaier court cited two Iowa cases as

standing for the proposition that attorneys’ fees cannot be considered in

determining whether jurisdictional limits have been exceeded because

attorneys’ fees are “separate and distinct” events that cannot be assessed

before liability is established.   Id. (citing Ayala v. Ctr. Line, Inc., 415

N.W.2d 603 (Iowa 1987); Maday v. Elview-Stewart Sys., Co., 324 N.W.2d

467 (Iowa 1982)). The Lettenmaier court distinguished federal diversity

cases where the question is whether attorneys’ fees should be considered

in order to reach the jurisdictional minimum. Id. The court noted that

the analogy to federal diversity cases “loses its persuasive power entirely

when it is applied to circumscribe a litigant’s access to a court that is

especially suited to his or her claims.” Id. at 596.

      The Lettenmaier court also considered practical implications of a

contrary rule.      The court noted that plaintiffs seeking a quick and

relatively inexpensive resolution in small claims courts could face

defense tactics of piling on attorneys’ fees to exceed the jurisdictional

maximum.      Id.    More importantly, the court feared that including

attorneys’ fees as part of the amount in controversy would put plaintiffs

in the position of foregoing counsel fees in order to maintain the

expedited process. Id.

      A case from the Ohio Court of Appeals also supports leaving

attorneys’ fees out of the “amount in controversy” for jurisdiction—Drake

v. Menczer, 425 N.E.2d 961 (Ohio Ct. App. 1980). This case involved a

small claim brought under the Ohio Landlords and Tenants Act (OLTA),

Ohio Revised Code chapter 5321.        Id. at 962.     Like Lettenmaier, the

Drake court noted that “[t]raditionally, when a statute authorizes the

award of attorneys’ fees, it does so by allowing the fees to be taxed as

costs.” Drake, 425 N.E.2d at 963. The Drake court also focused on the
                                   18

language of the OLTA, noting that its fee-shifting provisions provided for

“actual damages together with reasonable attorneys’ fees.” Id. (quoting

Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5321.02).      The Ohio court concluded that the

legislature intended damages and attorneys’ fees to be separate items,

and attorneys’ fees should be taxed as costs. Id. at 964; see also Bittner

v. Tri-Cty. Toyota, Inc., 598 N.E.2d 925, 928 (Ohio Mun. Ct. 1992)

(attorneys’ fees arising from consumer protection statute are considered

costs and not damages for purposes of jurisdictional limitation in

municipal courts).

      In Arabian v. Kearns, the Oregon appellate court considered

whether attorneys’ fees should be considered in determining the amount

in controversy under an Oregon small claims statute. 667 P.2d 1038,

1039 (Or. Ct. App. 1983) (en banc). The Oregon court concluded that

attorneys’ fees should not be included in determining the jurisdictional

limit. Id. at 1040. Among other reasons, the Oregon court stressed that

attorneys’ fees are not a matter of proof during trial, but are instead

determined after trial and are procedurally treated like costs and

disbursements. Id. This reasoning is close to that in Lettenmaier, where

the New Jersey Supreme Court relied on Iowa cases making that point.

      A Wisconsin appellate court considered the issue in Reusch v.

Roob, 610 N.W.2d 168 (Wis. Ct. App. 2000). In that case, the Wisconsin

appellate court considered whether statutory attorneys’ fees awarded

under a Wisconsin consumer protection statute should be included for

purposes of determining the jurisdiction of a small claims court. Id. at

178. The Reusch court concluded that statutory attorneys’ fees should

not be included. Id. at 179. The court reasoned that the attorneys’ fees

awarded pursuant to consumer protection statutes were not designed to
                                    19

compensate victims for damages but instead to compensate attorneys for

their services. Id.

      The Reusch case was cited with approval by the Wisconsin

Supreme Court in Roehl Transport, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,

784 N.W.2d 542 (Wis. 2010).      In a footnote, the Wisconsin Supreme

Court, citing prior precedent, noted the “subtle but significant difference

between attorney[s’] fees attributable to bringing a lawsuit and those

recoverable as damages resulting from a tort.”     Id. at 572 n.65.    The

court emphasized that attorneys’ fees attributable to bringing a lawsuit

are “intended to compensate the attorneys, whereas [damages are]

intended to compensate the victims.” Id.

      There are cases that seem to stand for the contrary. For example,

Texas courts have generally held that in determining the amount in

controversy for jurisdictional purposes, actual damages, exemplary

damages, and attorneys’ fees are included. See Villarreal v. Elizondo, 831

S.W.2d 474, 476 (Tex. App. 1992). This rule is qualified, however, by the

notion that a plaintiff may seek additional damages exceeding the

jurisdictional limits if they have occurred as a result of the passage of

time. Id. Similarly, in Pinnacle Properties v. Saulka, an Indiana appellate

court held that attorneys’ fees should be included in determining the

amount sought for purposes of determining the jurisdiction of a small

claims court. 693 N.E.2d 101, 106 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998). The Indiana

court noted that the small claims statute did not explicitly distinguish

between attorneys’ fees and damages. Id.

      E. Iowa Caselaw. There is no Iowa caselaw directly on point on

the narrow jurisdictional question presented here. There are two cases,

however, that were cited by Lettenmaier that may have bearing on the
                                    20

question of whether attorneys’ fees should be considered in determining

the amount in controversy for purposes of jurisdictional limitations.

      In Maday, we considered a question of attorneys’ fees in the

context of Iowa Code chapter 91A, the Wage Payment Act. 324 N.W.2d at

468. The precise question posed was whether attorneys’ fees should be

determined by a judge or jury in proceedings brought under the statute.

Id. at 469.   In Maday, we sided with authorities treating statutory

allowance of attorneys’ fees as costs logically assessable by the court. Id.

at 469–70.

      We reached a similar result in Ayala.      There, the question was

whether a judge or jury should determine an award of attorneys’ fees

under the Iowa Civil Rights Act. Ayala, 415 N.W.2d at 604. We observed

that “an award of attorney fees is more in the nature of an equitable

remedy than an award of actual damages.” Id. at 605. We further noted

the assessment of attorneys’ fees, like the assessment of court costs,

cannot be done until liability is established. Id. at 606. We therefore, as

in Maday, determined the question of attorneys’ fees should be handled

in the same manner as costs, namely, decided by the court after trial of

the underlying matter. Id.

      We have also considered whether costs includes attorneys’ fees in

significantly different contexts than what we face in this case.        For

instance, in Weaver Construction Co. v. Heitland, we held that the term

“costs” in Iowa Code chapter 677 could not be interpreted as including

attorneys’ fees. 348 N.W.2d 230, 233 (Iowa 1984). Similarly, in Turner v.

Zip Motors, we held that the use of the term “costs” in Iowa Code section

625.1 should not be interpreted to include attorneys’ fees.       245 Iowa

1091, 1100, 65 N.W.2d 427, 432 (1954). These cases, however, deal with

the question of whether the term “cost” or “costs” is sufficient to create a
                                   21

substantive fee-shifting provision contrary to the ordinary American rule

that each party bears the expense of fees charged by their attorneys.

These cases simply do not address the question of whether a reference to

costs in a jurisdictional statute includes attorneys’ fees when there is a

separate statutory authority to shift the costs of attorneys’ fees to the

other party.

      F.   Analysis.   In interpreting section 631.1, we begin with the

statutory language. See In re Marriage of Thatcher, 864 N.W.2d 533, 538

(Iowa 2015). “Words or phrases that are undefined in the statute or for

which there is no established legal meaning are given their common,

ordinary meaning in the context within which they are used.” Bank of

Am., N.A. v. Schulte, 843 N.W.2d 876, 880 (Iowa 2014). If the statute is

unambiguous, we will look no further than the language chosen by the

legislature.   In re J.C., 857 N.W.2d 495, 500 (Iowa 2014). “Under the

pretext of construction, we may not extend a statute, expand a statute,

or change its meaning.” Bank of Am., 843 N.W.2d at 880.

      Yet, we have cautioned that courts “should be circumspect

regarding narrow claims of plain meaning and must strive to make sense

of [a statute] as a whole.” Rolfe State Bank v. Gunderson, 794 N.W.2d

561, 564 (Iowa 2011). The meaning of language is often not self-evident.

“Whether or not the words of a statute are clear is itself not always

clear.” Barbee v. United States, 392 F.2d 532, 535 n.4 (5th Cir. 1968).

When a statute is ambiguous, we may look to a wide variety of intrinsic

and extrinsic aids to discover the meaning of the legislative language.

State v. McIver, 858 N.W.2d 699, 704 (Iowa 2015).          We recognize,

however, that use of various resources and interpretive aids do not

mechanically and automatically produce inescapable answers.       See 2A
                                           22

Norman J. Singer & Shambie Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction,

§ 45.13, 137–38 (7th ed. rev. 2014).

       We have little trouble noting that the meaning of the terms

“amount in controversy” and “costs” for purposes of determining the

limits of small claims jurisdiction under Iowa Code section 631.1 cannot

be resolved by simply declaring a plain meaning. Both terms are open-

textured and can include and exclude a wide variety of items, depending

on context.     The ambiguity of the statutory terms is demonstrated by

legislative usage.     In some contexts, the legislature has expressly said

that costs includes attorneys’ fees.            For example, Iowa Code section

6B.33 authorizes payment of all costs in appeals of condemnation

proceedings “including reasonable attorney fees.” 6 In other contexts, the


       6See,  e.g., Iowa Code § 207.14(5) (2015) (allowing court to assess “all reasonable
costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney fees” in administrative proceeding
regarding coal mining inspection); id. § 421B.10 (awarding “costs of suit, including
reasonable attorney fees” to plaintiffs for established violations of cigarette sales
statutes); id. § 455B.111(4) (authorizing award of costs including attorney fees to any
party in action for natural resources statute violations); id. § 501A.801(4)(h) (allowing
court to order payment of “party’s reasonable costs, including reasonable attorney fees”
in suits over the inspection of business records); id. § 504.1604(3) (requiring any court
ordering nonprofit corporation to allow the inspection of its records by a member to also
“pay the member’s costs, including reasonable attorney fees”); id. § 507C.46(2) (stating
that any applicant for assets in insurer liquidation “shall pay the costs and expenses of
the liquidator in resisting the application including a reasonable attorney fee”); id.
§ 533C.705 (assessing costs including reasonable attorney fees against persons who
violate the Uniform Money Services Act); id. § 535B.13(3) (allowing court to order that
unlicensed banker “pay the costs for the investigation and prosecution of the
enforcement action including attorney fees”); id. § 552A.5(3) (stating that persons
injured by violations of statutory prescriptions for sale of club memberships may
recover “costs, including reasonable attorney fees”); id. § 553.12(4) (allowing injured
person or state to “[r]ecover the necessary costs of bringing suit, including a reasonable
attorney fee” under Iowa competition law); id. § 598.24 (levying costs, including attorney
fees against a party in contempt in a divorce proceeding); id. § 600B.25 (allowing court
to award prevailing party in a paternity suit “the reasonable costs of suit, including but
not limited to reasonable attorney fees”); id. §§ 633.551(5), .673 (assessing the costs,
including attorney fees, of a guardianship against ward or ward’s estate); id.
§ 633A.4507 (permitting court to award costs including reasonable attorney fees to any
party in a proceeding on the administration of a trust); id. § 654.17(2) (allowing
mortgagee to charge mortgagor “the costs, including reasonable attorney fees, of
                                            23

legislature had declared that the court may tax “as costs” a reasonable

attorney fee.      For instance, in Iowa Code section 625.22 the general

assembly provided that “[w]hen judgment is recovered upon a written

contract containing an agreement to pay an attorney fee, the court shall

allow and tax as part of the costs a reasonable attorney fee to be

determined by the court.” 7           This legislative language plainly suggests

that, at least in some contexts, the simple term “costs” is broad enough

to include attorney fees.

       Yet, in other statutes, the legislature has referred to attorneys’ fees

and costs as separate and distinct items. 8                In addition, although the
_________________________
foreclosure and rescission”); id. § 714.16(11) (entitling attorney general to recover costs
of court action, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, in consumer fraud action); id.
§ 714.16B(1)(b)(3) (providing for recovery of attorney fees as part of reasonable costs of
bringing a civil action for identity theft); id. § 715A.2A(3)(b) (assessing against any
employer that accommodates fraud the costs of an enforcement action including
attorney fees).
       7See, e.g., Iowa Code § 202B.401(2)(b) (2015) (awarding attorney fees that are
“taxed as part of the costs of the action” to parties prevailing in actions for agricultural
processing violations); id. § 202C.3(1) (taxing attorney fees as part of the costs of a legal
action for breaching a sales agreement); id. § 257B.33 (awarding compensation for
attorney fees to be taxed as costs in actions by school boards to recover debts); id.
§ 327D.16 (allowing court to tax as “costs in the case,” the costs of suit and a
reasonable attorney fee); id. § 479.46(6) (prescribing that pipeline company pay all costs
of appealing an assessment of installation damages “including reasonable attorney fees
to be taxed by the court”); id. § 479B.30(6) (same for construction damages); id.
§ 502.509(5) (awarding attorney fees taxed as court costs to clients maintaining actions
against unregistered investment advisers); id. § 573.21 (allowing court to tax, as costs,
attorney fees for parties establishing a claim for labor or materials on public
improvements); id. § 717A.3(2)(b) (awarding “reasonable attorney fees, which shall be
taxed as part of the costs of the action,” to prevailing plaintiffs in actions for damage to
crops); Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.1225 (“On partition of real estate, but not of personal property,
the court shall fix, and tax as costs, a fee in favor of plaintiff’s attorney . . . .”).
       8See,  e.g., Iowa Code § 21.6(3)(b) (2015) (requiring a court to “order the payment
of all costs and reasonable attorney fees” to a person prevailing on an open meetings
claim); id. § 22.10(3)(c) (providing that a court shall “order the payment of all costs and
reasonable attorney fees” to a person prevailing on an open records claim); id.
§ 80A.16A(2) (authorizing costs and reasonable attorney fees as part of recovery for
persons injured by actions of bail enforcement agents); id. § 91A.8 (making an employer
that intentionally fails to pay wages liable for “court costs and any attorney’s fees
incurred in recovering the unpaid wages”); id. §§ 216.15(9)(a)(8), .17A(6)(11) (allowing
                                            24

context is different, we have not interpreted the word “costs” when used

alone in a statute to be inclusive of attorney fees.                 See Weaver, 348


_________________________
plaintiff in discriminatory housing or wage action to recover reasonable attorney’s fees
and court costs); id. § 217.31 (providing that any entity that disseminates confidential
records is liable for “court costs, expenses, and reasonable attorney fees”); id.
§ 252B.13A(1) (stating that child “support payments do not include attorney fees [or]
court costs”); id. § 252K.313(3) (“The tribunal shall order the payment of costs and
reasonable attorney’s fees if it determines that a hearing was requested primarily for
delay.”); id. § 322G.8(3) (allowing consumer to recover pecuniary loss, “reasonable
attorney’s fees, and costs” in action over defective motor vehicle); id. § 327C.21
(permitting court to “render judgment for costs, and attorney’s fees for counsel
representing the state” in actions against railroads for violations of duties owed to the
public); id. § 502.509(2)(c), (3)(c) (permitting award of costs and reasonable attorney fees
in securities actions); id. § 523D.7(1) (permitting recovery of “court costs and reasonable
attorney fees” from provider of continuing care for violations of chapter 523D); id.
§ 523H.13 (creating liability for both costs and reasonable attorney fees for violators of
chapter regarding franchises); id. §§ 535.8(4)(d), .11(8) (allowing for recovery of both
costs and attorney fees from lender or creditor who collects an unlawful charge); id.
§ 535A.6(2) (permitting court to award actual damages, court costs, and attorney fees if
financial institution committed a “red-lining” violation); id. § 537.3621 (authorizing a
consumer’s recovery of attorney fees and court costs); id. § 551A.8 (authorizing awards
of reasonable attorney fees and court costs for violations of disclosure in business
opportunity promotions); id. § 572.32(1) (permitting prevailing plaintiff to recover
reasonable attorney fees in action to enforce mechanic’s lien); id. § 598B.312(1)
(awarding to prevailing parties seeking child support costs and attorney fees along with
other expenses of proceedings); id. § 633.713(4) (stating that court may assess expenses
including attorney fees and court costs against party engaging in unjustifiable conduct
regarding guardianship proceeding); id. § 649.5 (permitting court to “assess, in addition
to the ordinary costs of court, an attorney fee” to a successful plaintiff in an action to
quiet a title); id. § 663A.1(6)(a) (listing as part of the damages recoverable by a
wrongfully imprisoned person “court costs imposed and paid and any reasonable
attorney’s fees”); id. § 685.3(6)(b) (enabling recovery of “litigation costs and reasonable
attorney fees” by certain whistleblowers); id. § 692.6 (making entities disseminating
criminal history information in violation of chapter liable for “court costs, expenses, and
reasonable attorney fees”); id. § 714B.8(2) (providing for recovery of “[c]osts and
reasonable attorney fees” when a person suffers pecuniary loss because of a violation of
the prize promotion law); id. § 714D.6(1)(c) (allowing for recovery of “[c]osts and
reasonable attorney fees” in an action by a consumer against a telecommunications
provider for fraud); id. § 714G.11 (permitting attorney general to seek “a monetary
award for civil penalties, attorney fees, and costs” for consumer credit violations); id.
§ 729.6(8) (awarding as part of relief to an aggrieved party under genetic testing laws
attorney fees and court costs); id. § 729A.5 (providing that hate crime victims may bring
an action for “reasonable attorney fees[] and costs”); id. § 809A.12(7) (requiring agency
bringing forfeiture action to pay reasonable attorney fees and costs); id. § 910.2(1)
(listing “court costs” and the “court-appointed attorney fees” as separate charges to be
payable by any convicted offender).
                                          25

N.W.2d at 233 (“We do not agree, however, that the word ‘costs’ [in

chapter 677] should be so liberally stretched as to include attorney

fees.”); Turner, 245 Iowa at 1100, 65 N.W.2d at 432 (“[Section 625.1] has

always been held to mean the ordinary costs, not including attorney

fees.”).

          We should be careful not to extrapolate too much from the

foregoing statutes and authorities. They do suggest, however, that the

threshold test of ambiguity has been crossed and that we may resort to

interpretive tools to guide us in determining the narrow issue presented

here. 9

          In order to aid us in determine the meaning of costs in the small

claims statute where a substantive statute authorizes the payment of

attorneys’ fees, we turn to historical precursors of our current small

claims statute.      Before the passage of the Unified Trial Court Act in

1972—1972 Iowa Acts chapter 1124—Iowa had justice-of-the-peace

courts with limited amount-in-controversy jurisdiction. See Iowa Code

§§ 602.1–.56 (1971). The legislature created the small claims division of

the Iowa district courts to replace the justice-of-the-peace courts and the

other inferior courts that had previously resolved small civil disputes.
Suzanne E. Elwell & Christopher D. Carlson, The Iowa Small Claims

Court: An Empirical Analysis, 75 Iowa L. Rev. 433, 453–60 (1990)

[hereinafter Elwell].     Under the former system, we viewed contractual


          9Prior
              to 1980, contractual attorneys’ fees were a percentage of the recovery.
See Iowa Code § 625.22 (1979) (authorizing court to tax as costs an attorney fee set as a
percentage of the amount recovered). Thereafter, courts were authorized to award
reasonable attorneys’ fees. See Iowa Code § 625.22 (1981) (authorizing court to award a
reasonable attorney fee). One could argue that once courts were given authority to
determine reasonable attorneys’ fees, it no longer became possible to tax them in the
same mechanical manner that costs were taxed. Yet the “tax” terminology remained in
the statute.
                                      26

attorneys’ fees as equivalent to costs for amount-in-controversy purposes

and thus excluded them in computing the jurisdictional limit:

      One question certified and argued seems properly to arise
      from the record, and is of a determinative character; and
      that is, as to whether, in determining the jurisdiction of the
      justice, where a question is made as to the amount in
      controversy, an attorney’s fee provided for in the note is to be
      considered a part of the amount in controversy, or treated as
      costs.

            The statute expressly declares that it shall be treated
      as a part of the costs. Section 2 of act above cited. The
      amount in controversy, then, was not more than $100, and
      the justice had jurisdiction.

Spiesberger Bros. v. Thomas, 59 Iowa 606, 609, 13 N.W. 745, 746 (1882).

Fifty years later, we reiterated this point:

      [W]e know of no case holding that in determining the
      question of jurisdiction, the prayer for costs is taken into
      consideration in determining the amount in controversy.
      The right to recover costs is a statutory one, and an incident
      of the litigation. It is equally true that contracts may provide
      for attorney’s fees, and courts have recognized the right to so
      provide; but the statute provides they should be taxed as a
      part of the costs. The amount thereof is fixed by statute,
      and therefore is not a matter of controversy between the
      parties.     They are in the same category as any other
      statutory costs incident to litigation, and cannot be taken
      into consideration in determining the amount in controversy
      between the parties. In other words, the claim of $50 for
      attorney’s fees made by the plaintiff is simply a claim for
      costs, the same as for any other costs incident to the
      litigation.

Johnson v. Boren, 215 Iowa 453, 455–56, 245 N.W. 711, 712–13 (1932).

      Given that the 1972 legislation did not explicitly address how

attorneys’ fees were to be handled for jurisdictional amount purposes,

apart from stating that costs should be excluded, we think it is fair to

infer the general assembly intended a continuation of prior law.         See

Iowa Farm Bureau Fed’n v. Envtl. Prot. Comm’n, 850 N.W.2d 403, 434

(Iowa 2014) (“The legislature is presumed to know the state of the law,
                                    27

including case law, at the time it enacts a statute.” (quoting Welch v.

Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 801 N.W.2d 590, 600 (Iowa 2011))).        The cost

exclusion for jurisdictional amount purposes therefore would extend to

contractual attorneys’ fees.

      Of course, this does not directly answer the question of how

noncontractual attorneys’ fees should be treated.      The existence of “a

written contract containing an agreement to pay an attorney’s fee” upon

which a judgment has been recovered is a clear condition precedent to

the application of section 625.22. See, e.g., Bankers Trust Co. v. Woltz,

326 N.W.2d 274, 277–78 & n.4 (Iowa 1982) (applying section 625.22 to a

surety contract). So, section 625.22 does not apply here.

      We have previously stated, however, that statutory, noncontractual

attorneys’ fees are likewise taxed and treated as costs:

      When a statute provides for attorney fees but is silent as to
      their ascertainment, we find the better rule to be that
      “[w]here attorneys’ fees are allowed to the successful party,
      they are in the nature of costs and are taxable and treated as
      such.”

Maday, 324 N.W.2d at 469 (quoting 20 Am. Jur. 2d Cost § 72 (1965));

see also Ayala, 415 N.W.2d at 605.       As indicated above, Maday and

Ayala were cited in Lettenmaier in support of its holding that attorneys’

fees are not included within the amount in controversy for purposes of

determining the jurisdictional limits of small claims courts.

      As noted above, prior to the 1972 Unified Court Act, we had made

clear that because contractual fees were taxed as costs, they were

therefore excluded from the amount-in-controversy calculation.         Since

other attorneys’ fees authorized by statute are likewise taxed as costs, it

seems incongruous they would be treated differently—i.e., deemed part of

the amount in controversy.       This would go against the holdings of
                                    28

Spiesberger and Johnson that amounts taxed as costs do not count

against the jurisdictional limit. Johnson, 215 Iowa at 455–56, 245 N.W.

at 712–13; Spiesberger, 59 Iowa at 608, 13 N.W. at 746. Treating such

fees as costs for section 631.1 purposes avoids a seemingly odd situation

where attorneys’ fees sometimes would and sometimes would not count

toward the amount in controversy, depending on the basis for those fees.

      Further, we think the reasoning contained in the out-of-state

caselaw declining to include attorneys’ fees awarded pursuant to statute

in determining the limits of small claims jurisdiction is persuasive. As

pointed out in Reusch, the purpose of statutory fees is not to compensate

plaintiffs for their damages, but to compensate attorneys. 610 N.W.2d at

179. This reasoning suggests that an award of statutory attorneys’ fees

should not be included for small claims jurisdictional purposes. See id.

      As suggested in Lettenmaier and Arabian, the fact that statutory

attorneys’ fees are ordinarily not determined by the fact finder, but are

treated like other costs, indicates that when there is a statutory basis for

awarding attorneys’ fees they should be treated as costs and not as an

amount in controversy under a small claims statute. See Lettenmaier,

741 A.2d at 596; Arabian, 667 P.2d at 1040. Further, the Lettenmaier

court looked to the underlying fee-shifting statute, noting that attorneys’

fees were grouped with filing fees and costs. Lettenmaier, 741 A.2d at

594; see also Drake, 425 N.E.2d at 963–64 (looking to language of

underlying fee-shifting statute to determine if attorneys’ fees are to be

included in determining small claims jurisdiction). Here, the underlying

statute clearly distinguishes between damages and attorney fees. Iowa

Code § 562A.12(3), (7), (8).

      We acknowledge that the treatment of costs under the federal

diversity statute seems inconsistent with our view at first blush. Under
                                     29

the federal diversity statute, federal courts have jurisdiction over

disputes between citizens of different states when the amount in

controversy exceeds $75,000, “exclusive of interest and costs.” 28 U.S.C.

§ 1332 (2012). Contractual and statutory attorneys’ fees generally count

against the jurisdictional limit, see 14AA Charles A. Wright et al., Federal

Practice and Procedure § 3712, at 806–12 (2011), and our legislature

employed the same phrase—“exclusive of interest and costs”—in the

Unified Court Act in 1972. 1972 Iowa Acts ch. 1124, § 60 (codified at

Iowa Code § 631.1 (1973)).       Yet, as noted in Lettenmaier, including

attorneys’ fees against the jurisdictional limit in the context of the federal

diversity statute is designed to expand access to the federal court for

substantial cases, not contract access to small claims court where

matters are efficiently and expeditiously resolved. 741 A.2d at 596.

      We recognize that small claims court is meant to provide a simple

and streamlined judicial process with limited dollar amounts at stake.

See Barnes, 279 N.W.2d at 259. Attorneys’ fees, unlike traditional court

costs and interest, can have a substantial impact on financial risks

posed by the litigation. If attorneys’ fees are not included in calculating

the small claims jurisdictional limits, fee shifting can have the effect of

significantly raising defendants’ exposure.

      There can be little question, however, that landlord–tenant

disputes are ordinarily the kind of dispute that should be resolved in

small claims court. Tenants are generally quite mobile, and drawn-out

proceedings could impair the ability of tenants to vindicate their

statutory rights.   Small claims court will often be the most preferable

forum.
                                          30

       Yet, without a lawyer, it will often be very difficult for tenants to

litigate these small claims. 10 This case is a good example of the kind of

case that simply could not realistically have been prosecuted by student

tenants on a pro se basis. We want to encourage the use of small claims

procedure for landlord–tenant disputes, not put the preferred forum at

risk simply because tenants are represented by competent and zealous

counsel.

       For all the reasons stated above, we are persuaded that the

exclusion of costs in Iowa Code section 631.1 applies to amounts “taxed

as costs,” i.e., attorneys’ fees when separately authorized. Accordingly,

the small claims court had jurisdiction to hear this case. Our opinion is

limited to section 631.1 and should not be taken as expressing a view

that when the term “costs” is used in other contexts, it encompasses

attorneys’ fees.

     IV. Duties        of   Landlord      and     Tenant     Regarding       Damaged
Exterior Door.

       A. Development of the Implied Warranty of Fitness and

Habitability.

       1. Historical overview.           The law related to landlord–tenant
relationships has evolved over time. For centuries, landlord–tenant law

was governed by property law. See Russell E. Lovell, The Iowa Uniform

Residential Landlord and Tenant Act and the Iowa Mobile Home Parks

Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, 31 Drake L. Rev. 253, 256–57

(1981) [hereinafter Lovell]; see also Mease v. Fox, 200 N.W.2d 791, 793


       10According to one source, landlords are represented by counsel in twenty-five
percent of the small claims cases. See Elwell, 75 Iowa L. Rev. at 471. Consultation
with attorneys appears to occur between thirty-four percent for plaintiffs and thirty-one
percent for defendants in tenant claims. Id. at 490, Table J.
                                    31

(Iowa 1972).   The right to possess land for agricultural purposes was

thought to be at the heart of the transaction, and as a result, the

landlord had no obligation to repair structures located on the property.

See Mease, 200 N.W.2d at 793. Further, the common law recognized an

independent doctrine under which the tenant’s obligation to pay rent was

independent of the landlord’s obligation to the tenant.          Donald E.

Campbell, Forty (Plus) Years After the Revolution: Observations on the

Implied Warranty of Habitability, 35 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 793, 796–

97 (2013) [hereinafter Campbell].

      With industrialization and urbanization, however, common law

courts began to take a second look at the traditional no-repair doctrine.

See id. at 797. In the modern age, many landlord–tenant relationships

involved residences in which the core interest of the tenant was

appropriate living space, not sprawling land for crop production. See id.

at 799.   While the yeoman farmer could generally maintain land for

agricultural purposes as well as the landlord, modern city dwellers

lacked the ability to make necessary repairs of residential property. See

Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 259.         Further, many courts noted the

disparity of bargaining power between landlords and tenants. See, e.g.,

Knight v. Hallsthammar, 623 P.2d 268, 271 (Cal. 1981) (en banc); Park

W. Mgmt. Corp. v. Mitchell, 391 N.E.2d 1288, 1292 (N.Y. 1979).

      As a result of these changed social and economic circumstances,

courts began to change the prevailing legal regime surrounding the

landlord–tenant relationship. Many courts departed from the traditional

no-repair rule through implying what was labeled a warranty of fitness

and habitability in a residential lease. By the early 1970s, a majority of

state courts, including Iowa, provided common law protection for

residential tenants to ensure habitability of the premises.      See, e.g.,
                                    32

Mease, 200 N.W.2d at 796 (citing cases).      These cases abandoned the

doctrine of independency and imposed mutual obligations whereby the

landlord’s right to receive rent was inseparable from the landlord’s

obligation to provide a fit and habitable premises.

       2. Eclectic analytic underpinnings of doctrine. The analytic bases

for the implied warranty of habitability were eclectic. Some courts drew

an analogy to contract law in general and the implied warranties under

the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) in particular. See, e.g., Javins v.

First Nat’l Realty Corp., 428 F.2d 1071, 1075 (D.C. Cir. 1970); Park W.,

391 N.E.2d at 1292; Mary Ann Glendon, The Transformation of American

Landlord–Tenant Law, 23 B.C. L. Rev. 503, 547 (1982) [hereinafter

Glendon].    This conceptualization had the merit of freeing landlord–

tenant law from the law of property, but as some have observed, it is a

“strained one” and has a “small resemblance” to implied warranties in

the sale of goods. Campbell, 35 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. at 829–30,

830 n.208; Glendon, 23 B.C. L. Rev. at 546–47.

       Indeed, the common law implied warranty of habitability has a

number of features materially different from contractual theory and the

UCC.    Unlike under the UCC, the common law warranty of implied

habitability ordinarily applies even when the defects are obvious to the

tenant at the time of “sale” and even though the tenant reasonably could

have discovered the defect by inspection. See Glendon, 23 B.C. L. Rev.

at 547 & n.285. The UCC allows “as is” transactions, while the majority

of courts refuse to allow “as is” transactions in a residential lease as

contrary to the implied warranty of habitability.       See id. at 547

& nn.286–88. The buyer under the UCC has the choice of rejecting the

goods or keeping them and suing for damages, while under the implied

warranty of habitability the tenant may stay in possession and still not
                                         33

pay rent. See id. at 547 & nn.289–90. In addition, the landlord–tenant

relationship is an ongoing relationship. Thus, the analogy comparing the

implied warranty of habitability with contract law or the UCC has limited

utility and may well be “misnamed.”                See Edward H. Rabin, The

Revolution     in    Residential     Landlord–Tenant        Law:     Causes      and

Consequences, 69 Cornell L. Rev. 517, 521 (1984) [hereinafter Rabin].

See generally Campbell, 35 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. at 829–31;

Glendon, 23 B.C. L. Rev. at 547–48.

       Further, the common law warranty of habitability is implied in law,

not in fact. Kline v. Burns, 276 A.2d 248, 252 (N.H. 1971). The doctrine

just does not rest on the unstated expectations of the parties, or even

one of them, but rather on public interests in health and safety.                See

Campbell, 35 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. at 829–31; Glendon, 23 B.C. L.

Rev. at 547–48. As a doctrine, implied in law is more in the domain of

public law than private ordering. See Berman & Sons, Inc. v. Jefferson,

396 N.E.2d 981, 986 n.11 (Mass. 1979) (noting implied warranty caselaw

removing the landlord’s duty from the “realm of private ordering”); see

also Glendon, 23 B.C. L. Rev. at 505.

       Aside from theory, a review of the cases demonstrates the public

law aspects of the common law implied warranty of habitability. One of

the important underlying impetuses of the development in the common

law of the implied warranty was the public policy embraced in the

enactment of housing codes by state and local authorities to protect

tenants and ensure a safe and sanitary housing stock. 11 See Javins, 428

       11Although  the legislative policy behind housing codes—promoting safe and
healthy housing—is clear, the housing codes were an ineffective means of advancing the
policy. Code enforcement has often been lax if not inconsistent, and the sanctions for
violations have been characterized as comparatively mild. Joel R. Levine, The Warranty
of Habitability, 2 Conn. L. Rev. 61, 73 (1969). According to one commentator,
                                           34

F.2d at 1080 (finding housing code requires warranty of habitability be

implied); Boston Housing Auth. v. Hemingway, 293 N.E.2d 831, 840

(Mass. 1973) (emphasizing role of housing codes in stimulating common

law development); Pines v. Perssion, 111 N.W.2d 409, 412–13 (Wis. 1961)

(following old rule of caveat emptor is “inconsistent with the current

legislative policy regarding housing standards”). See generally Glendon,

23 B.C. L. Rev. at 505. As a result, it is not surprising that the leading

cases establishing an implied warranty of habitability repeatedly justify

the rule by reference to the public interest. See Foisy v. Wyman, 515

P.2d 160, 164 (Wash. 1973) (en banc) (“We believe this type of bargaining

by the landlord with the tenant is contrary to public policy and the

purpose of the doctrine of [the] implied warranty of habitability.”). See

generally Lawrence Berger, The New Residential Tenancy Law—Are

Landlords Public Utilities?, 60 Neb. L. Rev. 707 (1981); Roger A.

Cunningham, The New Implied and Statutory Warranties of Habitability in

Residential Leases: From Contract to Status, 16 Urb. L. Ann. 3 (1979)

[hereinafter Cunningham].

       3. Remedies by tenants for breaches of implied warranty of

habitability.     Once courts determined that an implied warranty of

habitability existed as a matter of substantive law, questions of remedy

inevitably arose. One strand of cases involved the ability of tenants to

make necessary repairs and then recover the reasonable cost of labor

and materials from the landlord. For instance, in Pines, the court held

_________________________
“[h]ousing code enforcement has been notoriously unsuccessful.” Id. Common law
courts adopted the implied warrant of habitability to advance the policies behind
housing codes by offering a potentially more effective remedy. Creating a private right
of action for violation of public wrongs has solid legal provenance. See Altz v. Lieberson,
134 N.E. 703, 704 (N.Y. 1922) (Cardozo, J.); Ezra Ripley Thayer, Public Wrong and
Private Action, 27 Harv. L. Rev. 317, 320 (1914).
                                          35

that tenants were entitled to the return of rental deposits plus the costs

of labor for making such repairs.            111 N.W.2d at 413.          Similarly, in

Marini v. Ireland, the court approved a recovery when the tenant repaired

a cracked toilet and associated water leak. 265 A.2d 526, 528, 535 (N.J.

1970). In Jackson v. Rivera, a case that is somewhat similar to the facts

of this dispute, the court considered a similar tenant repair remedy, but

found, as a matter of fact, that the tenant failed to prove that she paid a

certain sum for a new front door and had been required to pay for a

window not broken by her.            318 N.Y.S.2d 7, 11 (Civ. Ct. 1971).            The

notion the tenant may, under some circumstances, perform the repairs

needed to bring housing into compliance with the implied warranty is

well-established in the caselaw.

       4. Development        of   Iowa    common      law    implied     warranty     of

habitability. In Fetters v. City of Des Moines, we observed that “the rule

of caveat emptor ordinarily applies as between lessor and lessee.” 260

Iowa 490, 496, 149 N.W.2d 815, 819 (1967), overruled in part by Mease,

200 N.W.2d at 794, 796.             Five years later, however, in Mease, we

embarked on a new course notwithstanding the landlord’s stentorian

proclamation that a departure from precedent would “wreck our way of

life.” 200 N.W.2d at 797. Iowa then embraced a common law implied

warranty of fitness and habitability in residential leases in Mease. Id. at

796.

       In holding that every lease implied a warranty of habitability, we

relied on the seminal case of Javins. Id. at 795. 12 We noted that the


       12Javins has been compared to Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 90 S. Ct. 1011,
25 L. Ed. 2d 287 (1970), in its importance to protecting low-income people. See David
A. Super, The Rise and Fall of the Implied Warranty of Habitability, 99 Cal. L. Rev. 389,
391 (2011) [hereinafter Super].
                                    36

Javins court emphasized, among other things, that many tenants lack

the ability to repair structures and that “[l]ow and middle income tenants

. . . would be unable to obtain any financing for major repairs since they

have no long-term interest in the property.” Id. (quoting Javins, 428 F.2d

at 1078–79). We favorably cited a passage in Pines for the propositions

that public policies manifested in housing standards and the need and

desirability for adequate housing were “too important to be rebuffed by

[the] obnoxious legal cliché, caveat emptor.” Id. at 794 (quoting Pines,

111 N.W.2d at 413). We further recognized that because of inequality of

bargaining power, “the potential lessee is in no position to dicker about

even the most basic necessities.” Id. at 794–95.

      We thus recognized in Mease a common law warranty of

habitability and declared that under the implied warranty the leased

premises “shall remain during the entire term in such condition to

maintain the habitability of the dwelling.”        Id. at 796.   While we

recognized that we had upheld the doctrine of caveat emptor in prior

cases, we noted that “this court reject[s] application of stare decisis to

avoid perpetuating decisional law made obsolete by time.” Id. at 797–98;

see Haynes v. Presbyterian Hosp. Ass’n, 241 Iowa 1269, 45 N.W.2d 151

(1950). The Mease opinion is written with confidence, and even verve, on

the question of whether to adopt a common law implied warranty of

habitability in Iowa.

      5. The issue of waiver of the implied warranty of habitability. The

Mease court, however, did not expressly decide whether the implied

warranty of fitness and habitability could be waived or overridden by

agreement of the parties. The Mease court did provide a list of factors

pertinent in “testing the effect and materiality of the alleged breach.” Id.

at 797. It is not explicit in Mease whether the factors were germane to
                                    37

breach or to remedy. According to Mease, factors pertinent in “testing

the effect and materiality” of an alleged breach include “whether tenant

voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently waived the defects, or is estopped

to raise the question of the breach.” Id.

      The precise meaning of this factor, and its relationship to other

factors listed by the court, is not elaborated upon in Mease or developed

in subsequent caselaw. The “testing the effect and materiality” language,

however, suggests that there must be a present specific defect before the

question of waiver or estoppel may be considered. At least one court has

ruled that common law warranty of habitability cannot be waived yet still

had a list of factors to determine the materiality of the alleged breach.

See Hemingway, 293 N.E.2d at 843–44.

      In any event, the majority of courts in other jurisdictions that have

taken the issue head on have held that the common law implied

warranty of habitability cannot generally be waived.      These nonwavier

courts emphasized the public policy purposes of the implied warranty

and the inability of most tenants to effectively bargain with their

landlords. For example, in the leading case of Javins, the court stressed

that “the old no-repair rule cannot coexist with the obligations imposed

on the landlord by a typical modern housing code.” 428 F.2d at 1076–

77. Following the rationale of Javins, the court in George Washington

University v. Weintraub, held that public policy considerations, including

inequality of bargaining power and scarcity of housing, prohibited waiver

by private agreement of the parties.        458 A.2d 43, 47 (D.C. Ct. App.

1983).   Similarly, in Green v. Superior Court, the California Supreme

Court emphasized that “public policy requires that landlords generally

not be permitted to use their superior bargaining power to negate the

warranty of habitability rule.” 517 P.2d 1168, 1173 n.9 (Cal. 1974) (en
                                    38

banc). Other cases offer similar rationales for nonwaiver of the implied

warranty of habitability.    See Knight, 623 P.2d at 273 (stating the

“reasons which imply the existence of the warranty of habitability . . .

compel the conclusion” that the warranty cannot be waived); Fair v.

Negley, 390 A.2d 240, 245 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1978) (emphasizing that

“[w]ere we to permit waiver of the implied warranty by an express

provision in the lease, it would be a rare lease in which the waiver would

not appear”); Foisy, 515 P.2d at 164–65 (rejecting bargaining between

landlord and disadvantaged tenant over habitability); Teller v. McCoy,

253 S.E.2d 114, 130–31 (W. Va. 1978) (holding waivers of warranty are

against public policy); see Shelby D. Green, Paradoxes, Parallels and

Fictions: The Case for Landlord Tort Liability Under the Revised Uniform

Residential Landlord-Tenant Act, 38 Hamline L. Rev. 407, 446 (2015).

      There are, however, a few squishy cases which, like Mease,

ambiguously suggest that whether a tenant had “waived the defect”

might be a factor to be considered somewhere along the line in the

analysis. See Kline, 276 A.2d at 252 (stating that “whether the tenant

waived the defects” is a factor in “deciding if there has been a breach”);

Berzito v. Gambino, 308 A.2d 17, 22 (N.J. 1973) (citing a laundry list of

nonexhaustive factors for determining whether there “has been a breach

of the covenant of habitability” by the lessor, including “[c]an the tenant

be said to have waived the defect or be estopped to complain?”). Whether

and under what conditions a waiver would outweigh the other factors is

not explained. Further, the precise requirements for such a waiver, such

as whether it must be supported by consideration independent of the

rental agreement, whether it arises solely from after-the-fact settlement

agreements, whether the defect is waived only when there is a failure of

the tenant to give the landlord timely notice of the problem and a
                                            39

reasonable opportunity to repair, or whether there must be evidence of

actual and balanced bargaining related to the waiver, is not explored in

the cases.

       It is possible, however, to partially reconcile the cases.                   The

nonwaiver cases generally stand for the proposition that categorical

waivers of the implied warranty of habitability prior to the actual damage

that requires repair are barred. Thus, detailed anticipatory language in a

form lease agreement waiving the implied warranty of habitability is

barred. Once a potential breach occurs, however, the parties may then

separately negotiate for the repair, provided that any subsequent

agreement is fairly bargained, is supported by consideration independent

of the underlying lease, and resolves the underlying habitability problem.

       The Restatement (Second) of Property: Landlord and Tenant,

however, appears to have taken the view that the implied warranty of

habitability was subject to negotiation between the landlord and tenant.

The Restatement (Second) provides that “[e]xcept to the extent the parties

to a lease validly agree otherwise,” a landlord breaches his or her duties

if   the      residential   premises   is   not   suitable    for   residential    use.

Restatement (Second) of Prop.: Landlord & Tenant § 5.5(1), at 205 (1977

& Supp. 2015) [hereinafter Restatement (Second)]; see also id. at § 5.6, at

215. 13 What constitutes a “valid agreement,” however, is not explored.

See id. § 5.5(1), at 205.         Further, Restatement (Second) section 5.3,

comment c states, “The tenant as a matter of law is unable to waive any

remedies available to him at the time of entry, if at the time of entry it

       13If the Restatement (Second) is viewed as generally permitting waivers of the
implied warranty of habitability by contract in states that have recognized the common
law implied warranty of habitability, it represents a minority position. If, however, the
Restatement (Second) recognized that a valid contractual provision cannot be contrary
to the public policy embraced in the implied warranty cases, it is on firmer ground.
                                     40

would be unsafe or unhealthy to use the leased property in the manner

contemplated by the parties.” Id. § 5.3 cmt. c, at 190. Additionally, a

Reporter’s Note states, “The rule of this section does not allow waiver of

housing code violations [because of] public policy considerations.”    Id.

§ 5.3, reporter’s note 3; see also Cunningham, 16 Urb. L. Ann. at 96–97.

      As with the caselaw, academic authorities come to varied

conclusions regarding the waivability of the common law implied

warranty of habitability. One authority notes that if the implied warranty

of habitability read into leases could be waived by the landlord inserting

exculpatory language into the same lease, very little would be

accomplished.    See Ted L. Hansen, Current Interest Areas of Landlord-

Tenant Law in Iowa, 22 Drake L. Rev. 376, 388 (1973) (“[T]he same

reasons that necessitate an implied warranty of habitability would also

necessitate prohibition against waiver of that warranty.”).

      Another leading authority noted that “[a]lthough one might be

tempted to conclude that if the tenant read, understood, and signed the

lease the repugnant clause should be enforced, this conclusion is

erroneous.” Rabin, 69 Cornell L. Rev. at 582. Because of the market

defects including heavy transaction and information costs and the

practical absence of competition among landlords concerning such

terms, courts should refuse to enforce such exculpatory clauses absent

“truly effective bargaining.” Id. at 583.

      B. Provisions of the Iowa Uniform Residential Landlord and

Tenant Act.     In 1972, the Uniform Law Commission promulgated the

Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act.             Unif. Residential

Landlord & Tenant Act, 7B U.L.A. 289 (2001). In 1978, Iowa adopted its

version of the Uniform Act. 1978 Iowa Acts ch. 1172 (codified at Iowa

Code ch. 562A (1981)).       As was noted by a leading contemporary
                                     41

commentator, the Iowa statute was a close facsimile of the URLTA. See

Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 255.

      The IURLTA’s first substantive provision is a statement of purposes

of the Act.    Iowa Code § 562A.2.        Noteworthy is Iowa Code section

562A.2(2)(c), which describes one of the purposes as being “[t]o [e]nsure

that the right to the receipt of rent is inseparable from the duty to

maintain the premises.” Id. § 562A.2(2)(c). Thus, the statute emphasizes

that the obligations of landlords are inextricably intertwined with the

right to receive rent.   See id.   Further, the chapter is to be “liberally

construed and applied” to promote this underlying purpose.              Id.

§ 562A.2(1).

      The IURLTA language regarding the duty of the landlord to

maintain premises is similar to the URLTA.             Iowa Code section

562A.15(1) imposes six categories of duties on landlords, including the

duty to “[m]ake all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and keep

the premises in a fit and habitable condition.” Id. § 562A.15(1)(b). With

respect to two categories (landlord’s duty to provide trash services and to

supply running water and heat), the landlord and tenant of a single-

family residence may agree in writing to have the tenant perform the

landlord’s duties. Id. § 562A.15(2). In addition, the landlord and tenant

may enter into written agreements that the tenant perform “specified

repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, and remodeling, but only if the

transaction is entered into in good faith.” Id.

      The IURLTA also has a strong antiwaiver provision.        Iowa Code

section 562A.11(1)(a) provides that a lease provision in which a party

“[a]grees to waive or to forgo rights or remedies,” id. § 562A.11(1)(a),

under the Act are “prohibited,” id. § 562A.11(2). This provision ensures
                                     42

that heavily lawyered form leases cannot override the substantive

provisions of the IURLTA.

      C. Whether the Terms of the Lease Agreement Complies with

the IURLTA. The relationship between the statutory duty of the

landlord to “[m]ake all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and

keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition,” the statutory

provision prohibiting waivers, and the statutory provision allowing a

landlord and tenant to enter into written agreements that “the tenant

perform . . . specified repairs,” provides the grist for an important issue

in this appeal.   See id. §§ 562A.11(1)(a), .15(1)(b), .15(2).   It has been

characterized as “[t]he most difficult area” in residential landlord–tenant

law. Rabin, 69 Cornell L. Rev. at 582.

      On the one hand, the landlord argues that the specified-repairs

provision recognizes the ability of the landlord and tenant to freely enter

into agreements allocating the duties and responsibilities of the parties

as in any arm’s-length contract.       The landlord draws support from

language in Mease suggesting that contractual provisions were a factor

in determining the effect or materiality of the alleged breach. 200 N.W.2d

at 797.

      On the other hand, the tenant counters that if landlords may put

contractual provisions in leases requiring tenants to assume what would

otherwise be the responsibility of the landlord to make repairs to keep

the premises fit and habitable, the substantive protection of the statutory

duty of the landlord to provide and maintain a fit and habitable premise

would be largely eviscerated. The tenant could end up with “the right to

pay rent and precious little else.” Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 254 & n.1

(quoting Julian H. Levi, The Legal Needs of the Poor: Problems Relating to

Real Property 2 (1964)); see also Javins, 428 F.2d at 1080–81
                                    43

(emphasizing landlords have a continuing obligation during the lease

term to maintain the premises in a fit and habitable condition); Green,

517 P.2d at 1173 n.9 (“[P]ublic policy requires that landlords generally

not be permitted to use their superior bargaining power to negate the

warranty of habitability rule.”); Moity v. Guillory, 430 So. 2d 1243, 1245

(La. Ct. App. 1983) (noting tenant signs one-sided agreement to make

repairs when premises in poor condition).

      The leading contemporary commentator on the Iowa Act took the

latter position. Professor Lovell emphasized that the IURLTA prohibits

waiver of rights.   Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 290; see also Iowa Code

§ 562A.11(1)(a). According to Professor Lovell,

      The legislature has unequivocally spoken. The warranty of
      habitability and other rights afforded tenants under both
      Acts cannot be overcome by the inclusion of waiver clauses
      in a form lease. This legislation clearly overrides the vague
      language in Mease v. Fox which suggested that the warranty
      of habitability could be waived.

Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 290.

      Professor Lovell’s interpretation is certainly plausible.   While the

implied warranty of habitability protects tenants substantially, it limits

but does not eviscerate the contracting-out provision of Iowa Code

section 562A.15(2). A landlord and tenant, for instance, might agree that

a tenant perform specified repairs as a handy man, but the obligation to

pay the costs remains with the landlord. Or, specific repairs could be

limited to minor repairs that do not affect the landlord’s duty to provide a

habitable premises. But is Professor Lovell’s contemporary interpretation

the best approach to the Iowa statute?

      We note that versions of other states’ URLTAs often avoid any

ambiguity regarding the scope of any potential contractual waiver by the

tenant.   For instance, Minnesota law expressly provides that specified
                                    44

repairs do not include repairs necessary to keep “the premises and all

common areas . . . fit for their use intended by the parties.” Minn. Stat.

§ 504B.161(1), (2) (2015).   On the other hand, some states expressly

authorize open-ended contractual opt-out provisions in unmistakable

terms. For example, the Wyoming statute specifically states that “[a]ny

duty or obligation in this article may be . . . modified by explicit written

agreement signed by the parties.” Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-21-1202(d) (West,

Westlaw current through 2015 Gen. Sess.).       Similarly, Mississippi law

provides that “the landlord and tenant may agree in writing that the

tenant perform some or all of the landlord’s duties under this section,

but only if the transaction is entered into in good faith.” Miss. Code Ann.

§ 89-8-23(3) (West, Westlaw current through 2016 1st Extraordinary

Sess.). The Iowa legislature did not take either approach.

      Yet, when we read the Iowa statute in context, a substantial

limitation on the ability of the parties to waive basic protections of the

Iowa Act as suggested by Professor Lovell may make sense. The IURLTA

generally imposes six affirmative statutory duties upon a landlord

regarding the leased premises. Iowa Code § 562A.15(1). Specifically, the

landlord is required to,

            a. Comply with the requirements of applicable
      building and housing codes materially affecting health and
      safety.
            b. Make all repairs and do whatever is necessary to
      put and keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition.
            c. Keep all common areas of the premises in a clean
      and safe condition . . . .
             d. Maintain in good and safe working order and
      condition all electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating,
      ventilating, air-conditioning, and other facilities and
      appliances . . . .
            e. Provide and maintain appropriate receptacles and
      conveniences . . . for the central collection and removal of
      ashes, garbage, rubbish, and other waste . . . .
                                     45
            f. Supply running water and reasonable amounts of
      hot water at all times and reasonable heat . . . .

Id.
      The statute provides that the landlord and tenant may agree in

writing that the tenant perform the landlord’s duties specified in (e) and

(f) above.   Id. § 562A.15(2).     The statute further provides that the

landlord and tenant may agree in writing to have the tenant “perform . . .

specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, and remodeling, but

only if the transaction is entered into in good faith.” Id.

      Under Apartment Downtown’s approach to the “specified repairs”

section, however, the landlord’s obligation to provide a fit and habitable

premises under section 562A.15(1)(b) can be undermined by a stock

laundry list of specified repairs. Under the approach of the landlord, the

entire listing of statutory obligations related to the fitness of the

premises—and not just the obligations under (e) and (f) above—may be

contracted away. Further, a tenant could be liable for highly expensive

repairs that occur at the end of the term of the lease even though the

tenant did not cause the uninhabitable condition to arise.

      Apartment      Downtown’s      sweeping     approach    is   arguably

inconsistent with what the legislature has declared is one of the main

purposes of the IURLTA, namely, “[t]o [e]nsure that the right to the

receipt of rent is inseparable from the duty to maintain the premises.”

Id. § 562A.2(2)(c) (emphasis added).      Indeed, the statement of purpose

reflects the view that the common law doctrine of independency of

landlord and tenant duties has been abandoned.          And, the legislature

has directed us that in our consideration of matters under the IURLTA,

the statute should be “liberally construed and applied” to promote its

purposes, certainly including ensuring that “the right to the receipt of
                                    46

rent is inseparable from the duty to maintain the premises.”             Id.

§ 562A.2(1)–(2).

      Under the landlord’s interpretation, however, the right to receipt of

rent in the context of single-family dwellings can be severed from the

duty to maintain the premises through a detailed and well-lawyered form

contract exhaustively listing specified repairs. If the landlord’s position

in this case is followed, the statute ensures very little with respect to

maintaining the premises and does not ensure the receipt of rent is

inseparable from the duty to maintain the premises.

      Indeed, under the freedom-of-contract approach, the duty to

maintain the premises is quite separable. While the landlord’s duty to

maintain a habitable premises has been characterized as critical and

central to landlord–tenant law, it would be undermined under the

landlord’s approach. See Campbell, 35 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. at 807;

see also Lovell, 31 Drake L. Rev. at 310; Richard L. Costella &

Christopher S. Morris, West Virginia Landlord and Tenant Law: A

Proposal for Legislative Reform, 100 W. Va. L. Rev. 389, 419 (1997).

      Further, as noted in the caselaw regarding the common law

implied warranty of habitability, the duty is rooted substantially in public

policy.   Comment to section 2.104(d) of the URLTA notes that

“[s]tandards of habitability dealt with in this section are a matter of

public police power rather than the contract of the parties or special

landlord-tenant legislation.”   Unif. Residential Landlord & Tenant Act

§ 2.104(d) cmt., 7B U.L.A. 326–28.        The comment recognizes that

interests beyond the parties are implicated by the implied warranty.

Glendon, 23 B.C. L. Rev. at 553.      This comment plainly cuts against

shifting of the duty to the tenant to provide a fit and habitable premises

in lease documents.
                                       47

      It thus could be argued that the legislature’s stated purpose that

the rent paid by the tenant is inseparable from the landlord’s duty to

provide a fit and habitable premises is best promoted by limiting, in the

case of single-family dwellings, the ability of the landlord to shift its

duties to the tenant by contract to subsections (e) and (f). Iowa Code

§ 562A.15(1)(e)―(f), (2).   We recognize the rule of construction that the

“legislative intent is expressed by omission as well as inclusion, and the

express mention of one thing implies the exclusion of others not so

mentioned.”     Kucera v. Baldazo, 745 N.W.2d 481, 487 (Iowa 2008)

(quoting Meinders v. Dunkerton Cmty. Sch. Dist., 645 N.W.2d 632, 637

(Iowa 2002)).    Applying this rule of construction, the expression of

contracting authority with respect to subsections (e) and (f) arguably

implies the exclusion of contracting authority with respect to earlier

listed obligations of the landlord.         Then, looking to the relationship

between associated words and phrases, see T & K Roofing Co. v. Iowa

Dep’t of Educ., 593 N.W.2d 159, 163 (Iowa 1999), the term “specified

repairs” could be interpreted to involve matters not affecting the

landlord’s obligations to provide a fit and habitable premises such as

“maintenance     tasks,     alterations,    and   remodeling.”   Iowa   Code

§ 562A.15(2); see also Acad. Spires, Inc. v. Brown, 268 A.2d 556, 559

(Essex County Ct. 1970) (listing repairs not within the scope of the

implied warranty of habitability); Myron Moskovitz, The Implied Warranty

of Habitability: A New Doctrine Raising New Issues, 62 Cal. L. Rev. 1444,

1455–63 (1974) (providing examples).

      It is not necessary to reach the question of whether the duty of the

landlord related to fitness and habitability can be waived by contract.

Iowa Code section 562A.15(2) only authorizes the landlord and tenant to

agree that the tenant will perform certain “specified repairs, maintenance
                                    48

tasks, alterations, and remodeling” of the premises.            This view is

advocated by an academic commenter, who interprets the specific-

repairs provision of the URLTA to authorize the parties to “enter into a

separate written agreement, for adequate consideration, to shift at least

some    maintenance    duties   from     the    landlord   to   the   tenant.”

Cunningham, 16 Urb. L. Ann. at 96.             Such an approach would be

consistent with prior caselaw in which tenants made repairs and charged

the landlords for the labor and materials. See, e.g., Marini, 265 A.2d at

535; Jackson, 318 N.Y.S.2d at 11; Pines, 111 N.W.2d at 413.

       Here, the tenant did not perform the repairs. Instead, the landlord

performed the repairs and attempted to charge the tenant for them.

Section 562A.15(2) permits tenants to agree to make certain repairs, but

it does not authorize the landlord to make repairs and then shift the

costs to the tenants. Iowa Code § 562A.15(2). As a result, even if Iowa

Code section 562A.15(2) allows the landlord and tenant to enter into

agreements related to a single-family dwelling in which the tenant agrees

to make repairs affecting the fitness and habitability of the premises, the

landlord cannot prevail in this case on this theory because the landlord,

and not the tenant, made the repairs to the door.

       D. Whether the Landlord Complied with the Statutory Duty of

Providing a Fit and Habitable Premises in This Case. The question

remains whether the landlord, even if it cannot rely on the provisions of

its lease under Iowa Code section 562A.15(2), nonetheless still met its

statutory duty to provide a premises in a fit and habitable condition.

There is no dispute in this case that without repairing the door, the

leased premises would not be in “a fit and habitable condition.”           Id.

§ 562A.15(1)(b).   The landlord suggests the duty to provide a fit and
                                    49

habitable condition is satisfied if repairs are performed, but the costs are

shifted to the tenant.

      We reject this approach. The scope of a legal duty surely depends

upon its context.   For example, an insurer does not meet its duty to

defend by providing counsel and billing the insured.       See, e.g., Chem.

Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 177 F.3d 210, 223 n.17

(3d Cir. 1999). A duty to support a child or spouse does not allow the

party with the obligation to provide physical support and bill the other

spouse or child for the costs. Likewise, we do not think the duty of the

landlord to provide a habitable premises is so narrow that a landlord

may utilize the duty to in effect vest in the landlord a monopolistic right

to provide marked up services to the tenant to maintain habitability. If

the IURLTA were so interpreted, the statutory duty of the landlord to

provide a habitable premises would be eviscerated by allowing a landlord

to escape financial obligations through a well-lawyered lease provision.

In light of the history of the development of landlord–tenant law, we do

not think it can be fairly concluded that the legislature intended the

statutory duty of the landlord to “make all repairs and do whatever is

necessary to put and keep the premise in a fit and habitable condition”

to be satisfied by merely making repairs and shifting the costs to the

tenant pursuant to categorical provisions in the original lease agreement.

      V. Damages for Failure to Permit Sublease.

      The   landlord–tenant    agreement    in   this   case   requires   the

permission of the landlord before the tenant may sublease the premises.

The provision is a silent clause in that it does not expressly require that

the landlord act in a reasonable or nonarbitrary fashion. Although there

is older authority to the contrary, the modern trend is toward recognition

of an implied standard of reasonableness in such an agreement.            See
                                     50

Mark S. Dennison, Landlord’s Unreasonable Refusal to Consent to

Assignment or Sublease, 102 Am. Jur. Trials 277 § 5, Westlaw (database

updated Apr. 2016); see also Homa-Goff Interiors, Inc. v. Cowden, 350

So. 2d 1035, 1037–38 (Ala. 1977); Laura Hunter Dietz, et al., 49 Am.

Jur. 2d Landlord and Tenant § 991, at 905 (2006); Restatement (Second)

§ 15.2, at 100–13.

      Based on these authorities, we conclude the landlord did not act

reasonably when it refused to allow the sublease of the premise when it

attempted to enforce an unlawful provision in the lease. As a result, the

district court erred in not allowing damages as a result of the landlord’s

refusal to allow the tenant to sublease the premises.

     VI. Automatic Cleaning Deductions From Rental Deposits
Under IURLTA.
      A. Lawfulness of Automatic Carpet-Cleaning Provision.             This
brings us to Apartments Downtown’s cross-appeal on the merits.           The
company argues the district court erred in holding the automatic carpet-
cleaning provision violated section 562A.12 of the IURLTA.

      This lease provision reads as follows:

      The carpets throughout the building are professionally
      cleaned each time apartments turn over occupancy. Tenants
      agree to a charge starting at $95 (efficiency) not to exceed
      $225 (6+ bedrooms) being deducted from the deposit for
      professional cleaning at the expiration of the Lease.

      Iowa Code section 562A.12(3) authorizes only three grounds for

withholding amounts from a rental deposit: (1) “[t]o remedy a tenant’s

default in the payment of rent or of other funds due to the landlord

pursuant to the rental agreement”; (2) “[t]o restore the dwelling unit to its

condition at the commencement of the tenancy, ordinary wear and tear

excepted”; and (3) “[t]o recover expenses incurred in acquiring possession

of the premises from a tenant” who does not surrender and vacate the
                                    51

premises in compliance with the rental agreement.               Iowa Code

§ 562A.12(3)(a)–(c).

      The problem with the carpet-cleaning provision is that it generates

an automatic deduction from the rental deposit even when none of the

conditions of section 562A.12(3) have been met. For example, suppose a

tenant had Mary Poppins and her magical “Spoonful of Sugar” team

restore the carpet to a pristine state at the end of the leasehold.

Certainly, an additional carpet cleaning would not be necessary.

Nonetheless, the charge would still apply.

      We are not the first jurisdiction to address the legality of provisions

providing   for   automatic   deductions for   carpet   cleaning   in   lease

agreements. For instance, in Ohio, which has also adopted the Uniform

Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, it is “well-settled” that a provision

in a lease agreement providing for an automatic reduction from the

rental deposit to pay for professional carpet cleaning is unenforceable.

Chaney v. Breton Builder Co., 720 N.E.2d 941, 943 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998),

abrogated in part on other grounds by Parker v. I & F Insulation Co., 730

N.E.2d 972, 977–79 (Ohio 2000). In another case, an Ohio court said,

      In the absence of an affirmative showing, by way of
      itemization that there was a specific need to clean the carpet,
      [landlord]’s unilateral deduction was improper.        A lease
      provision regarding carpet cleaning that is inconsistent with
      [the Ohio provision regarding rental deposits] is
      unenforceable.

Albreqt v. Chen, 477 N.E.2d 1150, 1153 (Ohio Ct. App. 1983) (citation

omitted).   A court in another jurisdiction held that required carpet

cleaning at the conclusion of a lease did not amount to “tenant damages,

waste or neglect of property” that could be deducted from the rental

deposit and thus had to be supported by a separate writing.          King v.

Farkas, No. 82-2076, 1983 WL 161598, at *2 (Wis. Ct. App. Aug. 9,
                                    52

1983).   By contrast, in Indiana, an appellate court concluded the

landlord could require tenants to steam-clean carpets upon the

termination of the lease and deduct cleaning charges from the rental

deposit, including charges to pay for professional carpet cleaning.

Castillo-Cullather v. Pollack, 685 N.E.2d 478, 483 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997),

abrogated in part on other grounds by Mitchell v. Mitchell, 695 N.E.2d

920, 923 (Ind. 1998). Indiana law, however, unlike Iowa law, allows the

landlord to deduct damages for any breach of the lease from the rental

deposit, and the court reasoned that the parties were free to define in the

lease the condition to which the premises had to be restored at the

conclusion of the lease agreement. Id. at 483 & n.4.

      We decline to modify the stated statutory purpose behind rental

deposits. Their purpose is to ensure the tenant faithfully executes her or

his duties under the lease agreement. See Iowa Code § 562A.6 (defining

a rental deposit as “a deposit of money to secure performance of a

residential rental agreement”).   The rental deposit is not designed to

serve as an advance payment of amounts that will always be due under

the lease. Cf. Steenes v. MAC Prop. Mgmt., LLC, 16 N.E.3d 243, 251 (Ill.

App. Ct. 2014) (finding that a move-in fee, as “a one-time upfront

charge,” paid by the tenant with actual knowledge that it was

nonrefundable was not a security deposit); Kopp v. Associated Estates

Realty Corp., No. 09AP–719, 2010 WL 1510196, at *5–6 (Ohio Ct. App.

Apr. 15, 2010) (determining that nonrefundable pet fee and redecorating

fee were not rental deposits because they did not secure obligations of

the parties, were not intended to be applied toward damages, and were

not deducted from the deposit); Gartz v. J & J Ass’n Holding, LLC,

No. 03–1978, 2004 WL 202876, at *5 (Wis. Ct. App. Feb. 4, 2004) (noting

that a landlord’s carpet-cleaning fee was permissible under Wisconsin
                                   53

law because the lease did not provide that the cost would be deducted

from the rental deposit).

      It is possible that a landlord may be able to impose a

nonrefundable charge on tenants for automatic carpet cleaning.         See

Stutelberg v. Practical Mgmt. Co., 245 N.W.2d 737, 741 (Mich. Ct. App.

1976) (finding a nonrefundable cleaning fee not part of the rental

deposit); Holmes v. Canlen Mgmt. Corp., 542 S.W.2d 199, 201–02 (Tex.

Civ. App. 1976).      Additionally, the statute clearly authorizes the

deduction of carpet-cleaning costs from rental deposits if necessary to

restore the dwelling unit to the condition at the commencement of the

tenancy, beyond the ordinary wear and tear. Iowa Code § 562A.12(3)(b).

      What a landlord cannot do, however, is impose an automatic

carpet-cleaning fee and deduct such charges from a rental deposit. See

Chaney, 720 N.E.2d at 944; Albreqt, 477 N.E.2d at 1153.          Under the

IURLTA, “[i]f the rental deposit or any portion of a rental deposit is

withheld for the restoration of the dwelling unit,” the landlord must

provide notice and the tenant must have an opportunity to contest actual

damages.    Iowa Code § 562A.12(3).     A landlord cannot by contract

extract a waiver of the notice and opportunity to contest provisions when

funds are withheld from the rental deposit. Id. § 562A.11.

      There is one case arguably to the contrary.            In Schaefer v.

Murphey, funds held in a rental deposit were characterized as

nonrefundable by contract and the refunded amount of the rental deposit

would be reduced by deducting the automatically nonrefundable fee.

640 P.2d 857, 859 (Ariz. 1982). In other words, Schaefer stands for the

proposition if rental deposits were comingled with funds that the

landlord had an unqualified right to receive, the amount of the rental

deposit would be reduced by the nondiscretionary payment. The Iowa
                                         54

IURLTA, however, prohibits commingling of landlord funds with rental

deposits. Iowa Code § 562A.12(2). Additionally, Schaefer’s reasoning is

inconsistent with our statutory scheme, which limits the uses of rental

deposits and provides a process for challenging a landlord’s asserted

right to retain them. Id. § 562A.12. Under Iowa law, rental deposits may

only be used for the purposes outlined in Iowa Code section 562A.12. A

landlord may not use a tenant rental deposit for any purpose other than

those listed in the statute. Smolen v. Dahlmann Apartments, Ltd., 338

N.W.2d 892, 894–95 (Mich. Ct. App. 1983) (holding a landlord may not

withhold a tenant rental deposit for any purpose not provided for in the

statute). Under Iowa Code section 562A.12(3), “If the rental deposit or

any portion of the rental deposit is withheld for the restoration of the

dwelling unit, the statement shall specify the nature of the damages.”

The landlord may then withhold only those amounts necessary to restore

the dwelling unit to its prior condition. Iowa Code § 562A.12(3).

        The carpet-cleaning provision providing for automatic deductions

from the rental deposit is thus unenforceable under law for the reasons

stated above, and the district court’s decision relating to it is upheld.

Since we hold the provision violates the IURLTA, we need not address the

small     claims    court’s     determination      that     the    provision     was

unconscionable. See id. § 562A.7(1)(a) (discussing unconscionability). 14

        14At  trial in the small claims court, the witness for Apartments Downtown
testified that notwithstanding the lease language, the company does not automatically
deduct for carpet cleaning at the end of the lease term, but makes an individualized
assessment of carpet cleanliness. In other words, Apartments Downtown argues that
as a matter of grace, it does not enforce its otherwise impermissible lease provision.
Both the small claims court and the district court treated the charge as an automatic
one, and we think this finding is supported by substantial evidence.         Notably,
Apartments Downtown’s deposit statement—which included the $191 carpet-cleaning
deduction—did not describe the condition of the carpet, but simply referred to the
automatic charge provision in the lease. Nor are we persuaded that a landlord can
defend an improper charge by arguing it could have assessed the same charge in a
                                          55

       B. Bad-Faith Penalty.           Apartments Downtown next challenges

the $200 in punitive damages the small claims court awarded under the

IURLTA, which the district court upheld. Iowa Code section 562A.12(3)

requires a landlord to return a tenant’s rental deposit within thirty days

from the end of the tenancy and receipt of the tenant’s mailing address

or to furnish the tenant with a written statement explaining the specific

reason for withholding the rental deposit or any portion of it.                 Under

section 562A.12(7),

       The bad faith retention of a deposit by a landlord, or any
       portion of the rental deposit, in violation of this section shall
       subject the landlord to punitive damages not to exceed two
       hundred dollars in addition to actual damages. 15

Id. § 562A.12(7).

       The landlord argues that the controversies in this case are good-

faith disputes and that, as a result, the $200 penalty under Iowa Code

section 562A.12(7) must be reversed. The tenant responds by citing Ikari

v. Mason Properties, 731 N.E.2d 975 (Ill. App. Ct. 2000). In that case, an

Illinois appellate court assessed double damages for withholding a rental

deposit in bad faith for repair and cleaning after the tenants had left

their unit. Id. at 980–81. Here, the tenant argues that the retention of

the deposits was not “a simple error in computation or confusion over

dates.”    The tenant further notes that the district court found the

automatic carpet-cleaning and repair provisions as well as the charges

_________________________
different, proper way. We are not called upon to address the issue of whether a
landlord could require the tenant to pay in advance for a carpet cleaning as a separate
charge, not included within the rental deposit. We leave that issue for another day.
       15The  legislature has since amended the subsection authorizing punitive
damages for the bad-faith retention of a rental deposit. See 2013 Iowa Acts ch. 97, § 4.
It currently provides for “punitive damages not to exceed twice the monthly rental
payment in addition to actual damages.” Iowa Code § 562A.12(7) (2015).
                                        56

under     them    were    unconscionable,       thereby    supporting     punitive

damages. 16

        Regardless of the legality or enforceability of the underlying

contract provisions, Iowa Code section 562A.12(7) permits an award of

punitive damages only for bad-faith retention of the deposit or any

portion of the rental deposit.       The IURLTA does not define bad-faith

retention of deposit by the landlord. This is problematic as bad faith can

mean a number of different concepts, depending on context.                     See

Austrum v. Fed. Cleaning Contractors, Inc., ___ F. Supp. 3d ___, ___ 2016

WL 93404, at *6 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 8, 2016) (“ ‘Bad faith’ is an often

inconsistently used phrase that has different meanings in different legal

contexts.”); Staves v. Johnson, 44 A.2d 870, 871 (D.C. 1945) (noting that

good faith is “not susceptible of exact definition”).

        In some landlord–tenant cases involving rental deposits, bad faith

has     been   defined    somewhat       broadly    as    including    “vexatious,

unreasonable, or outrageous conduct.”              Ikari, 731 N.E.2d at 980.

Similarly, in McGrath v. Mishara, the court noted that bad faith could be

shown when the landlord “knew or should have known” that the rental

deposit should not have been withheld from the tenant.                434 N.E.2d

1215, 1219–20 (Mass. 1982). Using language like “should have known”

and “unreasonable,” bad faith in Ikari and McGrath seems to have an

objective dimension. In another case, a Texas appellate court declared

that bad faith for purposes of withholding a rental deposit is defined as


       16Iowa Code section 562A.7 prohibits an unconscionable provision in a rental

agreement. This Code provision provides that a court may refuse to enforce an
unconscionable provision or limit its application to avoid an unconscionable result.
Iowa Code § 562A.7(1)(a). There is no provision for imposition of a penalty for
unconscionable provisions in Iowa Code section 562A.7. If a penalty is to be imposed
for use of an unconscionable provision, it must be pursuant to Iowa Code section
562A.11(2).
                                      57

“a breach of faith; willful failure to respond to plain, well understood

statutory or contractual obligations; lack of good faith; [or] improper

motive.” Hogg v. Jaeckle, 561 S.W.2d 568, 572 (Tex. App. 1978).

      In contexts other than landlord–tenant relationships, bad faith can

have an expansive meaning. Bad faith in the insurance context means

“the absence of a reasonable basis for denying benefits of the policy and

defendant’s knowledge or reckless disregard of the lack of a reasonable

basis for denying the claim.” Kiner v. Reliance Ins. Co., 463 N.W.2d 9, 12

(Iowa 1990) (quoting Dolan v. Aid Ins. Co., 431 N.W.2d 790, 794 (Iowa

1988)). In the context of fiduciary duty, bad faith has been described as

including “purposeful obliviousness of the known facts suggesting

impropriety.” N.J. Title Ins. Co. v. Caputo, 748 A.2d 507, 514 (N.J. 2000).

      While there is no definition of bad faith in the IURLTA, there is a

definition of good faith. Under the IURLTA, good faith is “honesty in fact

in the conduct of the transaction concerned.”      Iowa Code § 562A.6(4).

Although the definition of good faith under Iowa Code section 562A.6(4)

is similar to that found in the Uniform Commercial Code, there is a

notable difference. Under Iowa Code section 554.1201(2)(t), good faith is

defined as “honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial

standards of fair dealing.” Under Iowa Code section 562A.6(4), however,

there is no mention of the objective concept of reasonable commercial

standards of fair dealing.     Good faith under the IURLTA is limited to

“honesty in fact.” It is entirely subjective.

      It seems that if good faith amounts to “honesty in fact” under the

statute, bad faith should be the opposite, or “dishonesty in fact.”

Baldwin Cty. Hosp. Auth. v. Trawick, 504 S.E.2d 708, 710 (Ga. Ct. App.

1998) (“ ‘[B]ad faith’ is the opposite of ‘good faith.’ ”); accord Nelson v.

Lindaman, 867 N.W.2d 1, 13 (Iowa 2015). If so, the test of bad faith is a
                                    58

subjective test based upon dishonesty in fact by the landlord in the

landlord–tenant relationship. See Minor v. Adams, 694 S.W.2d 148, 151

(Tex. App. 1985) (“The test of bad faith is whether a person acted in

dishonest disregard of the rights of the person concerned.”).

      Under this approach, intentional or deliberate acts alone do not

establish bad faith, but the landlord’s intention must also be dishonest.

Leskinen v. Burford, 892 S.W.2d 135, 136 (Tex. App. 1994).         A mere

mistake does not establish dishonesty in fact. See H-L Apartments v. Al-

Qawiyy, 440 N.W.2d 371, 373 (Iowa 1989).         Further, the presence of

conflicting evidence on a disputed question of fact does not establish bad

faith. Alltex Constr., Inc. v. Alareksoussi, 685 S.W.2d 93, 95–96 (1984).

      We think the dishonesty-in-fact approach to bad faith in the

IURLTA under Iowa Code section 562A.12(7) is the best approach in light

of the definition of good faith under Iowa Code section 562A.6(4). There

is no objective element in bad faith in Iowa Code section 562A.12(7)

because there is no objective element in good faith as defined in section

562A.6(4). The burden of proving bad faith, or dishonesty in fact, rests

with the tenant. Lewis v. Jaeger, 818 N.W.2d 165, 187 (Iowa 2012). Bad

faith, being a state of mind, may be established by substantial

circumstantial evidence as well as by substantial direct evidence. Roeder

v. Nolan, 321 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa 1982).

      Upon our review of the factual record in this case, we do not find

substantial evidence of dishonesty in fact in connection with the use of

the unlawful automatic carpet-cleaning charge. We have held that the

landlord improperly structured the automatic cleaning charge by linking

payment of the mandatory fee to the rental deposit.         But while the

landlord has used a lease provision that we have found illegal, there is no

evidence of subjective dishonesty in fact in this record. The landlord did
                                    59

not make any misrepresentations to the tenant, but simply used a

structure that we have concluded is prohibited by the IURLTA.           By

simply raising rental rates, the landlord could have obtained the amount

of funds sufficient to offset any discretionary decision by the landlord to

automatically clean the carpet in an apartment at the end of a tenancy.

Under all the facts and circumstances, we cannot say on the current

record that there is substantial evidence that the landlord’s use of the

fully disclosed automatic cleaning charge amounted to dishonesty in fact

under Iowa Code section 562A.12(7).

      In the alternative, the tenant asserts that the landlord’s retention

of late fees from the deposit for nonpayment of the cost of the door

repair, which it characterized as rent, was in bad faith.    The landlord

does not challenge the conclusion of the district court that the imposition

of these late fees was improper. The landlord does assert, however, that

(1) the unpaid maintenance charges under the lease when they are due

become a payment owed to the landlord, (2) as a payment due to the

landlord, the unpaid maintenance charge is considered part of rent―see

Iowa Code section 562A.6(9) (defining “rent” as “a payment to be made to

the landlord under the rental agreement”),―and (3) as rent, the landlord

was entitled to deduct the entire amount owed from the rental deposit

under Iowa Code section 562A.12(3)(a) (authorizing deduction from

rental deposits of to cure default of the tenant “in the payment of rent or

of other funds due to the landlord pursuant to the rental agreement”). In

any event, as with the automatic carpet-cleaning deposit, no one has

claimed that the lease provisions were misrepresented in any way or that

the provisions were not fully disclosed in the lease.        Although the

landlord’s argument may be unpersuasive on the merits, we do not think

there is substantial evidence in the record to support a conclusion that
                                          60

the landlord engaged in subjective dishonesty in fact under Iowa Code

section 562A.12(7) with respect to the issues raised in connection with

deduction of the door-repair expenses.

        This is not to say that a tenant has no remedy for use of unlawful

provisions in a rental agreement, at least under some circumstances.

Iowa Code section 562A.11(2) provides that a landlord may not willfully

use a lease provision known by the landlord to be prohibited under the

IURLTA. The statute provides for actual damages “and not more than

three months’ periodic rent and reasonable attorney fees” for knowing

use of an illegal provision. Id.; see Caruso v. Apts. Downtown, Inc., ___

N.W.2d ___, ___ (Iowa 2016). No claim, however, has been presented in

this case under this statutory provision. 17

        VII. Attorneys’ Fees.

        In this case, the tenant submitted two affidavits related to

attorneys’ fees to the magistrate after the matter was submitted. Lead

counsel Warnock submitted an affidavit.             So did second-chair counsel

Boyer. The landlord resisted on grounds of lateness and that granting

the fees would cause the small claims court to lack jurisdiction of the

case.    Before the magistrate could rule on the question, the landlord



        17There  is an argument that the penalty provisions of Iowa Code section
562A.11(2) and Iowa Code section 562A.12(7) are mutually exclusive. Iowa Code
section 562A.11(2) is arguably directed at the use of unlawful statutory provisions and
requires that the provision is known by the landlord to be unlawful. Iowa Code section
562A.12(7) is arguably directed not at illegal provisions in a lease but instead toward
factual disputes associated with retention of rental deposits. Each provision has its
own statutory penalties. One may question whether the legislature intended the
penalty provisions to be cumulative. For example, if a landlord utilizes a provision
known to be illegal and is thus subject to penalties under Iowa Code section 562A.11(2),
does that expose the landlord to bad-faith penalties under Iowa Code section 562A.12(7)
as well? This seems like double dipping. The parties have not raised the question of
the relationship between penalty provisions in Iowa Code section 562A.11(2) and
section 562A.12(7) in this case. In any event, it is not necessary to consider the
relationship in light of our disposition of the contested issues on other grounds.
                                    61

appealed to district court and the magistrate did not enter a ruling on

the attorneys’ fee issue. On appeal, the district court concluded that

      the attorney fee affidavit filed by Attorney Christine Boyer on
      June 21, 2013 includes [a] sufficient breakdown of the
      attorneys’ fees sought by Plaintiff’s counsel such that the
      court can, and does, determine that the fees sought are
      reasonable.

The district court did not specifically mention the fees of lead counsel

Warnock.

      On appeal to this court, tenant seeks an award of the attorneys’

fees of lead counsel Warnock.         The landlord concedes error was

preserved on the issue. The landlord argues the district court was in the

best position to evaluate the work of counsel and that the fees sought by

lead counsel were excessive. The landlord also argues the district court

lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter because the claim, with attorneys’

fees, exceeded the $5000 jurisdictional limit of small claims court.

Finally, the landlord also contends that the tenant was not a prevailing

party in the litigation and is therefore not entitled to attorneys’ fees. We

have rejected these last two claims.     Thus, the only remaining issue

raised is whether the fees sought by the tenant were excessive, as

claimed by the landlord, or reasonable, as claimed by the tenant. See

Iowa Code § 562A.12(8).

      As a preliminary matter, however, we consider a question of

whether the tenant was required to file in the district court a motion to

enlarge or expand under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904 in order to

preserve the issue. We have held that because Iowa Code chapter 631

contains no express provision for posttrial motions with respect to

appeals to the district court, posttrial motions are not available at this

stage of the proceeding.    See Midwest Recovery Servs. v. Cooper, 465
                                    62

N.W.2d 855, 856 (Iowa 1991). This case is in a slightly different posture,

as it does not involve an appeal from a magistrate to the district court

but instead a discretionary appeal from the district court to this court.

We have cited Midwest Recovery, however, in support of the proposition

that there are no posttrial motions on appeal from a small claims court

judgment. See GE Money Bank, 773 N.W.2d at 539.
      The principle embraced in Midwest Recovery is fully applicable
here. The trial of the matter occurred before the magistrate in this case.
The case was then appealed to the district court.         Midwest Recovery
makes clear that a motion for expanded findings is not available when
the case is tried under Iowa Code chapter 631. 465 N.W.2d at 855–57.
If so, logic dictates there is no basis for a rule 1.904 motion after the
district court has determined the small claims appeal.
      Aside from our caselaw and the lack of authorization of posttrial
motions in Iowa Code chapter 631, grafting rule 1.904(2) into small
claims proceedings would be poor policy.         The parties in small claims
court are often unrepresented by attorneys.          Our caselaw, however,
demonstrates   that   Iowa   Rule   of   Civil   Procedure   1.904   can   be
complicated.    In close cases, even a skilled lawyer has difficulty
determining whether a rule 1.904 motion should be filed.         A misstep,
however, may result in waiver of a claim or even loss of an appeal.
Requiring small claims litigants to understand the intricacies of Iowa
Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2) cuts against the policy of Iowa Code
chapter 631 of providing a swift and simple procedure for determining
disputes. Further, the complexity of trial procedure is one of the reasons
the implied warranty of habitability has been ineffective. See Super, 99
Cal. L. Rev. at 440. Small claims court is, after all, “the people’s court”
where emphasis belongs on simplicity and fairness for pro se litigants.
Kimble v. Kimble, 264 P.3d 1229, 1231–32 (Okla. 2011).
                                     63

      With that necessary digression, we now turn to the issue the
parties have asked us to decide, namely, whether the fees of lead counsel
are excessive. While we could, perhaps, decide the issue on appeal, we
think the better approach at this stage is to remand the question of
Warnock’s attorney’s fees to the district court to allow the district court
in the first instance to consider the reasonableness of the fee request of
lead counsel. We review the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees for
abuse of discretion. GreatAmerican, 691 N.W.2d at 732. As a result, the
district court should evaluate Warnock’s fee application in the first
instance.   On remand, the district court should further determine the
merits of any claim for appellate attorneys’ fees. See Ayala, 415 N.W.2d
at 606; Crouch, 287 N.W.2d at 154.
      VIII. Conclusion.
      For the above reasons, we affirm the district court in favor of the
tenant on the issue of jurisdiction and cleaning costs. We reverse the
decision of the district court adverse to the tenant on the issue of liability
for the door repair and on the claim for damages for failure to permit the
tenants from subleasing the apartment.         We also reverse the district
court decision on punitive damages adverse to the landlord under Iowa
Code section 562A.12(7).
      On the issue of attorneys’ fees, we affirm the judgment of the
district court as to the reasonableness of fees awarded attorney Boyer,
but remand for a determination of reasonable attorney fees in connection
with attorney Warnock’s work on this case and for consideration of any
claim for appellate attorneys’ fees.    Costs are assessed to Apartments
Downtown.
      AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
      All justices concur except Mansfield, Waterman, and Zager, JJ.,
who concur in part and dissent in part.
                                     64
                      #14–0820, De Stefano v. Apartments Downtown, Inc.
MANSFIELD, Justice (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

      I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part because I disagree

with two conclusions reached by the court. In particular, I do not think

small claims courts can award unlimited attorneys’ fees without regard

to the $5000 jurisdictional limit.    Nor do I think the Iowa Uniform

Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (IURLTA) makes it illegal for the

landlord and the tenant of a single-family home to agree that the tenant

will be financially responsible for a repair to an exterior door that is

vandalized during the tenancy.

      I. Small Claims Jurisdiction.

      I would hold that attorneys’ fees count against the jurisdictional

limits of the small claims court.    The statute provides that the small

claims court has jurisdiction over those “civil action[s] for a money

judgment where the amount in controversy is . . . five thousand dollars

or less . . . exclusive of interest and costs.” Iowa Code § 631.1(1) (2011).

So, the question is whether attorneys’ fees are costs or not. This is an

important question because what’s good for the goose is good for the

gander. If a college student represented by a legal aid agency can recover

her attorneys’ fees from a landlord in small claims court, so can a debt

collector suing an indigent working single parent.

      We are interpreting one term, “costs,” in one statute, Iowa Code

section 631.1. We cannot have the term mean one thing for plaintiffs

who are tenants and something different for other plaintiffs.          And

although the matter is not free from doubt, I believe the majority’s view of

the matter is erroneous for several reasons.

      First, as the court acknowledges, we have consistently interpreted

statutes that use the term “costs” alone to exclude attorney fees. See
                                       65

Weaver Constr. Co. v. Heitland, 348 N.W.2d 230, 233 (Iowa 1984) (“We do

not agree, however, that the word ‘costs’ [in chapter 677] should be so

liberally stretched as to include attorney fees.”); Turner v. Zip Motors, 245

Iowa 1091, 1100, 65 N.W.2d 427, 432 (1954) (“[Section 625.1] has

always been held to mean the ordinary costs, not including attorney

fees.”). I am not aware of a single contemporary Iowa statute lacking the

phrase “attorney fees” while using the term “costs” alone that has been

interpreted to award attorney fees as costs. Why start here?

      Second, I am not persuaded that when the general assembly

enacted the Unified Court Act in 1972, it intended to adopt caselaw from

1882 and 1932 relating to the old court system. The statute setting forth

the jurisdictional limits in the old system was worded differently. See

Iowa Code § 601.2 (1971) (stating that justice-of-the-peace courts had

jurisdiction “where the amount in controversy does not exceed one

hundred dollars”).

      As the majority recognizes, the whole idea of the Unified Court Act

was to create a new and better system than what had gone before. And

when the legislature did so, it seems to have consciously borrowed from

the federal diversity statute. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (2012) (“The district

courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions where the matter

in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $75,000, exclusive of interest

and costs . . . .”); 1972 Iowa Acts ch. 1124, § 60 (codified at Iowa Code

§ 631.1 (1973)) (“A small claim is a civil action for money damages where

the amount in controversy in money is one thousand dollars or less,

exclusive of interests and costs . . . .”).

      Under the federal diversity statute, it was well understood that

attorneys’ fees were separate from “interest and costs.”      See, e.g., Mo.

State Life Ins. Co. v. Jones, 290 U.S. 199, 202, 54 S. Ct. 133, 134, 78
                                          66

L. Ed. 267, 269 (1933); 14AA Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller &

Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3712, at 806 (4th ed.

2011). So I would be more inclined to follow the federal interpretations of

the diversity statute as a guide to interpreting Iowa Code section 631.1.

See Peoples Trust & Sav. Bank v. Armstrong, 297 N.W.2d 372, 373–75

(Iowa 1980) (noting the resemblance between the wording of Iowa Code

section 631.1(1) and that of the federal diversity statute and applying

federal diversity precedents to determine when interest counts against

the small claims jurisdictional limit).

       Furthermore, in the original 1972 Unified Court Act, when the

word “costs” was used in other contexts, it clearly did not include

attorneys’ fees. See 1972 Iowa Acts ch. 1124, § 65 (codified at Iowa Code

§ 631.6 (1973)) (“Fees and costs shall be one-half of fees and costs in

regular civil actions in district court.”). “When the same term appears

multiple times in the same statute, it should have the same meaning

each time.” State v. Paye, 865 N.W.2d 1, 7 (Iowa 2015).

       Another reason to interpret costs in the small claims jurisdictional

statute as something different from attorneys’ fees is that it furthers the

legislature’s goal of “a simpler, easier, and less expensive procedure” in

which the parties “need not retain an attorney unless they wished.”

Barnes Beauty Coll. v. McCoy, 279 N.W.2d 258, 259–260 (Iowa 1979).

Plainly, if attorneys’ fees don’t count against the jurisdictional limit, that

is an incentive for parties to use attorneys in small claims court. And

the presence of an attorney, while generally desirable if the matter is

significant, tends to undermine the informality of the proceeding. 18 From


       18The  majority uses the apt phrase: “the people’s court.” Thus, our court
declined to give “preclusive effect to small claims adjudications in subsequent regular
district court trials [because to do so] would be inconsistent with maintaining the
                                        67

the very beginning, the legislature made clear that small claims cases

don’t need attorneys.      See 1972 Iowa Acts ch. 1124, § 70 (codified at

Iowa Code § 631.11 (1973)).

       Under the majority’s approach, some small claims defendants may

be subject to substantial judgments—but without the procedural

protections afforded in district court. It is antithetical to the purpose of

small claims court to allow potentially open-ended attorney-fee recoveries

that could dwarf the stated small claims jurisdictional limit.

       Finally, I am not persuaded that the out-of-state authority on

which the court relies—particularly Lettenmaier v. Lube Connection, Inc.,

741 A.2d 591 (N.J. 1999)—has any bearing on this issue.                     The New

Jersey court rule involved in Lettenmaier has different wording from

Iowa’s statute.     See id. at 593 (quoting New Jersey Rule 6:1–2(a)(1),

which mentions only “the amount in controversy”).

       Furthermore, unlike my colleagues, I would not even give minimal

weight to Lettenmaier’s citation of two Iowa cases because it miscited

them. See id. at 594–95 (citing Ayala v. Ctr. Line, Inc., 415 N.W.2d 603

(Iowa 1987); Maday v. Elview-Stewart Sys. Co., 324 N.W.2d 467 (Iowa

1982)).   Lettenmaier cited Maday for “examining structure of statute

allowing counsel fees and concluding that, because such fees were

grouped with costs, they were costs.” Id. at 594. Lettenmaier cited Ayala

for   “refusing   to   consider    attorney    fees   in    determining      whether

jurisdictional limit had been exceeded because they are separate and

distinct events giving rise to cause of action and cannot be assessed until



_________________________
simplicity and informality of small claims procedures.”    Village Supply, Inc. v. Iowa
Fund, Inc., 312 N.W.2d 551, 554 (Iowa 1981).
                                         68

liability is established.”       Id. at 595.     I can’t find those propositions

anywhere in Maday and Ayala. 19
     II. Lease Provisions Making Tenants Responsible for Costs of
Repairing an Exterior Door Damaged by Third-Party Vandalism.

        The lease between Apartments Downtown—on the one hand—and

Elyse De Stefano and her housemates—on the other hand—is three

pages long. De Stefano testified she did not read the lease before signing

it, but she does not dispute that she assented to its terms. She testified

that no one misrepresented what was in the lease.

        In paragraph 30, the lease provides, “Tenants agree to pay for all

damages to the apartment windows, screens, and doors, including

exterior unit doors (including random acts of vandalism).” The lease also

provides in paragraph 33, “Unless the Landlord is negligent, Tenants are

responsible for the cost of all damages/repairs to windows, screens,

doors, carpet, and walls, regardless of whether such damage is caused by

residents, guests or others.”        Additionally, the lease contains a $452–

$690 estimated cost for the repair or replacement of a prehung entry

door.

        The    lease   further    provides     that   the   landlord’s   Iowa   City
Maintenance would perform all repairs “unless written authorization is

secured from Landlord.” It states that Iowa City Maintenance charges

$70 per hour during regular business hours and $90 per hour during

nights and weekends, with a minimum of one hour per service call. Iowa

City Maintenance is an alter ego of Apartments Downtown.




        19Tobe clear, I have no quarrel with how my colleagues have summarized
Maday and Ayala in their majority opinion. But it is wrong to give the Lettenmaier
decision any credence because it happens to cite to Maday and Ayala.
                                    69

      The three-page lease has some circling and other marks on it.

Some of the marks are in the vicinity of the foregoing provisions.

According to the business manager of Apartments Downtown, the

presence of these markings confirmed that specific provisions of the lease

were actually reviewed with the tenants before they signed it.         As

summarized by the district court, “The Court finds no evidence in the

record that there was a lack of honesty in fact in the conduct of the

transaction concerned.”

      The door replacement charge and the subsequent late fees

stemmed from a burglary that occurred at De Stefano’s residence in

October 2010.    De Stefano and the other tenants filed a police report

with the Iowa City Police Department.        The report stated that the

burglary had left the exterior doorframe and the door lock damaged, and

the tenants reported two or three cans of beer as well as a bottle of

flavored vodka stolen.    Apartments Downtown was called to repair the

door on October 11—presumably by De Stefano or one of her cotenants.

      Apartments Downtown arranged for Iowa City Maintenance to

replace the kicked-in door, and the charges were billed to De Stefano and

her roommates.     The total cost of the repair and replacement was

$598.46, which included $318.46 for the replacement door and $280 for

four hours of labor.     Upon receipt of this charge, one of De Stefano’s

housemates sent a letter dated November 2 to Apartments Downtown,

contesting the charge and advising that the damage was not caused by

any of the tenants and that the police investigation was ongoing. In her

letter, the tenant referenced paragraph 30 of the lease agreement, which

stated, “Tenants agree to pay all damages to the apartment windows,

screen, and doors, including exterior unit doors (including random acts
                                      70

of vandalism).” Yet the tenant said she believed this lease provision to be

unconscionable and thus unenforceable by a court.

      Apartments Downtown responded on November 17,

               By signing the lease agreement you agree to pay for all
      damages to the apartment windows, screens, and doors,
      including exterior unit doors, including random acts of
      vandalism. If . . . the door was broken down during a
      burglary, the destruction of the door is considered vandalism
      . . . . Even though the door was damaged during the break
      in, and not by a guest of the tenants, it still falls under the
      basis o[f] a visitor, whether they were a known guest or not
      . . . . [I]f the police investigation results in the finding of the
      guilty party that was responsible for the damage, then at
      that time we would be more than happy to charge said
      person(s) for the damage. Until then however, the damage
      incurred to the property fall[s] under the responsibility of the
      leased tenants. At this time you currently still have an
      outstanding balance of 598.46 on your account, if this would
      happen to still be current when December[’]s rent comes
      due, it will accumulate the standard $40.00 late charge.

      A principal bone of contention between the parties is whether the

IURLTA permits the lessor and the lessee of a single-family home to agree

in writing that the lessee will be responsible for the repair of a door

damaged by third-party vandalism during the lessee’s tenancy.                My

colleagues ultimately do not decide this issue, but they frame the issue

in such one-sided terms that I feel obligated to respond.

      Section   562A.15(1)    of   the   IURLTA   imposes     a   warranty   of

habitability on the landlord.      Iowa Code § 562A.15(1) (2011)        Among

other things, the landlord shall “[c]omply with the requirements of

applicable building and housing codes materially affecting health and

safety” and “[m]ake all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and

keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition.”                   See id.

§ 562A.15(1)(a)–(b).   However, the duties in subsection (1) of section

562A.15 are immediately qualified by subsection (2):
                                      71
      The landlord and tenant of a single family residence may
      agree in writing that the tenant perform the landlord’s duties
      specified in paragraphs “e” and “f” [relating to waste removal
      and the provision of water, hot water, and heat], and also
      specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, and
      remodeling, but only if the transaction is entered into in
      good faith.

Id. § 562A.15(2) (emphasis added.)

      My colleagues present a lengthy argument as to why subsection (2)

affects only paragraphs (e) and (f) of subsection (1) and not the rest of the

subsection. In other words, according to this argument, the tenant of a

single-family residence may not agree to assume any responsibilities

relating to the implied warranty of habitability except those covered by

paragraphs (e) and (f).       The majority does not ultimately adopt this

position,   but   it   does   not   acknowledge   or   even   mention    the

counterarguments against this view.

      The biggest problem with this interpretation of the IURLTA is that

it gives no effect to the language after “and also” in subsection (2). See

id. § 4.4(2) (setting forth the presumption that “[t]he entire statute is

intended to be effective”).

      Clearly, the language “and also specified repairs, maintenance

tasks, alterations, and remodeling” must refer to landlord duties other

than those set forth in paragraphs (e) and (f). Otherwise, the language

would be totally superfluous.       Driving this point home is that our

legislature used the separator “and also,” indicating that what followed

“and also” was going to be something different from what preceded it.

Furthermore, it is difficult to conceive of alterations and remodeling that

would be needed to provide waste removal, water, hot water, or heat, if

indeed the entire subsection only applied to the duties in paragraphs (e)

and (f).
                                     72

      Equally   clearly,   the   language   “and   also   specified   repairs,

maintenance tasks, alterations, and remodeling” must relate to landlord

duties covered by paragraphs (1)(a), (1)(b), (1)(c), or (1)(d). For one thing,

section 562A.15(2) is placed within the statute and written as if it were a

qualifier to section 562A.15(1) as a whole. Moreover, if the terminology

“specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, and remodeling” did

not relate to matters that would otherwise be landlord duties under

paragraphs (1)(a), (1)(b), (1)(c), or (1)(d), the language would again be

totally superfluous. Under a separate section of the IURLTA, landlords

and tenants can always agree to various things in their leases if their

agreements are not contrary to the terms of the IURLTA—and there is no

“good faith” requirement. See id. § 562A.9(1) (stating that “[t]he landlord

and tenant may include in a rental agreement, terms and conditions not

prohibited by this chapter or other rule of law”). The legislature did not

need to include the verbiage after “and also” to authorize the same thing.

      Furthermore, the term “specified repairs” in subsection (2)

seemingly corresponds with language in paragraph (1)(b) requiring the

landlord to “[m]ake all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and

keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition.”              Iowa Code

§ 562A.15(1)(b), .15(2).   Under the argument offered by the majority,

repairs has to mean something different in two subsections of the same

statute. That seems unlikely. See Paye, 865 N.W.2d at 7 (indicating that

the same term should have the same meaning when it appears multiple

times in the same statute).

      Oddly, after scouring the country for out-of-state caselaw to

support its interpretation of Iowa’s sui generis small claims jurisdictional

statute, including the aforementioned New Jersey case, the majority
                                      73

omits discussion of pertinent out-of-state caselaw here—even though we

are talking about a uniform act adopted in many jurisdictions.

      Existing caselaw interpreting the URLTA undermines the argument

presented by the majority. In Sullivan v. Subramanian, 2 P.3d 66 (Alaska

2000), the court referenced the duties in Alaska’s counterpart to

paragraphs (1)(a), (1)(b), (1)(c), and (1)(d), and then added, “Barring

circumstances that do not exist here, landlords are prohibited from

shifting these duties to their tenants.” Id. at 69–70 (emphasis added). In

a footnote, the court then revealed the circumstances under which those

duties could be shifted by citing the “specified repairs, maintenance

tasks, alterations, or remodeling” language in Alaska’s counterpart to

section 562A.15(3). Id. at 70 n.8. The court also cited a prior Alaska

case, see id., which indicated that Alaska’s counterpart to section

562A.15(3) “governs landlords’ attempts to shift duties such as the

maintenance of common areas [found in the counterpart to Iowa Code

section 562A.15(1)(b)] to tenants,”    Coburn v. Burton, 790 P.2d 1355,

1357 (Alaska 1990).

      Similarly, in L & M Investments Co. v. Morrison, 605 P.2d 1347,

1350 (Or. Ct. App. 1980), the court cited Oregon’s counterpart to section

562A.15(1) and said, “[I]t is presumed that the stated rental is for

premises in a habitable condition and the landlord is estopped from

contending otherwise, at least in the absence of an express written

agreement pursuant to [Oregon’s counterpart to section 562A.15(3)].”

      In Graber v. Engstrom, 384 N.W.2d 307, 308 (N.D. 1986), there was

a scenario like the present one where the landlord of a single-family

residence (a mobile home) argued that the lease had transferred certain

habitability obligations to the tenant including the obligation to repair a

broken window.    Discussing North Dakota’s counterpart to Iowa Code
                                    74

section 562A.15, the court indicated this shifting of responsibility would

be lawful:

             Section 47–16–13.1(1), N.D.C.C., among other things,
      requires a landlord of a residential dwelling unit to comply
      with the requirements of applicable building and housing
      codes materially affecting health and safety; to make all
      repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and keep the
      premises in a fit and habitable condition; and to maintain in
      good and safe working order and condition all electrical,
      plumbing, sanitary, heating, and other facilities and
      appliances supplied or required to be supplied by the
      landlord. Section 47–16–13.1(4), N.D.C.C., however, allows
      the landlord and tenant of a single-family residence to agree
      in writing that the tenant perform the landlord’s duties
      concerning specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations
      and remodeling if the transaction is entered into in good
      faith.

Id. at 308–09 (citation omitted).    However, the court found the lease

provision in question was “vague as to the specific maintenance tasks

intended to be delegated to” the tenant and therefore upheld the lower

court’s fact determination that they did not include the matters at issue.

Id. at 309–10.

      Also, the Rhode Island Supreme Court, interpreting a statute

somewhat different from the uniform act but with nearly identical

wording in relevant part to Iowa Code section 562A.15(2), said,

      It is . . . clear that the landlord may shift the responsibility
      for performing ordinary specified repairs and maintenance of
      the rented dwelling premises to the tenant, provided that the
      parties act in good faith; the parties agree in writing; the
      agreement is supported by adequate consideration; and the
      agreement is not in violation of [the Rhode Island statute
      governing landlord’s maintenance duties and the landlord’s
      ability to contract them away].

State Water Res. Bd. v. Howard, 729 A.2d 712, 715 (R.I. 1999) (per

curiam). In that case, the state leased residential properties to tenants

on condition that tenants assumed the responsibility for all necessary

maintenance and repairs in exchange for a deduction from the fair
                                    75

market value of rent. Id. at 713. Because the leases did not “shift the

responsibility to cure existing or past violations of the applicable housing

and building codes to the tenants” and the state had attempted to

negotiate the repair-shifting provisions in good faith, the challenged

provisions were upheld under Rhode Island law. Id. at 715.

      I agree that an operating lock on an exterior door is one aspect of

habitability.    See Brichacek v. Hiskey, 401 N.W.2d 44, 47 (Iowa 1987)

(“On the record of this case we believe that a landlord is under a duty to

provide a front door lock as a part of his overall duty of providing

habitable quarters.”).   And I assume that the burglary here, like most

burglaries, resulted in the damaged side-entry door no longer being

secure.   However, Iowa Code section 562A.15(2) does not provide an

exception for “specified repairs so long as they do not relate to

habitability.”    Instead, the exception is simply for specified repairs.

Furthermore, if the parties’ ability to contract regarding specified repairs

were limited by the landlord’s duty to perform any repair that relates to

habitability, it is easy to foresee that many disputes would arise. Some

door and window repairs relate to habitability; some do not.        Thus, I

believe the IURLTA allows a landlord and a tenant of a single-family

home to agree that the tenant will perform specified repairs, where the

subject matter is specified and the task to be performed can be fairly

characterized as a repair. That is what section 562A.15(2) says.

      Tenants living in a single-family residence may be in a better

position than a landlord who is not on the scene to safeguard doors,

screens, and windows from outside harm.          Note that the argument

bruited by the majority applies to all landlords and tenants of single-

family residences.     Thus, a lifelong Iowan who rents her home upon
                                    76

retiring to Florida could not contract that the renter would be responsible

for repairing the doors to the home.

      The court ultimately finds for De Stefano on an alternative,

narrower ground. The court reasons that even if De Stefano might be

required to perform specified repairs under section 562A.15(2), she

cannot be required to pay for such repairs when performed by the

landlord.   While this ground is more plausible, I do not believe the

IURLTA draws such a fine line. The IURLTA allows any provision “not

prohibited by this chapter or other rule of law,” Iowa Code § 562A.9(1),

while disallowing any provision that “waive[s] . . . rights or remedies

under this chapter,” id. § 562A.11(1)(a). Here, the lease provision merely

imposed on the tenant the duty to pay for a repair that the law

authorized the parties to agree would be the tenant’s responsibility.

Significantly, this is not a case where the tenant sought to perform the

repair herself or himself and was denied permission to do so. Rather, the

lease provided that repairs would be performed by Iowa City Maintenance

unless the tenants obtained written authorization from the landlord. The

tenants never sought such authorization.

      For these reasons, I would hold that Iowa law does not prohibit a

landlord and a tenant of a single-family residence from agreeing in the

lease that the tenant will pay for the costs of repairing damage to a door

resulting from third-party vandalism when the damage occurs during the

lease term and is not due to the landlord’s negligence. I further note that

other provisions in the IURLTA protect the tenant in other, more serious

circumstances than a vandalized door. See id. § 562A.25 (authorizing

the tenant to vacate all or part of the premises and terminate the lease or

receive a rent reduction when “the dwelling unit or premises are

damaged or destroyed by fire or casualty to an extent that enjoyment of
                                         77

the dwelling unit is substantially impaired”); see also 49 Am. Jur. 2d

Landlord and Tenant § 704, at 679 (2006) (noting that even a general

covenant to repair “merely binds the lessee to make ordinary repairs, as

opposed to extensive structural repairs”). 20

       III. Conclusion.

       I agree with the court’s resolution of the automatic carpet-cleaning

deduction, the bad-faith penalty, and attorneys’ fees.             However, in my

view, attorneys’ fees are included in the $5000 maximum amount in

controversy recoverable in small claims.           In addition, I do not believe

Iowa law forbids lease provisions requiring the tenant of a single-family

home to pay the costs of repairing door vandalism that occurs during the

tenancy. If I were deciding this case, I would affirm the thorough order of

the district court except I would reverse the decision on punitive

damages and remand for consideration of Attorney Warnock’s fees

subject to the overall $5000 jurisdictional limit.

       Waterman and Zager, JJ., join this concurrence in part and

dissent in part.




       20A  lessee of real property generally has an insurable interest in the leased
property. See Neubauer v. Hostetter, 485 N.W.2d 87, 89–90 (Iowa 1992). In this case,
the record indicates that the landlord had insurance for the premises, but cost of the
door repair was below the deductible.