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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 16-CV-669
09/13/2018
MARIO J. SEGRETI, APPELLANT,
V.
LUKE DEIULIIS, et al., APPELLEES.
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(CAB-4255-04)
(Hon. Judith N. Macaluso, Trial Judge)
(Argued January 16, 2018 Decided September 13, 2018)
Michael B. McGovern for appellant.
Appellee Luke DeIuliis filed a statement in lieu of brief supporting the
April 19, 2016, decision of the trial court.
Appellee Antoinette Witt filed a statement in lieu of brief supporting the
April 19, 2016, decision of the trial court.
Before GLICKMAN and FISHER, Associate Judges, and FERREN, Senior Judge.
FISHER, Associate Judge: Appellant Mario Segreti sought attorney’s fees
after prevailing in three actions concerning his rights as a tenant. The Superior
Court denied his motion. We affirm.
2
I. Background
Appellant moved in with his grandmother, Marguerite Corsetti, in 1990.
Before she died, Corsetti deeded the house to an inter vivos trust, and shortly after
her death in 2004, the trustees attempted to remove appellant from the property so
they could sell it. Determined not to treat appellant as a tenant, which, as their
lawyer explained, they feared would confer on him “all kinds of special rights,” the
trustees declined to seek a judicial eviction and instead sent appellant a letter
demanding that he vacate. When he refused, they told the companies that provided
electricity and water to the Corsetti house that a squatter lived on the property—an
assertion that led the companies to shut off services.
That act launched the protracted legal battle that gives rise to this case—a
procedural history we summarized in a prior memorandum opinion and judgment
(“MOJ”) concerning the merits of that litigation. See Corsetti Trust v. Segreti,
Nos. 10-CV-1021, -1039, -529, 11-CV-1111 & 12-AA-1656, Mem. Op. & J. at 2
(D.C. Sept. 30, 2014). First, in May 2004, appellant filed a complaint in the
Superior Court (“the civil case”) seeking preliminary and permanent injunctions
restoring his utilities and enjoining co-trustee Luke DeIuliis from interfering with
his lawful use of the property. DeIuliis responded with an answer and a six-count
3
counterclaim. Second, appellant filed a petition with the Rental Accommodations
and Conversion Division of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs
(“the administrative action”), that alleged, among other things, that the trust cut off
his utility services for retaliatory purposes. Finally, in November 2008, the trust
decided to switch tactics and filed a complaint for possession in the Landlord-
Tenant Branch of the Superior Court (the “landlord-tenant case”).
Appellant prevailed in all three of these actions and, except for one issue not
relevant here, we affirmed each decision on appeal.1 After those appeals, he filed a
renewed motion for attorney’s fees and costs in all three cases, as the Superior
Court had held a similar motion in abeyance pending our review of the trial court
and agency decisions. The Superior Court awarded appellant costs but denied his
claim for fees. After the court denied his motion for reconsideration, he filed this
appeal, contesting the court’s denial of fees. Neither the trust nor its trustees filed
a brief as appellee, resting instead on the Superior Court order.
II. Analysis
1
Appellant also initiated an action in the Probate Division, contesting
Corsetti’s will and claiming title to the property. However, the trustees won that
round of litigation and, consequently, appellant does not seek compensation for the
attorney’s fees associated with it.
4
The American Rule generally renders each party responsible for its own fees
for legal services. Assidon v. Abboushi, 16 A.3d 939, 942 (D.C. 2011). However,
that rule admits of exceptions and appellant contends that two of them apply here.
He first argues that, under D.C. Code § 42-3509.02 (2012 Repl.), he was entitled to
attorney’s fees for services rendered in the civil and administrative cases. Second,
appellant invokes the common law “bad faith” exception to argue for additional
fees, primarily those amassed in the landlord-tenant case. We consider appellant’s
claim for fees in each case in turn.
A. Claim for Fees in the Civil Case
D.C. Code § 42-3509.02 authorizes courts to “award reasonable attorney’s
fees to the prevailing party in any action under this chapter, except actions for
eviction authorized under § 42-3505.01.” While appellant prevailed on his
complaint and on the counterclaims in the civil case, his success makes him
eligible for fees only if those claims arose “under this chapter,” that is, chapter 35
of title 42 of the District of Columbia Code—the Rental Housing Act (“the Act” or
the “RHA”). Thus, in order to decide whether the trial court should have awarded
appellant statutory fees, we must determine, as a threshold matter, whether the
5
complaint or the counterclaims arose under the Act, a question of statutory
construction that we consider de novo. See Twyman v. Johnson, 655 A.2d 850,
855 (D.C. 1995) (whether tenant can assert cause of action under RHA is an issue
of “pure[]. . . statutory construction”).
1. The Complaint
a.
In his complaint, appellant alleged that DeIuliis arranged the utilities shut-
off in order to evict him “by means of self-help.” For forty years, this court has
held that such conduct is unlawful and that tenants can contest it in Superior Court.
Mendes v. Johnson, 389 A.2d 781, 787 (D.C. 1978) (en banc), abrogated in part
on other grounds by Davis v. Moore, 772 A.2d 204, 230 (D.C. 2001) (en banc).
However, the remedy we have recognized—a suit for wrongful eviction—arises
under common law, not the RHA. See id. (stating that a self-help eviction “gives
rise to a cause of action in tort”); see also Young v. District of Columbia, 752 A.2d
138, 144 (D.C. 2000) (housing provider may “be liable in tort for wrongful
eviction”). Accordingly, we have never authorized § 42-3509.02 attorney’s fees to
parties simply because they prevailed on a wrongful eviction count. Instead, where
6
we have upheld an award of fees to such claimants, we have relied on other
exceptions to the American Rule, such as the one for bad faith in litigation. See,
e.g., Oliver v. Mustafa, 929 A.2d 873, 878, 879–80 (D.C. 2007).
We disagree with appellant’s assertion that D.C. Code § 42-3505.01
provides an additional cause of action for challenging a self-help eviction. That
RHA provision primarily enumerates the lawful bases for evicting a tenant and
establishes notice requirements; it does not contain an express, blanket prohibition
on regaining possession through nonjudicial means. The closest it comes is
subsection (f), which establishes comprehensive procedures for evictions initiated
in order to renovate or alter the rented property. See D.C. Code § 42-3505.01
(f)(1)–(5). To the extent that provision bars self-help, it does so only in the limited
context in which it applies—evictions pursued “for the immediate purpose of
making alterations or renovations.” See § 42-3505.01 (f)(1). Subsection (f) does
not establish a general prohibition on self-help and also does not apply here, as
appellant does not allege that the trustees sought to evict him in order to renovate
the house in which he resided.
Even if one could read § 42-3505.01 to ban self-help evictions implicitly,
this court has heretofore not done so. When we first announced the prohibition on
7
self-help evictions of residential tenants, we did not cite the RHA, see Mendes, 389
A.2d at 786 & n.12, even though the version of the statute in effect at the time
contained a provision analogous to § 42-3505.01, see D.C. Code § 45-1653 (a)
(1978 Supp.). Instead, we relied primarily on other landlord-tenant statutes—
specifically D.C. Code §§ 16-1124, -1501, and 45-905 (now § 42-3210)—which
establish summary proceedings for evictions and, which we held, implicitly ban
landlords from regaining possession by nonjudicial means. Mendes, 389 A.2d at
786 & n.12, 787.
Regardless of whether § 42-3505.01 contains a blanket ban on self-help, it
certainly does not establish a new cause of action for challenging such conduct.
Nothing in the provision’s text expressly or implicitly authorizes tenants to sue
whenever their landlords seek to regain possession via nonjudicial means. Nor
does its legislative history provide a basis for inferring an intent to create such a
cause of action. If anything, § 42-3505.01 affirms that when the legislature wishes
to establish a cause of action, it knows how to say so. Subsection (f)—which, as
noted, applies only to evictions pursued for purposes of conducting renovations—
authorizes plaintiffs to “seek enforcement of any right or provision under this
subsection.” D.C. Code § 42-3505.01 (f)(6) (emphasis added). Through the
italicized language, the legislature made clear that § 42-3505.01 (f)(6) does not
8
permit suits for violations of rights expressed or implied by other subsections—a
restriction that evinces an intent to limit Superior Court claims based on § 42-
3505.01.
To defend his broad interpretation, appellant insisted at oral arguments that
the wrongful eviction tort does not provide an adequate remedy for challenging
self-help. He argued, first, that a wrongful eviction plaintiff can only seek
damages. However, our case law suggests that tenants relying on that cause of
action can also pursue an injunction. See Henson v. Prue, 810 A.2d 912, 914, 916
(D.C. 2002) (affirming Superior Court decision awarding injunctive and
declaratory relief, but not damages, to a wrongful eviction plaintiff). Appellant
also contended that tenants without leases cannot raise a wrongful eviction claim
under the common law; yet our precedents refute this contention as well. See
Young, 752 A.2d at 142, 143 (defining a tenancy at sufferance as a month-to-
month rental “without a written agreement” and observing that such a tenancy
“require[s] court process for termination”).
Both of these arguments suffer from a more significant defect: they assume
that we have authority to interpret a statute so as to achieve a particular policy
outcome. That is not our role. Although this court construes remedial statutes
9
such as the RHA broadly, we cannot infer a right to sue where neither the text nor
the legislative history justifies doing so. See, e.g., Twyman v. Johnson, 655 A.2d
850, 856–58 (D.C. 1995) (holding that RHA does not create private damages
action for retaliatory eviction). Here, we have no basis for concluding that § 42-
3505.01 creates an additional cause of action for challenging self-help evictions in
Superior Court; consequently, we hold that it does not.2
b.
At oral argument, appellant hinted at an alternative basis for recovering
under § 42-3509.02. He noted that his wrongful eviction claim turned on whether
he qualified as a “tenant,” a point he ultimately won when his opponent conceded
(after an adverse ruling by the RHC) that he satisfied the RHA’s definition of the
term. This definitional connection between the Act and his victory, appellant
posits, entitles him to statutory fees.
2
Because appellant only argued that his complaint arose under § 42-
3505.01, we have no need to address the possibility that another RHA provision
might have provided a basis for his claim. Nor does our holding bear on a tenant’s
right to seek relief for a “substantial[] reduc[tion] . . . [in] services” by filing an
administrative action pursuant to D.C. Code § 42-3509.01 (a).
10
We disagree. As a threshold matter, appellant does not present, much less
develop, this argument in his brief. That fact alone would justify ignoring it. See
McFarland v. George Washington Univ., 935 A.2d 337, 351 (D.C. 2007). But
even if we excused this defect, the contention would still fail on the merits.
Section 42-3509.02 does not allow recovery simply because a prevailing party has
referenced the Act or used it to strengthen an argument. Rather, that provision
specifies that the RHA must provide the cause of action on which the party
prevails. Section 42-3509.02 makes this point clear when it states that parties can
recoup fees only if they win on an “action under this chapter.” (Emphasis added.)
Here, appellant did not plead such an action, and the common law claim he
did assert in no way depended on the Act generally or its definition of “tenant” in
particular. Our post-RHA precedents suggest that a plaintiff who satisfies any
definition of “tenant” recognized by law—including ones supplied by the common
law or statutes other than the RHA—can assert a wrongful eviction claim.3 See,
3
Although our 2014 memorandum opinion and judgment stated that the
RHA definition of tenant “occupies the field,” we made this point in the context of
analyzing whether appellant’s administrative claims arose under that statute such
that the Rental Housing Commission had jurisdiction over them. We in no way
suggested that the RHA entirely preempted the common law and other landlord
tenant statutes, an observation that would have contravened our prior holdings.
See, e.g., Hernandez v. Banks, 84 A.3d 543, 554 (D.C. 2014) (noting that this court
seeks to “reconcile[]” the RHA with other landlord-tenant statutes). More
(continued…)
11
e.g., Young, 752 A.2d at 143 (analyzing whether “landlord-tenant relationship
exist[ed]” in wrongful eviction action by citing several definitions of tenant,
including one provided by RHA, “factors” established by case law, and definition
of estate by sufferance under D.C. Code § 42-520 (then codified as § 45-220));
Harkins v. Win Corp., 771 A.2d 1025, 1027 (D.C.), amended in part on reh’g, 777
A.2d 800 (D.C. 2001) (relying on common law definitions to distinguish tenants,
who are protected from self-help evictions, from roomers, who are not). That
means that satisfying the RHA definition is not an essential element of proving the
wrongful eviction tort: while plaintiffs can establish their rights against a self-help
eviction by qualifying as an RHA tenant, they can make the same argument by
relying on other authorities instead.
Appellant appears to have recognized this fact in the Superior Court
proceedings, as he did not litigate his case as if it depended on the Act. His
complaint made no reference to the RHA; even when it asserted that he qualified
as a “tenant . . . entitled to all protections under District of Columbia law,” it did
(…continued)
generally, we observe that, contrary to appellant’s assertions, our prior decision did
not consider the basis for the claims in the civil case, much less hold that they
arose under the RHA.
12
not state which definition he met.4 Moreover, while a few of appellant’s Superior
Court filings cited the RHA definition of tenant, at least one also asserted that he
qualified under other definitions of that term. Memorandum in Support of Motion
for Order Lifting Stay, etc. at 2 n.1, 3, Segreti v. DeIuliis, CA No. 4255-04 (D.C.
Super. Ct. July 23, 2007).
The main link between appellant’s complaint and the RHA is DeIuliis’s
decision, after he had lost the point in an administrative action covered by the
RHA, is appellee Deluliis’s decision to “prospectively” recognize appellant as a
“statutory” tenant and consent to a permanent injunction enjoining future reliance
on self-help. Yet, in admitting that appellant qualified as a statutory tenant,
DeIuliis never conceded that the wrongful eviction claim arose under the RHA.
Moreover, DeIuliis’s attempt to “get this matter resolved[] and get the Trust back
on track” cannot transform an action predicated on the common law into one
“under this chapter.” We recognized a similar point in our prior MOJ, when we
explained that, by conceding that appellant qualified as a tenant, DeIuliis did “not
convert [his] earlier filed” common law counterclaim for mesne profits “into a
demand for rent” under the RHA. For the same reason, DeIuliis’s concession also
4
The quoted clause perhaps could be read as a request for a declaratory
judgment that appellant qualifies as a tenant. However, he has not argued that he
sought such relief, or that he prevailed on that claim under the RHA.
13
did not alter the legal authority on which appellant’s “earlier filed” complaint
relied.
***
In sum, appellant did not state a claim under D.C. Code § 42-3505.01 nor
did his civil complaint otherwise arise under the RHA. Thus, he cannot obtain
statutory fees for prevailing on it.
2. The Counterclaims
Appellant has also failed to demonstrate that any of DeIuliis’s six
counterclaims in the civil case arose under the RHA. Three of them—alleging
unpaid loans, tortious conversion, and breach of fiduciary duties—clearly do not
fall within the purview of that statute. These claims pertained to Mr. Segreti’s
alleged failure to repay a debt and misuse of his grandmother’s assets; they were
not based on his occupancy of the property and therefore do not arise under the
RHA. Although the remaining three claims—ejectment, mesne profits, and
trespass—do relate to appellant’s use of the property, DeIuliis made no reference
to the Rental Housing Act in asserting them. Rather, he grounded his ejectment
14
and mesne profits counts in D.C. Code §§ 16-1101 and -1109, respectively. And,
while DeIuliis did not specify the legal basis for his trespass claim, this court has
treated that cause of action as arising under the common law. See, e.g., Hinton v.
Sealander Brokerage Co., 917 A.2d 95, 110 (D.C. 2007) (deriving rule for
assessing damages for trespass claim from “general principles of property and tort
law”). Thus, because the counterclaims did not arise under the RHA, § 42-3509.02
does not entitle appellant to attorney’s fees for prevailing on them either.
3. Affirming on Alternative Grounds
We agree with the trial court’s judgment but, because we deem its reasoning
unpersuasive,5 affirm based on the grounds expounded above instead. This court
“may affirm a decision for reasons other than those given by the trial court,”
Randolph v. United States, 882 A.2d 210, 218 (D.C. 2005) (quoting Purce v.
United States, 482 A.2d 772, 775 n.6 (D.C. 1984)), and we deem nothing improper
5
The court determined that appellant’s complaint did arise under § 42-
3505.01 but held that the RHA’s fee-shifting rule did not apply. Both aspects of
this holding are flawed. First, for the reasons stated previously, appellant’s
complaint did not arise under § 42-3505.01; second, if it had, § 42-3509.02 would
not bar recovery. That provision only prohibits fee awards to parties who prevail
in “actions for eviction authorized under § 42-3505.01.” D.C. Code § 42-3509.02
(emphasis added). A claim that contests an eviction—like the one raised in
appellant’s complaint in the civil case—is not an “action for eviction” and
therefore § 42-3509.02’s exception would not apply to it.
15
about invoking that authority here. First, doing so does not usurp the trial court’s
discretion. Our holding turns on whether the claims in the civil case arise under
§ 42-3505.01, a question of law over which the trial court has no discretion. See
Twyman, 655 A.2d at 855.
Second, relying on alternative grounds is not procedurally unfair. Although
the trial court did not analyze the legal basis of the claims in the civil case,
appellant appears to have foreseen that we would. His brief on appeal asserts that,
in our 2014 MOJ, we referenced the RHA “at least a dozen” times and
“clear[ly] . . . concluded that Mr. Segreti prevailed and did so under the RLA
[sic].” This analysis—which, as noted previously, misconstrues our prior decision,
see note 3, supra—is most plausibly read as an attempt to persuade this court that
the civil case involved RHA causes of action. Moreover, in the Superior Court, the
defendants raised versions of the arguments on which we rely. After appellant
moved the court to reconsider its denial of fees, defendant Antoinette Witt filed an
opposition in which she asserted—admittedly without analysis or reference to
supporting authority—that appellant’s complaint did not arise under the Rental
Housing Act. Similarly, in their “Answer to Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s
Fees,” the defendants argued that their counterclaims were not predicated on the
RHA. Appellant filed replies to both oppositions and, in each one, raised cursory
16
challenges to the defendants’ arguments. Thus, appellant had notice and an
opportunity to demonstrate that the civil case involved RHA claims; there is
nothing unfair about denying him fees based on his failure to devote more attention
to this point.6
B. The Administrative Case
Appellant also sought fees under § 42-3509.02 for legal services rendered in
the administrative case and argues that the trial court erred by refusing to consider
that claim. Here, the decision not to award fees under § 42-3509.02 did not turn on
a question of statutory interpretation and, consequently, we review the court’s
decision for abuse of discretion. See Jerome Mgmt., Inc. v. District of Columbia
Rental Hous. Comm’n, 682 A.2d 178, 186 (D.C. 1996). The trial court did not
hold that it lacked authority to award the fees appellant requested; rather, it chose
6
Appellant also complains that the Superior Court proceedings were unfair
because the court “never suggested” that it might deny him fees altogether. To the
contrary, before appellant filed his renewed motion for fees, the court indicated
that his entitlement to relief remained an open question. For example, it asked the
parties to analyze the “factors involved in my consideration of whether to approve
and . . . how much money to approve.” (Emphasis added.) True, the court issued
an order requiring appellant’s fee motion to “follow the format of Johnson v.
Georgia Highway Express, Inc., 488 F.2d 714, 717–19 (5th Cir. 1974),” a case that
concerns the amount of fees to award, not whether to award any at all. But it was
not reasonable for appellant to interpret the court’s emphasis on this case as
relieving him of the burden of proving an essential element of his claim.
17
to leave the matter to the agency, which the court determined could better balance
the equities with respect to the way that distinct litigation was conducted.
Although the administrative case and the civil case addressed similar issues, the
court’s decision to defer to the Rental Housing Commission on a matter over
which that body presided was a reasonable choice. Assuming he complies with the
relevant procedural rules, and is not barred by the statute of limitations, appellant
may petition the Rental Housing Commission to award him fees; however, the trial
court did not abuse its discretion in declining to resolve this claim.
C. The Landlord-Tenant Case
We also reject appellant’s common law contention that the court erred in
declining to award attorney’s fees in the landlord-tenant case—or in any of the
other actions giving rise to this appeal—based on his opponents’ alleged bad faith
conduct. Under the common law, trial courts may award attorney’s fees to the
prevailing party if its “opponent acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for
oppressive reasons.” Jung v. Jung, 844 A.2d 1099, 1107 (D.C. 2004). We review
18
awards of fees under this exception to the American Rule for abuse of discretion.7
Id. at 1108.
Here, appellant identified eighteen acts that he alleged the trust committed in
bad faith. After considering these averments in detail, the trial court concluded
that only one of the acts appellant listed—the attempt to evict him without judicial
process—actually reflected bad faith. The trust’s reliance on self-help left
appellant’s home without electricity for four days and without water for two. The
trial court determined that he had received “sufficient[]” compensation for this
harm, noting that the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) awarded him $5,600 in
punitive and trebled damages as a result of it. Appellant does not argue that the
ALJ’s order failed to remunerate him fully for the trust’s reliance on self-help; nor
does he contend that the trial court abused its discretion in concluding that the
7
When appellant renewed his motion for fees, he simultaneously moved for
summary judgment on that claim. As a result, he argues that we should assess the
trial court’s decision de novo, the standard used for reviewing summary judgment
rulings. Yet, appellant cites no authority indicating that we should apply de novo
review to an order considering a motion for fees filed under both Super. Ct. Civ. R.
54 (d)(2) and 56 (a). To the contrary, courts appear to have applied an abuse of
discretion standard to cases in this posture. See, e.g., Mr. L. v. Sloan, 449 F.3d
405, 406 (2nd Cir. 2006) (Sotomayor, J.), where the district court denied a claim
for attorney’s fees on summary judgment and the Second Circuit stated that it
would review the “decision to grant or deny attorney’s fees for abuse of
discretion . . . [and] the district court’s interpretation of the relevant fee-shifting
statute de novo.”
19
ALJ’s remedy obviated the need to award him fees. Appellant also does not argue
that the trial court erred in concluding that his remaining allegations of bad faith
did not actually deserve that label. Indeed, appellant expressly “adopt[ed] and
incoporat[ed]” the court’s findings.
Instead, appellant simply asserts that the court erroneously failed to assess
whether his allegations demonstrated bad faith when viewed collectively, rather
than individually. Notably, appellant did not raise this challenge in his motion to
reconsider. In any event, the trial court fully considered the interplay among his
allegations. Indeed, the court specifically stated that it “combined related items
[raised in appellant’s motion] and occasionally omitted items deemed
insubstantial.” Consequently, we have no basis for disturbing its decision.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.