MAIA FALCONI-SACHS v. LPF SENATE SQUARE, LLC ( 2016 )


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  •                             District of Columbia
    Court of Appeals
    No. 14-CV-433
    JUL - 7 2016
    MAIA FALCONI-SACHS,
    Appellant,
    v.                                                        CAB-5314-12
    LPF SENATE SQUARE, LLC, et al.,
    Appellees.
    On Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia
    Civil Division
    BEFORE: BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY and EASTERLY, Associate Judges; and PRYOR,
    Senior Judge.
    JUDGMENT
    This case came to be heard on the transcript of record and the briefs filed,
    and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, and as set forth in the opinion
    filed this date, it is now hereby
    ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the trial court’s decision is affirmed in
    part and reversed and remanded in part.
    For the Court:
    Dated: July 7, 2016.
    Per Curiam opinion for the court.
    Concurring opinion by Associate Judge Catharine Easterly.
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 14-CV-433
    7/7/16
    MAIA FALCONI-SACHS, APPELLANT,
    V.
    LPF SENATE SQUARE, LLC, et al., APPELLEES.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CAB-5314-12)
    (Hon. Thomas J. Motley, Trial Judge)
    (Argued October 13, 2015                                     Decided July 7, 2016)
    Daniel Hornal for appellant.
    Ward B. Coe III, with whom David W. Kinkopf, and Hillary H. Arnaoutakis,
    were on the brief, for appellees.
    Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and PRYOR,
    Senior Judge.
    Per Curiam opinion for the court.
    Concurring opinion by Associate Judge EASTERLY at page 21.
    PER CURIAM:      Appellant Maia Falconi-Sachs appeals from an order
    dismissing her complaint pursuant to Superior Court Rule of Civil Procedure 12
    (b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Having paid a late rent fee of $249.85, she
    2
    alleges that this fee—assessed and collected by appellees, apartment building LPF
    Senate Square LLC (“Senate Square”), and Bozzuto Management Company, LLC
    (“Bozzuto”)—was illegal under various theories. We affirm the Superior Court’s
    12 (b)(6) ruling as to all claims but one: Ms. Falconi-Sachs’s claim of unjust
    enrichment. As to that claim, we reverse and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    I.   Facts
    On August 24, 2011, appellant and another person (both recent law school
    graduates) signed a one-year lease agreement—with a term beginning on that
    date—for a Senate Square apartment at 201 I Street Northeast, Washington, D.C.
    20002. The lease named appellant and the other person as the “Lessee,” Senate
    Square as the “Lessor,” Bozzuto as the lessor’s “Agent,” and set the monthly rent
    amount at $2,499.00. The lease section entitled “Rent Payments” included a clause
    (in capital letters) as follows:
    RENT PAYMENTS NOT RECEIVED BY THE FIFTH
    (5TH) DAY OF THE MONTH FOR WHICH SAID
    PAYMENT IS DUE SHALL BE SUBJECT TO A LATE
    PAYMENT CHARGE OF TEN PERCENT (10%) OF
    THE MONTHLY RENT AND SUCH LATE CHARGE
    3
    WILL BE IMMEDIATELY DUE AND PAYABLE AS
    ADDITIONAL RENT PURSUANT TO THE TERMS
    OF THE LEASE. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, IN THE
    EVENT LESSEE FAILS TO PAY THE RENT WITHIN
    FIVE (5) DAYS AFTER THE DUE DATE, SUCH
    FAILURE SHALL BE CONSIDERED A WILLFUL
    NON-COMPLIANCE AND THE LESSOR OR ITS
    AGENTS MAY PROCEED WITH LEGAL ACTION
    PURSUANT TO STATE LAW. THE LESSEE SHALL
    BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL COSTS, INCLUDING
    ATTORNEY’S FEES, EXPENDED BY THE LESSOR
    OR HIS AGENT, IN ENFORCING THE COLLECTION
    OF ANY DELINQUENT RENT AND/OR LATE
    CHARGES AS PERMITTED BY STATE LAW.
    [Emphasis in original]
    On April 6, 2012, appellees placed a “Final Notice Letter” under appellant’s
    door, informing her that her April rent had not been received, and that a late fee in
    the amount of $249.85 was due immediately. Appellant gave appellees a check for
    $249.85 on April 21, 2012.
    II.   Procedural History
    On June 27, 2012, appellant filed a class action complaint in the District of
    Columbia Superior Court, alleging violations of the Consumer Protection
    Procedure Act (“CPPA”), fraud, negligent misrepresentation, unconscionability,
    and restitution/unjust enrichment. She amended the complaint on July 12, 2012, in
    4
    order to add appellees’ addresses for service of process. On August 16, 2012, the
    case was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia,
    but later was remanded and appellees were ordered to pay appellant’s attorneys’
    fees. Falconi-Sachs v. LPF Senate Square, LLC, 
    963 F. Supp. 2d 1
    , 3 (D.D.C.
    2013). On February 14, 2013, the case was re-opened in Superior Court, and
    appellant filed a motion for class certification. Appellant later orally requested
    without opposition that the motion for class certification be stayed, and the trial
    court granted her request. On June 21, 2013, appellant filed a subsequent amended
    complaint. Appellees then filed a motion to dismiss on July 12, 2013, and the
    motion was granted on February 7, 2014.
    The trial court dismissed appellant’s CPPA cause of action, holding that it
    “falls within the realm of landlord-tenant relations and thus outside the scope of the
    CPPA.”      The court further held that appellant’s fraud and negligent
    misrepresentation claims failed to meet the respective elements of those torts, that
    her unconscionability claim failed to plead sufficient facts to show either
    procedural or substantive unconscionability, and that her unjust enrichment claim
    was barred by the voluntary payment doctrine. This appeal followed.
    5
    III.   Analysis
    A.     Scope of Review
    This court reviews de novo the dismissal of a complaint under Superior
    Court Rule of Civil Procedure 12 (b)(6) for failure to state a claim on which relief
    can be granted. Tingling-Clemmons v. District of Columbia, 
    133 A.3d 241
    , 245
    (D.C. 2016). “In so doing, we apply the same standard the trial court was required
    to apply, accepting the [factual] allegations in the complaint as true and viewing all
    facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff[ ].”         
    Id.
    (quoting Hillbroom v. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 
    17 A.3d 566
    , 572 (D.C.
    2011)). “To pass muster,” a complaint must “allege the elements of a legally
    viable claim, and its factual allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief
    above the speculative level.” 
    Id.
     (quoting OneWest Bank, FSB v. Marshall, 
    18 A.3d 715
    , 721 (D.C. 2011)); see also Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009)
    (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007)).
    6
    B. CPPA
    With respect to appellant’s CPPA claims, this court has previously addressed
    the question whether the CPPA applies to landlord-tenant relations. See Gomez v.
    Independence Mgmt. of Delaware, Inc., 
    967 A.2d 1276
    , 1286 (D.C. 2009) (holding
    that the CPPA does not apply to landlord-tenant relations). In Gomez, we found
    that although the Council of the District of Columbia amended the enforcement
    provisions of the CPPA to no longer limit the CPPA’s private right of action
    contained in 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
     to the jurisdictional boundaries of the
    Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (“DCRA”)—which “may not . . .
    apply the provisions of section 28-3905 to . . . landlord-tenant relations”—this
    limitation had been deleted only for budgetary reasons to remove the DCRA’s
    under-funded role. Id. at 1287. In other words, the Council had no intention of
    “expand[ing] the reach of the CPPA,” id. at 1287, and “did not intend by that
    amendment to extend the private right of action created by the CPPA into the
    realm of landlord-tenant relations.” Id. at 1286.2 Accordingly, appellant’s CPPA
    2
    Appellant’s argument that this holding was dicta is misplaced. This court
    in Gomez, after deciding that the trial court had erred in granting summary
    judgment on appellants’ Sales Act claim, affirmed the dismissal of the CPPA claim
    —even though the appellants had wholly premised that claim upon on the Sales
    (continued . . .)
    7
    claims were appropriately dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief
    can be granted.
    C. Fraud
    The elements of fraud are “(1) a false representation, (2) made in reference
    to a material fact, (3) with knowledge of its falsity, (4) with the intent to deceive,
    and (5) an action that is taken in reliance upon the representation.” In re Estate of
    Nethken, 
    978 A.2d 603
    , 607 (D.C. 2009) (emphasis added).             Here, appellant
    alleges that appellees committed fraud by falsely representing “that [appellant] had
    ____________________________________
    (. . . continued)
    Act claim—because it concluded that the CPPA does not apply to landlord-tenant
    relations. Gomez, 
    supra,
     
    967 A.2d at 1284-85
    .
    Appellant further claims that this court’s decision in Brandywine
    Apartments, LLC v. McCaster, 
    964 A.2d 162
    , 170 (D.C. 2009) supports her
    argument that the logic of Gomez only applies, if at all, where an existing landlord-
    tenant relationship is fundamental to the claim. We find this argument
    unpersuasive. In Brandywine, after a jury ruled for the plaintiff/appellee in a case
    involving a rejected housing application, we upheld an award of attorneys’ fees on
    the claim. The appellant, however, did not challenge the application of the CPPA,
    only the award of attorneys’ fees. Therefore, the scope of our review in
    Brandywine was limited to whether the trial court abused its discretion in
    determining the appropriate attorneys’ fees. We did not address the substance of
    the jury’s verdict regarding the CPPA claim, instead focusing on the factual record,
    finding that “the trial court approached the issue of attorney fees in a careful
    manner.” 
    Id. at 169
    . Accordingly, our opinion in Brandywine does not affect the
    applicability of Gomez to the facts of this case, which clearly arise from a dispute
    occurring in a landlord-tenant relationship.
    8
    the obligation to pay late fees and attorney’s fees.”        Appellant’s claim fails,
    however, because the alleged misrepresentation is in essence an alleged
    misrepresentation of law, not a misrepresentation of fact. Thus, even when we
    accept appellant’s allegations as true, she fails to allege the second element of
    fraud, which is material fact.         Accordingly, appellant’s fraud claim was
    appropriately dismissed.
    D. Negligent Misrepresentation
    To prevail on this claim, appellant must show that appellees (1) “made a
    false statement or omitted a fact that he had a duty to disclose; (2) that it involved a
    material issue; and (3) that [appellant] reasonably relied upon the false statement or
    omission to [her] detriment.” Sundberg v. TTR Realty, LLC, 
    109 A.3d 1123
    , 1131
    (D.C. 2015) (citation omitted, emphasis added).
    Here, unlike in the fraud context, a plaintiff alleging negligent
    misrepresentation “need not allege that the defendant had knowledge of the falsity
    of the representation or the intent to deceive.” 
    Id.
     However, she must still show
    that the appellees falsely stated (or omitted) a material fact. Thus, as we have
    already discussed in the fraud context, appellant’s negligent misrepresentation
    9
    claim fails because they only amount to an allegation that appellees misrepresented
    the law—not that they misrepresented the facts. Accordingly, the trial court did
    not err in dismissing appellant’s claim for negligent misrepresentation.
    E. Unconscionability
    The doctrine of unconscionability is generally applied as an affirmative
    defense, not a cause of action. Williams v. Cent. Money Co., 
    974 F. Supp. 22
    , 28
    (D.D.C. 1997) (“The claim of common law unconscionability appears to apply
    only defensively, for example, as a response to an attempt to enforce a contract.”)
    (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 208 comment g); see also Findlay v.
    CitiMortgage, Inc., 
    813 F. Supp. 2d 108
    , 122 (D.D.C. 2011) (“At common law . . .
    unconscionability was used as a defense in contract actions, not as a basis for
    obtaining damages in tort.”) (citing Williams v. Walker-Thomas Furniture Co., 
    350 F.2d 445
    , 449 (D.C. Cir. 1965)). For this reason, we do not reach the merits of the
    parties’ arguments regarding the sufficiency of appellant’s unconscionability claim
    and affirm the trial court dismissal of this claim.3
    3
    Although the trial court did not rest its dismissal on this ground, this court
    may affirm for reasons other those given by the trial court. Chevalier v. Moon, 
    576 A.2d 722
    , 724 (D.C. 1990) (quoting Garrett v. Washington Air Compressor Co.,
    
    466 A.2d 462
    , 464 n.5 (D.C. 1983)).
    10
    F. Unjust Enrichment/Restitution
    The doctrine of unjust enrichment applies “when a person retains a benefit
    (usually money) which in justice and equity belongs to another.” Jordan Keys &
    Jessamy, LLP v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    870 A.2d 58
    , 63 (D.C. 2005).
    The recipient of such a benefit has “a duty to make restitution to the other person
    ‘if the circumstances of its receipt or retention are such that, as between the two
    persons, it is unjust for [the recipient] to retain it.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting RESTATEMENT OF
    RESTITUTION § 1 cmt. c (AM. LAW INST. 1937)). The elements of an unjust
    enrichment claim are “(1) the plaintiff conferred a benefit on the defendant; (2) the
    defendant retains the benefit; and (3) under the circumstances, the defendant’s
    retention of the benefit is unjust.”      News World Communications, Inc. v.
    Thompsen, 
    878 A.2d 1218
    , 1222 (D.C. 2005). Here, there is no dispute that
    appellant adequately pled the first two elements of an unjust enrichment claim: her
    complaint alleges that she conferred a benefit on appellees by giving them her late-
    fee payment and that appellees retained the payment. The issue before us is
    whether the third element of the action was adequately pled.
    Appellant acknowledged in her amended complaint that she paid the late fee
    11
    pursuant to a provision in her lease. Unjust enrichment claims typically lie in the
    absence of a contractual arrangement—they provide relief in equity where
    “circumstances are such that justice warrants a recovery as though there had been a
    promise.” 4934, Inc. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 
    605 A.2d 50
    ,
    55 (D.C. 1992). But the existence of a contract does not automatically foreclose an
    unjust enrichment claim.     As the authors of the RESTATEMENT (THIRD)          OF
    RESTITUTION AND UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 2 cmt. c (AM. LAW INST. 2011) explain:
    Judicial statements to the effect that “there can be no
    unjust enrichment in contract cases” can be misleading if
    taken casually. Restitution claims of great practical
    significance arise in a contractual context, but they occur
    at the margins, when a valuable performance has been
    rendered under a contract that is invalid, or subject to
    avoidance, or otherwise ineffective to regulate the
    parties’ obligations. Applied to any such circumstance,
    the statement that there can be no unjust enrichment in
    contract cases is plainly erroneous.
    The rule is thus more nuanced: “Considerations of both justice and efficiency
    require that private transfers be made pursuant to contract whenever reasonably
    possible, and that the parties’ own definition of their respective obligations—
    assuming the validity of their agreement by all pertinent tests—take precedence
    over the obligations that the law would impose in the absence of agreement.” Id.
    (emphasis added); accord Jordan Keys & Jessamy, 
    870 A.2d at 64
     (“One who has
    12
    entered into a valid contract cannot be heard to complain that the contract is unjust,
    or that it unjustly enriches the party with whom he or she has reached agreement.”
    (emphasis added) (footnote omitted)); Harrington v. Trotman, 
    983 A.2d 342
    , 347
    (D.C. 2009) (explaining that the existence of a contract bars an unjust enrichment
    claim, “[u]nless there is a basis to set aside a contract as unenforceable”).
    The viability, and ultimately the success, of appellant’s unjust enrichment
    claim thus depends on whether the late-fee provision in appellant’s lease is
    legitimate and enforceable. Appellant claims it is not; she alleges that the late-fee
    provision constitutes an invalid penalty provision under the common law, not a
    valid liquidated damages clause. In other words, appellant asserts that the alleged
    illegitimacy of the late-fee provision creates the equitable circumstance that
    supports her claim of unjust enrichment and her plea for restitution.
    Liquidated damages clauses in contracts deserve special scrutiny. As we
    explained in District Cablevision Ltd. Partnership v. Bassin, 
    828 A.2d 714
     (D.C.
    2003): “The common law views liquidated damages clauses with a gimlet eye.
    Such clauses may serve valuable purposes, as where actual damages are likely to
    13
    be difficult to quantify in the event that the contract is breached.” 
    Id. at 724
    .4 But
    “[w]hen a contract specifies a single sum in damages for any and all breaches even
    though it is apparent that all are not of the same gravity, the specification is not a
    reasonable effort to estimate damages; and when in addition the fixed sum greatly
    exceeds the actual damages likely to be inflicted by a minor breach, its character as
    a penalty becomes unmistakable.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Lake River Corp. v. Carborundum
    Co., 
    769 F.2d 1284
    , 1290 (7th Cir. 1985)). “Agreements to pay fixed sums plainly
    without reasonable relation to any probable damage which may follow a breach
    will not be enforced.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Order of AHEPA v. Travel Consultants, Inc.
    
    367 A.2d 119
    , 126 (D.C. 1976)). In other words, where a liquidated damages
    provision is “disproportionate to the level of damages reasonably foreseeable at the
    time of the making of the contract,” it will be “void as a penalty.” 
    Id.
    Here, appellant pled detailed facts to support the assertion that her fixed late
    fee was an unenforceable penalty under District Cablevision. She alleged that the
    4
    We are more accepting of liquidated damages provisions when they are
    the product of “fair arm’s length bargaining” between parties of equal
    sophistication in the negotiated transaction. 
    828 A.2d at 724
    . “But where there is
    a disparity of bargaining power and one party unilaterally imposes a liquidated
    damages provision in an adhesive contract, the skepticism (bordering, it has been
    suggested, on outright hostility) shown by the common law to liquidated damages
    is at its height.” 
    Id.
    14
    late fee was based on a percentage of the monthly rent and was “not calculated
    based on a reasonable estimation of anticipated or actual harm caused by a breach
    of contract,” and that the $249.85 fee demanded on April 6, 2012, in fact far
    exceeded “a reasonable forecast of damages flowing from the breach of the
    covenant to pay rent” by April 5, 2012. More particularly, appellant alleged that
    all residents in her apartment building have the same 10% late fee provision in
    their leases; “[t]he late fee is calculated as a percentage of the total monthly rent,
    not the net amount of rent due”; “[t]he late fee is the same regardless of how late
    the payment is made, so long as it is after the 5th of the month”; appellant’s “breach
    of her obligation to pay rent by April 5, 2012 [the due date] was nominal” and cost
    the landlords “far less than $249.90,” i.e. the 10% late fee assessed; the landlords
    could calculate the “cost . . . for any particular payment of late rent . . . with
    reasonable certainty” and “[t]he late fee of 10 percent charged . . . is far higher than
    a reasonable forecast of damages flowing from a breach of the covenant to pay rent
    on time”; the lease is a standard form; tenants must take or leave it and cannot
    negotiate the late fee provision; and the late fees are not “valid liquidated damages
    clauses” because, again, they “are not a reasonable estimate of actual damages
    caused by any tenant’s breach.”
    15
    These allegations were sufficient to support appellant’s unjust enrichment
    claim challenging the landlord’s retention of her late fee. See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
     (holding that to survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain “more
    than an unadorned, the-defendant-unlawfully-harmed-me accusation”; it must set
    forth “sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is
    plausible on its face’” (quoting Twombly, 
    550 U.S. at 570
    )); Potomac Dev. Corp.,
    28 A.3d at 544 (interpreting Super. Ct. Civ. R. 8 (a) using the Iqbal-Twombly
    pleading standard); see also Super. Ct. Civ. R. 8 (a) (requiring “a short and plain
    statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief”). In short, we
    conclude that appellant, pursuant to Rule 12 (b)(6), has duly stated a claim for
    unjust enrichment.
    The trial court determined, however, that appellant’s claim should be
    dismissed pursuant to “the voluntary payment doctrine.” Quoting this court’s
    decision in Eagle Maintenance Services, Inc. v. D.C. Contract Appeals Board, 
    893 A.2d 569
     (D.C. 2006), the trial court stated that this doctrine provides that “money
    voluntarily paid under a claim of right to the payment . . . cannot be recovered by
    the payor solely because the claim was illegal.” 
    Id. at 582
     (quoting Smith v. Prime
    Cable of Chicago, 
    658 N.E.2d 1325
    , 1329 (Ill. App. Ct. 1995)). We conclude that
    dismissal was not proper on this basis: we question the trial court’s reliance on this
    16
    doctrine, but in any event conclude that the trial court improperly considered this
    affirmative defense in considering whether appellant had failed to state a claim.
    In Eagle Maintenance Services, we referred in passing to the voluntary
    payment doctrine as an “old common law doctrine rarely cited by courts in
    modern, complex transactions.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Avianca, Inc. v. Corriea, No. 85-CV-
    3277, 
    1992 WL 93128
    , at *6 (D.D.C. April 13, 1992)).            But we limited our
    discussion of this common law rule and did not explain its operation, ultimately
    concluding that it (and several other common law doctrines) did not apply. To
    discern what we meant by the “voluntary payment doctrine,” we look to the cases
    we cited in that opinion: Avianca and Smith v. Prime Cable of Chicago, 
    658 N.E.2d 1325
     (Ill. App. 1995). Only Avianca provides a detailed explanation5:
    The doctrine might be best thought of as a corollary to
    the general rule about contracts without consideration:
    while such a contract is not enforceable, once completed
    it is generally irrevocable; one cannot take a “gift” back
    once given. The voluntary payment doctrine is thus a
    rule against welshing. . . . The doctrine is most
    commonly applied in situations where the terms of an
    5
    The court in Smith briefly acknowledged that voluntary payment could
    function in some cases as a waiver of rights, but then held that any assertion of
    voluntary payment could not serve as the foundation for a determination that a
    plaintiff had failed to state a claim. 
    658 N.E.2d at 1329
    ; see infra pages 18-20.
    17
    initial contract have not been fulfilled by a seller/payee
    (for whatever reason) and a subsequent agreement, one
    that decreases the burden or increases the compensation
    to the seller/payee without consideration, replaces it . . . .
    Once the subsequent agreement has been performed, a
    payor cannot then sue on the initial contract to get his
    payments back; the payor is deemed to have waived its
    rights.
    
    1992 WL 93128
    , at *6 (citations omitted).
    Relatedly, the Restatement (Third) of Restitution & Unjust Enrichment has
    recognized that voluntary payment may potentially bar a claim to recoup payments
    that are made with full knowledge of the uncertainty as to the amount actually
    owed. See RESTATEMENT (THIRD)           OF   RESTITUTION & UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 6
    cmt. e (AM. LAW INST. 2011) The Restatement explains that it is “at least
    paradoxical to suppose that the overpayment of an asserted (or any payment of a
    non-existent) liability could ever be voluntary, and it is important to bear in mind
    that the proper operation of the voluntary payment rule must be realistic rather than
    artificial.”   Id.   Accordingly, “judicial statements to the effect that ‘money
    voluntarily paid with knowledge of the facts cannot be recovered back[]’. . . . must
    be treated with caution.” A better articulation of the rule is: “[M]oney voluntarily
    paid in the face of a recognized uncertainty as to the existence or extent of the
    payor’s obligation to the recipient may not be recovered, on the ground of
    ‘mistake,’ merely because the payment is subsequently revealed to have exceeded
    18
    the true amount of the underlying obligation.” Id.6 The Restatement views this as
    nothing more than proper allocation of risk: “[One] form of risk allocation takes
    place when a payor assumes unilaterally the risk of uncertainty—electing to satisfy
    a demand, even without compromise as to amount, in the face of recognized
    uncertainty about the payor’s underlying liability.” Id. at § 6 cmt. d.
    But we need not definitively resolve how the above-described principles
    apply in this case. Voluntary payment is an affirmative defense, see Eagle Maint.
    Servs., 
    893 A.2d at 582
    , and a plaintiff’s failure to anticipate and rebut affirmative
    defenses in her complaint is not a sufficient basis for a Rule 12 (b)(6) dismissal.
    See Flying Food Grp., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    471 F.3d 178
    , 183 (D.C. Cir. 2006); see
    also Super. Ct. R. Civ. P. 8 (a) (containing no requirement that a complaint
    anticipate and rebut affirmative defenses); 5 CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT             ET AL.,
    FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 1276 (3d ed. 2004) (“[A]llegations that
    6
    The Restatement (Third) correspondingly advocates discarding the
    distinction between mistakes of law and mistakes of fact. RESTATEMENT (THIRD)
    OF RESTITUTION & UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 6 cmt. c (“[A] mistake as to liability
    concerns the existence of an obligation, contractual or otherwise; the extent of a
    valid obligation; or the existence of a defense to an obligation that is otherwise
    valid. Relief is available in all of these cases without regard to whether the
    mistake might be characterized as mutual or unilateral, a mistake of fact or a
    mistake of law.”); see also Time Warner Ent. Co. v. Whiteman, 
    802 N.E.2d 886
    ,
    891 & n.6 (Ind. 2004).
    19
    seek to avoid or defeat a potential affirmative defense . . . are not an integral part of
    the plaintiff’s claim for relief and lie outside his or her burden of pleading.”).
    Rather, the application of this affirmative defense is “a question of fact, to be
    judged in light of all the circumstances surrounding a given transaction.” Shaw v.
    Marriott Intern., Inc., 
    474 F. Supp. 2d 141
    , 150-51 (D.D.C. 2007) (quoting
    Randazzo v. Harris Bank Palatine, N.A., 
    262 F.3d 663
    , 669 n.1 (7th Cir.
    2001)) (concluding that “[w]hatever the merits of” the voluntary payment defense,
    appellant was “certainly correct that it raises factual issues that cannot be resolved
    in the context of a motion to dismiss”).
    To be sure, this court has acknowledged that a complaint may nonetheless be
    dismissed when affirmative defenses are “established on the face of the
    complaint.” Francis v. Rehman, 
    110 A.3d 615
    , 621 (D.C. 2015) (quoting Hafley v.
    Lohman, 
    90 F.3d 264
    , 266 (8th Cir. 1996)).             But nothing in the Amended
    Complaint supports a determination that appellant pled herself out of court in this
    case. She did not concede voluntary payment under the rule described above.
    Rather, appellant alleged in her Amended Complaint that appellees caused the late
    fee provision to be placed in the standard form lease, and that they “knew, or
    should have known, they had no right to collect these late fees”; that they
    represented this “illegal clause[] as being legal”; that they were the more
    20
    sophisticated parties in negotiating residential lease terms; and that appellants
    reasonably relied on their expertise. Nor did appellant concede voluntariness even
    in the colloquial sense; rather, she alleged facts suggesting that, in addition to
    being ignorant of the late fee’s illegality, she was coerced into paying this fee. 7
    Thus, the trial court should not have relied on the voluntary payment doctrine to
    justify dismissal of appellant’s unjust enrichment claim.
    In sum, we hold that the trial court erred by dismissing appellant’s unjust
    enrichment claim. Whether appellant’s late fee was, in fact, disproportionate to the
    landlord’s reasonably anticipated damages and thus an improper penalty is a
    factual question that was not properly resolved at the motion to dismiss stage.
    Likewise the trial court’s ruling on the affirmative defense of voluntary payment
    was possibly incorrect and at the very least premature. Thus, we vacate the
    dismissal of the unjust enrichment claim and remand to give appellant the
    opportunity to prove her claim.
    7
    That appellant may have alleged these facts in anticipation of a voluntary-
    payment argument by appellees does not open the door to a ruling on this issue at
    the motion-to-dismiss stage. See 5 FED. PRAC. & PROC. CIV. § 1276 (“[I]f the
    plaintiff purports to negative an affirmative defense by way of anticipation but
    does not admit the effectiveness of the defense in his pleading, the [trial] court
    should treat the plaintiff’s references to the defense as surplusage.”).
    21
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s decision is affirmed in part and
    reversed and remanded in part.
    So ordered.
    EASTERLY, Associate Judge, concurring: I agree that Ms. Falconi-Sachs
    adequately pled a claim of unjust enrichment and that the trial court’s 12 (b)(6)
    dismissal was thus in error. Moreover, I share the court’s skepticism that the
    voluntary payment doctrine has any application to this case. Particularly in the
    landlord-tenant context, it seems inappropriate to endorse the legal fiction that a
    tenant “knowingly” waives her rights to challenge illegal fees or assumes the risk
    of paying illegal fees when she signs a standard form contract, drafted by a
    landlord, that contains unenforceable penalty provisions.         Instead it seems
    advisable to follow the Restatement rule that “a person who renders performance
    under an agreement that cannot be enforced against the recipient . . . has a claim in
    restitution against the recipient as necessary to prevent unjust enrichment.” See
    RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION & UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 31 (1); see, e.g.,
    Time Warner Ent. Co. v. Whiteman, 
    802 N.E.2d 886
    , 893 (Ind. 2004) (following
    the Restatement (Third) and rejecting application of voluntary payment doctrine to
    bar plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment challenge to unlawful late fee provision and
    22
    noting that it would be absurd to allow the commercial defendant “to take financial
    advantage of its own wrongdoing”).8 I agree we need not definitively decide this
    question, but our forbearance should not be mistaken for agreement with the trial
    court’s premature conclusion that voluntary payment barred Ms. Falconi-Sachs’s
    unjust enrichment claim.
    .
    8
    The trial court cited two cases to the contrary, BMG Direct Marketing, Inc.
    v. Peake, 
    178 S.W.3d 763
     (Tex. 2005), and Putnam v. Time Warner Cable of Se.
    Wisc., Ltd., 
    649 N.W.2d 626
     (Wisc. 2002), but there is reason to question the
    analysis in these decisions. In BMG Direct Marketing, the court purported to agree
    with the Restatement (Third) (it was reviewing a draft of the edition eventually
    published in 2011), but then endorsed an artificial awareness-of-risk rule of the
    exact sort the Restatement disapproved. It opined that “when a person pays a late
    fee knowing its amount and the circumstances under which it would be
    imposed”—but not how it is calculated or whether it is legal—“that person pays in
    the face of a recognized uncertainty sufficient to satisfy the voluntary-payment
    rule’s full-knowledge requirement.” 178 S.W.3d at 774. In Putnam, the court
    cited only to the RESTATEMENT (FIRST) OF RESTITUTION (AM. LAW INST. 1937) and
    grounded its conclusion that voluntary payment of late fees could bar a claim for
    restitution in a mistake-of-law analysis that the Restatement (Third) has since
    disapproved. 
    649 N.W.2d at 631-37
    .
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-CV-433

Filed Date: 7/7/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/13/2016

Authorities (25)

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Frank P. Randazzo, as Trustee for Frank P. Randazzo ... , 262 F.3d 663 ( 2001 )

Jordan Keys & Jessamy, LLP v. St. Paul Fire & Marine ... , 870 A.2d 58 ( 2005 )

Flying Food Group, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board , 471 F.3d 178 ( 2006 )

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evelyn-susan-hafley-v-janette-lohman-director-department-of-revenue , 90 F.3d 264 ( 1996 )

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Garrett v. Washington Air Compressor Co., Inc. , 466 A.2d 462 ( 1983 )

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News World Communications, Inc. v. Thompsen , 878 A.2d 1218 ( 2005 )

Gomez v. Independence Management of Delaware, Inc. , 967 A.2d 1276 ( 2009 )

In Re Estate of Nethken , 978 A.2d 603 ( 2009 )

Hillbroom v. Pricewaterhousecoopers LLP , 17 A.3d 566 ( 2011 )

District Cablevision Limited Partnership v. Bassin , 828 A.2d 714 ( 2003 )

Harrington v. Trotman , 983 A.2d 342 ( 2009 )

OneWest Bank, FSB v. Marshall , 18 A.3d 715 ( 2011 )

4934, Inc. v. District of Columbia Department of Employment ... , 605 A.2d 50 ( 1992 )

Eagle Maintenance Services, Inc. v. District of Columbia ... , 893 A.2d 569 ( 2006 )

Shaw v. Marriott International, Inc. , 474 F. Supp. 2d 141 ( 2007 )

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