The provisions of this chapter shall apply to all residential rental units located within the city renting for less than four hundred fifty dollars per month, except as provided in Section
4.02.030, as of September 1, 1979.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984)
In construing the provisions of Chapters
4.02 and
4.04, the following definitions shall apply:
"Landlord"
means any owner, lessor, operator or manager of apartments,
condominiums or mobile home parks. The term "landlord" shall also
include the owner, lessor or manager of any single-family residence
which is occupied by a renter.
"Rent"
means the consideration, including any bonus, benefit or
gratuity, demanded or received by a landlord for the use and occupancy
of a residential rental unit, including services, amenities and security
deposits.
"Residential rental unit"
means any mobile home space, apartment, condominium or single-family
residence, or other living quarters, occupied by any person other
than the owner for payment of rent pursuant to an oral or written
lease, or other form of rental agreement. The term "residential rental
unit" shall not include any premises subject to the transient occupancy
tax of the city for any period during which such tax is actually collected
and paid to the city.
"Tenant"
means any person entitled to occupy such apartment, mobile
home, condominium or other residential unit pursuant to an oral or
written lease with the owner thereof, or pursuant to some other rental
agreement with the owner, lessor, operator or manager thereof.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; Ord. 1299 § 1, 1988)
The following rental units shall be exempt from the provisions
hereof:
(1) Units
used primarily for commercial purposes;
(2) Units
in buildings, mobilehome parks, or developments of four units or less
where one unit is occupied by the owner;
(3) Units
upon which construction began on or after April 1, 1979;
(4) Units
in any hotel, motel, inn, tourist home or boardinghouse which are
rented primarily to transient guests and are subject to the transient
occupancy tax of the city for any period during which such tax is
actually collected and paid to the city;
(5) Spaces
in any recreational vehicle park;
(6) Units
in nonprofit cooperatives when occupied by the shareholder entitled
to exclusive possession thereof;
(7) Units
in any hospital, medical care facility, asylum, or nonprofit home
for the aged;
(8) Units
owned, managed or operated by any government agency;
(9) Units
whose rent is subsidized by any governmental agency, if federal or
state law or regulation specifically exempts such units from rent
regulation.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; Ord. 1299 §§ 2, 3, 4, 1988)
(a) From
September 1, 1979, which shall be deemed to be the effective date
of the ordinance codified in this chapter, until such time as this
chapter is no longer deemed necessary by the city council and approved
by the majority of the voters of the city, no landlord of any residential
rental unit covered by this chapter shall request, demand or receive
a rent increase in excess of three-fourths of the increase in the
cost of living as indicated in the latest available Consumer Price
Index (CPI) for the city of Los Angeles. No landlord shall be entitled
to more than one such rent increase in any twelve-month period.
(b) As
used herein, the term "Consumer Price Index for the city of Los Angeles"
means that portion of the consumer price index published by the United
States Department of Labor for the Los Angeles-Anaheim-Riverside Metropolitan
area, designated as all urban consumers, all items, 1967 = 100, or,
if discontinued, such other consumer price index which, subject to
adjustment, most nearly results in a similar consumer price index.
(c) Computation
of rent increases allowable by this chapter shall be according to
the following formula:
(1) The cumulative allowable percentage rent increase (I), expressed
as a decimal figure may be calculated as follows:
I = (A/B — 1) x .75
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where A is the latest available consumer price index, and B
is the consumer price index for the base rent month (CPA for September,
1979 is 220.7);
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(2) Multiply the cumulative allowable percentage rent increase by the base rent, as determined by Section
4.02.050. The resulting figure (allowable cumulative increase) added to the base rent is the maximum allowable rent;
(3) Subtract the current rent from the maximum allowable rent. The resulting
figure is the maximum current increase in the rent;
(4) At the landlord's option, for bookkeeping convenience, the rent (base
rent plus allowable cumulative increase) may be rounded to the nearest
dollar, provided such adjustment is made for all rental units included
in any group of rental units.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; Ord. 1299 § 5, 1988)
The base rent, for purposes of this chapter, and for computation
of allowable rent increases, shall be the monthly rent charged on
September 1, 1979, except:
(1) If
the unit was held as of September 1, 1979, under a lease which provided
for monthly rental payments of unequal amounts, the monthly rent charged
on September 1, 1979, shall be deemed to be the total rent due under
such lease divided by the number of months of said lease; and
(2) If
the unit was vacant or not yet completed or otherwise exempt from
application of this chapter, as of September 1, 1979, the base rent
shall be the monthly rent charged when the unit first became occupied
as a rental unit after September 1, 1979, and the base rent month
shall be the month when such unit first became occupied.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; Ord. 1299 § 6, 1988)
Any landlord who shall petition or apply to the rent review commission for a hardship adjustment, and who shall be granted any such hardship adjustment as to any one or more residential units, may adjust the rent of such unit or units in an amount not exceeding the amount of the hardship adjustment so granted or approved by the rent review commission, upon giving to the tenant such written notice as is required by law. Service upon a tenant of a copy of the petition or application to the rent review commission for a hardship adjustment of rent shall be deemed to constitute the notice of rent increase referred to in Section
4.02.080; provided, however, that the tenant shall be entitled to at least thirty days' written notice of the actual dollar amount of any rent increase.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984)
(a) A
notice of rent increase allowable by this chapter may be served at
any time. Any such increase shall become effective not less than ninety
days after service of notice by the landlord on the tenant. All notices
of rent increase shall be served in the manner described by law.
(b) If
any notice required by this chapter is not served on the tenant, the
tenant shall not be required to pay any increase in rent until ninety
days after such notice is served.
(c) If any notice of rent increase, served pursuant to subsection
(a) of this section, does not state the actual dollar amount of such rent increase, a supplemental or additional notice which does state the actual dollar amount of such rent increase shall be served upon the tenant, in the manner prescribed by law, not less than thirty days prior to the effective date of such rent increase.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; Ord. 1299 § 7, 1988)
(a) If
the landlord demands, accepts, receives or retains any rent payment
in excess of the amounts permitted by this chapter, the tenant may
recover said sum from the landlord as actual damages, together with
a civil penalty of three hundred dollars per violation, and reasonable
attorneys' fees as determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.
(b) In
any action for recovery of rent, or for unlawful detainer based on
nonpayment of rent, the tenant may defend such action on the ground
that the amount of rent claimed is in excess of the rent allowed by
this chapter.
(c) The
city may bring an action for injunctive relief to prevent or remedy
any violation of this chapter.
(d) In
any action involving the validity of any proposed or actual rent increase,
the landlord shall have the burden of proving all facts sustaining
the rent increase.
(e) Nothing
in this section is intended to limit or preclude any other lawful
defense, cause of action, or claim of the landlord or tenant.
(f) The failure on the part of any landlord to comply with the provisions of Section
4.02.075(a) or the actions of any landlord in violation of Section
4.02.075(b) of Chapter
4.02 shall be a defense in any action or legal proceeding to recover possession of a residential rental unit otherwise subject to the provisions of this chapter.
(g) In any action or other legal proceeding to recover possession of a residential rental unit otherwise subject to the provisions of Chapter
4.02, a landlord shall allege in the complaint for possession substantial compliance with the provisions of Section
4.02.075(a) and shall further allege that the landlord has not violated any of the provisions specified in Section
4.02.075(b). Failure of the landlord to comply with this subsection shall be an additional defense to any action or other legal proceeding for possession of a residential rental unit otherwise subject to the provisions of this Chapter
4.02.
(Ord. 1213 § 2, 1984; measure KK § 2(d), 1994)