2016-05-07

MY COMMENTS:

This case was turned into a big deal by http://massrealestatelawblog.com and the Landlord Association at http://masslandlords.net. That association even asked a lawyer to write a “friend of the court” brief where they argued that Security Deposit violations are only counterclaims (for money) and not defenses (preventing evictions). That is all good. I think we, as landlords, should participate in any case that has anything to do with landlords. So the Mass Landlords Association is on the right path of increasing its size which will lead to hopefully increased revenues some of which to be used to hire lawyers in order to have a voice in cases like these and to be able to lobby Beacon Hill.

That being said, I have to say, the result was pretty predictable. I thought that was already the law. After all, the first sentence of MGL 239, 8A says that “any law” can be used as defenses against eviction in cases of non-payment of rent or no-cause. That’s why I avoid evicting for “non-payment” or for “no-cause” and I try to evict “for-cause” which at least prevents the tenant from raising the habitational defenses and counterclaims.

One thing that made me laugh:

At the very end of the decision the super wise SJC says: “we emphasize that a tenant

who retains possession under this provision of the statute does

not enjoy that right in perpetuity. The statute does not impose

an obligatory tenancy on the landlord. Nothing in the statute

prevents the landlord from bringing a second summary process

action for possession after he or she has remedied the violation

of the security deposit statute.”

So if we cure the Security Deposit Violation we could start again by serving the tenant one more time and initiating a new Summary Process. Let’s say the Security Deposit violation was that the landlord did not provide a receipt when they received the deposit at the inception of the tenancy. How does the SJC envision that this violation gets corrected – invent a Time Machine and go back in time to fix it? (: My point is that there are certain Security Deposit Violations that cannot be “remedied” and fixed because they happened in the past.

So we are getting closer and closer to having their secret desire – somehow to impose an obligatory tenancy on the landlord or as close to that as they can get – become a de facto reality in MA, the first eviction-free state.



One thing is clear – while I constantly hear from strangers a variation of the same statement – “landlords have too few rights and tenants too many rights in MA, it’s unfair”, the State House and the Courts clearly do not think so and they continue to build up and pile up anti-landlord decisions and there is nothing to stop them because there is no coherent opposition and the reason there is no real opposition is that probably 90% of landlords are part-time landlords, owners of a 2, 3 or 4 family who don’t see themselves as real landlords and so they have no inclination or time (they have another full-time job) to meet or write to Senators or go to meetings or hold signs in the street or make comments online (none of the 4-5 landlord blogs in MA have any comments for pretty much anything they write) and because of that inertia and lack of passion, anti-landlord legislation is not a problem to propose and pass in MA. I even predict that rent control might come back because even though groups like Masslandlords.net have the right idea and are doing what they can to attract more people, in the end they will, unfortunately, fail because most landlords in MA are part-time and they just don’t care enough.

The way MassLandlords.net came into prominence last year is by going around and asking landlords from other Associations to join them (they were a small group in Worcester for decades) so that they can claim they are the “largest association” in MA. They even managed to add the numbers of SPOA.com to their group. SPOA is the group that fought and won against rent control in MA decades ago (which is the only real pro-landlord thing that has happened in MA) and has been a passionate and watchful guard against it coming back with their sharp pen and amazing investigative journalism skills). But this moving landlords from one group to another does not change the total number of participating landlords in MA which is around 1,500 by my estimate and has been there for decades. That number needs to be increased thru new growth and that has been painfully slow (I have tried and failed and people before me have failed and after me will fail too) and the reason, again, is that only a very small percentage of landlords are full-time landlords and want to learn the laws and change them and by the time they become full-time they have enough money and knowledge that even at that point they are not interested in activism because they are all set and they have paid their dues so to speak.

These fundamental problems cannot be fixed. The same applies for NY and CA. The reason why all the other states are more balanced is because, shames me to say, but it is because they have more elected Republicans. I am a Bernie Sanders kind of liberal Democrat and I won’t ever vote Republican because of their track record of trickle down economics (cut taxes to the rich with the hope that they would hire more), which has been proven again and again not to work, their anti-women, anti-gay, anti-black, anti-immigrant and generally speaking anti-minority and anti-science, pro-puritan and pro-war but anti-“small guy” values but Democrats with their pro-“small guy” values take it to the extreme with their goody-two-shoes political correctness. I am all for defending and protecting tenants by regulating the landlord industry but Democrats get carried away. MA landlord-tenant law is a great example of how Democrats get carried away.

So below please enjoy reading another anti-landlord ruling in MA:

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal

revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound

volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical

error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of

Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1

Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-

1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

SJC-11859

GARTH MEIKLE vs. PATRICIA NURSE.

Suffolk. November 5, 2015. – April 27, 2016.

Present: Gants, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Duffly, Lenk,

& Hines, JJ.

Summary Process. Practice, Civil, Summary process, Counterclaim

and cross-claim. Landlord and Tenant, Security deposit,

Termination of tenancy, Eviction.

Summary process. Complaint filed in the Boston Division of

the Housing Court Department on June 11, 2014.

The case was heard by MaryLou Muirhead, J.

The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative

transferred the case from the Appeals Court.

Louis Fisher (Patricia Whiting with him) for the defendant.

Garth Meikle, pro Se.

Peter Vickery, for Worcester Property Owners Association,

Inc., amicus curiae, submitted a brief.

Maureen McDonagh & Julia Devanthéry, for City Life/Vida

Urbana, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.

HINES, J. In this appeal we decide whether a tenant may

assert a violation of the security deposit statute, G. L.

2

c. 186, § 15B, as a defense to a landlord’s claim for possession

in a summary process action brought under G. L. c. 239, § 1.

The issue arises from a Housing Court judge’s disposition of a

summary process action brought by Garth Meikle, the landlord,

against Patricia Nurse, the tenant. After a trial, the judge

ruled that the tenant properly could assert a violation of the

security deposit statute as a counterclaim for damages, but that

a counterclaim on this basis is not a defense to the landlord’s

claim for possession. The tenant appealed, arguing that the

plain language of G. L. c. 239, § 8A, buttressed by its

legislative history, establishes that a violation of the

security deposit statute may be asserted as a defense to a

landlord’s claim for possession and that the judge erred in

rejecting this interpretation of the statute. We transferred

the appeal to this court on our own motion.1

We conclude that a violation of the security deposit

statute is encompassed within the definition of “counterclaim or

1 The judge’s ruling in this case conflicts with other

Housing Court decisions on this issue. See, e.g., Patnod vs.

King, Worcester Hous. Ct., No. 14-SP-3620 (Sept. 29, 2014)

(landlord failure to notify lessee of location of security

deposit and failure to deposit in interest-bearing account

created defense to possession); Gouveia vs. Noel, Southeast

Hous. Ct., No. 13-SP-02987 (Sept. 19, 2013) (failure to place

security deposit in interest bearing account constituted defense

to no-fault eviction); Dunn vs. Cox, Boston Hous. Ct., No. 99-

SP-03639 (Aug. 23, 1999) (statutory violation of security

deposit law prohibited landlord action to recover possession).

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defense” in G. L. c. 239, § 8A, and that a counterclaim or

defense on that basis may be asserted as a defense to a

landlord’s possession in a summary process action under G. L.

c. 239, § 1. Therefore, we reverse the Housing Court judgment

granting possession to the landlord and remand for a hearing in

accordance with the provisions of G. L. c. 239, § 8A, fifth par.2

Background. We summarize the judge’s findings of fact,

which we accept unless they are clearly erroneous. Martin v.

Simmons Props., LLC, 467 Mass. 1, 8 (2014). In October, 2011,

Nurse moved into a residential building owned by Meikle. The

parties executed a one-year lease under which Nurse paid a

security deposit in the amount of $1,300, equivalent to one

month’s rent. Meikle failed to give Nurse a receipt

acknowledging acceptance of the deposit, failed to provide Nurse

with a receipt indicating the bank account into which he

deposited the funds, and failed to pay Nurse interest earned. On

expiration of the lease, Nurse continued to live in the premises

as a tenant at will until Meikle terminated the tenancy in

April, 2014, to provide housing to members of his extended

family. Meikle then instituted a no-fault summary process

action for possession of the premises, G. L. c. 239, § 1, and

2 We acknowledge the amicus briefs submitted by City

Life/Vida Urbana and Worcester Property Owners Association, Inc.

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for recovery of monies due for use and occupancy, G. L. c. 239,

§ 2, for the months of May, June, and July, 2014. Nurse

counterclaimed,

3 alleging violations of G. L. c. 186, § 15B

(security deposit statute), and G. L. c. 93A, in addition to

improper termination, insufficient notice to quit, retaliation,

and breach of the warranty of habitability.

After a two-day bench trial, the judge found for Meikle on

all but the security deposit claim, ruling that his failure to

provide Nurse with an acceptance receipt, a bank deposit

receipt, and the interest earned from the security deposit

violated G. L. c. 186, §§ 15B (2) (b),4 (3) (a),5 and (3) (b),6

3 Pursuant to G. L. c. 239, § 8A, “tenant[s] or occupant[s]”

may defend against a landlord’s claim of possession. This

includes lessees, tenants at will, and tenants at sufferance who

meet the statutory requirements to attain standing. See Rubin

v. Prescott, 362 Mass. 281, 290-291 (1972) (declining to rule

whether tenants at sufferance are barred from raising sanitation

code violations as defense to summary process but nonetheless

reaching § 8A claims of tenants at sufferance); Hodge v. Klug,

33 Mass. App. Ct. 746, 754 (1992) (“the statute would be

defanged if a tenant at sufferance could not employ its

machinery”). Thus, Patricia Nurse may enlist § 8A in defense of

her tenancy.

4 General Laws c. 186, § 15B (2) (b), requires that “[a]ny

lessor or his agent who receives a security deposit from a

tenant or prospective tenant shall give said tenant or

prospective tenant at the time of receiving such security

deposit a receipt indicating the amount of such security

deposit, the name of the person receiving it and, in the case of

an agent, the name of the lessor for whom such security deposit

is received, the date on which it is received, and a description

of the premises leases or rented. Said receipt shall be signed

by the person receiving the security deposit.” (Emphasis added.)

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respectively. The judgment awarded possession and unpaid rent

($3,900) to Meikle, to be offset by the amount due to Nurse on

her security deposit counterclaim ($1,304.61), resulting in net

damages to Meikle in the amount of $2,595.39. Nurse’s motion to

reconsider was denied, and she timely appealed.

Discussion. 1. Standard of review. “We review questions

of statutory interpretation de novo.” Commerce Ins. Co. v.

Commissioner of Ins., 447 Mass. 478, 481 (2006). Here we apply

the “general and familiar rule . . . that a statute must be

interpreted according to the intent of the Legislature

ascertained from all its words construed by the ordinary and

approved usage of the language, considered in connection with

the cause of its enactment, the mischief or imperfection to be

remedied and the main object to be accomplished.” Lowery v.

Klemm, 446 Mass. 572, 576-577 (2006), quoting Hanlon v. Rollins,

5 General Laws c. 186, § 15B (3) (a), provides in relevant

part: “A receipt shall be given to the tenant within thirty

days after such deposit is received by the lessor which receipt

shall indicate the name and location of the bank in which the

security deposit has been deposited and the amount and account

number of said deposit. Failure to comply with this paragraph

shall entitle the tenant to immediate return of the security

deposit.” (Emphasis added.)

6 General Laws c. 186, § 15B (3) (b), requires that “[a]

lessor of residential real property who holds a security deposit

pursuant to this section for a period of one year or longer

. . . shall . . . pay interest at the rate of five per cent per

year . . . payable to the tenant at the end of each year of the

tenancy.”

6

286 Mass. 444, 447 (1934). The language of a statute is

interpreted in accordance with its plain meaning, and if the

“language is clear and unambiguous, it is conclusive as to the

intent of the Legislature.” Commissioner of Correction v.

Superior Court Dep’t of the Trial Court for the County of

Worcester, 446 Mass. 123, 124 (2006), citing Commonwealth v.

Clerk-Magistrate of the W. Roxbury Div. of the Dist. Court

Dep’t, 439 Mass. 352, 355-356 (2003). Also, insofar as relevant

here, “a remedial statute . . . should be given a broad

interpretation . . . in light of its purpose and to ‘promote the

accomplishment of its beneficent design.'” Seller’s Case, 452

Mass. 804, 810 (2008), quoting Neff v. Commissioner of the Dep’t

of Indus. Accs., 421 Mass. 70, 73 (1995).

2. Violation of the security deposit statute as a defense

to possession. The trial judge, without explaining her

reasoning, ruled that the tenant’s counterclaim for violation of

the security deposit statute, while properly asserted as a claim

for damages, did not constitute a defense to Meikle’s action for

possession. This was error.

General Laws c. 239, § 8A, sets forth in broad outline the

defenses and counterclaims available to a tenant in a summary

process action and, in certain circumstances, authorizes a

prevailing tenant to retain possession of the premises. More

specifically, G. L. c. 239, § 8A, fifth par., provides in

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relevant part:

“There shall be no recovery of possession under

this chapter if the amount found by the court to

be due the landlord equals or is less than the

amount found to be due the tenant or occupant by

reason of any counterclaim or defense under this

section. If the amount found to be due the

landlord exceeds the amount found to be due the

tenant or occupant, there shall be no recovery of

possession if the tenant or occupant, within one

week after having received written notice from

the court of the balance due, pays to the clerk

the balance due the landlord, together with

interest and costs of suit, less any credit due

the tenant or occupant for funds already paid by

him to the clerk under this section.” (Emphasis

added.)

Drawing from the plain language of the statute, a tenant may

retain possession only if two conditions are met: (1) the

tenant prevails on a counterclaim or defense brought “under this

section”; and (2) the damages on that defense or counterclaim

exceed the amount due the landlord, or if the damages are less

than the amount due the landlord, the tenant pays to the court

the amount due within one week. The matter of damages is purely

a factual question and needs no further explanation. Therefore,

we focus on the specific issue of statutory interpretation

presented here: whether we may deem the tenant’s counterclaim

for violation of the security deposit statute to have been

brought “under this section.”

To begin the analysis, we accept that the only logical

interpretation of the “under this section” language in G. L.

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c. 239, § 8A, fifth par., is as a reference to G. L. c. 239,

§ 8A, first par., the sole statutory provision describing the

counterclaims or defenses that may be asserted by a tenant in a

summary process action. The reference to “counterclaim[s] or

defense[s] [brought] under this section” without further

explication necessarily connects the two provisions. They are

to be read together in determining whether, in a given case, a

tenant may defeat a landlord’s claim for possession. We turn

then to the definition of counterclaims and defenses in G. L.

c. 239, § 8A, first par., taking note that “[w]here the

Legislature uses the same words in several sections which

concern the same subject matter, the words ‘must be presumed to

have been used with the same meaning in each section.'”

Commonwealth v. Wynton W., 459 Mass. 745, 747 (2011), quoting

Insurance Rating Bd. v. Commissioner of Ins., 356 Mass. 184,

188-189 (1969).

a. General Laws c. 239, § 8A, first par. Section 8A,

first par., specifies that a tenant who faces eviction in a

summary process action for nonpayment of rent, or because the

tenancy is terminated without fault of the tenant, has the right

to raise certain defenses or counterclaims in that proceeding.

It provides, in relevant part:

“In any action under this chapter to recover possession of

any premises rented or leased for dwelling purposes,

brought pursuant to a notice to quit for nonpayment of

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rent, or where the tenancy has been terminated without

fault . . . , the tenant or occupant shall be entitled to

raise, by defense or counterclaim, any claim against the

plaintiff relating to or arising out of such property,

rental, tenancy, or occupancy for breach of warranty, for a

breach of any material provision of the rental agreement,

or for a violation of any other law” (emphasis added).

Based on the plain language of the statute, an actionable

counterclaim or defense under this provision must meet two

requirements: (1) the defense or counterclaim must “relat[e] to

or aris[e] out of” the tenancy; and (2) the subject matter of

the defense or counterclaim must be based on either “a breach of

warranty,” “a breach of any material provision of the rental

agreement,” or “a violation of any other law.” Id.

The first requirement, that a counterclaim or defense be

related to or arise out of the tenancy or occupancy, reflects

the Legislature’s concern that summary process actions be

unencumbered by landlord-tenant disputes that have nothing to do

with the tenancy. Thus, it imposes an appropriate limitation on

the defenses or counterclaims that may be asserted by the

tenant. A counterclaim or defense based on a violation of the

security deposit statute fits squarely within this framework; it

indisputably relates to or arises out of the tenancy. The

tender of a security deposit by a tenant to a landlord is well

established as a prerequisite to most residential tenancies.

The centrality of a security deposit to the landlord-tenant

relationship is further evidenced by the Legislature’s enactment

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of the security deposit statute, G. L. c. 186, § 15B, as part of

an elaborate scheme of rights and duties to prevent abuses and

to insure fairness to the tenant.

The second requirement, that the counterclaim or defense

must relate to a breach of warranty, breach of any material

provision of the rental agreement, or a violation of any other

law, further limits the subject matter of the actionable

counterclaims or defenses to these specific categories. As

neither a breach of warranty nor a breach of the rental

agreement is applicable here, we consider only whether the

violation of the security deposit statute fits within the

remaining category, “violation of any other law.”

Although the Legislature’s choice of the phrase “violation

of any other law” suggests that the universe of laws might be

available as the source of a tenant’s counterclaim or defense,

we see no need to assume such an intent in this case. In the

context of a summary process action, we have no difficulty

interpreting the phrase “violation of any other law” to include

any law enacted to protect a tenant’s rights in the landlordtenant

relationship.7 See Lawrence v. Osuagwu, 57 Mass. App. Ct.

60, 63 (2003) (interpreting “violation of any other law” to

7 Our confidence is buttressed by language in the same

paragraph, permitting “such other damages as may be authorized

by any law having as its objective the regulation of residential

premises.” G. L. c. 239, § 8A, first par.

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include counterclaim for breach of covenant of quiet enjoyment

under G. L. c. 186, § 14). The security deposit statute is one

such law. Indeed, the security deposit statute has no raison

d’être other than to insure fairness to a tenant who pays a sum

to the landlord and relies on the landlord’s good faith for the

return of the portion to which he or she is entitled at the end

of the tenancy.

Our cases involving the security deposit statute

demonstrate its importance in the scheme of protections afforded

a tenant. This court has recognized for some time that the

Legislature views violations of the security deposit statute,

G. L. c. 186, § 15B, as serious violations. See Hampshire

Village Assocs. v. District Court of Hampshire, 381 Mass. 148,

151-152, cert. denied sub nom. Ruhlander v. District Court of

Hampshire, 449 U.S. 1062 (1980) (“Section 15B is not without

reason. The question of security deposits has long been

agitated; the problems are well known; and the Legislature has

attempted progressively to deal with them” [footnote omitted]).

Indeed, the security deposit statute provides for treble

damages, costs, and attorney’s fees. See G. L. c. 186,

§ 15B (7). Thus, it would be contrary to legislative intent to

interpret “violation of any other law” in a manner that would

undermine a tenant’s right to assert the range of protections

available under the summary process statute.

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The legislative history of G. L. c. 239, § 8A, supports

this interpretation. Within a ten-year time frame, the

Legislature acted on more than one occasion to increase the

availability of counterclaims to tenants. See St. 1965, c. 888

(creating counterclaims to allow enforcement of sanitation

code); St. 1967, c. 420, § 1 (permitting counterclaims for

sanitary code violations in no-fault evictions); St. 1975, c.

467, § 3 (expanding counterclaims to include breach of

warranty). The most substantive expansion occurred in 1977,

when the Legislature removed the language that had limited

defenses or counterclaims to the condition of the premises and

retained the current language permitting “any claim against the

plaintiff . . . for a violation of any other law” (emphasis

added). St. 1977, c. 963. The steady progression in the

availability of tenant defenses, culminating in the elimination

of conditions-based restrictions, confirms the Legislature’s

intent to provide tenants with a broad set of defenses and

counterclaims in the summary process action, including the

defense asserted by the tenant in this case.

b. Application of G. L. c. 239, § 8A, fifth par. Having

determined that a counterclaim for violation of the security

deposit statute may be asserted as a defense to possession, we

now address whether the judge properly applied G. L. c. 239,

§ 8A, fifth par., in granting possession to the landlord. Here,

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the judge’s ruling erroneously foreclosed the tenant’s right to

make payment as required to retain possession of the premises.

Where a tenant prevails on a defense or counterclaim and is

awarded damages in an amount less than the amount owed to the

landlord, the statute provides that “no judgment shall enter

until after the expiration of the time for such payment and the

tenant has failed to make such payment.” Id. Accordingly, the

tenant is entitled to the opportunity to pay the amount due

within one week and retain possession.

Last, for the sake of clarity, we emphasize that a tenant

who retains possession under this provision of the statute does

not enjoy that right in perpetuity. The statute does not impose

an obligatory tenancy on the landlord. Nothing in the statute

prevents the landlord from bringing a second summary process

action for possession after he or she has remedied the violation

of the security deposit statute. Also, even where the tenant

agrees to pay the amount due the landlord to exercise the right

to possession, the landlord may thereafter commence a summary

process action. We interpret the Legislature’s intent in

providing for the tenant’s right to retain possession as a timelimited

equitable remedy for the particular conduct underlying

the tenant’s defense or counterclaim.

Conclusion. For the reasons explained above, we reverse

the judge’s order granting possession to the landlord and remand

14

for entry of an order providing notice to the tenant of the

right to retain possession in compliance with G. L. c. 239,

§ 8A, fifth par.

So ordered.

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