Attorney general files lawsuit against owner of Barclay Farms

Delaware State News
Posted 11/17/15

DOVER — The Delaware Attorney General’s Office has filed suit against the owner of Barclay Farms and two other Delaware manufactured housing communities for allegedly attempting to financially …

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Attorney general files lawsuit against owner of Barclay Farms

Posted

DOVER — The Delaware Attorney General’s Office has filed suit against the owner of Barclay Farms and two other Delaware manufactured housing communities for allegedly attempting to financially pressure tenants to give up their legal right to arbitrate proposed rent increases.

Barclay Farms is on Paynters Way in Camden.

The Department of Justice’s Consumer Protection Unit filed the lawsuit Friday against Chicago-based Hometown America Communities Inc., the fifth-largest owner of manufactured housing communities in the United States.

The lawsuit alleges Hometown America violated Delaware law by issuing rent increase notices to tenants of its Barclay Farms, Angola Beach Estates and Rehoboth Bay communities that attempt to factor Hometown America’s anticipated litigation costs into its rent increase.

According to the lawsuit, the notices require homeowners to waive their right to arbitrate the proposed rent hikes in exchange for giving them a purported “discount” to a substantial rent increase.

The lawsuit contends such conduct is forbidden under Delaware’s manufactured housing laws, which prohibit community owners from factoring arbitration and other litigation-related costs into the rent charged to homeowners under any circumstances, and prohibit community owners from trying to include in their rental terms provisions where homeowners waive rights provided to them by law.

“This tactic of getting community tenants to sign away their legal rights in exchange for a lower rent increase is reprehensible,” Attorney General Matthew Denn said in a Monday news release.

Historically, community owners had disproportionate power to set rental rates, because it is difficult for tenants to move their manufactured homes to new locations. Delaware enacted a rent justification law two years ago to protect tenants — including the right to arbitrate proposed rent increases — while still ensuring landowners could earn a reasonable return on their investment, officials said.

The lawsuit seeks, among other things, a declaration that Hometown America’s rent increase notices are invalid, an order directing Hometown America to pay affected tenants the equivalent of three months’ rent for having willfully violated Delaware’s manufactured housing laws, payment of civil penalties and an order requiring Hometown America to cease its activities.

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