Rent collusion suit tossed vs manufactured home community operators

Rent collusion suit tossed vs manufactured home community operators

Spread the love

A federal judge has dismissed, for now, a class action accusing some of the nation’s largest manufactured home community landlords of rent collusion.

In October 2023, attorneys from the firms of DiCello Levitt, of Chicago and New York; Hausfeld LLP, of Washington, D.C., New York and San Francisco; and Myron M. Cherry & Associates, of Chicago, filed the class action lawsuit in Chicago federal court.

Named plaintiffs in the action include Ronald Kazmirzak, of southwest suburban Justice; Luis Melendez, of Orlando, Florida; Carol Rachelle Roach, of Clearwater, Florida; Yvonne Sewell, of Vero Beach, Florida; and Anthony Silverence, of Newburgh, New York.

Named defendants are Equity LifeStyle Properties, Hometown America Management, Lakeshore Communities, Sun Communities, RHP Properties, Yes Communities, Inspire Communities, Kingsley Management, Cal-Am Properties and Murex. The lawsuit asserts they improperly used industry information, known as JLT Market Reports, to inflate rent prices in mobile home park communities and pricing out senior citizens and other vulnerable tenants. A company known as Datacomp, described in the complaint as “the nation’s largest provider of manufactured mobile home data,” distributes the JLT information and also is a named defendant.

In an opinion filed Dec. 4, U.S. District Judge Franklin Valderrama granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint.

Valderrama first noted the plaintiffs didn’t counter defendants’ argument the complaint lacked direct evidence of a conspiracy to raise rental prices. The companies further challenged whether the renters raised sufficient circumstantial evidence, claiming no allegations of any “parallel conduct” or other factors required to survive a dismissal motion.

According to the plaintiffs, the fact Datacomp asked the community operators constituted an invitation to participate in a conspiracy and their submission of the solicited “competitively sensitive pricing information” established their acceptance of the alleged scheme. However, Valderrama agreed with the community operators that the complaint didn’t allege Datacomp invited them to do anything, much less that they accepted any invitation.

Valderrama wrote the plaintiffs only alleged the companies participated in telephone surveys or otherwise communicated with Datacomp, and although “such an allegation supports an information exchange … it does not support an inference of an invitation, much less an acceptance to do anything.” He further said the cases the plaintiffs invoked as precedent are distinct because those plaintiffs alleged an explicit “demand to participate in the anticompetitive behavior.”

While the landlords did raise rent prices, they noted the plaintiffs didn’t plausibly allege the “increases were uniform or moved together at all,” Valderrama wrote. “The way defendants see it, asserting that aggregate prices rose across 10 defendants over the course of half a decade is not an allegation of parallel pricing, but rather impermissible group pleading. In fact, argue defendants, plaintiffs’ own allegations relating to timing — that is, that Datacomp began publishing the JLT Reports as early as 2014, but (rents) did not change at an allegedly unusual rate until 2019 — contradict plaintiffs’ argument that defendants’ conspiracy caused sudden and unprecedented changes in pricing structure.”

While Valderrama sided with the plaintiffs’ contentions that variable price increases spread across several years don’t inherently undermine their allegations, he said the companies sufficiently argued the complaint needs to “allege more than just parallel conduct” to survive. The renters insist they did so, alleging information exchange, market structure details, collusion opportunities, conduct contrary to the companies’ self interest and a strong motive.

Valderrama said the “information exchange allegations qualify as a plus factor because they facilitate the conspiracy at issue” but disagreed with regard to market structure. He noted the defendant companies make up 30% of the market, weakening the plaintiffs’ otherwise adequate allegations of “high barriers to entry in the market and the difficulty for (mobile home lot) renters to switch.”

Regarding opportunities to conspire, Valderrama said the complaint merely alleges the companies belonged to “a trade organization and attended industry meetings, which does not move the needle.” But he sided with the plaintiffs on the issue of the companies’ not acting in their self interest, giving weight to the argument that firms wouldn’t typically disclose sensitive pricing information and allowing for the inference the sharing was essential to a conspiracy.

That said, as to motivation, Valderrama noted the complaint merely alleges the companies wanted to increase profits, claims that “do not give rise to an inference of a conspiracy because such motives always exist.” He further said the complaint doesn’t meaningfully address other reasons mobile home lot rents might’ve increased, leaving the allegations “merely consistent with, rather than suggestive of, a price-fixing conspiracy.”

The renters also alleged the mere sharing of data violated the federal Sherman Antitrust Act, but Valderrama said they could only do so by also adequately defining the market. He also rejected their unjust enrichment claim, noting it relied on the same alleged facts bolstering the antitrust claims he’d already agreed to dismiss.

The plaintiffs have until Jan. 5 to amend their complaint.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois lawmakers grill diversity commission over lack of progress

By Jared Strong | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) -- State lawmakers expressed public, bipartisan concern again Wednesday over an Illinois commission's efforts to increase access to...
U.S. House vote on spy powers extension delayed due to bipartisan pushback

U.S. House vote on spy powers extension delayed due to bipartisan pushback

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is postponing a vote on a clean extension of the federal government’s electronic surveillance powers due to member pushback....
Auditors praise Trump anti-fraud healthcare proposal

Auditors praise Trump anti-fraud healthcare proposal

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A coalition of 14 state financial leaders across the country backed a Trump administration policy to reduce fraud in health-care systems. The group of state...

WATCH: Gun owners rally at Illinois Statehouse against more gun regulations

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois gun owners are pressing their legislators to oppose gun regulations and some elected officials are on...
GOP seeks probe of $180B in fraud with taxpayers' money

GOP seeks probe of $180B in fraud with taxpayers’ money

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California’s Assembly Republican Caucus on Wednesday called for a special legislative session to investigate an estimated $180 billion in fraud in taxpayer-funded programs. “Fraud absolutely...
Bill advances to prevent local governments from clearing homeless camps

Bill advances to prevent local governments from clearing homeless camps

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – State law may soon restrict local governments from clearing homeless encampments from parks and other public spaces....
Bonta’s anti-Exxon emails may have run afoul of CA corruption law: Claim

Bonta’s anti-Exxon emails may have run afoul of CA corruption law: Claim

By Michael Carroll | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A Texas federal judge’s decision to allow ExxonMobil’s defamation lawsuit against California Attorney General Rob Bonta to move forward could ensnare Bonta...
Expulsion votes for two members of Congress could happen next week, Luna says

Expulsion votes for two members of Congress could happen next week, Luna says

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Two more members of Congress may be forced to resign next week or face votes for their expulsion, U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Florida, says....
NAACP sues xAI over air pollution near Memphis data center

NAACP sues xAI over air pollution near Memphis data center

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square The NAACP filed a lawsuit in federal court Tuesday against Elon Musk’s xAI, saying the company is illegally operating 27 methane gas turbines in Mississippi...
Trump says he's ready to nominate up to three Supreme Court justices

Trump says he’s ready to nominate up to three Supreme Court justices

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is "prepared" to nominate another Supreme Court justice to the bench, should a vacancy arise. No justice has publicly...
Military hostilities in Iran continue after Senate tanks War Powers Resolution

Military hostilities in Iran continue after Senate tanks War Powers Resolution

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square For the second time in the U.S. Senate, Republicans tanked a War Powers Resolution that would have halted the ongoing U.S. military operations in Iran....

WATCH: Detransitioner battles to revive landmark malpractice and fraud lawsuit

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square A woman at the center of the detransition movement is waiting to find out if a North Carolina appeals court will let her case proceed...
Iran economic fallout is temporary, Hassett says

Iran economic fallout is temporary, Hassett says

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The economic fallout of the U.S. conflict in Iran will be temporary, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said on Wednesday. Hassett touted the Trump...
Illinois Quick Hits: NFIB says biz deduction will bring jobs, benefit to Illinois

Illinois Quick Hits: NFIB says biz deduction will bring jobs, benefit to Illinois

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The National Federation of Independent Business says Illinois is projected to gain 48,000 new jobs each year...
Soaring costs and short supply shut millennials out of housing market

Soaring costs and short supply shut millennials out of housing market

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Baby Boomers continue to dominate the U.S. housing market, buying and selling more homes last year than any other generation, while homeownership remains out of...