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Full Opinion
OPINION
A. INTRODUCTION
The matters before us are an epilogue to our Opinion of September 21, 1988, reported at 91 B.R. 324, granting certain former tenants of the Debtor-landlord, MILTON CLARK, SR., a portion of the relief which they sought against him in a prior adversary proceeding. At issue are proofs of claims filed by four of the tenant-plaintiffs (hereinafter referred to collectively as âthe Claimantsâ) in that proceeding, to which the Debtor has objected. The Claimants allege that the Debtor continuously breached the implied warranty of habitability regarding their premises and that they are entitled to recover retroactive rent abate-ments, compensatory damages for personal property lost or purchased as a result of the condition of the rented premises, and compensation for âdeprivation and humiliation.â The Claimants also seek to treble their damages by invocation of the Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, 73 P.S. § 201-1, et seq. (as this is a law prohibiting unfair and deceptive acts and practices, it is hereinafter referred to by its generic designation as âUDAP.â)
We hold here that those Claimants who paid rent during that period are entitled to a retroactive rent abatement from September, 1986, until the filing of the Debtorâs bankruptcy petition. We also award that portion of damages sought for property lost or purchased as a result of the Debt- orâs breach of the implied warranty of habitability which we did not already award in our previous Opinion as compensation for the Debtorâs contempt of our Orders in the adversary proceeding. However, we decline to allow claims for rent abatements prior to September, 1986, because there is *572 insufficient proof that the implied warranty of habitability had been breached prior to that date. Neither do we award damages for any injuries incurred subsequent to the filing of the Debtorâs bankruptcy petition, as these are post-petition claims. Given the nature of the habitability problems presented here, we believe that the claimants are entitled to some compensation for âdeprivation and humiliation,â or discomfort. In addition, in light of the substantial and continuous nature of the habitability defects, we find that the claimants are entitled to treble damages under UDAP, but only as to certain of their claims. Specifically, we limit recovery of treble damages to the Claimantsâ out-of-pocket expenses occasioned by the prolonged lack of heat and hot water in their units.
B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Debtor filed the underlying voluntary petition for relief pursuant to Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on December 7, 1987. The Claimants, Beverly Williams, Kathleen Robbins, James and Marguerita Palmer, 1 and Carole Nelson, are prior tenants of the Debtor's 24-unit apartment building located at 126-36 South 54th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19139. 2 On January 6, 1988, the Claimants, and two other tenants who were subsequently dismissed as parties therefrom, filed an adversary Complaint against the Debtor alleging that he had failed to maintain their apartments in a fit and habitable condition. The Claimants sought, in the adversary action, a variety of remedies, including an order requiring the Debtor to provide full utility services to their apartments and awards of both compensatory and punitive damages.
On January 13, 1988, upon the agreement of counsel for both the Claimants and the Debtor, an Order was entered requiring the Debtor to provide full utility services, including heat and hot water, to the Claimantsâ premises and granting the Claimants relief from the automatic stay to pursue any state court remedies. The Debtor failed to comply with the terms of this Order, and an Order of Contempt was entered against the Debtor on January 28, 1988. See our previous Opinion, 91 B.R. at 327. As a result of the Debtorâs subsequent slow compliance with our Orders of January 13,1988, and January 28, 1988, we were required to hold several hearings to monitor the Debtorâs compliance with our Orders. Id. at 327-28. 3
In view of our finding that the Debtor remained in continuous contempt of this Courtâs Orders through the date of the final hearing, id. at 335-37, we awarded damages to the Claimants, but limited those damages to those attributable to the Debtorâs failure to provide utilities contrary to this Courtâs Order of January 13, 1988, and January 28, 1988, plus attorneysâ fees and costs. Id. at 339-41, 343. We specifically declined to enter judgment in that proceeding with respect to any other claims against the Debtor for damages, holding that such claims must be raised by means of the claims process in this bankruptcy case. Id. at 342.
Prior to our Opinion in the adversary matter, only Carole Nelson, among the present Claimants, had filed a proof of claim in the Debtorâs bankruptcy case. See id. at 342 n. 27. The bar date of August 29, 1988, had passed by the time that we' filed our Opinion. Nevertheless, on October 13, 1988, undoubtedly enlightened by our Opinion, the Claimants filed their present proofs of claim. 4 The Claimants *573 also filed, on that date, a motion to file their proofs of claims after the bar date and Objections to confirmation of the Debt- orâs Chapter 13 Plan. On November 4, 1988, the Debtor filed his Objections to the claimantsâ proofs of claims alleging, among other things, that the claims were not timely filed.
The proofs of claims themselves are bare-bones, and merely recite a total sum claimed by each of the four Claimants. It is only upon receipt of the Claimantsâ Brief that we were provided with any sort of breakdown whatsoever. We can now ascertain that the claims asserted by each of the Claimants are as follows: (1) Beverly Williams (hereinafter âWilliamsâ): $1,800.00 for rent rebate (October, 1986, to May, 1987); $983.07 for replacement of damaged property and purchases to provide heat; 5 and $1,400.00 for âdeprivation and humiliation,â measured in her case (and for all other Claimants) at $100.00 monthly (here, for the period from October, 1986, to December, 1987); treble the total of $4,183.07, or $12,549.21; less the $279.00 previously awarded; resulting in a net figure of $12,270.21; (2) Kathleen Robbins (hereinafter âRobbinsâ): $1,250.00 for rent rebate (March, 1986, to September, 1986); $396.00 to purchase pots, an electric heater, and hot plates; $2,100.00 for âdeprivation and humiliation;â treble the total of $3,846.00, or $11,538.00; less the $115.50 previously awarded; resulting in a net figure of $11,422.50; (3) James and Margueri-ta Palmer (hereinafter âthe Palmersâ): $6,880.00 for rent rebate (January, 1985, to August, 1987); $410.00 for blankets and child care; $3,600.00 for âdeprivation and humiliation;â treble the total of $10,890.00, or $32,670.00; less the $575.00 previously awarded; resulting in a net figure of $32,-095.00; and (4) Carole Nelson (hereinafter âNelsonâ): rent rebate of $3,600.00 (January, 1985, to April, 1986); $80.00 for purchases of blankets, pots, and pajamas; $3,300.00 for âdeprivation and humiliation;â treble the total of $6,980.00, or $20,940.00; less the $50.00 previously awarded; resulting in a net figure of $20,890.00. Thus, the demands of the Claimants total the eye-popping sum of $76,677.71.
A hearing was conducted in the Debtorâs main bankruptcy case on December 8, 1988, to consider confirmation of the Debt- orâs Plan, Objections to confirmation filed by the Claimants and by another creditor, Corestates Bank; the Debtorâs Objections to the claims in issue and to the claim of Corestates Bank; and the Claimantsâ motion to file late proofs of claims. After consideration of the arguments of counsel on the matter, we concluded that the prior adversary Complaint constituted the filing of timely âinformalâ proofs of claims on behalf of the Claimants, and we granted their motion to file late claims in an Order dated December 9,1988. See In re Ungar, 70 B.R. 519, 521-23 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987). It was agreed by counsel that the Debtorâs Objections to the present proofs of claim should be submitted on the record made in the adversary proceeding. The Claimants were directed to file their Brief in this matter on December 22, 1988, with the Debtorâs Brief due on January 6, 1989. The hearing to consider confirmation and the Debtorâs Objection to Corestates Bankâs proof of claim was continued until March 9, 1989. The Claimantsâ Brief was timely filed on December 22, 1988, and the Debtorâs Brief was untimely filed on January 9, 1989.
Since the present matter involves âallowance or disallowance of claims againstâ the Debtorâs estate, it is a core matter which can be determined by this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B). As it is not an adversary proceeding, this matter is not *574 within the scope of Bankruptcy Rule 7052, see In re Campfire Shop, Inc., 71 B.R. 521, 524-25 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987), and we may therefore issue the present Opinion in narrative form.
As this matter is to be decided based upon the record developed in the adversary proceeding and the present claims are the self-same matters addressed therein, we adopt both the factual findings and legal conclusions contained in our previous Opinion. We will not repeat our factual findings set forth in that matter, 91 B.R. at 328-32, and will supplement those findings only as is necessary to decide the present controversy.
C. DISCUSSION
1. GENERAL GUIDELINES: ONLY THE CLAIMANTSâ PRE-PETITION CLAIMS AS TO ELEMENTS OF DAMAGES PROVEN IN THE RECORD WILL BE ALLOWED
As noted above, one element of damages which the Claimants each seek, at this juncture, is a retroactive abatement of rents, certain portions of which some of them had previously paid, as a result of the Debtorâs breach of the implied warranty of habitability. See 91 B.R. at 341-42 (Claimants are not liable to the Debtor for back rent due to complete breach of warranty of habitability by the Debtor). The Claimants further seek reimbursement for money spent on supplemental sources of energy (ie., kerosene, electric heaters, etc.), which were necessitated by the Debtorâs failure to provide heat and hot water. The proofs of claims here in issue also include demands, by each of the Claimants, for âdeprivation and humiliationâ and for treble damages under UDAP.
The present matter fits within the fifth possible proof of claim scenario discussed In re Lewis, 80 B.R. 39, 41 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987). As a result, since the Debtor arguably has produced evidence in support of his Objections by defending the adversary proceeding, the Claimants bear the burden of proving their claims by a preponderance of the evidence.
It is clear that, in Pennsylvania, a breach of the implied warranty of habitability will support a tenantâs affirmative claim for damages against a landlord. Fair v. Negley, 257 Pa.Super. 50, 54, 390 A.2d 240, 242 (1978). A lease is to be construed as a contract, and standard contract remedies are available to both landlord and tenant for a breach thereof. Pugh v. Holmes, 486 Pa. 272, 284, 405 A.2d 897, 903 (1979). The standard measure of such damages is the âpercentage reduction in useâ method, i.e., the diminution in value of the leased premises by reason of the defects giving rise to the breach of the implied warranty of habitability. 486 Pa. at 275-76, 405 A.2d at 909-10. The tenant may also recover incidental or consequential damages resulting from the breach. See Fair, supra, 257 Pa.Super. at 54, 390 A.2d at 242; and Beasley v. Freedman, 256 Pa.Super. 208, 210-11, 389 A.2d 1087, 1088 (1978).
Three matters are addressed by us preliminarily before turning to the individual proofs of claim. The first involves fixing the time during which the Debtor breached the warranty of habitability, thereby excusing the Claimantsâ payment of rent for that period. Pugh, supra, 486 Pa. at 292, 405 A.2d at 907. This time period is significant, as it sets the parameters of the Claimantsâ claims for retroactive rent abatement.
We already found in the adversary proceeding that the Debtor had failed to provide the Claimants with housing that met even the most minimum standards of safety, health, and decency. 91 B.R. at 341-42. Throughout that proceeding, the Claimants testified extensively regarding the substandard conditions of the premises, including the lack of heat and hot water, infestation by rodents and insects, crumbling walls, leaking ceilings, and collapsing floors, and we credited same. Id. at 328-29. The substantial disrepair of the premises was also documented by forty-three (43) Violation Notices issued by the City of Philadelphiaâs Department of Licenses and Inspections (hereinafter âL & Iâ) between March, 1985, and April, 1988. Id. at 329. L & I declared the premises unfit for hu *575 man habitation in September, 1986, due to the insufficient supply of hot water, and again in January, 1988, due to the Debtorâs failure to supply adequate heat and hot water. Id.
As a result of the deteriorating condition of the leased premises, the Claimants discontinued rent payments on various dates. In light of the Debtorâs complete breach of the implied warranty of habitability, however, we found, in the course of the adversarial proceeding, that the Debtor was not entitled to recover on his Counterclaims against the Claimants for any back rent. Id. at 341-42. The Debtorâs total breach of the implied warranty of habitability will likewise entitle those Claimants who continued to make their rental payments to a refund of rental payments remitted.
In the adversary proceeding, we found that the Debtorâs breach of the implied warranty of habitability stretched from September, 1986, through the date that we rendered a decision in that matter, i.e., September, 1988. Id. at 341. This finding is amply supported by both the testimony of the Claimants and the documentary evidence from L & I. However, three of the Claimants here seek retroactive rent abate-ments prior to September, 1986. Robbins seeks an abatement of rent paid from March, 1986, through September, 1986. The Palmers seek a rebate for rent paid from January, 1985, through August, 1987. And Nelson seeks a rebate of rents paid from January, 1985, through April, 1986.
We are unable to conclude, on the basis of the present record, that the condition of the premises at any time prior to September, 1986, constituted a breach of the implied warranty of habitability. The testimonial evidence of conditions prior to that date is scant. Robbins testified that her heat âwasnât very goodâ when she moved in March, 1986. Nelson indicated that there was a âproblemâ with heat in winter, 1985-86. However, the extent and duration of the âproblemâ at that time was not fully developed on the record. In order to excuse a tenant from a rental-payment obligation, the condition complained of must be a serious one. See Pugh, supra, 486 Pa. at 291-92, 405 A.2d at 907. The Claimants bore the burden of proving the breach of the warranty of habitability with respect to their pre-September, 1986, claims. Lewis, supra, 80 B.R. at 41. We are unable to conclude on the basis of the present record that it was established that the Debtorâs implied warranty of habitability to the Claimants was breached prior to September, 1986. Accordingly, we shall not grant the Claimants recovery for retroactive rent abatements prior to that date.
Secondly, as we noted in our Opinion in the adversary proceeding, post-petition claims are neither affected nor discharged by the filing of the Debtorâs bankruptcy petition. Id. at 338 n. 17. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b); and In re M. Frenville Co., 744 F.2d 332, 337 (3d Cir.1984), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1160, 105 S.Ct. 911, 83 L.Ed.2d 925 (1985). The Claimants have not argued that any of their post-petition claims, other than those already accorded that status by our prior Opinion and Order, are properly classifiable as administrative claims. As a result, we will not allow any claims for damages which arose post-petition. Specifically, we will not grant any claims for rent abatements, child care expenses, or any other matters which arose after December 7, 1987. The Claimants are of course free to pursue those claims at a different time and place.
The December 7, 1987, cut-off date requires that we also deny some of Williamsâ claims for property damage. We will not allow Williamsâ claim for a replacement bed purchased due to damage by mice, since the bed was purchased in March, 1988. In addition, we shall disallow Williamsâ claims relating to replacement of a dresser, clothing, and a rug. According to Williamsâ testimony, these belongings were damaged as a result of a roof leak which occurred in or after January, 1988.
Finally, the Claimants here seek incidental and consequential damages for the costs of replacement heaters, child care, and other expenses necessitated by the lack of heat and hot water in the premises. In a claim for breach of the implied warranty of habitability, a tenant may be compensat *576 ed for such incidental and consequential damages. Fair, supra, 257 Pa.Super. at 53-54, 390 A.2d at 242, 243 (tenant may recover for reasonable repair and replacement of property damaged by the breach and excess utility bills created thereby); and Beasley, supra, 256 Pa.Super. at 211, 389 A.2d at 1088 (tenant can recover additional damages causally related to breach of the warranty of habitability).
In the adversary proceeding, we awarded the Claimants some damages for their expenses necessitated by the lack of heat and hot water. The compensatory damages awarded there were due to the Debtorâs failure to provide utilities in contempt of this courtâs Orders of January 13, 1988, and January 28, 1988. 91 B.R. at 339. We awarded damages for half of these expenditures since they were, in part, attributable to the lack of heat and hot water prior to entry of this Courtâs Order of January 13, 1988. Id. at 339, nn. 18-21. We will adjust the Tenantsâ Claimantsâ claims here to allow single, but avoid double, compensation for these expenditures.
2. ACTUAL DAMAGES ALLOWED TO THE CLAIMANTS: COMPUTATION OF PRE-PETITION ELEMENTS OF DAMAGE NOT PREVIOUSLY AWARDED
Having addressed these preliminary matters, we shall proceed to address the Claimantsâ specific respective demands for compensatory damages and retroactive rent abatements. Williams moved into her apartment, in October, 1986, agreeing to pay a monthly rent of $225.00. As a result of the defective condition of her unit, she last paid rent in April, 1987. Due to the lack of heat in her apartment, Williams incurred expenses for an electric heater and blankets. She also claims to have paid $50.00 for kerosene for the months of October and November, 1987. In addition, Williams paid $70.00 per month to her mother to care for her children during the winter months. In light of the above, we calculate Williamsâ actual damages as follows:
electric heater (balance of $27.09) $ 13.54
blankets (balance of $11.98) 5.98
kerosene 100.00
child care 140.00
rent rebate from October, 1986, through April, 1987 1,575.00
Robbins moved into her unit in March, 1986. Her monthly rent was also to be $225.00, which was last paid in September, 1986. In addition, she seeks compensation for heaters, hot plates, and pots. We calculate Robbinsâ compensable expenses as follows:
pots (balance of $16.00) $ 8.00
electric heater (balance of $215.00) 107.50
hot plates 170.00
rent abatement for September, 1987 225.00
The Palmers had resided in their apartment since September, 1984. Their monthly rent was $215.00, which they continued to pay until August, 1987. The Palmers also paid to place their children with relatives during the winter months due to the lack of heat in their apartment. We therefore calculate the Palmersâ compensatory damages as follows:
blankets (balance of $30.00) $ 15.00
child care 380.00
rent rebate from September, 1986 through August, 1987 2,500.00
Nelson moved into her apartment in September, 1979. Her monthly rent was $225.00, which was last paid in May, 1986. Nelson also seeks reimbursement for heaters, pajamas, and pots which she purchased due to the lack of adequate heat and hot water to her apartment. We calculate Nelsonâs damages as follows:
heaters (balance of $40.00) $20.00
pots (balance of $10.00) 5.00
pajamas (balance of $50.00) 25.00
3. DAMAGES FOR âDEPRIVATION AND HUMILIATIONâ: $500.00 ALLOWED TO EACH CLAIMANT
In addition to the compensatory damages discussed above, the Claimants each seek an award for âdeprivation and humiliation.â This claim appears to be a component of the Claimantsâ requests for compensatory damages due to the Debtorâs breach of the implied warranty of habitability. 6
*577 In Beasley, the Pennsylvania Superior Court held that, where there is a breach of the implied warranty of habitability, a tenant may recover, in addition to recovery of excess rentals paid, consequential damages which are proximately caused by the breach of the warranty. 256 Pa.Super. at 211, 389 A.2d at 1088. See also Roeder v. Nolan, 321 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa 1982) (tenant may recover incidental and consequential damages); Mease v. Fox, 200 N.W.2d 791, 797 (Iowa 1982) (tenant may recover incidental and consequential damages which falls within the general principles governing the allowance of such damages); Detling v. Edelbrock, 671 S.W.2d 265 (Mo.1984) (en banc) (tenant entitled to damages for impaired enjoyment of premises and consequential damages); and Glyco v. Schultz, 35 Ohio Misc. 25, 289 N.E.2d 919 (Sylvania Co. Mun.Ct.1972) (damages included cost of necessary repairs and damages to personal property). See generally Annot., Measure of Damages for Landlordâs Breach of Implied Warranty of Habitability, 1 A.L.R. 4th 1182 (1980). See also Javins v. First National Realty Corp., 428 F.2d 1071, 1072-73 (D.C.Cir.), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 925, 91 S.Ct. 186, 27 L.Ed.2d 185 (1970).
While we are not aware of any reported Pennsylvania cases on this issue, we are persuaded by the reasoning presented by the highest courts in two other states that damages for breach of the implied warranty of habitability may include claims for âdeprivation and humiliation.â The first of these cases involved a proceeding presented by certified question to the West Virginia Supreme Court, Teller v. McCoy, 162 W.Va. 367, 253 S.E.2d 114 (1978). In that case, the West Virginia Supreme Court joined Pennsylvania and many other jurisdictions in rejecting the doctrine of caveat emptor in the context of landlord-tenant relations, and held that a warranty of habitability is implied in every residential lease. 253 S.E.2d at 122-23. In discussing the appropriate measure of damages for such a breach, the court reviewed authorities which measured damages by the difference between the fair market value of the premises if they had been as warranted and as they actually were, and cases which ascertained damages as a percentage reduction of use. Id. at 127. However, the court concluded that neither approach should be the exclusive means of measuring damages for breach of the warranty of habitability in a non-commercial case. Id. at 128. The court reasoned that
money damages so assessed, while appropriate in the commercial cases, are inadequate in most residential landlord-tenant tenant cases, since the residential tenant who endures a breach of the warranty of habitability normally does not actually lose only money. The typical residential tenant rents a dwelling for shelter, not profit. When the warranty is breached, he loses, instead, such intangibles as the ability to take a bath or use hot water as frequently as he would like, he may be forced to worry about the health of his children endangered by rats, roaches, or other undesirable pests, or he may be denied the use of certain rooms in the apartment because there is odor, severe water leakage, or no heat. âWhen [the measure of damages] is difficult to apply because the property in question is not used commercially, it may be necessary to formulate a measure of damages that is more uniquely adapted to the plaintiffs injury.â Jarrett v. E.L. Harper & Son, Inc., W.Va. [160 W.Va. 399] 235 S.E.2d 362, 365 (1978).
Id. Thus, the Teller court concluded that, when the warranty of habitability is breached, a tenant may recover not only for the diminished value of his or her unit, but may also recover damages for annoyance and inconvenience proven to have resulted from the breach.
*578 In Hilder v. St. Peter, 144 Vt. 150, 478 A.2d 202 (1984), the Vermont Supreme Court considered a landlordâs appeal from an award of damages to a tenant for breach of both the implied warranty of habitability and express contractual provisions. During her tenancy, the Hilder plaintiff experienced a myriad of problems with her rental unit. When she initially moved in, she found garbage and personal items left by the prior tenants still there. The kitchen window was broken, and the plaintiff was never provided her with a key for her apartment. The toilet remained clogged and inoperable throughout the tenancy. In addition, water leaked from an upstairs apartment which caused a section of plaster to fall on to her bed and her grandsonâs crib. A broken sewage pipe resulted in an odor of raw sewage that permeated the plaintiffâs apartment during the summer months. 478 A.2d at 206. The Hilder court concluded that these facts âevince[d] a pattern of conduct on the part of the defendants for which the term âslumlordâ surely was coined.â Id. at 211.
Thus, the Vermont Supreme Court upheld the trial courtâs conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to reimbursement of all rent paid plus additional compensatory damages. Hilder, 478 A.2d at 202. 7 In discussing the measure of damages, the Hilder court stated, 478 A.2d at 209, that
[w]e also find persuasive the reasoning of some commentators that damages should be allowed for a tenantâs discomfort and annoyance arising from the landlordâs breach of the implied warranty of habitability. See Moskovitz, The Implied Warranty of Habitability: A New Doctrine Raising New Issues, 62 Calif.L.Rev. 1444, 1470-73 (1974) (hereinafter cited as A New Doctrine); [Note, The Implied Warranty of Habitability: A Dream Deferred, 48 UMKC L.Rev. 237, 250-51 (1980) ]. Damages for annoyance and discomfort are reasonable in light of the fact that
âthe residential tenant who has suffered a breach of the warranty .. .cannot bathe as frequently as he would like or at all if there is inadequate hot water; he must worry about rodents harassing his children or spreading disease if the premises are infested; or he must avoid certain rooms or worry about catching a cold if there is inadequate weather protection or heat. Thus, discomfort and annoyance are the common injuries caused by each breach and hence the true nature of the general damages the tenant is claiming.â
Moskovitz, A New Doctrine, supra, at 1470-71. Damages for discomfort and annoyance may be difficult to compute; however, â[t]he trier [of fact] is not to be deterred from his duty by the fact that the damages are not susceptible of reduction to an exact money standard.â Vermont Electric Supply Co. v. Andrus, 132 Vt. 195, 200, 315 A.2d 456, 459 (1979).
The Claimants here were subject to extensive discomfort and annoyance as a result of the condition of their respective rental units. Williams had crumbling walls in her bathroom and holes in her kitchen walls. Her toilet failed to work for months and, when it did, it ran over into the bathtub. Williams testified that her apartment was infested with mice. She testified graphically about finding the mice in her childâs crib. She slept at night with the lights on to keep the mice away, but, even so, she stated that she could feel them eating away at her bedâs boxspring at night. In the morning, she was greeted by the sight of mice coming into the apartment through a hole in the wall from the bathroom. Furthermore, one of her children was injured by eating debris from the apartmentâs walls that turned out to be infested with lead paint.
The other Claimantsâ testimony duplicated that of Williams. Robbins testified that the sound of mice chewing through the wall kept her awake at night. Robbinsâ *579 kitchen ceiling had fallen in as a result of leaks, her sink was broken, and the kitchen floor had sunk, preventing her from using most of her kitchen. The Palmers and Nelson presented similar testimony regarding their leaky ceilings, crumbling walls, and warped and sloping floors.
Most notable and egregious among the problems that the claimants experienced are the fact that they lived without any heat or hot water since early spring, 1987. As a result, they attempted to obtain some heat by use of electric and kerosene heaters and the warmth generated from their gas stoves. Reliance on these alternate sources to heat an apartment, of course, presents additional dangers of fire and other detriments to the health and safety of tenants. As a result of the lack of heat and hot water, the Palmers and Williams were compelled to place their minor children with relatives during the cold winter months.
In In re Aponte, 82 B.R. 738 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988), Chief Judge Twardowski of this court awarded both actual and punitive damages to a tenant against a landlord who failed to provide essential services in violation of the automatic stay, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(h). The debtor/tenant in Aponte was deprived of heat and hot water for approximately six months. 82 B.R. at 744. In discussing the appropriate measure of damages in that case, Judge Twar-dowski reasoned as follows:
We must also consider the effect of this deprivation on debtor and his family. See, e.g., In re Wagner, 74 B.R. 898, 905 [(Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987)] (awarding debtor $100.00 for his âshock alarm and fearâ); Mercer v. DEF, Inc., 48 B.R. 562, 565, Bankr.L.Dec. para. 70, 545 (Bankr.D.Minn.1985) (awarding debtor $1,000.00 for her â.. .humiliation, embarrassment, anxiety and frustrationâ) ... Although defendant did deprive debtor of heat and hot water during the cold fall, winter and spring months, debtor found alternative sources, for which he will be compensated in the form of actual damages. On the other hand, one kerosene heater and one space heater will do little to offset the winter chill in a two floor apartment. And debtor and his family were subject to the endless monotony of boiling water to meet their hot water needs, and filing and maintaining the heaters.
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To compound matters, this travesty impacted the lives of two children. We find that these repeated, knowing violations of the stay and our orders created an endless cycle of deprivation, harassment, discomfort, hopelessness and anxiety, which we will compensate with an award of $2,000.00.
Id. at 745.
The Claimants here were subject to the âinconvenienceâ of lack of heat and hot water. They were faced with the âdiscomfortâ of living with mice and lead paint. In addition, the Palmers and Williams were separated from their children due to the lack of heat and hot water. We feel that these are compensable injuries.
However, the Claimants did not present extensive evidence regarding these damages. As a result, we shall limit their award for these injuries to $500.00 each. Compare Simon v. Solomon, 385 Mass. 91, 431 N.E.2d 556 (1982) (court upholds jury award of $35,000.00 against landlord for reckless infliction of emotional harm and breach of covenant of quiet enjoyment when water and sewage from an adjoining area flooded their apartment approximately thirty times); and Dorgan v. Loukas, 19 Mass.App. 959, 473 N.E.2d 1151, 1153 (court awards $2,000.00 for emotional distress as a result of landlordâs failure to maintain apartment).
D. THE CLAIMANTSâ DEMANDS FOR TREBLE DAMAGES UNDER UDAP: WE WILL TREBLE ONLY THE SPECIFIC DAMAGES CLAIMED AND NOT THE RENT ABATEMENTS OR AMOUNTS FOR âDEPRIVATION AND HUMILIATIONâ