452 Mass. 833 | Mass. | 2009
This is an appeal by Emmitt Bridgewaters from a judgment of the Boston Division of the Housing Court Department awarding possession of his apartment to the Boston Housing Authority (BHA), and denying Bridgewaters’s postjudgment motions to alter or amend the judgment and for relief from the judgment. A judge in the Housing Court concluded that Bridge-waters had violated a provision of his lease by “committing a crime on the public housing development grounds that threatened the health and safety of another resident.” Bridgewaters appealed, and the Appeals Court affirmed. Boston Hous. Auth. v. Bridgewaters, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 757, 768 (2007). We granted his application for further appellate review limited to his claim for a reasonable accommodation.
Bridgewaters has a mental disability. Central to this appeal is his assertion that the BHA failed to explore the feasibility of a reasonable accommodation of his disability before concluding that continuation of his tenancy would constitute a threat to the safety of other tenants. See 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(9) (2000).
Before a public housing authority may conclude that a dis
1. Procedural background. On March 22, 2004, the BHA brought an eviction action against Bridgewaters by filing a summary process complaint in the Housing Court. The BHA claimed that Bridgewaters had caused serious physical harm to another tenant, his twin brother. Trial commenced and was concluded on April 22, 2004. On May 17, 2004, the judge issued written findings of fact and conclusions of law, and entered judgment for possession for the BHA.
Bridgewaters, now represented by counsel, moved for reconsideration and for relief from judgment pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 59, 365 Mass. 827 (1974), and Mass. R. Civ. P. 60 (b),
Bridgewaters filed a notice of appeal, together with motions to waive the appeal bond and costs, and to stay execution pending appeal. One week later, he moved in the Housing Court for relief from the judgment under rule 60 (b). After a hearing, the judge denied the motion.
Bridgewaters appealed to a single justice of the Appeals Court for a stay of execution pending appeal. The stay was granted, subject to Bridgewaters’s continued treatment for his disability and compliance with the terms of his lease with the BHA. The Appeals Court then affirmed the judgment and the Housing Court judge’s orders denying the postjudgment motions, concluding that “an individual who engages in conduct that violates a housing authority’s rules and that is significantly inimical to an authority’s obligation to provide a physically safe environment for its tenants is not a ‘qualified handicapped person’ entitled to an authority’s general obligation to provide reasonable accommodations for its handicapped tenants,” and that, “[u]nder that standard,” Bridgewaters was not a qualified handicapped person. Boston Hous. Auth. v. Bridgewaters, supra at 768.
2. Factual background. We summarize the facts found by the judge, supplemented by undisputed facts of record and uncontested affidavits and exhibits considered by the judge in Bridge-waters’s posttrial motions. The BHA owns and operates Holgate Apartments, a federally assisted residential complex for the elderly and the disabled, where Bridgewaters resides. His twin brother, Eric, also resided at Holgate, in a different apartment. In the late evening of January 9 or the early morning of January 10, 2004, Bridgewaters assaulted Eric, inside Eric’s apartment. As a result of the altercation, Eric, who was paralyzed on the left side of his body due to a stroke he suffered as a child, sustained severe injuries and temporary paralysis in his right leg.
During the trial, Bridgewaters, who was not represented by counsel, testified that he had not initiated the assault, that he had punched his brother once, and that had thrown water at him. Bridgewaters also testified that he suffers from a mental disability, which he termed manic depression or bipolar disorder. He stated that he had been prescribed medication, but that he was unmedicated at the time of the assault on the advice of his physician. Bridgewaters also testified that, after the altercation, he had received treatment for his disability and is “in a better situation today” than he was at the time of the assault. The BHA offered no evidence to refute Bridgewaters’s testimony about his course of medication or his treatment for disability. The BHA, however, did state that it would not reevaluate its decision to evict Bridgewaters: counsel asserted that the BHA was “not interested in preserving this tenancy” and was “not interested in any sort of mediation [because] of the severity of the crime.”
In support of his posttrial motion, Bridgewaters submitted affidavits and exhibits that elaborated on his trial testimony.
We reserve for later discussion facts related to whether the judge should have considered Bridgewaters’s disability-based defense at trial.
3. Discussion. Because the issue whether Bridgewaters made a reasonable accommodation request arises meaningfully only if the BHA is obligated to entertain his request, we first address whether Bridgewaters’s misconduct foreclosed consideration of any reasonable accommodation request.
a. The “direct threat” exception. Much of this case turns on what is known as the “direct threat” exception to a public housing authority’s ordinary obligation to accommodate tenants with disabilities. See 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(9) (2000).
In 1988, Congress enacted the FHAA, making it unlawful to
HUD subsequently promulgated regulations
“In determining whether an individual poses a direct threat to the health or safety of others, the agency must make an individualized assessment, based on reasonable judgment that relies on current medical knowledge or on the best available objective evidence to ascertain: the nature, duration, and severity of the risk; the probability that the potential injury will actually occur; and whether reasonable modifications of policies, practices, or procedures will mitigate the risk” (emphasis added).
24 C.F.R. § 9.131(c).
Thus, § 9.131 does not prevent a public housing authority from evicting a disabled tenant where the landlord can demonstrate that no accommodation is available that would protect the health or safety of other tenants. It does not require automatic accommodation of tenants who would harm other residents. It does, however, require a public housing authority to assess individually whether, given a proposed request for a reasonable accommodation, a disabled tenant poses a direct threat to the health or safety of others.
Cornwell & Taylor LLP vs. Moore, Minnesota Court of Appeals, No. C8-00-1000 (Dec. 22, 2000), is instructive. In that case, a landlord subject to the requirements of the FHAA attempted to evict a tenant with schizoaffective disorder and bipolar disorder. After the tenant stopped taking his medication, he entered a delusional state, hit and choked his wife, and then took a loaded
Echoing the Federal regulatory framework, the BHA’s reasonable accommodation in housing policy and procedures (reasonable accommodation policy) also prohibits it from summarily concluding, after a reasonable accommodation request has been raised and before an individualized assessment of a disabled tenant has been conducted, that no accommodation will sufficiently reduce the risk of harm. The reasonable accommodation policy provides, among other things, that a conclusion that a disabled tenant poses a direct threat to others “should be founded on a history of actions by an applicant or resident, provided that there have not been changes in the meantime which make it likely that such actions would not recur. Also, if a reasonable accommodation could eliminate or sufficiently reduce the risk to health or safety, that accommodation must be provided.” The reasonable accommodation policy also acknowledges that the BHA bears the burden of showing that no accommodation is reasonable: “if it can be shown that no reasonable accommodation is possible to lessen the risk of harm, then no accommodation is necessary.” Where not contradicted by the FHAA and HUD regulations, the BHA is bound by its own procedures. Morton v. Ruiz, 415 U.S. 199, 235 (1974).
In short, the FHAA, HUD regulations, and the BHA’s own policies make clear that the BHA cannot satisfy its requirement to explore reasonable accommodation for a disabled tenant who has committed an act of violence by summarily concluding, as the BHA’s counsel stated to the judge, “[FjranUy your Honor
We turn now to the merits.
b. Reasonable accommodation request. Because the BHA’s obligation to assess individually whether Bridgewaters posed a threat to the health or safety of others turns on whether Bridge-waters requested a reasonable accommodation, we now address whether the BHA knew that Bridgewaters was disabled and whether he made a request for a reasonable accommodation, leaving for later discussion the BHA’s claim that no causal link existed between Bridgewaters’s disability and the assault on his brother.
As a predicate to obtaining a reasonable accommodation in federally financed public housing, a disabled tenant must, if his landlord is not already aware, inform the landlord that he has a disability and must request some accommodation. Cf. Reed v. LePage Bakeries, Inc., 244 F.3d 254, 260 (1st Cir. 2001) (employee must make employer “sufficiently aware that she had a disability . . . and consequently needed some sort of special accommodation” [emphasis in original]). We have held that, if a tenant informs a “landlord that the tenant is a qualified handicapped person, and that the tenant is currently being denied an equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling,” the tenant has requested an accommodation. Andover Hous. Auth. v. Shkolnik, 443 Mass. 300, 313 (2005). The BHA argues that Bridgewaters did not raise his disability or request a reasonable accommodation at trial. It also claims that there is no evidence that Bridge-waters is disabled, and that it was unaware that Bridgewaters was disabled.
We reject the BHA’s assertion that Bridgewaters is not disabled under State and Federal disability law. Bridgewaters receives Federal disability benefits, which evidences that the Social Security Administration has determined that he has “an inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity” by reason of his physical or mental impairment because “he is not only unable to do his previous work but cannot engage in any other kind of substantial gainful work.” 42 U.S.C. § 423(d) (2000). HUD regulations define an individual with a handicap as “any person who
We also reject the BHA’s assertion that it did not know that Bridgewaters was a disabled person who might require a special accommodation. Several weeks before trial, the Housing Court referred Bridgewaters to the Boston Tenancy Preservation Project (TPP), a “cooperative effort” between the Housing Court and private nonprofit agencies that assists tenants “whose mental illness . . . may be jeopardizing their tenancies.” Annual Report on the State of the Massachusetts Court System, Fiscal Year 2003, at 16 (Feb. 14, 2004). Before trial TPP contacted the BHA regarding Bridgewaters. Even if the BHA was “not interested” in mediation, as its counsel stated at trial,
Although the BHA was on notice that Bridgewaters was dis
Even though Bridgewaters had not been fully apprised of his disability-related rights, at trial Bridgewaters did make the judge aware of his disability, testifying about his mental disability, the cessation in treatment at the time of the assault on his brother, and his subsequent treatment program. Bridgewaters did dispute that he had assaulted his brother, but he also argued: “I take full responsibility to a certain degree for my actions. ... I was not on my medication.” He was explicit about his mental disability (“I have a disability in which I suffer from bipolar and I’m manic depressive”) and testified that the assault occurred after his doctor suspended his medication due to negative side effects (“[A]t the time [my doctor] did not have me on my medication. I was taking [Depakote] but I was taken off of it”), and that he was currently receiving effective treatment (“[B]ut I can honestly say that I am in a better situation today than what I was on the [day of the assault], . . . I’m taking Topamax, I’m taking Seroquel”). The judge acknowledged Bridgewaters’s testimony
*846 “Where a resident faces eviction proceedings because of a lease violation(s) and the lease violation(s) is related to a disability, he or she shall be advised by management of the right to request reasonable accommodation. Both the Notice of Private Conference and Notice of Termination/Notice to Quit sent to residents shall set forth the basis for the proposed lease termination, and shall state that if the resident or a household member has a disability, he or she has the right to request reasonable accommodation to enable compliance with the lease on forms available at the development management office.”
To make a reasonable accommodation request, no “magic”
“[A disabled resident or an applicant for housing] makes a reasonable accommodation request whenever she makes clear to the housing provider that she is requesting an exception, change, or adjustment to a rule, policy, practice, or service because of her disability .... An individual making a reasonable accommodation request does not need to mention the Act or use the words ‘reasonable accommodation. ’ However, the requester must make the request in a manner that a reasonable person could understand to be a request for an exception, change, or adjustment to a rule, policy, practice, or service because of a disability.” (Emphasis added.)
Cf. Taylor v. Phoenixville Sch. Dist., 184 F.3d 296 (3d Cir. 1999) (where employee became psychotic at work due to her bipolar condition, and employer knew she had been hospitalized for three weeks for her condition, employer was on notice that employee had disability, and it was only necessary that employer be informed that employee needed accommodation); 5 Emp. Coordinator § 9:55, at 9-66 (West 2008) (“The employee need not use the phrase ‘reasonable accommodation,’ or make the request in writing. It is enough that the employee communicate the need in plain English that he or she has a disability and wants assistance for it”). Bridgewaters’s request to remain in his apartment should have set in motion the fact-specific, objective inquiry we have outlined above.
c. The nexus requirement. Under the FHAA, a refusal reasonably to accommodate a disabled tenant is discriminatory when “such accommodations may be necessary to afford such person equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling.” 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3)(B). In other words, a reasonable accommodation is required where there is a causal link between the disability for which the accommodation is requested and the misconduct that is the subject of the eviction or other challenged action. The BHA claims that Bridgewaters has not established a nexus or causal link between his disability and the assault on his brother.
Although the relationship between Bridgewaters’s disabilities and his acts is clearly implicit in his repeated assertions at trial
The case Peabody Props., Inc. v. Sherman, 418 Mass. 603 (1994) (Sherman), on which the BHA relies, does not compel a different result. In that case a tenant was engaged in illegal drug activity when proceedings to terminate his lease were commenced. Illegal drug activity in which a tenant is engaged is the FHAA’s sole exclusion from the definition of handicap. 42 U.S.C. § 3602(h) (“[the term ‘handicap’] does not include current, illegal use of or addiction to a controlled substance”). This case does not involve illegal drug activity. Moreover, in Sherman, the offending conduct was ongoing and “current.” Id. at 606-607. Here, Bridgewaters established, and the BHA does not challenge, that his violent conduct was limited to one serious assault that occurred after his doctor had directed him to suspend his medication for his bipolar disorder. The direct threat exception and attendant regulations apply directly to circumstances such as these.
4. Conclusion. Bridgewaters’s twin brother has the right to be
So ordered.
Boston Housing Authority (BHA), as a recipient of Federal funds, is governed by the Fair Housing Amendments Act. 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq. (2000).
Bridgewaters also asserts claims under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794 (2000); the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101 et seq. (2000); the Massachusetts Antidiscrimination Law, G. L.
We acknowledge the amicus briefs submitted in support of Bridgewaters by the AARP; Disability Law Center, Mental Health Legal Advisors Committee, Center for Public Representation, and Coalition for the Legal Rights of People with Disabilities; Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless, The Pine Street Inn, Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance, and Boston Center for Independent Living; and Massachusetts Union of Public Housing Tenants. We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted in support of the BHA by the Cambridge Housing Authority and Housing and Development Law Institute.
Bridgewaters pleaded guilty to three charges related to the incident: assault and battery, assault and battery on a disabled person, and assault and battery
Bridgewaters submitted an affidavit with his posttrial motion stating that the BHA “has been my landlord since I was one year old.” At the time Bridgewaters signed his affidavit in 2004, he was thirty-nine years old.
We recite uncontested facts raised after trial because they are relevant to this appeal.
A social worker stated in a posttrial affidavit that these medical conditions cause Bridgewaters to experience symptoms such as “impulsivity, suicidal ideation, instability of affect as manifested by manic and depressive episodes, mood reactivity, and transient stress-related paranoia.”
Title 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(9) (2000) (the direct threat exception) of the Fair Housing Amendments Act provides: “Nothing in this subsection requires that a dwelling be made available to an individual whose tenancy would constitute a direct threat to the health or physical safety of other individuals or whose tenancy would result in substantial physical damage to the property of others.”
Part 9 of 24 C.F.R. “applies to all programs or activities conducted by the [Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)], except for programs or activities conducted outside the United States that do not involve individuals with disabilities in the United States.” 24 C.F.R. § 9.102 (2008).
For a more extensive history of the direct threat exception, see Note, The
Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 3603, federally assisted public housing authorities such as the BHA are governed by the antidiscrimination prohibitions of 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f). Title 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3) provides, in pertinent part:
“ [Discrimination includes ... a refusal to make reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, or services, when such accommodations may be necessary to afford [a handicapped person] equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling.”
“No Senate Report was submitted with this legislation.” 1988 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 2173.
The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is empowered to “promulgate such regulations as may be necessary” to ensure that “[n]o otherwise qualified individual with a disability in the United States . . . shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance or under any program or activity conducted by any Executive agency . . . .”29 U.S.C. § 794 (2000).
The BHA’s reasonable accommodation policy, which was incorporated into Bridgewaters’s lease, states that the BHA will follow “guidelines and guidance issued by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.”
This language follows closely a passage in School Bd. of Nassau County v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273 (1987), on which the House Judiciary Committee drew in drafting the FHAA. 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2173, 2189. See School Bd. of Nassau County v. Arline, supra at 287, 288. See also United States v. California Mobile Home Park Mgt. Co., 29 F.3d 1413, 1416 (9th Cir. 1994) (“the FHAA imposes an affirmative duty upon landlords to accommodate the needs of handicapped persons”).
The BHA relies on Southeastern Community College v. Davis, 442 U.S. 397, 406 (1979) (Davis), to assert that disabled tenants are not qualified for a reasonable accommodation unless they are “able to meet all of a program’s requirements in spite of handicaps.” This reliance is misplaced. Alexander v. Choate, 469 U.S. 287, 299 n.19 (1985) (Alexander), clarified the holding in Davis by stating that “the question of who is ‘otherwise qualified’ and what actions constitute ‘discrimination’ under [§ 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973] would seem to be two sides of a single coin; the ultimate question is the extent to which a grantee is required to make reasonable modifications in its programs for the needs of the handicapped.” See Wynne v. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med., 932 F.2d 19, 27 (1st Cir. 1991) (holding “the literal language of Davis that an ‘otherwise qualified person’ must meet ‘all of a program’s requirements,’ ” was modified by Alexander, which “in effect modified the
A joint statement of HUD and the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), entitled Reasonable Accommodations Under the Fair Housing Act (May 17, 2004) (joint statement) provides: “A determination that an individual poses a direct threat must rely on an individualized assessment that is based on reliable objective evidence (e.g., current conduct, or a recent history of overt acts). The assessment must consider (1) the nature, duration, and severity of the risk of injury; (2) the probability that injury will actually occur; and (3) whether there are any reasonable accommodations that will eliminate the direct threat.” (Emphases added.) See note 17, infra.
This conclusion is consistent with HUD and DOJ guidance for public housing authorities, which the BHA’s lease obligates it to follow. In their joint statement, HUD and DOJ addressed certain specific questions, including “How can a housing provider determine if an individual poses a direct threat?” The response provided recited the individualized assessment set out in 24 C.F.R. § 9.131(c) and noted that, “in evaluating a recent history of overt acts, a provider must take into account whether the individual has received intervening treatment or medication that has eliminated the direct threat (i.e., a significant risk of substantial harm). In such a situation, the provider may request that the individual document how the circumstances have changed so that he no longer poses a direct threat. . . . The housing provider must have reliable, objective evidence that a person with a disability poses a direct threat before excluding him from housing on that basis.” (Emphasis added.)
The BHA’s assertion that, “if the ‘altercation’ was an isolated incident, it is
In an example provided in the joint statement of HUD and DOJ, a tenant who threatens a neighbor with a baseball bat because a psychiatric disability causes him to become violent when he stops taking his medication is not foreclosed from accommodation. The example states that, after a tenant requests a reasonable accommodation, the landlord would need to grant the accommodation if the tenant can provide assurance that the tenant will receive appropriate counselling and periodic medication monitoring.
At trial, when Bridgewaters confronted the BHA’s counsel with the Boston Tenancy Preservation Project (TPP) referral form, the BHA’s counsel responded: “I did receive a call from TPP ... a couple of weeks ago and I said that I wasn’t interested in any sort of mediation because of the severity of the crime . . . .”
The lease between Bridgewaters and the BHA provides that “Resident and BHA hereby agree to abide by the terms of BHA’s Reasonable Accommodation in Housing [Policy and] Procedures [reasonable accommodation policy], as it may then exist (and which is incorporated herein by reference).” The reasonable accommodation policy requires that “[a]ll documents sent by the BHA regarding action on a lease violation shall identify the lease violation and inform the resident of his/her right to request reasonable accommodation if necessary to comply with the lease.” The reasonable accommodation policy in turn provides:
For example, during Bridgewaters’s closing argument, the following colloquy occurred:
The judge: “I understand you’re getting treatment. . .”
Bridgewaters: “Right!”
The judge: “For the problems that you have.”
Bridgewaters: “Right!”
Pointing to Bridgewaters’s trial testimony that he acted in self-defense or that his actions were necessary to avoid physical injury, the BHA argues that this is a “fatal flaw” in Bridgewaters’s claim for reasonable accommodation. We disagree. Bridgewaters was not precluded from arguing both that the assault occurred because his doctor had taken him off the medication that treated his bipolar disorder and that his actions were not as alleged by BHA. These are not inconsistent defenses.
Bridgewaters’s lease is consistent with Federal policy that “any criminal activity that threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other tenants . . . shall be cause for termination of tenancy.” 42 U.S.C. § 1437d(l)(6) (2000). The BHA must depart from this policy in order to comply with the FHAA. 24 C.F.R. § 966.4(l)(5)(vii)(F) (2008) (“eviction actions must be consistent with fair housing and equal opportunity provisions”).
In denying Bridgewaters’s posttrial motions in which he argued that he was entitled to a reasonable accommodation from application of the BHA’s rules and policies because of his mental disability, the judge noted: “[ijssue not raised at trial or before; even if it were, Peabody Properties, Inc. v. Sherman[, 418 Mass. 603 (1994),] controls.” For the reasons described, we disagree with the trial judge on this point. See post at 849, discussing Peabody Props., Inc. v. Sherman, supra. We also disagree with the Appeals Court that the reasonable accommodation issues “were not the subject of trial testimony or other evidence of the type that is always necessary if abstract claims are to become fact-based contentions that the court can resolve.” Boston Hous. Auth. v. Bridgewaters, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 757, 764 (2007).
See note 17, supra.
In light of our conclusion that BHA did not comply with Federal law,
While it may be appropriate under Federal law to merge employment discrimination and fair housing doctrines where Congress explicitly drew on School Bd. of Nassau County v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273 (1987), an employment discrimination case, in drafting the FHAA, see note 15, supra, we see no reason to import the “egregious workplace misconduct” doctrine of employment cases into cases of housing discrimination where the Massachusetts statutes concerning “handicapped persons” differ in the two contexts, and where the Federal regulatory framework in the housing context has so clearly laid out the path to be followed.
The United States Supreme Court has held that an accommodation is not reasonable if it imposes “undue financial and administrative burdens,” South
The accommodation Bridgewaters seeks does not unduly burden the BHA. Bridgewaters does not suggest, as the BHA asserts, that the BHA should “monitor his treatment.” On the contrary, the accommodation he requests is rooted in lease compliance, and relies on improved treatment monitored by Bridgewaters’s doctors, who assert that the treatment they now provide can control his condition. Far from constituting a fundamental alteration to the BHA’s program, such an accommodation would be, as described in its reasonable accommodation policy, “in furtherance of the BHA’s goal of providing affordable housing to low income persons regardless of disability.”
The BHA relies on Department of Hous. & Urban Dev. v. Rucker, 535 U.S. 125 (2002), and Peabody Props., Inc. v. Sherman, 418 Mass. 603 (1994), to assert that the accommodation Bridgewaters seeks is unreasonable. Those cases are inapposite as both concerned tenants who were involved in illegal drug activity at the time of lease termination. As noted, such illegal activity is expressly excepted from the FHAA’s antidiscrimination provisions. 42 U.S.C. § 3602(h).