Aрpellee District of Columbia Housing Authority (DCHA) brought this action for possession against appellant Stella Callo-wаy based upon a claim that she had violated, inter alia, paragraph 5(m) of her lease addendum which required her, as the tenant on the lease, “[t]o refrain from ... [a]ny criminal ... activity which threatens the health or safety of other residents ... or [from] ... [a]ny drug-related criminal activity [on] ... DCHA property.” At trial, evidence established that a police seаrch of the five-bedroom, federally subsidized building leased to Calloway by DCHA had yielded a loaded handgun, ammunition, a vial оf PCP, drug paraphernalia (ie., empty zip-lock bags), and $1080 from two upstairs bedrooms, and another loaded handgun and additional ammunition from a first-floor bedroom. Instructed, inter alia, on constructive possession, a jury found that Calloway had violated her lease and awarded possession to DCHA.
On appeal, Calloway argues principally that the District’s statutes and regulations governing eviction required DCHA to issue a notice to correct or vacate — in еffect, to give her an opportunity to cure the lease violation — before moving to evict her. In this contеxt of federally subsidized housing, we have rejected that argument.
See Scarborough v. Winn Residential, L.L.P.,
At оral argument Calloway asserted, essentially for the first time, that because paragraph 5(m) of her lease also permitted her eviction for “other activity” — not just criminal and drug activity— that threatened the safety of others, hеr right to cure has not been supplanted by the federal regime cited in Scarborough, which related only to activities criminal in nature. Whatever force that argument might have in another case, however, it has none here, where the only fаctual basis on which DCHA sought Calloway’s eviction was the drugs, drug paraphernalia, and firearms and ammunition found in her dwelling.
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Cаlloway further argues that the notice to vacate served on her by DCHA was “impermissibly vague” (Br. for App. at 29). It was not. As in
Scarborough,
thе notice “contained a statement detailing the reasons for the eviction, including the factual basis on which [DCHA] rеlied,” and “specified the grounds for termination.”
Scarborough,
Finally, Calloway argues that the еvidence was insufficient to prove that she violated paragraph 5(m) of the lease. She is correct that, contrary to the command of federal law,
see Department of Hous. & Urban Dev. v. Rucker,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Scarborough was decided after Calloway filed her opening brief.
. By a pretrial order, a Superior Court judge had read the paragraph that way and limited DCHA to proving personal liability by Callo-way for violation of paragraph 5(m); DCHA took no cross-appeal from that ruling. To the extent Calloway now argues that jury instructions given by the judge, and closing argument by DCHA, allowed the jury nonetheless to find her liable under paragraph 5(m) for someone else’s conduct that she had not facilitated and of which she had no knowledge, she made no objection to the instructions or closing argument on that ground. Indeed, her briefs on appeal make no challenge to the trial court’s instructions as such.
. In view of this analysis, including the separate verdicts returned by the jury, we need not consider issues related to the jury’s finding that Calloway had also violated paragraph 5 (l) of the lease. Further, any prejudice she suffered from the аdmission in evidence of the transcript of Maurice Calloway’s guilty plea was, we conclude, negligible and certainly not enough to warrant reversal.
