Darleana Johnson, Appellant-Defendant, v. Housing Authority of South Bend, Appellee-Plaintiff.
Court of Appeals Case Nos. 22A-EV-1751
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
February 14, 2023
Foley, Judge. Judges Robb and Mathias concur.
Appeal from the St. Joseph Superior Court; The Honorable Matthew R. Raper, Magistrate; The Honorable Eric J. Tamashasky, Magistrate; Trial Court Cause No. 71D06-2204-EV-622
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
Kent Hull
South Bend, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Tramel R. Raggs
Jewell Harris, Jr.
Harris Law Firm, P.C.
Crown Point, Indiana
Opinion by Judge Foley
Judges Robb and Mathias concur.
Foley,
[1] This appeal stems from an eviction case.1 Darleana Johnson (“Johnson“) and her four children rented a home from the Housing Authority of South Bend (“HASB“). Johnson reported to a property manager the following complaints: that the home was not habitable due to mold; a burnt, sparking outlet; water damage caused by leaks in sinks and pipes; and a backed-up sewage line resulting in sewage in the house. HASB offered Johnson alternative housing, and Johnson declined, asserting that the alternatives were just as uninhabitable. HASB filed an eviction notice, and, after a small claims hearing, Johnson was evicted. After a damages hearing, Johnson was then ordered to pay owed rent. Our review of the record reveals several deficiencies in the hearings afforded Johnson, such that she was deprived of her constitutional right to due process. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On April 7, 2022, HASB filed a “Notice of Claim Filed-Eviction” in the St. Joseph Small Claims Court.2 Appellant‘s App. Vol. II p. 2. The small claims court set an eviction hearing for April 26, 2022, where it concluded that an evidentiary hearing would be necessary.3 The evidentiary hearing commenced on June 24, 2022. Johnson represented herself at the hearing. The small claims court swore in all potential witnesses at the beginning of the hearing, which it described as “sort of a continuation.” Tr. Vol. II p. 16. An HASB property manager testified that it called in the City of South Bend to perform inspections after Johnson complained about her home‘s habitability, but that the inspections turned up no issues other than one with the HVAC system. The property manager testified that Johnson continued to lodge complaints and that, in response, HASB offered Johnson two different alternative dwellings, which Johnson did not accept.
[3] HASB‘s attorney then explained to the small claims court that HASB has an internal and informal grievance process available, but that attempts to utilize it had broken down, and HASB felt it needed to file in state court in order to obtain a remedy. HASB‘s counsel further noted that there was a potentially related federal suit, but that it had been dismissed.4 The small claims court asked Johnson a series of questions designed to determine if there were any related matters pending, but it is not clear from the record whether her responses were considered testimony. During this exchange, Johnson declared that she could “prove that Housing Authority of South Bend actually violated the lease.” Id. at 32. The small claims court responded:
[S]ee, you‘re citing a federal regulation, okay? That‘s -- now we‘re going back to the whole federal thing.
You say they can‘t evict you. They‘re here all the time and evict people all the time, okay, under state law, that either they don‘t renew their Section 8 housing for whatever different reason or whatever, and the lease has expired. And[,] so you got to tell me how this federal law trumps anything to do with the not having a valid lease at this point.
Id. at 33.
[4] Through a further colloquy between Johnson and the small claims court, it became apparent that HASB had offered Johnson two other units, but that Johnson believed both alternatives to be as uninhabitable as her own. HASB explained that it cannot permit a tenant to remain in a unit that has been alleged to be uninhabitable and that Johnson refused to vacate. Therefore, HASB felt that their only option, in order to comply with federal regulations and the lease terms, was to terminate Johnson‘s lease. When Johnson
[5] In response to Johnson‘s specific assertions about habitability, and the resulting injuries, the small claims court stated:
That‘s all about damages. And I‘m trying to explain this as best I can, because I have no authority in federal -- whether or not they did certain things or didn‘t do certain things or whatever, I can sort of cover that in damages, but in terms of making them do things, I can‘t make them do anything in terms of recertifying you, okay?
Id. at 44. Johnson asked to call a witness to testify to the housing authority‘s procedures; a request which the small claims court denied. At several points, Johnson remarked that she had filed a grievance with HASB via “certified mail,” “letters” and a “demand” from HASB regarding their grievance process, that she had “papers” supporting her defense, a “mold report,” papers sent by certified mail indicating a willingness to relocate to a suitable unit and pertaining to Johnson‘s grievance process,5 and an email from Johnson‘s former attorney indicating that HASB had expressed that it would rectify the issues with the home.” Tr. Vol. II pp. 25–26, 32, 37–38, 41, 43. The trial court did not accept any exhibits, and repeatedly dismissed Johnson‘s mention of those exhibits as pertaining to “remedies . . . in federal court.” See, e.g., id. at 42.
[6] Finally, relevant for purposes of this appeal, the small claims court expressed the following:
Okay. You got a lease. Your lease has ended. You‘re a month-to-month tenant. And according to them, they don‘t want to renew your lease. I have a lease agreement, I have no authority about what goes on behind the scenes in terms of federal regulations and all that kind of stuff. That is a grievance that you have through the federal process, okay? And you went through that federal process. Well, that‘s something you can – that‘s – if you don‘t feel that you‘re adequately taken care of in the federal process, then you have to file a motion to reconsider, reconsider the administrative situation, okay? But that‘s through the federal process. It‘s not through this court.
Id. at 48. The trial court concluded the evidentiary hearing by ordering “final possession” of the property to HASB effective August 1, 2022. Id. This appeal followed.
Discussion and Decision
[7] Johnson claims that the hearing resulting in the final possession order was deficient for two reasons: (1) the small claims court failed to comply with statutory requirements; and (2) the trial court denied Johnson due process by refusing to allow her to assert a defense. In small claims court: “The trial shall be informal, with the sole objective of dispensing speedy justice between the parties according to the rules of substantive law, and shall not be bound by the statutory provisions or rules of practice, procedure, pleadings or evidence . . . .”
[8] Moreover, “[s]mall claims judgments are ‘subject to review as prescribed by relevant Indiana rules and statutes.‘” Martin, 120 N.E.3d at 248 (quoting
[9] Given the confusion below, we take a moment here to set forth the nature of the various claims and applicable laws in the instant matter. First, as a public housing authority, HASB is a creature of state law. In order to receive federal funding, however, HASB must comply with federal regulations, as set forth by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD“) in the Code of Federal Regulations. For example, housing authorities have an obligation to “maintain the dwelling unit and the project in decent, safe, and sanitary condition[,]”
[10] In addition, housing authority tenants subject to eviction and facing legal action in a local court must be ensured of a hearing that meets the requirements of due process, defined as follows:
Elements of due process shall mean an eviction action or a termination of tenancy in a State or local court in which the following procedural safeguards are required:
(1) Adequate notice to the tenant of the grounds for terminating the tenancy and for eviction;
(2) Right of the tenant to be represented by counsel;
(3) Opportunity for the tenant to refute the evidence presented by the PHA6 including the right to confront and
cross-examine witnesses and to present any affirmative legal or equitable defense which the tenant may have;
(4) A decision on the merits.
[11] Next, we note that HASB has internal administrative grievance processes. Johnson claims she complied with those processes and submitted the grievance properly but did not receive a response from HASB. HASB claims that it worked with Johnson‘s former attorney but that there was a breakdown in communication, and, in the meantime, a crucial deadline passed. We do not revisit this aspect of the case here,8 for we resolve this appeal on different grounds.
[12] Then, there are the claims available to both parties. HASB filed what appears to be an action seeking ejectment—based on state code—on the grounds that Johnson was allegedly in violation of the lease. Johnson‘s defense to the breach of contract claim is that HASB breached the lease first, by failing to comply with its obligations under the lease. This defense—mutual breach—does not sound in federal law, though the question of whether HASB breached in this particular case is at least somewhat informed by its obligations under federal law. To the extent Johnson may have raised claims in federal court for monetary damages for the expenses and injuries resulting from the alleged unsafe living conditions or other relief, those claims are not before this court and not a part of the eviction case.
I. Ejectment Statute
[13] We briefly address Johnson‘s first argument. Johnson claims that the small claims court erred by not requiring HASB to comply with the bonding requirement and affidavit “requirement” of the ejectment statutes,9 thereby contravening our Supreme Court‘s holding in Morton v. Ivacic, 898 N.E.2d 1196 (Ind. 2008). HASB contends that such procedural requirements are inapplicable to small claims courts. With respect to the affidavit requirement,
[,]” (emphasis added) stating, inter alia, that the plaintiff is entitled to possession of the property and that the defendant has unlawfully retained possession of the property. If such an affidavit is filed, the trial court must order a hearing in order to give the defendant an opportunity to controvert the affidavit.
[14] With respect to the bonding requirement,
II. Due Process
[15] We turn, next, to Johnson‘s primary argument. The
[16] We first note that we are concerned with the small claims court‘s apparent reticence to allow Johnson to call witnesses or to consider her documentary evidence. Furthermore, despite the small claims court‘s recognition that Johnson was entitled to cross-examine HASB‘s witness, see Tr. Vol. II p. 22, it does not appear that Johnson was ever actually given that opportunity. Towards the end of the hearing, the following colloquy occurred:
MS. JOHNSON: Can I call my witness before [ ] we proceed, please?
THE COURT: It‘s going to be the same thing. Without any sort of jurisdiction . . .
MS. JOHNSON: I know. But I have a witness that works for Housing Authority that knows the procedures and the way they are supposed to do things.
THE COURT: [ ] [A]nd that‘s not really going to matter because that‘s a federal situation.
Id. at 44. Johnson was not permitted to call the witness.
[17] It is true that pro se litigants are generally held to no different a standard than represented parties. See, e.g., Zavodnik v. Harper, 17 N.E.3d 259, 266 (Ind. 2014). But parties, represented or not, must not be expected to insist on being given the protections to which they are guaranteed and should automatically receive. And, as we have recently recognized,
[18] The core of Johnson‘s due process argument, however, is that the small claims court refused to hear her defense(s). Although it is not entirely clear, it appears that Johnson raised or sought to raise the following defenses: (1) that HASB violated federal laws and/or regulations and was, therefore, not entitled to take possession of the property; (2) that the fact that HASB violated federal laws and/or regulations means that it also violated the lease, and thus was not entitled to take possession of the property as a matter of state contract law; or (3) both. The small claims court repeatedly stated its belief that Johnson‘s defenses could only be raised in a federal court. To the contrary, “‘where there is not exclusive federal jurisdiction the state and federal courts have concurrent jurisdiction.‘” In re Beck‘s Superior Hybrids, Inc., 940 N.E.2d 352, 365 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (quoting Jaskolski v. Daniels, 905 N.E.2d 1, 12 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (cleaned up), trans. denied, cert. denied). Johnson was entitled to raise both her federal law defense and her contracts defense in a state court.
[19] We are not insensitive to the realities of small claims courtroom adjudications. Dockets are crowded and litigants are frequently unrepresented by counsel. Nonetheless, we find that the small claims court did not provide Johnson with sufficient due process when it refused to hear her defense(s). If proven, her defense(s) may establish that she was not in breach of the lease, that HASB was in breach of the lease, and Johnson did not unlawfully retain possession of the property. The consequence of such a finding would be that HASB would fail to shoulder its burden of proof. We reverse the small claims court‘s order on final possession and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
[20] Reversed and remanded.
Robb, J., and Mathias, J., concur.
