Thе question posed by this case is whether three women residing in “chapter 707 project based units” (see St. 1966, c. 707) operated by the Springfield YWCA are statutorily protected from self-help eviction. We conclude that they are and that the trial judge’s dismissal оf part of their claims was erroneous.
*640 The plaintiffs, Mary Serreze, Angela Anderson and Jane Doe, filed suit against the YWCA of Western Massachusetts doing business as Springfield YWCA (YWCA), alleging violations of G. L. c. 186, §§ 14* 2 and 15F, 3 as well as the State Civil Rights Act, G. L. c. 12, § 111, claiming, among other things, that when they were locked out of their apartments on May 12, 1989, they were unlawfully evicted without judicial process. 4 They sought preliminary injunctive relief, which was denied, and damages.
The YWCA moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint on the ground that the pleadings and supporting dоcuments established that the plaintiffs’ relationship to the YWCA was that of voluntary social service clients and not tenants. After a hearing, a judge in the Superior Court granted the YWCA’s motion to dismiss and judgment entered accordingly. 5
1.
The “Transitional Living
Program.” We summarize the facts set fоrth in the pleadings in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.
Yankubowicz
v.
Paramount Pictures Corp.,
*641
2. The dispute. Towаrd the end of January, 1989, the controversy which spawned this litigation erupted between the YWCA and the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs Anderson and Doe, unhappy with the program coordinator’s purported insensitivity to their case management, lodged a complaint with the executive director of the YWCA. A short time later, in a letter dated March 12, 1989, the three women articulated specific grievances against the program coordinator, including charges of breach of confidentiality, inaccessibility, laсk of knowledge as to area resources, and an inability properly to facilitate support group sessions. 7 Tensions mounted and culminated in Doe’s refusal to attend the individual and *642 group counseling sessions. Serreze joined the boycott shortly thеreafter.
On March 29, 1989, the program coordinator, citing as grounds for termination their “voluntary” failure to participate in support services, issued Doe and Serreze thirty-day notices to vacate their apartments by April 30, 1989. 8 Concerned that the rift wоuld jeopardize future funding for an otherwise valuable program, the YWCA executive director met with the plaintiffs on at least one occasion, on April 5, 1989, to discuss their complaints. At that meeting, the director agreed to investigate the plaintiffs’ grievаnces, but informed them that if they failed to vacate their apartments as required in the notices, she would have the locks changed. She added that this decision was hot appealable.
Anticipating a moratorium on the YWCA’s ouster notices, the thrеe women, through counsel, requested a fair hearing and conciliation conference through DSS. See 110 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 10.06, 10.08(2), 10.09 (1988). On May 12, 1989, during the DSS conciliation conference, and for reasons not entirely developed in the record, the YWCA represеntatives walked out of the meeting and changed the locks on the plaintiffs’ apartment doors.
3. Plaintiffs’ claims under G. L. c. 186. The plaintiffs contend that the YWCA, in barring them from their apartments without judicial process, violated G. L. c. 186, §§ 14 and 15F. The YWCA counters that plaintiffs were not tenants, but clients in a temporary treatment program, and, as such, licensees not statutorily protected under landlord-tenant law.
We recognize that the regulatory scheme underlying the transitional housing program suggests an intention to “depart from traditional cоncepts of the landlord-tenant relation
*643
ship.”
Spence
v.
O’Brien,
The YWCA, like many landlords before them, insists that the financial integrity of this program or other like programs will be compromised each time a disruptive resident must be ousted through summary process. We recognize in this case the legitimate interеsts of the YWCA in preserving the viability of its TLP program, see
City Wide Assocs.
v.
Penfield,
The mere fact that the TLP program is a condition of the occupancy agreement, and the services provided inherently restorative, should not preclude the аpplication of G. L. c. 186, § 14. In implementing this program, the YWCA has provided a safe place for participants whose survival depends upon controlling their own habitat. The plaintiffs sought refuge from their former households because the provisions of the abuse prevention statute, G. L. c. 209A, could not effectively “create [] a haven for [them] in which no further abuse need be feared. . . .”
Commonwealth
v.
Gordon,
4.
The civil rights claims.
Although we conclude thаt the YWCA interfered with the plaintiffs’ protected interest in the continuation of their subsidized occupancy, we do not think its behavior rose to the level of a civil rights violation under G. L. c. 12, § 111. There is no evidence that the YWCA ever threatened, intimidated, or cоerced the plaintiffs; thus, one of the elements necessary for a statutory violation is lacking.
Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks, Lodge No. 65
v.
Planning Bd. of Lawrence,
5.
Disposition.
So much of the judgment in favor of the YWCA as pertains to the G. L. c. 186, § 14, claim is vacated and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for a hearing to assess reasonable attorney’s fees of the plaintiffs to be added to an award for each of them under the formula provided in § 14 of twenty-five dollars plus three months rent each, or eighty-eight dollars for Mary Serreze; seventy-six dollars for Angela Anderson; and one hundred dollars for Jane Doe.
13
We decline to award appellate fees and costs.
Yorke Mgmt.
v.
Castro,
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 186, § 14, as amended by St. 1984, c. 189, § 146, provides in pertinent part: “Any lessor or landlord who directly or indirectly interferes with the quiet enjoyment of any residential premises by the occupаnt, or who attempts to regain possession of such premises by force without benefit of judicial process ... [is subject to statutory remedies].”
General Laws c. 186, § 15F, inserted by St. 1974, c. 575, § 2, provides as follows: “If a tenant is removed from the premises or excluded thеrefrom by the landlord or his agent except pursuant to a valid court order ... [a statutory remedy is available].”
Because the plaintiffs have not shown through the record or their briefs how G. L. c. 186, § 18, is implicated, we do not consider their claim under that section. Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended,
Since the trial judge considered documents beyond the pleadings (affidavits, photographs of the premises, and various agreements), this motion was treated as one for summary judgment under Mass.R.Civ.P. 56,
Each of the рrogram participants paid a monthly rent of twenty-five percent of her income pursuant to 760 Code Mass. Regs. § 7.02 (1986), the regulation governing the determination of rents in State-aided public housing.
Anderson and Doe also alleged in the complaint that a short time after the YWCA hired a child coordinator, on March 21, 1989, they believed *642 they “witnessed the Coordinator physically and psychologically abusing a child belonging to one of the other residents.”
In a parallel development, the program cоordinator had sent Anderson a letter on March 8, 1989, ordering her out of her apartment due to her failure to attend regular meetings and because of a partial arrearage on her security deposit. On April 10, 1989, Anderson was notified that she had until April 19, 1989, tо vacate her unit.
Because we hold that the plaintiffs are entitled to remedies afforded by G. L. c. 186, § 14, we need not reach the more difficult question whether they were “tenants” for the purposes of G. L. c. 186, § 15F. However, we note that remedial statutes, such as G. L. c. 186, § 15F, are to be liberally construed to effectuate the apparent legislative purpose.
Deas
v.
Dempsey,
Unlike several States in which anti-eviction statutes prohibit the removal of any residential occupant except for cause, Massachusetts continues to permit summary eviction of tenants-at-will. See and compare, the New Jersey Anti-Eviction Act, 1974 N.J. Laws c. 49, arising from a recognition of the severe housing shortage in that State. In Massachusetts, the burden remains on a tenant to establish a reasonable basis to stave off eviction proceedings. G. L. c. 239, §§ 1 et seq.
In this way, these women are very different from those individuals housed in programs funded through the Department of Mental Health. See 760 Code Mass. Regs. § 39.01(1) (1988), which specifically excludes mental health programs and shelters from the Transitional Housing Program. The plaintiffs have manifested no behavioral disorders justifying substantive limitations on their living accommodations, nor has there been any allegation that the plaintiffs substantially interfered with the rights of other ocсupants.
In our case the plaintiffs represent that they have found other housing accommodations and now seek only the damages remedy in § 14.
We note that this case differs from
Simon
v.
Solomon,
