American Campus Communities, Inc. v. Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 3, 2021
Docket03-21-00119-CV
StatusPublished

This text of American Campus Communities, Inc. v. Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated (American Campus Communities, Inc. v. Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Campus Communities, Inc. v. Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-21-00119-CV

American Campus Communities, Inc.; American Campus (PVAMU) Ltd.; American Campus (PVAMU IV) Ltd.; ACC OP (PVAMU VI), LLC; ACC OP (PVAMU VII), LLC; ACC OP (PVAMU VIII), LLC; American Campus (Laredo), Ltd.; American Campus (U of H), Ltd.; ACC OP (West Abram), LLC; ACC OP (The Block), LLC; 22 1/2 Street Partners, L.P.; Campus Investors Austin, LLC; Campus Investors Austin, LLC; ACC OP (Pearl Street), LLC; ACC OP (Retreat Sm), LLC; ACC OP (Retreat Sm Land), LLC; ACC OP (Sanctuary Lofts), LLC; ACC OP (Vistas San Marcos), LLC; ACC (Outpost San Marcos), L.P.; Campus Investors Hrse-SC, LLC; American Campus Communities Operating Partnership, L.P.; ACC (Outpost San Antonio), L.P.; ACC OP (West Campus), LLC; ACC OP (Uta Blvd.), LLC; ACC OP (26 West), LLC; GMH/GF Denton Associates, LLC; ACC OP (Cityparc), L.P.; Apkshv Lubbock, L.P.; ACC (Raiders Pass), L.P.; Lubbock Two Associates, LLC; Lubbock Main Street Associates, LLC; ACC OP (Overton Park), LLC; ACC OP (Tract 6), LLC; Sycamore Avenue Associates, LLC; ACC OP (Tracts 32 and 33), LLC; ACC OP (Denton-Fry), LLC; SHP-The Callaway House, L.P.; ACC OP (Callaway Villas), L.P.; ACC (Aggie Station), L.P.; ACC OP (Marion Pugh), LLC; ACC OP (South College Avenue), LLC; Campus Investors Baylor, LLC; & ACC OP (Speight Avenue), LLC, Appellants

v.

Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Appellees

FROM THE 345TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-18-005960, THE HONORABLE KARIN CRUMP, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants are American Campus Communities, Inc. and more than thirty of its

subsidiaries (collectively, ACC), all of which are landlords at separate residential properties throughout Texas. Appellees are ACC’s former tenants1 (Tenants) who filed a class action

alleging that ACC violated the Texas Property Code and was strictly liable to them for civil

penalties. The trial court granted Tenants’ motion to certify the class action, and ACC filed

this interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s certification order. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code § 51.014(a)(3). For the following reasons, we will modify the certification order and

affirm it, as modified.

BACKGROUND

Tenants filed an “Original Petition and Class Action Petition” in October 2018

alleging that ACC had violated Section 92.056(g) of the Property Code by not including

statutorily required language in its uniform lease agreements with Tenants (who were generally

college students)2 and that Tenants were entitled to statutory remedies for such omissions. See

Tex. Prop. Code §§ 92.056(g) (“A lease must contain language in underlined or bold print that

informs the tenant of the remedies [relating to a landlord’s duty to repair or remedy conditions

that materially affect the physical health or safety of an ordinary tenant] available under this

section and Section 92.0561.”), .0563 (“Tenant’s Judicial Remedies”). Tenants alleged that all

defendants except American Campus Communities, Inc. are subsidiaries of that corporation

and operate under an “umbrella” of corporate control by that entity or American Campus

Communities Operating Partnership, L.P.

1 Unlike the other three appellees, Beth Berry was not a tenant of ACC but signed as a guarantor on an ACC lease for her daughter, Brooke Berry. The trial court appointed Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein as class representatives. For convenience, we refer to all four appellees as Tenants and to class representative Brooke Berry as Berry. 2 In their live (third amended) petition, Tenants alleged that ACC was engaging in “ongoing statutory violations” affecting “residential tenancies of thousands of young, often first- time renters—college students.” 2 In June 2020, Tenants filed a motion for class certification. See Tex. R. Civ.

P. 42. ACC filed a response in opposition followed by a motion for summary judgment. The

trial court heard argument on ACC’s motion for summary judgment on September 22, 2020, and

conducted an evidentiary hearing on Tenants’ motion for certification on October 1, 2020.

On November 4, 2020, Tenants filed their live (third amended) petition in

which they asserted two “counts” for themselves individually and the following putative class:

“All Texas tenants under an ACC residential lease that was executed, entered into, continued,

renewed, or extended during the class period.”3 In their first count—“Breach of Statutory Duty

to Disclose”—Tenants alleged that ACC

violated Section 92.056(g) of the Texas Property Code with respect to the subject lease agreements used during the proposed class period since same did not contain required notice language in underlined or bold print (or any language whatsoever) that informed tenants of the remedies available under Section 92.056 and Section 92.0561 of the Texas Property Code.

See Tex. Prop. Code § 92.056(g). Tenants sought statutory remedies of a “civil penalty of one

month’s rent plus $500 . . . as to each member of the defined class” plus court costs and

attorney’s fees. See id. § 92.0563(a)(3), (5).

In their second count—“Breach of Statutory Anti-Waiver Prohibition”—Tenants

alleged that ACC’s “refusal to include the mandated language [in Section 92.056(g)] constitutes

an attempt to constructively inhibit, restrict or waive its landlord duties and corresponding tenant

rights and remedies in violation of” Section 92.006 and that ACC acted “knowingly” in omitting

3 Tenants proposed two alternate “class periods”: (1) the period encompassing “tenancies created after September 1, 2008, through ACC’s attempted lease modification in April 2018” or (2) the period encompassing “all existing tenancies during the four years prior to ACC’s lease modification in 2018.” 3 the language, entitling each class member to “a civil penalty of one month’s rent plus $2,000.”

See id. §§ 92.006, .0563(b).

In a section of their live petition entitled “Equitable Relief,” Tenants additionally

alleged that ACC “continue[s] to violate Texas law” for which they “seek the declarations and

injunctive relief outlined in Section 6 of this Third Amended Petition,” including a declaration of

“the legal deficiency” of ACC’s “2018 Lease Addendum” and “current leasing agreements.”4

See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 37.004(a) (providing for declaratory relief to person

“interested under a . . . written contract”). Tenants also asked the court to issue a permanent

injunction (1) prohibiting ACC from “using, employing, relying on, or seeking any relief based

on the 2018 Lease Addendum,” (2) “mandating that [ACC] provide the statutorily required

notice in proper print and us[e] full and complete language in compliance with Sections 92.006

and 92.056(g),” and (3) enjoining ACC from “utilizing legal defenses otherwise available to a

residential landlord regarding . . . repair reporting and timing of repair completion for tenancies

existing during the class period.”

The trial court signed an order denying ACC’s summary-judgment motion on

November 25, 2020, and an order granting class certification on February 26, 2021. The trial

court’s certification order certified the following class: “All Texas tenants residing under an

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American Campus Communities, Inc. v. Beth Berry, Brooke Berry, Yael Spirer, and Hailey Hoppenstein, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-campus-communities-inc-v-beth-berry-brooke-berry-yael-spirer-texapp-2021.