Carter v. Olmsted County Housing

574 N.W.2d 725, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 128, 1998 WL 37609
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 3, 1998
DocketC4-97-978
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 574 N.W.2d 725 (Carter v. Olmsted County Housing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Olmsted County Housing, 574 N.W.2d 725, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 128, 1998 WL 37609 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIS, Judge.

Relator Chelice Carter challenges the sufficiency of the findings and the evidence in support of the termination of her section 8 rental voucher. We reverse.

FACTS

In 1994, Chelice Carter obtained a section 8 rental voucher for herself and her three daughters through the Olmsted County Housing and Redevelopment Authority (HRA). In the process, she signed a “Statement of Tenant Responsibilities,” which provides in part:

I certify that no person(s), other than those listed on my application, can live/stay/reside with me in my housing unit without prior notice to the HRA. I can have guests/visitors who stay on a temporary basis for less than a total of thirty (30) days. I understand that I must notify the HRA, within 30 days, if anyone moves in or out of my housing unit.

On August 31, 1995, Carter added Romeo Reeearro, who had legally changed his name .from Terry Roundtree but continued to use both names, to her voucher as a member of her household. Reeearro signed a certificate indicating that he had no income. The record includes letters sent to Reeearro at Carter’s address dated August 2 and 14, 1995.

On May 24, 1996, Carter’s landlord sent a letter to the HRA indicating that a realtor had told him that she had spoken with Rec-carro and she “had a house for them,” asking if the landlord could terminate the family’s lease. The landlord wrote that he had spoken with Reeearro, who said he had looked at several houses and believed he would find one by the end of June 1996. At Carter’s termination hearing, she explained that Rec-earro had intended to purchase a house on contract for deed, which she understood to mean that no payment was required.

In- response to a letter from the HRA, Carter called its office on May 30, 1996, and said that she was not planning to move and was not involved in any of Reccarro’s possible plans to buy a house. According to the HRA’s record of the call, Carter said that she did not know whether Reeearro had income or not and that he was not a permanent resident of the household, but he stayed at her home when he was in town; she had added him to her voucher “because she was tired of the landlord complaining that he was visiting all the time and didn’t want to cause any problems with her housing.” Carter’s caseworker “informed her that we don’t add people to households out of convenience for the tenant or the landlord” and told Carter that she was responsible for reporting Rec-carro’s income. Carter became “irate” and told the caseworker to have the HRA remove Reeearro from the voucher, which the HRA did.

Carter recertified her tenancy on July 8, 1996, listing herself and the girls as rest- *728 dents. The file contains a handwritten record of a phone call signed by Carter’s caseworker, dated July 17, 1996, stating simply: “Per Laurie Dubois — [landlord’s] daughter!,] Terry is still there.” The HRA sent Carter a letter stating that it would terminate her voucher if Reccarro was occupying the unit or receiving mail at Carter’s address.

The record gives no information regarding Reccarro’s whereabouts between July and September 1996. Reccarro submitted a notarized statement by a person named Susan West, stating that he moved in with her on October 18, 1996, although a statement prepared for a lawsuit Reccarro brought against the Rochester school district, which employed him for approximately a month in October and November 1996, places Reccar-ro at West’s address in September 1996. Correspondence regarding Reccarro’s termination by the school district was sent to West’s address. The record includes two pieces of correspondence sent to Reccarro at Carter’s address between July 1996 and March 1997: an insurance application dated November 10, 1996, and a notice from an insurance company’s collection division dated January 25,1997.

West’s affidavit states that she “put [Rec-carro] out of [her] home” on March 14, 1997. On March 10, 1997, Reccarro told a food stamp worker to send his stamps to Carter’s address, and on March 11, Reccarro listed Carter’s address on some paperwork for the STRIDE work experience program. On March 14, a deposit slip related to a bank account of Reccarro’s was sent to Carter’s address; the slip does not indicate whether the account contained any money.

On March 17, Carter contacted the HRA asking to have Reccarro once again added to her voucher as a resident of her household. A new caseworker called Carter and said that, due to new regulations, the HRA would need to do a background check on Reccarro and that she and Reccarro would have to come in for an interview. The HRA’s event record states that Carter became upset and said that she would not come to the interview and that when the caseworker called Carter again on March 18, Carter was “very irate” and “used some vulgar language.” Carter asked what would happen if she did not “sign the form” and was told she could lose her assistance. Carter then said that Reccarro would not be moving in. Later that morning, Reccarro came to the office and told Carter’s caseworker: “I don’t know why you didn’t just call me to set up an appointment and I am sick of this.” The report states that Reccarro ' “slammed” an envelope on the counter and told the caseworker that all the information she needed would be in there and that he would be back to reclaim it. He then said in a loud voice, “Don’t mess with my civil rights.” The same day, the HRA sent Carter a letter stating that “a visitor is defined as someone who already has a permanent night time residence.”

The next day, Reccarro called the HRA, claiming that he had given the caseworker the wrong envelope and wanted it returned to Carter’s address. The caseworker instead opened the envelope, which contained a resume describing Reccarro as a “child care/ home teach assistant]” from October 1996 to present, a “class assistant” from January 1990 to present, and a “PCA burn victim/home teach assistant]” from June 1993 to October 1996. On March 31, the caseworker wrote Carter asking for Reccarro’s 1995 and 1996 tax returns. Instead, on April 10, Reccarro sent the HRA a letter stating that he was “mov[ing] out” of Carter’s residence as of that date. He also included letters from Carter and from a person named Ronnie Williams, who stated that Reccarro was moving in with Williams and Reccarro would provide Williams’s address.

On April 15, 1997, the HRA wrote to Carter stating that her assistance was being terminated because “it appears that Romeo Reccarro has been living at your unit for several months without the consent of the [HRA] ” and because Reccarro’s resume “suggested]” that he was employed and Carter had failed to provide Reccarro’s tax returns “to determine if a back payment was owed.” Carter requested a hearing, at which both she and Reccarro explained that he had intended to move in with Carter after being evicted from West’s residence but, after learning of the background check requirement, elected to leave Carter’s residence on April 10 in order to count his occupancy as a visit lasting less than 30 days. Reccarro also *729 explained that the jobs listed on his resume were unpaid volunteer or intern positions for which he was reimbursed only transportation expenses but that he had “embellished” the resume in order to look more attractive to employers and he had paid no taxes in 1995 or 1996 due to insufficient income.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
574 N.W.2d 725, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 128, 1998 WL 37609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-olmsted-county-housing-minnctapp-1998.