Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority v. Davis

2011 Ohio 6162, 967 N.E.2d 1244, 197 Ohio App. 3d 411
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 2011
Docket96477
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 6162 (Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority v. Davis, 2011 Ohio 6162, 967 N.E.2d 1244, 197 Ohio App. 3d 411 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Mary J. Boyle, Judge.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Lawanda Davis, appeals from the trial court’s order granting restitution of the premises to Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (“CMHA”) on its forcible-entry-and-detainer action. She raises two assignments of error for our review:

{¶ 2} “[1] The trial court erred in granting Plaintiff-Appellee Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority’s (“CMHA”) request to evict Davis from her apartment solely on the basis that persons in her apartment possessed small quantities of marijuana, and where, in one instance, Davis did not authorize the individual possessing the drug to be present in her apartment.
{¶ 3} “[2] The trial court erred in evicting Davis based on conduct of persons in her apartment when she had no knowledge whatsoever that those individuals had small quantities of marijuana in their possession.”

{¶ 4} Finding no merit to her appeal, we affirm.

Procedural History and Factual Background

{¶ 5} In June 2010, CMHA filed a forcible-entry-and-detainer action against Davis, a tenant of a public-housing facility owned and operated by CMHA. It sought restitution of the premises, alleging, among other things, that Davis violated the terms of her lease and federal law by engaging in drug-related or criminal activity.

{¶ 6} A hearing was held before a magistrate. CMHA police officer Ryan Allen wrote a report regarding an incident that occurred in Davis’s apartment on November 13, 2009. He testified that CMHA officers saw a male standing outside Davis’s apartment. The male, later identified to be Jacquez Lawson, “tried to get away” from the officers and ran into the apartment building. Three officers chased Lawson up the stairs to Davis’s apartment on the third floor. They saw Lawson go into Davis’s apartment and try to jump off her balcony. But when Lawson saw Officer Ryan standing outside Davis’s apartment, he ran back inside and hid in a closet. Officer Ryan testified that when officers knocked *413 on Davis’s door, Davis lied to them and told them that Lawson was not in her apartment. But Davis consented to the officers’ search of her apartment, and they found Lawson hiding in a closet; he had marijuana in his pocket.

{¶ 7} Scott Drew, also a police officer for CMHA, testified that he wrote the report regarding an incident that occurred in Davis’s apartment on November 15, 2009. He explained that officers went to Davis’s apartment to follow up the November 13 incident. He said that a young male, who was never identified, opened the door to Davis’s apartment and slammed the door in their faces when he saw who it was. The unidentified male jumped out of Davis’s kitchen window. Officers found an indentation in the ground where the male landed. Officer Drew said that another male, later identified to be Kaynye Smith, was sitting on Davis’s couch; Smith had marijuana in his pocket. Officer Drew testified that Smith said he was friends with Davis. Davis came home about five minutes later and became belligerent with the officers.

{¶ 8} Davis testified that on November 13, 2009, Lawson knocked on her door and she let him in her apartment. She said that she knew him from the neighborhood. Davis said that Lawson asked her, “Lawanda, what you doin’?” She replied, “Nothing.” He then asked her if he could “sit down with [her] real quick.” She told him that he could. She did not know he was running from the police. Davis testified that she did not lie to police and tell them that Lawson was not in her apartment. She said, “I listened to the police. I was like, ‘[h]e is right there.’ ” She further stated, “I told the police officer exactly where Jacquez Lawson was.”

{¶ 9} As for the incident on November 15, 2009, Davis testified that she knew Smith from the neighborhood as well. She said that Smith asked her if he could lie on her couch and she told him yes. She explained that she was at a party across the hall and that is how she saw the police were at her apartment.

{¶ 10} After a hearing, the magistrate found in favor of CMHA, concluding that Davis violated R.C. 5321.05(A)(9). Specifically, the magistrate found that illegal drug activity occurred on the premises on November 13 and November 15, 2009, and that Davis permitted the suspects access to her apartment or that they were her guests.

{¶ 11} Davis filed objections to the magistrate’s decision. The trial court overruled Davis’s objections, modified the magistrate’s decision, found in favor of CMHA, and granted it restitution of the premises. The trial court explained that it modified the magistrate’s decision to “indicate the basis upon which judgment is granted is the defendant’s violation of R.C. 5321.05, 24 CFR § 966.4(f)(12), and her lease, permitting drug activity at the premises.” It is from this judgment that Davis appeals.

*414 {¶ 12} We will address Davis’s assignments of error simultaneously as they both address whether the trial court erred when it granted CMHA a writ of restitution based on the drug activity of other persons.

Standard of Review

{¶ 13} In both of her assignments of error, Davis argues that the trial court erred in granting CMHA the right to evict her because CMHA failed to meet its burden of establishing that it had a right to do so. Although Davis claims that her appeal is a matter of statutory interpretation, Davis is actually claiming that the trial court’s judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence. “[W]here an appellant challenges a trial court’s judgment in a civil action as being against the manifest weight of the evidence, the function of the appellate court is limited to an examination of the record to determine if there is any competent, credible evidence to support the underlying judgment.” Lee v. Mendel (Aug. 24, 1999), 10th Dist. No. 98AP-1404, 1999 WL 638645. “Judgments supported by some competent, credible evidence going to all the essential elements of the case will not be reversed by a reviewing court as being against the manifest weight of the evidence.” Seasons Coal Co. v. Cleveland (1984), 10 Ohio St.3d 77, 80, 461 N.E.2d 1273.

Innocent-Tenant Defense

{¶ 14} Davis maintains that because she did not know that the two males who were in her apartment on two separate occasions had marijuana on their persons, the “result reached by the trial court * * * ordering [her] eviction [was] neither just nor reasonable.” Davis focuses her argument solely on the magistrate’s decision finding that she violated R.C. 5321.05(A)(9). But the trial court modified the magistrate’s decision to clarify that it found that she violated not only R.C. 5321.05(A)(9), but also the terms of her lease and federal law.

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Bluebook (online)
2011 Ohio 6162, 967 N.E.2d 1244, 197 Ohio App. 3d 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuyahoga-metropolitan-housing-authority-v-davis-ohioctapp-2011.