Douglas v. Kriegsfeld Corp.
This text of 884 A.2d 1109 (Douglas v. Kriegsfeld Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
FERREN, Senior Judge:
This case presents the question under the federal Fair Housing Act whether the trial court erred in denying a tenant the opportunity to defend her landlord’s action for possession by claiming discrimination — namely, the landlord’s failure to provide a “reasonable accommodation”— based on her alleged “handicap” (mental impairment). We disagree with several of the trial court’s rulings and thus reverse and remand the case to the trial court for further consideration of the tenant’s request for accommodation.
[1115]*1115It is important to note, before proceeding, that although four colleagues have either written or joined in dissenting opinions, all of them except for Judge Schwelb subscribe fundamentally to virtually all the legal principles elaborated in this opinion for the court. The difference between the majority and three of our colleagues, as expressed in Judge Glickman’s dissenting opinion, lies in applying those principles to the facts.
I.
Evelyn Douglas (tenant) receives federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits and is eligible for federally subsidized “Section 8” housing. On August 23, 2001, Kriegsfeld Corporation (landlord) served her with a thirty-day notice to “cure or quit” for violation of her lease covenant to “maintain the apartment in clean and sanitary condition.” Later, at trial, the landlord presented evidence that the apartment had a foul odor emanating into the rest of the building; that the toilet was frequently filled with feces and urine; and that garbage, rotting food, and dirty laundry were strewn about. An exhibit to the tenant’s earlier, unsuccessful motion for summary judgment confirmed that as a result of this situation the landlord’s representative, Ms. Deborah Reid, had referred the tenant to St. Elizabeths Hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.
The tenant neither cleaned up nor vacated the premises, and the landlord accordingly filed an action for possession on November 30, 2001. Through counsel, the tenant filed a timely answer and asked for a jury trial. Her answer included a general denial, a challenge to the validity of the notice to cure or quit, a defense of discrimination under “the federal Fair Housing Act and local fair housing laws,” and a counterclaim of discrimination under “the Fair Housing Act and D.C. Human Rights Act.”1
Soon thereafter, on February 5, 2002, counsel for the tenant sent a letter to the Director of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA) “requesting a reasonable accommodation under the Federal Fair Housing Act” for a “disability (mental),” namely a “mood disorder,” that affected the tenant’s ability to keep the apartment “safe and sanitary.” Counsel added: The “District of Columbia Government is prepared to assist her with cleaning the apartment.” DCRA never took action.2
[1116]*1116On February 20, 2002, two weeks after his letter to DCRA, counsel for the tenant wrote counsel for the landlord “requesting a reasonable accommodation in complying with provisions of [the tenant’s] lease.” In this letter — filed with the trial court as Exhibit 2 to the tenant’s motion for summary judgment and discussed in counsel’s supporting memorandum — counsel explained the basis for an accommodation as follows:
Ms. Douglas suffers from a mood disorder (mental illness). She is on SSI disability. She has been assigned a case worker with the District of Columbia government and she is an outpatient at a city operated mental health/substance abuse clinic.
... The District of Columbia government has advised me that they are prepared to assist her with her problems because it is their opinion as well that Ms. Douglas would benefit from intervention and a reasonable accommodation.
Counsel, however, did not describe the type of accommodation sought or the assistance that the District of Columbia government would offer. According to counsel for the tenant’s uncontradicted assertion in the trial court, landlord’s counsel — -who has acknowledged receipt — never responded to this letter.
Later, at a pretrial conference, the court asked for briefs on the question whether the tenant should be permitted to present her discrimination defense based on the landlord’s failure to make a “reasonable accommodation” of her alleged mental disability.3 Thereafter, the trial court denied the tenant’s motion for summary judgment, and on the day set for trial, June 17, 2002, the court heard testimony and argument on the reasonable accommodation issue prior to selection of the jury. The trial court conducted this hearing primarily to find out whether the tenant’s proffered “mental health experts” — D.C. government employees James Sutton of the Department of Mental Health and Damon Byrd of Adult Protective Services — were qualified to testify, and whether their testimony would support a finding that the tenant’s mental illness caused her to leave the apartment in an unclean, unsanitary condition, a finding the court believed was required to support a “reasonable accommodation” defense.
After the tenant’s proffered experts had testified, but before the trial court ruled, the landlord’s counsel acknowledged to the [1117]*1117court that counsel for the tenant (presumably sometime after his letter of February 20) had requested, as an accommodation, a stay of the eviction proceeding — ie., a stay of the action for possession — that would permit an agency of the D.C. government to “clean up” the apartment, which the “government had promised” to do. The landlord’s counsel further acknowledged: “I did not specifically talk to [tenant’s counsel] about that until a couple of weeks ago,” around the first of June 2002, “when I told him that his proposal simply lacked any specifics for us to really make an evaluation on.” Landlord’s counsel added his opinion that tenant’s counsel “had no authority to speak for the D.C. government,” and thus could not assure that the apartment would be cleaned or, if so, how long it would stay that way. Landlord’s counsel eventually communicated his position to tenant’s counsel on June 14, three days before trial: “We are willing to allow Ms. Douglas to stay in the unit through the end of August, the beginning of September, but the landlord would definitely request possession of the unit after a period of time” — whether the apartment was clean or not. Counsel then stressed: “They [ie., the landlord] don’t see there’s any way to get around or to accommodate Ms. Douglas in this matter to allow her to stay.” 4
The court was troubled that no one at the hearing had asked the tenant’s experts, who were in a position to know, exactly “what the possibilities [were] for Adult Protective Services to do cleaning of this apartment.” Whereupon counsel for the tenant represented to the court that the D.C. government had a fund for paying contractors to clean apartments of needy persons (most typically the elderly, including those suffering from Alzheimer’s disease) on an “ongoing” basis; that his witnesses, Sutton and Byrd, could “satisfy” the landlord that the D.C. government would “get the place cleaned up” in this case; and that if, because of the tenant’s mental condition, communication with her became too difficult, he was in a position, with the help of Sutton and Byrd, to pursue a conservatorship that would be able to “take action” on her behalf with respect to the apartment.
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FERREN, Senior Judge:
This case presents the question under the federal Fair Housing Act whether the trial court erred in denying a tenant the opportunity to defend her landlord’s action for possession by claiming discrimination — namely, the landlord’s failure to provide a “reasonable accommodation”— based on her alleged “handicap” (mental impairment). We disagree with several of the trial court’s rulings and thus reverse and remand the case to the trial court for further consideration of the tenant’s request for accommodation.
[1115]*1115It is important to note, before proceeding, that although four colleagues have either written or joined in dissenting opinions, all of them except for Judge Schwelb subscribe fundamentally to virtually all the legal principles elaborated in this opinion for the court. The difference between the majority and three of our colleagues, as expressed in Judge Glickman’s dissenting opinion, lies in applying those principles to the facts.
I.
Evelyn Douglas (tenant) receives federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits and is eligible for federally subsidized “Section 8” housing. On August 23, 2001, Kriegsfeld Corporation (landlord) served her with a thirty-day notice to “cure or quit” for violation of her lease covenant to “maintain the apartment in clean and sanitary condition.” Later, at trial, the landlord presented evidence that the apartment had a foul odor emanating into the rest of the building; that the toilet was frequently filled with feces and urine; and that garbage, rotting food, and dirty laundry were strewn about. An exhibit to the tenant’s earlier, unsuccessful motion for summary judgment confirmed that as a result of this situation the landlord’s representative, Ms. Deborah Reid, had referred the tenant to St. Elizabeths Hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.
The tenant neither cleaned up nor vacated the premises, and the landlord accordingly filed an action for possession on November 30, 2001. Through counsel, the tenant filed a timely answer and asked for a jury trial. Her answer included a general denial, a challenge to the validity of the notice to cure or quit, a defense of discrimination under “the federal Fair Housing Act and local fair housing laws,” and a counterclaim of discrimination under “the Fair Housing Act and D.C. Human Rights Act.”1
Soon thereafter, on February 5, 2002, counsel for the tenant sent a letter to the Director of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA) “requesting a reasonable accommodation under the Federal Fair Housing Act” for a “disability (mental),” namely a “mood disorder,” that affected the tenant’s ability to keep the apartment “safe and sanitary.” Counsel added: The “District of Columbia Government is prepared to assist her with cleaning the apartment.” DCRA never took action.2
[1116]*1116On February 20, 2002, two weeks after his letter to DCRA, counsel for the tenant wrote counsel for the landlord “requesting a reasonable accommodation in complying with provisions of [the tenant’s] lease.” In this letter — filed with the trial court as Exhibit 2 to the tenant’s motion for summary judgment and discussed in counsel’s supporting memorandum — counsel explained the basis for an accommodation as follows:
Ms. Douglas suffers from a mood disorder (mental illness). She is on SSI disability. She has been assigned a case worker with the District of Columbia government and she is an outpatient at a city operated mental health/substance abuse clinic.
... The District of Columbia government has advised me that they are prepared to assist her with her problems because it is their opinion as well that Ms. Douglas would benefit from intervention and a reasonable accommodation.
Counsel, however, did not describe the type of accommodation sought or the assistance that the District of Columbia government would offer. According to counsel for the tenant’s uncontradicted assertion in the trial court, landlord’s counsel — -who has acknowledged receipt — never responded to this letter.
Later, at a pretrial conference, the court asked for briefs on the question whether the tenant should be permitted to present her discrimination defense based on the landlord’s failure to make a “reasonable accommodation” of her alleged mental disability.3 Thereafter, the trial court denied the tenant’s motion for summary judgment, and on the day set for trial, June 17, 2002, the court heard testimony and argument on the reasonable accommodation issue prior to selection of the jury. The trial court conducted this hearing primarily to find out whether the tenant’s proffered “mental health experts” — D.C. government employees James Sutton of the Department of Mental Health and Damon Byrd of Adult Protective Services — were qualified to testify, and whether their testimony would support a finding that the tenant’s mental illness caused her to leave the apartment in an unclean, unsanitary condition, a finding the court believed was required to support a “reasonable accommodation” defense.
After the tenant’s proffered experts had testified, but before the trial court ruled, the landlord’s counsel acknowledged to the [1117]*1117court that counsel for the tenant (presumably sometime after his letter of February 20) had requested, as an accommodation, a stay of the eviction proceeding — ie., a stay of the action for possession — that would permit an agency of the D.C. government to “clean up” the apartment, which the “government had promised” to do. The landlord’s counsel further acknowledged: “I did not specifically talk to [tenant’s counsel] about that until a couple of weeks ago,” around the first of June 2002, “when I told him that his proposal simply lacked any specifics for us to really make an evaluation on.” Landlord’s counsel added his opinion that tenant’s counsel “had no authority to speak for the D.C. government,” and thus could not assure that the apartment would be cleaned or, if so, how long it would stay that way. Landlord’s counsel eventually communicated his position to tenant’s counsel on June 14, three days before trial: “We are willing to allow Ms. Douglas to stay in the unit through the end of August, the beginning of September, but the landlord would definitely request possession of the unit after a period of time” — whether the apartment was clean or not. Counsel then stressed: “They [ie., the landlord] don’t see there’s any way to get around or to accommodate Ms. Douglas in this matter to allow her to stay.” 4
The court was troubled that no one at the hearing had asked the tenant’s experts, who were in a position to know, exactly “what the possibilities [were] for Adult Protective Services to do cleaning of this apartment.” Whereupon counsel for the tenant represented to the court that the D.C. government had a fund for paying contractors to clean apartments of needy persons (most typically the elderly, including those suffering from Alzheimer’s disease) on an “ongoing” basis; that his witnesses, Sutton and Byrd, could “satisfy” the landlord that the D.C. government would “get the place cleaned up” in this case; and that if, because of the tenant’s mental condition, communication with her became too difficult, he was in a position, with the help of Sutton and Byrd, to pursue a conservatorship that would be able to “take action” on her behalf with respect to the apartment. Counsel stressed, however, that the District government would not incur the cleaning expense without assurance that the tenant could remain in her apartment; the District would not restore the apartment merely for the landlord’s benefit.
Accordingly, it was clear to everyone that the tenant was seeking, as a “reasonable accommodation,” a stay of the eviction proceeding for a period long enough for the District government to clean the premises and thus cure the tenant’s breach of the lease. Counsel also proffered both the resources and the willingness of a D.C. government agency, Adult Protective Services, to keep the premises clean. Signifi[1118]*1118cantly, moreover, counsel for the tenant was unequivocal in conceding that if the requested delay, coupled with government intervention, “didn’t work out” — meaning that if the apartment became filthy again (presumably because the government failed to continue its cleaning services on the tenant’s behalf), the landlord would have an acknowledged remedy, eviction. According to counsel, a reasonable accommodation, once given, need not be repeated if the tenant or her government protector failed to comply with its terms.
In sum, the tenant was asking initially for a brief stay of the eviction proceeding based on (1) a proffered mental illness that allegedly had caused her to foul the premises unremittingly, (2) a proffer that the D.C. government would clean the premises and keep it clean, and (8) a concession that eviction would be warranted if the premises did not remain clean. Inherent in this request was the idea that counsel would move for an extension of the stay, and eventual dismissal of the eviction proceeding, if the apartment continued to be maintained in “clean and sanitary condition,” as the lease required.
The trial court, after hearing evidence and argument, understood the tenant’s request clearly, accepted that the D.C. government would not want to clean the apartment without assurance that the tenant could stay there after the cleaning, and appeared to agree that if the apartment were to remain clean, the landlord’s concern about the health and safety of the other tenants would be resolved — ie., the lease violation would be cured:
[T]his case almost sounds to me like it’s resolvable if the government could make assurances that would satisfy the plaintiff. I mean, I don’t want to put the plaintiffs in an awkward position.... [T]hey have their right to a trial and they have waited now for several months until today’s trial date as well. And I don’t want to speak for them; but it sounds like they feel sorry for the defendant, too, and if they could just — if they could he assured that this place was going to be clean and not posing a danger to other tenants that they might be willing to let this go, or at least to see what happens.... (Emphasis added.)
[.I]f iAe place really got cleaned up, and there was some assurance — some reasonable assurance that it was going to be maintained — these people [ie., the landlord’s representatives] don’t have any — they’re not out for blood. I mean, I don’t think — I don’t know, the client [representative of the landlord] is nodding with me as if she agrees. (Emphasis added.)
I don’t have the sense that [the representative of the landlord is] anxious to see this poor woman out on the street homeless. Everybody knows that if she gets evicted in this case, it’s not going to be very easy for her to get another apartment through the Section 8 Program or otherwise.
... I’m just trying to figure out whether there is a way to resolve this case without the need to — without the need to move someone who might not have to be moved in order to satisfy both parties. And there have been these statements made that the Adult Protective Services can provide the services that the landlord presumably would think were necessary, but won’t, because the case is pending. But I mean, if that’s the only impediment to Adult Protective Services going in there and doing the cleaning, both initially and on an ongoing basis, presumably [Adult Protective Services] could [be] disabused of the erroneous view that they shouldn’t act while the case is pending. I mean, why not? (Emphasis added.)
[1119]*1119[I ]f counsel for the landlord said, look, yes, the case would still be pending, we would agree to such stay for some period of time just to see how things go, but I want to tell you if the place is brought up to an acceptable condition and if you keep it there, you know, we’re okay with that, why would [the District government] have a problem with that? (Emphasis added.)
... I can understand why, hypothetically, [District government representatives] don’t want to send three people in there for two days and clean it up and then have the defendant evicted the next week. But if they have every reason to believe that their work would not be for naught, I would hope that they’re not so tied up in bureaucratic concerns that would make it impossible.
... I guess in some respects we would have to speculate as to whether [the tenant] would allow these folks in to clean her apartment.
To the court’s final observation the tenant’s counsel replied: “[I]t might take a little bit of effort, it might not take one day, it might take a whole week or two weeks or something like that.”
The trial court adjourned the hearing after announcing that it would rule the next morning on the tenant’s proffered defense “if we are going to trial.” There was no settlement, however. The following day, the court ruled by oral opinion that the tenant could not present a “reasonable accommodation” defense. The jury then heard an essentially defenseless case and found for the landlord (the tenant subsequently was evicted). The tenant appeals from the trial court’s ruling that barred her discrimination defense and from the court’s order upon the jury verdict that resulted in her eviction.5
II.
The trial court rejected the tenant’s disability discrimination defense “for several reasons,” each of which the court found “independently sufficient” for its ruling. First, said the court, the tenant’s “request for an accommodation” — which was “extremely vague” — came too late, several months after the landlord had served the thirty-day notice to cure or quit and filed the lawsuit. The court acknowledged that it had “equitable authority” to grant relief to the tenant when a lease violation had not been eliminated during the thirty-day “cure period.” But it would not exercise that authority here because of the tenant’s “apparent refusal to allow people to come into the apartment to do any cleaning” and her resulting failure to cure the lease violation even before trial.
Second, the court opined, the premises were “a direct threat for the health and safety of others who live in the building.” Thus, “almost” as a matter of law under the Fair Housing Act “no accommodation would be reasonable.”
Third, for lack of qualified “expert testimony,” the court found the tenant’s evidence insufficient to demonstrate that she “had a mental disability,” and that this disability “caused her not to maintain her apartment in a clean and sanitary condition.” The trial court conceded that testimony from “a psychiatrist or a clinical psychologist” was not necessary; a qualified “social worker or mental health specialist” could suffice. But in the court’s [1120]*1120judgment, although each of the tenant’s two witnesses was a mental health professional with the D.C. government, neither was qualified by “education or experience” to “render an opinion” on either the disability or the causation issue.
III.
A.
Before addressing the trial court’s analysis, we believe it will be useful to outline the regulatory scheme that governs this case. First, the Federal Housing Act, as amended in 1988, prohibits a landlord from discriminating (among others) against a tenant in the “rental” or “terms, conditions, or privileges ... or in the provision of services or facilities” of a dwelling because of the tenant’s “handicap.”6 A “handicap” is defined to include a “mental impairment” and even applies to someone who is merely “regarded as having such an impairment,” whether impaired or not.7 “Discrimination” includes not only specified acts by a landlord that overtly deny equal treatment, but also a landlord’s “refusal to make reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, or services, when such accommodations may be necessary to afford [a handicapped] person equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling.” 8 In sum, actions based on a landlord’s perception of mental impairment, not only on the reality of it, can give rise to actionable discrimination; and discrimination can be found even in a landlord’s failure to offer a tenant assistance, not merely in affirmative acts of rejection.
The federal Fair Housing Act, however, also contains an important limitation. It does not “require[] that a dwelling be made available to an individual whose tenancy would constitute a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals or whose tenancy would result in substantial physical damage to the property of others.” 9 The Act’s administrators, as well as the courts, have also ruled that an accommodation will not be reasonable, and thus will not be required, if it “would impose an undue financial and administrative burden” on the landlord or “would fundamentally alter the nature” of the landlord’s operation.10 (These administrative limitations are not at issue in this case.)
B.
We turn, then, to the trial court’s first ruling: that the discrimination defense is barred because (a) the tenant’s request for a reasonable accommodation was “extremely vague,” and (b) it came too late, presented months after the landlord had [1121]*1121served the notice to cure or quit and filed suit. We respectfully disagree.
In the first place, the tenant’s requested accommodation was a brief stay of the eviction proceeding to permit the District government to clean the apartment, as it had reportedly agreed to do, followed by extension of the stay and eventual dismissal of the action if the apartment remained clean. That request was not “extremely vague.” The landlord’s representative testified that he understood what was wanted, and the trial court’s comments at the end of the hearing before trial revealed that the court was clear about this as well. Therefore, unless there was untoward delay in making clear what accommodation the tenant was seeking, there was no disqualifying vagueness here.
We turn, then, to timing. Under the Pair Housing Act, unlawful discrimination occurs whenever “a dwelling is ‘denied’ to a renter because of that renter’s handicap.”11 Under federal case law interpreting that provision, a discriminatory denial can occur at any time during the entire period before a tenant is “actually evicted”;12 actionable discrimination is not limited to the shorter cure period specified in a notice to cure or quit, or to any other period short of the eviction order itself.13 As a general rule, therefore, a “reasonable accommodation” defense is available at any time before a judgment of possession has been entered, if the other requirements of the defense are met.14
The trial court did not apply this general rule under the Fair Housing Act that a reasonable accommodation defense will be timely until the proverbial last minute. Rather the court faulted the tenant for failure to make clear what accommodation she was seeking until shortly before trial and, further, for her failure to cure her violation by cleaning the apartment during the seven months after the cure period had expired. In this way the trial court merged its vagueness ruling into the timeliness analysis; the tenant’s failure to detail the desired accommodation until months had passed after she first asked for “a reasonable accommodation” resulted in default — the loss of a discrimination defense.
We recognize that cases involving requests for “reasonable accommodation” are “highly fact-specific, requiring case-by-case determination,”15 and that circumstances occurring between the request for accommodation and the eventual trial can [1122]*1122affect the result.16 Thus, we must examine the facts in some detail. In doing so, we conclude — as elaborated below — that there was evidence sufficient for- a jury to find that principal responsibility for any delay in pinning down the details of the tenant’s request, and in working out plans for cleaning the apartment, lay with the landlord. We do not agree with the trial court’s ruling that as a matter of law the tenant’s request for accommodation was vague and untimely.
The tenant was under lease without incident for six months (January-July 2001). Then in July the landlord, upon observing filthy, unsanitary conditions in the tenant’s apartment, gave her a notice to cure or quit (August-October 2001). After she defaulted, the landlord filed suit for possession, and the tenant — for the first time represented by counsel — filed her answer and counterclaim requesting a “reasonable accommodation” under the Pair Housing Act (November 2001-January 2002). At this point, all the elapsed time was attributable to the normal requirements of judicial process that landlords risk having to accept from the business they have chosen to pursue. Within a month, in February 2002, tenant’s counsel wrote the landlord’s counsel that accommodation was required, in particular, for “mental illness” — a condition that the landlord’s agent, Ms. Reid, had perceived at least two months earlier in December 2001, when she successfully referred the tenant to St. Elizabeths Hospital.
Under the Pair Housing Act, a landlord “is only obligated to provide a reasonable accommodation” to a tenant “if a request for the accommodation has been made.”17 A tenant who requests a “reasonable accommodation,” moreover, should “make clear[ ]” to the landlord that “she is requesting an exception, change, or adjustment to a rule, policy, practice, or service because of her disability.”18 And “she should explain what type of accommodation she is requesting.”19 On the other hand, the Fair Housing Act “does not require that a request be made in a particular manner.”20 Even more importantly, the tenant’s failure to make clear in her initial request “what type of accommodation she is requesting” is not fatal. According to applicable case law, including an administrative adjudication by HUD itself, once the tenant requests a “reasonable accommodation” (or, without using those exact words, requests an accommodation for a disability) the landlord is obliged under the Fair Housing Act to respond promptly.21 If the request is not sufficiently detailed to reveal the nature of that request, the Act — as properly interpreted — requires the landlord to “open a dialogue” with the tenant, eliciting more information as needed, to determine what specifics the tenant has in mind and whether such accommodation would, in fact, be reasonable under the circumstances.22 Any delay from the landlord’s [1123]*1123failure to respond promptly to the tenant’s request may become the landlord’s responsibility.23
[1124]*1124The threshold question, then, is whether the letter of February 20, 2002 from tenant’s counsel to landlord’s counsel was specific enough to be a “request” that imposed a duty on the landlord to respond. We believe it was. In the interest of expediting the matter, counsel for the tenant should have stated the request for accommodation with greater specificity in his letter of February 20, which did not expressly mention a stay of the proceedings or spell out a plan for cleaning the apartment. That letter, however, did not lack detail. The landlord was informed that the tenant suffered from a “mood disorder,” was “on SSI disability,” had a D.C. government “case worker,” and was an “outpatient at a city-operated mental health/substance abuse clinic.” Of particular significance, counsel also told the landlord that the D.C. government was “prepared to assist” in achieving a “reasonable accommodation.” Counsel’s letter did not make clear exactly what kind of accommodation the tenant was seeking or precisely how the D.C. government would help in making the accommodation reasonable. But in the context of this pending action for possession, a jury reasonably could find from the evidence of record that, as early as February 20, 2002, a request for a stay was implicit; and in the circumstances of a filthy apartment, a jury reasonably could find that, as of that same February date, the reference to the D.C. government suggested that the government would help with the cleaning.
Accordingly, we cannot say that the February 20 letter failed as a matter of law to be a “request” for a “reasonable accommodation.” It supplied enough indi-cia of a plan to cure the lease violation, with intervention by the government and accommodation by the landlord, for a reasonable jury to find that the landlord had been obliged under the Fair Housing Act to respond promptly by “opening] a dialogue” with the tenant to determine whether an accommodation was feasible and would offer a reasonable possibility of curing the lease violation. From the evidence addressed at the pretrial hearing, a jury could also find that counsel for the landlord failed to engage in discussion with the tenant’s counsel until approximately two weeks before trial. Such a finding would eliminate any basis for concluding as a matter of law that the tenant’s request for a reasonable accommodation had been presented too late. Indeed, a jury could reason that if the landlord had promptly responded in February, as the law required, and asked for more detail, the ensuing negotiations between the parties, including the role of the D.C. government, presumably would have revealed whether accommodation was a realistic possibility, and thus might well have resolved the matter — or at least created a record of the parties’ best efforts to do so — before the trial date arrived in June.
To support its ruling that the tenant’s request for accommodation was untimely, the trial court relied on our Grubb decision 24 for equitable authority to deny the tenant relief. Grubb, however, was a local law decision addressing a notice to cure or quit unaffected by a Fair Housing Act defense. It has no application to the timing issue under federal law. Furthermore, Grubb itself noted that a “relevant factor in determining whether forfeiture [of a lease] should be ordered is the presence or absence of ‘fair dealing’ by the landlord."25 (Emphasis added.) It does not appear that the trial court considered this landlord factor when it relied on Grubb to deny [1125]*1125the tenant’s discrimination defense on grounds of timing. More specifically, it does not appear that the trial court considered the possibility, reasonably inferable from the evidence, that between February 20 and early June 2002 — a period longer than three months — the landlord’s counsel refused to respond in any way to tenant’s counsel’s request for a reasonable accommodation. Given the factual record to date and the applicable law, therefore, we cannot say as a matter of law that the tenant’s request was untimely.
Absent a vagueness or a timing issue, therefore, the question remains: was there evidence sufficient for a jury to sustain the tenant’s defense that the landlord did not respond to the tenant’s request for a “reasonable accommodation”?
C.
The court said “no” for a second reason: that this case came within the statutory exception that cancels a landlord’s obligation to offer a reasonable accommodation when the tenancy constitutes “a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals.”26 Contrary to the trial court’s understanding, however, federal courts construing the Fair Housing Act have held — and we agree — that this exception does not come into play until after the trial court has evaluated the landlord’s response to a requested accommodation and has determined, after a factual inquiry, that no reasonable accommodation could ameliorate the situation sufficiently to protect the health, safety, and property of others.27 One federal court has succinctly stated the point this way: “accommodation of an individual’s handicap must be attempted before denial of the benefits of federal legislation.”28 We do not believe that the court intended to suggest that the landlord must actually “attempt,” ie., carry out, a requested accommodation if patently unreasonable. Rather, as stated earlier, the landlord must attempt accommodation at least by opening a dialogue with the tenant on the requested accommodation and thus explore accommodation in good faith before saying “no.” Here, however, a jury reasonably could find that the landlord never made this required effort for accommodation,29 and yet the trial court held that the requested accommodation, even if explored further, could not save the situation for the tenant and others in the building. There may be situations in which no reasonable fact-finder could find that the accommodation requested was reasonable or, in any event, could protect the health, safety, or property of others.30 But this is not necessarily such a case. We believe that in denying the very possibility of an effective accommodation on the facts here, the trial court [1126]*1126ruled prematurely that the “health and safety” exception barred the tenant’s defense.
We would agree that, unless the requested accommodation gave adequate assurance that the apartment would be cleaned up promptly — and offered a reasonable prospect for its staying clean — the health and safety exception would likely justify the tenant’s eviction. In this case, however, the trial court did not give “accommodation” the required consideration. The court’s emphasis on the health and safety exception, rather than on the tenant’s request for accommodation, was influenced by its perception of the tenant’s “apparent” refusal to allow others to help with the cleaning — a perception enhanced, perhaps, by the fact that the tenant had been eluding counsel and had not shown up for trial.31 As a result of this perception of an uncooperative tenant, the court concluded “almost” as a matter of law that accommodation would not work and thus that the “health and safety” exception precluded a reasonable accommodation defense. This hedging language of the court (“apparent,” “almost”) was not raised to the level of a concrete finding of fact and thus left room for further inquiry into the potential for accommodation. This is especially true because (as we shall see below) the tenant was a subject of ongoing intervention by the D.C. government’s Adult Protective Services (APS), in addition to the services of an attentive lawyer. Furthermore, the court itself acknowledged that “we would have to speculate as to whether [the tenant] would allow these folks in to clean her apartment” (emphasis added) — hardly a finding that she would not do so. Finally, at the pretrial hearing, the court did not question counsel’s proffer that the District government, through APS, would be willing to clean the apartment if the landlord agreed to allow the tenant to remain there. And the court heard tenant’s counsel acknowledge that eviction would be warranted if the apartment did not remain clean (through continued government intervention). Implicit in this proffer and concession was the idea that as long as the apartment remained “clean and sanitary,” the tenant would be entitled to extension of the stay and eventual dismissal of the landlord’s action for possession. Nonetheless, in its ruling the court concluded to a virtual certainty that no reasonable accommodation was realistically available. In doing so, the court did not come to grips with how thoroughly a tenant’s request for accommodation must be explored — first by the landlord, then by the court — before a forfeiture order is lawful.
After failing for more than three months to respond to the tenant’s request for a “reasonable accommodation,” the landlord learned at least two weeks before the scheduled trial that the tenant was seeking a brief stay of the eviction proceeding to allow an agency of the D.C. government, APS, to clean the premises. And the landlord learned at the pretrial hearing, if not earlier, that the tenant would not contest eviction if the apartment, once clean, became filthy again. A reasonable jury could find that, given this knowledge, the landlord, nonetheless, did not respond. Here, then, is the point: until a landlord makes a good faith, reasonable effort at accommodation, upon request, after learning of a tenant’s mental impairment, the landlord’s continued pursuit of a pending action for possession is a discriminatory act under the Fair Housing Act.32 In this case, however, despite the trial court’s initial common-sense observa[1127]*1127tion that the landlord would be completely-protected if it agreed to a brief stay of the eviction proceeding while the District government cleaned the premises, the court did not connect that observation with its analysis of the “reasonable accommodation” requirement of the Fair Housing Act. More specifically, it did not recognize that before the “health and safety” exception could be invoked, the landlord had a legal duty — upon request — to “open a dialogue” with counsel for a mentally impaired tenant, not merely a practical responsibility to pursue a settlement for the parties’ mutual benefit. Accordingly, as a consequence of its belief that the “health and safety” exception could be invoked without concrete findings on the “dialogue” issue, or even on the “tenant cooperation” issue, the court’s reliance on that exception to justify the eviction was, in our view, premature and thus an error of law.
The landlord argues nonetheless that the “reasonable accommodation” defense, as formulated by the tenant, is unavailable as a matter of law for another reason, unrelated to the facts. The tenant’s request, says the landlord, does not fit the traditional, legal understanding of “accommodation.” Several federal courts, we are told, have said that “reasonable accommodation” means changing some rule that is generally applicable to everyone so as to make its burden less onerous on the handicapped individual.33 The Fair Housing Act itself, however, defines discrimination more broadly as “a refusal to make reasonable accommodations” not only in “rules” but also in “policies, practices, or services,”34 language broad enough to embrace modification of a wide variety of landlord actions that surely would include a brief continuance of the eviction proceeding to solve a concrete problem — as the case law makes clear.35 Such a continuance after a tenant violates a lease covenant may not be the kind of accommodation requested — and required — for most handicaps. But the Fair Housing Act requires reasonable accommodation of a “mental impairment,” which, unlike many handicaps, inherently reflects varied, unusual behaviors that will require unique responses — limited, of course, to reasonable ones — if the statutory purpose of “accommodation” is to be effectuated. Here, in any event, the tenant asks for waiver of a “generally applicable” rule/policy/practice, namely “relaxation or bending” of the rigid eviction timetable in a standard apartment lease, in order to make the cure period less onerous for the person claiming to be handicapped. In our view, the tenant’s request for a brief stay of the eviction proceeding with related follow-up meets the statutory test for “reasonable accommodation” because it imposes no “fundamental alteration” in the nature of the landlord’s practice or “undue financial or administrative burdens.”36
It is interesting to note, moreover, that the tenant’s requested accommodation would be considerably less burdensome on the landlord and the other tenants than the typical accommodation recognized in the case law — for example, allowance of [1128]*1128pets and priority parking, contrary to the landlord’s standard lease/rule/policy. Here, the tenant seeks only a carefully monitored stay of the eviction proceeding, not the typically requested “relaxation or bending” of a rule for the entire term of the tenant’s lease. The tenant seeks only time to clean the apartment and show that she can keep it clean with government help — and thus to show that she can protect, no longer threaten, the “health” and “safety” of others.
D.
We turn, finally to the merits of the tenant’s discrimination defense, including the trial court’s findings that the tenant had not proffered enough evidence to show that she had a “mental disability” that “caused” her failure to maintain a clean and sanitary apartment. But first some background on the manner of proof.
Three theories are available to establish discrimination under the Fair Housing Act: “disparate treatment” (when an action is facially discriminatory), “disparate impact” (when an action is neutral on its face but has a discriminatory effect), and failure to make a “reasonable accommodation.” 37 Under the first two theories, a tenant must prove that she is disadvantaged in relation to others “because of’ her handicap.38 In disparate treatment cases, the landlord allegedly is motivated by a discriminatory purpose39 and courts commonly evaluate the parties’ respective positions by employing the familiar three-stage burden-shifting approach outlined in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973) (interpreting Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964).40 In disparate impact cases, however, where the landlord is held accountable for the differential effect of its actions on the tenant without regard to motive,41 the courts resolve the dispute in fewer steps by weighing the tenant’s showing of discriminatory impact against the landlord’s justification for its conduct.42
Reasonable accommodation cases are different. A tenant who seeks reasonable accommodation of a disability after receiving a notice to cure or quit, for example, is concerned not about adverse [1129]*1129treatment in relation to other tenants but about the failure to receive treatment that reasonably recognizes her disability.43 The causation the tenant must show in this analysis, therefore, is limited to demonstrating that the requested accommodation “may be necessary” to assure “equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling.”44 Or, as the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the Sixth and Ninth Circuits have put it, tenants “must show that, but for the accommodation, they likely will be denied an equal opportunity to enjoy the housing of their choice.”45 As to manner of proof, the tenant initially must produce evidence sufficient for findings that the requested accommodation is reasonable and may be necessary for enjoyment of the premises equal to that experienced by tenants who are not disabled. Once the tenant produces such evidence, the burden of production shifts to the landlord to introduce evidence in rebuttal, leaving the ultimate burden of persuasion, of course, on the tenant who seeks accommodation.46
We turn, then, to the merits. To establish a reasonable accommodation defense under the Fair Housing Act, the tenant must demonstrate that (1) she suffered from a “handicap” (or “disability”), (2) the landlord knew or should have known of the disability, (3) an accommodation of the disability may be necessary to afford the tenant an equal opportunity to use and enjoy her apartment, (4) the tenant requested a reasonable accommodation, and (5) the landlord refused to grant a reasonable accommodation.47
As to the first required showing (suffering from disability), the federal government has stressed that persons, such as the tenant here, who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits “in most cases meet the definition of disability under the Fair Housing Act.”48 Counsel, however, did not attempt to demonstrate the tenant’s disability on that basis, and thus the trial court did not consider it. Rather, the court evaluated the testimony of expert witnesses called by the tenant’s counsel and accordingly premised the “disability” issue on the need for proof by experts. After the hearing, the court concluded that the quality of the testimony establishing the tenant’s mental impairment and its effect on the maintenance of her apartment was deficient, because the witnesses were not sufficiently expert to opine on the subject. Eschewing the need for a psychiatrist or psychologist, the trial court observed that a “social worker or mental health specialist” could supply the requisite expert testimony. In acknowledging that possibility, moreover, the court was aware that the tenant’s witnesses, James Sutton and Damon Byrd, were employed full time as mental health profes[1130]*1130sionals by the District of Columbia government. Sutton, who had a masters degree in “mental health,” had been a supervisor with the District’s Emergency Psychiatric Response Division for sixteen years, with personal experience making psychiatric assessments and ordering involuntary civil commitments. Byrd had been a social worker with the District’s Adult Protective Services Unit for three years, with experience investigating abused, neglected, self-neglected, and disabled adults. Both had daily, on-the-job experience with diagnosing persons as mentally ill, and each had multiple encounters with the tenant, whom Byrd had visited sixteen times. In court, Sutton and Byrd each testified that, in his opinion, the tenant was mentally ill, and that this illness, exacerbated by heavy dependence on alcohol, substantially limited her ability to care for her apartment.49 The trial court, however, declined to grant credence to these appraisals.
It is not entirely clear whether the court was saying that individuals with Sutton’s and Byrd’s training and experience were not qualified to opine on “mental impairment” under the Fair Housing Act, or was saying merely that the two witnesses, while perhaps generally qualified for this purpose, did not impress the court enough to justify crediting their testimony in this particular case. A careful reading of the trial court opinion, however, conveys the strong impression that the court was saying the former, because it stressed that these witnesses were unqualified to offer opinions as to the tenant’s particular “diagnosis,” including analysis of specific symptoms of the “mood disorder” ascribed to the tenant in the report of a St. Elizabeth’s Hospital psychiatrist who had assessed her.
In particular, the trial court rejected Sutton as an expert witness, despite his training and experience, because of the court’s perception that Sutton had relied “heavily” on the psychiatrist’s diagnosis of the tenant’s “mood disorder, NOS” without an accompanying opinion by that psychiatrist on “any connection” between that particular disorder and “the condition of her apartment.” The court was especially influenced by Sutton’s inability to explain the “NOS” part of the “mood disorder” diagnosis. As to Byrd, the court observed;
Mr. Byrd was readily convinced, “as I suspect all of us would be, that there was some mental illness that he was dealing with, but he himself testified that he’s not able to render a specific diagnosis, that he’s not qualified to make mental health diagnosis.” (Emphasis added.)
In sum, the court disqualified both Sutton and Byrd as experts because, although they could perceive the tenant’s mental illness in general — as the court itself apparently could, too, from the testimony presented — they could not “render a specific diagnosis” and as a consequence, in the court’s view, could not sufficiently [1131]*1131show the connection between the tenant’s illness and her filthy apartment.50
In our opinion, the court’s requirement of expert testimony to establish the tenant’s “mental impairment” under the Fair Housing Act — and especially the further requirement that experts opine with a “specific diagnosis” — sets the bar too high. “Mental impairment” is a generic term that incorporates multiple diagnoses and, on occasion, is susceptible to identification by lay individuals even less trained and experienced than Sutton and Byrd. Indeed, persuasive case law firmly establishes that lay persons — while not competent to offer specific diagnoses — can render opinions as to a person’s mental condition based on their own personal observations.51 No more than that — no specific diagnosis — is required for a finding of mental impairment under the Fair Housing Act.52
Nor, in this particular case, is much if any expertise required to permit a reasonable jury to find that the tenant’s mental impairment, combined with alcohol abuse, was a contributing cause of the unsanitary condition of her apartment. We agree with the trial court that, in general, “[tjhere are plenty of people who have mental disabilities who can keep their apartments clean,” and that “there are plenty of people who don’t have mental disabilities who don’t keep their apartments clean.” But, on this record, it is not readily apparent what explanation there might be — other than mental illness and [1132]*1132alcohol abuse — for the tenant’s filthy apartment.53
In order to establish the first, “disability” element of a prima facie case of discrimination, counsel for the tenant proffered expert testimony that his client was mentally ill, rather than rely on the landlord’s mere perception of the tenant’s illness {e.g., through Ms. Reid’s referral of the tenant to St. Elizabeths Hospital),54 or on the tenant’s eligibility for federal SSI disability benefits. We thus turn to the evidence.
The tenant’s expert mental health specialist, James Sutton, testified that the Department of Mental Health’s Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency Services (CPES) had wanted to “bring [the tenant] in involuntarily” for civil commitment but did not have sufficient proof “that she was in imminent danger to herself or others.” Sutton noted that the tenant “didn’t see anything wrong” with her apartment, insisted that “she didn’t have a mental health problem,” and “was ■ waiting for money to be coming from the Navy.” In Sutton’s opinion the tenant “was suffering from some paranoia and some delusions.” He added that he had referred her to a CPES psychiatrist, who had reported that she “was alcohol dependent] and that she suffered from mood disorder, NOS.” Sutton described his understanding of a mood disorder but could not explain the term “NOS” (not otherwise specified).55 In light of all the foregoing, Sutton had tried to impress on the tenant the urgency of cleaning her apartment, and had told her that in any event “she would have to appear in court.” To which she had replied: “Jesus is going to take care of it.” Sutton was convinced, accordingly, that there was “a relationship between” the tenant’s “mental illness” and “alcohol” abuse and the “deplorable” state of her apartment.
The tenant’s other expert, Damon Byrd, the social worker with Adult Protective Services, described the tenant’s appearance on one occasion as “halfnaked” and “completely exposed,” with “heavy makeup” that was “caked up and smeared on her face.” Byrd added that the tenant “was in delusional or paranoia behavior” while claiming that “she was in the Navy” and “waiting to receive her money.” He testified that her “insight and judgment” were “poor,” and that “[s]he did not completely understand the hazards of the apartment situation.” In answer to a direct question from the court, Byrd replied, [1133]*1133“Do I think she has a mental illness, yes,” adverting to his observations of her “erratic behaviors on numerous occasions” and a diagnosis of her “mood disorder” by Dr. Henerian of the Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency team. The court then asked Byrd: “Is a failure to maintain an apartment or other living space in a clean and sanitary way ... a typical symptom of mood disorder or is it just an example of a failure or inability to exercise good judgment”? Byrd replied:
Actually, the connection lies pretty much, in my opinion, with the alcohol. Half the time she’s not sober. So if she spends half her time drinking, she’s not able to effectively clean her apartment, notwithstanding the fact that the apartment is rodent and rat infested. That doesn’t help the situation. So I would say, a combination of—I believe that the alcoholism impacts her diagnosis of mood disorder....
We are satisfied that, consistent with the understanding of “mental impairment” under the Fair Housing Act, Messrs. Sutton’s and Byrd’s observations were competent evidence sufficient for a jury to consider the tenant’s alleged disability and its causal relationship to the unhealthy state of her apartment. Given the trial court’s comment that it suspected “all of us” would be “readily convinced” that the tenant had “some mental illness,” it appears the trial court itself would find that the evidence of record was sufficient for a jury to consider the “mental impairment” issue under the Fair Housing Act as we have interpreted it.
We turn to the second requirement of a prima facie case (landlord’s knowledge). The evidence, as we have seen, tended to show that the landlord knew or had reason to know that the tenant suffered from a mental impairment. The letter of February 20, 2002 from tenant’s counsel informed the landlord’s counsel that the tenant “suffered] from a mood disorder (mental illness),” was “on SSI disability,” and was “an outpatient at a city operated mental health/substance abuse clinic.” Earlier, in fact, the landlord’s own agent, Deborah Reid, after inspecting the apartment several times, had urged the tenant to seek help from St. Elizabeths Hospital, whereupon she did so and received the psychiatrist’s diagnosis of “mood disorder, NOS” referred to above. The evidence, therefore, is sufficient for a jury to consider this second requirement.
Implicit in the third requirement (need for accommodation) is a showing that the disability has caused the need for accommodation and that the accommodation requested would eliminate the problem. Here, the evidence tended to show that the tenant’s mental disability was a contributing cause of the filthy apartment, and that some kind of accommodation of that disability would have to be made for her not only to continue her use and enjoyment of the apartment but also to continue her tenancy without threatening the health and safety of others. Counsel for the tenant proffered that if the landlord would stay the eviction proceeding, the D.C. government would clean the apartment, and that unless it remained clean the landlord would be entitled to evict her. As we explain below, this proffered solution would appear to be sufficient to solve the problem, leaving us to inquire whether that solution, as implemented, would be “reasonable.”
The nub of this case is thus the fourth element of a prima facie defense of reasonable accommodation, namely, the reasonableness of the accommodation the tenant proposed. There was no question in the landlord’s—or the court’s—mind that the tenant, in requesting a “reason[1134]*1134able accommodation,” meant a stay of the eviction proceeding for the period reasonably required for the D.C. government to clean up the apartment and for the tenant then to demonstrate, through the continuing help of the D.C. government, that she would keep it clean. Furthermore, no one disputes that a clean apartment would erase the legal justification for the notice to cure or quit and thus would cure — albeit belatedly — the tenant’s default.56 The landlord takes the position, however, that the tenant has not carried out her responsibility to make a precise enough request to allow the trial court — and ultimately a jury — to find that the accommodation she sought was “reasonable” under the Fair Housing Act. We cannot agree.
Not long ago, in Giebeler v. M & B Associates,57 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit considered both the burden of proof and the merits under “reasonable accommodation” analysis applicable to the Fair Housing Act. The panel noted that courts construing that Act have drawn on case law interpreting the same requirement under the federal Rehabilitation Act (RA) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).58 The interpretive formulations under each, while conceivably [1135]*1135differing in a way that could be outcome-determinative in some instances, are not significantly different from one another.59 Under RA case law as interpreted by the Ninth Circuit, the party requesting accommodation “bears the initial burden of producing evidence that a reasonable accommodation was possible,” whereupon “the burden shifts to the other party to produce rebuttal evidence that the requested accommodation is not reasonable.”60 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has expressed the RA test differently, stating that the proponent “need only show he seeks a ‘method of accommodation that is reasonable in the run of cases’ (emphasis in original).”61 Under the ADA, the Supreme Court has adopted a formulation akin to that of the D.C. Circuit in the RA case: the requesting party “need only show that an accommodation ‘seems reasonable on its face, ie., ordinarily or in the run of cases,’ ”62 after which the burden shifts to the other party “to demonstrate that the accommodation would cause undue hardship in the particular circumstances.”63 Alternatively, if the requesting party cannot show that the proposed accommodation would be reasonable in the ordinary run of cases, she “nonetheless remains free to show that special circumstances warrant a finding that ... the requested ‘accommodation is reasonable’ on the particular facts.”64 It is important to note, therefore, that aside from the secondary, alternative formulation focused on “the particular facts” of a requested accommodation, the tenant’s initial burden is to proffer a generalized, categorical accommodation (e.g., “method” of accommodation reasonable “on its face”), which the landlord has the burden of rebutting with specifics that reveal an “undue hardship” on the landlord’s operation.
In applying “reasonable accommodation” under the Fair Housing Act, the Ninth Circuit concluded in Giebeler that the prospective tenant had proffered evidence sufficient to satisfy both the RA and the ADA formulations.65 Accordingly, in reversing the district judge’s finding that the prospective tenant had failed to proffer a reasonable accommodation, the court did not have to choose between the two formulations for Fair Housing Act purposes. In the present case as well, we do not have to select one of these formulations, for we cannot say as a matter of law that the tenant has failed to satisfy any, let alone all, of the tests specified in Giebeler. More specifically, we cannot conclude on [1136]*1136this record that the tenant’s request for a stay, coupled with her proffer that the D.C. government would clean the apartment and keep it clean, was not “possible” or did not state a “method of accommodation that is reasonable in the run of cases” (emphasis omitted). Nor can we conclude that her proffer did not “seem[] reasonable on its face, i e., ordinarily or in the run of cases” (or, even if not facially reasonable, was not “reasonable on the particular facts”).66
It is not clear from Giebeler how much detail a tenant must offer in evidence to meet her initial burden under these respective formulations. The landlord argues that the tenant, while making clear in general what kind of accommodation was requested, never proffered the kinds of details that ordinarily would be required to convince a fact-finder that the tenant’s proposal assuredly was reasonable, that is, likely to keep the apartment clean. For example, tenant’s counsel did not specify the number of days required for the stay, or the basis for assuring tenant cooperation, or the frequency and duration of cleaning by the District government. Indeed, we must add, counsel for the tenant permitted Mr. Sutton and Mr. Byrd to depart the hearing without addressing the particulars of D.C. government cooperation.
If the landlord had met its own responsibilities under the Fair Housing Act, the landlord’s argument might have force, even in light of the generalized initial showing the tenant ordinarily may make under an RA or ADA formulation. But there is evidence from which a reasonable jury could find that the landlord had failed to do so. As we explained earlier, citing an abundance of case law,67 the February 20, 2002 letter from tenant’s counsel requesting a “reasonable accommodation” supplied enough detail to trigger an obligation of the landlord to open a dialogue with the tenant, through counsel, to determine more specifically what was desired. The record also shows that the landlord’s counsel conceded before trial that he had learned, in particular, of the tenant’s desire for a stay, as well as about her counsel’s proffered cleaning of the apartment by the D.C. government and the further proffer that the government would keep the apartment clean — failing which, eviction would be conceded. Finally, there is evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to find that the landlord had chosen to reject the tenant’s proposal out of hand, regardless of any implementing details. In sum, there is evidence sufficient for jury to find that (1) the landlord defaulted on its legal obligation to engage the tenant in a discussion of her request for a reasonable accommodation, and that (2) the land[1137]*1137lord refused to grant the requested accommodation, which the landlord clearly understood and which, if implemented, would have cured the tenant’s default and prevented it from recurring.
Under such circumstances, the landlord’s default and refusal will permit a reasonable accommodation defense to go forward if the tenant’s request — while perhaps lacking details that might be necessary to demonstrate feasibility if the landlord had pressed for particulars — is complete enough for a reasonable jury to find that the elements of the request, if implemented along the lines proposed, would provide an accommodation responsive to the tenant’s handicap that would cure and continue to prevent her default. The landlord, after all, could have questioned feasibility, if indeed there were grounds for doing so, by engaging in the required dialogue. By declining to do so as the law requires, the landlord failed to demonstrate any missing element or other inherent defect in the tenant’s proposal. The landlord thereby kept the level of specificity required to establish prima fa-cie “reasonableness” at the minimum. In a case such as this, for example, the details about tenant cooperation, the strength of the government’s commitment, and the frequency of cleaning would likely be spelled out with some precision when the landlord participates and insists on particulars before deciding whether, from its viewpoint, the accommodation would be reasonable. But when the tenant offers a coherent, ostensibly feasible proposal which the landlord rejects out of hand without discussion in good faith, the landlord has little, if any, standing to complain that the tenant has not been particular enough to proceed with a reasonable accommodation defense before the jury. Here, the tenant has proffered that the D.C. government will clean the apartment and keep it clean. Prima facie that will solve the problem, absent input from the landlord that the proposal will not work, for example, without pinning down a specific, frequent cleaning schedule.
Case law on the landlord’s obligation to open a dialogue with a disabled tenant who requests a “reasonable accommodation” has focused on the landlord’s failure to inquire about the extent of the illness,68 or about the responsiveness of the requested accommodation to that illness.69 The reasoning in such cases, however, supports our conclusion in the case at hand; that when a tenant proposes a coherent, ostensible feasible accommodation responsive to her handicap, the burden shifts to the landlord to ask for whatever additional details it considers necessary to evaluate [1138]*1138that proposal.70 A landlord’s obligation to elicit additional information about a basically understandable accommodation is no different from its obligation to fill out the details about a tenant’s announced illness or elicit her reasons why a requested accommodation will alleviate her handicap.
In addition to the foregoing analysis, it is clear from the record that any more detail proffered by the tenant to the trial court would have been fruitless in any event, for the court ruled against the tenant, as a matter of law, on three alternative — and, in our view, legally erroneous— grounds: that the requested accommodation was vague and untimely, was precluded (ie., made legally irrelevant) by the health and safety exception, and failed of proof from the lack of high quality expert testimony. Each of these threshold rulings would likely have forestalled further inquiry into whether any kind of stay, coupled with a cleaning effort, would have been reasonable.
In sum, a reasonable jury could find that the landlord did not cooperate, as required by law, and thus never entertained tenant’s counsel’s representation — made later in the trial court — that his D.C. government witnesses, Sutton and Byrd, who had a client relationship with the tenant, could “satisfy” the landlord’s need for an apartment cleaned on an “ongoing” basis. Furthermore, the trial court focused primarily on issues at the pretrial hearing that led to erroneous rulings against the tenant on grounds other than the reasonableness of the requested accommodation. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the tenant must be allowed to proffer her reasonable accommodation defense anew for trial court consideration..
In reconsidering the tenant’s proffer, the trial court will have to apply the formulations for “reasonableness” discussed above and may eventually have to determine what formulation should be used for instructing a jury. We have not had to do so here, nor has the issue been briefed to the point that we would feel comfortable in doing so. We are satisfied that the trial court, on remand, will be able to receive whatever assistance is necessary from the parties to resolve this aspect of the case.
Finally, the fifth requirement for a pri-ma facie case (landlord’s refusal to make a reasonable accommodation) easily presents a jury question on this record. Thus far, no one has disputed that the landlord declined to agree to the requested accommodation, even at the beginning of June two weeks before trial, when the landlord’s counsel for the first time undertook to discuss the matter. A jury reasonably could find that in those discussions, landlord’s counsel rejected any stay that might keep the tenant in the apartment after the end of August or early September, even though the landlord had learned at the pretrial hearing, if not earlier, that the tenant would not contest eviction if the apartment, once clean, reverted to an unsanitary condition.
IV. Response to Dissents
A. Judge Schwelb
Judge Schwelb argues that the tenant-whom he characterizes as a “purported [1139]*1139victim” of unlawful discrimination who “wanted nothing at all to do with the case,” and for whom the majority offers not “a single word of criticism” — was not entitled to a reasonable accommodation for a mental disability. He offers essentially four reasons: (1) the landlord had no “obligation to engage in a dialogue” with a tenant who the landlord believed “was not suffering from a relevant ‘handicap’ within the meaning of the Fair Housing Act” and who, in any event — “as a matter of law”— “was not a ‘qualified’ handicapped person”; (2) there was insufficient evidence that if the “ ‘eviction was delayed, [she] could conform [her] conduct to the terms of [her] lease’ (3) the case had gone on too long, to the great discomfort of other tenants; and (4) the tenant’s defense must fail in any event because she was “nowhere to be found.”
As to the first, the dissent premises the reasonableness of the landlord’s belief that the tenant was “not suffering from a relevant ‘handicap’ ” on the trial court’s finding that the tenant “had not been shown to be suffering the kind of mental impairment which would prevent her from maintaining a sanitary apartment.” We have rejected that finding, however, as too narrowly premised on the absence of a “specific diagnosis” of mental illness, rather than on the more general “mental impairment” discernible even by lay persons, such as Ms. Reid, the landlord’s representative who referred the tenant to St. Elizabeth’s hospital.71 The dissent’s other basis for concluding as a matter of law that the tenant was not a “ ‘qualified’ ” handicapped person is the Andover Housing Authority72 case. That decision defined “qualified,” however, by reference not to the nature of the illness but to whether “more than reasonable modifications,” i.e., an “undue burden,” would be imposed on the landlord in accommodating the tenant.73 Plainly, no undue burden on the landlord is called for here; the only accommodation requested is a brief continuance of the eviction proceeding to test whether the tenant can follow through successfully with a government subsidized program to clean the apartment and keep it clean, failing which the tenant concededly would have to leave.
The dissent’s second concern — that the evidence was insufficient to show that the tenant could conform her conduct to the terms of the lease — is, we believe, premature. Like our colleague, we have noted the tenant’s failure to proffer “the kinds of details that ordinarily would be required to convince a fact-finder that the tenant’s proposal assuredly was reasonable.” On the other hand, we believe that enough was proffered — namely, a request for stay of the proceeding for a period long enough for the D.C. government to clean the premises and demonstrate a commitment to keep it clean — that the landlord was required to open a dialogue with the tenant to fill in whatever details it believed were lacking. The evidence is sufficient for a finding that the landlord declined to do so. Accordingly, the tenant’s proffer, without a timely, meaningful response by the landlord, could not simply be rejected out of hand. On remand, given a proper understanding of the law, the trial court will be in a position to determine whether a jury could reasonably find that the tenant’s proffered request for accommodation was clear and coherent enough, in light of [1140]*1140the landlord’s indifference to a dialogue to elicit additional details, that the accommodation should be deemed reasonable. Furthermore, we have noted that a more detailed proffer at the time would have been fruitless in any event because the trial court ruled against the tenant on three alternative, legally erroneous grounds. In sum, the tenant should have an opportunity to complete her proffer before the trial court reaches a conclusive determination as to whether the jury should hear her reasonable accommodation defense.
Third, as to delay, we have stressed that if the landlord had complied with the law by opening a dialogue with the tenant, through counsel, upon receipt of the February 20 letter, the entire matter might have been resolved much earlier than trial, eventually scheduled more than three months later in June. The tenant requested a “reasonable accommodation” for “mental illness” — an accommodation, according to counsel’s letter, that would permit the District government’s “intervention” to “assist her with her problems.” That request was clear enough to impose a legal duty on the landlord to respond promptly. The landlord failed to respond, however, for more than three months and, indeed, was never willing to permit the tenant to remain in her apartment even if the District government were to clean— and maintain — the premises. The trial court itself recognized, moreover, that once the landlord had taken action to evict, the District government had a sound, fiscal reason not to intervene unless the landlord gave assurance that the tenant could remain if the government kept her apartment clean. In sum, because the landlord defaulted on its obligation to open a dialogue with the tenant until two weeks before trial and, even then, indicated that no accommodation would be acceptable, the delay — with all the unfortunate burdens it imposed on other tenants — is primarily assignable to the landlord.
Finally, Judge Schwelb’s complaint that this tenant “wanted nothing at all to do with the case” and was “nowhere to be found” misconceives the record and is unfair to the tenant. In the first place, there is no record basis for finding that the tenant had ever been missing from her apartment until a few weeks before the pretrial conference on April 17, 2002. Significantly, moreover, the record shows that she had returned by June 5, 2002 — twelve days before trial — for a meeting with the District government’s representatives, Messrs. Sutton and Byrd. Furthermore, counsel represented that the tenant had not shown up for trial because she thought that the trial was another trick to commit her (she apparently had survived an actual effort to commit her two weeks earlier). The tenant may have been elusive, but one cannot say as a matter of law that she was “missing — end of case.” The tenant was not well; she had a mental illness that underlay the need for accommodation. In our view, therefore, she cannot be fairly charged under such circumstances with prejudicial indifference or deemed, definitively, a missing person. We cannot say as a matter of law that her lawyer, working with Messrs. Sutton and Byrd, was in no position to find her and convey hopeful news that would bring her to court.
Judge Schwelb relies on two cases that, in our judgment, make clear how the “reasonable accommodation” requirement should be treated and why the result here should be as the en bane majority, not his dissent, analyzes the case. In Andover Housing Authority v. Shkolnik,74 reasonable accommodation was sought for an ill tenant and spouse who made excessive [1141]*1141noise. The housing authority responded immediately to the tenant’s request for accommodation by investigating the feasibility of acoustical carpeting, a sound-absorbing drop ceiling, a room air conditioner so that the windows could remain closed during hot weather, and a stay of the eviction proceeding pending installation of an effective accommodation. The tenants, in the meantime, kept denying the noise and made no effort to engage in the interactive process, unlike the effort initiated by the tenant in this case. After a three-month stay of the eviction proceeding “so the tenants could continue to work with the authority and with their neighbors in order reasonably to accommodate all residents’ needs,”75 the process failed and the court entered judgment of possession for the housing authority. The housing authority thus made the kinds of efforts to accommodate that the law requires — efforts that contrast sharply with the landlord’s failure in this case to join the interactive process required under the Fair Housing Act.
In the other case on which our colleague relies, Arnold, Murray Construction, L.L.C. v. Hicks,76 the Supreme Court of South Dakota sustained a trial court judgment of possession, rejecting a reasonable accommodation defense proffered by a tenant who was accosting others in his building with “emotional outbursts, verbal threats, nude appearance and other offensive conduct.”77 There, the court accepted the line of authority confirming that “Congress intended for landlords to attempt reasonable accommodations, even when the tenant is a direct threat to the health and safety of other tenants, if those accommodations will eliminate or acceptably minimize the risks posed by that tenant.”78 But the court concluded that the accommodations requested by the tenant dealt only with “parking” and “controlled access door issues,” not at all with his threats and other offensive conduct79 — a situation entirely different from the present case, in which the tenant’s proffered accommodation, if successfully implemented, would eliminate the threat to health and safety from an unclean apartment.
With all respect due, therefore, we cannot accept the portrayal of this case, factually and legally, presented in this dissent.
B. Judge Glickman
Judge Glickman’s dissent rests on the proposition that the tenant’s request for accommodation “was simply too vague to rise to the level of a bona fide request for a reasonable accommodation under the Fair Housing Act.” Judge Glickman does not dispute, however, that the tenant requested a stay of the eviction proceeding for the period reasonably required for the D.C. government to clean up the apartment and for the tenant to demonstrate, through the continuing help of the D.C. government, that she would keep it clean — failing which she would not contest eviction. Nor does our colleague dispute that an apartment once cleaned, and kept clean on an ongoing basis, would erase the legal justification for the landlord’s notice to cure or quit, thus cure the tenant’s default, and forestall similar default in the future. Under the circumstances and prevailing case law, that proffer is specific enough. See supra at 1133-88.
[1142]*1142We have explained at length why we cannot conclude that the evidence proffered by the tenant in support of her request was insufficient for a jury to find that the tenant’s proposal was “possible,” or “reasonable on its face” or “in the run of cases,” or even “reasonable on the particular facts,” whichever of these case-law formulations for reasonableness were to be applied. See id. And our inability to rule against the tenant as a matter of law becomes especially clear in light of evidence that the landlord failed in its legal obligation — an obligation that Judge Glickman effectively reads out of the law — to open a dialogue with the tenant to elicit whatever additional specifics the landlord deemed necessary to evaluating the tenant’s proposal. We have also explained, moreover, that a landlord’s failure to engage in the required dialogue relieves a tenant from any need to proffer additional specifics beyond those required for a coherent, ostensibly feasible proposal that would allow a reasonable jury to find that if all its elements were implemented, it would accommodate the tenant’s handicap and cure her default, presently and for the future.
Contrary to our reading of the record, however, Judge Glickman states that “[pjrior to trial, when a productive dialogue was still possible, the landlord’s counsel solicited the ‘details’ of a suitable accommodation from Ms. Douglas’s counsel, and her counsel could not provide them.” In our view, that statement summarizes the situation lopsidedly. On this record, a jury could reasonably find that the landlord’s counsel, rather than soliciting details, essentially stonewalled the tenant’s counsel by waiting over three months to discuss the matter and then by stating, two weeks before trial, “that his proposal simply lacked any specifics for us to really make an evaluation on.” Landlord’s counsel then rejected the proffered D.C. government cleanup on the ground that tenant’s counsel “had no authority to speak for the D.C. government” (even though counsel’s pretrial testimony represented that his government witnesses, Sutton and Byrd, could “satisfy” the landlord in this regard). The landlord’s counsel thereafter declined to discuss the matter further. This pretrial behavior by counsel for the landlord, coupled with counsel’s statements in the trial court, provides the basis for a reasonable jury finding that the landlord did not make a good faith effort to enter the required dialogue with tenant’s counsel as to reasonable accommodation. We are satisfied, therefore, that under these circumstances the trial court would have a basis for sending the tenant’s defense to the jury under the authority of Jankowski Lee & Assocs. (a case Judge Glickman cites) and its progeny.80
Judge Glickman, like Judge Schwelb, stresses the difficulty that the tenant’s counsel had in finding his client during the days immediately before trial — a situation, he says, that meant “a meaningful dialogue of the sort envisioned by the majority ceased to be possible.” He then adds a footnote stating, with apparent reference [1143]*1143to the two weeks in June before trial, that the tenant’s “unavailability for reasonable accommodation discussions ... was determinative of everything, for it made it impossible for her counsel even to propose a reasonable accommodation for the landlord’s consideration.” Those two statements ignore that the landlord’s counsel concededly had refused any dialogue with the tenant’s counsel for a period of months after a request for reasonable accommodation had been made, and they further ignore the landlord’s obligation to commence that dialogue promptly, and certainly enough before a trial to permit a good faith exchange. Although he refers to the tenant’s absence for “several weeks” before the April 17 pretrial conference, Judge Glickman does not claim that the tenant was unavailable during the entire period when the landlord was aware of her request, through counsel, for a stay coupled with a D.C. government cleanup. Significantly, he does not dispute the evidence that the tenant was available for a meeting with D.C. government representatives Sutton and Byrd on June 5, 2002, within days after the landlord first acknowledged the request for reasonable accommodation. She presumably would have been available to her counsel then as well. Furthermore, as noted above, there was evidence from which a reasonable jury could find that the landlord declined in any event to engage in meaningful discussion with the tenant’s counsel toward reasonable accommodation — the kind of lawyer-to-lawyer discussion that did not depend on the tenant’s presence at every session. By focusing primarily on the period immediately before trial, therefore, our colleague overlooks the tenant’s availability from time to time during the much longer period after accommodation had been requested and the landlord had an obligation to respond. Accordingly, by emphasizing that a “meaningful dialogue ceased to be possible,” our colleague in effect is claiming that the landlord won a game of “gotcha”: the tenant’s apparent unavailability from the day after she met with Sutton and Byrd (June 6) to the trial date (Junel7) erased all legal significance from the landlord’s own multi-month unavailability. The law applicable here does not work that way.
Judge Glickman concludes, in any event, that if the tenant had been allowed to put on her discrimination defense it “would have fallen flat on its face, because she had no evidence to present.” To the contrary, as indicated earlier in response to Judge Schwelb, if a trial had begun in which the tenant was allowed to put on her reasonable accommodation defense, one cannot say on this record that she assuredly had no evidence to present. The D.C. government representatives, Sutton and Byrd, were available. The landlord’s representatives also were available. And who is to say that the tenant’s counsel would not have been able to find his client with the good news that her defense would go forward (assuming that her presence was essential to that defense)? The fact that counsel on a number of occasions showed caution in answering questions about how long it would take to locate his mentally ill client should not be held determinative of an inability to find her altogether. And we cannot say that the trial court would not have granted a reasonable continuance for that purpose, upon request, if the court, based on a correct understanding of the law, in contrast with the understanding relied on at trial, ruled that the reasonable accommodation defense could go forward.
It takes two, landlord as well as tenant, to work out a reasonable accommodation. And, as we have explained, the landlord was legally obligated to discuss the matter in response to the tenant’s counsel’s letter of February 20, 2002, and certainly there[1144]*1144after when the tenant expressly requested the stay and proffered a cleanup, and continued cleaning, by the D.C. government. On this record, a reasonable jury could find that the landlord did not meet its obligation to come to the table when the tenant made her request. As a consequence, the tenant was entitled to have the trial court determine whether she had proffered enough detail in her request that a jury could reasonably find that her proposed accommodation was reasonable because it was responsive to her handicap and satisfied applicable case law formulations. Accordingly, the tenant must have a renewed opportunity to proffer her defense to the trial court.
V.
Because we agree with the tenant that the trial court erred in its rulings, we must reverse and remand the case to the trial court to permit the tenant to show, by affidavit or similar proffer, that triable issues of fact remain as to whether her mental impairment can be accommodated in a manner consistent with the health and safety of the other tenants.
So ordered.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
884 A.2d 1109, 2005 D.C. App. LEXIS 515, 2005 WL 2600210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-kriegsfeld-corp-dc-2005.