East Hartford Housing Authority v. Colon, No. Hdsp-108933 (Nov. 27, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 14017
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 27, 2000
DocketNo. HDSP-108933
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 14017 (East Hartford Housing Authority v. Colon, No. Hdsp-108933 (Nov. 27, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Hartford Housing Authority v. Colon, No. Hdsp-108933 (Nov. 27, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 14017 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
I.
The plaintiff, East Hartford Housing Authority (Authority), filed this summary process action on May 17, 2000, seeking possession of an apartment it leased to the defendant, Michael Colon. The Authority alleges that Colon failed to pay rent for the month of April, 2000. In his answer, Colon raised a number of special defenses to this action. In his first special defense, Colon alleges that the proper amount of rent was tendered prior to service of the notice to quit. In his second special defense, Colon alleges that a dispute exists as to the amount of rent due for the month of April and that no agreement existed. In his third special defense, Colon alleges the equitable defense prohibiting forfeiture of the lease, especially under the circumstance that the tenant offered to pay the full amount allegedly due and owing and in his fourth special defense, Colon alleges that the notice to quit was equivocal.

The court heard the Authority's summary process action on September 7, 2000. The evidence indicates that Colon, a young man who undergoes dialysis every other day as a result of kidney failure, entered into a lease with the Authority effective January 1, 2000, for a dwelling unit on School Street in East Hartford, Connecticut, at a rate of $225 per month. At the time he entered into the lease, Colon was receiving state supplemental assistance in the amount of $189 per month, in addition to federal social security disability assistance in the amount of $599 per month. CT Page 14018

When he entered into the lease with the Authority for subsidized public housing, Colon immediately lost the state supplemental assistance. According to the testimony of both Colon and the Authority's leasing and occupancy coordinator, Telmo Zuniga, discussion occurred in February, 2000, concerning a reduction in the rental amount as a result of the reduction in Colon's income. The court also received into evidence a copy of a facsimile from the state department of social services dated February 29, 2000, addressed to Zuniga, reflecting Colon's total income.

Colon testified that he had a discussion with Zuniga subsequent to receiving the facsimile from the department of social services. In that discussion, Zuniga indicated that Colon's rent would be reduced to $170 per month and that Colon was "all set." Zuniga disputes this testimony. Instead, Zuniga testified that Colon failed to attend a meeting with him to finalize the paperwork to reduce the rent and that Zuniga never verbally told a tenant, other than, perhaps, a prospective tenant, a rental amount. Colon further testified that he was in Florida in March and left his rent of $170 with a friend to deliver to the Authority. Colon stated that the friend was told that the rent was $225 and that the friend paid the additional amount for Colon so that Colon would not lose his apartment. The Authority's rental records, received into evidence, reflects that a payment of $225 was received on March 13, 2000.

Colon testified that when he returned from Florida, he went to see Zuniga in April, prior to receiving the notice to quit. Colon offered $182 for April's rent, an amount he believed was the proper amount as a result of a food stamp allotment, but the tender was rejected by the Authority. Colon further testified that Zuniga asked if Colon received the notice to quit. Zuniga testified that Colon signed certain paperwork on April 12, 2000, but failed to mention whether tender was offered. The Authority failed to offer any certification form or affidavit into evidence, but Colon introduced his April 12, 2000, handwritten statement that "I [am] only getting income from SSI which is $599.00 per month." The Authority's leasing and occupancy manager, Linda McComber, testified that, notwithstanding the facsimile received from the department of social services in February, 2000, no action was taken to reduce Colon's rental payment until April 12, 2000, effective May 1, 2000. McComber further testified that, on April 20, 2000, she adjusted, by letter, the effective date of the rental amount decrease to April 1, 2000, and also wrote that Colon needed "to pay $170, plus $20, for a total of $190 before the end of April, in order to avoid going to legal office."

The court heard additional testimony from Courtney Anderson, coordinator of eviction prevention with Community Renewal Team, Inc. (CRT), a state-funded rent bank. Anderson testified that an agreement was worked out with Colon that would enable Colon to receive sufficient funds CT Page 14019 to pay any arrearage in his account with the Authority. Anderson further testified that the Authority refused to enter into the agreement with CRT.

II.
A.
The dwelling unit owned by the Authority, a municipal agent, in which Colon resides, is low-income public housing subsidized by the United States Department Housing and Urban Development (HUD). As such, many federal and state requirements apply that are not applicable to private housing. One area regulated by federal and state requirements is the amount of rent that may be charged, and the amount for which Colon is responsible is, of course, the subject of this dispute.

In 1969, Congress amended the United States Housing Act of 1937, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1402 (1) et seq., passing P.L. 91-152 (1969) (the Brooke Amendment), limiting rents to be charged for low-income housing to twenty-five percent of a family's income. This percentage was later revised and today, low-income residents of public housing cannot be charged more than thirty percent of the family's income.42 U.S.C. § 1437a. (2000).1 The program is administered through regulations promulgated in the code of federal regulations (C.F.R.). The C.F.R. provides a process for annual and periodic audits of a tenant's income. See 24 C.F.R. § 966.4 (c) (2000).2 The C.F.R. also mandates that the tenant execute a release authorizing appropriate agencies to provide financial information to the landlord and further requires the family to provide certain documentation to the landlord. See24 C.F.R. § 5.617 (b).3

B.
The C.F.R. provides no specific road map for how a housing authority should handle interim adjustments. See 24 C.F.R. § 966.4 (c). The regulations do, however, require the housing authority to provide for periodic review in the lease. 24 C.F.R. § 966.4 (c). The relevant portion of the lease between the Authority and Colon states: "VIII. REDETERMINATION OF RENT; APARTMENT SIZE; ELIGIBILITY: B. (1) If you are in a low rent or a Section 8 project or federal elderly project, your rent may be changed before the next regular rent determination for any of the following reasons: (a) Your circumstances change and have continued for at least one month and seem likely to continue for some time so that a decrease in rent is justified under the schedule of rents or to avoid a hardship. (b) You begin to get public assistance, or your public assistance ends. You must report the change to us in ten days. . . ." CT Page 14020

The C.F.R.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 14017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-hartford-housing-authority-v-colon-no-hdsp-108933-nov-27-2000-connsuperct-2000.