EDWARD GRAY APTS./REGION NINE HOUSING CORP. v. Williams
This text of 800 A.2d 259 (EDWARD GRAY APTS./REGION NINE HOUSING CORP. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
EDWARD GRAY APARTMENTS/REGION NINE HOUSING CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Norma WILLIAMS, Defendant-Respondent.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*261 Tarella & Liftman, attorneys for appellant (James A. Tarella, North Brunswick, on the brief).
Felipe Chavana, Ex. Director, Essex-Newark Legal Services, Inc., attorney for respondent (Jose L. Ortiz and Nora R. Locke, on the brief).
Before Judges PRESSLER, LANDAU and KIMMELMAN.
*260 The opinion of the court was delivered by LANDAU, J.A.D. (Retired and temporarily assigned on recall.)
Plaintiff Edward Gray Apartments/Region Nine Housing Corporation, appeals from the dismissal of its Special Civil Part complaint for eviction of defendant Norma Williams.
The complaint, filed June 22, 2001, demanded possession in two counts. Count One recited defendant's failure to pay unsubsidized rent of $1,003 per month after she was notified that her monthly subsidy in the amount exceeding $135 per month was terminated in accordance with Section 8(HUD) regulations effective June 1, 2001. Count Two recited defendant's failure to comply with a notice to cease dated April 16, 2001, and notice to quit dated April 26, 2001, effective May 31, 2001.
The matter was tried on stipulated facts, the several termination notices and the lease between the parties. These were deemed legally insufficient to support eviction. We disagree and reverse.
The parties stipulated:
1. Norma Williams commenced a tenancy at Berkeley Terrace Apartments, 5 Berkeley Terrace, Apt. 2B, Irvington, N.J., on or about 1989, and received a Section 8 subsidy.
2. In July 1, 1998, Norma Williams applied for tenancy, and another Section 8 subsidy, at Edward F. Gray Apartments, 712 15th Street, Apt. 1304, Irvington, N.J.
3. Norma Williams commenced tenancy at Edward F. Gray Apartments effective 8/18/98 and began receiving a Section 8 subsidy for that apartment.
4. Norma Williams did not terminate her tenancy at Berkeley Terrace until April 12, 2001.
5. From August 18, 1998 to April 12, 2000, Norma Williams maintained tenancies at Berkeley Terrace and Edward F. Gray Apartments and received subsidies at both locations.
5. [sic] In February 2001, Norma Williams met with the managers of both complexes.
*262 6. In April 12, 2001, Norma Williams terminated her tenancy at Berkeley Terrace Apartments.
7. By letter dated April 28, 2001, Edward F. Gray Apartments purported to terminate the Section 8 subsidy effective June 1, 2001.
8. Edward F. Gray Apartments served notice to terminate tenancy, appended to the complaint, effective May 31, 2001.
9. Norma Williams did not vacate Edward F. Gray Apartments, and remains in occupancy.
10. Norma Williams has not paid the unsubsidized rent, $1003, for June and July 2001 and contends that her rent obligation is $135, her portion of rent if the subsidy continued.
Paragraph 4 of the subject lease provides in pertinent part that:
The Tenant agrees that the amount of rent the Tenant pays and/or the amount of assistance that HUD pays on behalf of the Tenant may be changed during the term of this Agreement if: ... D. changes in the Tenant's rent or assistance payment are required by HUD's re-certification or subsidy termination procedures; ... or F. the Tenant fails to provide information on his/her income, family composition or other factors as required by the landlord.
Paragraph 4 also requires compliance with HUD's handbooks and regulations related to administration of subsidy programs.
Paragraph 13 of the lease provides in pertinent part: "The Tenant must live in the unit and the unit must be the Tenant's only place of residence."
Paragraph 23B. of the lease provides in pertinent part that:
any termination of the agreement by the Landlord must be carried out in accordance with HUD regulations, state and local law, and the terms of this agreement. The Landlord may terminate this agreement ... for: ... the Tenant's material non-compliance with the terms of this agreement.
The term "material non-compliance" with the lease includes, "failure of the Tenant to timely supply all required information on... eligibility factors ... or to knowingly provide incomplete or inaccurate information..."
Paragraph 25 of the lease provides that, "knowingly giving the Landlord false information regarding income or other factors considered in determining Tenant's eligibility and rent is a material non-compliance with the lease subject to termination of tenancy...."
These lease provisions are consistent with the provisions of HUD Handbook 4350.3, entitled Occupancy Requirements of Subsidized Multifamily Housing Programs, Sections 5-17 through 5-21.
Significantly, this portion of the HUD Handbook is preceded by a note explaining that key provisions in Sections 5-19 through 5-21, "were first introduced in the Office of Housings Tip Guide, `Locking Out Tenant Fraud and Errors in Multi-Family Housing Programs,' issued 10/91." The note goes on to explain that, "the material below instructs owners on what corrective courses of actions to take." Section 5-17c. includes the following language "... fraud can be handled civilly by using it as grounds for a termination of tenancy. Providing false information is a material non-compliance with the lease." The section goes on to explain in sub-paragraph d. that the file must show that the tenant was made aware of the program requirements, which can be shown by the intake documents, and that the tenant intentionally misstated or withheld material information. Fraudulent intent, according to the *263 subsection, can be demonstrated by proving that, "the tenant omitted material facts which were known to the tenant" or that "there were admissions to others of the illegal actions or omissions." Section 5-20b. provides that, "When fraud, by legal definition, is present, the authorized course of action for owners to take is termination of tenancy." This statement is supported by a reference to 24 C.F.R. § 247.3 (entitlements of tenants to occupancy). The subsection also states that material non-compliance includes knowingly providing incomplete or inaccurate information.
While agreeing that defendant's conduct constituted fraud, the trial judge concluded that the notices which formed the basis of the complaint for possession were inadequate. One notice clearly referenced defendant's initial misrepresentation of eligibility and cited defendant's continued maintenance of the two subsidized apartments. Another also recited defendant's maintenance of the two subsidized units. The judge concluded, however, notwithstanding his view that the undisputed facts established fraud,[1] that termination of defendant's tenancy should be denied. He reasoned that because defendant gave up one of the tenancies in April 12, two months after a February meeting at which she was confronted with her subsidized tenancy in the two apartments, this rendered the April 26 notice to cease inapplicable, and the notice to quit unenforceable.
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800 A.2d 259, 352 N.J. Super. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-gray-aptsregion-nine-housing-corp-v-williams-njsuperctappdiv-2002.