Farina v. Janet Keenan Housing Corporation

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 2025
Docket23-CV-0832 & 24-CV-0045
StatusPublished

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Farina v. Janet Keenan Housing Corporation, (D.C. 2025).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

Nos. 23-CV-0832 & 24-CV-0045

PETER FARINA, APPELLANT,

V.

JANET KEENAN HOUSING CORPORATION, et al., APPELLEES.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2022-CA-004492-B & 2023-CAB-006168)

(Hon. Juliet J. McKenna, Trial Judge)

(Argued October 8, 2024 Decided May 22, 2025)

Peter Farina, pro se.

Stephen O. Hessler for appellee Janet Keenan Housing Corporation.

Lucy E. Pittman, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Brian L. Schwalb, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Caroline S. Van Zile, Solicitor General, and Ashwin P. Phatak, Principal Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellee District of Columbia.

Before MCLEESE, DEAHL, and HOWARD, Associate Judges.

DEAHL, Associate Judge: Peter Farina has lived at the Victor Howell House,

located at 1304 Euclid Street NW, since 1989. At that time and for the next decade,

the private owner of the property rented the house out to a group of low-income 2

individuals at reduced rates. When that private owner decided to sell the house in

2000, Farina and others advocated for the establishment of a non-profit charitable

corporation known as the Janet Keenan Housing Corporation (JKHC), which then

purchased the property partially through a grant provided by a national affordable

housing nonprofit. The Victor Howell House is JKHC’s only asset, and JKHC’s

articles of incorporation and bylaws identify its purposes as “preserv[ing] and

promot[ing] affordable housing in the District.”

These appeals stem from JKHC’s recent attempts to sell the house to an

undisclosed private third party, which triggered two tracks of litigation that are now

consolidated before us. On the first track, the District sued JKHC to halt the sale on

the basis that it was not compliant with JKHC’s charitable purposes. As the District

and JKHC neared a settlement that would permit the third-party sale to proceed,

Farina sought to intervene to oppose the settlement, but the court denied that motion.

Farina then appealed that ruling and separately brought his own second track of

litigation, arguing that if the sale is permitted to proceed, he has a right to purchase

the property himself as a protected tenant under the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase

Act (TOPA). Farina also argued that JKHC’s attempted sale would violate the

Uniform Trust Code (UTC). The trial court ruled against Farina on both fronts. It

reasoned that Farina’s TOPA rights were extinguished by the court-approved

settlement in the District’s litigation. See D.C. Code § 42-3404.02(c)(2)(M) 3

(transfers “pursuant to . . . court-approved settlement[s]” are not “sales” triggering

TOPA rights). It further reasoned that he lacked standing to bring his UTC claim,

and in any event, that it had already rejected the arguments underlying Farina’s UTC

claim when it approved the proposed sale in the District’s litigation.

Farina now appeals the rulings in both cases. He argues that the trial court

erred by (1) denying his motion to intervene in the District’s case, (2) denying him

his TOPA rights, and (3) rejecting his UTC claim. We agree with Farina on his

second point: The settlement between the District and JKHC, removing an

impediment to JKHC’s pre-litigation deal to sell the house to a third party, did not

render the anticipated third-party sale exempt from TOPA’s requirements. Farina

must be afforded his rights, as an eligible tenant, to purchase the property prior to

that third-party sale. We disagree with Farina on his first and third points: The trial

court acted within its discretion in rejecting Farina’s motion to intervene in the

District’s litigation and did not err in rejecting his UTC claim. We therefore affirm

the trial court’s judgment in the District’s litigation, No. 23-CV-0832, but vacate its

judgment in Farina’s suit, No. 24-CV-0045, and remand that case for further

proceedings. 4

I. Factual Background

The facts in this case are not in dispute. Peter Farina has been a tenant at the

Victor Howell House, a group home for low-income adults in need of affordable

housing, for over thirty-five years. When a previous owner decided to sell the house

some decades ago, Farina helped advocate for the creation of a non-profit

corporation, JKHC, which purchased the property in 2000. JKHC funded its

purchase of the house (its sole asset) through a conditional grant from the Enterprise

Foundation, a national nonprofit that focuses on affordable housing issues. The

grant required JKHC to maintain the house as “permanent rental housing” for

low-income individuals who would operate it as a self-run household. Farina was

named the “head of household” at the time of JKHC’s 2000 purchase and has had

various administrative and maintenance duties in that role. Farina also once served

on JKHC’s board of directors, but no longer does. As houses often do, this one

eventually fell into some disrepair and JKHC claims it can no longer afford to

maintain the house.

In 2022, JKHC’s president and CEO informed Farina and the other residents

that JKHC was putting the house up for sale. When the residents asked if they would

be permitted to stay in the house, they were told that it would be up to the new owner.

That news triggered two different lawsuits. In the first lawsuit and at Farina’s 5

urging, the District sued JKHC to block the sale of the house on the grounds that the

sale would violate JKHC’s charitable mission. When the District and JKHC neared

a settlement that would allow the sale to proceed, and Farina was denied leave to

intervene, Farina brought his own suit alleging that the anticipated sale would violate

his TOPA rights and the UTC. We detail these separate suits in turn.

District of Columbia v. JKHC

When Farina learned that JKHC was intent on selling the Victor Howell

House, he contacted District government authorities in September 2022 to alert

them. The District promptly responded by sending JKHC a “standstill letter,”

directing it to cease efforts to sell the house. When JKHC nonetheless went under

contract to sell the house with a closing date scheduled for early October 2022,

(1) Farina responded by filing an official form with the District invoking his TOPA

rights, and (2) the District responded by filing suit to enjoin the sale. The District

argued in its suit that the sale would violate the Non-Profit Corporation Act because

it would run contrary to JKHC’s charitable purposes. See generally D.C. Code

§ 29-410.03 (“Property held in trust or otherwise dedicated to a charitable purpose

shall not be diverted from its purpose.”). The trial court granted the District’s motion

to enjoin the sale and precluded JKHC from selling the property until further order

of the court. 6

After nearly a year of litigation, as the District and JKHC were on the cusp of

reaching a settlement agreement, Farina moved to intervene in the case. He argued

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