Ford Ex Rel. Pringle v. Philadelphia Housing Authority

848 A.2d 1038, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 235
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 848 A.2d 1038 (Ford Ex Rel. Pringle v. Philadelphia Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Ex Rel. Pringle v. Philadelphia Housing Authority, 848 A.2d 1038, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 235 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge PELLEGRINI.

The Philadelphia Housing Authority (Authority) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (trial court) entering judgment in favor of Tyree Ford (Ford) by and through his mother, Louise Pringle (Pringle), on his claims that it was negligent and breached the implied warranty of habitability at their public housing rental property, 2114 Taney Terrace, by allowing lead-based paint to exist which Ford ingested causing him to suffer from lead poisoning and brain damage.

Pringle began leasing the Authority residence on November 19, 1990, prior to the birth of Ford and remained there with her children until November 16, 1994, when the Authority relocated them to another residence that was free of lead-based paint. Due to Ford’s ingestion of lead-based paint at the Authority’s rental property, Ford, who was born in 1991, was found to have suffered from lead poisoning, and after undergoing testing in early 1999, it was determined that he suffered brain damage. Consequently, it was not until October 20, 1999, when Ford was eight years old, that Pringle filed a complaint 1 against the Authority on Ford’s behalf alleging the following:

*1042 • Ford resided at 2114 Taney Terrace, a property that was owned by the Authority;
• from 1992 through 1995, he was tested and suffered from elevated blood levels as a result of ingesting lead-based paint at the Taney Terrace residence from 1992 through 1994;
• as a result, he suffered injuries consisting of neurological brain damage, diminished IQ, hyperactivity, loss in appetite, poor behavior, excitability and attention deficits.

The complaint further alleged that due to his ingestion of the lead-based paint, Ford had undergone medical care, would have to undergo chelation therapy, 2 and would, in the future, suffer from “insidious and progressively severe disability, mental and physical anguish, dysfunction of the mind and body, great expenses, loss of income and loss of power to earn.” (Complaint at 5.) In response, the Authority filed both an answer denying the allegations and a cross-claim alleging contributory negligence.

In order to prove negligence (Count I of the complaint) 3 and breach of an implied warranty of habitability (Count II of the complaint), at the bench trial, 4 Pringle first *1043 testified regarding the rental property. She stated that prior to moving into the property, she was unaware of the effects of lead-based paint on children, and that the Authority did not inform her or provide her with any information about lead-based paint and the effects of lead on children. She further stated that during the time she lived at 2114 Taney Terrace up until the time Ford went into the hospital in October of 1994, she never received any information or literature from the Authority regarding lead-based paint. Pringle testified that the Authority inspected the rental property annually and filled out inspection forms when she complained of chipping paint, but the Authority never came out and painted the property any time during the four years she lived there. However, Pringle stated that just before Ford was hospitalized in October of 1994 for his chelation therapy, she requested and received lead-free paint so that she could paint the walls of the downstairs area of her home where the paint was cracking.

To further prove that the Authority was aware that her residence had lead-based paint that was chipping but did nothing to remove it, she presented the testimony of Dennis Glancey (Glancey), who had worked for the Authority for 22 years until he retired in 1996. He stated that the last position he held with the Authority was Director of the Environmental Services Department for 18 months where he was responsible for identifying and doing whatever had to be done to remediate environmental concerns such as lead-based paint. (January 27, 2003 hearing transcript at 149.) Glancey stated that prior to his employment with the Authority, the Authority was made aware in 1971 that a regulation had been issued for public housing authorities to test for and abate lead-based paint on chewable surfaces on the inside of their units. (January 27, 2003 hearing transcript at 198.) He then identified an Authority document that Pringle offered into evidence dated March 7, 1974, indicating that 2114 Taney Terrace required lead-based paint removal from numerous locations inside the unit. Additionally, he identified documents from an April 19 and 25, 1990 interview and home visit by Authority personnel to the Taney Terrace address, which did not indicate that the Authority personnel advised Prin-gle of the lead-based paint in the rental property; and the Authority’s lease agreement with Pringle which did not say anything regarding lead-based paint, but did require the lessee to have children in order to lease the unit and stated that the Authority was required to maintain the dwelling in compliance with the applicable laws, rules and regulations. Although Glancey stated that in 1991, the Authority sent to every resident in one of its units a letter explaining the threat lead-based paint posed to children, the precautions to take to avoid poisoning, and the symptoms of poisoning and what could be done about it, the only document offered into evidence showed that Pringle had received a letter and signed it indicating her receipt on November 17, 1994, after Ford had been diagnosed with lead poisoning. Finally, Glancey testified that Pringle’s unit should have been inspected annually and an inspection report should have been generated, but he did not recall seeing such a report for any year that she lived there and particularly not for 1991.

Pringle then offered into evidence a written report dated October 14, 1994, authored by John Peduto (Péduto), the Authority’s Lead Based Paint Coordinator, which was sent to the Authority’s senior legal counsel, Denise Baker, stating the following:

Attached herewith is the Lead Based Paint report on 2114 Taney Terrace, *1044 Unit # 130408 (Wilson Park)'. The report shows that there are many components with a high reading of lead inside and outside of the residence.
The child in question has an EBL (elevated blood level) of 55.
Following are the recommendations that the Philadelphia Housing Authority should follow:
1) Full abatement must be completed within 14 days after positive testing, or;
2) Transfer the tenants into a lead free unit immediately.

Pringle also offered into evidence a letter she received from the Authority dated November 4, 1994, stating that the Authority had tested the painted surfaces for lead-based paint in her unit and had confirmed the presence of lead. She stated that the Authority then offered to move her to another unit that was lead free, which she accepted, and she and her family moved on November 16, 1994.

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Bluebook (online)
848 A.2d 1038, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-ex-rel-pringle-v-philadelphia-housing-authority-pacommwct-2004.