Hailemariam v. Zewdie

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 2023
Docket21-CV-0217
StatusPublished

This text of Hailemariam v. Zewdie (Hailemariam v. Zewdie) 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.

Bluebook
Hailemariam v. Zewdie, (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 21-CV-0217

ADMAS HAILEMARIAM, APPELLANT,

V.

TINSAYE KAH ZEWDIE, APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2021-CA-000037-H)

(Hon. Kelly Higashi, Trial Judge)

(Submitted February 15, 2022 Decided March 23, 2023)

Jonathan H. Levy and Megan Moffett * were on the brief for appellant.

Workneh Churnet was on the brief for appellee.

Before MCLEESE, Associate Judge, and GLICKMAN and THOMPSON, Senior Judges. †

* Practicing law in the District of Columbia pursuant to D.C. Court of Appeals Rule 49(c)(9)(C) under the supervision of Legal Aid attorneys admitted to the D.C. Bar and in good standing. † Judges Glickman and Thompson were Associate Judges of the court at the time this appeal was submitted. 2

GLICKMAN, Senior Judge: This appeal is from the dismissal of a complaint

that appellant Hailemariam filed against her landlord, appellee Zewdie, on the

Superior Court’s Housing Conditions Civil Calendar. We affirm.

Appellant’s complaint sought remediation of numerous alleged Housing Code

violations. At the initial hearing, the parties apprised the trial judge that the matters

in dispute included threshold issues regarding the scope of the tenancy, what part of

the house had been rented to appellant, and whether the lease obligated the landlord

to provide and repair a bathroom on the first floor of the dwelling. The judge stated

that she “need[ed] to consult with the Civil Division management to see if this case

would need to be transferred to a Civil II calendar because the Housing [Conditions

Civil] calendar is not set up to handle contested motions like these.” At the next

status hearing, the judge referenced that consultation and informed the parties,

“[a]ccording to the case management plan for the housing conditions civil calendar,

when there are issues, such as these, that require more extensive litigation they need

to be addressed on a regular Civil II calendar. . . . And because of that, I am going

to dismiss this case without prejudice so that plaintiff may, if she chooses, file a

complaint alleging her [landlord’s] breach of contract and outlining her basis for her

claim that her lease agreement with the landlord covers the bathroom downstairs.” 3

Appellant requested the judge to “retain jurisdiction at least over those

violations” that were unrelated to the first-floor bathroom. The judge noted,

however, that “most of the violations” did relate to that bathroom, and appellant’s

counsel agreed that was so. After further colloquy, the judge ruled that she could

not “retain jurisdiction over part of this case. All of the issues can be addressed

through a Civil II case.”

Following the dismissal of her complaint without prejudice, appellant filed a

new complaint for damages and injunctive relief in the Civil Division of Superior

Court. This complaint, No. 2021 CA 003168B, is still pending on the Superior

Court’s docket.

Appellant apprehends that the court dismissed her case for want of subject

matter jurisdiction on the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar, and she argues that

“[a] case over which the Superior Court has jurisdiction is not subject to

dismissal . . . merely because it is assigned to a unit of the court in which it does not

belong.” 1 That is a correct statement of law. However, appellant’s premise is

mistaken, and the principle she invokes does not apply here. The dismissal was not

1 Robinson v. United States, 769 A.2d 747, 751 (D.C. 2001). 4

for want of jurisdiction, but rather to effectuate a discretionary transfer of the case

to a more appropriate civil calendar. Because the dismissal was, under the

circumstances, functionally equivalent to a certification of the case directly to that

calendar without a formal dismissal, we conclude that appellant was not prejudiced

and reversal is not warranted.

The Case Management Plan for the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar

expressly authorized the procedure that the court followed. In relevant part, the

Management Plan states:

The Housing Conditions Civil Calendar is a problem- solving court. Its goal is to efficiently and quickly achieve compliance with the District of Columbia Housing Code Regulations . . . and Property Maintenance Code . . . .

The Housing Conditions Civil Calendar is governed by the terms of these practices and procedures and the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. . . .

Although the Court has the same jurisdiction over cases on the Housing Conditions Calendar as over cases on other calendars in the Civil Actions Branch, the Court imposes several limits on cases on the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar in order to keep the Calendar within manageable limits consistent with resource constraints. In addition, the judge presiding over the Calendar has discretion to manage the Calendar consistent with its purpose efficiently and quickly to secure compliance with housing code regulations. . . . 5

If issues arise that cannot be addressed on the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar without adversely affecting the Court’s ability to provide efficient and expedited enforcement of housing code regulations, the Court may certify the case to a randomly assigned Civil 2 Calendar or dismiss it without prejudice so that the plaintiff can file the case on a Civil 2 Calendar.[2]

Thus, under the terms of the Case Management Plan, the judge was vested

with broad discretion to manage the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar by

certifying this case to the Civil 2 Calendar or dismissing the case without prejudice

so that appellant could refile it on the Civil 2 Calendar herself. Generally speaking,

a judge in this position should certify the case rather than dismiss it, because a

dismissal of the complaint — even one without prejudice — could have adverse

consequences for the plaintiff. In such a case, the dismissal would be error or an

abuse of the court’s discretion. Fortunately, however, the two options were

functionally equivalent in this case; appellant has not shown that the choice of

dismissal rather than certification prejudiced her, and we do not perceive that it did. 3

2 Case Management Plan for the Housing Conditions Civil Calendar, District of Columbia Courts, https://www.dccourts.gov/sites/default/files/Housing- Conditions-Case-Management-Plan.pdf; https://perma.cc/R69V-UJTB (last visited March 2, 2023). 3 This was not a situation where, for example, the choice of dismissal triggered the running of a statute of limitations that operated to preclude any of appellant’s claims. Nor is it a case in which the transferred claims could not be litigated on the destination calendar. And the dismissal and refiling did not burden appellant with 6

We likewise do not perceive that the judge abused her discretion in deciding

it would be appropriate for the case to be transferred to the Civil 2 Calendar.

Appellant asserts that the articulated need for “more extensive litigation” of a

“threshold” issue was not a valid reason to dismiss her complaint. It would not have

been a valid reason to dismiss appellant’s complaint with prejudice for lack of

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Related

Robinson v. United States
769 A.2d 747 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Hailemariam v. Zewdie, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hailemariam-v-zewdie-dc-2023.