Herring v. Chicago Housing Authority

850 F. Supp. 694, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4476, 1994 WL 159849
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 7, 1994
Docket90-C-3797
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 850 F. Supp. 694 (Herring v. Chicago Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. Chicago Housing Authority, 850 F. Supp. 694, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4476, 1994 WL 159849 (N.D. Ill. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

NORDBERG, District Judge.

Plaintiff Beverly A. Herring, a resident of the Chicago Housing Authority’s Harold Ickes Homes (“HIH”), has sued the Chicago Housing Authority (“CHA”), and several CHA officials in their official capacities: Vincent Lane, the Chairman of the CHA Board, Virginia Peoples, an Area Director of CHA for the area including HIH, Beverly Shepard, the CHA Site Manager of HIH, and Earnest Eddins, the Assistant Site Manager of HIH. Plaintiff alleged, in her Second Amended Complaint now before the Court, violations of her rights under the First Amendment, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the United States Housing Act, and her lease agreement with the CHA. The Plaintiff claims that the CHA has, or had, certain eviction policies regarding its tenant’s rights of association. She claims that, as a result of these policies, Defendants attempted to terminate her tenancy, in violation of several of her constitutional and statutory rights.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment and, on May 28, 1992, the Court referred the motions to a Magistrate Judge for a Report and Recommendation. Now before the Court is that Report and Recommendation, dated April 22, 1993, in which the Magistrate Judge recommends that each motion be granted in part and denied in part. Each party has filed objections to the Report and Recommendation. Based on those objections, the Court reviews the Magistrate Judge’s recommendations de novo. Fed.R.Civ.P. 72(b).

I. BACKGROUND

The Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation sets out the factual background of this case in great detail. The Court summarizes the facts sufficient for this opinion below.

Ms. Herring lives on the twelfth floor of a fifteen story building located at 2822 South Calumet in Chicago, Illinois. Ms. Herring’s apartment is one of several buildings in a development known as the Harold Ickes Homes (“HIH”). She lived at the same location during the events at issue in this lawsuit.

In early December 1988, the CHA conducted a “lockdown” of several of its apartment buildings, including HIH. CHA residents contested the legality of the “lock-down”, filing a class action suit here in the Northern District of Illinois, Summeries v. Chicago Housing Authority, No. 88-C-10566 (N.D.Ill). The district court eventually entered a Consent Decree resolving that litigation. The Consent Decree permitted the CHA to conduct inspections to identify and remove unauthorized occupants and to inspect the condition of the housing units, subject to the CHA’s minimizing its intrusion on the rights of its residents. Pursuant to the Consent Decree, the CHA instituted a “Visitation Policy” at HIH. For a tenant to have a guest visit at a CHA apartment, the Visitation Policy required the tenant to write down in a registry the tenant’s name, apartment number, and guest’s name before the guest would be admitted to the building.

*697 In addition to the class action filed against the CHA, several protest groups organized to protest the “lockdown.” Two of these groups were the Campaign to End the CHA Lockdown (the “Campaign”) and the Revolutionary Communist Party (the “RCP”). Ms. Herring was involved with, and attended, some, but not all of the organized protests. These groups and others staged protests of the lockdown. On May 1, 1990, one such protest became violent and resulted in the protestors barricading the doors to CHA management offices, throwing paint bombs, starting fires, damaging property, physically injuring CHA personnel, and taking rent payments from some residents. Among the more demonstrative acts of the protest was the placement of the head of a pig atop one of the HIH management buildings. Four protestors were arrested: Neil Danota, William K. Small, Cheryl Jue, and Sylvester Richmond (mistakenly called Richardson in a CHA memo), (see Defs.’ Mot.Summ.JApp., Ex. F, Bates No. H000021). (Defs.’ Resp. to Pl.’s Statement of Material Facts ¶ 23.)

Two days later, on the evening of May 3, 1990, Herring was in the lobby of her building waiting to register her fiancé pursuant to the Visitation Policy. While in the lobby, Herring encountered three individuals, now known to be Terry Jue who is also known as Cheryl Jue, Fred Johnson, and someone known only as “Ariel” (collectively, the “guests”). The guests were waiting to be admitted to see another tenant of the building, Sylvester Richmond, the same Sylvester Richmond who had been arrested on May 1. When Richmond did not come down to admit the guests, Herring signed them in. At the time, Herring did not know each of the individual guests’ surnames. Instead of asking each guest his or her name, Herring made up names for each, writing down Terry Fong, Fred Clock, and James Clark.

Herring and the guests went to Richmond’s apartment. A janitor recognized the guests as protestors and notified security. After looking for the guests at Herring’s apartment, two security guards went to Richmond’s apartment. There, the guards encountered the guests, requested them to leave the building, and escorted them out. The guards claim that they did not see Herring or any other CHA tenant present in the apartment. Herring contends that she was in the kitchen of the apartment at the time the guards arrived. Apparently, the parties now agree that Herring was there.

On May 31, 1990, Herring received a notice informing her that her tenancy would terminate on June 21, 1990. However, she remained in her apartment through that date and on July 3, 1990 filed this lawsuit. After the filing of this case, the CHA filed, but eventually voluntarily dismissed without prejudice to reinstate, a state action seeking to evict Herring. During the pendency of the current litigation, Herring has remained in her CHA residence. The CHA has represented that it has no further intention to seek to evict Herring for the events of May 3, 1990. After refusing to accept rent from Herring for July and August of 1990, the CHA again accepted rent beginning in September 1990.

After extensive discovery and the filing of Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, the parties filed the instant cross-motions for summary judgment. The Magistrate Judge, in the Report and Recommendation, recommends that the Court grant Plaintiffs Motion as to her First Amendment claim and deny her Motion as to her remaining claims. The Magistrate Judge recommends that the Court deny the Defendants’ Motion as to Plaintiffs First Amendment Claim but grant their Motion as to the remaining claims. The Court now turns to the parties’ objections to these recommendations.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Plaintiffs Objections

The Magistrate Judge concluded that the Plaintiffs lease was never terminated and therefore recommended that the Court grant the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs Due Process, United States Housing Act, and lease claims, and deny Plaintiffs motion with regard to those claims. Plaintiff objects to these recommendations, arguing that her lease was terminated. The Court agrees with the Magistrate Judge.

It is undisputed that Plaintiff remains a resident of HIH, that she lives in the same

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Bluebook (online)
850 F. Supp. 694, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4476, 1994 WL 159849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-chicago-housing-authority-ilnd-1994.