Housing Auth. City of Pgh., Aplt. v. Nash, D.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 25, 2025
Docket16 WAP 2024
StatusPublished

This text of Housing Auth. City of Pgh., Aplt. v. Nash, D. (Housing Auth. City of Pgh., Aplt. v. Nash, D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Housing Auth. City of Pgh., Aplt. v. Nash, D., (Pa. 2025).

Opinion

[J-15-2025] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, McCAFFERY, JJ.

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF : No. 16 WAP 2024 PITTSBURGH, : : Appeal from the Order of the Appellant : Commonwealth Court entered : November 20, 2023, at No. 1200 CD : 2022, reversing the Order of v. : Allegheny County Court of Common : Pleas entered September 20, 2022, : at No. LT-21-189 DARLENE NASH, : : ARGUED: April 8, 2025 Appellee :

OPINION

JUSTICE DONOHUE DECIDED: SEPTEMBER 25, 2025 In this appeal, the Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh1 (“HACP”) asks that

this Court consider whether its lease agreement (“HACP Lease”) permits it to evict a

tenant who hosted a party at her leased residence (“Unit”) where a third-party committed

a fatal shooting. This issue requires us to examine the relevant provisions of the HACP

Lease to determine whether HACP can evict a tenant under these circumstances. We

conclude that HACP can evict on this basis and, therefore, we reverse the order of the

Commonwealth Court.

1 Under the Housing Authorities Law, Act of My 28, 1937, P.L. 955, as amended, 35 P.S. §§ 1541-1575, a “housing authority,” such as HACP, is defined as a “public body and a body corporate and politic created and organized” for the purpose of, inter alia, providing federally subsidized housing to low-income individuals. 35 P.S. §§ 1542, 1543, 1550. I. Background

HACP leased the Unit located in the Northview Heights Complex2 to Darlene Nash

(“Nash”) on or about May 4, 2017, through a signed lease agreement, i.e., the HACP

Lease. Relevant to the instant matter, the HACP Lease requires a tenant “[t]o assure that

no ‘Covered Person’[3] engage in … [a]ny criminal activity on or off the Premises that

threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of any HACP community by

members of the Household, Guests, other Tenants or employees of HACP … .” HACP

Lease, § 9(K). Further, it is considered “a material breach of Tenant’s Lease and specific

grounds for termination of [the HACP Lease] if any ‘Covered Person’ … [s]hoot[s], fire[s],

explode[s], throw[s] or otherwise discharge[s] a potentially deadly weapon, or … [i]nflict[s]

... any injury upon another person through the intentional use of a deadly weapon, or by

the reckless or negligent use of such weapon ... .” Id. § 9(M)(2)-(3).

On January 9, 2021, Nash celebrated her fifty-ninth birthday in her Unit with a party

organized by herself and some friends. Nash and her goddaughter, who provided the

only other substantive testimony on Nash’s behalf at trial, testified that numerous people

attended the party, some staying for a short period of time and others remaining for a

longer period of time. Although there were no formal invitations sent out, there was

testimony indicating that one or more guests had announced the party on social media,

which led more people in the community to attend the party at Nash’s Unit. Among them

2 Northview Heights Complex is a residential housing complex consisting of 450 apartments managed by HACP. HACP, Northview Heights, https://hacp.org/housing_communties/northview-heights/ (last visited 9/22/2025). Northview Heights participates in the public housing program under the authority of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”), in which eligible low-income tenants are provided property-based subsidies. 55 Pa. Code § 291.22. 3 The HACP Lease provides that “Covered Person: means any Tenant, any members of Tenant’s Household, a Guest or Other Person under the Tenant’s Control ... .” HACP Lease, § 2(C).

[J-15-2025] - 2 was a juvenile male individual (“Shooter”)4 who frequented the residence next door to

Nash’s Unit where the mother of his child lived, often spending the night there. Nash

testified that she had known Shooter and his family for years and that he had previously

been welcomed into her home on several occasions, and had, on at least one occasion,

showered in her Unit and left belongings there. N.T., 5/25/2022, at 81-82.

Throughout the duration of Nash’s party, people would enter her Unit, including

Shooter, offer their congratulations to Nash, enjoy some cake and stay for a period of

time. As Nash indicated, nobody who entered her Unit during the party was told that they

were unwelcome or was asked to leave, except for Blake Green (“Green”). Green was

initially welcomed to the party; however, Nash eventually asked him to leave “because he

was starting with somebody[.]” Id. at 88. Approximately twenty minutes later, Green

returned to the Unit. Nash attempted to explain to Green that they were cleaning up the

party and continued to ask him to leave. At approximately 10:30p.m., as Green was

departing from the Unit, he was shot and killed. Nash suffered injuries from being grazed

by a bullet, as well. Afterwards, Nash instructed others to remove Green’s body from her

Unit out of fear that the shooting would lead to her eviction from Northview Heights.

Because Green was positioned between Nash and Shooter, Nash testified that she could

not see who shot Green. However, Pittsburgh Police Detective Joseph Fabus testified

that officers recovered bullet casings inside the Unit and “slugs” in the carpet inside of the

Unit. Although it has not been confirmed that Shooter indeed was the one who pulled the

4 Although there have not been any convictions, charges or arrests made with respect to the fatal shooting relevant to the underlying case, the juvenile was identified as the main suspect by police during the trial. N.T., 5/25/2022, at 46-47. Due to his age at the time of the incident, the juvenile’s identity has never been disclosed throughout the proceedings. However, at all stages of these proceedings, the juvenile individual has been treated as the shooter for purposes of the lower courts’ analyses, and throughout their briefing the parties appear to concede for purposes of their arguments that Shooter was the one involved in the fatal shooting inside of Nash’s Unit. For these reasons, we shall refer to the juvenile individual as Shooter throughout.

[J-15-2025] - 3 trigger, see supra note 4, Fabus’ testimony established that Shooter was a suspect and

that Shooter has been on the run since the time of the shooting.

On or about March 1, 2021, HACP served Nash with a notice to terminate her

lease, referencing the January 9, 2021 shooting by a “Covered Person” and further

referenced an “Unauthorized Occupant”5 in the Unit. Specifically, HACP contended that

Shooter was an “Unauthorized Occupant” and that, as a “Covered Person,” Shooter had

committed a crime in violation of the HACP Lease’s provisions pertaining to “criminal

activity” and “discharge of a potentially deadly weapon.” HACP’s Lease

Termination/Vacate Notice, 3/21/2021. Because Nash did not vacate the Unit, HACP

initiated this eviction proceeding in the Magisterial District Court on April 7, 2021. The

Magisterial District Court granted HACP possession of the Unit, permitting HACP to

proceed with the eviction. Following Nash’s appeal to the Allegheny County Court of

Common Pleas, HACP filed its complaint. An arbitration panel was later convened, and

5 Only those specifically approved by HACP may reside in the Unit. HACP Lease, § 1(D).

However, there are certain exceptions for the accommodation of a tenant’s guests:

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