JOHNSON v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-01591
StatusUnknown

This text of JOHNSON v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA (JOHNSON v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOHNSON v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

KEITH JOHNSON, CIVIL ACTION

Plaintiff, NO. 19-1591-KSM v.

CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, et al.,

Defendants,

MEMORANDUM

MARSTON, J. June 3, 2020 Plaintiff Keith Johnson claims that the Defendant City of Philadelphia demolished three rowhomes on his property without notice and without a proper investigation.1 The City brings this motion for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed below, the Court grants the City’s motion on all counts. I. Factual Background Keith Johnson owns eight properties in and around Philadelphia, including the vacant property located at 1866 Brunner Street. (Doc. No. 1 at ¶¶ 6–7; Doc. No. 29-2 at 133:19–21.) For seven of those properties, the property deeds list Johnson’s residential address as a location where either he or a family member lived at the time of purchase. (Doc. No. 29-2 at 120:6–16, 123:17 to 124:17.) But the deed for the Brunner Street property lists the vacant property itself as Johnson’s home address, even though he lived on West Albanus Street when he purchased the

1 Johnson also sues the City’s Department of Licenses and Inspections. We consider the City and its subdivision to be one entity in deciding this motion. property. (Id. at 133:22 to 134:7, 115:7–21, 120:17–22.) A. The March Inspection The Brunner Street property is across the street from a community center, and children frequently walk by the property to reach a nearby school. (Doc. No. 29-2 at 102:24 to 103:19; Doc. No. 29-3 at 61:12–16.) Johnson purchased the property in 2001 and allowed family

members to live there on and off until the end of 2012, after which the property was left vacant. (Doc. No. 29-2 at 28:7–10, 32:22–24, 107.) In October 2017, Johnson received a letter from Inspector Carlton Smith, who was with the operations department of the Department of Licenses & Investigations (the “Department”), directing Johnson to get a vacant property license. (Id. at 69:14-17.) Johnson did not get the license, and the City filed a code enforcement complaint in May 2018 to compel him to do so. (Id. at 73:3–20, 74:16 to 75:13, Doc. No. 29-4.) Johnson waited for the initial court date, June 18, 2018, to address the issue. (Doc. No. 29-2 at 73:10– 14.) During that time, the rowhomes’ exterior wall began to bulge. (Id. at 93–94, 96:7–10.) Johnson had a contractor inspect the bulge in the wall, and the contractor recommended that he

install an anchor. (Id. at 93:15 to 96:6.) Johnson spoke with three contractors about pricing to repair the wall, but he did not move forward with the repair before the City demolished the building. (Id. at 95:3–18.) On March 6, 2018, a neighbor submitted a service request to the City, claiming that “bricks are starting to come out between the windows on the first floor of this abandoned property.” (Doc. No. 29-5.) In response, the City sent Eugene Stallworth, a building inspector with the Contractual Services Unit (CSU) of the Department to inspect the building. (Id.) Under the CSU Field Manual, inspectors rate properties with structural issues on a scale from 1 to 5. (Doc. No. 29-6 at p. 17.) If an inspector rates the property as a 1 or 2 then it is considered “imminently dangerous” (id.), which — according to the Philadelphia Property Maintenance Code — means “there is imminent danger of failure or collapse of a structure or any part thereof which endangers life, or when any structure or part of a structure has fallen and life is endangered by the occupation of the structure.” PM Code at PM-108.1.1. A rating of 3, 4, or 5 means the building is merely “unsafe” (id. at pp. 17–18), and:

[d]angerous to the life, health, property or safety of the public or the occupants of the structure by not providing minimum safeguards to protect or warn occupants in the event of fire, or because such structure contains unsafe equipment or is so damaged, decayed, dilapidated, structurally unsafe or of such faulty construction or unstable foundation that partial or complete collapse if possible.

PM Code at PM-108.1.1. During his March visit, Inspector Stallworth rated the Brunner Street property a 3 (unsafe), noting that bricks were loose and beginning to fall from the wall and that there was a bulge in the side load-bearing wall.2 (Doc. No. 29-3 at 34:12–23, 47:9 to 48:4, 63:22 to 64:4; Doc. No. 29-7.) Stallworth photographed the bulge (Doc. No. 29-8), and left a notice on the front door that labeled the building unsafe, gave the date of the posting, described the steps Johnson needed to take to address the issue or appeal the determination, and listed the contact information for the Department (Doc. No. 29-9 (time stamped photograph of orange notice posted to the front door of the property)).3 The March notice also stated that “IF YOU FAIL TO

2 A building qualifies for a rating of 3 if an inspector finds: a. Any building that has a suffered an interior and/or roof collapse but has the majority of its bearing walls still laterally supported and front walls are free of defects; b. Any building that has a roof collapse and is causing damage to occupied adjoining properties; or c. Any building that is situated in the middle of a row and has suffered a collapse of the roof, floor or ceiling assemblies. (Doc. No. 29-6 at p. 17.) 3 Johnson argues that many of the facts are in dispute because to support them the City cites “only the testimony of Stallworth.” (See Doc. No. 34 at ¶ 57 (“[T]he Defendants cannot assert something is undisputed fact merely based on their inspector’s testimony.”); see also id. at ¶ 30 (disputing that Stallworth posted notice on the property because “there is no evidence as to who posted the notice other than Stallworth’s testimony”).) The Court OBEY THIS ORDER THE STRUCTURE IS SUBJECT TO DEMOLITION BY THE CITY AT ANY TIME AFTER THIRTY (30) DAYS FROM THIS NOTICE.” (Id.) The next day, Stallworth opened a case for the property in CSU’s computer system, named Hansen, and another subdivision of the Department4 sent Johnson a notice of violation (NOV), telling him that the Brunner Street property had been declared “UNSAFE, in whole or in

part, pursuant to Section PM 15-108.1 of the Philadelphia Property Maintenance Code.” (Doc. No. 29-10.) Like the posted notice, the March NOV directed Johnson to get the necessary permits and address the unsafe condition — a “[b]ulged side wall with loose and falling bricks” — by either repairing or demolishing the property. (Id.) The NOV also stated that “[f]ailure to comply with this order within 30 days may result in the City taking action to demolish the structure and to stucco remaining party walls exposed by the demolition” at Johnson’s expense. (Id.) It is undisputed that Johnson never received the March NOV. The Department sends an NOV via certified mail any time a violation is reported in the system, and the NOV is sent to the

location listed in the system as the owner’s primary address. (Doc. No. 29-3 at 57:13–23, 58.) In this case, the system listed 1866 Brunner Street as Johnson’s primary address because that was the address identified in the property deed. (Id. at 14–16; Doc. No. 29-11.) Because 1866

may consider sworn deposition testimony when deciding a motion for summary judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c) (allowing the Court to consider facts established by “materials in the record, including depositions”); see also Fox Intern. Relations v. Laucius, No. 04-5877, 2009 WL 5184487, at *6 n.4 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 22, 2009) (“Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(e) allows District Courts to consider depositions in determining a motion for summary judgment.”).

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JOHNSON v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2020.