Karen Cohen v. David Clark and 2800-1 LLC

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 30, 2020
Docket18-2173
StatusPublished

This text of Karen Cohen v. David Clark and 2800-1 LLC (Karen Cohen v. David Clark and 2800-1 LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karen Cohen v. David Clark and 2800-1 LLC, (iowa 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 18–2173

Filed June 30, 2020

KAREN COHEN,

Appellant,

vs.

DAVID CLARK and 2800-1 LLC,

Appellees.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Chad

Kepros, Judge.

A tenant appeals a district court ruling dismissing her claims

against her landlord and a neighboring tenant stemming from the

landlord’s waiver of its no-pets provision in the lease to accommodate the

neighboring tenant’s emotional support animal. REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

Christopher Warnock of The Tenants’ Project, Iowa City, for

appellant.

Amy L. Evenson of Larson & Evenson, Iowa City, for appellee David

Clark.

Erek P. Sittig of Holland, Michael, Raiber & Sittig, PLC, Iowa City, for appellee 2800-1 LLC. 2 CHRISTENSEN, Chief Justice. This case involves a tenant with pet allergies who moved into an

apartment building due to its no-pets policy, a neighboring tenant who

sought a waiver of the no-pets policy for his emotional support dog, and a

landlord in a pickle trying to accommodate both of them. In an attempt to

please both parties, the landlord allowed the emotional support dog on the

premises while requiring the two tenants to use different stairways and

providing an air purifier for the tenant with pet allergies. These measures

failed to prevent the tenant from suffering allergic attacks. She sued the

landlord and her neighboring tenant in small claims court for breach of

the lease’s no-pets provision and interference with the quiet enjoyment of

her apartment. As a defense, the landlord asserted that its waiver of the

no-pets policy was a reasonable accommodation that it had no choice but

to grant under the Iowa Civil Rights Act (ICRA).

The small claims court dismissed the case, concluding the landlord’s

accommodations were reasonable. On appeal to the district court, the

district court concluded the landlord should have denied the emotional

support dog request due to the other tenant’s pet allergies but dismissed

the case due to the uncertainty of the law governing reasonable

accommodations for emotional support animals. Both tenants filed applications for discretionary review, and the landlord filed a consent to

discretionary review. We granted discretionary review and retained the

appeal.

Under our highly fact-specific inquiry that balances the parties’

needs, we conclude the landlord’s accommodation of the emotional

support dog was not reasonable because the tenant with pet allergies had

priority in time and the dog’s presence posed a direct threat to her health. We also conclude that the tenant suffering allergic attacks was entitled to 3

recover on her claims of breach of lease and breach of the covenant of quiet

enjoyment and remand for an award of her requested damages of one

month’s rent. To be clear, our holding today is based on the specific facts

of this case. Our balancing in this case is not a one-size-fits-all test that

will create the same result under different circumstances, such as when

the animal at issue is a service animal for a visually disabled person.

Nevertheless, the fact that the tenant with allergies was first in time and

the dog posed a direct threat to her health tips the balance in her favor in

this case. Thus, we reverse the district court’s dismissal. I. Factual and Procedural Background.

Karen Cohen has a medically documented severe allergy to pet

dander that causes nasal congestion, swollen sinuses, excess coughing,

and, at times, a swollen throat. Her allergic reaction is more severe when

she is exposed to cats, compared to dogs, requiring her to carry an EpiPen

to protect against anaphylactic shock if she is exposed to cat dander.

Cohen’s allergy to cats used to be the same as her allergy to dogs but

progressed through repeated exposure, and she worried that her allergy to

dogs would similarly progress if she were repeatedly exposed to their

dander.

Due to her severe pet allergies, Cohen sought an apartment building

that did not allow pets. On November 11, 2015, she entered into a written

lease agreement to rent an apartment from 2800-1 LLC at a rent of $1464

per month in Iowa City for the term of July 21, 2016 to July 12, 2017. In

deciding to enter a lease agreement with 2800-1 LLC, Cohen relied upon

section 53 of the written agreement, which states,

No pets are allowed in the building or on the Premises at any time. Tenants may be assessed labor cleanup charges (if applicable) for each violation. Tenants agree to an increase in the rental deposit up to the maximum allowed by law in the 4 events of non-compliance with pet prohibitions. Reasonable accommodations accepted.

On January 18, 2016, approximately two months after Cohen

entered into her lease, David Clark entered into a written lease agreement

with 2800-1 LLC to rent an apartment down the hall from Cohen’s for the

term of July 21, 2016 to July 12, 2017. Clark’s lease contained the same

no-pets provision as Cohen’s lease. After Clark’s and Cohen’s leases

began, Clark presented 2800-1 LLC with a letter from his psychiatrist on

or around August 23, which explained Clark’s chronic mental illness

causing “impairment in his ability to function.” The psychiatrist noted,

Research has shown that pets are therapeutic and beneficial to physical and mental health. In my professional opinion, owning and caring for a dog would benefit his health and well- being. Please allow David to include a pet on his lease.

Clark requested a reasonable accommodation to have his emotional

support animal (ESA), a dog, with him on the apartment premises.

Jeffrey Clark (no relationship to plaintiff), the leasing and property

manager, notified the other tenants in the building of the request to

accommodate the ESA and inquired about whether any tenant had

allergies to dogs. Cohen responded, detailing her allergies to cats and dogs

and the symptoms associated with those allergies. After receiving Cohen’s

response, Jeffrey contacted the Iowa Civil Rights Commission (ICRC) and requested the ICRC’s review or a formal agency determination even though

no party ever filed a complaint. Jeffrey explained to the ICRC employee

over the phone that 2800-1 LLC had apartments in other buildings

available that allowed pets and could accommodate Clark’s request by

renting him a different apartment in a different building. The ICRC staffer

advised Jeffrey that moving Clark to another building was not a reasonable accommodation and informed Jeffrey that he had to try to reasonably

accommodate both Cohen’s allergies and Clark’s ESA rather than deny 5

Clark’s ESA request. There was no finding by the ICRC that allowing

Clark’s ESA in the building despite Cohen’s allergic reactions would be a

reasonable accommodation.

2800-1 LLC allowed Clark to have his ESA join him on the

apartment premises while trying to mitigate Cohen’s allergies. In doing so,

2800-1 LLC had Cohen and Clark use separate assigned stairwells in an

effort to keep Cohen free of the ESA’s dander. 2800-1 LLC also purchased

an air purifier for Cohen’s apartment to minimize her exposure to pet

dander inside the apartment. 2800-1 LLC explored installing “air lock” doors on each of the four floors of the apartment building to reduce the

amount of air infiltration but ultimately decided it was not financially

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