Margaret Kris v. P Dusseault Family Revocable Trust et al.

2022 DNH 035
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 23, 2022
Docket18-cv-566-LM
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 DNH 035 (Margaret Kris v. P Dusseault Family Revocable Trust et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Kris v. P Dusseault Family Revocable Trust et al., 2022 DNH 035 (D.N.H. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Margaret Kris

v. Civil No. 18-cv-566-LM Opinion No. 2022 DNH 035 P Dusseault Family Revocable Trust et al.

ORDER

Before the court is pro se plaintiff Margaret Kris’s motion for summary

judgment (doc. no. 70) on the claims remaining in this case. Defendants – the

Dusseault Family Revocable Trust of 2017 (“Trust”) and Charlene and Frances

Dusseault (“Dusseaults”) – have filed an objection (doc. no. 71). Kris filed a reply

(doc. no. 72).

BACKGROUND1

I. Lease, Complaints, Eviction, and Consequences

This case arises from Kris’s rental of—and eviction from—an apartment in

Manchester, New Hampshire, in a building owned and managed by defendants.

Kris signed the lease and began living in the apartment in September 2017. She

was evicted less than a year later, in June 2018, when defendants obtained a writ of

possession. For the duration of Kris’s tenancy, the U.S. Department of Housing and

1 The background facts summarized in this order are undisputed, except as

otherwise indicated. Urban Development (“HUD”) subsidized her rent through the Section 8 voucher

program, administered by the Manchester Housing and Redevelopment Authority

(“MHRA”).2 Kris filed complaints against defendants to the MHRA, and she claims

that defendants retaliated against her by evicting her and subjecting her to other

adverse actions, in violation of her rights under the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”).

Kris lives with disabilities, including a hearing impairment, breathing issues

(chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (“COPD”)), and mental health issues. When

she lived in defendants’ building, Kris kept a cat for emotional support.

At different times in 2017 and 2018, Kris sent texts to Frances Dusseault

and/or her adult daughters Charlene and Joanne, concerning the rent, the condition

of the apartment, and other building issues. She also corresponded with staff at the

MHRA. Relevantly, Kris submitted a “reasonable accommodation” request form to

the MHRA in October 2017, stating that she was concerned that the apartment

might need bedbug extermination, and that chemical exposure could affect her

COPD and harm her support animal (her cat). Doc. no. 1-1, at 38.

Next, on December 11, 2017, Kris wrote a letter to the MHRA about a lack of

heat, inadequate snow and ice removal, the behavior of other tenants, and the

2 “Under the Section 8 Federal Housing Choice Voucher Program . . . HUD

provides housing assistance funding to state and local public housing authorities, which in turn administer the Program at the local level by making rent subsidy payments to landlords on behalf of participating tenants.” DeCambre v. Brookline Hous. Auth., 826 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 2016) (citing 24 C.F.R. § 982.1(a)(1)–(2)).

2 number of people collecting her rent. Doc. no. 1-1, at 39. That same day,3 after Kris

had complained about the lack of heat, the Dusseaults came to see Kris in her

apartment, without providing a full day’s notice of their visit. See doc. no. 1-2 at 33;

doc. no. 70, at 2-3. Shouting ensued.

The specifics of that interaction are disputed. Kris alleges that the

Dusseaults “admonished” her for reporting them to the MHRA and “verbally

assault[ed]” her. See doc. no. 1-2 at 33; doc. no. 70, at 2. In addition, she asserts

that Frances Dusseault “dug her nails” into Kris’s arm and pushed Kris’s arm away,

as Kris approached her while carrying a cup to a nearby sink. See doc. no. 1-2, at

33; doc. no. 70, at 2.

The Dusseaults assert that when they went to the apartment after receiving

notice of a lack of heat, Kris became confrontational and aggressive. The

Dusseaults deny that any assault or coercion occurred. Doc. no. 36.

A few weeks later, in early January 2018, Kris wrote a letter to the MHRA

stating that the Dusseaults were not providing adequate notice of snow removal

because they were relying on the snowplow’s horn to alert tenants that they needed

to move their cars out of the driveway. Kris explained that the deafness in her left

3 This court previously gleaned from the record before it when it ruled on

defendants’ motion to dismiss, that the incident in Kris’s kitchen occurred in January 2018. For purposes of ruling on her motion for summary judgment, the court accepts as undisputed Kris’s statement in her summary judgment papers that the incident occurred on December 11, 2017, the same day she wrote the letter to the MHRA complaining about the heat and other building issues.

3 ear made it hard to hear the horn. See doc. no. 1-1, at 45; see also doc. no. 1-2, at

16.

Defendants have made an offer of proof that the snowplow operator was not

acting at their direction in honking the horn to announce the plow’s arrival.4 See

doc. no. 73, at 2. Further, defendants have asserted that:

Charlene Dusseault will deny that the Defendants had any knowledge regarding the Plaintiff’s complaint to the MHRA regarding a hearing impairment in connection with snow plowing activities . . . .

Id.

Kris has asserted that, after “[Frances] put her hands on me,” the Dusseaults

stopped responding to her maintenance requests. Doc. no. 1-1 at 31, 40. On

February 1, Kris began to withhold rent. In a text to Joanne Dusseault, a week

later, see doc. no. 1-2, at 19, Kris said she would withhold rent until issues she had

raised concerning other tenants and sublessees were addressed. The next month,

Kris sent a letter to the MHRA stating that she would not pay the rent until

building issues were addressed, repairs were made, and she received contact

information for the Dusseaults’ attorney. Doc. no. 1-1 at 31, 40.

In late February, the Trust notified Kris in writing of its intent to seek her

eviction and a writ of possession if she did not abandon the premises by March 1.

See doc. no. 1-2, at 26. On March 2, when Kris did not move out, the Trust, through

4 A “Winter Plowing Notice,” dated December 16, 2017, states that shoveling

and plowing contractors had been hired, and that tenants must move their cars away from walks, steps, and the driveway during “plowable snowstorms of 3 inches or more.” Doc. no. 1-1, at 44.

4 its attorney, filed an eviction proceeding in the N.H. Circuit Court, 9th Circuit,

District Division (“Manchester District Court”), seeking a writ of possession under

N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) 540:13, for nonpayment of rent. See Dusseault Fam.

Rev. Tr. of 2017 v. Kris, No. 456-2018-LT-00234 (Manchester District Court); see

also doc. no. 70, at 18.

Anticipating her eviction, Kris obtained an FHA Discrimination Complaint

from the MHRA and mailed it to HUD’s Boston office in late March. Doc. no. 1-1 at

17. She checked boxes on the form indicating that she had suffered discrimination

on multiple bases, including her disabilities. She further claimed she had been

evicted because she withheld rent for repairs, and that her landlord verbally and

physically assaulted her, and failed to respond to her maintenance requests.5 In

response, HUD issued a “Determination of No Valid Issues” letter to Kris, stating

that, after an inquiry, the agency had concluded that her claims were not covered by

the FHA, and that her case had been closed. See doc. no.

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