McInnis v. Veterans Village

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-00127
StatusUnknown

This text of McInnis v. Veterans Village (McInnis v. Veterans Village) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McInnis v. Veterans Village, (N.D. Ind. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION

GREGORY MCINNIS, ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) CAUSE NO.: 2:21-CV-127-JPK ) VETERAN’S VILLAGE and CITY OF ) HOBART, INDIANA, ) Defendants. )

OPINION AND ORDER

This matter is before the Court on motions to dismiss Plaintiff Gregory McInnis’s amended complaint, filed by Defendant Veterans Village [DE 37] and Defendant City of Hobart, Indiana (the “City”) [DE 39]. Veterans Village also requests that the Court strike the complaint. On March 17, 2022, then-presiding judge Philip P. Simon1 dismissed McInnis’s prior complaint and granted McInnis leave to file this amended complaint. Defendants now argue that the amended complaint does not state a legal claim against them. McInnis filed a response [DE 45], which the Court accepts as timely filed because it was postmarked before McInnis’s revised deadline to respond. [See DE 44, 45-1]. At the outset, the Court notes that affordable housing for disabled veterans is quite literally the least we can provide for those who served and are disabled. The dispute here does not center around whether McInnis qualifies as a disabled veteran. It seems apparent from the filings that he earned that status, and therefore lived at Veterans Village. What also seems more or less undisputed is that Veterans Village did not feel that McInnis was living up to the terms under which he resided in their housing, and sought eviction. Generally speaking, and as discussed

1 The parties consented to have this case assigned to a United States Magistrate Judge to conduct all further proceedings. [DE 41]. further below, this Court is not the proper place to challenge that eviction. As Judge Simon said in ruling on the initial motions to dismiss in this case: State court is the venue to challenge the eviction, even though McInnis tried to prevent the eviction by invoking an order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”). [See DE 33 at 7-8]. For the reasons described below,

the motions to dismiss are granted. BACKGROUND For purposes of the motions to dismiss, the Court considers the facts in the light most favorable to McInnis, accepting as true all well-pleaded facts alleged, and drawing all plausible inferences in his favor. Jackson v. Blitt & Gaines, P.C., 833 F.3d 860, 862 (7th Cir. 2016). The Court considers the body of McInnis’s amended complaint as well as the attached exhibits. See Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 10(c); Williamson v. Curran, 714 F.3d 432, 436 (7th Cir. 2013) (on a motion to dismiss, “a court may consider, in addition to the allegations set forth in the complaint itself, documents that are attached to the complaint”). The Court also takes judicial notice of the docket in NWI Veterans Village, LP v. Gregory McInnis, 45H05-2101-EV-000014 (filed Jan. 12, 2021),

the eviction case in the Hobart City Court that gives rise to this lawsuit. See Fed. R. Evid. 201(b); Guaranty Bank v. Chubb Corp., 538 F.3d 587, 591 (7th Cir. 2008) (a court may take judicial notice of judicial proceedings). The Court does not assume the truth of any statements contained within the court filings, only of the fact “that those documents exist [and that] they say what they say.” Our Country Home Enters. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 855 F.3d 773, 782 n.1 (7th Cir. 2017). The complaint alleges as follows: McInnis lived at Veterans Village, a housing complex in Gary, Indiana, catering to disabled veterans. On February 8, 2021, McInnis received a summons to the Hobart City Court, because Veterans Village was seeking to evict him for failing to pay rent. He requested an “audit” of his rent, which resulted in Veterans Village crediting him with four months of back rent. Veterans Village continued to pursue eviction proceedings, arguing that McInnis still owed back rent. Presented with these facts, the Hobart City Court “denied the audit stating [that] as long as some rent was owed the eviction proceedings would continue.” [DE 36 at 1-2].

During the eviction proceedings, McInnis presented a sworn declaration that he was seeking federal housing assistance and had made partial rent payments to the best of his ability. McInnis believed that his declaration entitled him to a stay of eviction based on the federal moratorium on evictions in effect at that time.2 However, the Hobart City Court “subjectively determined that Plaintiff had not lived up to the declaration,” and ultimately granted an order for possession of the property to Veterans Village. [Id. at 2]. On April 16, 2021, Officer J. Hayes of the Hobart Police Department appeared at Veterans Village to carry out the eviction. Hayes told McInnis that he had to vacate immediately. McInnis alleges: “[A]n issue arose as to whether [McInnis] had time to gather certain medications . . . Because of the slowness of [McInnis] in gathering all medication necessary, and because the

locksmith had changed the lock within less than seven minutes, Officer Hayes stated that time was up and placed [McInnis] under arrest.” [Id. at 2]. McInnis was taken to the Hobart jail, where he fell ill “with what was believed to be a heart attack.” After “numerous requests for medical treatment,” he was taken by ambulance to a hospital. [DE 36 at 2-3]. Medical records from the hospital indicate that he was treated for “chest pain, unspecified.” [DE 36-1 at 13-15]. After several hours at the hospital, he was given back to the

2 The Court infers, as Judge Simon did, that McInnis is referring to the CDC’s September 4, 2020 order titled “Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions to Prevent the Further Spread of COVID-19.” 85 FR 55292-01, 2020 WL 5253768 (F.R.). Under that order, certain tenants who provided “an executed copy of the Declaration form . . . to their landlord” could not be evicted from a residential property through December 31, 2020, for failure to pay rent. Id. at 55292-93. Hobart police. The police drove McInnis back to the Hobart police station, released him with no explanation, and refused to give him a ride back to Gary. [DE 36 at 3]. Roughly six weeks later, on May 28, 2021, Officer Hayes signed an affidavit of probable cause stating that he arrested McInnis because McInnis had refused to leave the property unless he was arrested. [DE 36-1 at 3].3 On June 4, 2021, McInnis was summoned to appear before the Lake County Superior Court

for arraignment on a charge of misdemeanor criminal trespass. [DE 36 at 3]. In terms of damages, McInnis alleges he “suffered a heart attack resulting in pain, suffering and duress beginning on April 16, 2021 [the day of the eviction] and continuing today.” McInnis also seeks the return of his belongings from his former apartment, and a stolen car. McInnis states that the car was “confiscated” at Veterans Village, and the Village “refuses to divulge its location.” [Id. at 4]. McInnis reported the car as stolen from the Village parking lot on June 11 or 12, 2021, roughly two months after his eviction. [DE 36-1 at 8-9, 17]. Judge Simon addressed many of these allegations in his opinion dismissing the prior complaint. He explained that the CDC’s moratorium on evictions does not provide a private right

of action, and therefore does not entitle McInnis to relitigate the order of possession in federal court. [DE 33 at 7-8]. As for McInnis’s removal from the apartment, Judge Simon found that while the prior complaint “hinted at” a potential Fourth Amendment violation, it did not set forth facts

3 McInnis attached Hayes’s probable cause affidavit to his complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
McInnis v. Veterans Village, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcinnis-v-veterans-village-innd-2023.