McQueen v. National Capital Housing Authority

366 A.2d 786, 1976 D.C. App. LEXIS 425
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1976
Docket9255
StatusPublished

This text of 366 A.2d 786 (McQueen v. National Capital Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McQueen v. National Capital Housing Authority, 366 A.2d 786, 1976 D.C. App. LEXIS 425 (D.C. 1976).

Opinion

*788 HYDE, Associate Judge:

This is an appeal from a ruling by the National Capital Housing Authority (NCHA) denying petitioner’s admission to a low-income homeownership program. Petitioner’s original application was turned down, but that action was reversed by a Hearing Examiner; NCHA reversed the Hearing Examiner.

On Auguest 21, 1973, petitioner Dorothy McQueen applied for admission to the Homeownership Opportunity Program D. C. 1-73 (hereinafter D.C. 1-73). The D.C. 1-73 program is administered by NCHA under a national program run by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) entitled “Low-Rent Housing Homeownership Opportunities” and is more commonly known as the Turnkey III Program (hereinafter Turnkey III). The Turnkey III program allows local housing authorities such as NCHA to provide low-income families with an opportunity to become homeowners through federal assistance taking the form of annual contributions to the various local housing authorities. D.C. 1-73 is designed to enable an individual to eventually purchase a home that he or she initially rents. NCHA acquires the housing pr.ojpct with assistance from HUD and owns all the homes until title is actually transferred to a “home buyer”.

The purchase of a home is accomplished by having the home buyer make monthly payments to NCHA which in essence constitutes rent. Each home buyer is also required to pay his or her own utilities every month and perform routine maintenance work. From this monthly payment, NCHA sets up two separate accounts for the home buyer. The first is called the Earned Home Payments Account (EHPA) 1 and the second is the Non-Routine Maintenance Reserve (NRMR). 2 A portion of each monthly payment made by the home buyer is set aside in each of these accounts. The remainder of the required monthly payment goes toward the monthly operating expenses of the project. After the home buyer’s EHPA achieves a credit of $200, the home buyer can exercise an option to buy the home he or she occupies. Until the EHPA reaches this amount, the home buyer has the status of a lessee of NCHA with an obligation to build up the necessary balance. In any event, for the purposes of convenience, the occupant is referred to as a home buyer during his status as a lessee.

The amount of a home buyer’s required monthly payment, based upon a percentage of the family’s income, is set by NCHA. The required monthly payment, plus a monthly allowance for utilities that the home buyer pays directly, has been initially set at an amount equal to 22.5% of “Family Income” as defined by NCHA. 3 Although this figure is adjustable, in no case may it exceed 25% of “Family Income.” 4

*789 The Turnkey III Program is different from an ordinary rental project in that it is a homeownership program designed to be self-liquidating. It is for this reason that the program is structured in such a way that the monthly payments made by all the families in the project must be 10% greater than the “break-even amount”. 5 However, NCHA may select home buyers whose monthly payments by themselves will be less than the break-even amount, provided the over-all average is maintained. 6 NCHA has computed the necessary average monthly payment of all the families in the project to be $90 in order to maintain financial feasibility.

The process of determining eligibility for the program involves several steps. First, the family applying must be determined to be within the maximum income level established for the program. 7 Second, a determination is made of whether the family has “potential for homeowner-ship”. In order to have “potential for homeownership” a family must be said to have sufficient income to equal the EHPA, the NRMR, and the cost of utilities from its monthly payment. Additionally, at least one member of the family must be gainfully employed or have an established source of continuing income. 8 The final step in the process is to select the actual home buyers from those said to have “potential for homeownership” because they meet the above standards.

NCHA, pursuant to HUD regulations, 9 sets forth specific dollar amounts for home buyer eligibility in its “income qualifications” statement. 10 This statement says that there is no minimum income requirement for individual acceptance into the program. The minimum monthly payment plus the monthly utility cost for each unit, which is approximately $30, is restricted by law to 25% of family income. For the purposes of this program, however, NCHA set that figure at 22.5% of family income. 11

Petitioner’s application for admission to the Homeownership Opportunities Program was denied by the NCHA Selection Committee. Mrs. McQueen’s minimum monthly payment was set at $35. In a letter dated October 15, 1973, she was told by the Selection Committee that she was not eligible for the program under federal guidelines because she was unable to meet the required minimum monthly payment of $35 from 22.5% of her net income. The letter also said that neither she nor her spouse was working and that federal regulations required that one of the adult members of the family be either gainfully employed or have an established source of continuing income.

Since March 1971, Mrs. McQueen’s sole source of income has been a monthly welfare check in the amount of $384.80. The Selection Committee calculated her net income by multiplying her monthly public assistance check of $384.80 by twelve, thereby arriving at a gross annual income of $4,617.60. This amount was then adjusted by 5% plus another $1,800 for six depend *790 ents, as required by federal law. 12 This left Mrs. McQueen with a net income of $2,586.72; 22.5% of that figure, which is the maximum NCHA felt it could charge for rent, is equal to $582.01. Dividing that figure by the twelve months of the year comes to approximately $49 per month which Mrs. McQueen had available for shelter costs. Since her utility bills were approximately $31 per month, this left only $18 with which to make the $35 monthly payment. Therefore, she was $17 short.

Until the time she applied for admission to the Turnkey III program, petitioner rented premises from a private landlord. She paid $128 a month for rent, plus utilities ranging from $20 to $24 a month, and petitioner alleges that she was never in arrears on the rent.

Mrs. McQueen also receives food stamps every month worth $218, for which she pays $107, resulting in a net benefit of $111 per month. The value of these food stamps was not considered by the Selection Committee in computing her monthly income in order to determine her eligibility for admission to Turnkey III. This is an important point which will be referred to later.

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Bluebook (online)
366 A.2d 786, 1976 D.C. App. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcqueen-v-national-capital-housing-authority-dc-1976.