Morris S. Reece v. Carson D. Combs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 13, 2021
Docket2021AP000079
StatusUnpublished

This text of Morris S. Reece v. Carson D. Combs (Morris S. Reece v. Carson D. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris S. Reece v. Carson D. Combs, (Wis. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. October 13, 2021 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2021AP79 Cir. Ct. No. 2020SC3499

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT II

MORRIS S. REECE,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

CARSON D. COMBS,

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Racine County: MICHAEL J. PIONTEK, Judge. Affirmed.

¶1 NEUBAUER, J.1 Carson D. Combs appeals from an order of the circuit court granting eviction and issuing a writ of restitution in an action filed by

1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(a) (2019-20). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted. No. 2021AP79

his landlord, Morris S. Reece. As we understand his briefing, Combs appears to argue that the circuit court lacked competency to proceed over the eviction action, violated his due process rights for various reasons, and was biased against Combs. We affirm the order of the circuit court.

BACKGROUND

¶2 The parties do not dispute the following facts pertinent to this appeal,2 which, up to the return date hearing, were summarized by the circuit court as follows:

This is an eviction action filed by [Reece] on November 16, 2020. It was filed pursuant to a 30-day notice to vacate. The complaint alleges that defendant’s one-year lease expired on September 30, 2020,[3] it has not been renewed. [Combs] refuses to vacate, refuses landlord to enter. The notice was given September 21, 2020, via certified mail, and it notifies Mr. Combs he’s to vacate by October 31, 2020, which is the last day of the rental period….

….

In his objection to the notice of termination of tenancy, [Combs] alleges that he’s under a VA HUD/VASH Housing Program Section 8 administered by HUD. He admits he was renting the upper unit of the property by virtue of a Housing Assistance Payment subsidizing his rent through the Racine County Housing Authority.

2 We note that Combs presents a number of facts in his briefing and appendix that are not part of the circuit court record. We will not include those facts in our discussion or rely on them in our analysis of the circuit court proceedings and decisions, as they are unsupported by the record before the circuit court. See Nelson v. Schreiner, 161 Wis. 2d 798, 804, 469 N.W.2d 214 (Ct. App. 1991); 4 C.J.S. Appeal and Error § 688 (2021) (collecting cases). 3 Our review of the relevant record documents indicates that the term of the original lease actually expired on August 31, 2020, one year after it was entered into, at which point the Racine County Housing Authority (RCHA) stopped making payments on Combs’s behalf pursuant to the federal Housing Assistance Program (HAP).

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In an attempt to narrow the issues for trial, the circuit court made several additional findings at the return hearing, including that the notice provided by Reece was “adequate to notify” Combs of the termination of the tenancy, that, although the parties entered into a mutual rescission of the lease in February 2020, the parties continued in a landlord-tenant relationship with Combs maintaining occupancy as a “month-to-month” holdover, that all but one of Combs’s asserted counterclaims were not properly permissible in an eviction action. The court further concluded that the only issue appropriate for trial at that point was Combs’s allegation of retaliatory eviction. The court set the matter over for a trial on the retaliation issue for later that same afternoon.

¶3 The trial proceeded as scheduled that afternoon, but, without seeking “the [c]ourt’s permission” or “explain[ing] why,” Combs did not appear for the trial. Reece was the only person to testify at trial, though the court noted that it had reviewed Combs’s lengthy “affidavit in support of his position in [the] matter.” Based on Combs’s affidavit, Reece’s testimony, and the other facts and documents in the record to that point, the court found that Combs, “with his filings, which appear … to be frivolous, ha[d] no defense to [this] eviction action.” The court further found that “based on the records, filings and proceedings, there is no question in the [c]ourt’s mind” that the unit that Combs had been renting “wasn’t placed up for sale in retaliation to anything [because] it was placed for sale months before he even began renting the property.” The court also concluded that Reece gave Combs proper thirty-day-statutory notice “in an attempt to have the premises without renters so that it [could] be sold to a prospective buyer…. [I]t was a proper termination of the tenancy, and the tenancy is terminated.” Based on these findings, “[t]he [c]ourt order[ed] an order of eviction to issue in the

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form of a writ of restitution” and set a hearing date for the parties “to assert any money damage claims that [they] may have.”

¶4 Prior to the trial on damages, Combs filed a motion in the circuit court “seeking [r]econsideration and [r]elief from the [j]udgment [o]rdering his eviction and granting a Writ of Restitution issued against him.” For the first time up to that point, Combs argued that the alleged defective notice provided to him by Reece resulted in the circuit court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction over the eviction action. Combs sought to vacate the order of eviction.

¶5 At the start of the trial on damages, the circuit court made an oral ruling denying Combs’s motion for reconsideration in its entirety. The court found that the challenge to the eviction was moot, noting that eviction was the only issue the court had decided at that point and Combs had already moved out of the apartment, but the relief sought in his reconsideration motion was to be allowed to move back into the unit, which was “moot” because Combs had moved off the premises by the time of the damages hearing. The court also denied the motion as to its purported lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court considered the evidence presented by both parties at the damages’ hearing, at which Combs did appear and testify, and found that, after giving Combs credit for his security deposit, rent paid on his behalf up until August 31, 2020, and other credits for which Combs presented documentation, Reece was entitled to money damages in the net amount of $5,302.77.

¶6 Combs appeals from the order granting eviction and issuing a writ of restitution. The notice of appeal indicates that Combs is appealing only the eviction itself and is silent as to the motion for reconsideration and the damages amount. We therefore limit our discussion below to the issues raised by Combs on

4 No. 2021AP79

appeal that challenge the eviction proceedings and the small claims procedural violations he contends the court committed. We include additional facts in the discussion as necessary to the analysis.

DISCUSSION

Combs Fails to Demonstrate that the Notice to Vacate was Legally Deficient and thus Deprived the Circuit Court of Competency to Proceed

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Bluebook (online)
Morris S. Reece v. Carson D. Combs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-s-reece-v-carson-d-combs-wisctapp-2021.