Naima Jabeen v. Camden Development, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 23, 2025
Docket0594234
StatusUnpublished

This text of Naima Jabeen v. Camden Development, Inc. (Naima Jabeen v. Camden Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Naima Jabeen v. Camden Development, Inc., (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Malveaux, White and Senior Judge Annunziata

NAIMA JABEEN MEMORANDUM OPINION* v. Record No. 0594-23-4 PER CURIAM SEPTEMBER 23, 2025 CAMDEN DEVELOPMENT, INC.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Robert J. Smith, Judge

(Naima Jabeen, on briefs), pro se. Appellant submitting on briefs.

(Anders T. Sleight; Austin C. Hinel; Offit Kurman, P.C., on brief), for appellee. Appellee submitting on brief.

Naima Jabeen appeals the circuit court’s judgment for Camden Development, Inc., in this

unlawful detainer action. Jabeen argues that the circuit court erred by: (1) admitting certain

“irrelevant and unduly prejudicial evidence at trial,” (2) entering judgment for Camden despite a

“defective” notice it would not renew her lease, and (3) entering judgment for Camden despite its

failure to provide Jabeen with a statement of tenant rights and responsibilities within the time

required by Code § 55.1-1204(H).1 Finding no error, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.2

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Code § 55.1-1204 has been amended several times since 2020. See 2020 Va. Acts chs 985, 986, 998, 1231; 2021 Va. Acts Spec. Sess. I ch. 427; 2023 Va. Acts chs. 450, 679, 706; 2024 Va. Acts ch. 831; 2025 Va. Acts chs. 554, 562, 627, 655. Unless otherwise specified, we refer to the version in effect when Camden filed its unlawful detainer action. See Code § 55.1-1204 (2022 Repl. Vol.); 2021 Va. Acts Spec. Sess. I ch. 427. 2 The parties waived argument in this case. See Code § 17.1-403(ii). BACKGROUND

Jabeen rented certain residential property from Camden under a lease which commenced in

October 2020. The premises is an “affordable dwelling unit” provided through a low-income

housing program. On April 12, 2021, Camden sent Jabeen written notice that the lease would not

renew and would terminate at the end of its term on June 27, 2021. Jabeen paid rent to Camden on

June 26, 2021, which Camden accepted with reservation of its right to evict her.

Camden filed an action for unlawful detainer in general district court on November 12,

2021, alleging that Jabeen had failed to vacate the premises. On December 1, 2021, Camden

provided Jabeen with the statement of tenant rights and responsibilities maintained by the

Department of Housing and Community Development. On December 2, 2022, the general district

court held a hearing and entered judgment for Camden, awarding it possession of the premises.3

Jabeen appealed to the circuit court for a de novo trial.

At the circuit court trial, Camden offered a copy of the lease agreement, but Jabeen

objected to the document as incomplete because it did not include an addendum about the

apartment’s status as an affordable dwelling unit. Camden acknowledged that the lease had

other parts but asserted that it was offering the incomplete lease “only to establish that there is a

landlord-tenant relationship between the parties.” The circuit court accepted the lease into

evidence.

3 In January 2022, while the unlawful detainer action was pending in general district court, Jabeen filed a complaint against Camden with the Virginia Fair Housing Office of the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation. Jabeen alleged in the complaint that she had a disability and that Camden had refused to make a reasonable accommodation for her. The general district court continued the unlawful detainer while the fair housing case was litigated. The Director of the Fair Housing Office issued a letter in November 2022 explaining that the Real Estate Board (a regulatory board within the Department, see Code §§ 54.1-2104, -2344(D)) had “determined that there is ‘No Reasonable Cause’ to believe that an unlawful discriminatory housing practice has occurred.” -2- Camden’s general manager, Marcus Mason, testified that Camden terminated the lease by

sending Jabeen the April 2021 nonrenewal notice. Jabeen objected to the notice, arguing that

Camden had relied on a different notice in its bill of particulars in general district court.4 The

circuit court overruled the objection because Camden had not filed a bill of particulars in the

circuit court.

Camden also introduced the statement of tenant rights and responsibilities that it

delivered to Jabeen on December 2, 2022. Jabeen objected to that document because Camden

had neither provided it to her within a month of the lease’s effective date, nor before filing the

unlawful detainer, as required by Code § 55.1-1204(H). The circuit court overruled the objection

because Jabeen admitted that she ultimately had received the document. Jabeen challenged the

document’s timeliness again while cross-examining Mason. The circuit court ruled, “[a]ll they

have to do is have it in there, into your hands before they get into court.” Jabeen replied, “Yes.

So it was not.” The court did not respond to that point. Jabeen then argued that Camden’s

failure to deliver the statement of tenant rights and responsibilities to her within the time required

by Code § 55.1-1204(H) invalidated the lease. The circuit court rejected that argument as

contrary to the statutory language.

Finally, Camden submitted a document entitled “reservation of rights,” which it sent to

Jabeen in July 2021, stating that it accepted her June 26, 2021 rent payment without waiving its

right to evict her. Mason testified that Camden never waived its notice to vacate, and it relied on

the April 2021 nonrenewal notice as its basis for termination of the lease.

4 In Camden’s bill of particulars in the general district court, it alleged that the lease’s regular term ended on June 27, 2021, and the lease continued on a month-to-month basis. Camden further alleged that it provided a notice of nonrenewal on September 13, 2021, which terminated the lease effective October 31, 2021. Camden did not introduce the September 13, 2021 notice at the circuit court trial or rely on it as a basis of the lease’s termination. -3- In her defense, Jabeen argued that Camden “gave a defective notice and continued to

allow [her] to stay for almost three months until [sic] the defective notice was given.” Jabeen

further asserted that under the affordable housing addendum to the lease, it could only renew for

a term of 6 to 12 months, rather than month-to-month. She did not introduce the addendum into

evidence. Jabeen also argued that Camden was evicting her in retaliation for complaints she had

made about common areas in the property. Finally, Jabeen reiterated her argument that Camden

could not maintain the unlawful detainer action because it had failed to provide her with the

statement of tenant rights and responsibilities before filing the action. The circuit court found

that Jabeen failed to prove retaliation but did not address Jabeen’s other arguments. The circuit

court entered judgment for Camden and granted it possession of the premises. Jabeen timely noted

an appeal.

Jabeen filed a proposed written statement of facts in lieu of a transcript for the trial.

Camden objected to the statement, and the circuit court entered an order rejecting Jabeen’s

proposed statement and certifying its own statement of facts instead. Upon review of the record,

we found that the statement of facts certified by the circuit court did not contain a complete and

accurate record of the proceedings. Thus, we ordered the circuit court “to provide notice to

counsel and conduct a hearing in compliance with Rule 5A:8(c) and (d),” “take any action

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