New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 2026
Docket24CA012184
StatusPublished

This text of New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson (New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson, (Ohio Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

[Cite as New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson, 2026-Ohio-2232.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF LORAIN )

NEW SUNRISE PROPERTIES, INC. C.A. No. 24CA012184

Appellee

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE LILLIAN ROBERTSON COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF LORAIN, OHIO Appellant CASE No. 23CV209802

v.

THE MENTAL HEALTH AND RECOVERY SERVICES BOARD OF LORAIN COUNTY

Defendant

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: June 15, 2026

STEVENSON, Judge.

{¶1} Appellant Lillian Robertson appeals a judgment of the Lorain County Court of

Common Pleas granting the motion for summary judgment of New Sunrise Properties, Inc. (“New

Sunrise”). This Court affirms.

I.

{¶2} New Sunrise is the owner of apartment units, and it houses tenants that receive

subsidized housing under a federally funded Shelter Care Plus Program (“Shelter Plus”). Shelter

Plus provides housing assistance to individuals deemed chronically homeless and disabled. It is 2

funded by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”). HUD

directs Shelter Plus funding to the Lorain County Mental Health and Recovery Services Board (the

“MHARS Board”), who then directs the funds to New Sunrise pursuant to a Housing Assistance

Payment (“HAP”) contract. New Sunrise applies the subsidy to the rent of those tenants who are

Shelter Plus recipients.

{¶3} Ms. Robertson qualified for the Shelter Plus program and signed a one-year lease

to reside in a New Sunrise apartment on November 3, 2020. Ms. Robertson was required under

the lease to annually apply for recertification to continue receiving the Shetler Plus subsidy in the

next rental year. A recertification is an “[a]nnual [r]eview of family income, expenses, assets and

composition.” Ms. Robertson recertified in October 2021, and she continued to receive the Shelter

Plus subsidy for the 2021-2022 rental year.

{¶4} New Sunrise sent Ms. Robertson written recertification notices as the subsidy

renewal date approached in 2022. It sent renewal notices on July 6, 2022, August 11, 2022, and

September 30, 2022. Ms. Robertson recalls receiving recertification notices in 2022. She contends

that she never received the July 6, 2022, notice but admits that she received the August 11, 2022,

notice and that she “tried to recertify but [] couldn’t get a ride from anyone[.]” The August 11,

2022, notice scheduled a meeting for September 6, 2022, to process Ms. Robertson’s

recertification.

{¶5} Ms. Robertson also admits that she received the September 30, 2022, final notice

from New Sunrise. New Sunrise informed Ms. Robertson in the final notice that her Shelter Plus

subsidy “is set to expire 10/31/22” and that, despite “multiple letters[,]” speaking “verbally on

multiple occasions[,]” “arrang[ing] transportation[,]” and going “to [her] home in an effort to get

[her] to comply” with recertification, she has “refused to cooperate.” The final notice stated that 3

“[c]ooperation with the recertification is a condition of continued program participation.” The

notice gave Ms. Robertson a chance to “immediately submit [her] income sources and sign the

required paperwork” and it informed her that, if she failed to do so, her subsidy would terminate

“effective November 1, 2022 and you will be responsible for the full market rate rent on that unit

which is $732.00.” The final notice included a phone number for Ms. Robertson to call and discuss

the matter. Ms. Robertson did not respond to the final notice, and she was no longer a Shelter Plus

recipient as of November 1, 2022.

{¶6} Lindsay Kochheiser is the Shelter Plus manager at New Sunrise who sent the

recertification notices to Ms. Robertson. Ms. Kochheiser testified that, because Ms. Robertson

“had failed to appear at several appointments that were made for her Shelter Plus Care

recertification[,]” she went to Ms. Robertson’s apartment in October, 2022, “with [Ms.

Robertson’s] case worker in an attempt to get her to sign [the recertification] paperwork[.]” She

testified that she had all of the necessary paperwork with her at the visit and that Ms. Robertson

“failed to cooperate.” Ms. Robertson does not dispute that a caseworker came to her apartment to

address her subsidy recertification.

{¶7} There is no dispute that Ms. Robertson did not complete the recertification process

by the deadline for the 2022-2023 rental year and that she lost her Shelter Plus subsidy. Mindy

Wright, the Manager of Housing and Compliance at New Sunrise, explained that Ms. Robertson

was “no longer a [Shelter Plus] participant” when she failed to “comply with the program” by

recertifying. Ms. Wright notified Ms. Robertson in an October 26, 2022, letter that, effective

November 1, 2022, she would “be responsible for the full rent in the amount of $732” because she

had failed to recertify her Shelter Plus subsidy. Ms. Robertson continued living in the apartment

without making any rental payments. 4

{¶8} New Sunrise filed an eviction action against Ms. Robertson for non-payment of rent

in December 2022. New Sunrise later dismissed this first eviction action without prejudice.

{¶9} Counsel for Ms. Robertson sent New Sunrise a reasonable accommodation letter

on February 3, 2023, wherein she requested that she complete her Shelter Plus recertification. Ms.

Robertson did not submit any medical documentation in support of her reasonable accommodation

request. She also sent a reasonable accommodation letter to the MHARS Board.

{¶10} New Sunrise responded to Ms. Robertson’s reasonable accommodation request on

March 2, 2023, stating that recertification is a Shelter Plus requirement. New Sunrise explained

that Shelter Plus is administered by the MHARS Board and that, “[a]s such, the determination as

to whether [she] will be permitted to complete her recertification late or to reinstate retroactively

is not a rule or policy that New Sunrise can alter or change.” It informed Ms. Robertson that it

would “engage in the interactive process” and “will complete any recertification forms required

by the Shelter Care Plus Program and submit the same to the MHARS Board to determine if a

recertification is warranted.” New Sunrise stated that “[i]f [the] MHARS Board determines that

the subsidy will be retroactively reinstated, [it] will accept the payments[.]”

{¶11} The MHARS Board denied Ms. Robertson’s reasonable accommodation request on

March 9, 2023. It stated that “Ms. Robertson did not adhere to her responsibilities for

recertification, and therefore her subsidy has expired” and it “consider[ed] [the] matter closed.”

Ms. Robertson appealed the decision of the MHARS Board, and the trial court dismissed the

appeal. This Court reversed the judgment of the trial court on the basis that it had not determined

whether the October 26, 2022, notice of lease termination was a final order under R.C. 2506.01(A).

Robertson v. Mental Health, Addiction, and Recovery Servs. Bd. of Lorain Cty., 2025-Ohio-224,

¶ 9 (9th Dist.). 5

{¶12} New Sunrise served Ms. Robertson with a “THIRTY (30) DAY TERMINATION

NOTICE” for “NON-PAYMENT OF RENT” on April 14, 2023. This notice informed Ms.

Robertson that she had “defaulted in payment of rent and/or damages . . . under [her] Lease/Rental

Agreement” and that $4,392.00 was due. Ms. Robertson was informed that she had “ten (10) days

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New Sunrise Properties v. Robertson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-sunrise-properties-v-robertson-ohioctapp-2026.