Rice v. City and County of San Francisco

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJanuary 13, 2023
Docket3:19-cv-04250
StatusUnknown

This text of Rice v. City and County of San Francisco (Rice v. City and County of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. City and County of San Francisco, (N.D. Cal. 2023).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 San Francisco Division 11 ALLISON BARTON RICE, Case No. 19-cv-04250-LB ORDER DENYING THE CCSF 12 Plaintiff, SUMMARY JUDGMENT, GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO THE 13 v. INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANTS, AND GRANTING THE PLAINTIFF 14 CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS FRANCISCO, et al., FOR FOUR DEFENSES 15 Defendants. Re: ECF Nos. 132, 135 16 17 INTRODUCTION 18 The narrow issue at summary judgment is whether there are triable issues of fact about 19 whether the City and County of San Francisco (CCSF) violated the Fair Housing Act when it 20 denied the plaintiff’s request to have a rent-paying roommate in his below-market-rate 21 condominium. The purchase agreement allowed leasing only with the CCSF’s written permission. 22 The CCSF denied him permission. Triable issues of fact exist about whether the CCSF understood 23 the request to be for a paying roommate and whether the accommodation was necessary or 24 reasonable. The court denies the CCSF summary judgment (but grants the unopposed motion for 25 summary judgment in favor of the individual defendants). 26 The court also grants the plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings on the CCSF’s 27 equitable defenses of good faith, unclean hands, proper conduct, and acting in good faith. 1 STATEMENT 2 1. The Denial of a Rent-Paying Roommate 3 The plaintiff bought a below-market-rate condominium in San Francisco in 2004 through a 4 program administered by the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency. The purchase agreement 5 contained the terms of purchase and restrictions, including a requirement that he could not lease 6 any part of the condominium without the agency’s written consent.1 From 2004 until 2009, the 7 plaintiff — a former Naval Service member who has been diagnosed with a one-hundred-percent 8 disability rating for his service-connected depression and paranoid schizophrenia — lived there 9 alone.2 He was “overwhelmingly lonely” and “felt that having a roommate would be good for his 10 psychological well-being.” “[H]e came to this conclusion because, in the past, it had a significant 11 positive impact on his mental health and interpersonal skills.”3 12 Because he wanted a roommate to help him maintain his mental health, in late 2008 or early 13 2009, the plaintiff called Edith Horner, an employee of the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency, 14 who told him over the phone — but not in writing — that he could have a roommate. He did not 15 ask her whether he could charge the roommate rent “because he believed that [rent] was inherent 16 in the definition of the word [roommate]” and below-market-rate homeowners need to obtain 17 permission for a roommate only when that roommate will be paying rent.4 As part of that process, 18 he told Ms. Horner and her supervisor David Sobel that he wanted to divide the one bedroom into 19 two, and after they told him that it was “copacetic,” he secured the necessary approval from the 20 building department and finished the partition in August 2009.5 21

22 1 Letter from C. Yin to A. Rice, Ex. 12 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-13 at 2; Condominium Agreement, Ex. 4 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-5 at 6 (§ 6.1). Citations refer to material in the 23 Electronic Case File (ECF); pinpoint citations are to the ECF-generated page numbers at the top of documents and, for depositions, to the page and line numbers. 24 2 Pl.’s Resps. to Defs.’ 1st Set of Interrogs., Ex. 2 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-3 at 7–8; Lines 25 Report, Ex. 3 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 144-4 at 9–10 (¶ 33). 3 Lines Report, Ex. 3 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 144-4 at 9–10 (¶ 33). 26 4 Pl.’s Resps. to Defs.’ 1st Set of Interrogs., Ex. 2 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-3 at 8; Rice Dep., Ex. 27 B to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 133-4 at 3–4 (pp. 155:22–158:10). 5 Rice Dep., Ex. A to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 133-3 at 5 (pp. 69:1–71:10), 6 (p. 73:2–21), 8 (p. 94:9– 1 In September 2009, the plaintiff’s first rent-paying roommate moved in.6 From then until 2 October 31, 2017, the plaintiff had rent-paying roommates most of the time.7 3 In March 2016, he reviewed his condominium agreement and realized that it required written 4 consent to lease any portion of the condominium. He tried to obtain written consent that month: he 5 emailed Ms. Horner explaining the issue and asking for written confirmation, but she did not 6 respond. In September 2017, his primary-care physician at the VA (Dr. Alison Ludwig) sent a 7 letter to the agency recommending approval of his request for a roommate.8 (In her deposition, Dr. 8 Ludwig testified that by “roommate,” she meant a rent-paying roommate.9) On October 19 and 22, 9 2017, the plaintiff emailed Sandra Gates-Anderson and Cissy Yin at the agency, included his 10 earlier emails and Dr. Ludwig’s letter, and described Ms. Horner’s earlier verbal approval (in 2008 11 or 2009) of his request for a roommate.10 In the October 22 email, he said that the written-consent 12 requirement in the Agreement “absolutely escaped [his] attention and memory,” the agency did 13 not respond to his prior emails, he reasonably relied on Ms. Horner (given his many contacts with 14 her, his principal contact at the agency), and his failure to obtain written consent for the roommate 15 was an honest mistake by an honest person. He asked the agency to honor Ms. Horner’s previous 16 verbal permission.11 Ms. Gates-Anderson responded that the information had been forwarded to 17 the agency’s compliance department because “they now have the file.”12 18 On October 26, 2017, Ms. Yin responded in a letter as follows: 19 As a part of the Program, the Agency and you entered into a Declaration of Resale Restrictions and Option to Purchase Agreement (“Declaration of Restrictions”) 20 21 6 Rice Dep., Ex. A to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 133-3 at 8 (pp. 94:15–95:4). 22 7 Pl.’s Resps. to Defs.’ 1st Set of Interrogs., Ex. 2 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-3 at 34–35. 23 8 Id. at 8; Rice Dep., Ex. B to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 133-4 at 4–6 (pp. 158:11–167:1); Email String, Ex. O to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 132-16 at 3; Letter from A. Ludwig, Ex. P to Murphy Decl. – ECF 24 No. 132-17. 25 9 Ludwig Dep., Ex. F to Murphy Decl. – ECF No. 133-5 at 5 (p. 60:7–13); Ludwig Dep., Ex. 11 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 144-6 at 4 (pp. 54:19–55:11). 26 10 Email String, Ex. 7 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-8; Email String, Ex. 8 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-9 at 12–17. 27 11 Email String, Ex. 8 to Fisher Decl. – ECF No. 145-9 at 12–17. dated September 23, 2004, and recorded on October 25, 2004, as document number 1 2004-H838555-00. Pursuant to Section 6.1 of the Declaration of [Restrictions], you 2 are required to occupy the Property as your principal residence and prohibited from “leasing the Property, or any portion thereof, without the Agency’s prior written 3 consent”. It has been brought to MOHCD’s attention that you have been leasing out the Property and collecting rents without MOHCD’s prior written consent. 4 Although you may have received verbal approval by the Agency to have a roommate, there is no record that the Agency approved you leasing out your 5 Property. This unapproved lease of the Property is a direct violation of the 6 covenants and restrictions in the [Declaration] of Restrictions (“Default”) and constitutes an Event of Default as described in Section 11.l(b) of the Declaration of 7 Restrictions. 8 We have received the September 19, 2017 letter provided by your primary care physician. You may have roommates, without charging rents. You may travel as 9 long as you continue to live in the Property as your primary residence. Primary residence is defined in Section 4 (aa) of the Declaration of Restrictions, which 10 requires you to reside at the Property for at least ten (10) months out of each 11 calendar year.

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Rice v. City and County of San Francisco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-city-and-county-of-san-francisco-cand-2023.