Seales v. Boston Housing Authority

40 N.E.3d 1046, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 643
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 16, 2015
DocketAC 14-P-1551
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 N.E.3d 1046 (Seales v. Boston Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seales v. Boston Housing Authority, 40 N.E.3d 1046, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 643 (Mass. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Meade, J.

Tina Seales is a participant in the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Housing Choice Voucher Program, commonly referred to as “Section 8.” The program is administered by the Boston Housing Authority (BHA) pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1437f (2012), and related HUD regulations. In August of 2013, Seales received notice that the BHA proposed to terminate her participation in the program due to serious or repeated violation of her lease. Seales appealed the proposed termination. Following an informal hearing, a hearing officer, by a decision dated January 2, 2014, upheld the termina *644 tion of Seales’s Section 8 housing subsidy. Thereafter, Seales successfully sought relief in the nature of certiorari under G. L. c. 249, § 4, in the Housing Court. On appeal from that judgment, the BHA claims that the judge erred in determining that the hearing officer improperly found that criminal or illegal activity occurred on the rental premises that constituted a serious violation of Seales’s Section 8 lease. We reverse.

Background. Seales resided at 25 Drayton Avenue in the Dor-chester section of Boston. She was a participant in the BHA’s Section 8 program and had been receiving Section 8 housing benefits for approximately fifteen years. Seales lived with her three children, then ages sixteen, seventeen, and nineteen. In August of 2013, Seales received notice that the BHA proposed to terminate her participation in the program due to a family member having engaged in drug-related activity and serious or repeated violation of her lease. 1 The BHA based its allegations on a Boston police incident report, a leased housing recertification questionnaire, family obligations, and the lease itself.

1. The incident report. According to the Boston police incident report, on July 9, 2013, Officers Femino, McGrath, and Bernier saw an individual leave 25 Drayton Avenue wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and dark-colored jeans and carrying a white T-shirt. The individual was later identified as Gavin Compass. As soon as Compass noticed the officers in their unmarked cruiser, he “clutched at his waist,” turned, and sprinted back into the front door and into the common hallway of 25 Drayton Avenue. Based on “key indicators” of Compass’s behavior, and their training and experience, 2 the officers believed that Compass was in possession of a firearm.

After Compass turned and sprinted up the stairs of the building, Officers Femino and Bernier got out of the unmarked cruiser and pursued Compass into the building. Once inside, the officers saw a discarded white T-shirt and a black firearm on the stairs of the common hallway. The firearm was a Ruger LCP loaded with three rounds of ammunition. The officers spoke with the residents of the other two apartments in the building, received their permission to search their apartments, and determined that Compass was not in those apartments. The officers went to Seales’s apart *645 ment, where a nearby witness told them that Compass had indeed run inside Seales’s apartment. The officers announced themselves to those inside, received no response, and made a forced entry. Inside they discovered a shirtless Compass; Seales’s nineteen year old daughter, Shurlynn; and another person, Keonte Campbell. One of Seales’s minor sons was also in the apartment. The black hooded sweatshirt was located in a rear bedroom. Compass was arrested.

During a protective sweep of the residence, Sergeant Teahan located “5 individual [plastic bags] of off white rock like substance believed to be crack cocaine and 2 [plastic bags] of green leafy substance believed to be marijuana.” As a result, police arrested Shurlynn and charged her with possession with intent to distribute class B and class D controlled substances in violation of G. L. c. 94C, §§ 32A and 32C. The drugs were brought to the Boston police area B2 drug safe, where they were logged and recorded.

The BHA’s proposed termination of Seales’s Section 8 housing assistance was due to the events described above. The BHA cited two violations of her lease and Section 8 housing agreement, notifying Seales that her assistance would be terminated because (1) “[a] family member [Shurlynn] [had] engaged in drug related activity,” and (2) Seales had committed “[s]erious or repeated violations of the lease.” The police incident report, detailed above, served as evidence for both violations.

2. Administrative hearing. Seales administratively appealed the BHA’s termination in September of 2013. At the informal hearing before a BHA hearing officer, she was afforded the opportunity to comment on the police report, and she explained that she was not home during the incident and that neither she nor her children knew Compass.

Seales claimed that her daughter did not open the door for the police because she was “afraid of retaliation” from “the local kids,” and stated that her daughter “just opened the door” for Compass because there were “police everywhere” and he “just came in the house.” Seales further recounted that her daughter informed her that Compass entered their home, took his shirt off, and “was just walking back and forth” when the police knocked and kicked in the door.

With regard to the narcotics recovered from her apartment, Seales explained that “the stuff was in [her] unit, but it was on [Compass].” Furthermore, as police observed the drugs in plain *646 view in a closet, she asserted that it was Compass who had left them behind: “[H]e must have taken the drugs or the guns or whatever . . . and put the drugs where the police found them in [the] closet.”

After reviewing the police report and testimony from both Seales and the BHA leased housing division, the hearing officer determined that (1) “Shurlynn ... did not engage in drug related activity” but that (2) “the Tenant [Seales] committed serious and repeated violations of provision 10(a) of her 7/25/2012 lease because the police found in her unit: 5 individuals [sic] plastic bags of off white rock like substance believed to be crack cocaine; 2 plastic bags of green leafy substance believed to be marijuana and [a] replica M14 shotgun BB Gun.”

The hearing officer relied on the police report in evaluating the circumstances and determined that the report met the “substantial indicia of reliability” requirement for the admission of hearsay evidence in an administrative proceeding under Costa v. Fall River Hous. Authy., 453 Mass. 614, 627 (2009). In finding the police report sufficiently reliable, the hearing officer explained that (1) the officer who made the report was not anonymous and made statements based on his firsthand observations, (2) Seales confirmed the presence of illegal drugs in her apartment through her failure to deny that the substances were drugs, and (3) she did not contradict the police report with any statement or other evidence that the hearing officer found credible. Specifically finding her statements inconsistent and unreliable, the hearing officer did not credit Seales’s testimony. 3

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E.3d 1046, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seales-v-boston-housing-authority-massappct-2015.