TURQUOISE WYLIE v. GLENNCREST.

143 A.3d 73, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 4035381
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 21, 2016
Docket15-CV-146
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 143 A.3d 73 (TURQUOISE WYLIE v. GLENNCREST.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TURQUOISE WYLIE v. GLENNCREST., 143 A.3d 73, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 4035381 (D.C. 2016).

Opinion

EASTERLY,. Associate Judge:

Turquoise Wylie appeared in court in response to a lawsuit for nonpayment of rent filed against her by Glenncrest, her landlord, but she failed to return to court for the rescheduled initial hearing. The *76 trial court entered a default against her and ultimately granted Glenncrest a judgment for possession. Ms. Wylie subsequently filed a pro se motion to vacate this default judgment pursuant to Super. Ct. Civ. R. 60(b). The trial court held a hearing, but even though the parties disputed issues of fact, the court heard no testimony and took no evidence. Moreover, the court’s consideration of the factors bearing on Ms. Wylie’s motion for relief from a default judgment was skewed toward upholding the default judgment — as it did— instead of favoring a decision on the merits. Concluding that the trial court abused its discretion, we reverse and remand.

I. Facts

Ms. Wylie was a long-time tenant of Glenncrest. By the time Glenncrest filed and served 1 its complaint for possession due to nonpayment of rent, Ms. Wylie had been living in a Glenncrest townhouse at 5069 Kimi Gray Court, S.E., for approximately eight years. Glenncrest’s complaint alleged that Ms. Wylie had failed to pay rent from January through June 2014.

At the initial hearing in July 2014, Ms. Wylie and counsel for Glenncrest each entered an appearance and together signed a praecipe asking for a one-month continuance. 2 At the further initial hearing in August, Ms. Wylie failed to appear, and Glenncrest requested and obtained an entry of default. The court scheduled an “ex parte proof hearing” 3 and, according to the docket, mailed a notice addressed to Ms. Wylie with the following information:

The above-captioned Landlord and Tenant case has been scheduled for Ex Parte Proof Hearing on the date and time shown below. All parties shall appear before Judge COURTROOM LANDLORD & TENANT.
Hearing Date: September 12,2014
Time: 10:00 am.
Location: 510 4th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20001
LandLord & Tenant Courtoom B-109 PLEASE BRING THIS NOTICE WITH YOU WHEN YOU APPEAR.

Ms. Wylie did not appear in court on September 12, 2014, and the ex parte proof hearing was held without her. At the hearing, Glenncrest’s counsel asked its property manager, Ophelia Johnson, to read into the record a provision in Ms. Wylie’s lease expressly waiving her right to a 30-day notice to quit or vacate. 4 Ms. Johnson also testified that Ms. Wylie owed *77 $2,556.99 for some combination of past-due rent, late fees, 5 and utility bills. The court entered a redeemable judgment for possession in favor of Glenncrest, with a Trans-Lux 6 amount of $2,556.99. Four days later, the trial court issued a notice to Ms. Wylie informing her that a judgment of possession for nonpayment of rent had been entered against her, and that she would have to pay $2,592 (the Trans-Lux amount plus court costs) to avoid eviction. Ten days later, the Superior Court issued a writ of restitution to the U.S. Marshal Service. On September 30, 2014, two and a half weeks after the ex parte proof hearing, the U.S. Marshals Service evicted Ms. Wylie.

On December 17, 2014, Ms. Wylie, representing herself, filed a Rule 60(b) motion 7 to vacate the trial court’s judgment for possession, as well as an answer to Glenncrest’s complaint, an application to reduce the payment required to avoid eviction, and a motion to restore herself and her family to the townhouse. In these pro se filings, Ms. Wylie asserted that she did not owe back rent for January through June 2014 (the six months identified in the complaint) — only rent for September 2014 (the month she was evicted), plus a late fee and $301.52 outstanding on a previous settlement agreement with Glenncrest.-Moreover, in her Rule 60(b) motion, Ms. Wylie explained that she “did not understand” that she needed to return to court' in August because she'had “an out-of-court agreement with [her] landlord,” and that after missing this August hearing she had not received notice of the ex parte proof hearing.

The trial court held a hearing on Ms. Wylie’s motions in January 2015. Ms. Wy *78 lie (still representing herself) and counsel for Glenncrest were both present, as was Tiffany Talbert, a Glenncrest property manager. Immediately after the court called the case, counsel for Glenncrest tried to persuade the court that Ms. Wylie’s motions should be summarily denied in light of the fact that Ms. Wylie had “just popped; up 90 days after the eviction”; that she “admitted] in her motion that she owed money” (though he acknowledged the parties “don’t agree on the amount”); that the case had already gone to “a full ex [parte proof] hearing”; and that the “unit [had] been re-rented.” Counsel for Glenncrest added that.the only reason the case had been continued' from the initial hearing date in December was to give Ms. Wylie the opportunity to find a lawyer.

Ms. Wylie responded that she “didn’t just pop up 90 days later”; rather, ever since her eviction, she had been trying to rectify the situation. Specifically, Ms. Wylie asserted that she had been trying to contest the default judgment, first by trying to secure counsel and legal advice through Bread for the City, and then by repeatedly consulting the Superior Court’s Landlord Tenant Resource Center: 8

I went through Bread for the City first to obtain legal advice and try to get a lawyer. Then I’ve been coming down here to the Resource Center and all my paperwork that showed that it’s been taking me this long to even file my motions when I filed them in December. I had got that opportunity because I’ve been doing everything they’ve been telling me to do to try to get some type of representation or just get some type of advice or how can I continue to make my case. That’s .why it’s been taking ... this long since I got put-out.

The court seemed to credit Ms. Wylie’s assertions that she had been trying to obtain legal assistance, but nonetheless faulted her for not filing anything in court sooner, noting that the “people out here in the Resource Center_ [t]hey’re independent people.... They don’t work for us. You didn’t tell anybody in the Court until over two months later "that they ... put you out under these circumstances _” Ms. Wylie explained that she had been working to collect documentation to support her defenses, per the Resource Center’s recommendation. She further explained that when she received the writ of restitution she tried to avert eviction by calling Ms. Crystal Cove, who was Glennc-rest’s property manager at the time. Ms. Wylie stated that she thought there had been a mistake — that the issuance- of the writ was based on her “account balance which was already wrong....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A.3d 73, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 4035381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turquoise-wylie-v-glenncrest-dc-2016.