War Eagle Village Apartments Vs. Geneva Plummer

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 20, 2009
Docket07–1217
StatusPublished

This text of War Eagle Village Apartments Vs. Geneva Plummer (War Eagle Village Apartments Vs. Geneva Plummer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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War Eagle Village Apartments Vs. Geneva Plummer, (iowa 2009).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 07–1217

Filed November 20, 2009

WAR EAGLE VILLAGE APARTMENTS,

Appellee,

vs.

GENEVA PLUMMER,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County,

James D. Scott, Judge.

A residential tenant requests discretionary review of a district court

decision holding that Iowa Code section 562A.29A(2) (2005) does not

violate the Due Process Clauses of the United States and Iowa

Constitutions, does not violate Iowa’s equal protection clause, and does

not require that either a tenant or someone else sign the receipt for a

forcible entry and detainer petition sent via certified mail. REVERSED.

William J. Niebel, Sioux City, for appellant.

William G. Deck of Deck & Deck, L.L.P., Sioux City, for appellee. 2

BAKER, Justice.

Geneva Plummer was ordered to vacate her apartment under a

statutory scheme that she claims is not calculated to give her notice of

the hearing where her eviction was to be determined. Plummer is a

residential tenant who has applied for discretionary review from an order

issuing execution for removal in a forcible entry and detainer (“FED”)

action. This court is asked to decide: (1) whether the service of original

notice of forcible entry and detainer by certified mail, with no

requirement that a signed return receipt be obtained, as allowed by Iowa

Code section 562A.29A(2), violates the Due Process Clauses of the United

States Constitution and the Iowa Constitution; (2) whether Iowa Code

section 562A.29A(2) violates the equal protection clause of the Iowa

Constitution because it applies only to residential tenants and not to

commercial or agricultural tenants; and (3) alternatively, whether Iowa

Code section 562A.29A(2) could be read narrowly to mandate that service

is not completed until someone signs a return receipt for the notice.

Because Iowa Code section 562A.29A(2) does not require service which is

reasonably calculated to reach the intended recipient, we find the FED

statutory notice scheme violates the due process provision of the Iowa

Constitution on its face.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

This case involves a landlord-tenant dispute. Plummer was a

tenant at War Eagle Village. She lived in an apartment at this complex

from approximately February 1, 2006, until September 18, 2006, when a

warrant of removal was issued. In July 2006, Plummer was unable to

pay her rent and became delinquent in the amount of $67.00. The

property manager at War Eagle testified that on July 17, 2006, she both

mailed and had an employee personally deliver to Plummer a notice that 3

procedures to terminate her lease would commence in three days if the

delinquent rent was not paid. Plummer claimed she never received this

notice.

Because Plummer failed to pay the delinquent rent within the

three-day time period given, War Eagle commenced an action on July 24,

for FED under Iowa Code chapter 648, requesting possession of the

apartment. On this date the original notice for FED was mailed to

Plummer by certified mail. The hearing upon the FED action was set for

July 31. No attempt at personal service on Plummer was ever made.

When Plummer failed to appear at the hearing, a default judgment was

entered, and she was ordered to vacate the premises. Plummer did not

receive the original notice informing her of the July 31 trial until August

2 when she retrieved a certified letter from the post office.

On August 3, Plummer appealed the default judgment. The

district court waived the appeal bond and stayed execution of the writ of

removal until the opinion in another Woodbury County FED appeal to

the district court with the same constitutional issues regarding certified

mail service was issued. On August 25, the other case was decided

against the tenant, and the stay of execution was lifted.

On October 2, Plummer requested an evidentiary hearing on

appeal, claiming that she had not had an opportunity to “present

evidence . . . regarding the constitutional inadequacies of certified mail

notice, with respect to [her] specific situation or to Iowa FED cases

generally.” The district court granted Plummer’s request and set a

hearing to allow her to create an “evidentiary record to demonstrate why

she did not receive notice of the [FED] trial in the above case so she can

then argue why the notice requirement for small claims court [is]

constitutionally defective as to her and her circumstances.” 4

An evidentiary hearing was held from which we find the following

facts. The original notice was mailed by certified mail on Monday, July

24, 2006. Although there is no record from the post office regarding this

specific piece of mail, a “first” attempt at delivery of the certified mail was

probably made by a postal worker approximately three days later on

Thursday, July 27. Plummer testified that although someone would

have been home at the normal time for mail delivery at the apartment, no

postal employee ever came to her door to deliver the certified letter. The

mail carrier assigned to her address did not testify.

An employee of the United States Postal Service in Sioux City

testified that when a certified letter is received by the post office, a carrier

is generally assumed to have attempted to deliver the certified letter to

the door of the addressee. If the resident is home, the carrier will obtain

the resident’s signature on a Form 3849 notice and personally deliver the

article. The Domestic Mail Manual, however, does not mandate that a

to-the-door delivery attempt be made. The postal employee also testified

that she has “overheard mail carriers say that they have to cut the times

on their routes,” and to do that “they could just drop the 3849 in the

mailbox and go. They wouldn’t have to attempt the delivery [to the door]

which would take time.”

Regardless of whether a to-the-door attempt is actually made by

the postal carrier, if the carrier does not obtain a signature on the Form

3849, the carrier is required to leave a Form 3849 notice in the resident’s

mailbox. This form informs the addressee that a delivery was attempted

when no one was home and that the certified letter can be picked up at

the post office within the next fifteen days. After the fifteen days, the

form is returned to the sender. Plummer testified that she did not

receive the Form 3849 that should have been left at the time of the first 5

attempted delivery of the certified letter that probably occurred on

Thursday, July 27.

According to the postal employee, there is a “standing order” at the

Sioux City post office that a second Form 3849 should be filled out and

mailed to the addressee, so as to arrive five days after the first Form

3849 was left in the addressee’s mail box. Plummer testified that she

received this second Form 3849 notice on August 1, the day after the

scheduled hearing. It is on this basis that it is assumed that the first

attempt at delivery was on July 27. Upon the advice of Iowa Legal Aid,

Plummer took this second notice to the post office on August 2, and

received the certified letter containing the original notice for FED. On

this same day, she retrieved notice of the default judgment entered

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