Weatherly v. Second Northwest Coop. Homes Assoc., Inc.

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 2023
Docket22-CV-0646
StatusPublished

This text of Weatherly v. Second Northwest Coop. Homes Assoc., Inc. (Weatherly v. Second Northwest Coop. Homes Assoc., Inc.) 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
Weatherly v. Second Northwest Coop. Homes Assoc., Inc., (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 22-CV-0646

JAMILA WEATHERLY, APPELLANT,

v.

SECOND NORTHWEST COOPERATIVE HOMES ASSOCIATION, INC., APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2022-CA-002377-B)

(Hon. Hiram E. Puig-Lugo, Trial Judge)

(Submitted May 3, 2023 Decided November 8, 2023 ∗)

Robert Maxwell for appellant.

Daniel Costello and Jessica S. Blumberg for appellee.

Before DEAHL, HOWARD, and SHANKER, Associate Judges.

SHANKER, Associate Judge: Appellant Jamila Weatherly, as the personal

representative of the estate of her deceased grandmother Norma D. Weatherly,

∗ The decision in this case was originally issued as an unpublished Memorandum Opinion and Judgment. It is now being published upon the court’s grant of appellee’s motion to publish. 2

sued appellee Second Northwest Cooperative Homes Association, Inc., for breach

of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in connection

with a unit in a cooperative building that Norma 1 had occupied. The cooperative

unit had been the subject of two prior actions involving Ms. Weatherly and Second

Northwest, in the Superior Court’s Landlord and Tenant Branch and the Superior

Court’s Probate Division. The Superior Court dismissed the complaint at issue

here under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(b)(6) on grounds of res judicata (claim

preclusion) and collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) and, in the alternative,

granted Second Northwest’s motion for summary judgment. Because we find

summary judgment for Second Northwest appropriate, we affirm on that basis and

decline to address preclusion.

I. Background

A.

Norma and her husband Casslee Weatherly purchased stock in and became

members of Second Northwest Cooperative Homes Association, Inc., a housing

cooperative corporation. As stated in its by-laws, the purpose of Second

Northwest is to provide members with housing and community facilities. Under

1 We refer to appellant Jamila Weatherly as “Ms. Weatherly” and to others with the surname Weatherly by their first name. 3

those by-laws, Norma and Casslee, with their stock ownership and membership,

were entitled to enter into an occupancy agreement to reside in unit 204 of a

residential building owned by Second Northwest located at 405 N Street, NW,

Washington, DC.

The terms of the occupancy agreement provided that neither the agreement

nor a member’s right of occupancy was transferable or assignable except as

provided by the by-laws. The by-laws, in turn, provided, as relevant here, that if,

upon a member’s death, the membership passed by will or intestate distribution to

a family member, the legatee or distributee could become a member of Second

Northwest by assuming in writing the terms of the occupancy agreement within 60

days after the member’s death and paying all amounts then due. If a member died

and an obligation was not assumed under those terms, then Second Northwest had

the option to purchase the membership from the deceased member’s estate. If

Second Northwest did not exercise that option, the deceased member’s estate could

sell the shares to someone who was qualified to be a member of Second Northwest.

Norma occupied unit 204 until her death on October 10, 2021 (with Casslee

having pre-deceased her). Ms. Weatherly, Norma’s granddaughter, was appointed

the executor (personal representative) of Norma’s estate. Ms. Weatherly, who was

residing in unit 204, sought to occupy the unit permanently, but, “due to probate

issues,” did not inherit Norma’s membership by will or intestate distribution—and 4

therefore did not assume in writing the terms of the occupancy agreement—within

60 days of Norma’s death. Second Northwest, for its part, did not exercise its

option to purchase the membership from Norma’s estate. Ms. Weatherly does not

allege or point to record facts indicating that the estate has tried to sell the

membership shares to a qualified individual.

B.

Three months after Norma’s death, Second Northwest filed in the Superior

Court Landlord and Tenant Branch a complaint against Ms. Weatherly in her

individual capacity for possession of the unit, alleging that Ms. Weatherly was not

a tenant and had “no legal right to occupy the premises.” Following a trial, a

magistrate judge entered a nonredeemable judgment for possession of the property

in favor of Second Northwest, which was subsequently upheld on review by the

trial judge.

The trial judge observed that Second Northwest’s “[b]y-laws detail the

process for how an individual can become a member, which [Ms. Weatherly] did

not follow. Because [Ms. Weatherly] is not a member and did not receive the

property via the clearly delineated transfer process,” the magistrate judge “did not

err in concluding that [Ms. Weatherly’s] continued residence in the unit was

inconsistent with the terms of the [b]y-laws . . . .” The trial judge added that the

judgment gave Second Northwest physical possession of the property but that 5

Ms. Weatherly could still sell the membership to a qualified individual or would be

entitled to the proceeds of a sale by Second Northwest. The Landlord and Tenant

Branch ruling “simply returned physical possession of the unit to Second

Northwest because [Ms. Weatherly] is not a member and Second Northwest is a

corporation that provides housing to its members.” Ms. Weatherly appealed the

trial court’s ruling, and this court affirmed (initially in a Memorandum Opinion

and Judgment that is now being published simultaneously with this Opinion).

Jamila Weatherly v. Second Northwest Coop. Homes Ass’n, No. 22-CV-0403,

Mem. Op. & J. (D.C. Oct. 31, 2023). 2

Separately, Ms. Weatherly had filed in Norma’s estate’s probate proceedings

a motion for an order to show cause, asserting that Second Northwest was

“interfering with the estate’s property rights” by seeking her eviction in the

Landlord and Tenant Branch. The trial court denied the motion, concluding that

the issues related to “the estate’s property rights” had “already been thoroughly

litigated” in the landlord-tenant action. The trial court added that the magistrate

judge and trial judge in the landlord-tenant matter “were well aware that

2 As this court notes in its Opinion in the landlord-tenant appeal, after Ms. Weatherly filed her notice of appeal in that case, the trial court issued an order purporting to vacate the judgment that Ms. Weatherly had appealed. This court held that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to do so and that the judgment therefore remains in effect. 6

[Ms. Weatherly] was the personal representative in this estate case at the time of

their decisions, and the Personal Representative, through counsel, made the same

arguments [in the landlord-tenant case] that she wishes to raise again before this

Court.” Finally, the court noted, the relief granted to Second Northwest in the

landlord-tenant branch “was simply occupancy of unit 204 at 405 N St. NW;

nothing in the landlord tenant case interfered with the estate’s ownership of stock

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