Wright v. Willow Lake Apartments (MD) Owner, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 3, 2023
Docket8:22-cv-00484
StatusUnknown

This text of Wright v. Willow Lake Apartments (MD) Owner, LLC (Wright v. Willow Lake Apartments (MD) Owner, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Willow Lake Apartments (MD) Owner, LLC, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

-UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT , DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

TAMARA L. WRIGHT, Plaintiff .

UY. , . WILLOW LAKE APARTMENTS (MD) Civil Action No. TDC-22-0484 OWNER, LLC and , MORGAN PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT COMPANY, LLC, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION . Plaintiff Tamara L. Wright, a former tenant of Willow Lake Apartments (“Willow Lake”) in Laurel; Maryland, has filed suit against Defendants Willow Lake Apartments (MD) Owner, LLC and Morgan Properties Management Company, LLC, the owners of Willow Lake, alleging that Defendants failed to protect her and her dog from the threatening conduct of other tenants and gun violence on the premises, falsely billed her for damage to her apartment, unj ustifiably retained her security deposit, and wrongfully reported her to a collections agency and credit reporting agencies for failing to pay the allegedly unfounded charges. Wright alleges unfair, abusive, or deceptive trade practices, in violation of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act (““MCPA”), Md. □ Ann., Com. Law. §§ 13-101 to 13-320 (West 2017); retaliation in violation of the County □

Code of Prince George’s County, Maryland (the “Prince George’s County Code”), Prince George’s Cnty., Md., Code of Ordinances § 13-160 (2022); improper retention of her security

. deposit, in violation of the Prince George’s County Code, id. § 13-159(h); and common law claims of fraud, negligence, breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment, constructive eviction, and tortious

interfererice with a prospective advantage. Defendants have filed a Motion to Dismiss, which is fully briefed. Having reviewed the submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is necessary. See D. Md. Local R. 105.6. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. BACKGROUND Wright resided in a rented apartment at Willow Lake from April 12, 2016 to June 6, 2021.

In November 2019, Wright purchased a dog, a Siberian Husky mix puppy, which grew to weigh approximately 100 pounds and lived with her in her apartment for the remainder of her tenancy. Wright had another dog, a Chihuahua, which also lived in her apartment. □ Between August 2019 and February 2020, Wright’s son, Gabriel Dixon, lived with her in the apartment. Although Dixon was listed on the lease during this time period, when Wright renewed her lease for the period from August 10, 2020 to June 9, 2021, Dixon was removed from the lease and thus had no obligations relating to it. L Dog Harassment -. Wright first alleges that she and one of her dogs were subj ected to harassment by multiple tenants within the Willow Lake apartment complex (collectively, “the Tenants”). Beginning in April 2020, Wright occasionally encountered another tenant (“Tenant 1”) and his dog while walking her dog. During these encounters, Tenant 1’s dog became aggressive toward Wright’s dog, attacked Wright’s dog, and baited Wright’s dog to fight. Wright refused to allow her dog to fight with Tenant 1’s dog and asked Tenant 1 to control his dog. According to Wright, despite her

requests, Tenant 1 refused to control his dog. Asa result, Wright decided to avoid Tenant 1 and his dog. Nevertheless, on April 3, 2021, Wright and her dog were “assaulted” while on her patio by Tenant 1 and his dog, who came out from behind a building outside of Wright’s view. Am.

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Compl. J 43, ECF No. 37. Wright alleges that Tenant 1’s dog “aggressed on” Wright’s dog while Tenant i watched and refrained from intervening to end the attack “until the very end.” Jd. □ 44. During the attack, Wright was forced to use her hand to block the patio door latch “while trying to shove and kick” Tenant 1’s dog away and trying to get her dog “safely inside.” Jd.

Meanwhile, beginning in August 2020, a second Willow Lake tenant (“Tenant 2”) frequently used sticks and his dog to “taunt,” “provoke,” and goad Wright’s dog. Jd. J] 31-32, 36. Wright alleges that Tenant 2 often stared into her apartment at her dog for long periods of time. Although Wright requested that Tenant 2 cease this conduct, he ignored her requests and sometimes yelled at her in response. Beginning in February 2021, a third Willow Lake tenant (“Tenant 3”).also “taunted” her dog with a bamboo stick and a whip. fd. ff] 38, 40. As a result, beginning after the April 3, 2021 incident with Tenant 1 and his dog, Wright was “unable to walk her dog around the perimeter” of the apartment complex because “she feared confrontations” with the Tenants and their dogs. Jd. | 46. Wright specifically feared that they were “hiding behind parked cars” in the parking lot. Jd. Therefore, instead of walking her dog, Wright felt compelled to have her dog relieve himself while standing on a 12-foot line at the center of her patio so that she could “stand guard” and get her dog to safety if the Tenants and their dogs appeared. Jd. On April 8, 2021, because of the ongoing harassment, Wright informed Defendants that she did not intend to renew her lease at Willow Lake and would vacate her apartment when her lease ended on June 9, 2021. Two days later, on April 10, 2021, the building superintendent (“the □ Superintendent” or “Tenant 4”), an employee of Defendants who resided next door to Wright,

approached Wright and asked her whether she was “moving because of the guys looking in her apartment and antagonizing her dog.” Jd. 4 51. The Superintendent informed Wright that

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“dogfighting was active and popular in the community” and that the Tenants were taking these actions because they wanted her dog to fight. fd. Wright expressed her concerns about the harassment to the Superintendent with the belief that he would communicate them to Defendants. □

Wright later learned that the Superintendent was personal friends with Tenants 1, 2, and 3. Upon _ learning of these relationships, Wright felt “surrounded” and “outnumbered” and believed that she needed to protect herself and her dog by leaving Willow Lake. fd. J 55.

_ On April 11, 2021, Tenant 2 “began to escalate in the frequency and severity of taunting and goading” Wright’s dog. Id. { 56. As a result, Wright’s son, Dixon, took Wright’s dog to his home for one week. On April 14, 2021, Tenant 3 approached her patio with a whip made of a bamboo stick with a rope on one end, but he retreated when Wright used her cell phone to attempt _

_ to video record him from inside her apartment. On April 15, 2021, another tenant (“Tenant 5”)

approached Wright’s back door, placed his face to the glass, and stared into Wright’s apartment while sending text messages and lightly knocking on the window. After Wright’s dog returned to the apartment on April 18, 2021, the harassment resumed with increasing frequency. On May 9, 2021, Wright observed Tenant 3 and another man “standing and staring squarely back at her from □ the edge of her patio in the dark.” Jd. □ 68. On June 5, 2021, as Wright loaded her belongings into her vehicle, another tenant (“Tenant 6”) sat on his patio observing her. When Wright looked at Tenant 6, he smiled and lifted up the front paws of his dog, in a gesture Wright asserts was “taunting.” Id. 4 70. Tenant 6 continued staring at Wright for a long period of time. The same day, Wright reported these events to Defendants and requested their assistance. Defendants declined to assist her.

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I. Gun Violence . Wright also alleges that Defendants failed to protect her from gun violence on the premises. __ During Wright’s tenancy, several shootings took place at Willow Lake. In March 2020, an assailant fired multiple shots into an occupied apartment. On April 13, 2020, Wright witnessed an individual on the other side of the lake shoot and injure a man on his patio. When the shooter fled toward the Willow Lake office, Wright called that office to warn the staff about the shooting and also reported it to the police.

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