LOS ANGELES, November 18, 2022 — A developer’s legal attack on the city’s emergency eviction protections—one that threatened to undermine other protective ordinances and push countless low-income tenants into homelessness—was dismissed Thursday.
The developer, Geoffrey Palmer, whose company owns more than 15,000 units in Los Angeles, filed a lawsuit in August of 2021 seeking to overturn two city ordinances that have protected tenants during the pandemic and the slow economic recovery. This week, a judge rejected his claim that the ordinances violate the 5th Amendment’s “Takings Clause,” which prohibits governments from taking private property for public use without “just compensation.”
“We are grateful that the court saw this legal challenge for what it was: a spurious attempt to unravel the emergency eviction moratorium and set dangerous legal precedent that could undermine other tenant protections,” said attorney Rachel Steinback of Neighborhood Legal Services of Los Angeles County—who together with the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles and Public Counsel represented tenant groups in defending the moratorium.
Since March of 2020, the emergency eviction protections have helped the city stave off a wave of evictions and have kept countless families from having to move into overcrowded housing and shelters, where the virus spread with ease. They have also protected the city’s dwindling stock of rent-stabilized units.
Courts across the country have rejected similar challenges to COVID-19 tenant protections.
“These challenges are meritless and meanspirited,” said Ryan Kendall, Staff Attorney in the Housing and Communities Workgroup at the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles. “Governments have a duty to protect vulnerable residents in the midst of a global catastrophe. The Constitution does not leave tenants helpless in the face of an ongoing pandemic.”
In October of 2021, tenant groups that were instrumental in passing the ordinances asked the court for permission to join the city in defending these laws against Palmer’s attack. The groups—Strategic Actions for a Just Economy, Coalition for Economic Survival, and the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment Action—represent thousands of tenants, most of them Black and Latinx, who have depended on the emergency eviction protections to stay housed. These tenants live in neighborhoods where rates of infection, serious illness, and death have been dramatically higher than those in whiter, wealthier neighborhoods. The economic impact of the virus also hit these communities particularly hard, and the recovery has been slow.
“We know that Los Angeles faces a crippling housing and homelessness crisis that squeezes communities of color the most,” said Faizah Malik, Senior Staff Attorney in the Community Development Project at Public Counsel. “This ruling makes it crystal clear that LA’s eviction protections are legal, have been upheld by the courts multiple times, and are still needed as we grapple with the economic fallout from the pandemic.”
In yesterday’s ruling, judge Dean Pregerson dismissed the complaint, roundly rejecting Palmer’s Physical Takings arguments. However, the judge did leave the door open for Palmer to amend his complaint with new evidence to support his claims, giving him 21 days to respond. Attorneys representing Los Angeles tenants believe that given the ruling, it will be difficult for Palmer to amend his complaint in a way that could meet the high standards set by the law, as recognized by the judge’s order.
Two of the tenant groups intervened in a similar lawsuit filed last year by the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles. That lawsuit has so far failed to invalidate the emergency eviction protections.
Read the order granting the motion to dismiss here.
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Founded in 1970, Public Counsel is the nation’s largest provider of pro bono legal services, utilizing an innovative legal model to promote justice, hope, and opportunity in lower-income and communities of color in Los Angeles and across the nation. Through groundbreaking civil rights litigation, community building, advocacy, and policy change, as well as wide-ranging direct legal services that annually help thousands of people experiencing poverty, Public Counsel has fought to secure equal justice and opportunity for all for more than 50 years.
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