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Christopher Village, Ltd. Partnership v. Retsinas

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Date filed: 1999-09-16
Citations: 190 F.3d 310
Copy Citations
45 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                           No. 98-20181


           CHRISTOPHER VILLAGE, LIMITED PARTNERSHIP;
                WILSHIRE INVESTMENTS CORPORATION,

                                             Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                 v.

                   NICHOLAS P RETSINAS; ET AL,

                                             Defendants,

     NICHOLAS P RETSINAS; ALBERT CASON, Director Multifamily
        Housing Management; THE HONORABLE ANDREW M CUOMO,
   Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; HENRY CISNEROS,

                                                 Defendants-Appellees.

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Southern District of Texas
                        September 15, 1999
Before JONES, SMITH, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

          Appellants   Christopher    Village,    Ltd.   and    Wilshire

Investments (collectively “Village”), owned and managed a federally

subsidized low income housing complex in Bryan, Texas.         They filed

this suit contending that the Department of Housing and Urban

Development (HUD) caused Village to default on its obligation to

maintain the property by denying necessary rent increases and

illegally demanded a multimillion-dollar equity contribution from
Village.    As the suit progressed, HUD reacquired and sold the

property at foreclosure, and the apartment complex has been torn

down.   Nevertheless, as to the part of this case which is not moot,

we hold that HUD’s actions were arbitrary and capricious.              Village

is entitled to a partial declaratory judgment in its favor.

                              BACKGROUND

1.   HUD Regulatory Scheme

           The National Housing Act was enacted (and subsequently

amended) to “assist private industry in providing housing for low

and moderate income families and displaced families.”           12 U.S.C.A.

§ 1715l(a) (West 1989).      To foster private investment, the Act

authorizes HUD to insure private mortgage loans used to construct

low income housing.   See 12 U.S.C.A. § 1715l(d)(3) (West 1989).           In

addition, the Act and HUD regulations encourage private investment

by allowing owners to borrow money at reduced interest rates,

reducing a borrower’s equity requirements, permitting owners to

sign non-recourse notes, and, prior to the 1986 tax code changes,

granting   owners   and   investors       generous   tax   benefits.      See

generally, Kargman v. Sullivan, 552 F.2d 2, 4 (1st Cir. 1977).             By

granting owners these benefits, Congress sought to reduce the

financial risk associated with operating low income housing by

“reducing the rentals necessary to service the landlord’s debt

obligation.”    Hahn v. Gottlieb, 430 F.2d 1243, 1245 (1st Cir.


                                      2
1970); see also Beck Park Apartments v. United States Dep’t of

Hous. and Urban Dev., 695 F.2d 366, 368 (9th Cir. 1982).

             In exchange for these financial benefits, HUD requires

low income property owners to enter into “Regulatory Agreements”

that give HUD extensive regulatory authority over the operation and

maintenance of the property.       See 12 U.S.C.A. § 1715l(d)(3).1

Under a standard Regulatory Agreement, an owner must dedicate the

property for medium or low income tenants, must remain a sole asset

entity (i.e., may not engage in any business other than owning and

operating the property), may not take a profit distribution over

six percent per year, must adequately maintain the property, and

may not increase rents without approval from HUD. See Kargman, 552

F.2d at 4.    If an owner violates the Regulatory Agreement, HUD may

declare the property in default, accelerate the mortgage, and

foreclose on the property.2    HUD also sets the maximum allowable

rent an owner can charge its tenants.   In doing so, HUD is supposed

to provide owners with sufficient funds to operate and maintain the

property, service the debt, pay taxes, cover various reserve



     1
      Section 221(d)(3) requires owners to be “regulated or
supervised . . . by the Secretary under a regulatory agreement or
otherwise, as to rents, charges, and methods of operation, in such
form and in such manner as in the opinion of the Secretary will
effectuate the purposes of this section.”
     2
      HUD may exercise these remedies only if it holds the note.
If the lender still holds the note, HUD can notify the lender of
the default and request that it accelerate the mortgage and
foreclose, or request that the note be assigned to HUD so it can do
so.

                                  3
requirements,    and   provide    the       owner   a   reasonable   return   on

investment.     See, e.g., 12 U.S.C.A. § 1747c (West 1989).3                  If

rental revenues fail to cover these costs, an owner can request a

rental increase from HUD.        See 24 C.F.R. § 245.325.

            Since most tenants of low income housing are on welfare

and cannot afford to pay the full contract rental price, Congress

created the Section 8 housing program to subsidize their rent. See

42 U.S.C.A. § 1437f (West 1994).            “Under the program, tenants make

rental payments based on their income and ability to pay; [HUD]

then makes ‘assistance payments’ to the private landlords in an

amount calculated to make up the difference between the tenant’s

contribution and a ‘contract rent’ agreed upon by the landlord and

HUD.”    Cisneros v. Alpine Ridge Group, 508 U.S. 10, 12, 113 S. Ct.

1898, 1900 (1993).     Because the Section 8 program requires that a

tenant pay a maximum of 30% of the gross rent, if HUD approves a

rental increase, the majority of the increase is absorbed by HUD

via the Section 8 subsidy.         The subsidy is implemented through


     3
        12 U.S.C.A. § 1747c states:

     Prior to approving the initial or any subsequent rent
     schedule pursuant to this section, the Secretary shall
     find that such schedule affords reasonable assurance that
     the rents to be established thereunder are (1) not lower
     than necessary, together with all other income to be
     derived from or in connection with the project, to
     produce reasonably stable revenues sufficient to provide
     for the payment of the operating expenses, the minimum
     annual amortization charge, and the minimum annual
     return; and (2) not higher than necessary to meet the
     need for dwellings for families of moderate income.

                                        4
Housing Assistance Payment (“HAP”) contracts entered into between

HUD and the property owners which extensively regulate an owner’s

management   of    the     property.     HAP    contracts       set   the   maximum

allowable rent an owner may charge and the subsidy amount paid by

HUD and require owners to maintain the property in a safe and

sanitary condition.

2.    Factual and Procedural History

           The property at issue in this case, Mockingbird Run

Apartments, was built in 1970 from the proceeds of a § 221(d)(3)

insured loan and was therefore subject to a Regulatory Agreement.

Because Mockingbird was receiving Section 8 subsidies, the property

was also subject to a HAP contract.                    When Village purchased

Mockingbird in 1983, it assumed the obligations and benefits of

both agreements.

           By      1995,     Mockingbird’s           physical    condition      had

substantially deteriorated and approximately $2 million was needed

to restore the property.            HUD warned Village that a failure to

refurbish the property could result in abatement of Section 8

subsidies and constituted a default under the Regulatory Agreement.

The   parties     began    negotiating       plans     to   repair    Mockingbird,

including the issue who would fund the needed repairs.                      Each of

several   plans    proposed    by    Village    stipulated       that   HUD   would

increase the contract rent and Village would incur a large loan to

be repaid out of the property’s future rental revenues.                        HUD,



                                         5
however, rejected the proposals, insisting instead that Village pay

all of the $2 million repairs without any assistance from HUD.

           In   June    1995,    Village       formally      requested    that    HUD

increase its contract rent since Mockingbird’s rental revenues were

inadequate to reimburse its operating costs and the necessary

maintenance and repairs. Without approving or denying the request,

however, HUD replied by letter dated August 25, 1995, demanding

that Village place the $2 million needed to pay for the repairs in

escrow within 60 days or face default.                       On September 6, HUD

reiterated its demand, cautioning that, although Village’s rent

increase request was under review, “no action will be taken at this

time due to the provisions in the HUD letter dated August 25,

1995.”   Finally, on September 14, HUD notified Village that, since

Village had not complied with the August 25, 1995 demand for $2

million and because Village had “violated paragraph eight of the

Regulatory Agreement by not maintaining the mortgaged premises in

good repair and condition,” HUD would “proceed without further

notice to take whatever remedies are appropriate”. HUD intended to

accelerate the mortgage and foreclose on the property.                   Indeed, on

December   1,   1995,   HUD     assumed       control   of    the   property     as   a

mortgagee in possession.4

           Village sued various HUD officers seeking a declaratory


     4
      On November 17, 1995, the original lender assigned the note
and mortgage to HUD and collected the insurance proceeds. Thus,
HUD had the same remedial rights as the original lender.

                                          6
judgment, an injunction, and mandamus, arguing that HUD unlawfully

refused to entertain its rent increase request, illegally demanded

$2 million, and made it impossible for Village to maintain the

property because of insufficient rental revenues.                The district

court, unmoved, ultimately denied all of Village’s requested relief

and granted summary judgment in favor of HUD.              According to the

court, HUD’s rent increase decisions are unreviewable5, and Village

had an absolute obligation to maintain the property regardless

whether it received sufficient rents to cover repair costs.

                After   obtaining   the   favorable   summary   judgment,   HUD

slated the property for foreclosure sale.             Although Village moved

the district court to stay the sale pending appeal, the district

court, and subsequently this court, rejected the motion and allowed

the sale to proceed.        HUD, as the only bidder, bought the property

at the auction and eventually “sold”6 it to the City of Bryan

Housing Authority, allegedly to be demolished and redeveloped as

elderly and handicapped housing.7



            5
        The court alternatively held that, even if reveiwable,
Village failed to show that HUD’s actions were arbitrary and
capricious.
        6
      The City of Bryan paid $10 for the property. That HUD was
authorized to sell the property to the City of Bryan is not in
dispute: “HUD may negotiate the sale of any project to an agency
of the federal, State, or local government.” 24 C.F.R. 290.13(a).
    7
     At oral argument, HUD represented to this court that it owned
the property and had spent several million dollars renovating it
when, in fact, it had already transferred the property to the City
of Bryan several months before.

                                          7
                          STANDARD OF REVIEW

           This court reviews a grant of summary judgement de novo,

applying the   same   standards   as   the   district   court.     Summary

judgment is proper if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to

interrogatories,    and   admissions   on    file,   together    with   any

affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any

material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as

a matter of law.”   Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see also Celotex Corp. v.

Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-24, 106 S. Ct. 2548 (1986).           All fact

questions are reasonable inferences draw therefrom are viewed in

the light most favorable to the non-moving party.          See Urbano v.

Continental Airlines, Inc., 138 F.3d 204, 205 (5th Cir. 1998).

                              DISCUSSION

                              I. Mootness

           Before considering the merits of this appeal, it is

necessary to determine whether Mockingbird’s foreclosure sale,

purchase by HUD, and subsequent transfer to the City of Bryan

mooted this appeal.   “The mootness doctrine is grounded primarily

and originally in the appellate court’s inability to fashion

relief.”   Sullivan Cent. Plaza I, Ltd., v. BancBoston Real Estate

Capital Corp. (In re Sullivan Cent. Plaza, I, Ltd.), 914 F.2d 731,

733-34 (5th Cir. 1990).     Ordinarily, an appeal will be moot when

the property underlying the dispute has been sold at a foreclosure

sale because this court cannot fashion adequate relief, i.e.,


                                   8
cannot reverse the transaction.         See id. at 733 (“If the debtor

fails to obtain a stay, and if the property is sold in the interim,

the   district   court   will   ordinarily   be   unable   to   grant   any

relief.”); United States v. Blanche, 169 F.3d 956, 957 (5th Cir.

1999); NCNB Texas Nat’l Bank v. Southwold Assocs., 909 F.2d 128,

129 (5th Cir. 1990).

            The foreclosure sale and transfer to the city of Bryan

effectively mooted Village’s request for an injunction and mandamus

because of this court’s inability to fashion adequate relief.           The

property has been sold at a foreclosure sale and is now held by a

party not before this court; the apartment complex has been torn

down.     Thus, any request for relief that involves a transfer of

“the property” would amount to an impossible request for this court

to “unscramble the eggs”.

            Although the injunction and mandamus requests are moot,

Village’s request for a declaratory judgment continues to present

a live dispute because this court can still provide adequate

relief.    “Where several forms of relief are requested and one of

these requests subsequently becomes moot, the Court [can] still

consider[] the remaining requests.”       Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S.

486, 496 n.8, 89 S. Ct. 1944, 1951 n.8 (1969); see also id. 395

U.S. at 499, 89 S. Ct at 1955 (“A court may grant declaratory

relief even though it chooses not to issue an injunction or

mandamus.”).     A declaration that HUD violated its regulations and



                                    9
contracts grants Village adequate relief because, even without

regaining title to the property, Village could use the declaration

as a predicate for a damages action against HUD in the Court of

Federal Claims. See id. (noting that “[a] declaratory judgment can

then be used as a predicate to further relief”); Globe, Inc. V.

United States, 227 Ct.Cl. 784 (Ct. Cl 1981) (allowing plaintiff who

obtained a favorable declaratory judgment in federal district court

to sue the United States for damages in the Court of Claims).           The

declaratory judgment aspect of this case is not moot.

                           II.   REVIEWABILITY

           The district court granted summary judgment in part

because it found HUD’s actions judicially unreviewable in light of

HUD’s   discretion   to   approve   or   deny   rent   increase   requests.

Village argues, however, that HUD’s actions are reviewable because

HUD violated its regulatory and contractual duty to entertain the

rent increase request.

           The Administrative Procedure Act authorizes judicial

review of agency decisions except when the “agency action is

committed to agency discretion by law.”          5 U.S.C.A. § 701(a)(2).

An action is committed to agency discretion when “no judicially

manageable standards are available for judging how and when an

agency should exercise its discretion . . . .”         Heckler v. Cheney,

470 U.S. 821, 830, 105 S. Ct. 1649, 1655 (1985).




                                    10
          The circuit courts have unanimously agreed that because

Congress committed to HUD full discretion in determining whether to

grant or deny a rent increase request, the decision on the amount

of any increase is unreviewable.        See Frakes v. Pierce, 700 F.2d

501, 505 (9th Cir. 1983) (“[C]ourts are ill-equipped to superintend

economic and managerial decisions of the kind involved here.”)

(quoting Hahn 430 F.2d at 1249); Langevin v. Chenango Court, Inc.,

447 F.2d 296, 302-03 (2d Cir. 1971); Hahn, 430 F.2d at 1249-51.      In

determining rent increase requests, HUD must delicately balance the

competing interests of the property owner, the tenants, and the

federal government as guarantor of the loan and payor of the

Section 8 subsidy.    HUD must also take into account factors that

bear on rental rates such as property taxes, utility rates, the

average rental rate in the area, estimates of future maintenance

needs, and vacancy rates. See 42 U.S.C.A. 1437f(c)(2)(B). Because

of the lack of judicially manageable standards and HUD’s need for

a “flexible exercise of administrative discretion” in overseeing

its properties, Hahn, 430 F.2d at 1246, courts should generally

refuse to review HUD’s substantive decisions regarding a rent

increase request.

          The   district   court    and    HUD,   however,   misconstrue

Village’s argument.   Village is not appealing HUD’s denial of its

requested rent increase; rather, it is appealing HUD’s refusal to

entertain the request and the alternative regulatory path taken by



                                   11
HUD –- threatening foreclosure and demanding a multimillion-dollar

equity contribution from Village.                  The cases previously cited

universally recognize that a court’s refusal to review HUD rent

decisions does not necessarily obtain when HUD ignores “a plain

statutory       duty,     exceed[s]       its    jurisdiction,      or   commit[s]

constitutional error.”            Id. at 1251.       As Village’s allegations

involve these very issues, its claims are reviewable.

          III. Village’s Request for a Declaratory Judgment

            Village seeks a declaratory judgment stating that HUD

acted arbitrarily and capriciously by (1) refusing to consider

Village’s rent increase request; (2) declaring Village in default

and subsequently foreclosing on Mockingbird because Village failed

to adequately maintain the property; and (3) refusing to review its

rent increase request unless Village escrowed $2 million for

repairs on Mockingbird.

            Village      argues    that    its    obligation   to   maintain     the

property    was    dependent      upon    HUD’s    providing     sufficient    rent

revenues to pay for maintenance. According to Village, because HUD

refused    to    approve    a   sufficient        rental   schedule,     HUD   acted

arbitrarily and capriciously in citing poor maintenance as the

reason for declaring Village in default. HUD counters that Village

had an absolute duty to maintain the property, regardless of its

rental income.          This means that if Village’s rental income was

insufficient to pay all of its operating and maintenance costs,



                                           12
Village and its financial partners must either invest additional

equity to make up any deficiencies or risk default and foreclosure.

            HUD’s argument would perhaps be convincing if it had

undertaken to review Village’s rental increase request and to rule

upon it. Both the Regulatory Agreement and HUD’s regulations

require HUD at least to entertain a rent increase request.8              See

Regulatory Agreement, ¶4(g) (stating that HUD “will at any time

entertain a written request for [a rent] increase”); 24 C.F.R. §

886.312(b) (stating that once HUD receives a request, it “shall

approve a rental schedule . . . or shall deny the increase stating

the   reasons    therefor”)   (emphasis     added).     HUD   violated   its

contractual and regulatory duty to consider the rent request. This

defect renders suspect HUD’s other actions, particularly when the

full regulatory context is considered.

            Village certainly had the duty to maintain Mockingbird

“so   as   to   provide   decent,   safe   and   sanitary   housing.”    HAP

Contract, § 14(a); see also Regulatory Agreement, § 7 (“Owners

shall maintain the mortgaged premises . . . in good repair and

condition.”).     Village’s duty, however, was not absolute.        Nothing

      8
     In fact, if Village’s mandamus request had not been mooted by
the transfer of Mockingbird to the City of Bryan, Village would
have been entitled to a mandamus to “require [HUD] to take action
upon [the] matter, without directing how it shall act.” Forest
Guardians v. Babbitt, 174 F.3d 1178, 1190 (10th Cir. 1999) (quoting
Attorney General’s Manual on the Administrative Procedure Act, at
108 (1947)); see also 5 U.S.C. § 706(1) (“The reviewing court shall
. . . compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably
delayed.”); N.A.A.C.P. v. Secretary of Hous. and Urban Dev. 817
F.2d 149, 160 (1st Cir. 1987).

                                      13
in the National Housing Act, HUD’s regulations, the Regulatory

Agreement, or the HAP contract requires Village, as a low income

property owner, to absorb or subsidize operating and maintenance

deficiencies.      Instead, the programs are designed to ensure that

HUD establishes rental rates so that property owners receive enough

revenue   to    cover      all     of    the       property’s     expenses     including

maintenance, repairs, debt service, taxes, and a six percent return

on   investment.        See      12     U.S.C.A.      §   1747c.       Thus,     the   HUD

reimbursement     scheme       resembles        cost-plus       contracts      or   public

utility regulation, in either of which situations the private party

who performs the work is assured of recovering reasonably incurred

costs as well as a reasonable return on investments.

           That the cost of operating and maintaining the property,

in   addition    to     the      cost    of    complying        with   the     Regulatory

Agreement,9 must be paid for out of the regulated rental revenues

is   reinforced       in      several      ways.          First,       HUD’s    internal

interpretation of its regulations indicates that operating and

maintenance costs are to be derived from the rental revenues.

Albert Cason, the Director of Multifamily Housing (Houston, Texas

Office) and the HUD official who oversaw Mockingbird, testified


     9
     Albert Cason, HUD’s Houston Director of Multi-Family Housing,
testified that rental revenues pay for the costs of complying with
the Regulatory Agreement, including 1) the reserve fund for
replacements, Regulatory Agreement 2(a); 2) the residual receipts
fund, id. at 2(c); 3) the cost of producing and submitting the
property’s annual financial report, id. at 9(e); and, 4) the costs
of the management contract, id. at 9(a).

                                              14
that “[e]verything that comes from the project’s operation is paid

from the rents,” and “[w]e’ve all agreed that the operation and

maintenance of the property comes out of the rents.”                     Similarly,

HUD’s handbook states that “[i]n reviewing requests from owners

concerning rents and charges, the Field Office should be guided by

the   fact   that    these   rents     and    fees   should   and    must   provide

sufficient     and    adequate    funding       to   operate       the   projects.”

Multifamily Asset Management and Project Servicing, United States

Department of Housing and Urban Development, Handbook 4350.01 Rev-

1,7-1   (September     1992);    see    also    42   U.S.C.    §    1437f(c)(2)(B)

(stating that HUD shall adjust the HAP contract to provide for

sufficient monthly rents “to reflect increases in the actual and

necessary expenses of owning and maintaining the units”); 12 U.S.C.

§ 1747c.; Beck Park, 695 F.2d at 371 (“HUD has the duty to maintain

reasonable rents, based on operating costs, and to allow project

owners a reasonable return on their investment.”).

             Second, HUD forced Village to be organized as a single

asset entity, which can neither own or operate any other property

nor   conduct any other business besides owning the property.                   See

Regulatory Agreement § 6(f) (prohibiting Village from engaging “in

any other business or activity, including the operation of any

other rental project”).         Because of this requirement, Village had

no source of income to maintain the property other than the rental

revenues.     The only way for it to obtain a sufficient amount of


                                         15
money to pay for the needed repairs was by seeking a rent increase.

HUD’s refusal to consider a rent increase effectively forced

Village either to default or, as HUD well knew, to seek additional

equity or debt financing without assurance that these investments

would be recouped.

            Third, Village signed a non-recourse note, guaranteed by

HUD.   From the inception of HUD’s program, therefore, Village was

not required to support the property financially after its initial

investment.    Had Village not obtained a non-recourse loan, then

either Village as an entity or perhaps its investors could have

been made responsible to the lender (and HUD) for failure to repay

or comply with terms of the loan.                One HUD official put it this

way: “[HUD} does not require owners to make outright cash gifts to

the projects they own.          After final endorsement of a mortgage,

there is no requirement of owners to provide additional funds to a

project.”      Letter    from    Dean       K.   Reger,   Deputy      Director   of

Multifamily Housing Management, to Mr. Streuby L. Drumm, Jr.

(October 21, 1994).

            The interplay among these aspects of the regulatory

program makes clear that all of the expenses of operating and

maintaining a low income housing project must be paid out of the

rental   revenues,   which      in   turn    are    subsidized   by    HUD.      The

regulatory scheme does not contemplate that property owners must

bear the risk of maintaining properties based on insufficient

rental revenues.        HUD could understandably refuse to provide

                                        16
financial assistance to an owner that has misappropriated funds,

mismanaged the property, taken a profit instead of maintaining the

property, or been negligent in its management in some other regard.

When those elements are absent, however, the statutes provide that

HUD must ensure that the owner receives rents sufficient to meet at

least the operating and maintenance expenses of the property.

There is no statutory or regulatory basis for imposing on a

conscientious low-income housing operator the risk of uncompensated

dilapidation or deterioration; the federal government, not the

private contractor, is charged with funding the public program.

           In the case at hand, it is alleged that rental revenues

approved by HUD were consistently insufficient to cover the cost of

operating and maintaining the property.10   Village sought several

rental increases over the course of its ownership of Mockingbird,

but it never received the full amount requested, nor the amount it

thought was necessary to maintain the property.11   Annual financial


     10
       In January 1988, a HUD inspection indicated that the HUD-
approved rent schedule was insufficient to satisfy Mockingbird’s
needs.   See Management Review Questionnaire, January 27, 1988.
Seven years later, (and one month before Village requested the rent
increase request involved in this case), a HUD Management Review
Report also stated that the HUD-approved rent schedule was
insufficient to meet Mockingbird’s needs. See Management Review
Summary Sheet, May 3, 1995.
      11
        In 1990, Village requested a 15% rent increase, but HUD
approved a 10.4% increase.     In 1993, Village requested an 18%
increase, but HUD approved only a 12% increase. In 1994, Village
requested a 15% increase, but HUD granted only a 7% increase. The
last time Village requested a rent increase, in 1995, Village
requested a 29% increase, but HUD refused to consider the request
unless Village first escrowed $2 million.

                                17
audits appear to have routinely showed, moreover, that Village

never misappropriated funds or squandered its revenues.    Village

never received a profit from Mockingbird and appears to have

applied all of its revenues to cover costs of operating and

maintaining the property.   In addition, there was no evidence that

the property was mismanaged,12 nor did HUD ever attempt to remove

the management company as it had a right to do.     See Regulatory

Agreement, 9(a) (“Any management contract entered into by Owners .

. . involving the project shall contain a provision that it shall

be subject to termination, without penalty, and with or without

cause, upon written request by the Commissioner addressed to the

Owners.”).




       12
        Although HUD now accuses Village of poorly maintaining
Mockingbird, there is a dearth of evidence to support its claim.
At most, the record reflects a concern by HUD that Mockingbird’s
maintenance staff was inexperienced. The record does not evince,
however, the sort of wide-spread mismanagement suggested by HUD.
In fact, the record reveals the opposite.      For instance, in a
letter written to Village less than two weeks before HUD became a
mortgagee in possession, HUD conceded that it “has no current
problems with the performance of the Management Company because it
was presumed the company was not properly funded to effect
appropriate repairs.” Letter from Albert Cason, HUD Director of
Multi-Family Housing, to Dean Earle Ross, General Partner,
Christopher Village Limited Partnership (November 20, 1995); see
also Deposition of Albert Cason,         286 (October 24, 1996)
(testifying that the cause of Mockingbird’s decline was not the
management, but the lack of money to repair the property); HUD
Management Review, Part A, A-1 (May 3, 1995) (finding that,
although Mockingbird is in poor condition, “on-site management
appears to be earnestly trying to make corrections with the funds
and training allocated”).

                                18
            These facts reinforce Village’s contention that HUD’s $2

million demand was arbitrary and capricious.                     As noted supra,

instead of considering Village’s rent request, HUD determined that

“no action”    would     be    taken   unless      Village   first      escrowed    $2

million. HUD cannot point to any statute, regulation, or agreement

with Village giving it the discretion to table Village’s rent

increase request and use it as leverage to demand $2 million new

equity for repairs.13



            Because     HUD    acted     without     statutory     or     regulatory

authority,    the     agency    arbitrarily        and   capriciously       demanded

Village to escrow $2 million before it would consider the rent

request.

            HUD argues that a holding in Village’s favor would mean

that HUD has the duty to pay for all of a property’s maintenance

expenses,    thus     giving    owners     the     incentive     to     neglect    the


     13
      Furthermore, HUD’s motive in refusing to consider Village’s
rent request was suspect. Internal HUD e-mail showed that, for
several months prior to declaring Village in default, HUD officials
planned to force Mockingbird into default and thus obtain the
property. Responding to one suggested course of action, one HUD
official stated:
          I don’t think these are the same courses of action, but
are parallel. They’ll attempt possession through a deed in lieu;
conduct the inspection and notice the owner in case they need a
regulatory default and begin foreclosure as soon [as] the loan is
assigned (if it[‘]s not). Whichever action is completed first will
have accomplished the desired goal: possession of the property, the
quickest way possible.
          E-Mail from Albert B. Sullivan to Kenneth F. Hannon et
al. (April 24, 1995).

                                         19
maintenance needs of their property.          We disagree.   This decision

has   no   bearing   on   those   cases    where   a   property   owner   has

negligently permitted the property to deteriorate or has misused

its rental income in a way that has caused the maintenance problem.

As noted supra, rental increase decisions are discretionary and are

generally unreviewable by the courts.          In this case, however, HUD

acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it refused to abide by its

legal obligation to consider a rental increase request from a non-

negligent owner and instead demanded a $2 million cash infusion and

then declared the property in default for those very reasons.

                      IV.   DUE PROCESS VIOLATION

            Village also argues that HUD officials violated due

process by abating a single Section 8 subsidy payment.               In May

1995, a HUD inspection of Mockingbird revealed that 173 out of 200

units   failed   HUD’s    Housing   Quality    Standard   (“HSQ”)   review.

Consequently, HUD gave Mockingbird 30 days to repair the units or

face abatement of its Section 8 subsidies.         A follow-up inspection

revealed that all but 19 of the units were repaired;              thus, HUD

abated its subsidy accordingly.           The abatement, which totaled $

7,594, lasted only one month (August 1995) as the remaining 19

units later passed inspection. According to Village, HUD officials

falsified the inspection reports that formed the basis of HUD’s

decision to abate. In addition, Village claims that “[n]one of the

cited deficiencies justified abating the Section 8 payments.”



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             The HAP contract gives HUD complete discretion regarding

decisions to reduce Village’s Section 8 subsidy.                   See Housing

Assistance Payments Contract, § 26 (b)(2)(b) (stating that HUD may

“[r]educe or suspend housing assistance payments until the default

under this Contract has been cured to the satisfaction of HUD”).

As with decisions whether to grant or deny rent increase requests,

see supra, HUD’s exercise of discretion with respect to HUD’s

abatement decision is unreviewable.14         The district court correctly

granted summary judgment for HUD on this issue.

                                 CONCLUSION

             Village’s request for an injunction and mandamus is now

moot   because     Mockingbird   was    sold    at     a    foreclosure   sale,

transferred to the City of Bryan, and razed. Village’s declaratory

judgment request, however, still presents a live controversy.

Because we find that HUD acted arbitrarily and capriciously in

declaring Village in default after it demanded that Village pay $2

million before considering Village’s rent increase request, we

reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment.                    Upon

remand,     the   district   court   should    issue       Village’s   requested

declaratory judgment consistent with this opinion.




       14
       The documents that Village proffers as proof of falsified
reports are immaterial. HUD could not have possibly relied upon
these documents in deciding to abate the August payment because all
of the documents pre-date HUD’s June 15, 1995, re-inspection that
formed the basis of the abatement.

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          Appeal DISMISSED AS MOOT in part, AFFIRMED in part, and

REVERSED in part.




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