Rex Schellenberg v. City Of Los Angeles — In September 2018 Carol Sobel Filed Yet Another Federal Suit Against The City Of Los Angeles — Alleging Summary Confiscation And Destruction Of The Property Of An Elderly Disabled Homeless Man — And Seeking An Injunction Against These Practices — For Some Reason This Has Not Been Covered At All In The Media — Read The Initial Complaint Here

On September 3, 2018 Carol Sobel filed suit in federal court against the City of Los Angeles, alleging that Rex Schellenberg, a homeless man living in the San Fernando Valley, stepped away from his property briefly only to have it confiscated and much of it destroyed by the LAPD and LA Sanitation personnel. I can’t find anything about this case in the media, in contrast to Sobel’s other pending case on the matter, Mitchell v. City of LA, which is covered extensively. You can read and get copies of the pleadings here on Archive.Org. I’ll update the collection as more stuff is filed.

The facts of the case are simple. Schellenberg, an elderly man homeless in Los Angeles for more than twenty years and disabled as well, lives in the San Fernando Valley. In July 2017 he left his property momentarily unattended to visit a convenience store and employees of the City of Los Angeles summarily confiscated and destroyed Schellenberg’s neatly stored possessions. In its monumental decision in Lavan v. City of LA, the Ninth Circuit had this to say about this practice:

As we have repeatedly made clear, “[t]he government may not take property like a thief in the night; rather, it must announce its intentions and give the property owner a chance to argue against the taking.” This simple rule holds regardless of whether the property in question is an Escalade or [a tent], a Cadillac or a cart. The City demonstrates that it completely misunderstands the role of due process by its contrary suggestion that homeless persons instantly and permanently lose any protected property interest in their possessions by leaving them momentarily unattended in violation of a municipal ordinance. As the district court recognized, the logic of the City’s suggestion would also allow it to seize and destroy cars parked in no-parking zones left momentarily unattended.

As with all of Sobel’s writing, the initial complaint makes compelling reading. You can get a copy of the PDF here, or turn the page for a transcription of selections.


PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

3. In 2012, the Ninth Circuit upheld a preliminary injunction in Lavan v. City of Los Angeles. Lavan challenged the enforcement of an earlier version of LAMC § 56.11, proscribing the placement of any personal property on public property. Lavan v. City of Los Angeles. In Lavan, the district court enjoined the City from seizing property of unhoused individuals which is not abandoned, evidence of a crime or creates an immediate public hazard without complying with due process notice requirements. The injunction also barred the City from summarily destroying seized property and ordered the City to store the property for 90 days, consistent with state law. In affirming the rights of the plaintiffs in Lavan, the Ninth Circuit underscored that the “simple rule [i.e. notice and an opportunity to be heard by an impartial tribunal] holds whether the property in question is an Escalade or a [tent], a Cadillac or a cart.”

4. The City of Los Angeles has been sued repeatedly to stop the unlawful seizure and summary destruction of the personal property of homeless individuals. See e.g., Bennion v. City of Los Angeles, LASC Case C637718 (1987); Justin v. City of Los Angeles, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17881; CV-00-12352 LGB (CD Cal. 2000); Lavan v. City of Los Angeles , 797 F. Supp. 2d 1005 (CD Cal. 2011); aff’d, 693 F.3d 1022 (9th Cir. 2013). It has also been sued twice to challenge the same practices in the Venice area. The most recent injunction issued in Mitchell v. City of Los Angeles,.

5. Despite the repeated decisions from the federal court holding that homelessness is not a crime, the City continues to seize personal property and destroyed it without an opportunity for the rightful owner to reclaim it.

PARTIES

Rex Schellenberg

6. Plaintiff REX SCHEFFENBERG is a 78-year-old chronically homeless and disabled individual residing on the streets of Los Angeles. He is physically disabled. His sole source of income is Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). Given his fixed income, he is unable to secure appropriate affordable housing in the City.

7. Mr. Schellenberg became homeless in the early 1990s after the Hollywood home he was renting was sold and he was forced to move. Mr. Schellenberg had limited income and could not to rent at another location. He began living in his recreational vehicle (RV) on the streets of Los Angeles. For some period of time, he lived in the vehicle in a mobile home park, but his employment was precarious and after a couple of years he could not pay the fees to rent a space at the mobile park either. Mr. Schellenberg eventually lost his vehicle and began living on the streets.

8. In 2005, Mr. Schellenberg was violently assaulted by an individual and he suffered a severe spinal injury. As a result of his injuries, he began receiving SSDI benefits.

9. Mr. Schellenberger lives in the San Fernando Valley, near the intersection of Balboa and Nordhoff Boulevards. On or about July 14, 2017, Defendants confiscated and summarily destroyed Mr. Schellenberg’s property that was neatly stored on a public sidewalk.

FACTS

13. On or about July 14, 2017, Mr. Schellenberg was on a public sidewalk at the intersection of Balboa and Nordhoff in the Northridge neighborhood of the City of Los Angeles. He had his personal property with him as he had slept there the previous night, pursuant to the settlement in Jones v. City of Los Angeles. That morning, Mr. Schellenberg packed his belongings, including his tent and suitcases, and neatly stored them on the sidewalk, directly adjacent to a clothing donation receptacle located on the same sidewalk.

14. Mr. Schellenberg loaded a stroller with his most valuable belongings and began walking toward a nearby convenience store while pushing the stroller. As he walked in that direction and away from his other belongings, two LAPD officers (DOE 1 and DOE 2) stopped him and instructed him to return to the sidewalk with his stroller and the rest of his belongings.

15. On information and belief, the LAPD officers called for a vehicle from the Los Angeles Department of Public Works, Bureau of Sanitation. When Public Works employees arrived, the LAPD officers instructed the City employees to take all of Mr. Schellenberg’s property. At the same time, City employees gave Mr. Schellenberg one, 60-gallon trash bag and told him that he could only keep those belongings that fit in the bag.

16. While Mr. Schellenberg attempted to salvage some of his property, City employees simultaneously began seizing his property. Mr. Schellenberg objected to the City employees taking his property and repeatedly told them his property was not trash. Still, City employees arbitrarily and capriciously decided which property would be seized.

17. On information and belief, most of the property was thrown in the back of a green trash truck and destroyed in the garbage compressor. Some property appeared to be seized and stored in the cab of the green truck.

18. The only property Mr. Schellenberg was left with was three torn suitcases filled with women’s clothes that were donated to him and which he intended to distribute to unhoused women in need.

19. Among the property that the Defendant City seized was Mr. Schellenberg’s new Schwinn bicycle, a stroller that he used to transport his clothes and essential property, a laptop, and important personal papers such as his Section 8 Housing Voucher.

20. All of Mr. Schellenberg’s property was stored together in a manner that clearly indicated it was not trash nor abandoned. At the time that the bicycle was seized, Mr. Schellenberg had removed one wheel and chained the wheel and bicycle to the stroller. This is common practice of bicycle riders in public places when a bicycle is briefly left unattended and is done in order to prevent bicycle thefts. The bicycle was fully operational when the wheel was attached.

21. After City employees seized his property, Mr. Schellenberg asked the two LAPD officers where his property would be taken. The LAPD officers did not tell him where he could retrieve his belongings. Instead, the officers handed him paperwork related to the LAPD “H.O.P.E.” Team.

22. Following this event, Mr. Schellenberg searched online and discovered a phone number for the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Sanitation “unattended property” line. He was informed that if any property was stored by Public Works, it would be held at a storage facility located on Towne Avenue in Downtown Los Angeles. The Towne Avenue facility is located almost 30 miles from the location at which Mr. Schellenberg’s property was seized.

Traveling on public transportation from the west Valley to the Towne Avenue facility would take hours. Mr. Schellenberg could not travel to the facility because of his disability. No accommodation was available or offered to help him retrieve his personal property, if any, stored at the distant storage facility.

23. Mr. Schellenberg made every effort to recover his property. He was eventually able to speak by phone with a supervisor at the storage facility. Mr. Schellenberg identified when and where his property was seized, but was informed him that no vehicle from that area brought in property on the day in question.

24. On information and belief, Mr. Schellenberg believes that nearly all of his property seized in this incident was immediately and completely destroyed by City workers and that none of it was stored. Approximately a month after he was told that none of his property was stored, City employees called Mr. Schellenberg and informed him that they found property that was mislabeled and asked him to describe the belongings that were taken. After he identified some of the property as his own, City employees returned the property to him in the parking lot of a local Goodwill. He received a tent, a blanket, and some clothing, but not his bicycle, laptop, personal documents including his Section 8 Voucher, or clothing and bedding seized on July 14, 2017.

25. This was not the first or the last time Mr. Schellenberg’s was seized. Each time, his essential property such as tent, blankets, clothing, and canned food was taken and destroyed.

26. The loss of his personal papers is a significant hardship. To obtain new paperwork for his Section 8 Housing eligibility, Mr. Schellenberg must travel downtown to the Housing Authority office. He risks leaving his property behind and having it seized and destroyed by the City once again. This cycle is prolonging and interfering with his efforts to regain permanent supportive housing.

27. Mr. Schellenberg must regularly migrate between different areas of the San Fernando Valley to avoid further harassment by City officials. On information and belief, the Defendant City has engaged in this practice at least six different times, stripping Mr. Schellenberg of his essential belongings each time.

FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION
Right to Be Secure From Unreasonable Seizures
Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments (42 U.S.C. § 1983)

California Constitution, Art. 1, § 13

31. Defendant and its employees and agents violated Plaintiffs Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure of his property by confiscating and then destroying Plaintiffs property without a warrant.

32. These unlawful actions were done with the specific intent to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional right to be secure in his property.

33. Plaintiff is informed and believes that the acts of the Defendant and its employees and agents were intentional in failing to protect and preserve Plaintiff’s property and that, at a minimum, were deliberately indifferent to the likely consequence that the property would be seized and destroyed unlawfully, even though the right at issue was well-established at the time.

34. As a direct and proximate consequence of these unlawful acts, Plaintiff has suffered and continues to suffer loss of his personal property and is entitled to compensatory damages for his property and personal injury.

SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION
Violation of the Takings Clause
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment (42 U.S.C. § 1983)

California Constitution, Art. 1 § 19

36. Defendant and its employees and agents seized and destroyed Plaintiff’s property without offer or opportunity for compensation, in violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.

37. As a direct and proximate consequence of these unlawful acts, Plaintiff has suffered and continues to suffer loss of his personal property and is entitled to just compensation for his property and personal injury.

THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION
Right to Due Process of Law
Fourteenth Amendment (42 U.S.C. § 1983)

California Constitution, Art. 1, § 7

39. Defendant and its employees and agents owed a duty to Plaintiff under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to provide Plaintiff with adequate notice that his property was at risk of being seized and/or destroyed, and to preserve that property or provide adequate means of reclaiming it in a timely manner.

40. These unlawful actions were done with the specific intent to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional right to due process of law.

41. Plaintiff is informed and believes that the acts of the Defendant and its employees and agents were intentional in failing to protect and preserve Plaintiff’s property and that, at a minimum, were deliberately indifferent to the likely consequence that the property would be seized and destroyed unlawfully, even though the right at issue was well-established at the time.

42. As a direct and proximate consequence of these unlawful acts, Plaintiff has suffered and continues to suffer loss of his personal property and is entitled to compensatory damages for his property and personal injury.

FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION
Violation of 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.: Title II – Americans with

Disabilities Act

44. Title II of the ADA provides in pertinent part: “[N]o qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such disability, be … denied the benefits of the services, programs, or activities of a public entity, or be subjected to discrimination by any such entity.” 42 U.S.C. § 12132.

45. At all times relevant to this action, Defendant, its employees and agents, were public entities within the meaning of Title II of the ADA and provided programs, services, or activity to the general public.

49. Plaintiffs knew, or should have known, that the incidence of disabilities for people who are homeless is extremely high, with estimates as high as more than one in two homeless individuals suffering from some significant mental, medical or physical disability, and many, like Plaintiff, suffering from compound disabilities. On information and belief, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant could have reasonably retained Plaintiff’s bicycle, critical personal papers, and other property in a location that was accessible to an individual with disabilities. As a public entity, Defendants are required to “make reasonable modifications in policies practices, or procedures when the modifications are necessary to avoid discrimination on the basis of disability” where, as here, modifications to would not “fundamentally alter the nature of the service, program or activity.” 28 C.F.R. § 35.130(b)(7). This includes the need to make reasonable accommodations to protect the essential life-protecting and mobility assistive property of persons who are homeless, as well as provide prompt and reasonable access to ensure that individuals are able to recover seized property. The policies, practices and procedures challenged in this action, even if otherwise facially neutral, unduly burden disabled persons who are without shelter and within the federal definition of homeless.

50. Defendant, its employees and agents, committed the acts and omissions alleged herein with intent and/or reckless disregard for the rights of Plaintiff.

51. Plaintiff is informed and believes that Defendant and its agents and employees have failed and continue to fail to adopt and enforce adequate policies and procedures for interacting with homeless individuals with disabilities.

FIFTH CAUSE OF ACTION
Violation of Unruh Civil Rights Act
Cal. Civ. Code § 51

53. California Civil Code 51 et seq. provides in pertinent part that: “All persons within the jurisdiction of this state are free and equal, and no matter what their … disability … are entitled to the full and equal… privileges, or services in all business establishments of every kind whatsoever.”

54. Defendant, through its agents and employees in the LAPD and Department of Public Works, is a “business establishment” within the meaning of §51.

55. The acts and omissions complained of herein denied Plaintiff his right to be free from discrimination on the basis of his disability, and were done with intent or reckless disregard for Plaintiff’s rights as a disabled individual.

56. Asa direct and proximate consequence of these unlawful acts, Plaintiff has suffered and continues to suffer loss of his statutory rights and is entitled to statutory damages pursuant to California Civil Code §§52 and 52.1. Plaintiff is also entitled to an injunction pursuant to Cal. Civ. Code § 52.1.

INJUNCTIVE RELIEF

64. A real and immediate difference exits between Plaintiff and Defendant regarding Plaintiff’s rights and Defendant’s duty owed to Plaintiff to protect Plaintiff’s personal property present on the public sidewalks and streets of the City of Los Angeles. Defendant’s policies and actions have resulted and will result in irreparable injury to Plaintiff.

65. There is no plain, adequate, or complete remedy at law to address the wrongs described herein. The Defendant City has made it clear that it intends to continue these practices of confiscating and immediately destroying the property of homeless individuals from the public streets and sidewalks without a warrant, without pre- and post- deprivation notice, and without just compensation. Unless restrained by this Court, Defendant will continue to implement this policy and practice.

66. As a direct and proximate consequence of the acts of Defendant’s Plaintiff has and will continue to suffer damages through injury to his person and the loss of his personal property, including bedding, clothing, medication, tents, tarts, personal papers, and other personal possessions. Plaintiff claims that these acts are contrary to law and seeks a declaration of his rights with regard to this controversy.

PRAYER FOR RELIEF

WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays as follows:

1. For a declaratory judgment that Defendant’s policies, practices and conduct as alleged herein violate Plaintiff’s rights under the United States and California Constitutions and the laws of California;

2. For an order enjoining and restraining Defendant from engaging in the policies, practices, and conduct complained of herein;

3. For damages according to proof and on the basis of minimum statutory amounts recoverable under California law for the loss of Plaintiff’s property, the violation of his constitutional rights, and for pain and suffering resulting from the unlawful conduct of Defendant;

4. For costs of suit and attorney fees as provided by law;

5. For such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.

DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL

Plaintiff hereby respectfully demands that a trial by jury be conducted with respect to all issues presented herein.

Dated: September 3, 2018 Respectfully submitted,

LAW OFFICE OF CAROL A. SOBEL

/s/ Carol A. Sobel

By: Carol A. Sobel
Attorneys for Plaintiffs


Image of Carol Sobel is ©2018 MichaelKohlhaas.Org. It’s a modified version of this image.

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