U.S. Supreme Court lifts New York's
pandemic-related eviction ban
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[August 13, 2021]
By Andrew Chung
(Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on
Thursday lifted New York state's ban on residential evictions during the
COVID-19 pandemic, handing a victory to a group of small landlords that
challenged a moratorium that had been slated to expire on Aug. 31. |
Light from the sunset shines on the United States Supreme Court Building
in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 13, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly |
The
justices granted an emergency request by the landlords to lift
the ban on eviction proceedings while litigation over the
dispute continues. The nine-member court's three liberal
justices dissented from the decision.
A lower court in June rejected landlords' argument that the
moratorium violated their rights to due process of law and free
speech under the U.S. Constitution.
Some landlords in the state could still could face another
barrier. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on
Aug. 3 issued a new 60-day federal moratorium on
residential evictions to combat the spread of COVID-19, focused
on jurisdictions with high infection rates.
The New York dispute centers on a state law passed last December
that halts all new or pending evictions if tenants submit a
declaration that they are experiencing financial hardship or
that moving would pose a pandemic-related health risk. The law
similarly protects small landlords from foreclosure.
The five New York landlords sued various officials to stop the
law's enforcement after legislators extended its May expiration
to the end of August. The landlords said they have been "pushed
to the brink of disaster" even as many other pandemic-related
restrictions have eased. Though all of their tenants stopped
paying rent - some even before the pandemic - they said they
have been unable to proceed with evictions.
The suit argues that the New York eviction law violates their
right to due process under the Constitution's 14th Amendment
because it allows a tenant's declaration of hardship to deny
them legal recourse.
The law also requires landlords to provide the declaration form
to the tenants, which they said compels them to deliver a
message they do not support in violation of their First
Amendment right to free speech.
Writing in dissent, liberal Justice Stephen Breyer said the
burdens on the landlords must be balanced with the hardships of
tenants who "will now be forced to face eviction proceedings
earlier than expected." He added that in this case, "I would not
second-guess politically accountable officials’ determination of
how best to 'guard and protect' the people of New York."
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York. Editing by Will Dunham
and Aurora Ellis)
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