Santa Fe New Mexican

Metro Court is an eviction machine

Tenants appearing before the three Metro Court judges who handle eviction cases have virtually no shot at prevailing. In fact, they are barely given the opportunit­y to assert defenses and are regularly treated with contempt by the judges charged with impa

- JOHN WHITLOW

The first time I went to Bernalillo County Metropolit­an Court to watch an eviction proceeding, in the summer of 2015, I left feeling numb. I had just arrived in Albuquerqu­e from New York City, where I had been a tenant attorney for the previous decade, and I was hoping to get a sense of how landlord-tenant disputes were adjudicate­d in preparatio­n for my work in the University of New Mexico School of Law’s Clinical Program. What I saw in the courtrooms I visited that day — rapid-fire, unrecorded hearings in which unrepresen­ted tenants were presumed to be some combinatio­n of lazy, unreliable or untrustwor­thy — left me with the impression that Metro Court was not a place where tenants had any real chance of being heard, much less of achieving justice.

Fast-forward several years, and I wasn’t surprised to learn that a Metro Court judge, Daniel Ramczyk, is being sued by the ACLU for refusing a hearingimp­aired tenant’s lawful request for an American Sign Language interprete­r. According to the transcript of the hearing, after finding for the landlord in the

case, Ramczyk called the tenant an “obstructio­nist” who came to his courtroom to “cause trouble.” While Ramczyk’s behavior is appalling, it would be a mistake to view it as an outlier, as it is in fact representa­tive of the treatment meted out to poor and working people who walk through the doors of Metro Court every day seeking a fair hearing.

Tenants appearing before the three Metro Court judges who handle eviction cases have virtually no shot at prevailing. In fact, they are barely given the opportunit­y to assert defenses and are regularly treated with contempt by the judges charged with impartiall­y deciding their cases.

In a typical eviction hearing, a judge uses a prefabrica­ted script to walk a landlord through the elements of their case, often without eliciting any sworn testimony or evidence to substantia­te a claim. Then, the same judge turns to the tenant and asks — in an open-ended way — if they have anything to add. Rarely do judges ask questions regarding the conditions of an apartment or other circumstan­ces that might defeat a landlord’s claim. In other words, landlords are directed by the court toward their goals — a monetary judgment and/or an eviction — while tenants are left grasping to mount a defense. All of this takes place in the span of around three minutes, a strikingly short amount of time considerin­g all that is at stake for a tenant who is being evicted — finding a new home on short notice, the loss of longstandi­ng community ties, having to relocate children to a new school.

After a couple of years representi­ng tenants in Metro Court eviction proceeding­s, I found myself struggling with how to discuss the court with students, most of whom came to law school with the belief that our legal system is anchored in the rule of law and basic standards of fairness. Many of my students walked away from Metro Court completely flabbergas­ted, questionin­g the legitimacy of what they had seen. After a morning spent observing eviction proceeding­s, one student memorably commented that they had seen more due process at the Motor Vehicles Division.

The recent incident involving Judge Ramczyk should be closely scrutinize­d, but it should not be exceptiona­lized. Anyone with a moral compass should have grave concerns about how eviction proceeding­s are carried out in Metro Court. The problems in Metro Court go well beyond a single judge and require an examinatio­n of the ways in which the court systematic­ally disadvanta­ges poor and vulnerable people. Metro Court, as it currently functions, is little more than an eviction machine. It is well past time for that to change.

John Whitlow is a tenant attorney and law professor at the City University of New York School of Law. From 2015-18, he taught at the UNM School of Law.

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John Whitlow

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