Filed 10/8/15 Volis v. Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles CA2/5
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION FIVE


RICHARD J. VOLIS,                                                   B262248

         Plaintiff and Appellant,                                   (Los Angeles County
                                                                    Super. Ct. No. BS149294)
         v.

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY
OF LOS ANGELES,

         Defendant and Respondent.



         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of California. Robert H.
O’Brien, Judge. Affirmed.
         Richard J. Volis, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
         Joseph L. Stark & Associates, Joseph L. Stark, for Defendant and Respondent.
       Appellant Richard J. Volis (Volis) sought a writ of mandate ordering respondent
Housing Authority of Los Angeles (the Housing Authority) to set aside its final decision
approving a rent increase sought by the landlord of Volis’s “Section 8” apartment. The
trial court denied his administrative mandamus writ petition, finding it was moot. Volis,
appearing in propria persona, raises assorted claims of error. We reject his claims and
affirm because the limited appellate record before us provides no basis to question the
trial court’s judgment.


                                    BACKGROUND
       The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds a
Housing Choice Voucher program, which state or local public housing agencies
administer. The program allows senior citizens, individuals with low incomes, and those
with disabilities to select privately owned rental units. Assuming the housing agency
approves the tenancy, the housing agency contracts with the property owner to make rent
subsidy payments on behalf of the program participants. (24 C.F.R. § 982.1.) These rent
subsidy vouchers are often referred to as “Section 8” benefits, based on the section of the
United States Housing Act of 1937 under which they are authorized. (42 U.S.C. § 1437f;
24 C.F.R. § 982.2.) Program regulations do not permit housing agencies to approve a
tenancy unless the rent is reasonable, and the regulations also provide that any proposed
rent increases for units occupied by program participants must be reviewed and approved
by the relevant state or local housing agency. (24 C.F.R. §§ 982.1(a)(2), 982.308 (g)(4)
[rent increases subject to reasonableness requirement], 507(a)-(b) [housing agency must
determine the reasonable rent for the unit compared to other unassisted units in the area].)
       Volis is a single man and under HUD guidelines he was approved for a one-
bedroom Section 8 housing assistance voucher. Volis, however, selected a two-bedroom
apartment in Sylmar, California where the rental payment was initially $1,177 per month.
The Housing Authority approved the tenancy with Volis paying $239 of that amount and
the Housing Authority paying $938, the amount of the one-bedroom voucher for which


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Volis had been approved. In July 2012, Volis’s landlord submitted a request to the
Housing Authority to increase the rent on Volis’s unit to $1,595 per month. The Housing
Authority conducted an evaluation of comparable free-market priced units in the area,
determined that $1,420 per month was a reasonable rental amount for Volis’s unit, and
authorized an increase to that amount effective October 1, 2012. The Housing Authority
notified Volis that the voucher amount to which he was entitled ($938 per month) would
not change and that he would accordingly be responsible for paying the additional $243 in
rent per month.
       Volis invoked the Housing Authority’s hearing procedures to challenge the
agency’s rent increase authorization. It appears from the administrative record that Volis
and Housing Authority representatives attended an informal hearing before a hearing
officer in July, which was continued to September 2013. Appellant argued the hearing
officer should set aside the Housing Authority’s decision because his apartment failed to
pass safety inspections. In response, the Housing Authority explained that the only issue
in a Section 8 rent increase proceeding was whether the increase was justified, and the
Housing Authority contended Volis submitted no evidence to demonstrate its calculations
based on comparable units on the market were incorrect.
       On October 21, 2013, the hearing officer issued her decision. The decision
explains, citing 24 C.F.R. section 519, that the Housing Authority is obligated to permit
the landlord of a privately-owned Section 8 unit to seek an increase in rent once annually.
The hearing officer found that Volis provided no information to establish that the
Housing Authority misapplied regulations in granting the rent increase, nor had he shown
the increased rental amount was based upon incorrect information.
       Volis apparently filed a petition for writ of administrative mandamus (§ 1094.5)1
in the trial court seeking review of the hearing officer’s decision; a copy of the petition is
not included in the record on appeal. A minute order in the record indicates the matter


1      Undesignated statutory citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

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was heard on January 15, 2015; Volis has not provided us with a reporter’s transcript of
the proceedings.
       The trial court issued a written decision on January 23, 2015, denying Volis’s writ
petition as moot. The court, noting that Volis’s petition only sought a writ of mandate
directing the Housing Authority to set aside its decision approving the rental increase,
explained: “Respondent [Housing Authority] states that Petitioner has moved out of the
housing unit in question and that the unit has since been removed from the Section 8
program. Petitioner was apparently given the option of using his Section 8 housing
voucher to obtain alternative accommodations but refused to do so, resulting in his
termination from the Section 8 housing program.” The trial court concluded it was
therefore unclear whether a decision in Volis’s favor would have any effect, and it denied
the petition on that basis. The court thereafter entered a judgment of dismissal for the
Housing Authority.
       Volis filed a timely notice of appeal. This court issued an order on July 16, 2015,
directing both parties to brief whether the absence of a reporter’s transcript requires
affirmance based on the inadequacy of the record.


                                       DISCUSSION
       We presume trial court judgments are correct, and an appellant must affirmatively
establish error by an adequate record. (Ballard v. Uribe (1986) 41 Cal.3d 564, 574-575;
Osgood v. Landon (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 425, 435.) In dismissing Volis’s petition as
moot, the trial court apparently relied on a showing by the Housing Authority that Volis
had moved out of the apartment in question, that the unit had been removed from the
Section 8 program, and that Volis’s participation in the Section 8 program was terminated
after he declined to use his housing voucher to obtain alternative accommodations.
       Many documents from the trial court proceedings are missing in the appellate
record: the petition filed in this action, any request for judicial notice Volis may have
submitted, the reporter’s transcript of the trial court’s hearing on the petition, and other


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documents filed by the parties in connection with the petition. Without these materials,
we are unable to assess whether the findings that resulted in dismissal of the petition were
supported by sufficient evidence. We must therefore presume they were. (Hernandez v.
California Hospital Medical Center (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 498, 502 [court of appeal
unable to conclude the trial court’s decision was error where relevant documents not
included in the record].) Moreover, that presumption is reinforced by Volis’s brief on
appeal, which appears to concede at least some facts relevant to mootness. (Reply Brief
at pp. 7-8 [“Appellant contends that on March 31, 2015, he became homeless due to the
loss of his housing voucher and was subsequently terminat[ed] from the Section 8
Program due to the difficulty in locating suitable housing that would accommodate the
Appellant’s disabilities and accept Appellant’s emotional support animals”].)
       Volis argues, however, the petition is not moot because there has been a
“continuing violation of fraudulent concealment, abuse violations, and misrepresentation
wrongs.” He cites Title 29, United States Code, section 794 and briefs he appears to have
filed in a federal lawsuit. He claims that this “continuing violations doctrine” prevents a
finding of mootness. As best as we can tell, Volis seeks to rely on the doctrine that
permits a plaintiff alleging a discrimination cause of action under the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973 to rely on a continuing series of violations in determining whether the cause of
action is barred by the relevant statute of limitations. (See, e.g., Ervine v. Desert View
Regional Medical Center Holdings, LLC (9th Cir. 2014) 753 F.3d 862, 869.) That
doctrine has no application here.




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       Because we conclude the record provides no basis to review, much less reverse,
the trial court’s judgment dismissing the petition as moot, we need not reach Volis’s
specific claims of error on appeal.2


                                       DISPOSITION
       The judgment of the superior court is affirmed. The Housing Authority is to
recover its costs on appeal.


               NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS




                                   BAKER, J.
We Concur:




       TURNER, P.J.




       KRIEGLER, J.




2       We note, however, that the record is likewise insufficient to permit us to assess
many if not all of those claims: that the trial court’s evidentiary rulings, including its
ruling on appellant’s request for judicial notice of the federal proceedings, were in error;
that the Housing Authority in bad faith provided him with a version of the administrative
record that was improperly paginated; that the Housing Authority made false
representations to the trial court; that he was denied due process at the hearing on his
petition because the judge presiding was not familiar with his case and failed to issue a
tentative ruling before the hearing; and that he was denied a reasonable accommodation
to extend the term of the voucher so he could remain in the same neighborhood.

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