PHILADELPHIA – A Philadelphia man alleges that the City of Philadelphia’s Licenses and Inspections Department has engaged in a campaign of unfair treatment against him for years, culminating in the Department demolishing two of his properties located adjacent to the scene of a fire in October 2019.
Negash Aberra filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on Sept. 27 versus the City and unknown City employees. All parties are of Philadelphia.
“Negash Aberra is in the business of buying properties and repairing and refurbishing them for sale; plaintiff owned properties at 1148 and 1150 Rising Sun Avenue, which he intended to sell for profit or for other business purposes. As of Oct. 4, 2019, both properties were physically stable, were in livable condition and they posed no threat of danger to the neighboring properties or residents in the area,” the suit says.
“On Oct. 5, 2019, at around 3 a.m. or thereafter, a fire broke out at the house next to plaintiff’s properties, at 1146 Rising Sun Avenue. Based on statements from plaintiff’s neighbors, employees of the City of Philadelphia Fire Department allowed the fire to burn for an inordinate and unreasonable amount of time, prior to attempting to extinguish it; the result in the purposeful delay in extinguishing the fire, was that it spread to plaintiff’s properties and caused fire damage to both of them. Although plaintiff’s properties suffered fire damage, they were both still structurally sound and were not in danger to collapse in part or in whole.”
Aberra added that two days later, employees from the City’s Licenses and Inspections Department arrived at the scene of the fire, telling him they intended to demolish his properties – and Aberra responded by telling them that his properties were stable and salvageable, and that he was going to repair them immediately.
“A Licenses and Inspections supervisor named ‘Paul’ told plaintiff that he needed to obtain a temporary restraining order from court to stop demolition, and plaintiff indicated that he would do so. Plaintiff went to City Hall for the purpose of filing for restraining order; a hearing occurred at which time a Mr. Rybakowski from the Department of Licenses and Inspections informed plaintiff (and the court) that his houses had already been demolished by the Department, making any hearing on the issue moot,” per the suit.
“Approximately three days after plaintiff’s houses were demolished, he received a letter from Licenses and Inspections, informing him that he had five days to inform it whether he intended to repair the properties or not and to request a permit to repair them, before they would simply demolish the properties if he did not respond; however, the houses had already been demolished.”
Aberra explained that he had a history with the Department and Rybakowski, filing prior litigation against those parties for alleged improper demolition of another one of his properties on Dec. 20, 2017.
Historically, the plaintiff adds he has experienced unfair treatment from the Department and Rybakowski, including undeserved citations and notices for demolition of his properties
For counts of procedural and substantive due process violations of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 and negligence, the plaintiff is seeking, jointly and severally, compensatory and punitive damages.
The plaintiff is represented by Reginald C. Allen in Philadelphia.
The defendants have not yet secured legal counsel.
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania case 2:21-cv-04241
From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com