The fate of 28 apartment buildings belonging to Stephen Frenz, the Minneapolis landlord who's been stripped of his rental licenses, was the subject of two separate court hearings on Wednesday, while more than 1,000 tenants could be affected by the decisions.
Hennepin County Housing Court Referee JaPaul Harris said he would issue a ruling soon on whether to hold the buyer of five of Frenz's properties in contempt for disobeying an earlier court order to turn over the keys and documents to an independent administrator he appointed to run the buildings.
He said he will also decide whether to stay that order at the request of landlord Rickey Misco's attorney, Oliver Edward Nelson III.
Late Wednesday afternoon Hennepin District Judge Karen Janisch rejected Misco's request to have referee Harris removed for alleged bias for failure to follow the law. Janisch wrote that state rules set the procedures for hearing a motion to remove a judge for prejudice or bias, and that the issue was not properly raised by Misco's lawyer.
Misco contends that Harris had been biased against him because he had appointed an administrator to run Misco's buildings without granting an evidentiary hearing.
Michael Cockson, an attorney representing Misco's tenants, said Wednesday in housing court that the referee's decision does not warrant removal.
"There is absolutely no indication of bias," Cockson told Harris. Misco had no rental license so he cannot collect rents, said Cockson. "If you don't have a driver's license, you shouldn't be able to drive. ... He wants a stay so he can continue to collect illegal rent."
The Minneapolis City Council revoked all of Frenz's rental housing licenses in December for continuing to secretly own properties with Spiros Zorbalas, who was banned in 2011 from owning and renting out apartments.