Artisan/American Corp. v. City of Alvin, Tex.

588 F.3d 291, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 24968, 2009 WL 3789902
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 2009
Docket09-20174
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 588 F.3d 291 (Artisan/American Corp. v. City of Alvin, Tex.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Artisan/American Corp. v. City of Alvin, Tex., 588 F.3d 291, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 24968, 2009 WL 3789902 (5th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Following the City of Alvin’s refusal to permit a proposed low-income housing project, the developer, Artisan/American Corp., filed suit under the Fair Housing Act, alleging that the City’s denial was motivated by racial animus and that it had a discriminatory impact on racial minorities, specifically Hispanics. The district court granted summary judgment for the City. We now AFFIRM.

*294 I

Artisan/American and its sister companies (collectively “Artisan/American”) proposed two developments, each with thirty-six residential rental units, to be built in the City of Alvin, Texas. Located twenty-five miles southeast of Houston, in northeast Brazoria County, the City is home to more than 22,000 residents, of whom between 28% and 45% are Hispanic. 2

In January 2004, to secure funding for the project, Artisan/American applied to the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs for housing tax credits. The City opposed the application and, about two months after Artisan/American’s application, submitted a resolution urging that the City already had a greater proportion of citizens receiving housing assistance than other cities in Brazoria County, and that the proposed development did not meet then-unspecified municipal building ordinances. Nevertheless, the Department of Housing and Community Affairs approved the application in June 2004 and notified the City of its decision. In April 2005, the City passed additional resolutions, using the same language as the first, opposing two other Artisan/American low-income housing developments.

Undeterred, Artisan/American sought a permit for the proposed project. The City held its first pre-development meeting with Artisan/American in April 2005. There, it informed Artisan/American’s representative that the proposed location for the project would violate Section 31-7(e) of the municipal ordinances (the “Ordinance”), which proscribes placing an apartment project within 300 feet of a single family residential dwelling. 3 The City then provided Artisan/American with a copy of the Ordinance. At this meeting, a city official took notes that indicate that when Artisan/American’s representative asked, “What if we got a variance for the apartment project location?” the City replied, “You can ask but there was a resolution on this site not to do it.”

Again at informal meetings with Artisan/American in June 2005 and January 2006, the City reiterated that the proposed project violated the Ordinance. At no time did Artisan/American seek a variance for the apparent violation.

During the second pre-development meeting in March 2006, the City, presented with preliminary plats, noted that the project continued to violate the Ordinance because it remained within 300 feet of a residential triplex that included at least two single family homes. At this meeting, Artisan/American offered to eliminate one development and to move the other farther from the triplex. 4 The remaining development would use the front part of the property, abutting a highway, as retail development, with a tenant-access road running through the middle. The City balked, say *295 ing that this proposal still violated regulations because it did not provide adequate access from the complex to a public street.

The parties exchanged letters discussing the street issue throughout the summer of 2006, but to no avail. When Artisan/American suggested, as a compromise, that the City deem the access road a public street, thus excepting it from the development’s bounds, the City refused. Doing so, argued the City, would create unnecessary expense while serving only the housing project.

In any event, according to a map provided by the City in August 2006, the project continued to have other problems. Not only was it within 300 feet of the triplex, it also stood within 300 feet of a mobile home park, in violation of the Ordinance. Artisan/American notes that this was the first time that the City mentioned the mobile home park.

Eventually the parties were able to resolve all of the City’s objections to the project — including other violations of municipal regulations — except for the putative violation of the Ordinance. Still without municipal approval in February 2007, Artisan/American canceled the project, knowing it would not be completed before the state’s tax credits expired on December 31, 2007.

Artisan/American later brought this lawsuit in district court, alleging that the City’s actions in adopting or enforcing its 300-foot separation requirement had the purpose or effect of making housing unavailable to racial minorities, specifically Hispanics, in violation of the Fair Housing Act. The district court found summary judgment in favor of the City, Artisan/American now appeals, and this court employs the same standard of review as the district court.* *** 5

II

The Federal Housing Act prohibits discrimination in the provision of housing. 6 We have recognized that a claim brought under the Act “may be established not only by proof of discriminatory intent, but also by proof of a significant discriminatory effect.” 7 Following either avenue, Artisan/American’s claim falls short.

A. Discriminatory Intent

To survive summary judgment on its claim of discriminatory intent, Artisan/American must establish (1) a fact issue as to whether the City’s stated reason for its decision — i.e., that the project violates the City’s municipal ordinances — is pretextual and (2) a reasonable inference that race was a significant factor in the refusal. 8 The City’s “refusal may have been unsound, unfair, or even unlawful, yet not have been violative of the [Fair Housing Act] if there is no evidence ... that race was a significant factor in [the City’s] decision.” 9

*296 1. The City’s Resolutions

Artisan/American first points to the City’s resolution opposing tax credits for the development, as well as the City’s later opposition to Artisan/American’s other proposed projects. For each project, the City’s resolution stated that the proposed project in question “does not meet the City’s building ordinances,” that “one third of all the ‘low-income’ residents in Brazoria County that utilize housing vouchers currently reside in Alvin,” that “in comparison with all the other cities in Brazoria County, the City currently has a higher percentage of citizens receiving housing assistance,” and that “a new apartment complex with similar rental assistance programs recently opened for occupancy in late 2003.”

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Bluebook (online)
588 F.3d 291, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 24968, 2009 WL 3789902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artisanamerican-corp-v-city-of-alvin-tex-ca5-2009.