Bastani v. The Human Rights Commission

2023 IL App (1st) 191122-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 22, 2023
Docket1-19-1122
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 191122-U (Bastani v. The Human Rights Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bastani v. The Human Rights Commission, 2023 IL App (1st) 191122-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 191122-U No. 1-19-1122 Order filed November 22, 2023 Sixth Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ MARZIE BASTANI, ) Petition for Direct ) Administrative Review of a Petitioner-Appellant, ) Decision of the Human Rights ) Commission v. ) ) THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION, THE ) Charge No. 2015 CH 199 DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS, 55 W. ERIE ) ASSOCIATION, and PHOENIX RISING ) MANAGEMENT GROUP, ) ) Respondents-Appellees. )

JUSTICE C.A. WALKER delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Hyman and Tailor concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm the decision of the Human Rights Commission sustaining the Department of Human Rights’ dismissal of petitioner’s charge of housing discrimination for a lack of substantial evidence.

¶2 Petitioner Marzie Bastani appeals pro se from the decision of the Human Rights

Commission (Commission) sustaining the dismissal by the Department of Human Rights No. 1-19-1122

(Department) of her claim under the Illinois Human Rights Act (Act) (775 ILCS 5/1-101 et seq.

(West 2014)) against respondents 55 W. Erie Association (Erie or Association) and Phoenix Rising

Management Group (Phoenix).1 On appeal, petitioner contends that the Commission erred in

sustaining the Department’s dismissal of her charge because the Department mishandled its

investigation of the claims in her charge and the claims were meritorious. For the foregoing

reasons, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 In mid-2014, petitioner brought a charge before the Department against Erie and Phoenix,

the condominium association and management company, respectively, for the building where she

resided. She alleged that Erie and Phoenix altered the terms, conditions, or privileges of her real

estate transaction because of her Middle Eastern national origin or ancestry, in violation of Section

3-102(B) of the Act. Id. § 3-102(B). Specifically, she alleged that they “refused to fix water damage

to her interior walls as a result of a leaking downspout” while they “paid to repair water damage

to non-Middle Eastern resident Tony Marengo” and other unit owners. She also alleged that they

“refused to reimburse her for flowers and other garden supplies she purchased for the common

areas” while they “reimbursed other non-Middle Eastern unit owners for purchases they made for

the common areas.” Lastly, she alleged that they refused to allow her to participate in board

meetings and failed to include her requests made at the board meeting in the minutes, while they

“allowed non-Middle Eastern unit owners to participate in board meetings and included their

requests in the minutes.”

1 While petitioner is referred to frequently in the record as Marzi Bastani, she gives her name on her pro se petition for review as Marzie Bastani.

2 No. 1-19-1122

¶5 The Department investigated petitioner’s claims. It was uncontested that petitioner is of

Middle Eastern ancestry, but the Department found that she was not the only unit owner of Middle

Eastern ancestry in the Association and the other Middle Eastern unit owner was not discriminated

against.

¶6 It was uncontested that there was damage to the interior of petitioner’s unit, and that she

made a claim to respondents that they should be responsible for repairing that damage because the

water infiltration to the interior of her unit resulted from a leaky exterior downspout. However,

respondents disputed that petitioner was entitled under Erie’s bylaws to have repairs to the interior

of her unit paid for by respondents. Specifically, respondents asked their legal counsel about their

liability, and were advised that Erie was not responsible under its bylaws for any damage to the

interior of a unit regardless of the source or cause. Respondents provided copies of Erie’s bylaws

and the October 2013 letter from respondents’ counsel.

¶7 Petitioner pointed to the repair, five years before her damage, of interior water damage

from a leaky roof to the unit of Tony Marengo, president of Erie’s board. Neither Erie nor Marengo

contested that Erie paid for the repair work to Marengo’s unit, but Erie maintained that it did not

have a management company back then and acted informally without legal advice. Specifically,

Erie did not know then that its bylaws exempted it from liability for unit owners’ interior damage.

While petitioner’s charge alleged that respondents paid for repairs to the interiors of non-Middle

Eastern unit owners who suffered damage from the leaky downspout, Erie’s former board

president Tonya Gill attested that no other units were damaged by the leaky downspout and no

other unit owners made damage claims.

3 No. 1-19-1122

¶8 Regarding the claim of failure to reimburse, it was uncontested that petitioner as a unit

owner was entitled to reimbursement of approved expenditures for the common areas of the

building and that petitioner made such an approved expenditure for the common areas, specifically,

for outdoor plants. However, the Department noted, petitioner admitted that she was reimbursed

for those expenditures, and a December 2013 check issued by Erie matched the sum of July 2013

receipts provided by petitioner. Moreover, Lema Korshid, the other unit owner of Middle Eastern

ancestry, stated in an interview that respondents timely reimbursed her for a purchase she made

for the common areas.

¶9 Lastly, petitioner claimed that she was not allowed full participation at Erie’s board

meetings because her requests for repairs were not included in the meeting minutes and board

members whispered about her. However, Gill and Marengo denied that petitioner was

discriminated against in board meetings, asserting that “the only reason her requests for repairs

were not noted in the board meeting minutes” was because the board had already determined on

advice of counsel that Erie was not responsible for petitioner’s water damage and had already

informed her of the board’s decision. Also, petitioner was offered to have the board minutes

amended to reflect her repair request but she “failed to ask that the minutes be amended.” Gill and

Marengo also “denied that they or any other board members whispered about her at the board

meetings, or made any comments about [her] ancestry,” while petitioner “admitted that she was

not able to identify any board members or condo association members at large who whispered

about her, nor was she able to articulate any comments such persons whispered about her related

to her national origin or ancestry.”

4 No. 1-19-1122

¶ 10 The Department initially dismissed petitioner’s charge for lack of substantial evidence in

2015. In August 2015, petitioner requested that the Commission review the dismissal. In

September 2015, the Department agreed that further investigation was needed. Specifically, the

Department would have to determine whether Erie and Phoenix’s “articulated reasons for refusing

to fix water damage to [petitioner’s] unit, failing to reimburse [her] for expenses for the common

area in a timely manner, and for refusing to allow [her] to raise her complaint at a board meeting

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Related

Truger v. Department of Human Rights
688 N.E.2d 1209 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1997)
Alcequeire v. Human Rights Commission
685 N.E.2d 974 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1997)

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