CYR, Circuit Judge.
Hogar Agua y Vida en el Desierto, Inc. (“HAVED”), a nonprofit organization which operates group homes for persons infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (“HIV”), brought a civil action in the United States District Court for the District of Puer-to Rico alleging discriminatory conduct by defendants-appellees in violation of the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601-3617 (1993) (“FHA”). The district court ruled that the principal defendants, Jorge Suarez Medina and Baudilla Albelo Suarez (hereinafter: “Suarez” or “Suarezes”), were exempt from liability under the FHA by virtue of the “private individual owner” provision which applies to persons who own less than four “single-family houses,”
see id.
§ 3603(b)(1). For the reasons discussed in this opinion, we vacate the district court judgment and remand for further proceedings.
I
BACKGROUND
In September 1992, appellant HAVED entered into an oral agreement with Suarez to rent, with option to buy, two houses located on an undivided lot in the Los Llanos section of Corozal, Puerto Rico. Upon learning that HAVED intended to use the site as a group home for persons infected with HIV, defendants Milton Dolittle and Antonio Padilla organized neighborhood opposition and threatened and coerced Suarez into reneging on the rental-sale agreement. HAVED, along with its directors and a prospective resident of the proposed group home, initiated the present action charging defendants Suarez, Dolittle and Padilla with violations of FHA §§ 3604 and 3617, and Suarez with breach of contract under P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 31, §§ 3371-3589 (1993).
HAVED demanded declaratory and injunctive relief as well as compensatory and punitive damages.
Suarez moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, citing FHA § 3603(b)(1):
(b) Nothing in ... [section 3604 of this title] (other than subsection (e)) shall apply to—
(1) any
single-family house
sold or rented by an owner:
[1]
Provided,
That such
private individual owner
does not own more than three
such single-family houses
at any one time:
[2]
Provided further,
That in the ease of the
sale
of any such single-family house by a private individual owner
not residing in such house
at the time of such sale
or
who was
not the most recent resident
of such house prior to such sale, the exemption granted by this subsection shall apply only with respect to one such sale within any twenty-four month period:
[3]
Provided further,
That such
bona fide private individual owner
does not own
any interest
in, nor is there owned or reserved
on his behalf,
under
any express or voluntary agreement,
title to or any right to all or a portion of the
proceeds
from the sale or rental of, more than three such single-family houses at any one time:
[4]
Provided further,
That after December 31, 1969, the sale or rental of any such single-family house shall be excepted from the application of this title
only if
such house is sold or rented
(A) without the use in any manner of the sales or rental facilities or the sales or rental services of any real estate broker, agent, or salesman, or of such facilities or services of any person in the business of selling or renting dwellings ... and
(B) without the publication, posting or mailing, after notice, of any advertisement or written notice in violation of [section 3604(c) of this title]....
42 U.S.C. § 3603(b)(1) (emphasis added; clause numbers added; indentation altered from original).
A.
The Suarez Properties
At the time of the September 1992 rental-sale agreement with HAVED, Suarez owned four separate parcels of land on which were located five structures.
First,
the “Los Llanos Property,” the subject of the abortive rental-sale agreement, consists of one undivided lot containing two unattached residences. Suarez holds undisputed title to the entire lot and one residence (House A) where the Suarezes once resided. Their son built the second house on the lot (House B) as a residence for his own family. However, Mr. Suarez, Sr., was robbed while residing in House A, and the Suarezes and their son moved away from Los Llanos. Houses A and B remained unoccupied at the time of the HAVED-Suarez rental-sale agreement.
Second,
the “Guarieo Residence,” located in the Guarieo section of Corozal, was designed as a two-story house with a separately equipped, single-family apartment on each floor. Suarez held title to the lot and the house. At the time of the rental-sale agreement, the Suarezes resided primarily in the second-floor apartment, and the son and his family resided in the first-floor apartment. Due to his physical impairments, however, Mr. Suarez, Sr., sometimes lived “interchangeably” with his son’s family in the first-floor apartment. The district court ruled that the Guarieo Residence constituted one single-family house.
Third,
the “Guarieo Rental” is a two-story, single-family structure located near the Guarieo Residence but on a separate lot. At the time of the rental-sale agreement, Suarez held title to the house and the lot, and the house was being rented to a single family.
The
fourth
real estate parcel, the “La Al-dea Rental,” is a single lot in the La Aldea section containing a one-story structure which Suarez purchased in April 1991, and rented to a single family (Apartment 1). Pri- or to the rental-sale agreement, however, Suarez renovated the basement of the building into a separate apartment (Apartment 2), and it was rented to another tenant.
B.
The District Court Proceedings
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court dismissed the HAVED complaint for lack of “subject matter jurisdiction,” citing Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6). Pursuant to Provisos 1 and 3 of FHA § 3603(b)(1), the court ruled that at the time of the rental-sale agreement with HAVED in September 1992, Suarez had a bona fide ownership interest in only
three
“single-family houses” (hereinafter: “SFH” or “SFHs”): (i) the Guarieo Rental, (ii) the La Aldea Rental (Apartment
1), and (in) the La Aldea Rental (Apartment 2).
Thus, the district court explicitly declined to treat three abodes as SFHs. First, the court ruled that the Guarico Residence is not a SFH under FHA § 3603(b)(1) because only SFHs that are “sold or rented” can be counted toward the four-SFH threshold. In other words, in the district court’s view a defendant’s
current residence
is not counted as an SFH under Provisos 1 and 3 unless it is the subject of the sale or rental transaction giving rise to the cause of action under the FHA,
or
it is “on the market” at the time of the challenged transaction.
See Hogar Agua y Vida en el Desierto, Inc. v. Suarez,
829 F.Supp. 19, 22 (D.P.R.1993) (citing
Lamb v. Sallee,
417 F.Supp. 282, 285 (E.D.Ky.1976)). Second, since Suarez, Sr., had been forced to vacate House A at the Los Llanos Property after the robbery, and to acquire the Guarico Residence, the district court concluded that it would be “inequitable” to treat House A as a SFH under either Proviso 1 or 3.
Id.
at 22-23. Finally, relying on the same equitable grounds noted in relation to House
A,
the district court ruled that House B on the Los Llanos Property should not be treated as a SFH. The court ruled, in the alternative, that House B should not be treated as a SFH because the Suarezes’s son, who constructed House B, was its
bona fide
owner under Puerto Rico law; whereas the Suarezes simply held an unexercised “right of accession” based on their ownership of the land on which House B is situated.
Id.
at 23 (citing
Castro Anguita v. Figueroa,
103 P.R.Dec. 847, 850-51, 3
Official Translations
1188-89 (1975)).
II
DISCUSSION
Since the only dispute on appeal concerns the legal sufficiency of undisputed jurisdictional facts, we review the Rule 12(b)(1) dismissal
de novo. See Heno v. FDIC,
20 F.3d 1204, 1205 (1st Cir.1994). We conclude, as a matter of law, that the Suarezes’s claim to exemption is precluded by the FHA.
See FDIC v. Keating,
12 F.3d 314, 316 (1st Cir.1993) (statutory interpretations reviewed
de
novo).
We employ traditional tools of statutory interpretation, particularly the presumption that ambiguous language in a remedial statute is entitled to a generous construction consistent with its reformative mission.
See, e.g., Cia. Petrolera Caribe, Inc. v. Arco Caribbean, Inc.,
754 F.2d 404, 428-29 (1st Cir.1985) (noting that this canon of construction represents an “especially reliable and legitimate” indicator of congressional intent);
see generally
3 Norman J. Singer,
Sutherland on Statutory Construction
§ 60.01 (5th ed. 1992) [hereinafter
Sutherland
]. This presumption has been relied on consistently by the courts in interpreting the omnibus remedial provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, which prominently include the Fair Housing Act itself.
See Casa Marie, Inc. v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico,
988 F.2d 252, 257 n. 6 (1st Cir.1993) (citing
Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
409 U.S. 205, 211-12, 93 S.Ct. 364, 367-68, 34 L.Ed.2d 415 (1972));
see also City of Edmonds v. Washington State Bldg. Code Council,
18 F.3d 802, 804 (9th Cir.1994). An important corollary for present purposes is that ambiguous exemptions from FHA liability are to be
narrowly
construed.
See, e.g., id.; Elliott v. City of Athens, Georgia,
960 F.2d 975, 978-79 (11th Cir.)
cert. denied,
— U.S. -, 113 S.Ct. 376, 121 L.Ed.2d 287 (1992);
United States v. Columbus Country Club,
915 F.2d 877, 882-83 (3d Cir.1990) (collecting cases),
cert. denied,
501 U.S. 1205, 111 S.Ct. 2797, 115 L.Ed.2d 971 (1991).
From this appellate perspective we consider which Suarez properties were “single-family houses” within the meaning of Provisos 1 and 8 of FHA § 3603(b)(1). The parties agree that two properties — the Guaneo Rental and the La Aldea Rental — qualify as “single-family houses” within the meaning of the exemption.
Thus, given the four-SFH limen established in section 3603(b)(1), the FHA exemption cannot stand if the Suarezes were bona fide “owners” of
two
SFHs in addition to the Guarico Rental and the La Aldea Rental.
A.
Los Llanos Property, House A
First, HAVED argues that the district court exceeded its authority by fashioning an “equitable” exception which resulted in the exclusion of Los Llanos, House A, from the four-SFH calculus on the ground that the Suarezes had been forced to vacate the Los Llanos area due to neighborhood crime.
See In re Shoreline Concrete Co.,
831 F.2d 903, 905 (9th Cir.1987) (“Courts of equity are bound to follow express statutory commands to the same extent as are courts of law”) (citing
Hedges v. Dixon County,
150 U.S. 182, 192, 14 S.Ct. 71, 74, 37 L.Ed. 1044 (1893)).
Although courts have on occasion en-grafted equitable exceptions where rigid adherence to literal legislative language clearly would disserve legislative intent,
see, e.g., Zipes v. Trans World Airlines,
455 U.S. 385, 398, 102 S.Ct. 1127, 1135, 71 L.Ed.2d 234 (1982) (equitable tolling of filing deadlines), generally courts are loath “to announce equitable exceptions to legislative requirements or prohibitions that are
unqualified
by the statutory text.”
Guidry v. Sheet Metal Workers Nat’l Pension Fund,
493 U.S. 365, 376, 110 S.Ct. 680, 687, 107 L.Ed.2d 782 (1990) (emphasis added). Moreover, “[w]here Congress
explicitly enumerates
certain exceptions to a general prohibition, additional exceptions are
not
to be implied, in the absence of contrary legislative intent.”
Andrus v. Glover Constr. Co.,
446 U.S. 608, 616-17, 100 S.Ct. 1905, 1910, 64 L.Ed.2d 548 (1980) (emphasis added). Further, exemptions from the requirements of a
remedial statute
— like the FHA — are to be construed narrowly to limit exemption eligibility.
See Badaracco v. Commissioner,
464 U.S. 386, 398, 104 S.Ct. 756, 764, 78 L.Ed.2d 549 (1984) (rejecting taxpayer plea for “nonliteral reading” of tax statute .“on grounds of equity to the repentant taxpayer,” and noting that, faced with a statute “which must receive a strict construction,” “[cjourts are not authorized to rewrite [the] statute because they might deem its effects susceptible of improvement.”);
supra
p. 181.
For the foregoing reasons, we decline to endorse the equitable exception adopted by the district court, especially since Congress elected not to do so when it undertook to narrow FHA liability in 42 U.S.C. § 3603(b). Nothing in section 3603(b), nor in its legislative history, manifests a congressional intent to temper either the inflexible four-SFH formula or the categorical “ownership” standard. Thus, we believe these FHA provisions refleet the sort of “considered congressional policy choice” that elevates the “effec-tuation of certain broad social policies ... over the desire to do equity between particular parties.”
Guidry,
493 U.S. at 376, 110 S.Ct. at 687.
Guidry
cautions against creating equitable exceptions to comprehensive remedial statutes in an effort to protect individual defendants from occasional inequities, even inequities attributable to misfeasance by the plaintiffs.
Id.
(holding that the dis
trict court had no equitable power to contravene ERISA’s
unqualified
anti-garnishment provision by imposing a constructive trust upon pension benefits payable to a former union official who embezzled union funds). The
Guidry
admonition holds even stronger sway where, as here, defendant-Suarez’s misfortunes were in no sense due to HAVED’s conduct. The Court recognized in
Guidry
that any attempt to calibrate the precise point at which an individual defendant’s vicissitudes are so “
‘especially
’ inequitable” as to outweigh the broad prophylactic policies underlying the congressional decision to protect the plaintiff class would immerse the courts in an inappropriate and “impracticab[le]” task.
Id.
(emphasis added).
B.
The Guarico Residence
HAVED next contends that the district court committed reversible error in not treating the Guarico Residence as a SFH under Provisos 1 and 3 of FHA § 3603(b)(1). HAVED argues that nothing in FHA § 3603(b)(1) excludes “owner-occupied” houses from the term “single-family house.” Furthermore, HAVED notes, Proviso 2 explicitly qualifies the term SFH (“any such single-family house by a private individual owner
not residing in such house
at the time of such sale”), a qualification that would be entirely unnecessary if the term “SFH” itself excluded
owner-occupied
houses.
On the other hand, Suarez says that the Guarico Residence is excluded from consideration under Provisos 1 and 3 because the prefatory clause in FHA § 3603(b)(1) (exempting “any single-family house
sold or rented
by the [defendant]” in a discriminatory manner) suggests that Congress did not intend that any property of the defendant count toward the four-SFH threshold unless that property itself was up for
sale or rent
at the time of the allegedly discriminatory transaction.
Suarez argues that this must be so because the references to
“such
[SFHs]” in Provisos 1 and 3 can only relate back to the prefatory clause, and incorporate the requirement that only “sold or rented” SFHs are to be included in calculating the four-SFH threshold. Thus, Suarez says, a defendant’s residence normally would not be included as a SFH unless it were on the market at the time of the alleged discriminatory sale or rental. Suarez discounts the value of Proviso 2 as a tool for interpreting the prefatory clause in FHA § 3603(b)(1), since Proviso 2 creates a considerably “narrower” and altogether independent exemption that allows
one
discriminatory
sale
(but
not
a rental) of an
owner-occupied
SFH to be excluded within any two-year period. Proviso 1, on the other hand, creates a “broader exemption” for owners who own no more than three SFHs that are either for sale
or rent
by the owner.
The present dispute prompts two inquiries. The first is whether a defendant’s current residence is
excluded
from the threshold four-SFH calculus under Provisos 1 and 3 simply because it is his primary or current residence, even though all other SFHs owned but not occupied by the defendant are
included
without regard to whether they were concurrently “on the market.” The second inquiry is whether Congress meant to exclude from the threshold four-SFH calculus all SFHs owned by the defendant (including the primary residence) not on the market at the time the defendant — for discriminatory reasons — refused to sell or rent a different SFH to the plaintiff. We turn to these questions.
1.
Exclusion for Residence Qua Residence
As its prefatory clause makes clear, the FHA § 3603(b)(1) exemption — assuming its four provisos are
satisfied
— applies
to
any “single-family house sold or rented by the owner” in a discriminatory manner. For section 3603(b)(1) purposes, therefore, the relevant SFHs in this case are Houses A and B, located on the Los Llanos Property Suarez refused to rent or sell to HAVED. Section 3603(b)(1) neither defines the term “SFH,” nor does its prefatory clause expressly limit the term “SFH” to structures in which the defendant does not reside. Conversely, as Suarez acknowledges, if the Suarezes had refused to rent or sell their Guarico Residence to HAVED, the
prefatory clause
would not have debarred the Suarezes from a section 3603(b)(1) exemption merely because the property being rented or sold was their residence.
The statutory context in which the prefatory clause appears undermines the Suarez contention as well.
See Skidgel v. Maine Dep’t of Human Servs.,
994 F.2d 930, 937 (1st Cir.1993) (meaning of particular statutory language assessed in light of entire statute). The four FHA § 3603(b)(1) provisos do not give rise to four independent exemptions, as Suarez suggests, but represent four
cumulative
preconditions to the
single
exemption set out in the prefatory clause. If any of the four provisos is not satisfied, no section 3603(b)(1) exemption is appropriate.
Proviso 2 refers specifically to a discrete subset of the “discriminatory” SFH sales focused upon in the section 3603(b)(1) prefatory clause, namely, sales of SFHs in which the defendant is
not residing.
If the unqualified term “SFH” in the prefatory clause were intended to embrace only SFHs in which the defendant is not residing, no such further qualification would be needed in Proviso 2.
See Mosquera-Perez v. INS,
3 F.3d 553, 556 (1st Cir.1993) (court should avoid interpretations which render any part of statute meaningless). Thus, if the term “SFH,” as used in the prefatory clause, applies to residences
and
nonresidences, the pendent references to “such [SFHs]” in Provisos 1 and 3 also necessarily encompass the Suarezes’s Guarico Residence
qua
residence.
Finally, the legislative history discloses no basis for second-guessing the “plain language” of section 3603(b)(1).
See Laracuente v. Chase Manhattan Bank,
891 F.2d 17, 23 (1st Cir.1989) (“Absent a clearly expressed legislative intention to the contrary, the plain language of the statute is conclusive”). As initially introduced in Congress, the FHA contained few significant exemptions from liability,
see, e.g., supra
note 7 (describing “Mrs. Murphy” exemption), and the breadth of the FHA’s coverage caused vigorous Senate opposition.
See generally
Jean E. Dubofsky,
Fair Housing: A Legislative History and a Perspective,
8 Washburn L.J. 149 (1969). Senator Everett M. Dirksen proposed to assuage opposition by exempting sales and rentals of “any single-family house sold or rented by an owner residing in such house at the time of such sale or rental, or
who was the most recent resident of such house prior to such sale or rental.”
See
114 Cong.Rec. 4571 (1968). Yet even the “Dirk-sen substitute,” later modified and enacted as Proviso 2, failed to gain enough Senate support. To break the deadlock, Senator Robert C. Byrd proposed the expanded four-part exemption, later codified as present section 8608(b)(1). During floor debate, Senator Byrd offered two illuminating hypotheticals to demonstrate the coverage which would be provided under his proposal, but not under the Dirksen substitute:
A widow owns and
lives in
a single-family dwelling. She also owns a single-family dwelling across the street, the tenant therein being her daughter. The daughter moves to another State. The widow cannot qualify for exemption under the Dirk-sen substitute because she neither resides in the house across the street — of which she is the owner — nor is the “most recent resident” of such dwelling prior to a subsequent sale or rental.
An individual
lives in
his own single-family dwelling located on a three-quarter-acre lot. He decides to build a second house on the lot. Ten years later misfortune forces him to parcel the lot and
sell the house thereon.
He does not qualify under the Dirksen substitute exemption because he is neither “residing in” the adjacent dwelling nor was he the “most recent resident” thereof.
114 Cong.Rec. 5640 (1968) (emphasis added).
Asked why “it was necessary to raise the number of houses owned by one party to
three,”
Senator Byrd referred to these two hypotheticals, and noted that he had “already discussed situations in which there would be at least
two
[single-family] houses involved.”
Id.
(emphasis added).
Significantly, both hypotheticals assumed that the houses in which the seller currently resided would be counted toward the four-SFH threshold in Provisos 1 and S. See Rice v. Rehner,
463 U.S. 713, 728, 103 S.Ct. 3291, 3300, 77 L.Ed.2d 961 (1983) (noting that interpretation of statute by
sponsor
is “ ‘authoritative guide to the statute’s construction’ ”) (citation omitted);
see also Brock v. Pierce County,
476 U.S. 253, 263, 106 S.Ct. 1834, 1840, 90 L.Ed.2d 248 (1986) (sponsor’s statements credited if consistent with statutory language). Other senators likewise recognized that the “more than three” threshold would include houses in which the seller resided.
See
114 Cong.Rec. 5641 (1968) (“I know we have people who have a summer home or a winter home.... One could easily have
three
homes.”) (statement of Senator Jordan). Since this legislative history, at the very least, precludes our finding “a clearly expressed legislative intention to the contrary,”
Laracuente,
891 F.2d at 23, we must conclude that a defendant’s residence,
qua
residence, is not to be excluded under Provisos 1 and 3 of section 3603(b)(1).
2.
Exemption for “Off Market” SFHs
Suarez proposes to exclude the Guarico Residence under Provisos 1 and 3 because it was neither for rent nor sale at the time he refused to sell the Los Llanos Property to HAVED.
See Lamb v. Sallee,
417 F.Supp. 282, 285 (E.D.Ky.1976). The theory is that the term
“such
[SFHs]” in Provisos 1 and 3 unambiguously relates back to the complete phrase — “single-family house
sold or rented
by an owner” — in the section 3603(b)(1) prefatory clause. The language of
the statute is not dispositive on this issue, and the interpretation proposed by Suarez is at least plausible.
Although it is conceivable that Congress’s choice of the indeterminate modifier “such” was intended only to require the counting of residences
qua
residences under Provisos 1 and 3 — in direct contrast to the more constricted scope of the term “SFH” under Proviso 2 — Provisos 1 and 3 reasonably might be read to impose the additional, distinct requirement that any SFH, regardless whether it is the defendant’s “residence,” be counted under Provisos 1 and 3 only if it is a “single-family house
sold or rented by an oumer.”
Indeed, Congress’s choice of words — “sold or rented” — in the section 3603(b)(1) prefatory clause is a most curious usage. In order for liability to attach under FHA § 3604, a defendant need never have
consummated
the discriminatory rental or sale of the SFH to which the section 3603(b)(1) prefatory clause adverts. Rather, FHA liability attaches as soon as the defendant “refuses to sell or rent after [the plaintiff makes] a bona fide offer,”
see supra
note 1, without regard to whether the SFH is
ever
“sold” or “rented” to
anyone.
With these linguistic difficulties in mind, it seems arguable at least, in keeping with the structure and language of the statute, that the term “such,” as used in Provisos 1 and 3, imports the same “on the market” qualification necessarily implicit in the section 3603(b)(1) prefatory clause.
As noted earlier, however, normally latent ambiguity in a statutory modifier like “such” should be construed in furtherance of the statute’s remedial goals.
See Cia. Petrolera,
754 F.2d at 428. (“When Congress uses broad generalized language in a remedial statute, and that language is not contravened by authoritative legislative history, a court should interpret the provision generously so as to effectuate the important congressional goals.”) Not only does the authoritative legislative history not contravene the HAVED interpretation,
see supra
Section II.B.l, it contradicts the Suarez contention. Most importantly, neither hypothetical advanced by Senator Byrd assumed or intimated that the seller’s residence was “on the market” at the time the discriminatory sale of the second house took place, yet Senator Byrd included both these SFHs under Provisos 1 and 3. Notwithstanding a conceivable vestige of literal ambiguity, therefore, we are persuaded to the view that the Guarico Residence must be included in the four-SFH calculus under section 3603(b)(1) consistent with the FHA’s legislative history and its broad remedial design.
Ill
CONCLUSION
At the time HAVED was denied the opportunity to acquire the Los Llanos Property, allegedly on discriminatory grounds, Suarez held an undisputed ownership interest in “more than three” “single-family houses”: the Guarico Rental, the La Aldea Rental, the Los Llanos Property, House A, and the Guarico Residence. Since Suarez cannot satisfy either Proviso 1 or Proviso 3, the alleged discriminatory refusal to proceed with the HAVED rental-sale agreement relating to the Los Llanos Property did not qualify for exemption under FHA § 3603(b)(1).
The district court judgment is vacated. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs to appellant.