McFadden v. Moll

16 Mass. L. Rptr. 266
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 28, 2003
DocketNo. 032319
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Mass. L. Rptr. 266 (McFadden v. Moll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFadden v. Moll, 16 Mass. L. Rptr. 266 (Mass. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Billings, A.J.

This case concerns the defendant’s refusal to rent an apartment to the plaintiff and his family (himself, his fiancee, and four children, the youngest 18 months and the others over six years of age). In a verified complaint and with the support of affidavits submitted in support of his requests for equitable relief, the plaintiff alleges three forms of discrimination: (1) refusing to rent to a family with children in violation of G.L.c. 151B,§4(11); (2)refusing to rent to his family because the property contains lead paint and/or would trigger duties under the abatement requirements of the lead paint law, in violation of c. 111, § 199A; and (3) refusing to rent to a recipient of public assistance, in violation of G.L.c. 151B, §4(10). The same refusal is also alleged to violate the federal Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. §3604.

On May 15, 2001 this Court (Botsford, J.) granted a temporary restraining order, prohibiting the defendant from renting the apartment to anyone except the plaintiff or a current tenant (if any). I now allow the plaintiffs motion for preliminary injunction, on the terms set forth below.

Facts

The facts, with the significant exception of the defendant’s motive for refusing to rent to the plaintiff, are largely undisputed on the documentary record before me.1 The plaintiff is presently homeless. He has a voucher for a Section 8 housing subsidy. His family members (who do not presently live with him) include, as noted above, one child under the age of six. Voucher in hand, and in the hope of reuniting his family under one roof, he has been looking for rental housing in the greater Boston area since late 2002, without success.

The defendant owns (see below) a three-story, three-apartment building at 27 Wave Avenue, Revere. On May 11, 2003 he placed an ad in the Boston Globe, advertising for rent a four-bedroom apartment. The apartment is on the third floor.

A housing advocate (Stepansky) acting on the plaintiffs behalf called to inquire about the apartment. He reached an answering machine with the following recorded greeting:

Hi, if you are calling in regards to the apartment for rent, the owner is not accepting section 8 and the apartment is not de-leaded. Otherwise, please leave a message. Thank you.

Stepansky filed a complaint that day with the Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston. A “tester” from the Center (Wilburn) called later in the day, posing as a would-be tenant, and spoke with the defendant. The tester told the defendant she had children aged four and five, whereupon the defendant responded he would not rent to her, and would not show her the apartment, because she had young children and the apartment had lead paint. She said her children were well-behaved, and was told they nonetheless needed to be at least seven years old if she was to rent the apartment.

The next day, the plaintiff himself called. The person he spoke to told him that the owner would not accept a Section 8 tenant; that the apartment was not de-leaded; and that the owner was away until Friday. The plaintiff asked if he could leave a message for the owner, and was advised to call back and leave a [267]*267message on the answering machine. He did so, leaving his message after hearing the same recorded greeting as Stepansky had. The plaintiffs message said nothing about his Section 8 voucher or his youngest child. Shortly after, the defendant called back and offered to show the plaintiff the apartment the same evening. The plaintiff then disclosed the facts that he had a Section 8 voucher and a small child. The defendant told him he could not rent the apartment to him, and hung up.

On May 13, another tester (Gonzalez) called and spoke to the defendant. The defendant asked her, “do you have section 8 or children?” She said no and was invited to see the apartment. The defendant showed her the apartment the next day, and offered to rent it to her subject to a credit check.

The defendants’ affidavits disclose that the first- and second-floor apartments in his building are occupied by two family members, both of whom have lived there a very long time, are elderly, and currently suffer from multiple health problems.

Anna Olsen, the defendant’s aunt who transferred the property to the defendant subject to a life estate, lives on the second floor. She has lived in the apartment her entire life. She suffers from an inoperable tumor behind her left eye; had a hip replacement in the summer of2002; and suffers from macular degeneration which adversely affects her vision.

Albert Moll, the defendant’s 77-year-old father, has lived for 45 years on the first floor. He suffers from arteriosclerotic heart disease with congestive heart failure (for which he has undergone bypass surgery), angina, hypertension, and depression. A letter from his cardiologist reports that because of these conditions, “he requires that his apartment be quiet and free of any stress or aggravation.”

Discussion

Applying the familiar standard of Packaging Industries, Inc. v. Cheney, 380 Mass. 609 (1980):

1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits. The plaintiff is likely to succeed on the merits. The defendant points to the exemption in c. 15IB, §4(11)(a) (discrimination against families with children) for:

Dwellings containing three apartments or less, one of which apartments is occupied by an elderly or infirm person for whom the presence of children would constitute a hardship. For purposes of this subsection, an “elderly person” shall mean a person sixty-five years of age or over, and an “infirm person” shall mean a person who is disabled or suffering from a chronic illness.

The defendant argues that he falls within this exemption. He concedes, however, that he did not mention his elderly relatives or their health problems in any of the conversations he had with the plaintiff, the housing advocate, or the two testers; instead, he told all four that his concerns were public assistance and children falling within the lead paint law. The plaintiff has, in other words, made a compelling (if, at this stage, necessarily preliminary) showing of pretext.

Also, the elderly/infirm exemption only applies to the statutory bar to discrimination against families with children where lead paint is not involved (c. 15 11, §4(11); it does not permit discrimination motivated by a desire not to abate lead paint (c. 111, §199A) or to take tenants on public assistance (c. 151B, §4(10).2 The defendant’s statements to the plaintiff, the housing advocate, and the two testers were quite clear that his renting decisions were being driven by his desire not to take on a family on public assistance or a lead paint abatement project, not an aversion to children per se, or concern regarding their impact on the other tenants. There is no suggestion, for example, that he expressed interest in the sleeping, play, or life habits of the defendant’s children, or that he was at all interested in exploring Wilburn’s assurance that her children were well-behaved.

Finally, there is no elderly/infirm exemption in the federal Fair Housing Act which, if it applies3 would override a more permissive state statute. In 42 U.S.C. §3604

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Related

Packaging Industries Group, Inc. v. Cheney
405 N.E.2d 106 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Mass. L. Rptr. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadden-v-moll-masssuperct-2003.