Normal v. St. Louis Concrete Pipe Co.

447 F. Supp. 624
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedFebruary 15, 1978
Docket75-833C(B)
StatusPublished

This text of 447 F. Supp. 624 (Normal v. St. Louis Concrete Pipe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Normal v. St. Louis Concrete Pipe Co., 447 F. Supp. 624 (E.D. Mo. 1978).

Opinion

447 F.Supp. 624 (1978)

Carol J. NORMAL and McKinley Normal, Plaintiffs,
v.
ST. LOUIS CONCRETE PIPE CO., Russell A. Grantham d/b/a Grantham Management Co., Edwin Ryder, Jr., Lawrence F. Behymer, Sr., William Riley, Ray LaBrayere, Harold E. Grau and John Berra, Defendants.

No. 75-833C(B).

United States District Court, E. D. Missouri, E. D.

February 15, 1978.

*625 Francis H. Kennedy, Jr., St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiffs.

John R. Musgrave, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

REGAN, District Judge.

In this civil rights action, plaintiffs, a black married couple, seek injunctive relief and damages incurred as a result of alleged discriminatory acts in the rental of housing. Subject matter jurisdiction exists as alleged. 42 U.S.C., section 3612. Plaintiffs base their claim upon 42 U.S.C., section 3601 et seq. (The Fair Housing Act of 1968) and section 1983. Specifically, plaintiffs allege that their civil rights were violated by *626 defendants' refusal to lease premises to them on the basis of race and sex. In our judgment, the weight of the evidence does not support plaintiffs' contentions.

At all relevant times, defendants have been engaged in the business of selling single family dwellings which they have constructed in their Pleasant Hollow subdivision located in an unincorporated area of St. Louis County northwest of the City of Hazelwood. The 554 homes in the subdivision are in the moderate price ($24,000 to $34,000) range. The project is under the management of defendant Russell Grantham, doing business as Grantham Management Company. The home office of the management company is located some three miles distant from the subdivision. However, it maintains a local office in a display house where applications for unsold homes are taken by leasing agents who are employed under the general supervision of Marvin (Marty) Grantham, Russell Grantham's nephew.

To facilitate sales, defendants offered to applicants a lease-purchase plan pursuant to which a home would be leased for a period of three years with an option to purchase at a stipulated price at the end of the lease term. Upon exercise of the option, up to twenty per cent of the rental payments would be credited to the down payment. As of the time of the trial (about five years after the subdivision had been opened) some 155 of the homes had been sold and 356 of the remaining 389 dwellings were being rented on the lease-purchase arrangement. The ultimate purpose of defendants was to sell, rather than rent, the single family homes, having found through experience that the project would not otherwise be profitable. Unlike the usual lease of an apartment, the leases of the homes in the subdivision required the tenants to keep the properties in good repair.

Prior to September, 1974, the screening of applicants was very slipshod, and defendants encountered a number of problems adversely affecting the profitability of the project. For example, some of the tenants would fail to meet their obligations respecting the payment of rent and the repair of the rented premises. Unsupervised children of some residents would damage or vandalize homes in the subdivision. As the result, defendants developed what they term an underwriting process, that is, a careful evaluation of the risks, if any, involved in approving each application for a home in the subdivision.

The lease application itself is made at the office in the display home on a form prepared by Grantham Management Company. Each application is initially screened by the leasing agent on duty in the display home, and if on its face the application meets certain specified minimum criteria (or if it is a "borderline case") the application is "accepted" for submission to the home office. If the application is "accepted" by the leasing agent, the applicant is required to fill out and sign a job verification form to enable the home office to verify statements as to employment and income.

The criteria or "guidelines" utilized by the leasing agent in determining whether the application should be submitted to the home office had been prepared and posted in the office by Marty Grantham in September, 1974, based on his recollection of discussions he had with Russell Grantham. They excluded from initial "acceptance" applications from single persons, persons under the age of 21 years (except with a co-signer), families with more than 4 children and 2 adults or a total of 6 persons per house, and families with a combined weekly salary less than a sum equal to one month's rent.

If an application was "accepted" under the "guidelines," (or if it was a "borderline case" or one in which teen-age children would be at home while both parents were working), the guidelines stated that it would then be submitted to the home office for further consideration based on "financial stability, credit rating, personal reputation, length of employment and/or probability of continued employment, etc. of the applicant." In instances where a particular applicant did not meet the standard of the guidelines, but nevertheless insisted on *627 home office consideration, the application would be forwarded.

The posted guidelines specifically state that ten days to two weeks should be allowed for final approval of all submitted applications. During that period credit data and employment verifications would be checked and ultimately evaluated by Russell Grantham. He alone had authority to approve an application. The extent of the home office study depended in large part upon the nature of the information submitted by the applicant. On occasions when he was otherwise satisfied with the acceptability of an applicant, Russell Grantham would forego the usual in-depth study of the application.

With these background findings, we turn to the merits of plaintiffs' charges of sex and race discrimination.

Plaintiffs, accompanied by their teenage son, visited the display home in Pleasant Hollow subdivision, on Wednesday, August 27, 1975, about a year after the "guidelines" had been posted. They spoke to Diane Irwin, the only employee of Grantham Management Company who was on duty that day. As it happened, Wednesday was Marty's regular day off. The Normals looked at several homes and were favorably impressed with one the monthly rental of which was $235. An application to rent that dwelling on a lease-purchase arrangement was then filled out and signed. So, too, were job verification forms by each of the Normals.

We do not credit plaintiffs' evidence that Mrs. Irwin stated that Mrs. Normal's salary would not be counted for purposes of qualifying them as tenants. Such a comment would not only be beyond the scope of her limited authority and inconsistent with the posted guidelines which Mrs. Irwin had been applying for about a year, but would make meaningless her requirement that both Mr. and Mrs. Normal execute and sign job verification forms (and the fact that both such forms were actually sent by defendants to their respective employers). We find as a fact that the Normals were told by Mrs. Irwin that the wife's income as well as that of her husband would be considered by the home office in determining whether their combined income was sufficient, that a credit check would be made, and that processing the application for final decision by the home office would take ten days to two weeks. We further find, as appears infra, that neither the Grantham Management Company nor any other defendant had or applied a policy of excluding the wife's income in considering whether an application should be approved.

After the application was "accepted" by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F. Supp. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/normal-v-st-louis-concrete-pipe-co-moed-1978.