Quaker Hill Place v. Saville

523 A.2d 947, 1987 Del. Super. LEXIS 1429
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 10, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 523 A.2d 947 (Quaker Hill Place v. Saville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quaker Hill Place v. Saville, 523 A.2d 947, 1987 Del. Super. LEXIS 1429 (Del. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice * .

This appeal is from a final order of the State Human Relations Commission (the “Commission”) finding the appellant, Quaker Hill Place, to have unlawfully discriminated against appellee, Raymond Saville, Jr., in violation of 6 Del.C. § 4603(f). 1 Allegedly, Quaker Hill refused to rent an apartment to Saville because he suffered from a mental handicap. Quaker Hill maintains that Saville was denied an apartment based on criminal or antisocial behavior reasonably constituting a threat to the safety of the premises or the safety of other tenants, their property or guests.

This is the second time I have considered the issue. Earlier, this Court reversed, as contrary to fact and law, a prior ruling of the Commission that Quaker Hill had wrongfully denied Saville an apartment. The matter was remanded to the Commission for further proceedings consistent with the Court’s opinion. Quaker Hill Place v. State Human Relations Commission, Del.Super., 498 A.2d 175 (1985) (Quaker Hill I).

In the present appeal, Quaker Hill contends that the findings and conclusions of the Commission on remand: (1) were not consistent with the standards established in Quaker Hill I; (2) were neither supported by substantial evidence nor the product of an orderly and logical deductive process; and (3) were tainted by overt acts of prejudice toward Quaker Hill by the chairman of the Commission panel hearing the matter. After full briefing, oral argument, and a careful examination of the record on remand, it is evident that the Commission did not properly apply the appropriate legal standards of Quaker Hill I, when evaluating the discrimination claim. Moreover, the Commission’s conclusions are not the product of an orderly and logical deductive process, nor are they supported by Substantial evidence on the record. Finally, and most regrettably, I must conclude from the record that the Commission acted contrary to elemental standards of fairness and due process. Thus, under all the circumstances, any one of which would mandate rever *? sal, the decision of the Commission cannot stand and must be reversed. 2

I.

Many of the pertinent facts material to this dispute were summarized in Quaker Hill I:

Saville has been diagnosed as suffering from “Bi-Polar Disorder, Mixed Type”, an apparent form of manic depression, which the Commission assumed was the cause of Saville’s occasional antisocial behavior.
In the summer of 1983 Saville applied for an apartment at Quaker Hill. On the application he indicated that he was mentally handicapped, citing the manic depressive condition. Apparently, this illness would entitle Saville to federal rent assistance in a private, federally subsidized housing project, like Quaker Hill, which provides apartments to the handicapped and elderly.
Despite excellent references, including a medical report that Saville could live in a socially responsible manner, Quaker Hill rejected the application. At the Commission hearing, Quaker Hill relied upon several instances of unusual behavior by Saville, including certain criminal acts. These included:
(1)In 1981 Saville became angered over late delivery of his mail. His hostility toward the postal authorities was further exacerbated by an increase in first class postage rates. There were acrimonious discussions about the former with his local postmaster, who had advised that the delivery problems related to Sa-ville’s location on the mail route. In response Saville demanded that the delivery routes be changed so that he would receive his mail first. When this was not done, he twice went to his local post office and each time bought $100 worth of 20<f stamps by check. On a third occasion he went to a different post office and did the same thing. In each case he promptly stopped payment on the checks, advising his bank either that he did not like the new postage rates or that he did not like his postmaster. He was charged with felony theft, which the State offered not to prosecute. Instead, Saville demanded trial, was convicted and ultimately served a short prison term. Saville admitted at the Commission hearing that he used “poor judgment” in declining the State’s offer to drop the charges.
(2) In 1979 Saville became angered over the gasoline crisis, which caused long lines at the pumps and restricted gas sales. He also was harboring animosity toward the Delaware State Police in connection with a prior arrest in 1975. Spotting the Governor’s official automobile parked outside Legislative Hall in Dover, Saville decided to protest his grievances by letting the air out of the Governor’s tires. After doing so, he later went to the Governor’s office and gave the valve stems from the tires to a secretary. Although he was questioned by the State Police, no prosecution resulted.
(3) In June, 1982, Saville was hungry and without money. Allegedly, because he wanted to get arrested in order to receive a free meal in jail, and also because he harbored animosity toward the police for an earlier drunken driving arrest, he spray painted the letters “MADD” on a police car parked outside the State Office Building in Wilmington. He was arrested, fed, and released without prosecution.
(4) On another occasion Saville tried to telephone the President of the United States to complain about poor medical treatment he allegedly was receiving at a Veteran’s Administration Hospital.

Quaker Hill I, 498 A.2d at 177-78.

Quaker Hill also claims to have relied on one further act of threatening behavior by Saville. At Saville’s sentencing in the Superior Court on October 14, 1982 for the felony theft conviction, the Deputy Attor *952 ney General prosecuting the case told the trial judge in open court that an alleged telephonic bomb threat to a local motel had been traced to Saville. That statement appeared in an October 15, 1982 Wilmington, Delaware, newspaper article headed: “Protesting stamp costs nets jail.” The article stated in pertinent part:

Protesting the price increase of postage stamps cost Raymond L. Saville Jr. a 60-day jail sentence Thursday in Superi- or Court.
Judge Vincent A. Bifferato gave Sa-ville, 37, of Sheldon Apartments, Old Forge Road, New Castle, three years for felony theft, with all but 60 days suspended for probation.
******
Deputy Attorney General Alex Smalls said Saville had been involved in threats to a motel. He suggested that the court require Saville to take his medicine and attend a mental hygiene clinic.
Saville said he would like to know what Smalls was referring to in accusing him of having made threats. Smalls started to explain, but was interrupted by Sa-ville’s cry, “That’s a lie.”
******

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Bluebook (online)
523 A.2d 947, 1987 Del. Super. LEXIS 1429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quaker-hill-place-v-saville-delsuperct-1987.