Relationship Between Department of Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose Behalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedJanuary 20, 1995
StatusPublished

This text of Relationship Between Department of Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose Behalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act (Relationship Between Department of Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose Behalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Relationship Between Department of Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose Behalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act, (olc 1995).

Opinion

Relationship Between Department of Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose Behalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act

When the Department o f Justice undertakes a civil action on behalf o f a complainant alleging a discriminatory housing practice under the Fair Housing Act, Department attorneys handling the action do not enter into an attomey-client relationship with the complainant, nor do they undertake a fiduciary obligation to the complainant.

Because no attom ey-client relationship is established in such undertakings, no retainer agreement between the complainant and the Department attorneys should be entered into.

January 20, 1995

M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e A s s is t a n t A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l C iv il R ig h t s D iv is io n

You have requested that this Office clarify the legal relationship between Department attorneys and individuals on whose behalf the United States institutes civil actions pursuant to the Fair Housing Act, as amended. 42 U.S.C. §§3604- 3616a.

Description of the program

The Fair Housing Act uses the resources of the federal government to address housing discrimination against private persons. Persons alleging a discriminatory housing practice may file a complaint with the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (“ the Secretary” or “ HUD” ), or the Secretary may undertake action at his or her own behest. The statutory structure attempts to ensure that such complaints are vigorously investigated and, if meritorious, pursued by the government. Under § 3610(e), the Secretary may authorize a civil action for appro­ priate temporary or preliminary relief, to be filed by the Department of Justice. When a complaint is filed with HUD under §3610, the complainant, respondent, or person on whose behalf a complaint was filed may elect to have the claims asserted in that charge heard in a civil action under §3612(o). Subsection 3612(o) provides that, if an election to proceed in a civil action is made: “ the Secretary shall authorize, and not later than 30 days after the election is made the Attorney General shall commence and maintain, a civil action on behalf of the aggrieved person in a United States district court seeking relief under this subsection.” (Emphasis added.) Section 3613 grants aggrieved private persons a cause of action, whether or not the person has filed a complaint administratively. However, if the Secretary has already obtained a conciliation agreement with the consent of the aggrieved 1 Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19

person, then the aggrieved person may only file a suit to enforce the terms of such an agreement. Subsection 3614(a) authorizes the Attorney General to file suits alleging a pat­ tern or practice of violations o f the chapter; subsection (d) of this section author­ izes the courts, in either a pattern or practice case or a case filed upon a referral by the Secretary, to award injunctive relief, damages to the person aggrieved, civil penalties, and attorneys fees to parties other than the United States.

Relationship between Department attorneys and the complainant

We believe that when the Department of Justice undertakes a matter “ on behalf of’’ a complainant, the Department attorney does not enter into an attomey-client relationship with the complainant. Likewise, when the Department files a pattern or practice case under §3614, seeking damages on behalf of aggrieved persons, no attomey-client relationship is established with those for whom damages are sought. The structure of the statute compels this conclusion. Congress recognized not only that the government’s interests in large measure coincide with those of aggrieved parties, but also— and importantly for our purposes here — that the interests of the complainant or aggrieved persons may diverge from that of the government. Such potential divergence of interest would be inconsistent with inter­ preting the statute as establishing attomey-client relationships between the govern­ ment and the complainants on whose behalf the Department litigates. First, the statute has separate sections for enforcement by private persons under §3613 and enforcement by the Attorney General under §3614. More specifically, § 3613(a) illustrates that Congress recognized the potential for diverging interests within the statute itself. It provides that an aggrieved person may file a civil action, regardless of whether an administrative complaint was filed under §3610.' Similarly, § 3 6 13(e), which provides for intervention by the Attorney General in suits brought by private persons, and its companion provision, § 3614(e), which provides for intervention by aggrieved persons in suits brought by the Attorney General, indicate that the Attorney General may have separate interests or positions from those advanced by the complainant. Likewise, §3612(o)(2) provides that an aggrieved person may intervene as of right in any administrative action filed by the Secretary. Finally, if the Department (or a HUD attorney, in the case of an administrative filing) were the attorney for the complainant, Congress would not have needed to provide for the complainant’s individual representation, or for court appointment of an attorney for the complainant under § 3613(b). Moreover, Congress nowhere in the Fair Housing Act itself decreed or author­ ized the establishment of an attomey-client relationship between the Department 1 The only limit on Filing in court in such a circumstance is that the aggrieved person may not file if a conciliation agreem ent has already been obtained with th e consent o f the aggrieved person, or if the administrative law judge has already com m enced a hearing on the record. § 3613(a)(2)—<3).

2 Relationship Between Department o f Justice Attorneys and Persons on Whose B ehalf the United States Brings Suits Under the Fair Housing Act

attorney and the complainant or aggrieved person. Nor have we located anything in the legislative history that would indicate that Congress intended the Depart­ ment to serve as the complainant’s personal attorney, rather than the attorney for the government. Congress apparently intended that the government use its resources to vindicate civil rights with respect to housing, and to attempt to achieve redress for the complainants who bring violations to the government’s attention, as it has in other areas of civil rights. Yet the Fair Housing Act does not provide personal attorneys for those who believe that they have suffered housing discrimination. Other civil rights laws attempt to involve the government in the promotion of civil rights by mustering the government’s litigative resources on behalf of private individuals or groups of aggrieved individuals. In those situations, courts have not found that an attomey-client relationship was established between the govern­ ment and those for whom the government sought relief. Bratton v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 649 F.2d 658, 669 (9th Cir. 1980); Williams v. United States, 665 F. Supp. 1466, 1470 (D. Or. 1987).2 Courts have also recognized that the United States has broader and somewhat different litigative interests from that of the indi­ vidual complainants or aggrieved persons. General Tel. Co. o f the Northwest, Inc. v. EEOC, 446 U.S. 318, 324, 326 (1980); United States v. School Dist. o f Fem- dale, 577 F.2d 1339, 1345 n.9 (6th Cir.

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