Schipporeit v. Roberts
This text of 760 P.2d 1339 (Schipporeit v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Petitioners seek review of an order which found that they had committed racial discrimination in violation of ORS 659.033.1 They were ordered to cease and desist, to pay $12,000 damages for mental distress to the complainant Pearl Hampton and $4,781.31 damages for pecuniary loss and mental distress to the personal representative of the complainant John Cavender. We affirm.
Petitioners own and operate Sunnyview Mobile Home Park in Salem, where they rent and lease residential spaces. Cavender had rented and occupied a space on which he parked his mobile home. In September, 1982, he agreed to sell his home to Hampton, who is black, and to transfer to her his right to rent the space. His rental agreement with petitioners provided that he had to give them 30 days’ notice of his intent to sell his home if the purchaser also wanted to become a tenant. When petitioners learned that Cavender was going to sell to a black person, they strictly insisted on the 30-day notice requirement. After Cavender complied with that requirement, Hampton was not given a rental application, even though she repeatedly requested it.
Petitioners first argue that the Commissioner lacks authority to award damages as part of a cease and desist order for discrimination in housing. They recognize that we held otherwise in Williams v. Joyce, 4 Or App 482, 504, 479 P2d 513, rev den (1971), but argue that Williams is not controlling because, in 1977, the legislature enacted ORS 659 121(2),2 [15]*15which provides a complainant with the right to sue in circuit court in addition to the old administrative remedy. Petitioners contend that, as a result of that legislation, damages may be awarded only in a judicial proceeding.3 They urge that their interpretation is supported by the legislative history which, they assert, shows that ORS 659.121 was meant to bring Oregon into consonance with federal law, which does not provide for recovery of damages in an administrative proceeding. See 42 USC § 3610.
In Holien v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 298 Or 76, 93-96, 689 P2d 1292 (1984), the Supreme Court reviewed the legislative history of ORS 659.121, which indicates that the principal concern was to create a private cause of action for discrimination in employment and housing. Discussion of correspondence of the proposed Oregon legislation to federal provisions is part of that history. However, we do not agree with petitioners that it shows any intention to abrogate the previously existing powers of the Commissioner recognized in Williams v. Joyce, supra. In Holien, the Supreme Court concluded that the 1977 legislation did not eliminate or reduce existing administrative remedies, including damages, in employment discrimination. 298 Or at 95. We find that it did not change administrative remedies for housing discrimination either. ORS 659.121(4) specifically provides that the statute “shall not be construed to limit or alter in any way the authority or power of the commissioner * * * until and unless the complainant commences civil suit or action.” The creation of a judicial remedy with damages as relief did not eliminate the Commissioner’s administrative authority to assess damages.4
[16]*16Petitioners next contend that damages could not be awarded to the personal representative of Cavender’s estate. Cavender died in November, 1985, after the hearing but before the Commissioner’s final order. Petitioners argue that there is no provision for survivorship of administrative claims.
ORS 659.070 provides that an order from such a proceeding
“which awards money damages, unless paid, shall constitute a judgment and may be filed in accordance with the provisions of ORS 18.320 to 18.370. Execution may be issued upon the order in the same manner as execution upon a judgment in a court of record.”
The result of pursuing the administrative remedy is the same, insofar as damages are involved, as if the complainant had chosen to file a civil action. Providing for damages securable by execution as on a judgment is a way to achieve the purpose of ORS chapter 659 to eliminate the effects of discrimination. See Williams v. Joyce, supra, 4 Or App at 504. The legislature intended that an order arising out of the administrative proceeding have the same effect as a judgment in a judicial proceeding. We believe that it intended that the right to procure full administrative relief would survive the death of the injured party. See ORS 115.305.
Hampton filed her complaint on December 28,1983. On October 8, 1984, the Commissioner filed charges which alleged that petitioners had refused to rent to Hampton because of her race, a violation of ORS 659.033(1)(a). After the hearing, petitioners moved to dismiss the charge, arguing that the evidence did not show that Hampton had filed a formal rental application and been rejected and that, therefore, petitioners could not be found to have refused to rent to her. The Commissioner then amended the charges to add the allegation that petitioners had “attempted to discourage” Hampton from renting a space, a violation of ORS 659.033(l)(d). Petitioners argue that Commissioner lacked [17]*17the authority to add that allegation more than a year after the alleged discrimination and after the hearing. See ORS 659.045.
We need not address petitioners’ several arguments advanced in support of that contention, because the Commissioner’s amendment was surplusage. She found that petitioners’ reliance on the 30-day notice requirement was a pretext to keep Hampton out of the park, that Hampton’s repeated requests to be supplied with an application constituted an application for tenancy, that Hampton did all that she could have been expected to do and that the reason that she did not fill out the application was due entirely to petitioners’ failure to make it available to her. There is substantial evidence to support all of those findings. Those findings would, indeed, support a conclusion that petitioners discouraged Hampton from renting,5 but the Commissioner was correct in concluding6 that they also constituted a refusal to rent. Therefore, the original charge was sustained, and the post-hearing amendment is of no significance.
Affirmed.
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760 P.2d 1339, 93 Or. App. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schipporeit-v-roberts-orctapp-1988.