State Ex Rel. Dobbs v. Burche

729 N.W.2d 431, 2007 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 942375
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 30, 2007
Docket04-0273
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 729 N.W.2d 431 (State Ex Rel. Dobbs v. Burche) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Dobbs v. Burche, 729 N.W.2d 431, 2007 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 942375 (iowa 2007).

Opinion

HECHT, Justice.

The State, suing on behalf of former tenants, brought this action against the tenants’ former landlord, I.J.P., Inc., and its owners, John Burche • and Maura Burche, alleging sexual discrimination in housing. The district court entered judgment against the defendants for compensatory and punitive damages, penalties, and injunctive relief. During the pendency of this appeal, the parties reached a settlement agreement calling for satisfaction of the money judgment. Upon review of the issues not rendered moot by the settlement, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand this case for the entry of a judgment granting injunctive relief consistent with this opinion.

I. Background Facts.

A reasonable person could find the following facts from the record in this case. Jeannie Dobbs was a residential tenant of I.J.P., Inc., a corporation owned by John Burche and his wife, Maura Burche. Mr. Burche appeared at Dobbs’s apartment on August 1, 1999, purportedly to collect rent. Mr. Burche put his hands on Dobbsls face and told her she was pretty. During another visit to her apartment, Mr. Burche again told Dobbs she was pretty and asked her to go out with him, an offer she de-clinéd. When Dobbs reminded Mr. Burche he was a married man, he said, “What does that matter?” On that occasion, Mr. Burche grabbed her and kissed her on the cheek. During yet another encounter, Mr. Burche grabbed her face and kissed her on the mouth.

Mr. Burche frequently appeared at Dobbs’s apartment without her permission. *433 On one such occasion, she was alone in her apartment taking a shower. Hearing what she believed was the sound of a door closing, Dobbs opened the bathroom door. She saw Mr. Burche climbing the stairs, so she shut and locked the bathroom door. Mr. Burche claimed he had arrived to fix the toilet, but Dobbs did not recall reporting a faulty toilet.

These incidents made Dobbs’s continued tenancy burdensome and significantly less desirable than it would have been in the absence of the harassment. Dobbs testified that , in September of .1999 her boyfriend assisted Mr. Burche with some work. Consequently, Mr. Burche took Dobbs and her boyfriend out to lunch. After lunch, Burche followed Dobbs inside her apartment and told her they would have dinner alone on October 16, 1999. Dobbs, fearful of Mr. Burche’s conduct, stayed away from her residence on October 16. She requested that her boyfriend spend more time at her apartment to keep Mr. Burche away. Dobbs testified that because Mr. Burche’s conduct made her uncomfortable, she used her income tax refund to secure other housing.

Mr. Burche committed similar acts against Dawn Halligan, another tenant. Mr. Burche subjected her to unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature and requests for sexual favors. Mr. Burche agreed to keep her electrical and water service in his name, due to her lack of credit. When Mr. Burche came to Halligan’s apartment to discuss her desire to obtain lower rental payments in exchange for cleaning his apartments, Mr. Burche told her he would give her “gifts,” which she interpreted to mean lower rental payments, in exchange for sex. Halligan declined this proposal. Upon leaving Halligan’s residence, Mr. Burche held her in his arms and kissed her against her will on each cheek “for good luck.”

After Halligan had cleaned apartments for Mr. Burche, she received a notice alleging she had not fully paid her rent. She borrowed money from her mother and requested an extension of the time period in which to pay the rent. Mr. Burche again suggested to Halligan that if she had sex with him, he would give her “gifts,” which Halligan again interpreted to mean a reduction of her rent. Halligan. declined.

Because of Mr. Burche’s unwelcome conduct, Halligan’s tenancy became significantly less desirable. She began spending nights with her mother and friends, and a friend stayed with her for awhile. She eventually decided she had no choice but to move, notwithstanding her desire to prove to the Department of Human Services that she was stable and ready to reacquire custody of her children. Before she moved, Mr. Burche terminated Halli-gan’s electrical and water service.

Seven other former tenants of I.J.P., Inc., though not specifically joined as plaintiffs, testified that Mr. Burche had sexually harassed them. They generally endured acts of sexual harassment similar to those suffered by Dobbs and Halligan at the hands of Mr. Burche, including unwanted touching and invitations for sex in lieu of rental payments. One former tenant testified the day she moved into her apartment, Mr. Burche tried to convince her to have sex with him for “good luck.” When she refused, Mr. Burche overpowered and raped her. Mr. Burche evicted some of these tenants, while others moved to avoid further contact with him.

Although Mrs. Burche was not directly involved in her husband’s unwanted sexual advances against tenants, she did lash out against those who reported such incidents to her. Mrs. Burche accused one tenant of sleeping with Mr. Burche and called her a whore. Similarly, when one tenant requested that Mrs. Burche ask her husband *434 to stop calling, Mrs. Burche called the tenant a whore.

II. Background Proceedings.

The State’s Petition alleged that Mr. and Mrs. Burche’s behavior constituted sex discrimination in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act of 1965 (2001) (ICRA). The State sought damages not only for Dobbs and Halligan, the named plaintiffs, but also for witnesses who neither intervened nor were parties but who were allegedly “identifiable victim[s] of Defendants’ discriminatory housing practices.” See Iowa Code § 216.17A(9)(b)(2) (authorizing courts to award damages in actions under the ICRA). The State also sought the assessment of a civil penalty to be paid to the State, a declaratory judgment that defendants violated the ICRA, and an injunction restraining the defendants from discriminating on the basis of sex with regard to apartment rentals in the future, interfering with or threatening to take actions against people exercising or enjoying rights granted or protected by the ICRA, and failing to take affirmative steps to ensure the discontinuance of the alleged discrimination. See id. § 216.17A(9)(b)(l)-(3) (authorizing courts to order injunctions, civil penalties, and other “appropriate relief’ in actions under the ICRA).

After a trial, the district court found the defendants: (1) created a hostile housing environment for female tenants, in violation of section 216.8(2); (2) engaged in conduct amounting to quid pro quo sexual harassment of female tenants, in violation of section 216.8(2); (3) constructively evicted female tenants through quid pro quo sexual harassment and creation of a hostile housing environment, in violation of section 216.8(1); (4) interfered with female tenants’ enjoyment of their apartments without sex discrimination, in violation of section 216.11A; and (5) engaged in a pattern or practice of resistance to the rights granted and protected by the ICRA, in violation of section 216.17A(9). Because the district court believed a “drastic measure” was necessary to prevent Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
729 N.W.2d 431, 2007 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 942375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dobbs-v-burche-iowa-2007.