United Home Rentals, Inc. v. Texas Real Estate Commission

548 F. Supp. 566, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17733
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 29, 1982
DocketCA 3-81-0809-C
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 548 F. Supp. 566 (United Home Rentals, Inc. v. Texas Real Estate Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Home Rentals, Inc. v. Texas Real Estate Commission, 548 F. Supp. 566, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17733 (N.D. Tex. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM M. TAYLOR, Jr., District Judge.

This is a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 19831 and 28 U.S.C. § 1331.2 Plaintiffs complain that Defendants have violated their First Amendment Rights which have been made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment.3

[568]*568The Parties in their Joint Motion for Pretrial Order entered into stipulations A through L as follows:

A. Plaintiffs own and operate and/or are employed in the rental information service industry in several locations throughout the State of Texas. The focus of the business is the compiling, cataloging, and sale of information about available rental property. This information is then made available to segments of the general public who choose to purchase a “policy” or “membership” for a specified fee which enables the customer to examine the catalogued information for a certain period of time, usually six months.
B. It is the intent of Plaintiffs that employees of the rental information service in each office perform one or more of the following functions:
(1) gathering rental information from landlords, classified ads, and other sources;
(2) certifying the accuracy of the information on catalogued property, and its continued availability for rental, on a periodic basis;
(3) handling incoming telephone calls to the office either in response to ads or to give information to existing policyholders as to newly catalogued rental properties;
(4) the explanation of services offered and the sale of policies to customers who come into the office.
One or more functions may be performed by the same or multiple employees within each office.
C. Plaintiff Livingston is the sole shareholder and sole director of United Home Rentals, Inc. Plaintiff Bushman is a real estate broker employed full time by Plaintiff United Home Rentals, Inc., but has no ownership interest in the company. Plaintiff Bushman currently holds a brokers license issued by Defendant TREC and Plaintiff Livingston, through the sponsorship of Plaintiff Bushman, is the holder of a salesman’s license issued by TREC.
D. According to interpretations by Defendant TREC and its counsel, its Rules (Appendix 2) require that any employee that performs on any occasion any of the functions specified aforesaid in Paragraph VB be licensed as a salesman or broker under the provisions of the Real Estate License Act and the rules promulgated thereunder.
E. The Commission is currently demanding that such functions be performed only by licensed people or that Plaintiff United Home Rentals cease doing business. Defendant TREC has threatened (and in fact subsequent to the filing of suit, instituted) administrative proceedings against Plaintiffs Livingston and Bushman to revoke their licenses based upon their association with persons performing such functions who do not have licenses issued by Defendant TREC.
F. The minimal educational requirements for obtaining a real estate salesman’s license since 1976 and as changed by the 1981 amendment to the law are as follows:
(1) January 1, 1976 — 30 classroom hours (plus 30 additional hours each for second and third annual certification);
(2) January 1, 1977 — 6 semester hours (90 classroom hours);
(3) January 1, 1979 — 12 semester hours (180 classroom hours);
(4) January 1, 1981 — 21 semester hours (315 classroom hours);
(5) April 23, 1981 — 12 semester hours with 6 hours in core real estate courses including 2 hours in Principles of Real Estate (plus additional semester hours for second, third and fourth annual certifications).
G. On April 23, 1980, Defendant TREC rejected license applications by three employees of Plaintiff United Home Rentals, Inc. on the basis they misrepresented their activities either past or future in their application for licensure to Defendant TREC. Specifically, the application requires them to affirm under oath that they have not performed activities requiring licensure and that they will not [569]*569perform activities requiring licensure until the license is actually issued. Defendant TREC denied the applications on the basis that in working for Plaintiff United Home Rentals, Inc. each employee, necessarily and admittedly, performed one or more of the functions specified in paragraph VB, of the Rules (Appendix 2) without the benefit of a license from Defendant TREC. Accordingly, Defendant TREC has denied the applications on the basis that “the Texas Real Estate Commission is not satisfied that (employee) would conduct his real estate business with honesty, trustworthiness and integrity as required by . .. (the act)”.
H. Defendant TREC has informed Plaintiffs that the act provides for and in fact has commenced administrative actions to revoke the licenses of Plaintiffs Bushman and Livingston (such commencement occurring April 24, 1980) on the basis that they have “associated with unlicensed persons”.
I. Defendant TREC has informed Plaintiffs that the act provides for criminal prosecution of employees of Plaintiff United Home Rentals, Inc. not holding real estate licenses and performing any of the functions specified in paragraph VB of the Rules.
J. Defendant TREC has advised Plaintiffs counsel that it intends to immediately and vigorously prosecute enforcement proceedings pursuant to its authority as to Michael Livingston, Wesley Eugene Bushman, and United Home Rentals, Inc.’s employees, James Godfrey, Gerald Sheridan, and Kenneth Crain.
K. Companies in the rental information industries have been the subject of consumer complaints such as:
(a) not having the permission of the landlord to catalog property;
(b) cataloging property no longer available for rent;
(c) advertising property that did not really exist or that was no longer available;
(d) guaranteeing the results of a service and then not honoring such guarantees;
(e) promising the availability of property meeting the needs of a particular customer and then not having any such property.
L.Plaintiff United Home Rentals, Inc. has been the subject of such consumer complaints but has been responsive to resolving such consumer complaints. In 1976, Plaintiff United consented to an injunction against certain of such acts without admitting it had performed them. Mark McQuality and Joseph Chumlea, former Assistant Attorney Generals to the State of Texas — Consumer Division would testify that from October, 1976, to June, 1980, they processed approximately 37 complaints involving United Home Rentals, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
548 F. Supp. 566, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-home-rentals-inc-v-texas-real-estate-commission-txnd-1982.