Introduction
Donahue Francis was continuously harassed and threatened in his place of residence by his neighbor. Yet the apartment owner, Kings Park Manor, Inc. (KPM), aware of the circumstances, refused to take action.1 Even after the police were notified, KPM still refused to take action.2 Francis’s neighbor, Raymond Endres, continued to hurl racist insults at Francis until he was forced to call the police again and notify KPM directly.3 Still, KPM refused to interfere.4 Finally, Francis decided to file suit against KPM, alleging violations of the Fair Housing Act (FHA).5
The FHA was enacted in order to eradicate the disparities and discrimination prevalent in housing during the 1960s.6 Following the Civil War, the country continued to embody racist institutions in all areas of American life—including housing.7 As a result, the government enacted a series of Civil Rights Acts, which included the FHA, to suppress some of the racism throughout the nation.8 Although not perfect, the FHA has worked for decades to reduce the significant discrimination embedded in this sector of American society and to create equitable treatment for individuals.9
The Second Circuit’s en banc decision in Francis v. Kings Park Manor, Inc. (Francis II) was inconsistent with the language of the FHA when it concluded that a landlord does not have sufficient control over tenants to render landlords liable for tenant-on-tenant harassment.10 First, the legislative history of the FHA, read parallel to similar enactments such as Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), points to the fact that the FHA is meant to apply to post-acquisition conduct.11 Second, when landlords are aware of race-based discrimination in housing, they should be obligated to take action if they have a sufficient degree of control, which is embodied in the landlord’s power to evict under the lease.12
Part I of this Note provides a discussion of the facts and procedural history of Francis II. Part II then discusses the en banc court’s holding and reasoning behind its conclusion. Part III discusses the text and legislative history of the FHA. Part IV provides a textual and substantive analysis of the FHA, including a discussion on other relevant federal statutes, such as Title VII and the ADA, that are often used by courts to analyze issues in this area of law. Lastly, Section V.A first analyzes the implications of Francis II’s holding and explains why, despite the court’s reasoning, landlords often exercise the degree of control over their tenants necessary to establish liability under the FHA through their power to evict. Finally, Section V.B suggests a standard that works to reduce discrimination in housing: landlords are liable when they has actual notice of impermissible harassment between tenants and has reserved the power to evict under the provisions of the lease. This Note argues that when landlords have the power to evict under the lease and actual notice of harassment, they should be obligated to take action against the harassing tenant, and failure to do so should constitute a violation of the FHA.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Donahue Francis, a Black man, rented and lived in Kings Park Manor, a residential complex in Suffolk County, New York, owned and operated by KPM.13 On approximately eight occasions, between February and September 2012, Raymond Endres, Francis’s neighbor, verbally attacked and attempted to intimidate Francis by hurling racist insults and at least one death threat at Francis.14 In February 2012, Francis heard Endres say “Jews, f[——]g Jews” while standing in front of his apartment.15 On March 3, 2012, Endres approached Francis’s door saying “damn f[——]g Jews,” then while looking at Francis, said “f[——]g a[–]hole.”16 About a week later, Endres approached Francis in front of his open door and repeatedly called him a “n[—-]r.”17 After repeatedly feeling afraid in his own home, on March 11, 2012, Francis reported Endres to the Suffolk County Police Hate Crimes Unit, who visited the apartment complex, interviewed witnesses, warned Endres to stop threatening Francis, and informed KPM of the reported events.18 KPM did nothing.19 Again on May 22, 2012, Endres threatened Francis’s life, saying “I oughta kill you, you f[—–]g n[—-]r.”20 That month, Francis called the police again and filed another police report.21 He notified KPM of the events by letter, detailing Endres’s racist conduct from March through May 2012.22 In his letter, Francis provided detailed information regarding the events, including the contact information of the police unit that previously handled the matter.23 After the conduct persisted, the Suffolk County Police Department finally arrested Endres for aggravated harassment in violation of New York Penal Law Section 240.30.24 Francis then sent KPM another letter, advising it of the continued racial harassment from Endres and informing them that Endres had been arrested for the harassment.25
The harassment did not stop there, however. In September 2012, Endres attempted to photograph Francis’s apartment, and Francis once again contacted the police and sent KPM a third and final letter complaining of the continued racial harassment.26 However, KPM refused to respond to the incident and advised Downing, the property manager, to not get involved, while Endres remained a tenant at the apartment complex.27 After receiving no help from KPM, Francis finally brought action against the landlord, property manager, and Endres, alleging a continued pattern of racially discriminatory conduct and harassment in violation of the FHA.28 In January 2013, Endres’s lease expired and he vacated the apartment.29 Endres also pleaded guilty to a harassment charge in April 2013, and the state court entered an order of protection prohibiting him from contacting Francis.30
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York dismissed the action against KPM in part.31 The district court dismissed Francis’s claims, holding that Francis failed to state plausible FHA claims against KPM and its alleged agent.32 Francis appealed and the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded the case.33 A divided Second Circuit panel issued a decision, with the majority affirming the dismissal of Francis’s claims for negligent infliction of emotional distress but reversing the dismissal of his discrimination claims.34 The Second Circuit’s decision in the 2019 case, Francis v. Kings Park Manor, Inc. (Francis I), before it re-heard the case en banc in 2021, held that Francis adequately alleged that KPM was aware of Endres’s harassment of Francis, and that it refused to address the harassment because it was based on race, therefore violating the FHA.35 The Second Circuit first concluded that the FHA applies post-acquisition, an important detail in its holding.36 It then determined that KPM was liable for the tenant-on-tenant racial harassment because it failed to intervene, even though there was evidence that KPM had intervened in other instances regarding non-race-related violations.37
KPM filed a petition for a rehearing en banc pursuant to Rule 35 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, which provides that parties may petition for a rehearing en banc and a majority of active circuit judges may grant the order.38 The court conducted a poll, and a majority of the judges voted in favor of rehearing the appeal en banc.39 Thereafter, the en banc court reviewed the district court’s dismissal of the complaint de novo.40
II. Holding
The principal question in front of the en banc court was whether Francis stated a claim under the FHA for intentional discrimination by alleging that his landlord failed to respond to reports of race-based harassment by Endres.41 The Second Circuit en banc vacated the previous decision and held that Francis failed to state an FHA claim based on allegations that KPM failed to respond to reports of Endres’s race-based harassment.42 In its reasoning, the majority analyzed the requirements of an FHA claim, explaining that a landlord can only be liable under the FHA if it has control over the offending behavior, and ultimately concluded that landlords do not have this kind of control over tenant-on-tenant harassment.43 Part of the court’s reasoning relied on the lack of facts in Francis’s complaint to prove that KPM’s actions were motivated by race.44 When a plaintiff brings a claim under the FHA that does not rely on direct evidence of landlord discrimination, the plaintiff must plausibly allege that (1) they are a member of a protected class; (2) they suffered adverse action; and (3) the landlord was motivated by discriminatory intent.45 The court discussed the allegation that KPM had intervened against other tenants regarding non-race-related violations of their leases, noting that Francis did not provide concrete evidence that would change this from a vague allegation to a discrimination case.46
The court also discussed Francis’s argument that KPM intentionally discriminated against him under the deliberate indifference theory of liability.47 However, even after assuming that this can be used to establish liability under the FHA, the court still held that Francis provided no factual basis to infer that KPM had “substantial control over [Endres] and the context in which the known harassment occur[red].”48 In discussing the issue of control, the court held that the level of control necessary cannot be presumed to exist in a landlord-tenant relationship, as differentiated from environments of schools and prisons.49 The court explained that the typical powers of a landlord over a tenant do not establish the substantial control necessary to state a deliberate indifference claim under the FHA.50 The majority further stated that control cannot be reasonably presumed to exist in the typical arms-length landlord-tenant relationship, and that the typical powers of a landlord over a tenant, such as the power to evict, do not establish substantial control necessary to state a deliberate indifference claim under the FHA.51
The court also distinguished the employment context in its decision.52 Francis argued that the employer-employee relationship bears a strong resemblance to that of the landlord-tenant relationship; thus, if employers are responsible for employee-on-employee harassment under Title VII, then landlords must also be responsible for tenant-on-tenant harassment under the FHA.53 The court rejected this argument and pointed to the agency existing in employer-employee relationships—employees are considered agents of their employer, creating a greater degree of control—as well as the wide range of tools available to employers in contrast to that of landlords.54 The court went on to distinguish Wetzel v. Glen St. Andrew Living Community, LLC by stating that the landlord in Wetzel had an unusual supervisory control over the premises and tenants.55
Lastly, the court held that even if Francis had plausibly pleaded that KPM exercised sufficient control over Endres, his deliberate indifference claim would still fail because KPM’s actions were not “clearly unreasonable” in light of the known circumstances as required.56 KPM, as the court explained, was aware of the police involvement ultimately leading to Endres’s arrest, so its inaction was not clearly unreasonable.57
Judge Lohier dissented in part and concurred in part, only concurring in the majority’s dismissal of Francis’s claim of negligent infliction of emotional distress.58 Judge Lohier’s dissent primarily focused on Francis’s FHA claim and emphasized the inadequacy of KPM’s response to Francis’s complaints.59 Judge Lohier pointed out that Francis’s complaint did not solely allege that KPM failed to respond to reports of race-based harassment by a fellow tenant, as the majority claims.60 Rather, the complaint alleged that KPM ignored Francis’s repeated requests to take action against a tenant who engaged in criminal harassment.61 Judge Lohier continued to discuss the degree of control that the majority had difficulty establishing, pointing out that landlords “enjoy significant ‘flexibility’ to ‘respond to known [tenant-on-tenant] harassment.’”62 Judge Lohier pointed to New York’s warranty of habitability as proof that KPM had the degree of control necessary to take action here, since New York law requires landlords to ensure that “tenants are not subjected to any conditions endangering or detrimental to their life, health, or safety.”63 Lastly, the dissent pointed out that KPM’s previous interventions against other tenants regarding non-race-related violations of their leases or the law plausibly suggest that KPM had the power to discipline tenants for violating their leases.64
III. Background and Discussion of Prior Law
The FHA was codified to address issues of discrimination in housing throughout the United States.65 The legislative history behind the FHA demonstrates that Congress intended to address broad issues of racial discrimination after the Civil War.66 Furthermore, a textual analysis of the FHA reveals that it was intended to apply both pre- and post-acquisition in order to accomplish the Nation’s goal in securing “fair housing throughout the United States.”67
A. Race Discrimination Is Prohibited Under the Fair Housing Act
Race is among the various protected classes under the FHA.68 The FHA makes it unlawful for a public or private landlord to discriminate against any individual “in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling” based on a range of protected classes, including race.69 The amount of claims that allege a violation of the FHA for race discrimination remain high.70 In 2019 alone, over 2,000 FHA claims were submitted to the U.S. Department of Housing and Development (HUD) and the Fair Housing Assistance Program (FHAP) for discrimination based on race, and around 10,600 total FHA complaints were submitted based on other protected classes, such as disability and religion.71
B. The Legislative History Behind the Fair Housing Act Strongly Indicates That Congress Intended to Address Issues of Racial Discrimination in Housing
The legislative history behind the FHA suggests that it was established with the intent of eliminating housing discrimination throughout the United States.72 A period of intense racial tension prompted the Johnson administration to introduce the FHA in 1968.73 Mass uprisings and violent protests flooded the country, resulting in many deaths in cities across the United States.74 Soon after, the federal government began enacting a series of Civil Rights Acts in an attempt to suppress the increasing racial tension across the country.75 Among these acts were Title VII, which prohibited discrimination based on protected classes in the workplace.76 Title VII was enacted as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which historically ended legal segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination.77 However, despite the administration’s efforts, housing remained one of the most segregated areas in American society.78 Therefore, four years later, the federal government passed the FHA as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1968—intended as a follow-up to the 1964 Act.79 The 1968 Act expanded the coverage of protection against discrimination of the 1964 Act to include the prohibition of discrimination in housing.80 As discussed later in Section III.C.2, the language between the two Acts is almost identical.81
The FHA’s early history proves that the passage was not without debate. Although the House of Representatives passed an initial version of the FHA in 1966, severe opposition resulted in two years of delay.82 Meanwhile, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders released a report (Kerner Commission Report) supporting the passage of the Bill, warning that the country was heading toward “two societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal.”83 Soon after, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated at the height of civil unrest.84 That same week, the House passed the Bill and President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968.85 Though the Supreme Court has found the legislative history of the FHA minimally helpful for interpreting the Act,86 it has “acknowledged that the proximity of the Senate passing [the Bill] and the issuance of the Kerner Commission Report creates an inference that the Senate sought to eliminate de facto segregation in housing.”87 The Court has also acknowledged the FHA’s continuing role in creating a more “integrated society.”88 Ultimately, the FHA created regulations and obligations that work to reduce the discrimination in housing that prevented the United States from becoming a more equal society.
C. The Fair Housing Act Continues to Apply Post-Acquisition
1. Textual Analysis of the Fair Housing Act
The protections afforded by the Fair Housing Act do not evaporate once an individual takes possession of their house, condominium, or apartment.89 First, section 804(b) of the Fair Housing Act, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 3604(b), states that a landlord cannot “discriminate against any person in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling, or in the provision of services or facilities” on the basis of a protected class.90 For example, a landlord could not enact a rule prohibiting individuals of a certain race from accessing facilities in the building that are otherwise available to all tenants.91 This necessarily applies post-acquisition, demonstrating that the FHA covers conduct after sale or rental. This provision would not be logical if the FHA only applied pre-acquisition, since terms, conditions, and privileges of a sale or rental necessarily take place after one acquires the property. Next, section 801, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 3601, states that “[i]t is the policy of the United States to provide, within constitutional limitations, for fair housing throughout the United States.”92 This language implies that fair housing continues after an individual acquires property.93 The goal of section 801 would not be realized if it merely meant that fair housing only includes the ability to purchase or rent a dwelling.94 The social climate preceding the enactment indicates that discrimination in housing was at its height and the Johnson Administration sought to remedy that.95
Some scholars note that the words chosen by Congress throughout the text of the FHA clearly suggest some post-acquisition scope, even if the scope is not always clear.96 It has been suggested that because the text of the FHA is “broad and inclusive,” its provisions should be construed broadly as well.97 The FHA describes a dwelling “not only as a structure ‘intended for occupancy as[] a residence,’ which presumably would be sufficient if the FHA were focused solely on discrimination precluding sale or rental, but also as a structure ‘which is occupied as a residence.’”98 Here, Congress extended FHA coverage to “occupied” structures which implies some post-acquisition conduct.99
Various circuit and district courts have also found that the text of the FHA covers post-acquisition conduct. For instance, in Bloch v. Frischholz, which the majority in Francis I cited, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals looked at the availability of post-acquisition claims under 42 U.S.C. § 3604.100 In Bloch, Jewish condominium owners brought an action against the condominium association and its president under the FHA, challenging a rule prohibiting owners from placing objects outside of unit entrance doors.101 The plaintiffs alleged religious and racial discrimination that took place after the owners bought their condominium unit.102 The association enacted a set of rules that governed certain activities taking place outside the units in the common hallways, prohibiting certain objects from remaining outside unit entrance doors.103 The Blochs placed a religious object, a mezuzah, outside their front door only to find it removed by the association for violating the hallway rules.104 The Seventh Circuit identified two situations where post-acquisition claims under § 3604 may take place: (1) when discriminatory conduct constructively evicts a resident;105 or (2) when occupancy is governed by discriminatory terms.106 The court further acknowledged that § 3604(a) and (b) prohibits discriminatory evictions.107 Evictions, whether actual or constructive, the court explained, can only occur after the sale or rental is complete; therefore, the FHA must be read to apply post-acquisition.108 Furthermore, the court explained that “interference” with certain rights protected by § 3604—rights that prohibit discriminatory evictions—may also occur post-acquisition.109 The court held that a claim for coercion, intimidation, threats, and interference with or on account of a plaintiff’s § 3604 rights does not require the plaintiff to actually vacate the premises.110
Furthermore, as Judge Lohier noted in his majority opinion in Francis I, “every other circuit faced with th[is] issue has acknowledged that § 3604(b) at least prohibits ‘discrimination relating to . . . actual or constructive eviction.’”111 Actual and constructive eviction are necessarily post-acquisition conduct; therefore, it would make no logical sense to say that this section of the FHA prohibits discrimination relating to eviction but simultaneously does not apply post-acquisition.112
Courts have also read 42 U.S.C. § 3617 as covering some post-acquisition conduct.113 The Seventh Circuit in Bloch found that “§ 3617 reaches a broader range of post-acquisition conduct.”114 Here, the court noted that requiring the Blochs to vacate their home before permitting them to sue would stifle Congress’s intent in enacting the FHA.115
New York courts have also held that § 3617 applies post-acquisition. For example, in Davis v. City of New York, the District Court for the Southern District of New York held that § 3617 is best understood to prohibit post- as well as pre-acquisition discrimination in the provision of housing services.116 Here, a class action was brought on behalf of individuals residing in public housing, challenging the policies and practices that the housing authority used to enforce prohibition against trespassing on public housing property.117 The residents brought multiple claims alleging that the defendants’ discriminatory policing practices diminished their ability to enjoy the benefits their homes had to offer.118 In analyzing this issue, the court discussed the FHA’s application to post-acquisition conduct.119 The majority gave three reasons to conclude that § 3604(b) is best understood to prohibit post- as well as pre-acquisition conduct: (1) including the word “privileges” in the statute implicates continuing rights; (2) § 3604 should be given broad and liberal construction to enhance congressional intent; and (3) such a reading comports with the interpretation of the FHA as set forth by HUD and the Department of Justice.120
Additionally, in Ohana v. 180 Prospect Place Realty Corp., the same court found that the FHA protection continues after acquisition.121 In this case, apartment tenants sued their neighbors under the FHA, claiming discriminatory acts against them based upon their races, religions, and national origins.122 Plaintiffs alleged that their neighbors participated in racial and antisemitic slurs, threats of bodily harm, and noise disturbances.123 In its decision, the court noted that the FHA does not only protect individuals from discrimination in the acquisition of their residence, “but also protects them from interference” for these “discriminatory reasons in the peaceful enjoyment of their homes.”124 Though these holdings are not binding on the Second Circuit, they show a trend in the broad interpretation of the FHA to apply to cases that arise after an individual acquires their property.
Lastly, the Seventh Circuit’s and the New York district court’s rulings are consistent with HUD’s interpretation of § 3617. HUD’s regulations prohibit interfering with persons in their “enjoyment of a dwelling” because of their race or religion.125 This interpretation implies that § 3617 applies to post-acquisition discrimination.
2. Comparison to Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act
Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) are both relevant in interpreting Title VIII and help explain that the FHA applies to post-acquisition conduct. First, the language of § 3604(b) in the FHA and Title VII are strikingly similar.126 While the FHA prohibits property owners from discriminating in the “terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling,” Title VII prohibits employers from discriminating in the “terms, conditions, or privileges of employment.”127
Furthermore, the Supreme Court has held that Title VII is relevant in interpreting the FHA.128 In Texas Department of Housing and Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., the Supreme Court read disparate impact claims into the FHA based on its Title VII counterpart, because the two Acts share a purpose—to eliminate discriminatory practices in the United States.129 The Supreme Court noted that the similarity in text and structure of the two statutes is especially compelling because the FHA was passed only four years after Title VII.130
Judge Lohier’s majority opinion for the Second Circuit in Francis I noted the similarities between Title VII and Title VIII in explaining why courts often analogize the two.131 Judge Lohier discussed the language of Title VII which bans both pre- and post-hiring racial discrimination.132 The dissent in Francis II detailed that when the court is faced with a Title VIII issue, it often analogizes to Title VII because both Acts share the same purpose: to promote equality in the essential functions of everyday life.133
The court in Wetzel v. St. Andrew Living Community, LLC used Title VII to conduct its analysis of the FHA since the text of the FHA does not state a test for landlord liability.134 The Seventh Circuit noted that “when Congress uses the same language in two statutes having similar purposes, particularly when one is enacted shortly after the other, it is appropriate to presume that Congress intended that text to have the same meaning in both statutes.”135 The Seventh Circuit recognized that, although there are “important differences between the relationship that exists between an employer and an employee . . . and that between a landlord and a tenant,” Title VII is still a useful reference point for the analysis.136 Thus, where Title VII case law and regulations hold that employers must “act reasonably to attempt to stop the creation of a hostile work environment,” landlords should face a similar duty.137
Title VII not only prohibits discrimination in employment based on various protected classes, but it also extends to third-party liability when a hostile work environment is created by other individuals besides the employer.138 The question underlying a hostile environment claim as to third-party harassers is when an employer can be held liable for the creation of a hostile environment by a non-supervisor.139 Courts have held that knowledge of the harassing environment can be assumed on behalf of the employer based on the reasonable person standard.140 If it is found that the employer knew or should have known about the hostile environment, the employer is required to take action that is “reasonably calculated to end the harassment.”141
Other courts have made similar analogies between the FHA and the ADA. In Neudecker v. Boisclair, on which the majority in Francis I relied, a tenant sued a property management company under the FHA alleging that he was subjected to repeated disability-based harassment by fellow tenants, that he reported the harassment to the company to no avail, and that the harassment interfered with his right to enjoy his home.142 The Eighth Circuit concluded that such a post-acquisition disability harassment claim is actionable under the FHA.143 Here, too, the Eighth Circuit relied on analogous language between the two Acts.144 The court noted that although there is “no case authority expressly authorizing [the] claim in the housing context, decisions in related areas provide the foundation” for the claim.145 Here, it referenced hostile work environment claims for disability harassment and noted that even though this case presented harassment in housing rather than the workplace, “some federal courts have permitted claims under the FHA when sexual harassment cause[d] a hostile housing environment.”146 The facts in Neudecker bear a strong resemblance to the Francis cases, since both plaintiffs reported the harassment.147 However, Francis went one step further and reported the harassment to the police, who in turn also reported it to the management company.148 As the Eighth Circuit in Neudecker held, this post-acquisition harassment claim should be actionable under the FHA.149
IV. Analysis: Degree of Control
The majority’s decision in Francis II turned on whether KPM, as the landlord, had the degree of control necessary to be held liable under the FHA.150 As Judge Lohier’s concurrence in Francis II pointed out, “[d]etermining the actual degree of a landlord’s control turns principally on the terms of the tenant’s lease, the rights and obligations imposed by state law on landlords and tenants, and the landlord’s prior history of remedial action.”151 Furthermore, absolute control is never necessary in order to establish liability; therefore, the power to evict is sufficient.152 Although the majority in Francis II ultimately concluded that KPM did not possess sufficient control, this Note argues that KPM had the degree of control necessary to take action and prevent the harassment based on its power to evict under the lease; its previous conduct disciplining tenants who violated their leases or the law; the similarity of the landlord-tenant relationship to the employer-employee relationship; and similar principles in other doctrines such as nuisance law, tort liability, and New York’s warranty of habitability.153
A. Reservation of Power Through the Lease
First and most importantly, when landlords reserve the power to evict tenants in the lease for breaching the lease or breaking the law, landlords should also have an obligation to take action against tenants who discriminate against other tenants. The lease at issue in Francis II provided that KPM could use sanctions if tenants “commit[ed] any objectionable or disorderly conduct . . . that disturbs or interferes with the rights, comforts or conveniences of other residents.”154 The lease gave KPM the legal opportunity to intervene when tenants were found to be in violation.155 Sanctions available to KPM included warning the offending tenant; involving agencies with expertise in investigating charges of discrimination in housing, such as HUD or the State Division of Human Rights; and beginning formal eviction proceedings.156 Although the majority in Francis II pointed to Blatt v. New York City Housing Authority to conclude that that “the power to evict is never enough to show control under New York law,” Blatt shows that whether a landlord has a duty depends on the facts and circumstances in each case.157 In Blatt, a tenant brought a negligence action against the city and the city housing authority to recover personal injuries sustained as a result of having been shot by another resident.158 The court in Blatt held that this particular landlord did not exercise the requisite degree of control “[u]nder the circumstances” of the case.159 However, it is not the case that landlords never exercise the degree of control necessary to establish liability under the FHA.160 Even the Francis II majority acknowledged the possibility of a landlord possessing the degree of control necessary to establish liability under the FHA.161 Therefore, the court’s holding in Blatt does not preclude the finding that landlords may sometimes be obligated to take action against harassing tenants.
Additionally, KPM had the degree of control necessary because it had previously intervened against other tenants at Kings Park Manor for “non-race-related violations of their leases or of the law.”162 Francis alleged that even though KPM had intervened with other tenants upon notice of a breached lease, KPM refused to take steps against Endres for doing the same.163 Although the extent of these allegations was not evaluated through further discovery, if Francis’s allegations were accepted as true, then the defendants intentionally refused to intervene and address the harassment because it was based on race, when they had addressed non-race-related issues in the past.164 These previous interventions, in addition to the reservation of power in the lease and New York law, show that KPM had the power to intervene when tenants violated their leases or the law.165
The Seventh Circuit addressed a similar issue as the one found here in Wetzel v. Glen St. Andrew Living Community, LLC.166 In Wetzel, a lesbian resident of a community for older adults brought an action against the community alleging that it failed to provide her with non-discriminatory housing when the staff failed to address her complaints of abuse based on her sexuality by other residents, alleging violations of the FHA.167 The Seventh Circuit found that the FHA creates liability against a landlord when it has “actual notice of tenant-on-tenant harassment based on a protected status” but “chooses not to take any reasonable steps within its control to stop the harassment.”168 The FHA prohibits discriminatory harassment that unreasonably interferes with the use and enjoyment of a home.169 When a landlord fails to take action to prevent harassment, a landlord is interfering with a person’s right to exercise or enjoy the premises.170 In Wetzel, the Seventh Circuit concluded that the duty not to discriminate includes the “duty not to permit known harassment on protected grounds” under §§ 3604(b) and 3617.171
Although the Francis II court determined Wetzel does not apply here, Wetzel should not be differentiated from this case because both instances involved a landlord-tenant relationship, giving the landlords sufficient control over their tenants.172 The court in Wetzel described the relationship in that case as a landlord-tenant relationship and did not state that its holding only applies to cases involving heightened control, as the majority in Francis II tries to assert.173 In fact, the court specifically rejected St. Andrews’s argument that there was no agency or custodial relationship between a landlord and tenant.174 Although the specific landlord-tenant relationship in Wetzel was slightly different because it involved a nursing home, it was nonetheless a landlord-tenant relationship in which a landlord had reserved power through the lease to take certain actions where tenants were in breach.175 Furthermore, in Wetzel, the court explained that absolute control is not required for liability, and instead, liability attaches because a party has “‘an arsenal of incentives and sanctions . . . that can be applied to affect conduct’ but fails to use them.”176 The agreement in Wetzel allowed St. Andrews to evict a tenant if they engaged in activity that “unreasonably interfere[d] with the peaceful use and enjoyment of the community by other tenants.”177 The court said that this reminder of potential eviction could have deterred bad behavior.178 Similarly here, the landlord could have taken action against a tenant breaching the lease through their conduct. The court in Wetzel also stated that “direct liability for inaction makes sense only if defendants had, but failed to deploy, available remedial tools.”179
The requirements for a landlord can be imputed from the employment context due to the similarities between the two statutes.180 As discussed in Section III.C.2, courts have often compared Title VII to the FHA and this comparison extends to the obligations of both landlords and employers.181 For instance, employers may be held liable under Title VII when a hostile work environment is created by third parties.182 Title VII protects employees from sexual harassment through its provision making it unlawful for employers to discriminate against any individual based on protected classes including race and sex.183 In the employment context, courts have held that “[l]iability exists . . . where the employer ‘knew or should have known about the harassment and failed to take effective action to stop it.’”184 The same standard should be applied to landlords—if the landlord has notice or should have known about the harassment, it should be obligated to take remedial action. The particularities of the action would depend on the individual circumstances, as they do in the employment context.185 The appropriate inquiry would thus depend on whether the landlord’s response is reasonable under the given circumstances.186
Similar to the degree of control that employers possess to fire their employees when they commit acts against the employment contract or the law, a landlord’s power to evict a tenant furnishes it with the power necessary to handle harassment claims in housing.187 However, the en banc court in Francis II found that the employer-employee relationship differs from the landlord-tenant relationship in important ways.188 The Second Circuit relied on the difference between the relationship, mainly that employees are considered agents of their employer, while tenants are not.189 The Francis II court also noted that employers have significant control over their employees and have a wider array of tools to employ in the event that an employee breaks the law or their employment contract, such as demotion, transfer, training, and compensation reduction.190 However, although employers certainly have greater control over their employees than landlords have over their tenants, landlords still possess sufficient control over their tenants to establish liability. Landlords do not monitor their tenants daily as employers monitor their employees, but they are still aware of activities taking place on the premises and can take action if necessary.
B. Principles in Other Legal Doctrines Including Nuisance Law, Tort Liability, and New York’s Warranty of Habitability Support the Conclusion of Holding Landlords Liable
Principles in other legal doctrines—nuisance law, tort liability, and New York’s warranty of habitability—also support the conclusion that a landlord possesses the sufficient degree of control and should be held liable.191 First, a similar liability standard already exists in nuisance law, thus a requirement for landlords to take action upon notice of harassment does not impose a greater obligation than what already exists in the law.192 A majority of courts have found that a landlord may be liable for injuries caused by the attack of a tenant’s dog where the landlord had actual knowledge of the dangerousness of the dog.193 For example, in Turnbow v. Wye Electric, Inc., the Second Circuit found that even though a landlord is not strictly liable for a tenant’s injuries caused by a third party’s animal, if a landlord had actual knowledge of the animal’s “vicious propensity,” the landlord can be found negligent.194 Similarly, in Gill v. Welch, a tenant brought an action against her landlord after she was bitten by another tenant’s dog.195 However, the New York court alleviated the landlord of liability upon finding that a showing that the dog had been chained up and enclosed in a yard was insufficient to establish the landlord’s actual knowledge of the dog’s dangerous habits.196 The court in Gill distinguished Fontecchio v. Esposito, a similar case in which the court found liability where the dog had previously shown its dangerous propensities by growling and lunging at people, and had attacked a mailman.197 Francis II is comparable to Fontecchio in that the landlord in each case was put on notice of the problem and failed to take action.198
Furthermore, common law tort liability already imposes a standard on landlords to ensure the safety of their tenants, so this liability would not be unheard of.199 In Kline v. 1500 Massachusetts Avenue Apartment Corp., the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a district court’s decision that found no liability for a landlord when a tenant was assaulted in the building.200 In its reversal, the court determined that landlords have a duty “to take steps to protect tenants from foreseeable criminal acts committed by third parties” in common areas of the landlord’s property.201 In Kline, the plaintiff, a lessee of the defendant, was assaulted and robbed in a common hallway of the defendant’s apartment.202 The court repeatedly pointed out that the landlord is not the “insurer of the safety of his tenants,” but only has the duty to take measures within his power that can reasonably be expected to mitigate the risk—a similar concept to degree of control discussed in Francis II.203 In Francis II, there were actions within the landlord’s power that could have mitigated the risk against the harassed tenant.204 The landlord could have threatened eviction against Endres, which may have convinced him to cease the harassment against Francis. Some courts, while refusing “to impose a general duty of protection on the landlord,” still hold landlords obligated “to keep the common areas of [the] leased premises reasonably safe.”205 Therefore, a similar standard should be set for landlord liability in housing discrimination. Landlords should be held liable if they have actual notice of discrimination and the means to take action but fail to do so.
Finally, New York law imposes certain obligations on tenants through the warranty of habitability, giving landlords another avenue of control over their tenants.206 The warranty of habitability across states imposes responsibilities on the part of landlords to ensure that the premises are safe and habitable for tenants.207 Landlords warrant that tenants will not be subjected to any conditions that will endanger or be detrimental to their life, health, or safety.208 In Nostrand Gardens Co-Op v. Howard, for example, the court decided that a landlord was liable for breaching the warranty when it deprived a tenant of quiet enjoyment by failing to take effective steps to abate detrimental conditions created by other tenants when it had notice.209 Similarly here, the existence of the warranty of habitability already creates responsibilities for KPM to ensure that the premises are safe for tenants; therefore, requiring the landlord to take action upon notice of harassment is not placing a large burden on landlords. In the case of “severe harassment,” as found here, the tenant is deprived of habitable living conditions, and if a landlord ignores complaints of habitability based on severe racial harassment, the landlord affirmatively denies the tenant the enjoyment of their property.210 The warranty of habitability already requires landlords to take actions in creating a safe environment, assuming that landlords have certain tools enabling them to do so.211
V. Implications and Proposal
A. Implications of the Francis II Holding
The Francis II majority’s conclusion grants landlords a shield from liability even upon notice of unlawful discrimination.212 If the majority had decided that a landlord has the obligation to take action when it is aware of tenant-on-tenant harassment, that would promote a safe and habitable environment for all tenants regardless of race—a primary factor in the enactment of the FHA.213
The majority’s concern that finding liability will lead to landlords policing their tenants is overemphasized.214 Landlords are already potentially liable for the criminal or nuisance actions of their tenants if they have notice.215 For example, as discussed in Part IV, landlords are already potentially liable if they fail to take action when one of their tenants becomes a nuisance to other tenants, or for criminal actions of their tenants.216 Thus, holding landlords responsible in these circumstances when they have reserved power in the lease does not impose a greater obligation than what already exists in the law. Furthermore, the obligation on landlords to take action would only extend if the lease provided a legal basis for the landlord to do so, therefore ensuring that liability would only be imposed if the landlord had sufficient control over their tenants, which is one of the majority’s main concerns in Francis II.217
Public policy also favors rejecting the Francis II decision on the basis that the landlord had notice of the harassment and the tools to take action to protect the victim.218 Promoting diverse and inclusive communities is beneficial not only to those who have been systemically discriminated against, but also to American society as a whole. Furthermore, as mentioned in this Note’s Introduction, the FHA’s text explicitly says it is the policy of the United States to provide fair housing.219 Since fair housing does not end once an individual acquires housing,220 a standard imposed on landlords requiring them to intervene furthers public policy.
B. Proposal
This Note rejects the Francis II decision to the extent that it was clear that the landlord had actual notice and the degree of control necessary to take action against the assailant, yet failed to do so, thus rendering it liable for the plaintiff’s injuries.221 The FHA should create liability against a landlord when the landlord has actual notice of the tenant-on-tenant harassment and can exercise the degree of control necessary to take action through the reserved power to evict in the lease, yet fails to do so. However, the particular steps that must be taken by a landlord in a given case is fact-dependent, as the dissent recognized in Francis II.222
First, an actual notice standard would only impose third-party liability when a landlord has notice that a hostile condition exists on the premises.223 Actual notice then creates a duty to remedy the condition and requires the landlord to ensure the property is safe for its tenants.224 An actual notice standard here would be sufficient and avoid the “deputization” of landlords225 that the majority in Francis II was concerned about.226 In Francis II, the landlord had actual notice, as KLM was notified on multiple occasions of the ongoing harassment and the seriousness of the situation once the police were involved.227 When the landlord has actual notice that a tenant is being harassed by another tenant and has the degree of control necessary to take action, but does not, the landlord should be found liable under the FHA.228 KPM, as most landlords, had reserved power in the lease to evict tenants who breached the lease or violated the law.229 This reservation of power should create the obligation to take action and evict tenants who harass and threaten others, especially when it is clear that the harassing tenant poses a serious threat to others.
Once the landlord is notified of harassment, the landlord should be required to take remedial action. As discussed above, the necessary steps a landlord should take depend on the particular circumstances.230 If the landlord comes to find, as was the case here,231 that the police have been notified, or that a similar situation has occurred with the offending tenant in the past, then the landlord should be required to take further action and give the harassing tenant a warning that if the activity continues, they will be evicted. Even though police may already be involved, Francis I demonstrated that mere police involvement did not deter the assailing tenant from harassing Francis.232 Therefore, even though it is important to notify proper enforcement authorities, this should not be a free pass for landlords to avoid liability. The landlord, however, should keep the police notified if the activity continues so that the landlord can bring in individuals qualified to assess the situation and not put themselves and others in more danger. If the harassing tenant fails to discontinue the harassment after these efforts, the landlord should take steps to begin eviction proceedings against the tenant as soon as reasonably possible. If the landlord initiates eviction proceedings but fails, it will not be required to appeal the eviction, since a court’s determination will likely evaluate the facts of the harassment and make a judicial decision on whether there were sufficient allegations against the harassing tenant to justify the eviction. However, as the concurrence in Francis II noted, a mere threat of eviction will often deter the harassing tenant from engaging in similar activity in the future.233 Therefore, only if a threat of eviction is not sufficient will landlords be required to initiate eviction proceedings against the tenant, which would not be the case every time.
The landlord is not a guarantor that harassment will never occur; however, when the landlord has actual notice and degree of control, yet fails to take any steps, then the landlord should be found liable under the FHA.234 A landlord already has the power to evict a tenant that does not follow the lease; thus, as long as the landlord takes precautions and reasonably believes that a tenant harassed another, it will not be open to any additional liability than it already is under the terms of the lease.235 Furthermore, states already have a warranty of habitability that requires landlords to ensure that the premises are safe and habitable for tenants.236 Therefore, a similar requirement under the FHA would not change the ordinary course of business for landlords or require them to take any excessive measures to ensure their tenants’ safety. The burden on landlords would thus remain virtually unchanged.
Additionally, the risk of eviction for tenants remains unchanged because a landlord can only use the powers given to them through the lease to evict.237 Therefore, only if a tenant breaches the lease or violates the law can they be at risk of eviction.238 Although there is a concern that tenants may bear the cost of more eviction suits in the form of higher rent, in most cases, if a landlord prevails in its eviction suit, it can recover the costs and fees of the proceedings, which prevents the costs from being passed onto tenants.239
Additionally, landlords are not left on their own to determine what counts as harassment. Courts and landlords can look to HUD’s definitions of “hostile environment” and “quid pro quo harassment” in order to determine what counts as a hostile environment.240 For example, HUD defines harassment as “written, verbal, or other conduct, and does not require physical contact.”241 Although HUD is not binding on courts, it is helpful to courts in analyzing housing discrimination claims due to the lack of clarity in the FHA and its legislative history. In 2016, HUD issued a rule “setting out legal standards under the FHA for sexual and other forms of harassment in housing.”242 “HUD and courts have long held that harassment in housing . . .on the basis of [a protected class] is prohibited under the [FHA].”243 “HUD’s final rule on harassment in housing includes formal uniform standards for evaluating claims of both ‘hostile environment’ and ‘quid pro quo’ harassment in the housing context.”244 The rule also explains that housing providers may be held directly liable under the FHA for harassment if the provider “knew or should have known” about harassment by one tenant against another.245 Although courts are not bound by HUD’s standards, they are nonetheless helpful in guiding courts when making decisions about housing discrimination, since the FHA’s own legislative history does not provide much help in interpreting the Act.246
This Note does not advocate for a constructive notice standard, which would place an undue burden on landlords and put them at risk of liability.247 Instead, as in Wetzel, if a landlord has actual notice and the ability to evict tenants through provisions of the lease, it should be required to do so.248 An actual notice standard, as opposed to constructive notice, allows tenants to interact with other tenants, while giving them the option to pursue relief when they feel uncomfortable or unwelcome, and does not create too heavy of a burden on landlords.249 Furthermore, because similar liability already exists in housing within tort and nuisance law, this standard would not impose additional obligations upon landlords or require any action out of the ordinary course of business.250
Conclusion
Donahue Francis was the victim of harassment and the subject of death threats in his place of residence,251 somewhere he should feel safe and comfortable. His safety was compromised because KPM, his landlord, refused to take action against the offending tenant, even after being notified by Francis and the police.252 Thus, Francis decided to sue for violations of the FHA.253 Though the Second Circuit initially held that Francis established a claim under the FHA,254 upon rehearing en banc, the court reversed its decision, stating that KPM did not have the degree of control necessary to take action against Endres.255 To the contrary, this Note suggests that, based on KPM’s actual notice and ability to evict tenants under the lease, the court should have found liability under the FHA, and Francis should have prevailed on his claim.256
Housing discrimination continues to plague American society, despite the FHA’s attempts to remedy the two “separate and unequal” societies.257 Allowing landlords to evade accountability, even when they have actual notice of dangerous conditions on the premises, reinforces the inequality administrations have been trying to remedy for decades. In order to give meaning to the FHA’s intent, it is necessary to impose this liability on landlords to ensure the safety of tenants and prevent discrimination in housing.