DocketNumber: 03-1418
Filed Date: 8/25/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/22/2015
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 2 United States v. Edward Nos. 03-1316/1418 ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2004 FED App. 0279P (6th Cir.) Rose & Sons, et al. File Name: 04a0279p.06 _________________ UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS COUNSEL FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT ARGUED: Frederick M. Baker, Jr., HONIGMAN, _________________ MILLER, SCHWARTZ & COHN, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellants. Gregory B. Friel, UNITED STATES UNITED STATES OF AMERICA , X DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Plaintiff-Appellee, - Appellee. ON BRIEF: Frederick M. Baker, Jr., - HONIGMAN, MILLER, SCHWARTZ & COHN, Lansing, - Nos. 03-1316/1418 Michigan, Sheri B. Cataldo, Kevin J. Gleeson, Raymond P. v. - Rogissart, SULLIVAN, WARD, ASHER & PATTON, > Southfield, Michigan, Garry L. Walton, Kalamazoo, , EDWARD ROSE & SONS et al., - Michigan, Joseph R. Enslen, STRAUB, SEAMAN & Defendants-Appellants - ALLEN, St. Joseph, Michigan, for Appellants. Gregory B. (03-1316), - Friel, Jessica Dunsay Silver, UNITED STATES - DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for - Appellee. John P. Relman, RELMAN & ASSOCIATES, DORCHEN /MART IN Washington, D.C., Bruce E. Lundegren, NATIONAL ASSOCIATES , INCORPORATED ; - ASSOCIATION OF HOME BUILDERS, Washington, D.C., - ECKERT /WORDELL - James W. Harris, NATIONAL MULTI HOUSING ARCHITECTS, PC; GERALD - COUNCIL, Washington, D.C., for Amici Curiae. PETERSON ; JAMES R. SAULE , - _________________ Defendants-Appellants - (03-1418). - OPINION - _________________ N Appeal from the United States District Court SILER, Circuit Judge. This housing discrimination case for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. turns on what doors must be accessible to the handicapped. No. 02-73518—Victoria A. Roberts, District Judge. At issue are two sets of apartment complexes, designed with an inaccessible front door, but an accessible back patio door. Argued: March 10, 2004 The district court granted the U.S. Justice Department (“government”) a preliminary injunction halting the Decided and Filed: August 25, 2004 construction and occupancy of the buildings. The main defendant, the builder and owner, Edward Rose & Sons Before: SILER, MOORE, and SUTTON, Circuit Judges. (“Rose”), appeals, arguing that court erred (1) by misconstruing the requirements of the Fair Housing Act, 1 Nos. 03-1316/1418 United States v. Edward 3 4 United States v. Edward Nos. 03-1316/1418 Rose & Sons, et al. Rose & Sons, et al. 42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq. (“FHA”), and (2) by incorrectly regulations, guidelines, and design manual. The preliminary weighing the relative preliminary injunction interests and injunction halts construction on the “covered dwellings” and harms. We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of the restrains the defendants from occupying “covered dwellings” preliminary injunction. not yet leased. In this case, “covered dwellings” means simply the ground floor. See 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(7) (stating I. FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND if building has no elevator, only the ground floor is a covered dwelling subject to the FHA). Rose appeals. Defendant Rose1 constructed and owns the nineteen apartment buildings, located in Michigan and Ohio, at issue. II. STANDARD OF REVIEW These buildings are at various stages of construction, but all have the same basic design. The ground floor apartments at This court reviews the grant of a preliminary injunction for issue have two exterior entrances - a front door and rear patio an abuse of discretion. See Washington v. Reno, 35 F.3d door.2 The front door is closer to the parking lot, but is 1093, 1098 (6th Cir. 1994). A “district court’s findings of handicapped inaccessible because it can only be reached by fact underlying its decision to grant a preliminary injunction descending stairs. At the bottom of the stairs is a landing are reviewed for clear error and the legal conclusions shared by two front doors leading into two different underpinning its decision are reviewed de novo.” In re Eagle- apartments. The rear patio entrance is accessible,3 but is Picher Indus., Inc.,963 F.2d 855
, 858 (6th Cir. 1992). located farther from the parking lot. Because a trial court's decision to grant a preliminary injunction is accorded great deference, this court should The government alleged that the apartments violated the disturb such a decision only if the district court “relied upon disability portions of the FHA. The district court granted a clearly erroneous findings of fact, improperly applied the preliminary injunction, adopting the government’s position governing law, or used an erroneous legal standard.” that the front door was the “primary entrance” used by theWashington, 35 F.3d at 1098
. public and guests, and as such, it was a “public” or “common area” that the FHA mandates be accessible. See 42 U.S.C. The preliminary injunction factors are: “(1) the likelihood 3604(f)(3)(C)(i). In reaching this conclusion, the court relied that the party seeking the preliminary injunction will succeed on the Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) on the merits of the claim; (2) whether the party seeking the injunction will suffer irreparable harm without the grant of the extraordinary relief; (3) the probability that granting the 1 injunction will cause substantial harm to others; and The architects of the buildings, Do rchen/M artin Associates, Eckert/W ordell Architects, James Suale, and Gerald Peterson (4) whether the public interest is advanced by the issuance of (“architects”), were also name d as d efendants and have filed a brief. the injunction.”Id. at 1099.
These are factors to be balanced, 2 not prerequisites that must be met.Id. “[T]he district
court's The use of the words “front” and “rear” here is to help paint the weighing and balancing of the equities is overruled only in picture of the building. Obviously, which door is the “front” is a matter the rarest of cases.” In reEagle-Picher, 963 F.2d at 858
of op inion. T here is no binding statutory or regulatory de finition. (internal quotation marks omitted). The purpose of a 3 preliminary injunction is simply to preserve the status quo; The district court assumed the patio door accessibility for the prelim inary injunction. thus, findings of fact and conclusions of law made by a Nos. 03-1316/1418 United States v. Edward 5 6 United States v. Edward Nos. 03-1316/1418 Rose & Sons, et al. Rose & Sons, et al. district court in granting a preliminary injunction are not (III) reinforcements in bathroom walls to allow later binding at a trial on the merits. University of Texas v. installation of grab bars; and Camenisch,451 U.S. 390
, 395 (1981). (IV) usable kitchens and bathrooms such that an III. ANALYSIS individual in a wheelchair can maneuver about the space. Likelihood of Success on the Merits 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3) (emphasis added). The basic question of this litigation is whether the space outside the front door is a public or common use area that The government asserts that because the landing at the must be handicapped accessible. We are the first circuit to bottom of the stairs is a “common area,” § 3604(f)(3)(C)(i) consider the issue. The statute reads: mandates that the landing must be accessible. The landing in front of the entrances is not accessible because it can only be C) in connection with the design and construction of reached by the stairs. The government argues that this covered multifamily dwellings for first occupancy after entrance is the “primary” door because it is in the front and the date that is 30 months after September 13, 1988, a closest to the parking lot. As such, it is the entrance most failure to design and construct those dwellings in such a visitors will use, and thus the space or landing in front of the manner that-- door is a public or common area. Additionally, the stair landing is shared by two entrances to two different apartment (i) the public use and common use portions of such units, and thus a common area used by two tenants. dwellings are readily accessible to and usable by handicapped persons; Rose correctly points out that neither the statute nor any possibly binding regulations make any reference or (ii) all the doors designed to allow passage into and distinction between “primary,” “front,” or “back” doors. within all premises within such dwellings are sufficiently Rose argues that the government’s interpretation requires wide to allow passage by handicapped persons in almost every entrance to a unit be accessible. If the space in wheelchairs; and front of an entrance becomes a common use area, simply because people use the entrance, then the statute would (iii) all premises within such dwellings contain the require virtually every entrance to be accessible. following features of adaptive design: Rose asserts that if the space in front of virtually every (I) an accessible route into and through the entrance is a “common” or “public” area, dwelling; § 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I) becomes superfluous. Section 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I) mandates all premises must have “an (II) light switches, electrical outlets, thermostats, accessible route into and through the dwelling.” (Emphasis and other environmental controls in accessible added.). Rose contends that the indefinite article “an” locations; indicates that the statute only requires one accessible route into each unit. As such, the space in front of every door to a Nos. 03-1316/1418 United States v. Edward 7 8 United States v. Edward Nos. 03-1316/1418 Rose & Sons, et al. Rose & Sons, et al. private unit cannot be a common area, or all doors would Our ruling is narrow; we simply hold in this case that have to be accessible, and there would be no need for because the two apartments share the stair landing, the stair § 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I) to separately mandate “an accessible landing qualifies as a “common area” that must be accessible. route” into the unit. Moreover, even if there were such a We express no opinion on what the FHA would require if the thing as a single “primary” entrance, whose anterior space stairs only led to one apartment unit entrance and decline to must be accessible as a common area, there would still be no delve into the parties’ “primary entrance” arguments because need for § 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I) to redundantly mandate “an we find them unnecessary for the resolution of this case. accessible route.” An accessible route would already be Assuming arguendo that, as Rose submits, not every entrance mandated by the common area in front of the primary constitutes a “common area” because otherwise entrance of every unit. § 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I)’s mandate that all premises have “an accessible route” is superfluous, we still would find that the We find that, in this particular case, the stair landing in shared landing is a common area. Section front of the entrance is a common area that the statute § 3604(f)(3)(C)(iii)(I) would not be superfluous because that mandates be accessible. The fact that two apartment units section would ensure that apartment units that share no share the stair landing makes the space a common area. The entrance with another apartment unit would still have “an plain meaning of “common use” unambiguously covers the accessible” entrance. entrance under dispute. At the time of the statute’s enactment, dictionaries generally defined “common” as In sum, we find that the stair landing qualifies as a belonging to or shared by two or more individuals. See The “common area” that the FHA mandates be accessible. Thus, Oxford English Dictionary 565 (J.A. Simpson & E.S.C. the government’s likelihood of success on the merits is Weiner eds., Clarendon Press 2d ed. 1989) (defining common strong. as “[b]elonging equally to more than one” and “possessed or shared alike by both or all.”); Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 458 (Philip Babcock Gove ed., Merriam-Webster 1986) (“held, enjoyed, experienced, or participated in equally by a number of individuals; possessed or manifested by more than one individual”); Funk & under the HUD regulations defining “common use area.” See generally Wagnalls New International Dictionary (Publishers Chevron U.S.A. v. Natura l Resou rces D efense Co unc il,467 U.S. 837
International Press Comprehensive ed. 1984) (“Pertaining to, (1984) (finding regulatory interpretation of ambiguous statute controlling connected with, or participated in by two or more persons or if not contrary to the statute); Meyer v. Holley,537 U.S. 280
, 288 (2003) things; joint.”). Here, the stair landing belongs to, and is (Supreme Court using HUD regulations and comm entary in Federal Register in interpreting the FHA). T he regulation defines “com mon use shared by, two apartments, and exists for their “common areas” as “rooms, spaces or elements inside or outside of a building that use.”4 are mad e available for the use of residents of a building or the guests thereof . . . includ[ing] hallways, lounges, lobbies, laundry ro oms, refuse room s, mail rooms, recreational areas and passageways among and 4 between buildings.” 24 C.F.R. § 100.201. In the instant case, the shared W hile our finding that the plain meaning of “common use” landing is like a common “hallway” shared by the two apartments. Thus, unam biguo usly covers the stair landing at issue, even if we found the even if we found “comm on area” ambiguo us, Rose still would lose under statute amb iguous, the space in front of the two entrances wo uld fall the regulations. Nos. 03-1316/1418 United States v. Edward 9 10 United States v. Edward Nos. 03-1316/1418 Rose & Sons, et al. Rose & Sons, et al. The Other Preliminary Injunction Factors criteria do not govern the issuance of preliminary injunctions.”Id. at 551.
Like the FHA, the statute read that Besides the statutory interpretation, which deals with the courts “may” grant preliminary injunctions “as may be (1) “likelihood of success on the merits” factor, the other necessary to prevent, restrain, or terminate” any violations of injunction factors the court considers are (2) irreparable injury the statute.Id. at 550.
to the party seeking the injunction, (3) substantial harm to others, and (4) the public interest served by the grant of the We need not decide whether CSX controls or whether a injunction. We need not tarry because of the government’s statute must mandate another showing that displaces the overwhelming likelihood of success on the merits. traditional equitable factors because we find it immaterial to the disposition of this case. We balance the equitable factors, Irreparable Injury and none is a prerequisite.Washington, 35 F.3d at 1099
. The other equitable factors, particularly the strong likelihood of The district court presumed irreparable harm because the success on the merits, outweigh any lack of irreparable harm, FHA explicitly provides for injunctive relief. Rose argues with or without any presumption. this presumption is not the law of the Sixth Circuit. We find any error by the district court of no consequence. Substantial Harm to Others Under the FHA, the court “may award” a temporary Regarding the substantial harm to others factor, Rose injunction “for a violation” of the statute “as is necessary to asserts that it is sustaining massive monetary damage from assure the full enjoyment of the rights granted.” 42 U.S.C. the halt of construction and renting of the finished units, § 3614(d)(1)(A). Some circuits have ruled that when a amounting to $150,000 a month. The government responds federal statute specifically provides for injunctive relief, that it made Rose aware that these apartment designs violated traditional equity principles do not apply, and a showing of the FHA, so Rose proceeded at its own risk. This court, in irreparable harm is not required. See, e.g., United States v. Baker v. Adams County/Ohio Valley School Board, 310 F.3d Diapulse,457 F.2d 25
, 27-28 (2d Cir.1972). Other circuits 927 (6th Cir. 2002), found “[m]ere injuries, however find that the statute must have language specifically changing substantial, in terms of money, time and energy necessarily the traditional standards, such as language mandating that the expended” in compliance with an injunction “are not court “shall” enjoin the activity if an agency order is enough.”Id. at 930
(citation omitted). “Indeed, especially disobeyed. See, e.g., Illinois Bell Telephone v. Illinois when a party knew of the risk that it undertook when it Commerce Comm’n,740 F.2d 566
, 571 (7th Cir. 1984). undertook the enjoined activity, monetary losses from the Under this second approach, if a statute confers a right to an [sic] complying with the injunction will seldom be injunction once a certain showing is made, the plaintiff need irreparable.”Id. Thus, Rose
voluntarily incurred any harm show no more than the statute specifies. United States v. from the preliminary injunction. Microsoft Corp.,147 F.3d 935
, 943 (D.C. Cir.1998). In CSX Transportation v. Tennessee State Board of Equalization, 964 Public Interest F.2d 548 (6th Cir. 1992), the court found that “since Congress has expressly authorized the granting of injunctive relief to Finally, on the public interest factor, the Supreme Court has halt or prevent a violation of [the statute], traditional equitable found the FHA serves an “overriding societal priority.” Nos. 03-1316/1418 United States v. Edward 11 Rose & Sons, et al. Meyer v. Holley,537 U.S. 280
, 290 (2003); accord Price v. Pelka,690 F.2d 98
, 102 (6th Cir. 1982) (eradicating housing discrimination serves the “public interest”). IV. CONCLUSION Balancing the Preliminary Injunction Factors The stair landing shared by two apartments qualifies as a “common area” that the FHA mandates be handicapped accessible. This strong finding of a likelihood of success on the merits coupled with the public’s interest in eradicating housing discrimination overcomes any weakness in the irreparable injury and harm to others factors. AFFIRMED.
United States v. Diapulse Corporation of America, Also ... , 457 F.2d 25 ( 1972 )
Rose Price v. Norbert Pelka Gertrude Pelka Audrey Pelka , 690 F.2d 98 ( 1982 )
illinois-bell-telephone-company-v-illinois-commerce-commission-philip-r , 740 F.2d 566 ( 1984 )
United States v. Microsoft Corp. , 147 F.3d 935 ( 1998 )
bankr-l-rep-p-74574-in-re-eagle-picher-industries-inc-debtor , 963 F.2d 855 ( 1992 )
University of Texas v. Camenisch , 101 S. Ct. 1830 ( 1981 )
Meyer v. Holley , 123 S. Ct. 824 ( 2003 )
Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )