08-001955
Donald And Miranda Smith vs.
Marianne C. Montgomery, Realtor/Broker
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, September 19, 2008.
Recommended Order on Friday, September 19, 2008.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8DONALD AND MIRANDA SMITH, )
13)
14Petitioners, )
16)
17vs. ) Case No. 08-1955
22)
23MARIANNE C. MONTGOMERY, )
27REALTOR/BROKER, )
29)
30Respondent. )
32)
33RECOMMENDED ORDER
35Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held in this
45case on July 16, 2008, in Brooksville, Florida, before Ella Jane
56P. Davis, a duly-assigned Administrative Law Judge of the
65Division of Administrative Hearings.
69APPEARANCES
70For Petitioner: Donald and Miranda Smith, pro se
781047 Rudolph Court
81Spring Hill, Florida 34609
85For Respondent: David H. Sturgil,
90as Qualified Representative,
93c/o Exit Realty/Realty Shoppe
975300 Spring Hill Drive
101Spring Hill, Florida 34606
105STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
109Whether Respondent real estate broker is guilty of a discriminatory housing practice against Petitioners related to the sale and marketing of their home.
132PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
134Following a March 27, 2008, "Determination: No Cause" by
143the Florida Commission on Human Relations and Petitioners'
151subsequent timely-filed Petition for Relief, this cause was
159referred to the Division of Administrative Hearings on or about
169April 17, 2008.
172The file of the Division reflects all pleadings and orders
182intervening before the final disputed-fact hearing.
188At final hearing on July 16, 2008, David Sturgil was
198examined and accepted as Respondent's qualified representative,
205pursuant to Florida Administrative Code Rules 28-106.105 and 28-
214106.106.
215Each Petitioner testified, and Petitioners' Exhibits 1, 2,
2233, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, and 18, were
240admitted in evidence. Exhibits P-14, P-19, and P-20 were not
250admitted in evidence. Respondent Marianne (Marti) Montgomery
257testified. Respondent also presented the oral testimony of Ed
266Carr, Steve Van Slyke, Clara Ward, and Petitioner Miranda Smith.
276Respondent's Exhibits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14,
291and 15, were admitted in evidence. Respondent's Exhibit 12 was
301voided, and parts thereof were admitted under other exhibit
310numbers. Respondent's Exhibit 16 was not admitted.
317No transcript was provided.
321Each party timely filed a Proposed Recommended Order on
330August 4, 2008.
333FINDINGS OF FACT
3361. Petitioner homeowners allege that Respondent real
343estate broker discriminated against them by the length of the
353exclusive listing contract Petitioners signed with Respondent
360(eight months); by inferior service because Respondent showed
368Petitioners' home only once in the eight months the contract was
379in effect 1/ ; by incorrectly stating the agreed asking price on
390flyers Respondent circulated; by providing an "open house" to
399all of Respondent's other clients, but not to Petitioners; and
409by asking Petitioners to remove some of their bi-racial family
419photographs.
4202. Petitioner Donald Smith, Ph.D., is Caucasian. He is
429married to Miranda Smith, a dentist, who is African-American.
438They have at least one child, with whom they have been
449photographed. This case involves a house they owned on Cressida
459Circle in Spring Hill, Florida, where they displayed their bi-
469racial family photographs.
4723. On or about January 28, 2007, Petitioners signed, as
482sellers, an exclusive real estate listing contract with Kathlen
491Hobbs, a real estate salesperson, who at that time was an
502independent contractor associated with Exit Realty Shoppe.
509Respondent Montgomery, real estate broker, is the qualifying
517principal of Exit Realty Shoppe. Both Ms. Hobbs and Ms.
527Montgomery are Caucasian. The agreed asking price was
535$296,900.00. The term of the contract was for eight months:
546January 30, 2007, to October 1, 2007. Mr. Smith interviewed two
557other realtors, but he selected Ms. Hobbs and Respondent's
566proffered contract. It is a "fill-in the blanks contract," to
576which Mr. Smith had input.
5814. Although she signed the contract, Mrs. Smith did not
591speak to either Ms. Hobbs or Ms. Montgomery concerning the sale
602of the house at any material time.
6095. Mr. Smith testified that Ms. Hobbs initially told him
619that their home was "priced to sell" at $296,900.00, but he
631candidly admitted that Ms. Montgomery never made that
639representation and never "guaranteed" that the house would sell
648at that price.
6516. Upon the evidence as a whole and because Mr. Smith
662testified at one point that the other two realtors he
672interviewed told him the house would sell at "$295,000.00 or
683$296,000.00," and also testified contrariwise that Ms. Hobbs and
693the other two realtors told him the house would sell at "between
705$292,000.00 and $298,000.00," it is found to be more probable
717that no one guaranteed a sale at Petitioners' asking price of
728$296,900.00.
7307. Petitioners seek damages of $15,000.00, without stating
739any specific basis for that figure. They previously have sought
749$40,000.00, damages based upon the alleged lowered price of the
760house as sold by a subsequent realtor. However, the final date
771of sale and final sale price are not clear on this record.
7838. Paragraph Nine of the parties' contract provided for
792its early termination prior to its eight-month expiration date,
801upon the following terms:
8059. CONDITIONAL TERMINATION: At Seller's
810request, Broker may agree to conditionally
816terminate this Agreement. If Broker agrees
822to conditional termination, Seller must sign
828a withdrawal agreement, reimburse Broker for
834all direct expenses incurred in marketing
840the Property and pay a cancellation fee of
848$___ plus applicable sales tax. Broker may
855void the conditional termination and Seller
861will pay the fee stated in paragraph 6(a)
869less the cancellation fee if Seller
875transfers or contracts to transfer the
881Property or any interest in the Property
888during the same time period from the date of
897conditional termination to Termination Date
902and Protection Period, if applicable. (Blank
908space in original; emphasis supplied.)
9139. Paragraph Six of that listing contract provides, in
922pertinent part:
9246. COMPENSATION: Seller will compensate
929Broker as specified below for procuring a
936buyer who is ready, willing and able to
944purchase the Property or any interest in the
952Property on the terms of this Agreement or
960on any other terms acceptable to Seller.
967Seller will pay Broker as follows (plus
974applicable sales tax)
977(a) 6% of the total purchase price OR $__ ,
986no later than the date of closing specified
994in the sales contract. However, closing is
1001not a prerequisite for Broker's fee being
1008earned. (Blank space in original.)
101310. Steve Van Slyke has been an active licensed real
1023estate broker for over 20 years. For the last few years he has
1036done more property appraisals than real estate sales. He has
1046regularly taught and taken continuing education courses in the
1055real estate profession since he was admitted to the profession
1065in 1983. He has chaired the Professional Standards Committee of
1075the Hernando County Association of Realtors (HCAR) since 1991.
1084In that capacity, he has presided over hundreds of contract
1094disputes between buyers and sellers, including the one that
1103ultimately developed between the parties in this case. See
1112infra .
111411. According to Mr. Van Slyke, the contract in this case
1125is one commonly used in Hernando County, in the sense of not
1137being unusual, but there are no "average," "usual," or "industry
1147standards" for the duration of an exclusive real estate listing
1157contract. He further testified that to have such a generally
1167agreed-upon provision within the real estate industry would run
1176afoul of the United States Fair Trade Commission's jurisdiction
1185of, and prosecution for, "price-fixing." For the same reasons,
1194there is no established average, usual, or industry standard for
1204the conditional early release of a homeowner from a listing
1214contract.
121512. Because no dollar amount for a cancellation fee had
1225been written into Paragraph Nine of the parties contract
1234herein, Mr. Van Slyke interpreted Paragraph Nine and Sub-
1243paragraph Six (a) together, to permit Respondent broker the
1252latitude to require payment by the sellers of six percent of
1263Petitioners/sellers asking price as a condition of early
1271termination of the contract upon their unilateral request.
127913. Respondent submitted in evidence a similar contract
1287dated March 5, 2007, between Respondent and a different
1296homeowner for the duration of one year (12 months) from that
1307date. 2/ Petitioners presented no other contracts between any
1316seller and Respondent or, for that matter, between any seller
1326and any other realtor which specified a duration of less than
1337eight months. 3/
134014. It is accepted that a different realtor with whom
1350Petitioners contracted in November 2007, after their eight-
1358month contract with Respondent had expired, filled-in $500.00
1366in the equivalent Paragraph Nine, but there was no competent,
1376credible evidence that this replacement realtor, or any other
1385realtor for that matter, had a similar arrangement with any
1395other sellers.
139715. Petitioners and Ms. Hobbs agreed that Ms. Hobbs would
1407not submit Petitioners' sellers' contract on their existing home
1416to Respondent until she got an acceptance on their offer as
1427buyers for a new house on Rudolph Court. Accordingly, the
1437listing contract for the Cressida Circle house in which
1446Petitioners were living, and which contained their furniture and
1455photographs, was not submitted to Respondent at least until
1464January 31, 2007. Accordingly, Respondent could not begin
1472attempts to sell Petitioners' existing home until the next day,
1482February 1, 2007.
148516. There are 185 realty firms in Hernando County. There
1495are four printed real property advertising booklets which are
1504circulated in Hernando and surrounding counties. Each booklet
1512is published every 30 days. The lead time to get a photographic
1524advertisement of a newly listed property into each publication
1533is three weeks. Before a photo can be published, it has to be
1546made.
154717. On or about February 1, 2007, Ms. Hobbs photographed
1557Petitioners Cressida Circle house for purposes of advertising
1565it via websites, flyers, real estate advertising booklets, and
1574newspapers, and placed Respondents "for sale" sign and lock-box
1583on Petitioners' lawn.
158618. Respondent had admitted in evidence the first
1594advertisements she paid for in three printed real estate
1603booklets ("Nature Coast", March 22-April 18, 2007; "Real Estate
1613News", April 2007; and "Sunshine Living", April 2007). Each
1622advertisement contained a photograph and information extolling
1629the Cressida Circle house. Each advertisement correctly quoted
1637Petitioners' asking price of $296,900.00.
164319. Additionally, Respondent had admitted in evidence
1650documentation showing that from March 22, 2007, until the end of
1661her exclusive listing on September 30, 2007, she had advertised
1671Petitioners' property repeatedly and/or consistently via
1677newspaper, real estate advertising booklets, and/or Multiple
1684Listing Services (MLS) websites and commercial websites.
169120. Both parties agree that Ms. Hobbs' first printed flyer
1701stated an incomplete, and thus incorrect, selling price of
"1710$296,90.", and that this flyer was circulated and/or placed in
1721the lock-box tube on the "for sale" sign about February 1, 2007.
1733(See Finding of Fact 17.) Despite Petitioners' claim that this
1743was "inferior marketing," it is probable that most serious home
1753seekers would have figured out how to correctly read the price
1764as "$296,900.00", or would have asked what price was intended
1775when phoning for an appointment to view the house. While
1785Ms. Hobbs' flyer was never corrected, Respondent Montgomery had
1794other, correct flyers printed, and she placed and circulated
1803those correct flyers for the remainder of the contract period.
181321. It is customary for Exit Realty to conduct a "caravan"
1824shortly after a contract is signed. A "caravan" involves
1833Ms. Montgomery and all the salespeople she can round-up in her
1844office. The entire team tours a seller's home, making notes,
1854and then returns to Respondent's office, where a list of repairs
1865and upgrades is compiled with each salesperson's in-put. Then
1874the team brain-storms to develop selling techniques customized
1882to each property listed.
188622. On February 7, 2007, the day before Caravan Day, an
1897independent contractor with Exit Realty showed Petitioners' home
1905to a potential buyer. Through Ms. Hobbs, the salesperson
1914relayed to Mr. Smith that the potential buyer had remarked that
1925the house's exterior paint was unacceptable. Mr. Smith told
1934Ms. Hobbs that he would paint the house at his own expense if
1947the potential buyer would make an offer, but no offer was
1958forthcoming.
195923. Respondent's caravan viewed Petitioners' home on
1966February 8, 2007. As a result, a list of selling suggestions
1977was relayed by Ms. Hobbs to Mr. Smith.
198524. A day or so after Caravan Day, Mr. Smith was told by
1998Ms. Hobbs that to best present and sell Petitioners home,
2008Petitioners needed to deal with dirt and dust in an exhaust fan;
2020replace a broken tile in a bathroom, and refinish their swimming
2031pool. Mr. Smith also acknowledged that on the same date, or
2042minimally later, he was told by Ms. Hobbs to remove Petitioners'
2053large family photographs over the sliding doors opening from the
2063house's vaulted-ceiling living room onto its screened patio and
2072pool area. According to Ms. Montgomery, she had advised
2081Ms. Hobbs to relay this information and additional advice,
2090including the information that Petitioners house would sell
2098better if Petitioners moved out or reduced the amount of
2108furniture in the living room, so that potential buyers could
2118visualize their own belongings in the room. It was not proven
2129one way or the other whether Ms. Hobbs relayed the "move out" or
"2142remove furniture" suggestions at that time.
214825. When Mr. Smith pressed Ms. Hobbs as to why the family
2160photographs had to be removed, she referred him to
2169Ms. Montgomery, who "could better explain." Mr. Smith
2177acknowledged that Ms. Hobbs never said anything about race or
2187discrimination.
218826. Mr. Smith testified to three versions of why he
2198concluded that Ms. Montgomery was discriminating against
2205Petitioners on the basis of race: first, because neither
2214Ms. Hobbs nor Ms. Montgomery mentioned the bi-racial family
2223photographs until after Ms. Montgomery had first seen them on
2233Caravan Day, and Ms. Hobbs could not explain to his satisfaction
2244the reason for removing the photographs; second, because
2252Ms. Montgomery did not immediately return his phone calls; and
2262third, because when Ms. Montgomery did return his phone calls,
2272she mentioned the photographs over the sliding doors repeatedly
2281among several other upgrades she encouraged him to accomplish,
2290all of which upgrades Ms. Hobbs apparently had not passed along
2301to him.
230327. Ms. Montgomery can suggest and encourage her
2311independent contractors to pass on certain information to
2319sellers and buyers and to pursue sales in certain ways, but she
2331has no way to compel them.
233728. Mr. Smith conceded that at no time did Ms. Montgomery
2348ever mention race or make any overt discriminatory statement to
2358him and that she responded to all his letters, even though she
2370did not agree with him in those letters. See , infra .
238129. Petitioners also agree that at no time did
2390Ms. Montgomery or anyone associated with Exit Realty suggest
2399that Petitioners remove tastefully framed bi-racial family
2406photographs displayed on a bedroom dresser.
241230. Ms. Montgomery credibly testified that successfully
"2419staging" a home for sale usually requires removing as much
2429furniture as possible and all of the personalization, such as
2439awards and photographs hung on the walls of all rooms.
2449Mrs. Smith acknowledged that she was familiar with this concept
2459from print literature and television. Ms. Montgomery
2466demonstrated, using a photograph she had taken of the house
2476without the wall photographs in place, that anything mounted
2485above the living room's sliding glass doors had the potential to
2496draw a shopper's eye away from the luxuriant sweep of the
2507vaulted-ceiling and away from the scope and sweep of the view,
2518through the sliding glass doors, of Petitioners' pool and patio.
252831. Petitioners accomplished the three repair suggestions
2535(exhaust fan; tile; and swimming pool) that Ms. Hobbs passed on
2546to them, but they remained in the Cressida Circle house and did
2558not remove their furniture or the photographs above the sliding
2568glass doors.
257032. In early March, Petitioners requested a reduction in
2579the six percent commission specified in their Cressida Circle
2588contract with Respondent. Respondent declined to consider
2595reducing her commission until someone made an offer to buy.
260533. Petitioners closed on their new home on Rudolph Court
2615on March 30, 2007. The Rudolph Court sale and closing in which
2627Petitioners were buyers, was also handled by Hobbs, Montgomery,
2636and Exit Realty. Petitioners do not claim that any racial
2646discrimination by anybody occurred in the process of buying
2655their new home.
265834. Closing on the Rudolph Court house left Petitioners
2667with two houses to maintain and at least two (possibly four)
2678mortgages to pay. Petitioners became concerned that no one had
2688made an offer on their Cressida Circle house.
269635. Mr. Smith made several telephone calls to
2704Ms. Montgomery. She did not immediately return those calls.
2713When she did return Mr. Smith's phone calls, Ms. Montgomery
2723explained to him that the Cressida Circle house needed to be
"2734staged" better, including removing furniture and the
2741photographs over the patio doors.
274636. Ms. Montgomery wrote Mr. Smith on April 5, 2007, to
2757memorialize all of their April 4, 2007, conversation, giving him
2767clear advice that a lease/purchase procedure, as opposed to a
2778lease/option to buy arrangement which he had proposed, would
2787be a better and safer solution for his needs. She also advised
2799him that no home in his sub-development had been sold in the
2811last seven months, and emphatically advised him to lower his
2821asking price to $269,900.00, due to the competition of other
2832similar homes for sale.
283637. It is undisputed that the parties' contract was signed
2846during a "housing market slump" and that the housing market
2856continued to decline during the entire term of the parties'
2866contract.
286738. On April 9, 2007, Mr. Smith wrote Ms. Montgomery,
2877making no reference to race or discrimination, but complaining
2886about Exit Realty Shoppe showing his home only one time,
2896requesting to void their contract, and closing with:
2904If necessary we will follow thru [sic.] with
2912a complaint to the Florida Real-estate
2918[sic.] Commission in Tallahassee.
292239. Not unreasonably, Ms. Montgomery regarded Petitioners'
2929foregoing letter as a threat. She responded by registered mail
2939on April 10, 2007, setting out in detail all she had done and
2952describing the costs she had incurred as of that date to sell
2964the Cressida Circle house. She enclosed three printed real
2973estate publications advertising Petitioner's house (see Finding
2980of Fact 18); proof that the home was being advertised with the
2992correct price April 7-13, 2007, in the St. Petersburg Times;
3002proof that she had registered the house with the correct price
3013on the MLS; and proof that the house was being shown in color on
3027Exit Realty's three websites and on Ms. Hobbs' personal website
3037with the correct price. She also reminded Mr. Smith that she
3048had, earlier in the week, suggested that Petitioners reduce
3057their asking price by $30,000.00, to $269,900.00. She also
3068advised him, and included information showing, that as of that
3078writing, there were 11 comparable listings in his sub-
3087development, nine of which were listed at less than Petitioners'
3097asking price.
309940. Evidence of all of Respondent's foregoing April 10,
31082007, assertions was introduced in evidence by Respondent at the
3118final hearing. 4/
312141. Respondent's April 10, 2007, letter also explained
"3129staging," and offered to conditionally release Petitioners from
3137their contract for six percent of their $296,900.00 asking
3147price, as per the contract's Paragraph Six (a).
315542. Ms. Montgomery's April 10, 2007, unopened letter and
3164supporting documentation were returned to her by the U.S. Mail
3174as "unclaimed." Because Petitioners were still residing at the
3183Cressida Circle address and because the post office did not mark
3194the envelope "refused," it is probable that Petitioners simply
3203did not go to the post office to sign-for, and pick up,
3215Ms. Montgomery's material. However, Petitioners must have
3222received these items because Ms. Montgomery also had the same
3232materials delivered by messenger to Mrs. Smiths office.
324043. Also, on April 11, 2007, Mr. Smith wrote,
3249acknowledging receipt of Respondent's April 10, 2007, letter,
3257refusing to reduce the asking price, and advising Ms. Montgomery
3267that:
3268I feel that it will be my responsibility to
3277express this dissatisfaction in anyway [sic]
3283I can, to as many people as I can. . . . I
3296will do what ever [sic.] I can do to be
3306released from our agreement.
3310He further threatened to contact "different government agencies"
3318to report what he described as very poor service, but he did not
3331mention race or discrimination.
333544. On or about April 19, 2007, Mr. Smith filed a
3346complaint against Respondent dated April 16, 2007, with the
3355local Better Business Bureau (BBB). His complaint alleged lack
3364of service. Nowhere in his complaint is race or discrimination
3374mentioned. The material in evidence shows that the BBB
3383contacted Ms. Montgomery about the complaint, but marked it
"3392information only," and did not pursue it at that time. 5 /
340445. In early April 2007, Mr. Smith telephoned Ed Carr,
3414Executive Director of the Hernando County Association of
3422Realtors (HCAR). Mr. Smith said nothing to Mr. Carr about
3432racial discrimination at that point, but said only that he
3442wanted to get out of the listing contract with Respondent.
345246. On or about April 23, 2007, Petitioners filed a formal
3463complaint with HCAR. HCAR's Grievance Committee met May 7,
34722007, and, apparently in the mode of a probable cause panel,
3483referred the case for a full evidentiary hearing. On June 29,
34942007, the case was first noticed for hearing by HCAR.
350447. Petitioners HCAR complaint is not in evidence, and
3513the evidence herein falls short of enabling the undersigned to
3523determine whether the complaint before HCAR involved racial
3531discrimination. However, it is certain that Ms. Montgomery
3539perceived it that way. The HCAR hearing was first scheduled to
3550occur August 28, 2007, but it was re-scheduled. The actual date
3561the hearing took place and the date HCAR issued its decision are
3573not clear in this record, but the hearing was on or after
3585October 23, 2007. Mr. Van Slyke presided over the HCAR hearing.
3596The HCAR decision resulted in a determination that Respondent
3605had not violated professional real estate ethics.
361248. Despite Petitioners expressed dissatisfaction with
3618HCAR's result and their claims that HCARs panel was prejudiced
3628in Respondent's favor and that Respondent manipulated timing of
3637the hearing, the HCAR process, and its deciding body, there is
3648no competent, credible, or compelling evidence herein
3655demonstrating the validity of such accusations or demonstrating
3663that HCARs decision in Respondents favor was based on racial
3673discrimination or constituted a cover-up for racial
3680discrimination. That said, HCAR's decision is not binding here.
368949. Ms. Montgomery testified credibly that she had refused
3698to acquiesce in any overt action, such as voluntarily letting
3708Petitioners out of their contract without paying her commission,
3717because to do so might make her appear to be prejudiced. Even
3729more credible is her testimony that she did not want to let
3741Petitioners out of their listing contract unless they paid her
3751commission and costs, as provided in the contract, because she
3761had already expended considerable time and money on Petitioners'
3770behalf.
377150. Respondent continued to advertise the Cressida Circle
3779house until the end of the eight-month contract ( see Findings of
3791Fact 19 and 40), despite Petitioners refusal to allow
3800Respondent to reduce the asking price. Unfortunately, between
3808June 14, and July 1, 2007, Respondent advertised an incorrect
3818and lower asking price of $269,900.000, in "Nature Coast."
3828Respondent did not know how the error occurred. The advertising
3838for this two-week period was, as always, at Respondent's
3847expense, and the asking price was corrected in the next issue.
385851. While signed-up with Respondent, Mrs. Smith took
3866material prepared by Respondent for marketing the Cressida
3874Circle property, made minor adjustments to it, and placed it on
3885her own and others' websites. The material she posted sometimes
3895carried Ms. Hobbs' contact information. Other times,
3902Mrs. Smith's internet advertisements showed a reduced price for
3911contacting Petitioners. This placed Petitioners in direct
3918competition with Respondent's advertisements in which
3924Petitioners required that Respondent maintain the original
3931$296,900.00, asking price. In so-doing, Petitioners may have
3940offended a clause of the listing contract. In placing this
3950information on MLS websites outside of Respondents general
3958geographic area, Petitioners may have exposed Respondent to
3966liability in the professional real estate community. Respondent
3974advised Petitioners of these problems, but there is no clear
3984evidence that Respondent intervened to prevent Petitioners'
3991behavior.
399252. Petitioners moved into their new, Rudolph Court house
4001in early June 2007. When they moved, their furniture and
4011photographs went with them.
401553. Photographic evidence shows that Petitioners allowed
4022the Cressida Circle house to deteriorate after they moved to
4032Rudolph Court, thereby rendering the sale property less
4040desirable to potential buyers.
404454. Petitioners each testified credibly that between
4051January 31, 2007, and the time they moved out, probably about
4062June 6, 2007, Respondent gave them no advance notices that a
4073potential buyer was coming to view the Cressida Circle house, as
4084had been agreed upon when the house was listed.
409355. The sign-in sheet left in Petitioners sale house
4102demonstrated that Exit Realty showed the house once, on
4111August 21, 2007. Petitioners acknowledged that the home was
4120also shown another time on the day before Caravan Day. ( See
4132Finding of Fact 22.)
413656. Respondent produced her lock-box's recorded printout
4143showing that on February 1, 2007, Ms. Hobbs entered the house.
4154( See Finding of Fact 17.) It shows also that Ms Hobbs entered
4167again on June 7, 2007. On July 17, a ReMax salesman entered.
4179On July 27, Respondent entered. On July 31, an ERA saleswoman
4190entered. On August 10, and 11, Respondent entered. On August
420021, another Exit Realty saleswoman entered. ( See Finding of
4210Fact 55.) On September 20, Clara Ward, an independent
4219contractor with Exit Realty entered. ( See Finding of Fact 58.)
4230On October 4, 2007, Ms. Hobbs entered.
423757. Respondent acknowledged that on one or two of the
4247foregoing occasions, she entered the sale house, not to show the
4258property to prospective buyers, but to take photographs for the
4268HCAR hearing ( see Finding of Fact 47), but there is no credible
4281evidence to support Petitioners' conjecture that the other
4289visits by Ms. Montgomery and by all other real estate
4299salespersons were not for the purposes of showing the house or
4310for some other legitimate sales purpose.
431658. Clara Ward testified that she showed the house to a
4327legitimate potential buyer about a month before Respondent's
4335listing ended, and again in approximately December 2007, after
4344Petitioners had listed it with another realtor at the reduced
4354price of $256,900.00.
435859. Mr. Smith admitted that he never asked Ms. Hobbs for
4369an "open house," until June 2007.
437560. The contract does not require an "open house."
4384Ms. Montgomery testified credibly and without refutation that
4392she did not schedule an "open house" for Petitioners because, in
4403the past, "open houses" have not resulted in sales for her. She
4415rarely, if ever, utilizes them for any property.
442361. Mr. Smith admitted that Petitioners had no evidence to
4433support their allegation that every other home that Exit Realty
4443signed in the same period was shown more than once. Petitioners
4454also presented no evidence that every other home, besides the
4464Cressida Circle home, which Exit Realty signed in the same
4474period held even one open house. 6/
448162. In November 2007, Petitioners signed with another
4489realtor who marketed the house at $269,900.00, which was
4499$27,000.00 less than the only figure at which Petitioners would
4510permit Respondent to market the house. If and when there was a
4522sale is unclear.
4525CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
452863. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
4535jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this cause,
4545pursuant to Sections 120.57(1), 120.569, 760.20, and 760.37,
4553Florida Statutes.
455564. Section 760.23, Florida Statutes, "Discrimination in
4562the sale or rental of housing and other prohibited practices,"
4572provides:
4573(2) It is unlawful to discriminate against
4580any person in the terms, conditions, or
4587privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling,
4595or in the provision of services or
4602facilities in connection therewith, because
4607of race, color, national origin, sex,
4613handicap, familial status, or religion.
461865. Section 760.24, Florida Statutes, "Discrimination in
4625the provision of brokerage services," provides:
4631It is unlawful to deny any person access to,
4640or membership or participation in, any
4646multiple-listing service, real estate
4650brokers' organization, or other service,
4655organization, or facility relating to the
4661business of selling or renting dwellings, or
4668to discriminate against him or her in the
4676terms or conditions of such access,
4682membership, or participation, on account of
4688race, color, national origin, sex, handicap,
4694familial status, or religion.
469866. Section 760.25, Florida Statutes, "Discrimination in
4705the financing of housing or in residential real estate
4714transactions," provides:
4716(2)(a) It is unlawful for any person or
4724entity whose business includes engaging in
4730residential real estate transactions to
4735discriminate against any person in making
4741available such a transaction, or in the
4748terms or conditions of such a transaction,
4755because of race, color, national origin,
4761sex, handicap, familial status, or religion.
4767(b) As used in this subsection, the
4774term "residential real estate transaction"
4779means any of the following:
47842. The selling, brokering, or
4789appraising of residential real property.
479467. Assuming that Section 760.29, Florida Statutes,
4801governing "exclusions," does not bar this case entirely, the
4810burden of proof herein is upon Petitioners. See § 760.34(5),
4820Fla. Stat.
482268. Petitioner has the burden of establishing facts to
4831prove a prima facie case of discrimination. McCloud v. Jones ,
4841DOAH Case No. 98-1925 (RO: 8/25/1998; FO: 5/17/99); U.S.
4850Department of Housing and Urban Development v. Blackwell , 908 F.
48602d 864 (11th Cir. 1990).
486569. The three-part "burden of proof" pattern developed in
4874McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green , 411 U.S. 792, 93 S. Ct. 1817
4886(1973), applies herein. Under that test, Petitioners must first
4895prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that discrimination
4904has occurred. If the Respondent then articulates some
4912legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its action, the burden
4920shifts back to Petitioners to prove that the reason provided by
4931Respondent is merely pre-textual and not bona fide . See Pollitt
4942v. Bramel , 669 F. Supp. 172, 175 (S. D. Ohio 1987).
495370. As a bi-racial family, Petitioners are members of a
4963protected class, but Petitioners have not even presented a prima
4973facie case of discrimination. Even had they done so,
4982Respondents evidence overwhelmingly refutes it.
498771. First, Petitioners are not qualified real estate
4995brokers or agents and did not, as such, attempt to access
5006membership or participation in any multiple listing service,
5014real estate brokers' organization, other service organization or
5022facility relating to the business of selling or renting
5031dwellings. To the extent that Respondent complained about
5039Petitioners' illicitly trying to use such entities/programs,
5046( see Finding of Fact 51), there still is no evidence that
5058Respondent in any way denied Petitioners membership or
5066participation in such entities/programs.
507072. In regard to the allegations of discrimination by mis-
5080feasance, mal-feasance, or non-feasance, in Respondent's
5086marketing of Petitioners' house, there is not even a prima facie
5097case. Neutral business decisions and honest mistakes are not
5106the subject of Florida's Fair Housing Law.
511373. Mr. Van Slyke's testimony is expert and compels the
5123conclusion that there was nothing sinister in Respondent's
5131signing Petitioners to an eight-month exclusive listing
5138contract, instead of a six-month contract, or in Respondent's
5147requesting her full commission for early termination of their
5156contract at Petitioners unilateral request. Petitioners had
5163input to the contract's terms and voluntarily entered into it
5173after consulting two other realtors.
517874. Ms. Hobbs early pricing mistake on the initial flyers
5188was rationally explained and not demonstrated to be either
5197Respondents fault nor discriminatory. Respondent corrected the
5204price on subsequent flyers. The pricing mistake in the June 14-
5215July 1, 2007, "Nature Coast" advertisement was not demonstrated
5224to be Respondent's doing, as opposed to a publisher's
5233typographical error. It also was not shown to be either
5243deliberate nor discriminatory.
524675. The listing period herein occurred within a larger
5255period of a rapidly declining housing market. Respondent urged
5264Petitioners to cut their price so as to be competitive under
5275worsening circumstances, and Petitioners declined to heed her
5283advice. Against this undisputed evidence, lies Petitioners'
5290mere conjecture that Respondent was not trying to sell
5299Petitioners' home due to animus against their bi-racial family.
530876. The contract did not require an open house.
5317Respondent's decision to not hold an open house was a simple
5328business judgment call. Petitioners presented no evidence that
5336Respondent held open houses for all her Caucasian or single-race
5346clients.
534777. There is no evidence that Respondent practiced any
5356disparate treatment of Petitioners, and certainly, no nexus to
5365race was demonstrated on any issue.
537178. Moreover, the absence of any racial animus was
5380affirmatively demonstrated by Respondent's not asking
5386Petitioners to remove the bi-racial family photographs from
5394their bedroom. The undisputed evidence is that the only place
5404Respondent asked Petitioners to modify with regard to their bi-
5414racial photographs was over the sliding glass doors in their
5424living room. This fact renders very credible Respondent's
5432testimony that the only purpose of her request concerning the
5442living room pictures was for the non-discriminatory purpose of
5451favorably displaying the indoor vaulted-ceiling and the patio-
5459pool view. While decorating preferences are a matter of
5468individual taste, Respondent's preferences are as valid as
5476anyone else's and do not automatically establish bias, animus,
5485or discrimination on the basis of race. More to the point,
5496however, Respondent's "de-clutter" concept of staging
5502unobstructed views and de-personalizing the walls of a sale home
5512are acknowledged trends in the real estate sales profession.
552179. No discriminatory intent or effect was established,
5529but assuming arguendo that it was, it is contrary to common
5540sense to believe that Respondent would ask Petitioners to reduce
5550their price, thereby reducing her commission, in an effort to
5560somehow hurt them because they would not remove bi-racial
5569photographs from one room, while Respondent made no request that
5579Petitioners remove bi-racial photographs from the other room.
5587There also was affirmative evidence that there was no delay and
5598Petitioner perceived no animus when Respondent, Ms. Hobbs, and
5607Exit Realty sold Petitioners their new house on Rudolph Court.
561780. Petitioners have not borne their burden of proof.
5626RECOMMENDATION
5627Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
5637Law, it is
5640RECOMMENDED that the Florida Commission on Human Relations
5648enter a final order dismissing the Complaint and the Petition
5658for Relief.
5660DONE AND ENTERED this 19th day of September, 2008, in
5670Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
5674S
5675___________________________________
5676ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
5680Administrative Law Judge
5683Division of Administrative Hearings
5687The DeSoto Building
56901230 Apalachee Parkway
5693Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
5696(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
5700Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
5704www.doah.state.fl.us
5705Filed with the Clerk of the
5711Division of Administrative Hearings
5715this 19th day of September, 2008.
5721ENDNOTES
57221/ Petitioner changed this claim in their Proposed Recommended
5731Order, stating that Respondent only showed the house once in the
5742first six months of the eight months' contract.
57502/ Petitioners submit that this March 5, 2007, 12 months'
5760contract cannot be considered or is non-probative because it
5769came into existence after they complained about Respondent to
5778the Better Business Bureau (BBB) and the Hernando County
5787Association of Realtors (HCAR), but Petitioners produced no
5795evidence of fabrication or collusion, and this contract is
5804credible and probative. Moreover, the March 5, 2007, date on
5814the contract actually pre-dates the parties' written
5821correspondence, beginning April 5, 2007, Petitioners' April 16,
58292007, BBB complaint; and Petitioners' April 23, 2007, complaint
5838to HCAR. ( See Findings of Fact 36, 44 and 46.)
58493/ Mr. Smith testified that he was "told" by other realtors
5860that the average listing contract was only six months long.
5870This is uncorroborated hearsay which cannot be relied upon for
5880Findings of Fact. See § 120.57(1)(c), Florida Statutes.
58884/ Petitioners assert that these real estate publications were
5897only published after they began to complain about poor service
5907and asked to be released from their contract, but clearly
5917Respondent had invested effort, expertise, and expense for these
5926ads prior to their actual publication.
5932Petitioners further argue that none of Respondent's efforts
5940should "count" because Mr. Smith had already complained to
5949either BBB or HCAR before April 1, 2007. Petitioner's position
5959on this is specious, due to the chronology substantiated by the
5970evidence and found as fact. ( See Finding of Fact 18 and n. 2.)
59845/ Petitioners correctly point out that Ms. Montgomerys
5992testimony that she had to negotiate with BBB to not oust Exit
6004Realty Shoppe from that organization until BBB reviewed the
6013result of Petitioners subsequent HCAR complaint ( see Finding of
6023Fact 46) is inconsistent with the date on the BBB exhibit.
6034However, her inconsistency or confusion on this point is
6043reasonable and immaterial, given the multiple sequential
6050complaints raised by Petitioners before the BBB, HCAR, HUD,
6059Florida Commission on Human Relations, and Division of
6067Administrative Hearings.
60696/ Obviously, since Respondent claimed to not give open houses
6079for any of her clients, she could not show that she had not
6092given open houses. Throughout the hearing, Mr. Smith seemed to
6102believe that it was up to Respondent to present evidence to
6113disprove Petitioners' double negatives or unsubstantiated
6119claims, saying his several allegations were based on "the fact
6129that you [Respondent] have nothing to show me." This is not the
6141burden of proof herein. See Conclusions of Law.
6149COPIES FURNISHED:
6151Donald and Miranda Smith
61551047 Rudolph Court
6158Spring Hill, Florida 34609
6162David H. Sturgil,
6165As Qualified Representative,
6168c/o Exit Realty/Realty Shoppe
61725300 Spring Hill Drive
6176Spring Hill, Florida 34606
6180Denise Crawford, Agency Clerk
6184Florida Commission on Human Relations
61892009 Apalachee Parkway, Suite 100
6194Tallahassee, Florida 32301
6197Larry Kranert, Esquire
6200Florida Commission on Human Relations
62052009 Apalachee Parkway, Suite 100
6210Tallahassee, Florida 32301
6213NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
6219All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
622915 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
6240to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
6251will issue the final order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 12/02/2008
- Proceedings: Final Order Dismissing Petition for Relief from a Discriminatory Housing Practice filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 09/19/2008
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- Date: 07/16/2008
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/27/2008
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from D. Smith regarding Pre-hearing Meeting filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/30/2008
- Proceedings: Agency`s court reporter confirmation letter filed with the Judge.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/28/2008
- Proceedings: Certified Mail Receipts stamped this date by the U.S. Postal Service.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/28/2008
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from M. Montgomery regarding responses to Initial Order and requesting sample affidavit filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/28/2008
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for July 16, 2008; 12:00 p.m.; Brooksville, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 04/24/2008
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from D. Smith and M. Smith regarding response to request for pleadings and other documents filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
- Date Filed:
- 04/17/2008
- Date Assignment:
- 04/17/2008
- Last Docket Entry:
- 12/02/2008
- Location:
- Brooksville, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
Counsels
-
Marianne C. Montgomery
Address of Record -
Donald Smith
Address of Record