Source: https://www.clearinghouse.net/detail.php?id=11420&amp;search=
Timestamp: 2019-11-12 06:01:03
Document Index: 462329903

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1981', '§ 1983', '§ 1981', '§ 1983', '§ 3601', '§ 1101']

Villas at Parkside Partners v. City of Farmers Branch | Civil Rights Litigation Clearinghouse
Case Name Villas at Parkside Partners v. City of Farmers Branch IM-TX-0028
Docket / Court 3:08-cv-01551-B ( N.D. Tex. )
On September 3, 2008, several lessors and lessees of residential accommodations in Farmers Branch, Texas, filed a lawsuit against that city in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, under the Supremacy Clause; 42 U.S.C. § 1981; 42 U.S.C. § 1983; the Fair ... read more >
On September 3, 2008, several lessors and lessees of residential accommodations in Farmers Branch, Texas, filed a lawsuit against that city in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, under the Supremacy Clause; 42 U.S.C. § 1981; 42 U.S.C. § 1983; the Fair Housing Act (FHA), 42 U.S.C. § 3601, et. seq.; and the Texas Equal Rights Amendment. The plaintiffs, represented by private and public interest counsel, asked the court for monetary, declaratory and injunctive relief, claiming that the city's recently adopted Ordinance 2952 violated both the federal and state constitutions and the FHA. Specifically, the plaintiffs alleged that the ordinance's requirement that anyone wishing to rent a home or apartment prove U.S. citizenship or lawful residence and its requirement that landlords evict all tenants that cannot produce such proof were preempted by federal immigration law, in violation of the due process clause of the federal constitution, and in violation of equal protection measures in the federal and state constitutions and the FHA.
The Northern District had already permanently enjoined a substantially similar law, Ordinance 2903, on May 28, 2008. (See IM-TX-0003, and the two cases consolidated with it, IM-TX-0001 and IM-TX-0002, for more information; see also IM-TX-0004, a case on the ordinance brought in Texas state court.) Ordinance 2952 was passed in response to this injunction, and differed from its predecessor in two main ways: (1) it did not incorporate the HUD (Housing and Urban Development) classification system for non-citizen eligibility for housing, and (2) it reserved all determinations of immigration status to the federal government instead of deputizing landlords or local officials.
On September 12, 2008, the Court (Judge Jane J. Boyle) entered a temporary restraining order against Ordinance 2952, and on September 22 it granted the plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction.
After a series of disputes over discovery and admissible evidence in 2009, on March 24, 2010, the Court (Judge Boyle) granted the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment and denied that of the defendant. Villas at Parkside Partners v. City of Farmers Branch, 701 F. Supp. 2d 835 (N.D. Tex. 2010). It held that the ordinance was preempted by the Supremacy Clause, in that it was an attempt to regulate in the exclusively federal sphere of immigration, and that it was further preempted by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101, et seq., which was meant to be the only means of adjudicating the status of non-citizens and the uniform enforcement of which the ordinance undermined. On March 24, the Court issued an order permanently enjoining the ordinance from being enforced.
The defendants appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and after hearing arguments (October 4, 2011), a three-judge panel (Judge Thomas M. Reavley, Judge Jennifer W. Elrod and Judge James E. Graves Jr.) affirmed the lower court's decision on March 21, 2012. Villas at Parkside Partner v. City of Farmers Branch, 675 F.3d 802 (5th Cir. 2012). In an opinion by Judge Reavley, the panel held that the ordinance was not, as the city maintained, a residential housing regulation, but an impermissible attempt to regulate immigration that impeded the federal government's ability to uniformly enforce its immigration laws and threatened to interfere with its handling of foreign affairs. Judge Elrod, dissenting in part, would have held that the ordinance merely attached consequences to a federal determination of immigration status and did not attempt to regulate immigration per se, but that it was nonetheless preempted in part because the ordinance granted jurisdiction to state courts to review the immigration status of individuals, thus interfering with federal enforcement.
After the appellate ruling Farmers Branch petitioned for a rehearing of the case en banc, which a majority of the Fifth Circuit appellate court judges approved on July 31, 2012. Then on July 22, 2013, in a 9-5 judgment, the 14-judge en banc panel struck down the ordinance. The 5-judge plurality opinion (Judge Stephen A. Higginson) held the criminal provisions of the ordinance to be conflict-preempted for presenting an obstacle to the purposes of federal anti-harboring law and federal authority to arrest and detain for possible unlawful presence, while the judicial review section of the ordinance was held to be explicitly preempted because federal law reserves the power to classify non-citizens to the federal government. The plurality proceeded to invalidate the entire law because they found the impermissible portions to be unseverable. The Reavely and Dennis opinions held the entirety of the ordinance conflict-preempted on broader grounds. In her partial concurrence/partial dissent, Judge Owen found only subsection (E)(4) and a sentence of (E)(5) from the judicial review section to be preempted, holding the rest of the ordinance not to be in conflict with federal law.
The 5-judge dissent (Judges Edith H. Jones and Jennifer Walker Elrod) found an even narrower portion of the ordinance's judicial review provisions to have been preempted, maintaining that the rest of the ordinance was not in conflict with federal law. The dissent further found that the plurality's severability analysis was flawed, explaining that the ordinance could stand on its own, even divested of criminal penalties, because of the presence of the civil penalties.
Farmers Branch then appealed to the Supreme Court, which denied cert on Mar. 7, 2014. The parties then settled on an attorneys' fees in meditation.
Christopher Schad - 06/04/2012
Kenneth Gray - 07/30/2013
Ava Morgenstern - 09/19/2017
Defendant(s) City of Farmers Branch, TX
Plaintiff Description Owners of and residents at several apartment complexes in Farmers Branch, Texas
Order Duration 2010 - n/a
3:08−cv−01551 (N.D. Tex.)
IM-TX-0028-9000.pdf | Detail
IM-TX-0028-0008.pdf | External Link | Detail
Plaintiffs' Complaint and Jury Demand [ECF# 1]
IM-TX-0028-0005.pdf | Detail
Order (consolidating with Case No. 08-1551) [ECF# 22] (N.D. Tex.)
IM-TX-0028-0003.pdf | Detail
IM-TX-0028-0001.pdf | Detail
Memorandum Opinion and Order [ECF# 177] (701 F.Supp.2d 835) (N.D. Tex.)
IM-TX-0028-0002.pdf | WESTLAW| LEXIS | Detail
Opinion (5th Cir.) (675 F.3d 802)
IM-TX-0028-0004.pdf | WESTLAW| LEXIS | Detail
Order (granting En Banc rehearing) (688 F.3d 801)
IM-TX-0028-0006.pdf | WESTLAW| LEXIS | Detail
En Banc Opinion (726 F.3d 524)
IM-TX-0028-0007.pdf | WESTLAW| LEXIS | Detail
Judges Boyle, Jane J. (N.D. Tex.) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0002 | IM-TX-0028-0003 | IM-TX-0028-9000
Clement, Edith Brown (E.D. La., Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0006 | IM-TX-0028-0007
Davis, W. Eugene (W.D. La., Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Dennis, James L. (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Elrod, Jennifer Walker (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0004 | IM-TX-0028-0006 | IM-TX-0028-0007
Garza, Emilio M. (W.D. Tex., Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0006
Graves, James Earl Jr. (State Supreme Court, Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Higginson, Stephen Andrew (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Jolly, E. Grady (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Jones, Edith Hollan (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Owen, Priscilla Richman (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Prado, Edward Charles (W.D. Tex., Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Reavley, Thomas Morrow (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0004 | IM-TX-0028-0007
Smith, Jerry Edwin (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Southwick, Leslie (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Stewart, Carl E. (Fifth Circuit) show/hide docs
Plaintiff's Lawyers Anello, Farrin R (New York) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-9000
Biles, C. Dunham (Texas) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0005 | IM-TX-0028-9000
Brewer, William A. III (Texas) show/hide docs
Renard, James S. (Texas) show/hide docs
Smith, Michael L. (Texas) show/hide docs
Ternan, Jack GB (Texas) show/hide docs
Defendant's Lawyers Dowdy, William Trey C. III (Texas) show/hide docs
Jung, P. Michael (Texas) show/hide docs
Kobach, Kris W. (Missouri) show/hide docs
Masso, Jadd F (Texas) show/hide docs
Shanes, Scott (Texas) show/hide docs
Other Lawyers Bernal, Diego Manuel (Texas) show/hide docs
Broiles, David (Texas) show/hide docs
IM-TX-0028-0001 | IM-TX-0028-9000
Perales, Nina (Texas) show/hide docs
Perez, Marisol Linda (Texas) show/hide docs
Valerian, Dominic (California) show/hide docs