CAROL VORCHHEIMER v. THE PHILADELPHIAN OWNERS ASSOCIATION; JUNE IDZAL; FRANK J. BONOM
No. 17-1738
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
September 5, 2018
PRECEDENTIAL. Argued March 23, 2018. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2:16-cv-05145). District Judge: Honorable Juan R. Sánchez. Before: HARDIMAN, BIBAS, and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
Rosenthal Lurie & Broudy
102 Pickering Way
Suite 310
Exton, PA 19341
Counsel for Appellant
Christopher M. Curci [ARGUED]
Freeman Mathis & Gary
1800 John F. Kennedy Boulevard
Suite 1500
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Counsel for Appellees
OPINION OF THE COURT
BIBAS, Circuit Judge.
A disabled tenant has a right to a reasonable housing accommodation that she needs to use and enjoy her home. But if her landlord offers her an alternative that likewise satisfies that need, she has no right to demand the particular accommodation that she wants.
Carol Vorchheimer needs ready access to her rolling walker and wanted to leave it in her building‘s lobby. The building managers refused, but offered her four other ways to store and access her walker. She sued under the Fair Housing Amendments Act, claiming that her preferred accommodation was
We will affirm. Necessity is a demanding legal standard. For a housing accommodation to be “necessary” under the Act, it must be required for that person to achieve equal housing opportunity, taking into account the alternatives on offer.
Here, Vorchheimer‘s own complaint, including the exhibits attached to it, forecloses her claim. Leaving the walker in the lobby was her preference. But given the four alternatives offered—which she herself pleaded—she did not plausibly plead that it was necessary.
I. BACKGROUND
We accept as true the well-pleaded allegations in the amended complaint, including those in the exhibits attached to it: Vorchheimer suffers from pulmonary hypertension (high blood pressure) and other disabilities. As a result, she must use a rolling walker to get around. She owned a condominium in The Philadelphian and had a reserved parking space in front of the building. Vorchheimer would use her walker to get from her condo to the lobby and then use her cane from the lobby to her car. She could neither lift her walker, nor fold it, nor put it into her car. Instead, she began leaving her walker in The Philadelphian‘s lobby when she left.
One day, Vorchheimer left her walker in a corner of the lobby. A building staffer took the walker and stored it in a room behind the concierge desk. The next day, The Philadelphian‘s general manager, Frank Bonom, emailed Vorchheimer and
A year-long quarrel ensued, culminating in this case. Vorchheimer kept leaving her walker in the lobby. The Philadelphian‘s staff kept putting it into storage until she returned and asked for it. And Vorchheimer kept insisting that putting it away was unacceptable. Because of her disabilities, she asserted, she needed her walker to be available in the lobby upon her return so that she could independently retrieve it.
Although The Philadelphian refused to let Vorchheimer leave her walker in the lobby, it offered her four alternative accommodations. Am. Compl. ¶ 33 & Ex. 8. First, she could have staff store the walker and then return it to her in the lobby—she could either phone ahead to have it ready for her, or sit on a bench to await its retrieval. Second, she could have a staffer deliver the walker to her car before she got out of it. Third, she could have the doorman load the walker into and take it out of her car‘s trunk. Or finally, she could start parking in the building‘s indoor valet-parking garage, where she could leave her walker near the valet station. But Vorchheimer rejected all these alternatives and insisted that she needed to leave her walker in the lobby.
To support her demand, Vorchheimer gave the building‘s managers several letters from her doctors. In the first two, her doctors detailed her medical issues and wrote that “[h]er use of a rolling walker is a medical necessity.” Id. Exs. 4 & 7. In the third, her doctor reiterated that she needs to “have ready access to her walker or scooter” and that she should “not [be] required to stand [a]waiting assistance for any period of time.” Id. Ex. 9.
Neither side would budge. So Vorchheimer sued Bonom, The Philadelphian Owners’ Association, and the Association‘s then-president, June Idzal. She alleged that the defendants were violating
The District Court dismissed Vorchheimer‘s complaint. It acknowledged that “keeping her equipment in the lobby may be Plaintiff[‘s] preferred accommodation.” App. 2 n.1. But she had not plausibly alleged that it was necessary. App. 3 n.2. So, the Court held, “Defendants’ storage . . . and prompt retrieval of [her walker] when she returns does not deny Plaintiff a full and equal opportunity to enjoy her housing.” Id. Vorchheimer‘s amended complaint added nothing material, so the District Court dismissed again based on lack of necessity. App. 5 n.1. Vorchheimer then filed this appeal and later moved out of The Philadelphian.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim. Foglia v. Renal Ventures Mgmt., LLC, 754 F.3d 153, 154 n.1 (3d Cir. 2014). In doing so, we construe the
III. TO BE “NECESSARY,” A HOUSING ACCOMMODATION MUST BE REQUIRED TO ACHIEVE EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY IN LIGHT OF THE ALTERNATIVES OFFERED
The Fair Housing Amendments Act forbids housing discrimination against the disabled. One of its key provisions bans “discriminat[ing] against any person in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling, or in the provision of services or facilities in connection with such dwelling, because of [that person‘s] handicap.”
[1] a refusal to make
[2] reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, or services,
[3] when such accommodations may be
[a] necessary to afford such person
[b] equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling[.]
Under this subparagraph, a plaintiff can state a claim by pleading all three elements. This case turns on the first half of the third element: whether a requested accommodation is necessary. That is an independent requirement, one we must now define.
A. The statutory text requires an accommodation be essential to achieve equal housing opportunity, measured against any alternatives that were offered.
We begin with the text. We look to the statutory provision‘s language and to the ordinary meaning of the words it uses.
1. “Necessary” means required, indispensable, essential. “Necessary” is a “word[ ] of limitation.” In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litig., 355 F.3d 322, 327 (4th Cir. 2004). As an adjective, it means “[i]ndispensable, requisite, essential, needful; that cannot be done without,” or “absolutely required.” 10 Oxford English Dictionary 275-76 (2d ed. 1989); Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 1510-11 (1966). The other sense
Necessary‘s dictionary definitions reflect the word‘s ordinary meaning. Consider its use in formal logic: a necessary condition is something essential for something else to be true. See 10 Oxford English Dictionary at 276; Irving M. Copi et al., Introduction to Logic 471 (14th ed. 2011). In the example above, lemon juice is a necessary condition for making lemonade.
In keeping with these definitions, English speakers distinguish desired goods from necessary ones. Thoreau categorized the “necessaries of life” as “Food, Shelter, Clothing, and Fuel.” Henry David Thoreau, Walden 14 (Courage Books 1990). “[N]ext to necessaries,” he ranked only “a few implements, a knife, an axe, a spade, a wheelbarrow, etc., and for the studious, lamplight, stationery, and access to a few books.” Id. at 15 (emphasis added). And years before he became president, Lincoln contrasted alcohol with staples like “flour, beef, bacon, or any other of the real necessaries of life.” Abraham Lincoln, Temperance Address, Springfield, Illinois (Feb. 22, 1842).
So the word “necessary,” without more, is stringent. When it is not followed by an object, as it is in this statute, English speakers and writers typically reserve “necessary” for our physiological needs and perhaps our needs for health and safety. Cf. A.H. Maslow, A Theory of Human Motivation, 50 Psych. Rev. 370 (1943) (describing these as the foundational and second levels of Maslow‘s hierarchy of needs). Necessities
True, we sometimes speak loosely, confusing our wants with our needs. Children may declare, “I need candy.” Adults may groan that they need a beer or a vacation. But wants are not needs. Parents remind their children that, while they want candy, they do not need it. So too with beers and vacations. As The Rolling Stones put it: “You can‘t always get what you want / But if you try sometimes you might find / You get what you need.” The Rolling Stones, You Can‘t Always Get What You Want, on Let It Bleed (London Records 1969). And though we sometimes use the verb “need” loosely, we do not do the same with the adjective “necessary.” Nor does Congress write statutes with such loose, colloquial phrasing.
Like ordinary English speakers, the common law uses “necessary” in this strict sense of essential or indispensable. In contract law, “the predominant rule is that a minor‘s contracts are generally voidable but that contracts for what are known as ‘necessaries’ are enforceable.” Rodriguez v. Reading Hous. Auth., 8 F.3d 961, 964 (3d Cir. 1993) (Alito, J.). “[C]ourts have traditionally viewed what constitutes necessaries narrowly.” 5 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 9.19 (4th ed. 1993 & May 2018 update). The classic necessities are “food, clothing, and shelter,” and at least a basic education. Id. Ordinary food qualifies, though candies and fruit do not. Ordinary clothing qualifies, but elegant clothing and jewelry do not. A majority of courts hold that cars and trucks do not qualify, nor even bicycles. Id. And while shelter qualifies if a minor‘s parent or
When writers wish to tighten or loosen the degree of necessity, they add modifiers. Describing a necessity as “absolute,” “logical,” “physical,” or “bare” constricts the necessity required even more. But when Congress wants to loosen necessity to mean just “sufficiently important,” it uses the phrase “reasonably necessary.” E.g.,
Congress even used “necessary or appropriate” in another section of this Act. That provision authorizes the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to “collect such information . . . as the Secretary determines to be necessary or appropriate.”
In short, the Act‘s necessity element requires that an accommodation be essential, not just preferable.
2. We must gauge necessity in light of the goal of achieving equal housing opportunity. Necessity tracks an underlying need or goal. Sometimes that goal is implicit; “necessary” without more often implies “necessary for survival.” Sometimes, it is explicit. The word “necessary” is often followed by “to” or “for,” specifying the need. Fuel, oxygen, and a spark are necessary to build a fire. A medical degree is necessary to practice medicine.
Here, the Act tells us what to look for: an “accommodation[] . . . [that] may be necessary to afford [the disabled] person equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling.”
3. One must also consider the alternatives on offer to gauge whether they satisfy the statutory goal. Giving the paraplegic a first-floor apartment is one way to give him access and thus equal opportunity to use his apartment. But an elevator would work too. That alternative would give him access to every apartment, so a first-floor apartment would no longer be necessary. The landlord has to offer at least one of the accommodations, but not both. If she does offer one of them, she has not “refus[ed] to make reasonable accommodations . . . [that] may be necessary to afford [the tenant] equal [housing] opportunity.”
Of course, the proffered alternatives must still satisfy the remainder of the subsection‘s third element: affording equal housing opportunity. That may require more than “just those accommodations that are absolutely necessary for the disabled individual‘s treatment or basic ability to function.” Anderson v. City of Blue Ash, 798 F.3d 338, 361-62 (6th Cir. 2015). To qualify as alternative “reasonable accommodations,” the accommodations must afford the particular disabled person equal opportunity both to use and to enjoy her home. An accommodation that does not provide equal opportunity, or that provides equal opportunity to use but not to enjoy, will not satisfy that requirement.
So courts must weigh whether the tenant‘s requested accommodation and the landlord‘s proposed alternative afford equal housing opportunity. Whether the accommodations do so depends on that particular tenant‘s abilities and disability,
Beyond those observations, we need not offer detailed guidance on how judges and juries should compare various alternatives. We leave those details for another day. And, as we discuss below, a plaintiff need not plead or hypothesize alternatives to state a claim or establish a prima facie case.
B. Precedent supports this reading.
1. Our precedent. This reading of
The one time that we have applied the necessity element, we equated “necessary” with “required.” Lapid-Laurel, L.L.C. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 284 F.3d 442, 461 (3d Cir. 2002). In Lapid-Laurel, we held that, to establish necessity, the plaintiff had “to show that [the requested zoning variance] is required to make [the proposed nursing home] financially viable or medically effective.” Id. (emphasis added). In other words, the plaintiff had to prove “that the size of the proposed facility
We described that test as “[a] strict interpretation of the ‘necessity’ requirements.” Id. Applying that “strict interpretation,” we held that no reasonable jury could have found that the requested variance was necessary. Id. But because the case involved zoning variances, it focused on what was necessary to build and situate a nursing home in the first place. We had no occasion to consider an individual tenant‘s request for accommodations or the relevance of a landlord‘s proffered alternatives.
Vorchheimer, however, reads Lapid-Laurel differently. She asks us to distill a much weaker test of necessity from an earlier passage, in which we block-quoted a Fourth Circuit opinion: “‘And if the proposed accommodation provides no direct amelioration of a disability‘s effect, it cannot be said to be “necessary.“‘” Id. at 460 (quoting Bryant Woods Inn, Inc. v. Howard County, 124 F.3d 597, 604 (4th Cir. 1997)).
But that sentence did not define necessity. All the quoted sentence did is set forth a threshold criterion. Its double-negative construction means only that an accommodation is unnecessary when it does not directly ameliorate a disability‘s effect. That does not mean that an accommodation is necessary just because it does ameliorate a disability; it must “ameliorate [the] effect of the handicap” on the achievement of equal housing opportunity. Lapid-Laurel, 284 F.3d. at 461 (emphasis
2. Other circuits. Likewise, sister-circuit precedent adopts the strict sense of “necessary.” As then-Judge Gorsuch recognized, “necessary” in
Other circuits make the same point using the language of causation. Necessity functions as a but-for causation requirement, tying the needed accommodation to equal housing opportunity. An accommodation is necessary if, “without the accommodation, the plaintiff will be denied an equal opportunity to obtain [or use, or enjoy] the housing of her choice.” Wis. Cmty. Servs., Inc. v. City of Milwaukee, 465 F.3d 737, 749 (7th Cir. 2006) (en banc); accord id. at 754-55 (“cause-in-fact” and “but for” cause); Anderson, 798 F.3d at 361 (“but for . . . causation inquiry” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also Lapid-Laurel, 284 F.3d at 460 (quoting other circuits’ cases adopting a “but for . . . causation requirement“). Cf. Bhogaita v. Altamonte Heights Condo. Ass‘n, Inc., 765 F.3d 1277, 1289
C. HUD‘s informal guidance does not change the plain meaning of “necessary.”
Vorchheimer argues that alternative accommodations are irrelevant to analyzing necessity. She relies on a Joint Statement of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Justice, Reasonable Accommodations Under the Fair Housing Act (May 17, 2004). But it does not aid her cause.
The passage of the Joint Statement to which she points does not define necessity. It advises landlords to heed disabled tenants’ requests and superior knowledge: A landlord may “believe[] that, while the accommodation requested by [a disabled person] is reasonable, there is an alternative accommodation that would be equally effective.” App. 116. Because a disabled person “typically ha[s] the most accurate knowledge about [her own] functional limitations . . . [she] is not obligated to accept an alternative accommodation suggested by the provider if she believes it will not meet her needs and her preferred accommodation is reasonable.” Id. This may well be prudent advice. But it does not purport to interpret the statutory requirement of necessity.
Some of Skidmore‘s factors weigh in Vorchheimer‘s favor. The Joint Statement was issued fourteen years ago, and we have no reason to believe that it is “[in]consisten[t] with [the agency‘s] earlier and later pronouncements.” Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140. Even so, it is unpersuasive on this point. The passage does not purport to parse or define the statutory requirement of necessity, nor to consider what that word means in common parlance or in other areas of law. So it neither “thor-ough[ly] . . . consider[s]” nor “valid[ly] . . . reason[s]” about the particular statutory requirement of necessity. Id. It cannot overcome the plain meaning of the word, which requires courts to consider the alternatives on offer.
IV. VORCHHEIMER DID NOT PLAUSIBLY PLEAD NECESSITY, SO DISMISSAL WAS PROPER
A. Necessity is amenable to dismissal.
Vorchheimer argues that necessity is so fact-specific, and so divorced from the alternatives on offer, that it is never amenable to dismissal—or even perhaps summary judgment. We disagree. As we have explained, the necessity element has a
Our holding today in no way raises or shifts the pleading requirements or burden of proof for housing-discrimination claims. We do not require plaintiffs to hypothesize alternatives, let alone to preempt hypotheticals. Nor do we change how courts should treat these claims, including the necessity element, on a motion to dismiss. To survive a motion to dismiss, a plaintiff need only plausibly plead enough facts to make out the three elements set forth in
Plaintiffs need not, and generally do not, plead alternative accommodations. So, ordinarily, district courts do not have alternatives before them on a motion to dismiss. Assessing alternatives typically requires a factual record, and developing that factual record requires discovery.
But this is not an ordinary case. Vorchheimer did not just plead facts supporting the statutory elements, including her disability and her requested accommodation. She also specifically pleaded the four alternative accommodations in her complaint. Am. Compl. ¶ 33.a-d. She attached Idzal‘s correspondence (on behalf of The Philadelphian) outlining them. Id. Exs. 5, 8. And she attached four doctors’ letters that detail her disabilities and medical needs. Id. Exs. 4, 7, 9, 12. As exhibits to her own complaint, these materials were appropriate to consider on a motion to dismiss. See Mayer, 605 F.3d at 230; see also 5C Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1363 (3d ed. 2004 & Supp. Apr. 2018). They do not require going “outside the pleadings.” See
Finally, this appeal arises on a motion to dismiss, not a motion for summary judgment. Nothing in our opinion adds elements to a plaintiff‘s prima facie case or alters the burden-shifting framework that we apply at summary judgment. See Lapid-Laurel, 284 F.3d at 459; Hovsons, 89 F.3d at 1103.
B. Vorchheimer did not plausibly plead that her requested accommodation is necessary in light of the alternatives offered.
Although Vorchheimer asked to leave her walker in the lobby, she did not plausibly plead that it was necessary. Her own doctors’ letters establish two medical necessities. First, while she can “walk[] (with the assistance of a cane) the short distance from her car to the lobby,” “her use of a rolling walker is a medical necessity” to get from the lobby to and from her apartment. Am. Compl. Exs. 7, 9. So she needs “ready access to her walker or scooter.” Id. Ex. 9. Second, she needs to “[m]inimiz[e] her periods of unsupported standing.” Id. Ex. 7. “Even just standing, for periods as brief as 5 minutes, result[s] in the occurrence of progressive symptoms.” Id.
All four of the proffered alternatives, however, satisfy both of these medical needs. Staff could retrieve the walker from
Nor, though Vorchheimer amended her complaint, did she plausibly plead the contrary. Her only suggestion that the alternatives are inadequate is half a sentence in a footnote at the very end of her brief, citing three paragraphs of her amended complaint. Br. 21 n.5 (citing Am. Compl. ¶¶ 34-35, 39). The cited paragraphs allege at least four occasions on which she left her walker in the lobby and had to stand and wait for front-desk staff to retrieve it. But in none of the examples she gives did she seek to use The Philadelphian‘s alternatives; each time, she neither used the bench nor called ahead. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 35, 39. She alleged no problem with calling ahead to the front desk, having a doorman bring the walker to her, having a doorman load and unload the walker from her car, or using valet parking. Nor did she allege that she ever tried any of these options.
Vorchheimer also alleged a third medical necessity: preserving her “functional independence.” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 20, 23, 32, 34, 48, 69, 70, 78. She claims that if she cannot herself get the walker in the lobby, she might have to wait for it, increasing
Even if it were necessary for Vorchheimer to retrieve her walker independently upon her return, a satisfactory option was on the table. Idzal offered to let her park in the indoor valet-parking garage, “where [she] could leave [her] rolling walker in close proximity to the pick-up and drop-off spot for [her] vehicle.” Am. Compl. Ex. 8. Vorchheimer‘s only quibble with the valet-parking option is that she would have to “relinquish her coveted, designated outdoor parking space.” Am. Compl. ¶ 33.c. But nothing in the Act gives her a right to her preferred option. Wants are not needs.
One final note: If a civil-rights complaint fails to state a claim, a district court must grant leave to amend the complaint unless amendment would be futile or inequitable. Mullin v. Balicki, 875 F.3d 140, 151 (3d Cir. 2017). But here, Vorchheimer had already amended her complaint once and did not move to amend again or suggest what she might add. The District Court concluded that further amendment would be futile. We agree.
Carol Vorchheimer preferred to have access to her walker without having to wait for a staffer. But she did not plausibly plead that she needed to leave it in the lobby. To enjoy her home, she needed access to her walker without having to stand for minutes. She pleaded four alternatives on offer that, on their face, satisfied those needs. And she attached doctors’ letters that distinguish her needs from her preferences. Because the Act guarantees her only a “reasonable accommodation” that satisfies her needs, not the particular accommodation that she wanted, we will affirm.
