This appeal is mainly about familial-status discrimination under the Fair Housing Act. We must determine whether the district court erred in granting the defendants judgment as a matter of law on one of the plaintiffs claims and in ordering a new trial. We reverse the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law and vacate the order of a new trial.
BACKGROUND 1
Sheree Woodard (“Plaintiff’) rented an apartment. Plaintiff lived in the apartment with two of her children, Tash-unda, a 10-year old girl, and Demarius, an 8-year old boy. 2
Several months into her one-year lease of the apartment, some of the units (including Plaintiffs) at the pertinent property were purchased by Fanboy, L.L.C., a corporation owned in part and managed by Theodore Davis (collectively “Defendants”). 3 Defendant Fanboy assumed Plaintiffs, lease, and Defendant Davis began managing Plaintiffs apartment. Problems ensued. Defendants evicted Plaintiff. And a federal lawsuit resulted.
At trial, Plaintiff presented evidence that she was ultimately evicted from her apartment, at least in part, because she would not have sex with Defendant Davis. Defendant Davis made various sexually suggestive remarks to Plaintiff. Plaintiff did not respond favorably to the remarks. After Plaintiff rejected his advances, Defendant Davis evicted Plaintiff from her apartment. When Plaintiff asked why she was being evicted, Defendant Davis responded “because we could not get together.”
Plaintiff also claims that the evidence she presented at trial shows that Defendant Davis evicted her, in part, because she had children. Defendant Davis cursed at Plaintiffs children on several occasions and blamed them for the trash and vandalism around Plaintiffs apartment. Davis, on several occasions, tried to order Plaintiffs children to clean up the trash. Davis also directed Plaintiffs children not to play in the front yard of the apartment: he directed the children'to play in the alley behind the apartment. And, at the trial, Defendant Davis testified that “the big
Plaintiff originally sued Defendants, asserting state and federal law claims. But, the only claims submitted to the jury and at issue in this appeal are Plaintiffs housing discrimination claims under the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”), 42 U.S.C. § 3604(b). Plaintiffs specific FHA claims are that she was the victim of gender discrimination and of familial-status discrimination.
The jury found for Plaintiff. At the end of the trial, the jury responded affirmatively to this special interrogatory submitted to it for each Defendant:
Did Plaintiff prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a motivating factor in the decision by [Defendants] to terminate her lease was her sex and/or her family status?
No party objected to this interrogatory, which was crafted by the district court. After finding Defendants liable, the jury awarded Plaintiff $8,000 in damages.
After the verdict was returned, Defendants filed a Rule 50(b) motion seeking judgment as a matter of law on both claims. The district court granted the motion on Plaintiffs familial-status discrimination claim, ruling that insufficient evidence supported that claim. The district court denied the motion on Plaintiffs sex discrimination claim.- And the district court reasoned that, on account of the “and/or” language in the jury interrogatory, the jury’s verdict, in effect, was a general verdict. Because — in the district court’s view — one of the two claims on which the general verdict was based was not supported by the evidence, the district court ordered a new trial on Plaintiffs sex discrimination claim only.
See generally, Richards,
DISCUSSION
Plaintiff attacks the procedure the district court followed when granting Defendants a new trial. And, she argues that, contrary to the district court’s conclusion, sufficient evidence does support her familial-status discrimination claim. Because we conclude that sufficient evidence does support Plaintiffs familial-status discrimination claim and we reverse the district court’s order on that basis, we do not address Plaintiffs other arguments.
We are faced with the familiar task of reviewing the record to determine if sufficient evidence was introduced to support a verdict in Plaintiffs favor on her discrimination claim. We will reverse the district court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs familial-status discrimination claim was unsupported by sufficient evidence if “Plaintiff presented substantial evidence such that reasonable people, in the exercise of impartial judgment, might reach differing conclusions” on the merits of the claim.
Priester v. City of Riviera Beach,
To prove familial-status discrimination, Plaintiff must show that Defendants discriminated against her “in the terms, conditions, or privileges of ... rental of a dwelling ... because of familial status....” 42 U.S.C. § 3604(b).
4
Famil
At the trial, Defendants advanced legitimate non-discriminatory reasons for their acts. 5 Davis asserts that he terminated Plaintiffs lease specifically because of the apartment’s condition: (1) the interior of her apartment was unclean and (2) Davis believed that Plaintiff and her children were responsible for the trash outside her apartment. These reasons are legitimate non-discriminatory reasons for the eviction. So, Plaintiff needed to produce evidence sufficient to prove by a preponderance that Davis was actually motived by discriminatory animus on the basis of familial status.
A showing that a defendant has lied about the reasons for his acts-that he had a “dishonest belief’ in the reasons-can be strong evidence that a defendant has acted with discriminatory intent.
See Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.,
A plaintiff trying to show pretext based on a defendant’s dishonest belief of the grounds the defendant gave for his decision does not succeed by presenting evidence that the defendant was mistaken about the facts upon which he based his alleged non-discriminatory decision. Instead, a plaintiff must present evidence from which a reasonable jury could find that the defendant did not honestly believe the facts upon which he allegedly based his non-discriminatory decision.
Rojas v. Florida,
The evidence at trial was capable of refuting Davis’s claims that he thought that Plaintiffs apartment was “filthy.” So many witnesses testified that the interior of Plaintiffs apartment was always clean at the varying times that those witnesses visited the apartment that we must conclude that some reasonable jury could have found that Defendant Davis could not have honestly believed that Plaintiffs apartment was filthy. 7 Sufficient evidence supported a jury’s finding that Defendant Davis’s first asserted non-discriminatory reason for evicting Plaintiff was a pretext and that Davis was untruthful.
We believe a reasonable jury could find that Defendant Davis’s second asserted non-discriminatory reason — that Plaintiff and her children were responsible for the trash outside Plaintiffs apartment — was also a pretext. That trash accumulated outside Plaintiffs apartment seems undisputed.
8
But, several witnesses testified that Plaintiff and her children were not the cause of the outdoor trash problem, and the witnesses identified other obvious sources of the trash problem.
9
Plaintiff
When combined with evidence of Defendant Davis’s untruthfulness about the state of the interior of Plaintiffs apartment, we think the testimony about the other obvious sources of trash accumulations outside Plaintiffs apartment would allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Davis did not honestly believe that Plaintiff and her children were responsible for the trash problems outside Plaintiffs apartment. We stress that this asserted non-discriminatory reason- — that the area outside Plaintiffs apartment was filthy — is closely related to Davis’s other proffered reason: that the interior of the apartment was filthy.
10
Thus, that strong evidence was presented to show that Davis’s other non-diserimina-tory reason was pretextual — eight witnesses besides Plaintiff testified about the cleanliness of the interior of Plaintiffs apartment whenever they visited — makes this closely “intertwined” reason “fishy and suspicious” as well.
Wolf v. Buss (America) Inc.,
We conclude, therefore, that sufficient evidence exists to support a finding that Defendant did not honestly believe the reasons he gave for the eviction. But such a conclusion does not necessarily mean that sufficient evidence supported a finding of familial-status discrimination.
See Chapman v. AI Transport,
The ultimate question in cases like this one — whether a plaintiff has been unlawfully discriminated against — can be resolved only in the light of the specific facts of each case.
See Aka v. Washington Hosp. Ctr.,
Aside from the pretextual reasons discussed above, Defendants point to nothing else in the record that they contend shows a reason for the eviction other than familial-status discrimination.
Compare Rothmeier v. Investment Advisers, Inc.,
Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, we are left only with (1) Plaintiffs prima facie case, (2) all of Defendant Davis's asserted reasons for the eviction were false and not honestly believed by Davis, and (3) Davis's hostility to Plaintiff's children. With Defendants advancing no other explanation, 13 with the evidence of Davis's general hostility to Plaintiffs children, and with basically no evidence favorable to Defendant, we must conclude that Plaintiff has presented sufficient evidence to support a jury's finding of familial-status discrimination.
Sufficient evidence supported both theories of recovery presented by Plaintiff to the jury. We therefore REVERSE the district court's order granting Defendants judgment as a matter of law on Plaintiffs familial-status discrimination claim and VACATE the district court's grant of a new trial to Defendants. 14
Notes
.Because the district court based its grant of a new trial to Defendants, following a jury verdict in favor of Plaintiff, on the court's conclusion that one of Plaintiff's claims was unsupported by sufficient evidence, we consider all evidence (and the inferences drawn therefrom) in the light most favorable to Plaintiff.
See Richards v. Michelin Tire Corp.,
. Plaintiff testified that the children were ages 12 and 10 at the time of trial.
. Defendants, together, owned and managed roughly 13 housing units in the complex in which Plaintiff's apartment was located and roughly 30 units throughout the city.
. On appeal, Plaintiff also attempts to rely on the "in the provision of services or facilities” ■ language of Section 3604(b). Because we conclude that Plaintiff presented sufficient evidence of a violation of the "terms, conditions, or privileges” language of Section 3604(b), we do not address Plaintiffs arguments based upon "in the provision of services or facilities” language of Section 3604(b). Nor do we need to decide whether
. Defendants do not make separate arguments that serve to distinguish between themselves&emdash;for instance, about Fanboy's knowledge of Davis's knowledge and acts&emdash; on appeal. Defendants treat themselves as one-and-the-same for purposes of this appeal. So do we.
. When, in the employment context, an employer asserts that a hired or promoted employee was better qualified than the person alleging discrimination, we have described the kind of evidence needed to prove the pretext of the
non-discriminatory reason:
"disparities in qualifications must be of such weight and significance that no reasonable person, in the exercise of impartial judgment, could have chosen the candidate selected over the plaintiff for the job in question.”
Alexander,
. Eight witnesses, besides Plaintiff, testified that Plaintiff's apartment was clean. Only Defendant Davis's testimony was to the contrary. Walter Peek, the property manager before Defendant Davis took over, testified that Plaintiff's apartment was "tastefully decorated” and "always clean.” Dwight Reeves, Plaintiffs former boyfriend, testified that he was at Plaintiff's apartment every day, or every other day, and that Plaintiff kept the apartment clean. Five other witnesses also testified that Plaintiff's apartment was clean, some of whom visited "quite often” or "pretty much every day.” And, Robert Crawford, a neighbor whose children played at Plaintiffs apartment, testified that he became alarmed when he learned from Davis that Davis was evicting Plaintiff because her apartment was "nasty”. Crawford testified that he thereafter found an excuse to see the inside of Plaintiff’s apartment and discovered that it "wasn't nasty”; it was clean.
The strength of evidence does not necessarily depend upon the number of witnesses who testify; but the number is a legitimate consideration among other things, such as whether the single witness in opposition is an interested party.
. Both sides agree that trash accumulated to some degree around the apartment. But Plaintiff did dispute Defendants' claim that Plaintiff had 12-15 bags of trash sitting on her back porch. We therefore must assume that the 12-15 bags did not exist.
. For instance, Walter Peek, the former property manager, testified that a convenience store was nearby and that people used the area around Plaintiff's apartment as a shortcut to go back and forth to that store and purchase snacks and so on. And, Plaintiff testified about a particular time that Defen
Again, Defendant Davis was alone in testifying contrary to Plaintiff’s version of events: Plaintiff’s version being that Plaintiff and her children were obviously not responsible for the trash outside the apartment.
. In fact, Defendants often bundle the two reasons together.
. Evidence showed that other families with children lived in the apartment complex. But, no evidence was presented to show that these families with children lived in the units owned by Defendants.
. As discussed above, Plaintiff signed her lease before Defendants purchased the apartment units.
. Defendants never argue that we can infer no familial-status discriminatory intent from their giving of pretextual reasons because those pretextual reasons were given only to cover Davis's quid pro quo gender discrimination, and not familial-status discrimination. Cf. Fisher v. Vassar College,
. The grant of a new trial is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. See Lipphardt v. Durango Steakhouse of Brandon, Inc.,
