The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED
PEOPLE, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN FAMILY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Dеfendant-Appellee.
No. 91-1176.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 19, 1991.
Decided Oct. 20, 1992.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied Dec. 7, 1992.
William H. Lynch, Angermeier & Rogers, Mark M. Leitner, James Hall, Jr., Charne, Clancy & Taitelman, Gretchen Miller, Milwaukee, Wis., Dennis Cortland-Hayes, Willie Abrams, N.A.A.C.P., Gen. Counsel, Baltimore, Md., Curry First, Legal Aide Soc. of Milwaukee, Litigation Director, Milwaukee, Wis., John A. Powell (argued), ACLU, New York City, for plaintiffs-appellants N.A.A.C.P., Celestine Lindsey, Dorothy Listenbee, James Milner, Diane Pratt, Marvin Pratt, Simon Williams, Beverly Williams and Lois Woods, individually and as representatives of a class of all similarly situated persons.
Thomas L. Shriner, Jr., (argued), Richard M. Esenberg, Brian W. McGrath, Foley & Lardner, Milwaukee, Wis., for defendant-appellee American Family Mut. Ins. Co.
Grant F. Langley, Rudolph M. Konrad, Office of City Atty., Milwaukee, Wis., for amicus curiae City of Milwaukee.
John R. Dunne, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jessica Dunsay Silver, Linda F. Thome, Roger B. Clegg, Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Appellate Section, Paul F. Hancock (argued), Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Housing Section, Washington, D.C., for amicus curiae U.S.
Joseph R. Guerra, Sidley & Austin, Washington, D.C., for amicus curiae Nat. Fair Housing Alliance.
Lawrence M. Cohen, Jeffrey S. Goldman, Michael A. Paull, Fox & Grove, Chicago, Ill., for amicus curiae Nat. Ass'n of Independent Insurers.
Before COFFEY and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Is redlining in the insurance business a form of racial discrimination violating the Fair Housing Act? "Redlining" is charging higher rates or declining to write insurance for people who live in particular areas (figuratively, sometimes literally, enclosed with red lines on a map). The NAACP, its Milwaukee Branch, and eight of its members contend in this class action that redlining violates the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601-19, and four other rules of state and federal law when insurers draw their lines around areas that have large or growing minority populations.
Plaintiffs contend that a mortgage loan usually is essential to home ownership, and that lenders are unwilling to provide credit unless the borrower obtains insurance on the house that serves as security for the loan. Higher premiums price some would-be buyers out of the market; a refusal to write insurance excludes all buyers. If insurers redline areas with large or growing numbers of minority residents, that practice raises the cost of housing for black persons and also frustrates their ability to live in integrated neighborhoods. Even if they achieve their goal, they pay extra.
The complaint asserts that American Family Mutual Insurance Company engages in redlining in and near Milwaukee. The district judge concluded that two of plaintiffs' five theories are legally insufficient. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Following Mackey v. Nationwide Insurance Cos.,
Because the district judge dismissed claims under Title VIII and Wisconsin's insurance code in advance of discovery, we must assume that plaintiffs can establish that the defendant intentionally discriminates on account of race. That is, we must assume that the plaintiffs can establish disparate treatment and not just a disparate impact of decisions made on actuarial grounds. The distinction is important not only because the Supreme Court has yet to decide whether practices with disparate impact violate Title VIII, see Huntington v. NAACP,
Risk discrimination is not race discrimination. Yet efforts to differentiate more fully among risks may produce classifications that could be generated by discrimination. Recall the dispute, in both courts and journals, whether separate annuity tables for women are sex discrimination. See Arizona Governing Committee v. Norris,
A disparate treatment approach assigns burdens of proof and persuasion to the plaintiff, while a disparate impact approach places them on the insurer. Allocation of these burdens is bound to affect many cases, given the difficulty in drawing inferences. For example, a recent study by the Federal Reserve System concluded that black applicants for mortgage loans are more likely to be turned down, holding income constant. Glenn B. Canner & Dolores S. Smith, Home Mortgage Disclosure Act: Expanded Data on Residential Lending, 77 Fed.Res.Bull. 859, 868-76 (1991). Is this attributable to applicants' race, to the fact that they seek loans that are larger multiples of their average wealth, or to difficulties of obtaining insurance that may (or may not) themselves have a racial component? The Federal Reserve reported data on applicants' income but not their wealth or the value of the loans sought, both important variables. The greater the uncertainty in drawing inferences, the more the placement of the burden matters. We mention this not to resolve the question but to make clear that we have not done so by indirection. All we decide is whether the complaint states claims on which the plaintiffs may prevail if they establish that the insurer has drawn lines according to race rather than actuarial calculations.
* Appellate jurisdiction is the first question. Rule 54(b) allows a court to "direct the entry of a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties" but does not employ a special meaning of "final". So it does not authorize appeal of decisions that, if made in stand-alone litigation, would not be final. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Wetzel,
The district judge did not discuss the legal and factual overlap between the two counts being dismissed and the three being retained and did not explain why he viewed them as separate claims. A "claim for relief" seeks redress of a distinct wrong; a distinct legal underpinning differs from a new claim and is not independently appealable. A/S Apothekernes Laboratorium for Specialpraeparater v. I.M.C. Chemical Group, Inc.,
Plaintiffs' complaint begins with 66 paragraphs and then states five "claims," each of which incorporates these paragraphs and asserts one reason why the conduct is wrongful. The Fair Housing Act and the state insurance code are two. The other three: Wisconsin's Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (the right to be free of racial discrimination in making contracts), and 42 U.S.C. § 1982 (the right to be free of racial discrimination in buying real property). Perhaps the judge was led astray by the structure of the complaint. Identifying legal theories may assist defendants and the court in seeing how the plaintiff hopes to prevail, but this organization does not track the idea of "claim for relief" in the federal rules. Putting each legal theory in a separate count is a throwback to code pleading, perhaps all the way back to the forms of action; in both, legal theory and facts together created a "cause of action." The Rules of Civil Procedure divorced factual from legal aspects of the claim and replaced "cause of action" with "claim for relief" to signify the difference. Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G. (Zurich),
One set of facts producing one injury creates one claim for relief, no matter how many laws the deeds violate. Car Carriers, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.,
Language in some of our cases equates "claim" in Rule 54(b) with "claim" for purposes of res judicata, but as we observed in Olympia Hotels Corp. v. Johnson Wax Development Corp.,
"Sufficiently" and "substantially" are hedges. Ideally the facts and theories separated for immediate appeal should not overlap with those retained; to the extent they do, the court of appeals is "deciding" claims still pending in the district court, and may have to cover the same ground when the district court acts on the residue. A combination of anticipation with overlap leads to wasteful duplication and increases the likelihood of conflict (or error). In disdaining bright lines and asking how much duplication is too much, we enter the zone of shadings traditionally committed to a district judge's discretion. So the Supreme Court emphasized in Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. General Electric Co.,
Although the district judge in our case confused Rule 54(b) with § 1292(b), we do not believе that he abused his discretion in permitting an immediate appeal. American Family stated, in its memorandum concerning appellate jurisdiction, that "the dismissed Fair Housing Act claim, would, if it were viable, be subject to proof under a disparate impact formula, rather than under the 'intentional racial discrimination' test applicable to all the counts remaining in the district court." Huntington and Bellwood v. Dwivedi,
One additional jurisdictional problem needs attention. American Family insists that there is no case or controversy within the meaning of Article III because none of the plaintiffs has been unable to buy a house. This is strictly a constitutional argument, for the definition of "aggrieved person" in Title VIII, 42 U.S.C. § 3602(i), eliminates any prudential barriers to adjudication. Gladstone, Realtors v. Bellwood,
After Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, --- U.S. ----,
II
Any effort to use federal law to prescribe or penalize the behavior of insurers must reckon with the McCarran-Ferguson Act. Section 2(b) of this statute, 15 U.S.C. § 1012(b), provides: "No Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance ... unless such Act specifically relates to the business of insurance". American Family is engaged in the business of insurance; plaintiffs complain about how, and at what price, American Family writes (or declines to write) policies of insurance. The McCarran-Ferguson Act establishes a form of inverse preemption, letting state law prevail over general federal rules--those that do not "specifically relate[ ] to the business of insurance." Title VIII does not mention insurance and therefore cannot apply to its endeavors, American Family concludes. Plaintiffs rejoined at oral argument that racial discrimination is not insurance. The Fair Housing Act requires race-blind practices in housing and related services; it does not tell anyone how to write insurance and therefore does not regulate the business of insurance, plaintiffs conclude.
Doubtless there is a difference between the business of insurance and the business of insurers. Pilot Life Insurance Co. v. Dedeaux,
A stronger argument appears in plaintiffs' reply brief: that the McCarran-Ferguson Act does not apply to subsequently enacted civil rights statutes. This submission has the support of Spirt v. Teachers Insurance and Annuity Ass'n,
We find, based on the historical context, the legislative history, and judicial interpretations of that history, that Congress, in enacting a statute primarily intended to deal with the conflict between state regulation of insurers and the federal antitrust laws, had no intention of declaring that subsequently enacted civil rights legislation would be inapplicable to any and all of the activities of an insurance company that can be classified as "the business of insurance."
"No Act of Congress" could not be more сomprehensive. The McCarran-Ferguson Act creates a rule of construction applicable to all other federal laws, a "plain statement" approach. We had no difficulty applying the Act to subsequent legislation such as the Truth in Lending Act. Lowe v. AARCO-American, Inc.,
Spirt and all of the district court decisions reaching a similar conclusion predate Norris, in which four Justices concluded that the McCarran-Ferguson Act applies to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Although American Family insists that this conclusion ends the case, it does not. What state law regulating the business of insurance does Title VIII "invalidate, impair, or supersede"? None that we could find. American Family points to two: Wis.Stat. § 101.22(2)(e), which forbids discrimination by casualty insurers on the basis of race, and Wis.Stat. § 628.34(3), which more generally interdicts "unfair discrimination" in the business of insurance. Although American Family insists that it is "of no importance" that "these statutes may not be inconsistent with the Fair Housing Act", this is hard to swallow. Literalism cuts both ways. Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc., --- U.S. ----, ----,
Undoubtedly there is a sense in which any overlap between state and federal law upsets a balance struck by one of the two legislatures. Gade v. National Solid Wastes Management Ass'n, --- U.S. ----, ---- - ----,
Principles of labor law do not transfer to other subjects, however. Garmon and similar opinions rest on a conclusion that Congress occupied the field of labor relations, so that it remains only to decide which state laws regulate "labor relations" and which address broader subjects (such as criminal violence) that intersect with but do not displace federal rules. In the main, federal regulation of a subject--even thoroughgoing federal regulation--does not prevent states from adding remedies to the arsenal established by federal law. The McCarran-Ferguson Act is a form of inverse preemption, so principles defining when state remedies conflict with (and so are preempted by) federal law are pertinent in deciding when federal rules "invalidate, impair, or supersede" state rules.
Consider nuclear power. Nationаl law regulates almost every nook and cranny of industries handling radioactive materials. Yet the Court held in Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
Considerations of this kind led the fourth circuit to hold in Mackey that application of the Fair Housing Act to insurance would not impair or supersede any state law, although North Carolina, like Wisconsin, forbids discriminatory rates in the insurance business.
Lowe's unstated premise is that a federal statute duplicating the terms of state law "invalidate[s], impair[s], or supersede[s]" state law. Lowe did not explain why and cited no authority. This omission has opened Lowe to criticism by the fifth circuit. Cochran v. Paco, Inc.,
Nоthing in this conclusion permits federal law to displace states' choices about the proper conduct of the business of insurance. If Wisconsin wants to authorize redlining, it need only say so; if it does, any challenge to that practice under the auspices of the Fair Housing Act becomes untenable. American Family has not drawn to our attention, however, any law, regulation, or decision in Wisconsin requiring redlining, condoning that practice, committing to insurers all decisions about redlining, or holding that redlining with discriminatory intent (or disparate impact) does not violate state law. Cf. FTC v. Ticor Title Insurance Co., --- U.S. ----,
III
According to the plaintiffs, threе sections of the Fair Housing Act address insurance sold (or withheld) in connection with the purchase of a dwelling: 42 U.S.C. §§ 3604(a), 3604(b), and 3605. Section 3605 requires the least discussion. It provides:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person or other entity whose business includes engaging in residential real estate-related transactions to discriminate against any person in making available such a transaction, or in the terms or conditions of such a transaction, because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin.
(b) As used in this section, the term "residential real estate-related transaction" means any of the following:
(1) The making or purchasing of loans or providing other financial assistance--
(A) for purchasing, constructing, improving, repairing, or maintaining a dwelling; or
(B) secured by residential real estate.
(2) The selling, brokering, or appraising of residential real property.
It would strain language past the breaking point to treat property or casualty insurance as "financial assistance"--let alone as assistance "for purchasing ... a dwelling". Insurers do not subsidize their customers or act as channels through which public agencies extend subsidies. They do not "assist" customers even in the colloquial sense that loans are "assistance" (a lender advances cash, with repayment deferred). Payment runs from the customer to the insurer. Insurance is no more "financial assistance" than a loaf of bread purchased at retail price in a supermarket is "food assistance" or a bottle of aspirin bought from a druggist is "medical assistance."
Section 3604 makes it unlawful:
(a) To refuse to sell or rent after the making of a bona fide offer, or to refuse to negotiate for the sale or rental of, or otherwise make unavailable or deny, a dwelling to any person because of race, color, religion, sex, familial status, or national origin.
(b) To discriminate against any person in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling, or in the provisiоn of services or facilities in connection therewith, because of race, color, sex, familial status, or national origin.
Plaintiffs rely on the portions of these sections that we have italicized. They contend that by refusing to write policies (or setting a price too dear) an insurer "make[§ a dwelling] unavailable" to the potential buyer. Lenders require their borrowers to secure property insurance. No insurance, no loan; no loan, no house; lack of insurance thus makes housing unavailable. Cf. Cartwright v. American Savings & Loan Ass'n,
Nothing in the text of the statute permits us to rejеct these proposed readings. The Fair Housing Act does not define key terms such as "service" and "make unavailable". By writing its statute in the passive voice--banning an outcome while not saying who the actor is, or how such actors bring about the forbidden consequence--Congress created ambiguity.
Although § 3604 could bear the reading plaintiffs propose, it need not. It does not mention insurers or forbidden devices. Plaintiffs would like us to embrace the "remedial purpose" of the statute. Title VIII indeed is designed to root out racial discrimination in the housing market. Whether it reaches insurers, however, is not something a general reference to purpose discloses. One can always do "more" in pursuit of a goal, but statutes have limits. You cannot discover how far a statute goes by observing the direction in which it points. "Finding the meaning of a statute is more like calculating a vector (with direction and length) than it is like identifying which way the underlying 'values' or 'purposes' point (which has direction alone). Cf. Walton v. United States Consumers Club, Inc.,
After denying that "remedial purpose" alone extends the statute to insurance, the fourth circuit in Mackey gave several reasons why it believed that § 3604 does not apply. The first is that § 3605 shows that § 3604 must be read narrowly. "If § 804 [§ 3604] was designed to reach every discriminatory act that might conceivably affect the availability of housing, § 805's specific prohibition of discrimination in the provision of financing would have been superfluous."
As a second reason for treating § 3604 as inapplicable to insurance, Mackey observed that "[t]he insurance industry has traditionally classified risks. If insurance premiums are to remain at reasonable levels for most householders, some insurers must be permitted to reject risks which are perceived to be excessively high, while charging higher premiums on some risks than upon others."
Mackey also stressed the omission from both § 3604 and its legislative history of any reference to insurance. Because § 3604 uses the passive voice, however, it omits reference to any person. Insurers, escrow agents, title searchers, and so on are treated alike. The fourth circuit ultimately concluded that "service" in § 3604 means no more than "garbage collection and other services of the kind usually provided by municipalities",
Silence in the legislative history could imply that Members of Congress did not anticipate that the law would apply to insurers. Silence equally could imply that the debate was about the principle of non-discrimination, leaving details to the future. The backward phraseology of § 3604 suggests the latter possibility. What was in the heads of the legislators is not, however, the measure of their enactment. Only the statute, and not the debates, is part of the United States Code. Persuasive evidence that Congress embedded terms of art in the text might lead us to confine its scope, Continental Can Co. v. Chicago Truck Drivers Pension Fund,
In 1980 the silence was broken. A district court concluded that the Fair Housing Act covers property insurers. Dunn v. Midwestern Indemnity Mid-American Fire & Casualty Co.,
By parallel reasoning, we dispatch American Family's argument that legislative failure to overturn Mackey is significant. Interest groups alert Congress to many judicial decisions, and the legislature frequently alters the law to countermand opinions that do not find favor in today's political climate. During the last quarter century, Congress has interred an average of 15 opinions per year, about two-thirds of these opinions by the inferior courts. William N. Eskridge, Jr., Overriding Supreme Court Statutory Interpretation Decisions, 101 Yale L.J. 331, 338 (1991). Courts of appeals and district courts issue tens of thousands of opinions yearly, however, so an opinion has to stir up a hornets' nest to get on the agenda. Most of the time, Congress waits to see whether a higher court will reach a different conclusion. Mackey appeared on the agenda, but some Members of Congress opposed the proposal to change Title VIII. Members of Congress expressed conflicting views, but Congress as an institution took a pass. That decision carries no significance.
Congress has not been inactive since Mackey, however. In 1988 it enacted amendments to the Fair Housing Act, authorizing the Department of Housing and Urban Development to "make rules ... to carry out this subchapter." 42 U.S.C. § 3614a. Congress gave the Executive Branch this power with knowledge that since 1978 a succession of Secretaries have believed that "[i]nsurance redlining, by denying or impeding coverage[,] makes mortgage money unavailable, rendеring dwellings 'unavailable' as effectively as the denial of financial assistance on other grounds". Memorandum by the General Counsel of HUD, quoted in Dunn,
Section 3604 is sufficiently pliable that its text can bear the Secretary's construction. Courts should respect a plausible construction by an agency to which Congress has delegated the power to make substantive rules. Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Among the amendments in 1988, however, was a provision for administrative enforcement paralleling judicial enforcement. 42 U.S.C. §§ 3610-12. The Secretary's regulations would receive deference in an action to enforce HUD's administrative decision. It would be weird to say that Title VIII applies to insurers on judicial review of administrative actions but not when the litigation begins in district court. Long before Adams Fruit, indeed long before the Secretary had the power to issue regulations and adjudicate complaints under Title VIII, the Supreme Court declared that the Secretary's views about the meaning of that statute are entitled to "great weight". Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
Events have bypassed Mackey. We have expressed doubt about the interpretive methods used in that opinion. No matter how a court should have understood the Fair Housing Act in 1984, however, the question today is whether the Secretary's regulations are tenable. They are. Section 3604 applies to discriminatory denials of insurance, and discriminatory pricing, that effectively preclude ownership of housing because of the race of the applicant.
IV
Plaintiffs contend that redlining violates state law in two ways. First, they believe, redlining entails racial discrimination forbidden by Wis.Stat. § 101.22(2)(e). Second, they contend, redlining is an "unfair" practice that offends several provisions of the Insurance Code. American Family concedes that plaintiffs are entitled to enforce § 101.22(2)(e) in private litigation but denies that statutes and regulations speaking more generally about "unfair" practices create private rights of action. The district court agreed with this submission and dismissеd the complaint to the extent it relied on Wis.Stat. §§ 625.11(1) and 628.34(3), and Wis.Adm.Code INS 6.68. Our review is plenary. Salve Regina College v. Russell, --- U.S. ----,
Section 625.11(1) forbids "unfair discrimination" in the setting of rates but does not specify what unfair discrimination consists in. Section 628.34(3) bans differentials in premiums and coverages unless based on "classifications related to the nature and the degree of the risk covered and the expenses involved". Regulation INS 6.68 adds a bit of specificity to these open-ended statutes. Plaintiffs rely particularly on INS 6.68(3)(a), which identifies the following as "unfairly discriminatory" for purposes of the insurance statutes:
Making or permitting any unfair discrimination between individuals or risks of the same class and of essentially the same hazards by refusing to issue, refusing to renew, canceling or limiting the amount of insurance coverage on a property or casualty risk because of the geographic location of the risk, unless:
1. The refusal, cancellation or limitation is for a business purpose which is nоt a mere pretext for unfair discrimination, or
2. The refusal, cancellation or limitation is required by law or regulatory mandate.
Redlining is a distinction based on the "geographic location of the risk" and hence unlawful in Wisconsin as "unfairly discriminatory" unless "for a business purpose which is not a mere pretext for unfair discrimination".
Neither of these statutes, nor regulation INS 6.68, specifies private litigation or provides a remedy in damages. Each regulates general business practices and leaves much to the discretion of whoever must determine what is "unfair" or "for a business purpose". Like charges to a federal agency to identify the "public interest, convenience, and necessity," these rules read more like descriptions of an agency's turf than like individual rights to be enforced in litigation.
No court of Wisconsin has permitted anyone to enforce provisions of this kind in the insurance laws through private litigation. Plaintiffs observe that many state cases say that a remedy accompanies every right, e.g., Urwan v. Northwestern National Life Insurance Co.,
Kranzush v. Badger State Mutual Casualty Co.,
Perhaps the Supreme Court of Wisconsin ultimately will conclude that the specification of an administrative remеdy in INS 6.11 distinguishes that section from INS 6.68. Extensions of state law are best left to state courts. This is a case about racial discrimination, and plaintiffs will have ample opportunity to prove their claims under both state and federal law.
V
Because this opinion overrules Lowe to the extent that Lowe holds that the McCarran-Ferguson Act prevents the application of federal laws duplicating state rules, and because it conflicts with both the second circuit's views in Spirt and the fourth circuit's holding in Mackey, it was circulated before release to all judges in active service. See Circuit Rule 40(f). No judge requested a hearing in banc.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed to the extent it holds that there is no private right of action to enforce Wis.Stat. §§ 625.11(1) and 628.34(3), and Wis.Adm.Code INS 6.68. The judgment is reversed to the extent it holds that the Fair Housing Act is inapplicable to property and casualty insurance written or withheld in connection with the purchase of real estate. The case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
