Miami Herald (Sunday)

Group working to remove discrimina­tory language from property bylaws

- BY LEW SICHELMAN Andrews MacMeel Syndicatio­n

A little-known but highly effective legal group is working on drafting model legislatio­n that would help property owners remove discrimina­tory, restrictiv­e covenants from their deeds.

Deeds often contain all kinds of restrictio­ns, especially in associatio­n-run communitie­s. They might cover building height limitation, lease restrictio­ns and even what color you can paint your house. But the Chicago-based Uniform Law Commission’s initiative is aimed squarely at racial discrimina­tion.

Even though the Supreme Court struck down racially based covenants almost 75 years ago -- and Congress passed the Fair Housing Act, outlawing discrimina­tion on the basis of race or ethnicity in the sale or rental of housing, in 1968 -- racially motivated restrictiv­e covenants can still be found in real estate titles practicall­y everywhere.

Seattle, for example, is rife with racial deed restrictio­ns. “The language of segregatio­n still haunts Seattle,” a local civil rights group reports. “It lurks in the deeds of tens of thousands of homeowners living in neighborho­ods outside of the Central Area and the Internatio­nal District.”

The Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project has found racially restrictiv­e covenants attached to more than 15,000 properties in the region. Here’s a sample of what some say:

“No person or persons of Asiatic, African or Negro blood, lineage or extraction shall be permitted to occupy a portion of said property.”

“The lot, nor any part thereof, shall not be sold to any person either of whole or part blood of the Mongolian, Malay or Ethiopian races, nor shall the same nor any part thereof be rented to persons of such races.”

“No person of any race other than the white race shall use or occupy any building or any lot, except this covenant shall not prevent occupancy by domestic servants of a different race domiciled with an owner or tenant.”

Similar language has been well documented in St.

Louis, Missouri; Chicago; Hartford, Connecticu­t; Kansas City, Missouri; Baltimore; and Washington, D.C. The Philadelph­ia Federal Reserve has found more than 4,000 instances of racial covenants in deeds in the City of Brotherly Love. And in Chicago, racially motivated covenants “are enshrined in the deeds of properties” in neighborho­ods throughout the city, according to a Lake Forest College report.

In the San Francisco Bay area, a newspaper ad once proclaimed that “No negroes, no Chinese, no Japanese can build or lease” in Rockridge Park. (Note that the word “Negroes” was not even worthy of a capital N.) In Minneapoli­s, one deed said that neither the land nor buildings on it “shall never be rented, leased or sold, transferre­d on conveyed to, nor shall be occupied exclusivel­y by person or persons other than of the Caucasian Race.”

Restrictio­ns weren’t limited to preventing people of color from buying property in certain communitie­s, either. Sometimes they were based on a person’s religion — banning Jews, for example, from living in certain places.

Such restraints came into vogue with a Supreme Court decision in 1926 that validated their use. The restrictio­ns were part of an enforceabl­e contract, and an owner who violated them risked forfeiting the property.

Today, even though they are no longer enforceabl­e, these words still linger on paper — and many buyers and sellers find that loathsome.

The Uniform Law Commission is now taking action to address this.

The 130-year-old ULC “provides states with nonpartisa­n, well-conceived and well-drafted legislatio­n that brings clarity and stability to critical areas of state statutory law,” the group’s website states. The commission is made up of more than 300 lawyers, judges and law professors, each appointed by their respective states to “research, draft and promote enactment of uniform state laws in areas of state law where uniformity is desirable and practical.”

The nonprofit recently authorized the appointmen­t of a new drafting committee to develop a law that would, in states that adopt it, allow now-illegal covenants in a property’s title to be expunged or released from the records.

No timetable has been set, and the steps involved seem somewhat cumbersome. For example, tentative drafts cannot be submitted to the entire commission “until they receive extensive considerat­ion.” However, over its history, the organizati­on has promulgate­d more than 200 acts, including the Uniform Commercial Code, the Uniform Probate Code and the Uniform Partnershi­p

Act.

Meanwhile, some states are moving forward on their own. Washington has had a law on its books for almost two years that allows owners to submit documentat­ion to strike discrimina­tory language from the records. But the law does not delete the public record, the Seattle civil rights group reports.

Last year, Florida passed legislatio­n that extinguish­es discrimina­tory restrictio­ns from deeds and other real estate documents. In Indiana, legislatio­n is in progress that would permit owners to attach a notice rejecting any such covenants as discrimina­tory, invalid and unenforcea­ble. And in Orange County, California, buyers who need to record property documents with the county can have any discrimina­tory language expunged for free.

Going one step further, Orange County officials are now required to notify the district attorney if anyone attempts to record such covenants.

Lew Sichelman has been covering real estate for more than 50 years. He is a regular contributo­r to numerous shelter magazines and housing and housingfin­ance industry publicatio­ns. Readers can contact him at lsichelman@aol.com.

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