The Credit Union National Association (CUNA) and several financial services trade organizations petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review cases involving Fair Housing Act (FHA) claims filed by municipalities.
CUNA and the trades asked the Supreme Court to review Bank of America v. City of Miami and Wells Fargo v. City of Miami, as the organizations having a “significant interest in ensuring the FHA is enforced in a fair and reasonable way,” CUNA announced in a release.
The city of Miami brought suit against the two banks, arguing discriminatory actions against city residents entitled the city to damages for indirect harm. The city argued that foreclosures and other events stemming from unfavorable mortgages resulted in lost revenue from lower property taxes and other incurred expenses, the release stated.
“The court of appeals held that the proximate cause requirement for private litigation under the FHA imposes little if any effective limitation on novel FHA claims by plaintiffs who are not the direct victims of an alleged FHA violation and instead seek compensation for ‘ripples of harm’ extending outwards from such violations,” the trade associations’ brief stated. “The massive wave of litigation under the FHA — brought by private lawyers on behalf of municipalities — will impose potentially enormous costs on lenders without significantly advancing the goals of the FHA.”
The organizations believe the cases warrant Supreme Court review for at least three reasons:
- Numerous municipalities are asserting novel claims against banks under the FHA, seeking sums that range in the hundreds of millions of dollars, creating an issue of exceptional importance;
- The Court of Appeals’ decision on remand failed to adhere to principles set out in a previous Supreme Court decision; and
- The Court of Appeals failed to recognize that both the federal government and directly injured borrowers were fully equipped to remedy violations of the FHA by seeking damages as well as injunctive relief.