TERRY L. MORRIS and DIANE
MORRIS, Complainants,
VS.
DARREL COX and PATTI COX, Respondents.
FINDINGS OF FACT
1. The Complainant, Terry
L. Morris, timely filed verified complaint CP# 10-85-13676, with
the Iowa Civil Rights Commission on October 16, 1985 alleging
a violation of Iowa Code, Chapter 601A, discrimination in housing
on the basis of race, against Darrel Cox and through amendment
on February 13, 1986 against Patti Cox.
2. The Complainant, Diane Morris, timely filed verified complaint CP #10-85-13677, with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission on October 16, 1985 alleging a violation of Iowa Code, Chapter 601A, discrimination in housing on the basis of race, against Darrel Cox and through amendment on February 13, 1986 against Patti Cox.
3. The two cases were consolidated for purpose of public hearing.
4. The cases were investigated,
probable cause found, conciliation unsuccessfully attempted and
the cases proceeded to public hearing with Notices issued on September
15, 1986.
5. Diane Morris and Terry
Morris are wife and husband, married on October 4, 1974. Diane
is a white person and Terry is mixed Indian and a Black person.
The children were mixed and their Black characteristics were observable.
Terry and Diane have four children: Janon, age 11; Terry, Jr.,
age 10; Jesma, age 8; and Elijah, age 7. Diane grew up in Iowa.
Prior to moving to Boone, the Morris family lived in Sioux City,
Iowa.
6. In June 1985, the Morris Family visited with Amy Sinn, Diane's sister who lives in Boone, for two weeks. During that time Diane and Amy contacted Century 21 Realty and specifically Laura Quam, a Century 21 agent, for help in finding a rental unit. Diane informed Quam that she had four children. They were shown several properties. The one which Diane was interested in was located at 1140 Union Street, Boone, Iowa, a three bedroom house. She was then referred to Clark Realty, who was handling rental of that property. Clark Realty informed her that there was a $275.00 deposit and the monthly rent was $275.00. Diane felt the deposit was too high because considerable cleaning was needed and offered to pay $100.00 deposit. Clark Realty then called the owners of the house [Allen and Alma Hoffman, Scottsdale, Arizona] to see if they would accept the lesser amount.
They agreed and the deposit
and rent for one month were sent directly to the Hoffmans in the
form of a money order. The oral agreement was for a month to month
rental. The Morris family had no direct contact with the Hoffmans.
Clark Realty representatives were informed that there were four
children and a dog.
7. On July 6, 1985, the
Morris family moved to Boone. The decision to move to Boone was
based on Terry's drug related associations in Sioux City and the
resulting marital problems. The Boone move was an attempt to solve
their problems. They chose Boone because Diane's sister lived
in Boone at that time and felt a small town environment would
help them solve their problems.
8. The house at 1140 Union
Street was in a residential district. Complainants moved into
that house late afternoon on July 6, 1985. They used a Ryder truck
and had several friends helping them unload the truck. The children
and the dog were still in Sioux City. Sometime during the unloading,
Diane noticed a group of people gathered on the front lawn of
the house directly across South Benton Street and facing the side
of the Union Street house. Lawrence Happel lived in that house.
The people just lined up and watched the unloading process. No
one said "Hi" or offered to help. It was dark by the
time they finished unloading. The next morning they got up at
4:00 a.m. and drove the rented truck back to Sioux City.
9. The Morris family including
the children and the dog, returned to their new home at 1140 Union
on July 7, early evening. Diane spent the next day or two unpacking
and organizing the house; the children played outside; and, Terry
was pretty much incapacitated because he was having problems with
his arm. He was receiving workers compensation at the time. No
one from the neighborhood visited them. They had no phone. On
the 9th, Diane went back to Sioux City with Terry who was scheduled
to have surgery on his arm; he was hospitalized and they again
returned to Boone on the evening of the 11th. The children had
stayed with Amy during this trip to Sioux City.
10. The next several days
were spent unpacking and organizing the house. For about the first
week after the surgery, Terry was in bed recuperating from the
surgery. He did go out to do some shopping several times. The
dog was chained to a ground hook near the garage. About a week
later, because some neighborhood children teased the dog, he was
moved and chained to the garage. No one complained to the Morris's
that the dog barked nor that he was wearing paint off the garage
because of where he was chained. Amy visited Diane frequently
after she got off work in the afternoon.
11. On July 16th, the Morris's
drove to Sioux City to pick up the workers comp checks and to
get Terry's cast removed. They left around 9 or 10 in the morning
and returned after dark. Amy watched the children at 1140 Union
and was there when they returned. Upon their return, Amy informed
them that they had been served with an eviction notice. This was
10 days after they had moved in.
12. Diane was not shocked
by the eviction notice. She felt unwanted in the neighborhood
and had a bad feeling from the time they unloaded the truck. She
had observed cars driving back and forth slowly past the house
and felt they were just staring at them. One neighbor child told
the Morris children to get out of Boone; a couple others called
the children "nigger", including Joel Cox, son of Respondents.
13. The eviction notice
ignited the problems between Terry and Diane. She blamed him,
they argued; and, around August 5th Terry left. He returned to
Sioux City and then to South Dakota. Diane and the children were
left to face the eviction on their own.
14. Darrel and Patti Cox,
husband and wife and both white, owned and lived in the house
at 1136 Union Street next door to 1140 Union. Their son was named
Joel. Their driveway was between the two houses. Otherwise the
houses were fairly close together. The Morris house was on a comer
directly across South Benton Street from the house of Lawrence
Happel, also a white person. The Coxes moved into 1130 Union in
August 1980. For almost eight months prior to that, they had rented
1140 Union from the Hoffmans. Darrel Cox is a law enforcement
officer of the Iowa State Patrol and was serving as a community
service officer. Patti Cox is a registered nurse employed by the
Des Moines Area Community College in Boone as a clinical nursing
instructor. Lawrence Happel was semi-retired.
15. When the Morris family
moved in, the Coxes were on vacation. They did not return until
late evening on July 10, 1985. When they returned home that evening
they noticed lights on in the house at 1140 Union and a car in
the driveway. On July 11th, Darrel mowed his lawn. He noticed
that the children who had moved in were Black children. He noticed
that the lawn at 1140 Union had not been mowed for quite some
time. His own had not been mown for eight days. It should be noted
that the Hesser's across the street had been gone for about two
weeks and their yard had not been mown either. Several neighbors
came over and talked with Darrel. Their main concern was who was
living in the house at 1140 Union. Their expressed concern was
that they saw "a Black man and a white woman with
the moving van", and didn't know how many people were living
there. The neighbors reported to Darrel that they had seen a Black
man and two white women and seven children in the area
of the 1140 Union residence. [Transcript 293]. It is noted that
Terry, a Black man, and Diane, a white woman, and
four children of mixed race were living in the house. Diane's
sister and her two children who lived in Boone, all white,
did visit at 1140 Union, but did not live there.
16. It should be noted that
the Cox family arrived home late afternoon on July 10th.
Diane and Terry Morris returned from Sioux City late on July 11th.
The children and Amy Sinn were present at 1140 Union on the 10th
and 11th. On the morning of July 12, 1985, the next day
and less than a day and a half from the time they returned
from vacation, Darrel Cox went to Clark Realty to talk with John
Clark about the rental of 1140 Union. The rental precedent with
the Hoffmans was that when renters move out, they help find other
renters. The Coxes did so when they moved out. The last renter
was Linda Henesco who moved out when she married John Clark. For
that reason, Darrel Cox went to see John Clark. He said he wanted
to know who was living at 1140 Union. When Darrel returned from
the meeting with John Clark, he conferred with his wife, Patti
Cox. At 12:30 p.m. on July 12, 1985, that same day, the Coxes
placed a phone call to the owners of 1140 Union, Allen and Alma
Hoffman in Scottsdale, Arizona. During that phone conversation,
Patti told the Hoffmans that there was a Black man and
two white women and seven children in and out of the house. Darrel
stated that the purpose of calling the Hoffmans was to see who
was living in the house, how many people were living in the house,
and whether or not they had rented the house. The Coxes owned
no interest nor had any rights in the property located at 1140
Union.
17. John Clark testified
that on July 12th, Darrel Cox inquired as to whether or not there
was an ordinance which would prevent two families from living
in a house such as 1140 Union. He was told by Darrel that there
was apparently a Black man and four children with a white
wife and another lady with three or four children moving in. Sometime
after the Coxes had called the Hoffmans, the Hoffmans called John
Clark in a belligerent manner inferring he should have checked
the renters out. They threatened to sue Clark. Clark found out
about the eviction notice from Leonard Nelson, attorney for the
Hoffmans, when Nelson called Clark and said that: "We're
in a lot of trouble." Clark denies being a party to leasing
the house to the Morris family. [Transcript 210].
18. Amy Sinn, sister of
Diane Morris, helped in the moving and witnessed the people gathered
in the yard of the Happels. Amy was staying with the Morris children
on the day the Sheriff served the eviction notice. She had two
children. Amy accompanied Diane to John Clark's office after the
eviction notice. John did not deny or admit the reasons the Hoffmans
gave for eviction was based on race. He said it was because of
the lawn, junk cars, and such things. He did show Diane and Amy
the non- discrimmation plaque that was posted in the Realty office.
19. One day when the Morris
family returned from Des Moines, they found their dog frightened
and cowering because someone had thrown bottle rockets at him.
This was after the 4th of July. No one had ever complained to
them about the dog. [Transcript 1491.
20. Gene Hesser, who lived
across Union Street from the Morris family, had been on vacation
and returned just after the Morris family moved in. Shortly after
he arrived home, Lawrence Happel and another neighbor, Bob Greco,
came over and expressed concern about a Black man, two
white women and seven lads moving in. Later at work, he heard
rumors that a petition was being circulated in the neighborhood
to force the Morris family out and rumors of an eviction notice.
He never saw the petition. Darrel's son had told him his dad was
going to see John Clark. Gene Hesser did not know of any reason
why the Morris family should be evicted. His wife, Karen, also
knew of no reasons for the eviction. [Transcript 463]. Gene was concerned
with what he felt were racist feelings in the neighborhood.
21. The Morris family felt
and believed that there were neighborhood meetings held to discuss
getting them out of the neighborhood. Hesser had heard rumors
of such meetings but knew of none. [Transcript 252].
22. Leonard Nelson, attorney
for the Hoffmans, prepared and had the eviction notice served.
He claimed attorney-client privilege on questions relating to
the Hoffmans' reasons for requesting that an eviction notice be
served.
23. Darrel Cox stated that
he was concerned about the lawn, the dog, toys in the driveway,
the fact that they didn't know who was living in the house. [Transcript
333].
24. On July 11 th, Patti
Cox observed the lawn needing to be mowed, the dog, and seven
children. On the 12th, they were going to see John Clark to find
out if he had rented 1140 Union. She said the neighbors were confused
as to whom had moved in. Darrel reported to Patti that Clark had
not rented the property. They decided then to call the Hoffmans
and Patti initiated the call at 12:38 p.m. on July 12, 1985. They
talked for 13 minutes. Patti stated that her inquiry of the Hoffman's
was: "I'm calling to inquire about your rental policies."
When Mrs. Hoffman asked: *Why? What do you see?", Patti described
the occupants of 1140 Union "to be a Black man and
a white woman and four children, and another white lady
with three children to be there frequently. " She also reported
that there was a dog in the backyard and that the lawn had been
umnown. [Transcript 350].
25. Patti Cox stated that
the call to the Hoffmans was also based on the confusion expressed
by the neighbors as to the tenants of 1140 Union, i.e., a Black
man, white woman, four children, and frequently
another white woman and two children. Neither Patti, Darrel, or
any of the neighbors who expressed confusion as to the actual
tenants at 1140 Union walked across the driveway or across the
street to introduce themselves and find out who actually was renting
that house.
26. Diane and the children,
without money or a place to live, were forced to sell or give
away most of the furniture they owned; she had to sell her daughter's
hamster farm; she had to pawn her wedding ring for $20.00. They
were forced to move into a one-room motel room at the Shangri-La
Motel in Boone, not one of Boone's finest. Both Diane and Terry
were observably emotionally distraught in testifying about the
problems caused as a result of the eviction. It should be noted
that the four Morris children were present in the courtroom throughout
the hearing and were exceptionally attractive children and remarkably
well behaved.
27. The Morris family believed
that formal meetings were being held to discuss their removal
from the neighborhood. There were get-togethers for various reasons
- just talking, picnics, fixing kitchens - but the neighbors all
testified that there were no formal meetings, not even discussions
of the Morris family. It is admitted that the Morris family was
invited to the Block picnic. This occurred after the eviction
notice had been served.
28. On August 5th, when
Diane and Terry were having the argument which resulted in his
leaving, the Morris family believed that the Cox family and some
neighbors were looking in their windows from the driveway and
that Darrel Cox said, "We should try harder to get them out
of Boone." Terry Morris, Jr. so testified, [Transcript 120].
29. No other Black persons
lived in the neighborhood of 1140 Union Street, Boone, Iowa.
30. John Pulver, age 14
and a neighbor behind the Morris house, testified that some of
the neighborhood kids teased the Morris children and called them
nigger. The children would go in the house crying. John witnessed
some kids shoot fireworks at the dog. He testified that Joel Cox
would not play with the Morris children because they are Black.
[Transcript 430]
31. Lawrence Happel admitted telling neighbors that "a dark man and a white woman and four dark children, and there was three extra children living there, white - or was there but I didn't think they were living there." [Transcript 475].