Black California coupleâs home appraisal discrimination lawsuit gets support from DOJ
Department of Justice says appraisal company misinterpreted the 1968 Fair Housing Act
A Black California coupleâs home appraisal discrimination lawsuit received additional support last week from the U.S. Department of Justice.
The DOJâs civil rights division filed a statement of interest on Monday that supports some of the arguments made in a federal discrimination lawsuit filed last year by Marin County, California homeowners Tenisha Tate-Austin and husband Paul Austin.

The coupleâs lawsuit, obtained by theGrio, accuses appraisal management company AMC Links and the Miller & Perotti Real Estate Appraisals firm hired by AMC of undervaluing the Austinsâ home by nearly $500,000 due to their race in violation of the 1968 Fair Housing Act.
The Austins purchased their home â located just outside of Sausalito, California in an unincorporated region of Marin County known as Marin City â in December 2016, according to their March 2021 complaint.
Despite becoming more racially diverse in the 1980s and â90s, Marin City, the Austins argue, is a historically disproportionately Black region that still had a nearly 36% Black population in 2019.
The Austins spent thousands of dollars renovating their house before seeking to refinance their mortgage in 2020, court records show.
The familyâs real estate broker arranged an appraisal through AMC Links, which tapped Miller & Perotti licensed real estate appraiser Janette Miller to do the job.
Miller determined the market value of the Austinsâ home to be $995,000, a valuation that seemed âunreasonably low,â according to the coupleâs lawsuit.
In response, the Austins removed any trace of their racial identities from their house and asked a white friend to pose as the homeowner before arranging a second valuation inspection with a different appraiser days later.
âThis different appraiser arrived at a value of $1,482,500 â nearly half a million dollars higher than Millerâs estimated value,â the lawsuit stated.
AMC Links denied that race was a motivating factor in Millerâs valuation in an âanswer to complaintâ court document filed earlier this year on Jan. 7.
The company filed a motion to dismiss the Austinsâ lawsuit three days later, arguing, in part, that the Fair Housing Act âdoes not apply to the refinanceâ of the Austinsâ home.
âThe FHA does not typically apply to the private sale or rental of a single family house by an owner,â AMCâs attorneys wrote in their motion to dismiss. âFor these reasons, the FHA does not apply to the Subject Property.â
The DOJ refuted some of AMCâs arguments in its statement of interest on Monday, saying in part that the FHA does, in fact, apply to real estate appraisals.
âThe statuteâs text and case law make clear that it does,â the agency wrote.
The DOJ also argued against AMCâs contention that the Austinsâ complaint failed to establish a âprima facie case,â a legal term that essentially means the Austins havenât presented enough facts to establish a presumption of discrimination required for their lawsuit to proceed.
âPlaintiffs need not allege facts that make out a prima facie case at this stage,â the DOJ said. âThe [Fair Housing Act] simply requires that Plaintiffs allege a plausible entitlement to relief as a result of Defendantsâ âdiscriminatory housing practices.â
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