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The Oregon Court of Appeal rules out racial discrimination and that it could be compensated by a cash award after a Black woman is barred from renting an apartment due to race.
1971 (Jan 14)
The Oregon Court of Appeal ruled that mental anguish was one of the effects of racial discrimination and could be compensated by a cash award. The court sustained the contention of Beverley A. Williams, a young Black woman, who said she was discriminated against when Margaret C. Joyce refused to rent her an apartment in Portland. Williams's charge was earlier upheld by the Oregon State Bureau of Labor, which assessed Joyce $200 for humiliating Williams and $140 to pay for her moving expenses, but the cash award for humiliation was overthrown by the state circuit court on appeal by Joyce. The Court of Appeal, in setting aside the circuit court's ruling, said that compensation for humiliation was proper.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.