Metropolitan News-Enterprise

 

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

 

Page 1

 

Court Revives Racial Bias Suit Over Use of Hotel Ballroom

Ninth Circuit Panel Says Black Group Made Prima Facie Showing Its Event Was Shoved Aside for Bar Mitzvah

 

By KENNETH OFGANG, Staff Writer/Appellate Courts

 

A racial discrimination suit charging the owner of the Westin Los Angeles Airport Hotel with moving an African American  fashion show out of the hotel’s Grand Ballroom in 2001 to accommodate a bar mitzvah party was reinstated yesterday by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The panel, overturning a contrary ruling by U.S. District Judge Gary A. Feess of the Central District of California, said the fashion show’s promoter, E-Jays Panache Images, demonstrated a prima facie case of discrimination.

Panache’s owner, Eric J. Lindsey, said that he held several shows in the ballroom before 2001, drawing more than the minimum projected 300 guests each time. He acknowledged that after the 1998 show, he was not guaranteed a specific space, in accordance with what the hotel said was its policy, but said he understood the ballroom to be the only room in the hotel that could accommodate banquet seating for 300 guests.

Late Surprise

Lindsey said his workers arrived at the hotel on Saturday night, May 12, to set up for the event the next day and found the bar mitzvah party being set up in the ballroom. When the hotel’s food and beverage director, Jacob Stark, was called about the conflict, he ordered a halt to the setup and said he would come in at 5 a.m. Sunday to resolve the problem, Lindsey declared.

Stark allegedly came in the next morning, told a Panache representative that the bar mitzvah party was entitled to use the ballroom based on the contracts that had been signed and the fact that the party “was basically set up in the ballroom already.”

Stark met with Panache representatives later in the day and allegedly told them they had three choices—move to another Starwood hotel, split the event into a luncheon in the lobby and coffee-shop and a fashion show set up theater-style in a smaller room—which they eventually agreed to do—or hold the whole event in the lobby. There would have been no assistance in redirecting guests to another hotel, and no consideration of moving the bar mitzvah, even though it could have been held in the smaller room that was offered to Panache, Lindsey said.

Panache representatives said they had a “gut feeling” they were denied the Grand Ballroom because they were black.

Senior U.S. District Judge Edward C. Reed of Nevada, writing for the Court of Appeals, said the plaintiff “offered clear evidence that a similarly situated group of a different protected class was offered the contractual services which were denied to Panache,” and was entitled to a trial on its claim under Sec. 1981, which guarantees all persons the right to enter into and enforce contracts on the same terms as white citizens.

Conclusion Rejected

Reed rejected the district judge’s conclusion that no contract for the Grand Ballroom existed between the hotel and Panache. The appellate jurist noted that the contract clearly called for space for a minimum of 300 persons, meaning that no other space could have been intended.

The case is Lindsey v. SLT Los Angeles, LLC, 03-55824.

 

Copyright 2005, Metropolitan News Company