Covenants have been used to exclude certain classes from owning real estate based on race, religion or ethnicity. These groups are generally marginalized groups.
United States In the United States, in the early 20th century
zoning laws were used to prevent integrating neighborhoods but were struck down in
Buchanan v. Warley. Thus, deed restrictions and restrictive covenants became an important instrument for enforcing
racial segregation in most towns and cities, becoming widespread in the 1920s and proliferating until they were declared unenforceable in 1948 in the Supreme Court case
Shelley v. Kraemer. They prohibited a buyer of
real property from allowing use or occupancy by members of a given race, ethnicity, or religion as specified in the
title deed. Such covenants were employed by many
real estate developers to "protect" entire
subdivisions, with the primary intent to keep "
white" neighborhoods "white". Ninety percent of the
housing projects built in the years following World War II were racially restricted by such covenants. Cities known for their widespread use of racial covenants include
Chicago,
Baltimore,
Detroit,
Milwaukee,
Los Angeles,
Seattle, and
St. Louis. Often the restrictions applied only to African Americans wishing to buy property or rent a house or apartment, but other populations might also be banned, such as
Asians,
Jews,
Indians, and some
Latinos. For example, a restrictive covenant covering a large neighborhood in Seattle declared that "no part of said property hereby conveyed shall ever be used or occupied by any Hebrew or by any person of the Ethiopian, Malay or any Asiatic Race", thus banning Jews and anyone of African, Filipino, or Asian ancestry. The exclusionary language varied widely. Some neighborhoods were reserved for the "White or Caucasian race". Others enumerated banned populations. One subdivision near Seattle specified that "This property shall not be resold, leased, rented or occupied except to or by persons of the Aryan race." The Lake Shore Club District in
Fairview,
Pennsylvania sought to exclude various minorities, including "
Negroes", "
Mongolians",
Hungarians,
Mexicans,
Greeks, and various other European ethnicities. Covenants in Massachusetts localities excluded Black Americans and sometimes Irish, Italian and Polish people as well. One 1881 deed from
Lowell, Massachusetts stated that "land shall never be deeded or conveyed to any person born in Ireland". A 1916 covenant in
Springfield, Massachusetts, stated that "said lot shall not be resold to a colored person, a Polander or an Italian." Some covenants, such as those tied to properties in
Forest Hills Gardens,
New York, also sought to exclude
working class people; however, this type of
social segregation was more commonly achieved through the use of high property prices, minimum cost requirements, and application reference checks. Covenants in
Seattle, Washington, typically banned Black and Asian people and sometimes Jews. Covenants in
Hennepin County and
Ramsey County, Minnesota excluded African Americans and sometimes Asians and Middle Easterners. Prior to 1919, covenants sometimes excluded Jews. One Minneapolis covenant excluded "any person or persons of Chinese, Japanese, Moorish, Turkish, Negro, Mongolian or African blood or descent." In 1953, the
Michigan Legislature banned new covenants and in 1962 the legislature banned housing discrimination on the basis of race, religion or national origin.
History '' 1919) Racial covenants emerged during the mid-19th century and started to gain prominence from the 1890s onwards. It was not until the 1920s that they gained widespread national significance, and continued to spread through the 1940s. Racial covenants were an alternative to racially restrictive
zoning ordinances (
residential segregation based on race), which the 1917
US Supreme Court ruling of
Buchanan v. Warley invalidated on constitutional grounds. During the 1920s, the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) sponsored several unsuccessful legal challenges against racial covenants. In a blow to campaigners against
racial segregation, the legality of racially restrictive covenants was affirmed by the landmark
Corrigan v. Buckley judgment ruling that such clauses constituted "private action" not subject to the
Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. This cleared the way for racial restrictive covenants to proliferate across the US during the 1920s and 1930s. Even the invalidation of such a covenant by the US Supreme Court in the 1940 case of
Hansberry v. Lee did little to reverse the trend, because the ruling was based on a
technicality and failed to set a
legal precedent. On December 2, 1949
US solicitor general
Philip Perlman announced that the "FHA could no longer insure mortgages with restrictive covenants". Some commentators have attributed the popularity of exclusionary covenants at this time as a response to the
urbanization of black Americans following
World War I, and the fear of "black invasion" into white neighborhoods, which residents felt would result in depressed property prices, increased nuisance (crime), and social instability. But even still the covenants played a role as "gentlemen agreements", it wasn't until 1962, that the
Equal Opportunity in Housing executive order was signed by
President John F. Kennedy, prohibiting using federal funds to support racial discrimination in housing. This caused the FHA to "cease financing subdivision developments whose builders openly refused to sell to black buyers." In 1968, Congress passed the Fair Housing Act (Title VIII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1968) which outlawed housing discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. In 1988, it was expanded to prohibit discrimination based on familial status (e.g. the presence of children) or disability. It wasn't until 1972 that the Mayers v Ridley decision ruled that the covenants themselves violated the Fair Housing Act and that county clerks should be prohibited from accepting deeds with such clauses.
Persistence of exclusionary covenants Although exclusionary covenants are not enforceable today, they still exist in many original property deeds as "underlying documents", and
title insurance policies often contain exclusions preventing coverage of such restrictions. It is not always easy to remove them from the chain of title. Since 2010, the Seattle Civil Rights & Labor History Project has located more than 500 restrictive covenants and deeds covering more than 20,000 properties in
Seattle and its suburbs. In response, the Washington State legislature passed a law that since January 1, 2019 allows property owners to "modify" property records, disavowing the offensive restriction. Mapping Inequality, a collaboration of three teams at four universities, has identified restrictive covenants in various parts of the United States. The
Mapping Prejudice project at the University of Minnesota has collected restrictive covenants in the Minneapolis area.
Examples •
Forest Hills Gardens, Queens, New York – covenants forbade the sale of real property to Black, Jewish, and working-class people. •
Jackson Heights, Queens, New York – covenants employed to restrict occupancy to white, non-immigrant Protestants. •
Washington Park Subdivision, Chicago, Illinois – restrictive covenants used to exclude African Americans. •
Palos Verdes Estates, Los Angeles, California – covenants forbade an owner to sell or rent a house to anyone not of the white or
Caucasian race or to permit African Americans on their property with the exception of chauffeurs, gardeners, and domestic servants. •
Upper Arlington, Ohio – covenants forbade the sale of real property to Black people or Jews, but allowed for "colored" servants to reside in the homes in which they served. •
Guilford, Baltimore, Maryland – covenants provided for exclusion against "negros or persons of negro extraction". •
West Orange, New Jersey - one 1892 covenant stated "We do not sell to Colored People, Italians, Polanders, or Bohemians..."
Outside the US Although most commonly associated with the United States, racially or ethnically restrictive covenants have been used in other countries: •
Canada – Subdivisions such as
Westdale, Ontario employed racial covenants to bar a diverse array of ethnic groups, such as Armenians and foreign-born Italians and Jews. •
France – During
World War II, under the
Vichy regime in the
Free Zone outside the
Nazi occupied area, some condominiums inserted clauses forbidding selling to Jews. •
South Africa – racial covenants emerged in
Natal during the 1890s as an attempt to prevent Indians from acquiring properties in more expensive areas, and were commonplace across the country by the 1930s. They were later used as a tool to further the cause of
apartheid against the black population. •
Zimbabwe – Asians and
coloured people were excluded from purchasing or occupying homes in European areas by restrictive racial covenants written into most title deeds. ==Title covenants==