United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
00-5104
CIENEGA
GARDENS, CLAREMONT VILLAGE COMMONS, COVINA WEST
APARTMENTS,
DEL AMO GARDENS, DEL VISTA VILLAGE, DESOTO
GARDENS,
INDEPENDENCE PARK APARTMENTS, KITTRIDGE GARDENS I,
KITTRIDGE
GARDENS II, LAS LOMAS GARDENS, OXFORD PARK,
PARTHENIA
TOWNHOMES, PIONEER GARDENS, PUENTE PARK
APARTMENTS,
RAYEN PARK APARTMENTS, RESEDA PARK APARTMENTS,
ROSCOE
PARK APARTMENTS, ST. ANDREWS GARDENS, SAN JOSE
GARDENS,
SHERMAN PARK APARTMENTS, SUNLAND PARK APARTMENTS,
ARGONAUT
APARTMENTS, BECK PARK APARTMENTS, BLOSSOM HILL
APARTMENTS,
CASA SAN PABLO, CENTRAL PARK APARTMENTS,
DREHMOOR
APARTMENTS, FAIRVIEW GREEN APARTMENTS, GENESSEE
PARK
APARTMENTS, GRACE & LAUGHTER APARTMENTS, GREEN HOTEL,
HOLLYWOOD
KNICKERBOCKER APARTMENTS, HOLLYWOOD PLAZA, KINGS
CANYON
APARTMENTS, LAWRENCE ROAD APARTMENTS, LIVERMORE
GARDENS,
PALO ALTO GARDENS, PICO PLAZA APARTMENTS, PLACITA
GARDEN
APARTMENTS, SKYLINE VIEW GARDENS, VILLA FONTANA and
VILLAGE
GREEN,
Plaintiffs‑Appellants,
v.
UNITED
STATES,
Defendant‑Appellee.
Evertt C. Johnson, Jr., Latham & Watkins, of
Washington, DC, argued for plaintiffs-appellants. With him on the brief were Richard P. Bress, Leonard A.
Zax, and Matthew R. Lewis.
John E. Kosloske, Senior Trial Attorney,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, Department of Justice, of
Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee.
With him on the brief was David M. Cohen, Director. Of counsel on the brief were Carole W.
Wilson, Associate General Counsel; Angelo Aiosa, Assistant General
Counsel; and Terri L. Roman, Trial Attorney, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, of Washington, DC.
Appealed from: United
States Court of Federal Claims
Judge Robert H. Hodges, Jr.
United States Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit
00-5104
CIENEGA GARDENS, CLAREMONT VILLAGE COMMONS, COVINA WEST APARTMENTS, DEL AMO GARDENS, DEL VISTA VILLAGE, DESOTO GARDENS, INDEPENDENCE PARK APARTMENTS, KITTRIDGE GARDENS I, KITTRIDGE GARDENS II, LAS LOMAS GARDENS, OXFORD PARK, PARTHENIA TOWNHOMES, PIONEER GARDENS, PUENTE PARK APARTMENTS, RAYEN PARK APARTMENTS, RESEDA PARK APARTMENTS, ROSCOE PARK APARTMENTS, ST. ANDREWS GARDENS, SAN JOSE GARDENS, SHERMAN PARK APARTMENTS, SUNLAND PARK APARTMENTS, ARGONAUT APARTMENTS, BECK PARK APARTMENTS, BLOSSOM HILL APARTMENTS, CASA SAN PABLO, CENTRAL PARK APARTMENTS, DREHMOOR APARTMENTS, FAIRVIEW GREEN APARTMENTS, GENESSEE PARK APARTMENTS, GRACE & LAUGHTER APARTMENTS, GREEN HOTEL, HOLLYWOOD KNICKERBOCKER APARTMENTS, HOLLYWOOD PLAZA, KINGS CANYON APARTMENTS, LAWRENCE ROAD APARTMENTS, LIVERMORE GARDENS, PALO ALTO GARDENS, PICO PLAZA APARTMENTS, PLACITA GARDEN APARTMENTS, SKYLINE VIEW GARDENS, VILLA FONTANA, and VILLAGE GREEN,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES,
Defendant-Appellee.
___________________________
DECIDED: September 18, 2001
___________________________
Before MICHEL, RADER, and LINN, Circuit Judges.
MICHEL, Circuit Judge.
This
is a takings case. Appellants are
forty-two partnerships (“Owners”) formed to develop and operate residential
apartment buildings, primarily in California.
Owners’ claims arise from Congress’ enactment of the Emergency Low
Income Housing Preservation Act of 1987, Pub. L. No. 100-242, 101 Stat. 1877
(1987) (pertinent parts reprinted in 12 U.S.C. § 1715l, note (1994)
(Preservation of Low Income Housing) (“ELIHPA”) and the Low-Income Housing
Preservation and Resident Homeownership Act of 1990 (codified at 12 U.S.C. §§
4101-4147 (1994)) (“LIHPRHA”), both of which prohibited the prepayment of
Owners’ federally subsidized mortgage loans after 20 years without pre-approval
from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”). Asserting that ELIHPA and LIHPRHA abrogated
their contractual rights to prepay their mortgages (and thus to convert their
federally regulated housing into market-rate residences), Owners sued the
United States on January 3, 1994 for breach of contract, for just compensation
under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and for allegedly unlawful
administrative actions.
On
March 27, 1995, the U.S. Court of Federal Claims granted summary judgment in
favor of the Owners on their breach of contract claims, but denied their motion
for summary judgment on their takings claims.
The court dismissed their administrative law claims for lack of
jurisdiction. Cienega Gardens v.
United States, 33 Fed. Cl. 196 (1995).
Four model plaintiffs (Sherman Park Apartments, Independence Park
Apartments, St. Andrews Garden Apartments, and Pico Plaza Apartments,
collectively “Model Plaintiffs”) were selected for the purposes of litigating
the damages trial on the breach of contract claim. The trial court awarded the Model Plaintiffs $3,061,107 and
entered judgment in their favor pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Cienega Gardens v. United States, 38
Fed. Cl. 64 (1997). After the
government appealed the breach of contract issue, we vacated and remanded the
case, finding no privity of contract between the Owners and the United States
with respect to the right to prepay the mortgages after twenty years. Cienega Gardens v. United States, 194
F.3d 1231 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
On
remand, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the government
that the Owners’ takings claims were not ripe.
Finding the case controlled by Greenbrier v. United States, 193
F.3d 1348 (Fed. Cir. 1999), the court ruled that the Owners were required to
request permission from HUD to prepay their mortgages, and thus exhaust their
administrative remedies, before their takings claims would be justiciable. Cienega Gardens v. United States, 46
Fed. Cl. 506 (2000). The Owners filed a
timely notice of appeal to this court, and we heard oral argument on July 13,
2001. Because the trial court’s
findings during the damages trial of the breach of contract action, as well as
the United States’ own housing data, conclusively establish that HUD would have
had no discretion under the statutory requirements of ELIHPA and LIHPRHA to
permit the owners to prepay their mortgages, we conclude that it would have
been futile for the Owners to file prepayment requests with HUD. Accordingly, we hold that the takings claims
of the four Model Plaintiffs were ripe for review. We reverse and remand the summary judgment insofar as it rested
upon unripeness for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. This case falls
squarely into the futility exception.
But, insofar as the summary to the government rests on rejection of the
Owners’ per se taking theory, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
As discussed in detail in the prior
opinions of this court and the trial court in this case, the present dispute
arises out of federal legislation enacted in the 1950s and 1960s to encourage
private developers to construct, own, and manage housing projects for low- and
moderate-income families. To implement
this legislation, Congress authorized the Federal Housing Administration, and
later HUD, to provide mortgage insurance to enable private lending institutions
to provide low-interest mortgages to housing developers.
Typically,
when a developer received a HUD-insured mortgage, the developer signed a
long-term deed of trust note with a private lender. HUD would then endorse the note.
In 1970-1972, the Model Plaintiffs, all HUD-approved mortgagees, each
executed 40-year deed of trust notes.
These deed of trust notes bore a “Rider A” agreement. Importantly, Rider A to the HUD-endorsed
deed of trust notes expressly prohibited prepayment of the mortgages before 20
years from the date of endorsement, except under certain conditions which
included HUD approval of the prepayment.
The riders further stated that, after making payments for 20 years,
owners may prepay their mortgages in full without prior HUD approval. For example, Rider A to the Sherman Park
Apartments deed of trust note provided in relevant part:
The debt evidenced by this Deed of Trust may not be
prepaid in whole or in part, prior to the final maturity date hereof without
the prior written approval of the Federal Housing Commissioner, except a maker
which is a limited distribution mortgagor may prepay without such approval after
twenty (20) years from the date of final endorsement of this Deed of Trust Note
by the Federal Housing Commissioner.
(emphasis added). Simultaneously with entering into the
deed of trust notes, the developers entered into “regulatory agreements” with
HUD, which placed certain conditions on the mortgagors. The regulatory agreements imposed
restrictions on the operation of the projects, including: the income levels of tenants; the maximum
rents that could be charged; and the rates of return that the developer could
receive (collectively, “affordability restrictions”). These agreements, as well as the mortgage insurance provided by
HUD, were to remain in effect as long as the mortgage loan remained
outstanding. However, they contained no
reference to the Owners’ right to prepay their mortgages after 20 years.
The regulations in place in 1970 provided that
participating Owners could prepay their mortgage upon the expiration of 20
years. See, e.g., 24 C.F.R. §
221.524(a) (1970) (enumerating circumstances under which “mortgage indebtedness
may be prepaid in full” after 20 years).
The regulations, however, were subject to amendment, so long as the interest
of the mortgagee or lender under existing mortgages or loans was not adversely
affected. See 24 C.F.R. §
221.749 (1970) (“The regulations in this subpart may be amended by the
Commissioner at any time and from time to time, in whole or in part, but such
amendment shall not adversely affect the interests of a mortgagee or lender on
any mortgage or loan to be insured on which the Commissioner has made a
commitment to insure.”).
By the late 1980s, Congress had become concerned that
a large number of owners might take advantage of the prepayment clauses, thus
reducing the supply of low-income housing throughout the country. See S. Rep. No. 101-316 at 105
(1990), reprinted in 1990 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5763, 5867. As a result, Congress enacted two pieces of
legislation. The first, ELIHPA, was
enacted in 1987, prohibiting participating owners from prepaying their
mortgages absent prior approval from HUD.
ELIHPA § 225(a), 12 U.S.C. § 1715l, note. ELIHPA authorized HUD to approve a prepayment only after making
written findings that the prepayment would have minimal effects on the existing
tenants, the local low-income housing market in general, and the local housing
market for minorities. Id. ELIHPA
also authorized HUD to offer owners incentives to maintain the affordability
restrictions on their properties. Id.
at ELIHPA § 225(b).
In
1990, Congress enacted LIHPRHA, superseding ELIHPA. LIHPRHA, like ELIHPA, authorized HUD to provide incentives to
owners to maintain the affordability restrictions on their properties. See Pub. L. No. 101-625, 104 Stat.
4249, codified at 12 U.S.C. §§ 4101-4147 (1994). LIHPRHA also prohibited participating owners from prepaying their
mortgages after 20 years absent approval of HUD. To request such approval, an owner must file a Notice of Intent
(“NOI”) with HUD. 12 U.S.C. § 4102(a).
The property must then be appraised by two independent appraisers to
determine its “preservation value,” which in turn becomes a basis for any
incentives that are ultimately offered to the owners to induce them to maintain
affordability restrictions on the properties.
12 U.S.C. § 4103; see also id., §§ 4104(a), 4110(d). Within nine months after receiving an NOI
(or six months if the NOI proposes to terminate affordability restrictions),
HUD must send the owner a report containing the results of the appraisals and
other information necessary for the owner to proceed. 12 U.S.C. § 4106. The
owner must then, within six months, file a Plan of Action with HUD, indicating
whether the owner wishes to prepay the mortgage (terminating the affordability
restrictions), extend the affordability restrictions by requesting incentives,
or sell the property to a buyer who will agree to maintain the affordability
restrictions. 12 U.S.C. § 4107.
LIHPRHA
further provides that HUD may approve a request for termination of
affordability restrictions through prepayment of the mortgage only upon
its making a written finding that implementing the plan will not materially
increase “economic hardships” on existing tenants, involuntarily displace such
tenants, or decrease the availability of decent, safe, sanitary low-income
housing. 12 U.S.C. § 4108. In particular, section 4108(a) precludes HUD
from approving a prepayment request unless it finds that:
(1)
implementation of the plan of action will not --
(A) materially increase economic hardship for current
tenants, and will not in any event result in (i) a monthly rental payment by
any current tenant that exceeds 30 percent of the monthly adjusted income of
the tenant or an increase in the monthly rental payment in any year that
exceeds 10 percent (whichever is lower), or (ii) in the case of a current
tenant who already pays more than such percentage, an increase in the monthly
rental payment in any year that exceeds the increase in the Consumer Price
Index or 10 percent (whichever is lower); or
(B)
involuntarily displace current tenants (except for good cause) where comparable
and affordable housing is not readily available determined without regard to
the availability of Federal housing assistance that would address any such
hardship or involuntary displacement; and
(2) the supply of vacant, comparable housing is
sufficient to ensure that such prepayment will not materially affect --
(A) the availability of decent, safe, and sanitary
housing affordable to low-income and very low-income families or persons in the
area that the housing could reasonably be expected to serve;
(B) the ability of low-income and very low-income
families or persons to find affordable, decent, safe, and sanitary housing near
employment opportunities; or
(C) the housing opportunities of minorities in the
community within which the housing is located.
12 U.S.C. § 4108 (1994). Commentators have expressed the view that the requirements for
allowing HUD to approve a prepayment request would be met in only the rarest of
circumstances. See, e.g.,
Sheldon P. Winkelman, Low-Income Housing Preservation and Resident Ownership
Act of 1990, 73 Mich. B.J. 1160, 1161-62 (1994) (“It is generally felt that
it would require an extremely unique set of facts and circumstances to lead to
HUD’s granting permission for prepayment; that is, all areas arguably need
low-income housing . . . Therefore, the option of prepayment is probably a
fiction.”).
One important factor in evaluating eligibility for
prepayment is whether conversion of the Model Plaintiff’s properties to market
rentals would have caused the current tenants’ rents to increase by more than
10%, thereby inflicting “material economic hardship” as defined by §
4108(a)(1)(A)(i), and thus strictly and expressly precluding HUD from approving
a prepayment request. As set forth in
the parties’ Joint Stipulation of Facts, during the mid-1990s, after their
original 20-year prepayment dates had expired, the four Model Plaintiffs each
submitted Plans of Action to HUD seeking incentives under ELIHPA or LIHPRHA. As
part of the process of offering incentives, HUD determined the market rate for
apartments at the Owners’ locations.
With Sherman Park, St. Andrews Gardens, and Independence Park, HUD
completed formal determinations of the prevailing market rental value of such
apartments and approved the owners’ plans of action for receiving
incentives. Pico Plaza also submitted a
Plan of Action seeking incentives under LIHPRHA. Although Pico Plaza never progressed far enough into HUD’s
process for obtaining a final “Form 9607” determination, HUD commissioned an
appraisal that was completed on August 25, 1995. Based on HUD’s own data, as set forth in the Joint Stipulation of
Facts, the Owners have composed the following table setting forth the
HUD-restricted monthly rent at the four Model Plaintiffs’ properties, the
market rent as established by HUD, and the percent increase over HUD-restricted
monthly rents. “B.R.” stands for
“bedroom.”
|
Property |
HUD-Restricted Monthly Rent (A) |
Market Rent as Established by HUD (B) |
Percent Increase Over HUD-Restricted
Monthly Rent (B-A)/A |
|
Sherman Park |
1
B.R. = $356 |
1
B.R. = $600 |
1
B.R. = 69% |
|
St.Andrews Gardens |
1
B.R. = $349 |
1
B.R. = $605 |
1
B.R. = 73% |
|
|
2
B.R. = $443 |
2
B.R. = $720 |
2
B.R. = 63% |
|
|
3
B.R. = $479 |
3
B.R. = 850 |
3
B.R. = 77% |
|
Independence Park |
1
B.R. = $320 |
1
B.R. = $545 |
1
B.R. = 70% |
|
|
2
B.R. = $365 |
2
B.R. = $650 |
2
B.R. = 78% |
|
Pico Plaza |
1
B.R. = $416-454 |
1
B.R. = $520 |
1
B.R. = 15-25% |
|
|
2
B.R. = $495-522 |
2
B.R. = $630 |
2
B.R. = 21-27% |
Importantly, it is undisputed that, based on HUD’s
best estimates of prevailing market rates, allowing the four Model Plaintiffs
to charge market rate rents would uniformly cause the monthly rent of those
owners’ tenants to increase by more than 10%.
Indeed, in most cases, the rents would rise from between 63% and 78%.
LIHPRHA
also prohibits HUD from approving prepayment requests when the supply of
vacant, comparable housing is insufficient to allow termination of the
affordability restrictions without materially affecting the availability of
decent, safe, and sanitary housing. 12
U.S.C. § 4108(a)(2). Addressing this
issue, Carole Glodney, President of G&K Management Co., Inc. (the Owners’
management company), submitted an uncontested declaration that the demand for
low-income rental housing exceeded the supply in the Los Angeles communities
within which the Model Plaintiffs’ properties were located. Specifically, Glodney attested that each of
these properties operated at full occupancy and had a waiting list of
interested low-income tenants, and that other low-income rental properties that
G&K managed in the vicinity of the properties likewise were operating at
full occupancy and had waiting lists.
James Tahash, who had formerly served as Division Director of the
Planning and Procedures Division of HUD’s Office of Multifamily Housing
Management, and who was responsible for drafting the agency’s implementing
instructions and regulations for ELIHPA, stated in his declaration that
“low-income properties in California, including Los Angeles or the surrounding
areas, would not even arguably have been able to meet the statutory and
regulatory requirements for approval of prepayment under ELIHPA or LIHPRHA.”
The
Owners did not file Plans of Action with HUD seeking prepayment under ELIHPA or
LIHPRHA, asserting that it would have been futile to do so given the
differentials between market rental rates and HUD-controlled rates, as well as
the shortage of low-income housing in the communities where their properties
were situated. Instead, the Owners
sought other incentives available under ELIHPA and LIHPRHA. See ELIHPA § 224; 12 U.S.C. § 4109
(LIHPRHA). Glodney testified during the
damages trial in the breach of contract claim that preparing a Plan of Action
to receive the incentives was time-consuming and costly, and that it often took
years for HUD to approve one. Sherman
Park and St. Andrews Gardens eventually obtained tenant-based subsidies under ELIHPA
that approximate market rents, in exchange for extending the affordability
restrictions on their properties for another 20 years. Independence Park and Pico Plaza sought
low-income preservation incentives under LIHPRHA, but later obtained approval to
prepay their mortgages after Congress enacted the Housing Opportunity Program
Extension Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-120, 110 Stat. 834 (“HOPE Act”).
As represented in the Owners’ briefing, the Owners are
now earning rents closer to market levels on their properties. However, the Owners allegedly received no
reimbursement from the government for the fair-market rents to which they were
entitled during the period between their 20-year anniversary dates and the dates
on which they began receiving HUD funds under new use agreements (for Sherman
Park and St. Andrews Gardens) or were permitted to prepay and convert to market
rents under the HOPE Act (for Independence Park and Pico Plaza). The present suit seeks just compensation
under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to recover the revenue lost
during this period from the federal government’s alleged taking of the Owners’
rights to prepay their mortgages on the 20-year anniversary dates of their
mortgages.
As stated above, the trial court granted the
government’s motion for summary judgment that the Owners’ regulatory takings
claims are unripe for failure to exhaust administrative remedies, and that the
application of ELIHPA and LIHPRHA did not effect a per se taking of the
Owners’ property. For the reasons
discussed below, we conclude that the regulatory takings claims of the four
Model Plaintiffs were ripe for review, reversing the trial court as to the
regulatory takings issue. The futility
exception to the pre-approval process applies here. However, we agree with the trial court that, as a matter of law,
the application of ELIHPA and LIHPRHA does not constitute a per se
taking.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of
Review
This court must review the trial court’s rulings on
summary judgment de novo, construing the facts in the light most
favorable to the Owners and giving the Owners the benefit of all reasonable
inferences. See Helifix Ltd.
v. Blok-Lok, Ltd., 208 F.3d 1339, 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2000).
B. Regulatory
Takings
The
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the federal government from
taking private property for public use without just compensation. U.S. Const. amend. V. A “regulatory taking” may occur when government
action, although not encroaching upon or occupying private property, still
affects and limits its use to such an extent that a taking occurs. Palazzolo v. Rhode Island, 121 S. Ct.
2448, 2457 (2001) (citing Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393,
415 (1922)). The central issue
presented by this appeal is whether the Owners’ regulatory takings claims are
ripe for review, despite the fact that the Owners never requested prepayment
exemptions from HUD, and thus never obtained final decisions from HUD denying
such requests.
The government insists that the Owners must first file
Plans of Action with HUD, and receive final decisions from HUD denying their
requests, before the Owners’ takings claims ripen. The government relies on a wealth of cases, and especially those
concerning land use restrictions, wherein the Supreme Court has held that a
party alleging a regulatory taking must obtain a final decision from the
governmental agency charged with administering challenged regulations before
the claim is properly justiciable. The
Court recently reiterated the “important principle that a landowner may not
establish a taking before a land-use authority has the opportunity,
using its own reasonable procedures, to decide and explain the reach of a
challenged regulation.” Palazzolo, 121 S. Ct. at 2459 (emphasis added); see
also Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
473 U.S. 172, 186 (1985) (“[A] claim that the application of government
regulations effects a taking of a property interest is not ripe until the
government entity charged with implementing the [land use] regulations has
reached a final decision regarding the application of the regulations to the
property at issue.”); Agins v. Tiburon, 447 U.S. 255, 260 (1980)
(holding that a challenge to the application of a zoning ordinance was not ripe
because the property owners had not yet submitted a plan for development of
their property).
In
the context of these land use cases, seeking a final decision from the
pertinent land use authority is essential to determining the existence and
scope of the taking, allegedly due to the “high degree of discretion
characteristically possessed by land-use boards in softening the strictures of
the general regulations they administer.”
Palazzolo, 121 S. Ct. at 2459 (quoting Suitum v. Tahoe
Regional Planning Agency, 520 U.S. 725, 738 (1997)). Where agencies have discretion in
administering regulations, the requirement that complainants pursue
administrative solutions promotes the possibility that “a mutually acceptable
solution might well be reached with regard to individual properties, thereby
obviating any need to address the constitutional questions.” Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining &
Reclamation Assn., Inc., 452 U.S. 264, 297 (1981). Restated, where agencies have discretion,
requiring a final administrative decision ensures that there has been an
injury-in-fact. See Williamson,
473 U.S. at 193 (“[T]he finality requirement is concerned with whether the
initial decisionmaker has arrived at a definitive position on the issue that
inflicts an actual, concrete injury.”).
The
Owners contend that the final decision requirement is not applicable to them
because it would be futile to submit a prepayment request to HUD, as HUD has no
discretion under ELIHPA or LIHPRHA to grant such requests under the undisputed
facts of their cases. The Owners rely
in particular on Suitum v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 520 U.S. 725
(1997). Suitum concerned a land
use plan to regulate development in the Lake Tahoe basin. Under the plan, once a parcel of land was
deemed to fall within a “Stream Environment Zone” (“SEZ”), there could be no
“additional land coverage or other permanent land disturbance” on such a
parcel. Id. at 729 (citing Tahoe
Regional Planning Agency Code of Ordinances § 20.4). Bernadine Suitum purchased an undeveloped lot prior to enactment
of the land use plan, and later (after the plan’s implementation) applied to
the regional planning agency for permission to construct a house on her
lot. The agency determined that her property
was located within an SEZ, and denied permission to build. Id. at 731. Suitum appealed to the agency’s governing board, which also
denied relief. Id. She made no effort to pursue other
administrative remedies, such as determining the value of the “Transferable
Development Rights” allocated to her under the land use plan. Id.
The Supreme Court ruled that her claim was ripe for review, although she
had not obtained a final decision from the agency to determine the allowable
amount of development. The Court held
that “[t]he demand for finality is satisfied by Suitum’s claim, however, there
being no question here about how the ‘regulations at issue [apply] to the
particular land in question.’” Id.
at 739 (quoting Williamson County, 473 U.S. at 191). Moreover, the Court stated that “[b]ecause
the agency has no discretion to exercise over Suitum’s right to use her land,
no occasion exists for applying Williamson County’s requirement that a
landowner take steps to obtain a final decision about the use that will be
permitted on a particular parcel.” Id.
Palazzolo
recently reaffirmed the futility exception to the final decision rule. In that case, a landowner was not required
to submit further applications to a local land use authority once it was
determined that any request to fill the property owner’s wetlands would be
denied. The Court stated:
[O]nce it becomes clear that the agency lacks the
discretion to permit any development, or the permissible uses of the property
are known to a reasonable degree of certainty, a takings claim is likely to
have ripened.
. . .
Ripeness doctrine does not require a landowner to
submit applications for their own sake.
Petitioner is required to explore development opportunities on his
upland parcel only if there is uncertainty as to the land’s permitted use.
121 S. Ct. at 2459-60. Moreover,
Where the state agency charged with enforcing a challenged land use regulation entertains an application from an owner and its denial of the application makes clear the extent of development permitted, and neither the agency nor a reviewing state court has cited non-compliance with reasonable state law exhaustion or pre-permit processes . . . federal ripeness rules do not require the submission of further and futile applications with other agencies.
Id. at 2462
(internal citation omitted). Other
cases cited by the Owners also conclude that where an agency has no discretion
in the application of a contested regulation, an aggrieved party does not need
to obtain a final decision from the agency determining the scope of the
regulation. See City Nat’l
Bank of Miami v. United States, 30 Fed. Cl. 715, 720 (1994) (“Plaintiff is
not required to pursue futile means to obtain a final determination.”); Conant
v. United States, 12 Cl. Ct. 689, 693 (1987) (“This Court believes that it
would serve no purpose to require a claimant to exhaust administrative
procedures before seeking judicial review when it is clear that resort to
administrative action would be futile.”); see also Del Monte Dunes at
Monterey, Ltd. v. City of Monterey, 920 F.2d 1496, 1501 (9th Cir. 1990)
(“Most recently, we excused as futile a landowner’s failure to apply for a
variance that the local government was powerless to grant.”); Hoehne v.
County of San Benito, 870 F.2d 529 (9th Cir. 1989) (finding claim ripe
because plaintiff submitted uncontroverted affidavit that he was told that his
application would be denied).
We
conclude that that Owners present an even more compelling case of futility than
in Suitum, Palazzolo, and the other land use cases cited
above. Here, HUD lacks the “high
degree of discretion characteristically possessed by land-use boards in
softening the strictures of the general regulations they administer.” Palazzolo, 121 S. Ct. at 2459
(quoting Suitum, 520 U.S. at 738).
The prerequisites for HUD to grant a prepayment request are set forth by
statute, and there is no allegation that HUD has any discretion to depart from
these statutory requirements. Rather,
section 4108 sets forth strict numerical criteria that must be met before HUD
may exercise any discretion it has to approve prepayment requests. 12 U.S.C. § 4108 (1994).
As recited above, HUD lacks discretion to grant a
prepayment request unless (1) implementation of the plan will not materially
increase economic hardship for current tenants; and (2) the supply of
vacant, comparable housing is sufficient to ensure that prepayment will not
materially affect the availability of decent, safe, and sanitary housing
affordable to low-income persons in the area.
As to the first prong, the Owners have compiled HUD’s own data,
tabulated above, to show that allowing the four Model Plaintiffs to charge
market rate rents would uniformly cause the monthly rent of those owners’
tenants to increase by more than 10%, which constitutes a material increase in
economic hardship for existing tenants under 12 U.S.C. § 4108(a)(1)(A). As to the second prong, the Owners have
submitted uncontroverted affidavits attesting that allowing the four Model
Plaintiffs to terminate their affordability restrictions would materially
affect the supply of low-income housing in those communities. The government does not contest that, if
these four Model Plaintiffs are allowed to charge market rents, the Model
Plaintiffs will not be able to satisfy the criteria set forth in §4108(a) to
obtain approval to prepay their mortgages.
The
only arguable factual dispute in this case is whether the Los Angeles Rent
Stabilization Ordinance (“LARSO”) would limit the rents that the Owners could
charge if they were able to prepay their mortgages and terminate their
affordability restrictions under federal law.
LARSO makes it “unlawful for any landlord to demand, accept or retain
more than the maximum adjusted rent permitted pursuant to [LARSO] or
regulations or orders adopted pursuant to [LARSO].” Cienega Gardens, 38 Fed. Cl. at 81-82 (quoting LARSO, Los
Angeles Mun. Code §151.00 et seq.).
LARSO, however, specifically excepts government-operated or exempted
dwelling units or those subject to federal subsidization programs. Id. at 82. Moreover, LIHPRHA expressly prohibits any state or local law from
restricting, inhibiting or otherwise interfering with the rights of
participating property owners to prepay their existing mortgage balances as of
the 20-year prepayment date. LIHPRHA
provides:
§ 4122 Preemption of State and local laws
(a) In general.
No state or political subdivision of a state may establish, continue in
effect, or enforce any law or regulation that --
(1) restricts or inhibits the prepayment of any
mortgage described in section 229(1) [12 U.S.C.S. § 4119(1)] (or the voluntary
termination of any insurance contract pursuant to section 229 of the National
Housing Act [12 U.S.C.S. § 1715t] on eligible low-income housing; ...
Any law, regulation, or restriction described under
paragraph (1), (2), (3), or (4) shall be ineffective and any eligible
low-income housing exempt from the law, regulation, or restriction, only to the
extent that it violates the provisions of this subsection.
12 U.S.C. § 4122(a).
During the damages trial in the breach of contract
claim, the trial court concluded that LIHPRHA preempts LARSO, because the
latter would “restrict or inhibit prepayment” of the Owners’ mortgages, as the
ongoing effect of LARSO “is to interfere materially with the intent of the
federal subsidized housing program.” Cienega
Gardens, 38 Fed. Cl. at 85. The
present appeal does not require us to rule upon whether LIHPRHA does indeed
preempt LARSO. Nonetheless, the
government’s argument that LARSO withstands LIHPRHA’s preemption clause is the
government’s last defense against a finding of administrative futility. For purposes of this appeal, we conclude,
for all the reasons set forth by the trial court in the damages trial, that the
government’s arguments concerning the viability of LARSO are unconvincing as to
the ripeness issue. Id. Whether LIHPRHA preempts LARSO is a matter
of statutory interpretation. Jones
v. Rath Packing Co., 430 U.S. 519, 526 (1977). It is entirely appropriate to permit the trial court to perform
the preemption analysis in the first instance, rather than requiring the Owners
to first submit this preemption question to the officials at HUD. We conclude that the Model Plaintiffs’
claims are ripe, notwithstanding any remaining questions as to the applicability
of LARSO.
The
government’s final argument, which the trial court found persuasive, is that
our court has already ruled in Greenbrier v. United States, 193 F.3d
1348 (Fed. Cir. 1999), that the Owners must necessarily pursue administrative
remedies with HUD and obtain final decisions on their requests before their
takings claims may be properly justiciable.
Indeed, Greenbrier concerned takings claims essentially identical
to those in the present appeal. We held
that the claims of the 249 owners of low-income housing projects were not ripe,
as none had yet pursued statutory remedies with HUD to prepay their
mortgages. We acknowledged the owners’
complaints that HUD had set a “high hurdle” to allowing prepayment. Id. at 1359. However, we noted, according to the facts
then-of-record, that HUD had approved prepayment proposals on three of the
eight occasions on which such approval was sought. Id. at 1358.
Because the facts showed that HUD did, indeed, have limited discretion
to approve prepayment requests, we held that the 249 owners could not, as a
group, forego the requirement to obtain a final decision from HUD prior to
bringing suit for a taking. Id.
at 1360. We nonetheless recognized that
a claim could be ripe absent a prior, final decision from HUD “in the limited
circumstance in which the administrative entity has no discretion regarding the
regulation’s applicability and its only option is enforcement.” Id. at 1359 (citing Suitum, 520 U.S.
at 738-40).
The four Model Plaintiffs in the present appeal, as
opposed to the 249 owners in Greenbrier, have set forth uncontested
facts demonstrating that it would be futile for them to file prepayment
requests with HUD. Whereas our court in
Greenbrier was required to determine the ripeness of the owners’ claims
without the aid of the facts of their particular circumstances, the four Model
Plaintiffs have set forth a compelling case of administrative futility. Our conclusion that the takings claims of
the four Model Plaintiffs are ripe is applicable only to the circumstances of
the Model Plaintiffs and those other owners that demonstrate on a case-by-case
basis in future proceedings that it would have been futile to submit prepayment
requests to HUD. Under Greenbrier,
we cannot hold that all forty-two of the Owners are entitled to proceed with
their takings claims, as HUD may have discretion to grant some of the Owners’
prepayment requests. On remand, the
trial court will have to determine, under the applicable facts, whether each
plaintiff has demonstrated that it would have been futile to apply to HUD for
prepayment.
C. Per
Se Taking
The
Owners further contend that they have suffered a per se taking,
asserting that ELIHPA and LIHPRHA, by prohibiting prepayment except under
conditions that the Owners could not meet, forced the Owners to use their
properties to house government-approved, low-income tenants and prohibited the
Owners from converting their properties to other uses. We disagree that ELIHPA and LIHPRHA give
rise to a physical occupation of the Owners’ property as required to show a per
se taking. We agree with the
trial court’s ruling that “the effect of the prepayment restrictions . . . is merely to enhance an existing tenant’s
possessory interest,” and that they do not authorize a “permanent physical
occupation” of the Owners’ property. Cienega
Gardens, 33 Fed. Cl. at 217.
Accordingly, we conclude that Yee v. City of Escondido, 503 U.S.
519 (1992), is controlling, and that the trial court properly granted summary
judgment in favor of the government as to the Owners’ claims for a per se
taking.
CONCLUSION
We
conclude that the undisputed facts show that, if the four Model Plaintiffs had
been allowed to convert their federally-regulated apartments into market-rate
residences, the conversion would have imposed a materially increased economic
hardship on the Model Plaintiffs’ tenants, as defined by 12 U.S.C. § 4108(a),
and that such a conversion would reduce the supply of vacant, comparable
housing available to those tenants. We
find the government’s arguments concerning LARSO unconvincing as to the
ripeness issue, and thus we conclude it would have been futile for the four
Model Plaintiffs to submit prepayment requests to HUD. Accordingly, the takings claims of the four
Model Plaintiffs are ripe for adjudication.
If the factual circumstances of any or all of the remaining Owners
present a similarly compelling case of administrative futility, then the trial
court should adjudicate their takings claims, as well. Thus, we reverse as to the ripeness of the
Owners’ regulatory takings claims.
However, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor
of the government on the Owners’ claims for a per se taking.
COSTS
Each party to bear its own costs.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, REVERSED-IN-PART, and REMANDED