CITY OF CUYAHOGA FALLS v. BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
HOPE FOUNDATION
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
2003 U.S. LEXIS 2492
NOTICE:
[*1] This preliminary
LEXIS version is unedited and subject to revision.
The LEXIS pagination of this document is
subject to change pending release of the final published version.
PRIOR HISTORY: ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT.
DISPOSITION: 263 F.3d 627, reversed in
part, vacated in part, and remanded.
SYLLABUS: After the City Council of Cuyahoga
Falls, Ohio (hereinafter City), passed a site-plan ordinance authorizing
construction of a low-income housing complex by respondents -- a nonprofit
corporation dedicated to developing affordable housing and related parties -- a
group of citizens filed a formal petition requesting that the ordinance be
repealed or submitted to a popular vote. Pursuant to the City's charter, the
referendum petition stayed the site plan's implementation until its approval by
the voters. An Ohio court denied respondents an injunction against the
petition, and the city engineer, on advice [*2] from the city law director, denied their
request for building permits. The voters eventually passed the referendum, thus
repealing the ordinance. Subsequently, the Ohio Supreme Court declared the
referendum invalid under Ohio's Constitution, the City issued the building
permits, and construction commenced. While the state litigation was still
pending, respondents filed a federal suit against the City and its officials,
seeking an injunction ordering the City to issue the building permits, as well
as declaratory and monetary relief. They claimed that by submitting the site
plan to voters, the City and its officials violated the Equal Protection and
Due Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, as well as the Fair Housing
Act. The District Court, inter alia, denied the City's summary judgment
motion. After the Ohio Supreme Court invalidated the referendum, thus reducing
the federal action to a claim for damages for the construction delay, the
District Court granted the City and its officials summary judgment. In
reversing, the Sixth Circuit found that respondents had produced sufficient
evidence to go to trial on the allegation that the City, by allowing the
petition to stay the [*3] site
plan's implementation, gave effect to the racial bias reflected in the public's
opposition to the project; that respondents had stated a valid Fair Housing Act
claim because the City's actions had a disparate impact based on race and
family status; and that a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether
the City had engaged in arbitrary and irrational government conduct in
violation of substantive due process.
Held:
1. Respondents have not presented an equal
protection claim that can survive summary judgment. Proof of racially
discriminatory intent is required to show an Equal Protection Clause violation.
Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 265. Because respondents claim injury from the
referendum petitioning process, not from the referendum itself -- which never
went into effect -- cases in which this Court has subjected enacted,
discretionary measures to equal protection scrutiny and treated decisionmakers'
statements as evidence of intent, see e.g., Cleburne v. Cleburne Living
Center, Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 448, are inapposite. Neither of the official
acts respondents challenge [*4] reflects the intent required to support equal protection
liability. In submitting the referendum petition to the public, the City acted
pursuant to the requirement of its charter, which sets out a facially neutral
petitioning procedure, and the city engineer, in refusing to issue the permits,
performed a nondiscretionary, ministerial act consistent with the City Charter.
Respondents point to no evidence suggesting that these acts were themselves
motivated by racial animus. While they and the Sixth Circuit cite evidence of
allegedly discriminatory voter sentiment, statements made by private
individuals during a citizen-driven petition drive do not, in and of
themselves, constitute state action for Fourteenth Amendment purposes. And
respondents did not offer evidence that the private motives behind the
referendum drive are fairly attributable to the state. See Blum v. Yaretsky,
457 U.S. 991, 1004. In fact, by adhering to charter procedures, city
officials enabled public debate on the referendum to take place, thus advancing
significant First Amendment interests. Respondents' alternate theory -- that
city officials acted in concert with private citizens to prevent [*5] the complex from being built because of the
race and family status of the likely residents -- was not addressed below and
apparently was disavowed by respondents at oral argument. Moreover, respondents
never articulated a cognizable legal claim on such grounds. Pp. 5-8.
2. Subjecting the ordinance to the City's
referendum process did not constitute arbitrary government conduct in violation
of substantive due process. Both of respondents' due process claims lack merit.
First, the city engineer's refusal to issue the building permits while the
petition was pending in no sense constituted egregious or arbitrary government
conduct denying respondents the benefit of the site plan. In light of the
charter's provision that no challenged ordinance can go into effect until
approved by the voters, the law director's instruction to the engineer
represented an eminently rational directive. Indeed, the site plan, by law,
could not be implemented until the voters passed on the referendum.
Respondents' second theory -- that the city's submission of an administrative
land-use determination to the charter's referendum procedures constituted per
se arbitrary conduct -- has no basis in this [*6] Court's precedent. The people retain the
power to govern through referendum with respect to any matter, legislative or
administrative, within the realm of local affairs. Eastlake v. Forest City
Enterprises, Inc., 426 U.S. 668, 674, n. 9. Though a referendum's
substantive result may be invalid if it is arbitrary or capricious, respondents
do not challenge the referendum itself. Pp. 8-10.
3. Because respondents have abandoned their
Fair Housing Act disparate impact claim, the Sixth Circuit's disparate impact
holding is vacated and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss the
relevant portion of the complaint. P. 10.
263 F.3d 627, reversed in part, vacated in part, and
remanded.
JUDGES: O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion
for a unanimous Court. SCALIA, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which THOMAS,
J., joined.
OPINIONBY: O'CONNOR
OPINION: JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered
the opinion of the Court.
In 1995, the city of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio (hereinafter City),
submitted to voters a facially neutral referendum petition that called for the
repeal of a municipal housing ordinance authorizing construction of a
low-income housing complex. The United States [*7] Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit found
genuine issues of material fact with regard to whether the City violated the
Equal Protection Clause, the Due Process Clause, and the Fair Housing Act, 82
Stat. 81, as amended, 42 U.S.C. ' 3601 et seq., by placing the petition on
the ballot. We granted certiorari to determine whether the Sixth Circuit erred
in ruling that respondents' suit against the City could proceed to trial.
I
A
In June 1995, respondents Buckeye Community Hope Foundation, a
nonprofit corporation dedicated to developing affordable housing through the
use of low-income tax credits, and others (hereinafter Buckeye or respondents),
purchased land zoned for apartments in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. In February 1996,
Buckeye submitted a site plan for Pleasant Meadows, a multifamily, low-income
housing complex, to the city planning commission. Residents of Cuyahoga Falls
immediately expressed opposition to the proposal. See 263 F.3d 627, 630 (CA6
2001). After respondents agreed to various conditions, including that it
build an earthen wall surrounded by a fence on one side of the complex, the
commission unanimously approved the site plan [*8] and submitted it to the city council for
final authorization.
As the final approval process unfolded, public opposition to
the plan resurfaced and eventually coalesced into a referendum petition drive.
See Cuyahoga Falls City Charter, Art. 9, ' 2
(hereinafter City Charter), App. 14 (giving voters "the power to approve
or reject at the polls any ordinance or resolution passed by the Council"
within 30 days of the ordinance's passage). At city council meetings and
independent gatherings, some of which the mayor attended to express his
personal opposition to the site plan, citizens of Cuyahoga Falls voiced various
concerns: that the development would cause crime and drug activity to escalate,
that families with children would move in, and that the complex would attract a
population similar to the one on Prange Drive, the City's only African-American
neighborhood. See, e.g., 263 F.3d at 636-637; App. 98, 139, 191;
Tr. 182-185, 270, 316. Nevertheless, because the plan met all municipal zoning
requirements, the city council approved the project on April 1, 1996, through City
Ordinance No. 48-1996.
On April 29, a group of citizens filed a formal petition with
the City [*9] requesting that
the ordinance be repealed or submitted to a popular vote. Pursuant to the City
Charter, which provides that an ordinance challenged by a petition "shall
[not] go into effect until approved by a majority" of voters, the filing
stayed the implementation of the site plan. Art. 9, ' 2, App. 15. On April
30, respondents sought an injunction against the petition in state court, arguing
that the Ohio Constitution does not authorize popular referendums on
administrative matters. On May 31, the Court of Common Pleas denied the
injunction. Buckeye Community Hope Foundation v. Cuyahoga Falls,
Civ. No. 96-05-1701, (Summit County), App. to Pet. for Cert. 255a. A month
later, respondents nonetheless requested building permits from the City in
order to begin construction. On June 26, the city engineer rejected the request
after being advised by the city law director that the permits "could not
be issued because the site plan ordinance 'does not take effect' due to the
petitions." 263 F.3d at 633.
In November 1996, the voters of Cuyahoga
Falls passed the referendum, thus repealing Ordinance No. 48-1996. In a joint
stipulation, however, the parties agreed that [*10] the results of the election would not be
certified until the litigation over the referendum was resolved. See
Stipulation and Jointly Agreed upon Preliminary Injunction Order in No. 5:96 CV
1458 (ND Ohio, Nov. 25, 1996). In July 1998, the Ohio Supreme Court, having
initially concluded that the referendum was proper, reversed itself and
declared the referendum unconstitutional. Buckeye Community Hope Foundation
v. Cuyahoga Falls, 82 Ohio St. 3d 539, 697 N.E.2d 181 (holding that the
Ohio State Constitution authorizes referendums only in relation to legislative
acts, not administrative acts, such as the site-plan ordinance). The City
subsequently issued the building permits, and Buckeye commenced construction of
Pleasant Meadows.
B
In July 1996, with the state-court litigation still pending,
respondents filed suit in federal court against the City and several city
officials, seeking an injunction ordering the City to issue the building
permits, as well as declaratory and monetary relief. Buckeye alleged that
"in allowing a site plan approval ordinance to be submitted to the
electors of Cuyahoga Falls through a referendum and in rejecting [its]
application for [*11] building
permits," the City and its officials violated the Equal Protection and Due
Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, as well as the Fair Housing Act, 42
U.S.C. '
3601. Complaint in
No. 5:96 CV 1458 P1 (ND Ohio, July 5, 1996) (hereinafter Complaint). In June
1997, the District Court dismissed the case against the mayor in his individual
capacity but denied the City's motion for summary judgment on the equal
protection and due process claims, concluding that genuine issues of material
fact existed as to both claims. 970 F. Supp. 1289, 1308 (ND Ohio 1997).
After the Ohio Supreme Court declared the referendum invalid in 1998, thus
reducing respondents' action to a claim for damages for the delay in
construction, the City and its officials again moved for summary judgment. On
November 19, 1999, the District Court granted the motion on all counts. Civ.
No. 5:96 CV 1458, App. to Pet. for Cert. 35a.
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed. As to
respondents' equal protection claim, the court concluded that they had produced
sufficient evidence to go to trial on the allegation that the City, by allowing
the referendum petition to [*12] stay the implementation of the site plan, gave effect to the
racial bias reflected in the public's opposition to the project. See 263
F.3d at 639. The court then held that even if respondents failed to prove
intentional discrimination, they stated a valid claim under the Fair Housing
Act on the theory that the City's actions had a disparate impact based on race
and family status. See Id., at 640. Finally, the court concluded that a
genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether the City, by denying
respondents the benefit of the lawfully approved site plan, engaged in
arbitrary and irrational government conduct in violation of substantive due
process. Id., at 644. We granted certiorari, 536 U.S. 938 (2002),
and now reverse the constitutional holdings and vacate the Fair Housing Act
holding.
II
Respondents allege that by submitting the petition to the voters
and refusing to issue building permits while the petition was pending, the City
and its officials violated the Equal Protection Clause. See Complaint P41.
Petitioners claim that the Sixth Circuit went astray by ascribing the
motivations of a handful of citizens [*13] supportive of the referendum to the City. We agree with
petitioners that respondents have failed to present sufficient evidence of an
equal protection violation to survive summary judgment.
We have made clear that "proof of racially discriminatory
intent or purpose is required" to show a violation of the Equal Protection
Clause. Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., 429
U.S. 252, 265 (1977) (citing Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229 (1976)).
In deciding the equal protection question, the Sixth Circuit erred in relying
on cases in which we have subjected enacted, discretionary measures to equal
protection scrutiny and treated decisionmakers' statements as evidence of such
intent. See 263 F.3d, at 634-635 (citing Cleburne v. Cleburne Living
Center, Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 448 (1985); Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan
Housing Development Corp., supra, at 268; and Hunter v. Erickson, 393
U.S. 385, 392 (1969)). Because respondents claim injury from the referendum
petitioning process and not from the referendum itself -- which never
went into effect [*14] -- these
cases are inapposite. Ultimately, neither of the official acts respondents
challenge reflects the intent required to support equal protection liability.
First, in submitting the referendum petition to the voters, the
City acted pursuant to the requirements of its charter, which sets out a
facially neutral petitioning procedure. See Art. 9, ' 2. By placing the
referendum on the ballot, the City did not enact the referendum and therefore
cannot be said to have given effect to voters' allegedly discriminatory motives
for supporting the petition. Similarly, the city engineer, in refusing to issue
the building permits while the referendum was still pending, performed a
nondiscretionary, ministerial act. He acted in response to the city law
director's instruction that the building permits "could not . . .
issue" because the City Charter prohibited a challenged site-plan
ordinance from going into effect until "approved by a majority of those
voting thereon," ibid. See 263 F.3d at 633. Respondents
point to no evidence suggesting that these official acts were themselves
motivated by racial animus. Respondents do not, for example, offer evidence
that the City followed [*15] the
obligations set forth in its charter because of the referendum's
discriminatory purpose, or that city officials would have selectively refused
to follow standard charter procedures in a different case.
Instead, to establish discriminatory intent, respondents and the
Sixth Circuit both rely heavily on evidence of allegedly discriminatory voter
sentiment. See id., at 635-637. But statements made by private
individuals in the course of a citizen-driven petition drive, while sometimes
relevant to equal protection analysis, see supra, at 5, do not, in and
of themselves, constitute state action for the purposes of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Cf. Blum v. Yaretsky, 457 U.S. 991, 1002-1003 (1982)
("'The principle has become firmly embedded in our constitutional law that
the action inhibited by the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment is only
such action as may fairly be said to be that of the States'") (quoting Shelley
v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. 1, 13 (1948)). Moreover, respondents put forth no
evidence that the "private motives [that] triggered" the referendum
drive "can fairly be attributable to the State." Blum v. Yaretsky,
supra, at 1004. [*16]
In fact, by adhering to charter procedures, city officials
enabled public debate on the referendum to take place, thus advancing
significant First Amendment interests. In assessing the referendum as a
"basic instrument of democratic government," Eastlake v. Forest
City Enterprises, Inc., 426 U.S. 668, 679 (1976), we have observed that
"provisions for referendums demonstrate devotion to democracy, not to
bias, discrimination, or prejudice," James v. Valtierra, 402 U.S. 137,
141 (1971). And our well established First Amendment admonition that
"government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because
society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable," Texas v.
Johnson, 491 U.S. 397, 414 (1989), dovetails with the notion that all
citizens, regardless of the content of their ideas, have the right to petition
their government. Cf. Meyer v. Grant, 486 U.S. 414, 421-422 (1988)
(describing the circulation of an initiative petition as "'core political
speech'"); Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92, 96 (1972)
("Government may not grant the use of a forum to people [*17] whose views it finds acceptable, but deny use
to those wishing to express less favored or more controversial views").
Again, statements made by decisionmakers or referendum sponsors during
deliberation over a referendum may constitute relevant evidence of
discriminatory intent in a challenge to an ultimately enacted initiative. See, e.g.,
Washington v. Seattle School Dist. No. 1, 458 U.S. 457, 471 (1982)
(considering statements of initiative sponsors in subjecting enacted referendum
to equal protection scrutiny); Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing
Development Corp., 429 U.S., at 268. But respondents do not challenge an
enacted referendum.
In their brief to this Court, respondents offer an alternate
theory of equal protection liability: that city officials, including the mayor,
acted in concert with private citizens to prevent Pleasant Meadows from being
built because of the race and family status of its likely residents. See Brief
for Respondents 12-26; Tr. of Oral Arg. 33-34, 36-40, 43. Respondents allege,
among other things, that the city law director prompted disgruntled voters to
file the petition, that the city council intentionally [*18] delayed its deliberations to thwart the
development, and that the mayor stoked the public opposition. See Brief for
Respondents 17. Not only did the courts below not directly address this theory
of liability, but respondents also appear to have disavowed this claim at oral
argument, focusing instead on the denial of the permits. See Tr. of Oral Arg.
37-38.
What is more, respondents never articulated a cognizable legal
claim on these grounds. Respondents fail to show that city officials exercised
any power over voters' decisionmaking during the drive, much less the kind of
"coercive power" either "overt or covert" that would render
the voters' actions and statements, for all intents and purposes, state action.
Blum v. Yaretsky, 457 U.S., at 1004. Nor, as noted above, do respondents
show that the voters' sentiments can be attributed in any way to the state
actors against which it has brought suit. See ibid. Indeed, in finding a
genuine issue of material fact with regard to intent, the Sixth Circuit relied
almost entirely on apparently independent statements by private citizens. See 263
F.3d at 635-637. And in dismissing the claim against the mayor [*19] in his individual capacity, the District
Court found no evidence that he orchestrated the referendum. See 970 F.
Supp. , at 1321. Respondents thus fail to present an equal protection claim
sufficient to survive summary judgment.
III
In evaluating respondents' substantive due process claim, the
Sixth Circuit found, as a threshold matter, that respondents had a legitimate
claim of entitlement to the building permits, and therefore a property interest
in those permits, in light of the city council's approval of the site plan. See
263 F.3d at 642. The court then held that respondents had presented
sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment on their claim that the City
engaged in arbitrary conduct by denying respondents the benefit of the plan. Id.,
at 644. Both in their complaint and before this Court, respondents contend
that the City violated substantive due process, not only for the reason
articulated by the Sixth Circuit, but also on the grounds that the City's
submission of an administrative land-use determination to the charter's
referendum procedures constituted per se arbitrary conduct. See
Complaint PP39, 43; Brief for Respondents [*20] 32-49. We find no merit in either claim.
We need not decide whether respondents possessed a property
interest in the building permits, because the city engineer's refusal to issue
the permits while the petition was pending in no sense constituted egregious or
arbitrary government conduct. See County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S.
833, 846 (1998) (noting that in our evaluations of "abusive executive
action," we have held that "only the most egregious official conduct
can be said to be 'arbitrary in the constitutional sense'"). In light of
the charter's provision that "no such ordinance [challenged by a petition]
shall go into effect until approved by a majority of those voting
thereon," Art. 9, ' 2,
App. 15, the law director's instruction to the engineer to not issue the
permits represented an eminently rational directive. Indeed, the site plan, by
law, could not be implemented until the voters passed on the referendum.
Respondents' second theory of liability has no basis in our
precedent. As a matter of federal constitutional law, we have rejected the
distinction that respondents ask us to draw, and that the Ohio Supreme Court
drew as a matter of state [*21] law, between legislative and administrative referendums. In Eastlake
v. Forest City Enterprises, Inc., 426 U.S., at 672, 675, we made clear that
because all power stems from the people, "[a] referendum cannot . . . be
characterized as a delegation of power," unlawful unless accompanied by
"discernible standards." The people retain the power to govern
through referendum "'with respect to any matter, legislative or
administrative, within the realm of local affairs.'" Id., at 674, n. 9.
Cf. James v. Valtierra, 402 U.S., at 137. Though the "substantive
result" of a referendum may be invalid if it is "arbitrary and
capricious," Eastlake v. Forest City Enterprises, supra, at 676,
respondents do not challenge the referendum itself. The subjection of the
site-plan ordinance to the City's referendum process, regardless of whether
that ordinance reflected an administrative or legislative decision, did not
constitute per se arbitrary government conduct in violation of due
process.
IV
For the reasons detailed above, we reverse the Sixth Circuit's
judgment with regard to respondents' equal protection and substantive [*22] due process claims. The Sixth Circuit also
held that respondents' disparate impact claim under the Fair Housing Act could
proceed to trial, 263 F.3d at 641, but respondents have now abandoned
the claim. See Brief for Respondents 31. We therefore vacate the Sixth
Circuit's disparate impact holding and remand with instructions to dismiss,
with prejudice, the relevant portion of the complaint. See Deakins v.
Monaghan, 484 U.S. 193, 200 (1988).
The judgment of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit is, accordingly, reversed in part, and vacated in
part, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
CONCURBY: 538 U.S. ____ (2003)
CONCUR: JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE
THOMAS joins, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion, including Part III, which concludes
that respondents' assertions of arbitrary government conduct must be rejected.
I write separately to observe that, even if there had been arbitrary
government conduct, that would not have established the substantive-due-process
violation that respondents claim.
It would be absurd to think that all "arbitrary and
capricious" government [*23] action violates substantive due process -- even, for example, the
arbitrary and capricious cancellation of a public employee's parking
privileges. The judicially created substantive component of the Due Process Clause
protects, we have said, certain "fundamental liberty interests" from
deprivation by the government, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to
serve a compelling state interest. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702,
721 (1997). Freedom from delay in receiving a building permit is not among
these "fundamental liberty interests." To the contrary, the Takings
Clause allows government confiscation of private property so long as it
is taken for a public use and just compensation is paid; mere regulation
of land use need not be "narrowly tailored" to effectuate a
"compelling state interest." Those who claim "arbitrary"
deprivations of nonfundamental liberty interests must look to the Equal
Protection Clause, and Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 395 (1989),
precludes the use of "'substantive due process'" analysis when a more
specific constitutional provision governs.
As for respondents' assertion that referendums may [*24] not be used to decide whether low-income
housing may be built on their land: that is not a substantive-due-process
claim, but rather a challenge to the procedures by which respondents
were deprived of their alleged liberty interest in building on their land.
There is nothing procedurally defective about conditioning the right to build
low-income housing on the outcome of a popular referendum, cf. James v.
Valtierra, 402 U.S. 137 (1971), and the delay in issuing the permit was
prescribed by a duly enacted provision of the Cuyahoga Falls City Charter (Art.
9, ' 2),
which surely constitutes "due process of law," see Connecticut
Dept. of Public Safety v. Doe, ante, p. ___ (SCALIA, J.,
concurring).
With these observations, I join the Court's opinion.