Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge KAREN LECRAFT HENDERSON.
3883 Connecticut LLC, a limited Lability corporation wholly owned by Clark Tilden LLC and CEI, Inc. (Clark), brought suit against the District of Columbia (District) claiming that the District’s issuance of a stop work order (SWO) that halted Clark’s construction of a 168-unit apartment building violated its procedural due process and equal protection rights. The district court dismissed the suit, holding that Clark lacked a constitutionally protected property interest in the building permits the District had issued and that its equal protection claim was unripe.
3883 Conn. LLC v. District of Columbia,
I.
A.
The District of Columbia Construction Codes, D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 12A, §§ 101.0
et seq.
(Construction Codes), authorize the issuance of preliminary permits to a builder to begin limited activities on a building site while approval of construction plans for the complete project pends before the District Building and Land Regulation Administration (BLRA).
Id.
§ 108.1-.2. Pursuant to these provisions, Clark sought and obtained five separate permits to begin the sheeting, shoring, excavation, foundation construction and underpinning of existing structures in preparation for its construction of the nine story apartment building at 3883 Connecticut Avenue, Northwest. In order to obtain the five preliminary permits, Clark submitted
inter alia
an Environmental Impact Screening Form (EISF), describing the nature of the site and the proposed project, to District authorities — in particular, to the District Department of Health, Environmental Administration (DOH) — which determines whether a comprehensive, detailed Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is required by the Environmental Protection Act (DCEPA), D.C. Code §§ 8-109.01
et seq.,
before a building project can proceed. D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 20, § 7204.1-.4. Based on Clark’s EISF, DOH determined that an EIS was not required.
1
With its five pre
On August 9, Clark appealed the SWO to the BLRA Administrator, arguing, among other things, that it was invalid under District law and should be rescinded because the errors on the EISF were immaterial. Two days later, the Administrator responded, denying Clark’s appeal and upholding the SWO because he questioned whether the preliminary permits were based on inaccurate site information contained in Clark’s EISF. Clark submitted a revised EISF on August 16, disclosing for the first time that mature trees were located on the property, a stream ran near the property and an adjacent building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Clark then appealed the BLRA Administrator’s decision to the Director of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA), BLRA’s supervising agency. Although the Director did not act on Clark’s appeal, on September 7, DCRA did order Clark to submit more detailed environmental information regarding several potential impacts of its proposed project — including on traffic, vegetation and trees, storm water, soil erosion and groundwater control so that it could reconsider whether an EIS was required Clark submitted the requested information and, on October 3, renewed its request that the Director review the SWO. Again the Director failed to respond. On October 13, Clark filed the instant suit, initially seeking injunctive relief only. Meanwhile DCRA requested DOH and other District agencies to review Clark’s revised EISF. DOH officials reviewed Clark’s revised EISF and the supplemental materials Clark had submitted and visited the 3883 Connecticut Avenue site. DOH was concerned with surface water problems and recommended to DCRA that it require Clark to prepare a mitigation plan. Clark met with DOH and developed a plan that resolved the issue; on November 22, BLRA rescinded the SWO and, four days later, issued a building permit for Clark’s entire project. Clark then amended its complaint to seek compensatory and punitive damages for the four-month interruption of its project.
B.
The District moved for summary judgment and the district court dismissed both of Clark’s claims. It dismissed Clark’s due process claim because, it concluded, Clark lacked a property interest in the five preliminary permits suspended by the District’s SWO. 3883
Conn.,
As other courts-have done, the district court applied the property interest test set forth in
Board of Regents v. Roth,
the code official is authorized to issue a partial permit for the construction of foundations or any other part of a building or structure before the entire plans and specifications for the whole building or structure have been submitted, provided adequate information and detailed statements have been filed complying with all pertinent requirements of the Construction Codes.
3883 Conn.,
The district court also dismissed Clark’s equal protection claim, explaining that Clark’s assertion that its rights were violated because “the District applied the requirements of the DCEPA to this project alone” boiled down to a complaint that the District had required Clark to prepare an EIS. 3883 Conn., F.Supp.2d at 95. But because the District had not in fact required Clark to submit an EIS, it concluded, Clark’s claim was premature. Id. Clark then filed this appeal.
II.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Wash. Legal Clinic for the Homeless v. Barry,
We determine whether the interest at issue here constitutes property protected by the Fifth Amendment under
Roth,
Sections 108.9 and 117.1 of the Construction Codes, respectively, define District authorities’ discretion to revoke and suspend permits through a stop work order.
3
D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 12A, §§ 108.9,
We believe both of these provisions indicate that Clark has a property interest in the continued effect of the five permits. Revocation is limited to the five circumstances listed and issuance of a SWO depends on whether work is performed contrary to the provisions of the Construction Codes or unsafely.
Id.
§§ 108.9, 117.1. Discretion is not unfettered as in
Lopez,
where the FAA could “rescind [this] delegation [as a DER] ... at any time for any reason,”
Lopez,
Tri County,
on which the district court relied, does not compel a different conclusion. Our holding there that a permit applicant had no property interest in the District’s waiver of the EIS requirement because the waiver was “a mere step toward issuance of a building permit” does not fit the permits issued here.
3883 Conn.,
B.
Our finding of a property interest, however, does not alter the disposition of Clark’s due process claim because the procedures available to Clark to challenge the SWO afforded it due process. Under the Construction Codes, Clark was entitled to challenge the SWO pursuant to an expeditious appeal process with three levels of review. D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 12A, § 122.1.2. Specifically, Clark was entitled to first seek review of the SWO by a District “reviewing official,” here, the BLRA Administrator, who was required to, and did, render a decision within three working days.
Id.
If dissatisfied, Clark could, and did, seek a second review from
We decide whether these provisions adequately protected Clark’s interest in the permits under
Mathews v. Eldridge,
first, the private interests that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirements would entail.
Mathews,
We agree with Clark that the permit holder has a substantial interest in the continued effect of the permit and in proceeding with a project without delay.
See Tri County,
C.
Finally, we consider Clark’s assertion that the district court erred in dismissing its equal protection claim. Clark
Even if the district court mistook the thrust of Clark’s claim and therefore concluded Clark’s claim was unripe because no EIS had been required, we agree with the district court’s decision. Summary judgment against Clark was appropriate because Clark failed to make a sufficient showing regarding two essential elements of its “class of one” equal protection claim: (1) disparate treatment of similarly situated parties (2) on no rational basis.
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
So ordered.
Notes
. Clark in fact obtained the five permits before DOH made its determination. Once it obtained them, Clark was allowed to begin
. All events occurred in 2000 unless otherwise noted.
. In their briefs the parties follow the district court's analysis and thus focus only on the provisions that authorize the issuance of building permits under the Construction Codes. Clark argues that the permits were issued under section 108.1, which governs "permits,” and, according to Clark, limits the issuing official's discretion sufficiently to create a property interest. The District contends the permits were issued under section 108.2, which governs "partial permits,” and, the District says, vests sufficient discretion in the official to create no properly interest. The district court determined that Clark's permits were “partial permits” issued pursuant to section 108.2.
3883 Conn.,
. Clark sought review at the first two levels. Although the Director twice failed to render a decision, Clark did not seek BAR review,
.
Tri County,
in addition to discussing whether the plaintiff had a property interest in the waiver of an EIS requirement, considered whether a district official’s "oral order of suspension” of a building permit violated procedural due process.
Tri County,
