A.A. Profiles, Inc. filed suit against the City of Fort Lauderdale and the members of the City Commission, individually and in their official capacity (collectively “the City”), seeking relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 1 for the taking of property without just compensation in violation of the fifth amendment and the deprivation of property without due process in violation of the fourteenth amendment. The case prоceeded to a non-jury trial on the issue of liability only. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the district court granted a motion for dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b). The district court found no taking and no denial of substantive or procedural due process because appellant did not avail itself of state remedies. We reverse the district court’s judgment and remand.
I.
In 1979 appеllant contracted to purchase a twenty-eight acre tract of land in the northwest section of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The land was zoned M-l, the city's least restrictive industrial and manufacturing classification. Because appellant planned to operate a wood-chipping business on the site, the sales contract was conditioned on the City's approval of the proposed development.
As its first step in the approval process, appellant submitted its proposal to the City’s Planning and Zoning Department. The proposal was reviewed and approved initially by several city and county agencies. The proposal submitted to the Planning and Zoning Department provided that a ten foot concrete wall would be built around the entire site. After a public hear *1485 ing, the Planning and Zoning Department voted to recommend that the City Commission approve the development. The City Commission held a public hearing on December 4, 1979 and unanimously passed Resolution No. 79-440 approving the wood-chipping development planned by appellаnt.
Having obtained the necessary approvals, appellant completed the purchase of the land, obtained building permits and commenced construction on the land. Thereafter appellant asked the City’s Chief Building Inspector if it could begin receiving organic materials in order to relieve some cash flow problems. Although the wall was not completed, the Inspector approved this activity, but warned appellant that if there were any complaints the activity would have to cease. Advertising the development as “Le Dump,” appellant began to receive and store materials.
The city began receiving complaints from area residents and on April 22, 1980 the Chief Zoning Inspector ordered the project stopped on the grounds that the plans used for permitting purposes were not the same as the plans approved by the Planning and Zoning Board and the City Commission. At the same time the city manager ordered appellant to cease operations after an inspection had revealed that appellant was operating an illegal dump. Due to the new developments the City Commission held a public hearing on May 6, 1980 to address the growing concerns. At the meeting the City Commission voted to “temporarily suspend” the approval of the development granted by Resolution No. 79-440. The next day a “stop work” order was posted on the project by the Director of Building and Zoning.
At a subsequent hearing on July 1, 1980 the City Commission again addressed the wood-chipping operation and asked the city attorney to draft a resolution to modify the original resolution. The proposed resolution was submitted to the City Commission at a public hearing on July 30,1980. 2 Once again numerous residents voiced their opposition to the project and hinted that violence might ensue if the City Commission permitted the project to proceed. The discussion ended shortly after appellant announced that it would not proceed with the project until it clarified its legal position with the City.
Although open to reasonable alternatives appellant subsequently requested the City to “cease its attempts to make the continuance of this project unfeasible” and demanded damages for losses. On March 10, 1981 the City Commission unanimously passed Ordinance No. C-81-16 rezoning the site from M-l to B-3-C, light industrial use. Ultimately, appellant became unable to meet expenses and the lenders foreclosed on appellant’s property.
II.
In order to prevail in an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a plaintiff must show a constitutional violаtion.
See Rymer v. Douglas County,
The fifth amendment provides that “private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation.” The fifth amendment applies to the states through the fourteenth amendment.
See First English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles,
— U.S. -,
The Supreme Court has recognized that a taking may occur where a governmental entity exercises its power of eminent domain through formal condemnation proceedings,
see, e.g., Berman v. Parker,
On numerous occasions the Supreme Court has noted that a takings claim based on the application of a governmental regulation “is not ripe [for adjudication] until the government entity charged with implementing the regulations has reached a final decision regarding the aрplication of the regulations to the property at issue.”
Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
Appellant assеrts that the temporary suspension action by the City Commission amounts to a regulatory taking and that the state does not provide an adequate procedure for seeking just compensation. The City does not dispute appellant’s contention that no state remedy is available to address the alleged injury, 3 but maintains *1487 that the City Commission never reached a final decision with respect to appellant’s property. The City argues that there was no final decision because appellant never completed the wall that was a condition precedent to commencing business.
We believe that this case is ripe for adjudication. The City not only decided to temporarily suspend the project’s apprоval granted by Ordinance No. 79-440 and the building permits, but it also passed an ordinance rezoning appellant’s property approximately nine months later. As in
Com,
the temporary suspension of the enabling resolution and the rezoning ordinance put a “complete moratorium” on the development.
The City argues that the South Florida Building Code establishes an appellate procedure whereby an aggrieved property owner may appeal a stop work оrder and the revocation or suspension of a permit to the Board of Rules and Appeals and then ultimately, by certiorari, to the Circuit Court of Broward County. The City claims that appellant should have exhausted these available state remedies before filing this section 1983 action.
“The question whether administrative remedies must be exhausted is conceptually distinct, however, from the question whether an administrative action must be final before it is judicially reviewable.”
Williamson County,
For there to be a taking in this case the City’s action must have failed to substantially advance a legitimate state interest. A government regulation will constitute a taking if it is “not reasonably necessary to the effectuation of a substantial public purpоse....”
Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. City of New York,
Wheeler is indistinguishable from this case. 6 The original resolution granted appellant a property interest. The rezoning ordinance denied appellant this property interest because the new classification did not accommodate a development like the wood-chipping operation. The City Commission’s action therefore was а confiscatory measure. “[I]f a regulatory undertaking is confiscatory in nature, it is a taking.” Id. at 100. We note also that although the taking did not occur simply because appellant expended a great amount of money to begin the project, this expenditure in reliance on the resolution underscores the importance of the original resolution. 7
The City argues that the Supreme Court has held that land use regulations which promote health, safety, moral or general welfare must be upheld.
See Penn Central,
*1489 III.
We therefore reverse the district court’s finding that there was no taking and remand for further proceedings.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The complaint also sought relief under sections 1981 and 1988, and various common law theories. The section 1981 claim was not pursued.
. The proposed resolution rеquired that a buffer zone be established along all sides of the property and that the wall be built before the commencement of operations. In addition, the proposal required that the wood-chipping machine be operational prior to the acceptance of materials.
. “If the government has provided an adequate process for obtaining compensation, and if resort to that process *yield[s] just compensation,’ then the owner ‘has no claim against the Government for a taking.’ ”
Williamson County,
The Florida Supreme Court recently held in an inverse condemnation action that a taking occurred when the state destroyed healthy trees.
Department of Agric. & Consumer Servs. v. Mid-Florida Growers, Inc.,
. The City’s effort to characterize the May 6 suspension аs "temporary" is questionable as well. As the district court noted, the temporary suspension "in effect became permanent” because "there was no lifting of the suspension.”
. A representative of Landmark First National Bank of Fort Lauderdale, the second mortgage holder on appellant’s project, testified at the rezoning hearing that the first mortgagе on appellant’s property was in foreclosure and foreclosure on the second mortgage was imminent. The first foreclosure was not final until March 23, 1981. Thus while foreclosure proceedings were in progress at the time of rezoning, technically appellant was the property owner who was injured as a result of the taking.
. Appellees attempt to distinguish Wheeler by arguing that in Wheeler the public opposed the project originally approved by the city, whereas in this case adverse public sentiment arose due to a change in the proposed use, which led to the City’s reappraisal of the project and issuance of the stop work order. We believe that this distinction is irrelevant. In each case a taking occurred with the passage of a new ordinance which in essence repealed the city’s prior approval of a development.
. We reject appellant’s contention that the City did not have the authority to amend the ordinance and to require that the wall be completed before the operations began. Because the wall was included in appellant’s рroposal, appellant is estopped from preventing the City from amending the resolution to reflect this understanding.
. Citing
Hollywood Beach Hotel Co. v. City of Hollywood,
.Appellant also maintains that it was deprived of procedural due proсess in violation of the fourteenth amendment. Appellant states that the “commission meeting of May 6, 1980 was, at best, government by applause meter conducted in wholesale defiance of the state law mandated procedures for legitimate Commission action.” It is unclear from the district court’s opinion whether it considered this claim. We therefore will not address the merits of this claim.
