230 F.2d 827 | D.C. Cir. | 1956
Appellant’s complaint against the present appellees, the Administrator and the Urban Renewal Commissioner of the Federal Housing and Home Finance Agency, alleges that agreements between appellees and New York City will result in the eviction of appellants, without compensation, from the leased premises in which they carry on various businesses. The complaint alleges that in making these agreements appellees failed to secure, as the law requires, certain conditions beneficial to the United States. The complaint asks for a declaratory judgment and “a mandatory injunction restraining the defendants from taking any further steps of any kind whatever pursuant to and in connection with the
The District Court dismissed the complaint on three grounds; the City is an indispensable party, there is no claim on which relief can be granted, and the plaintiffs lack standing to sue. We need not consider the first two. Appellants will be evicted, if at all, by condemnation proceedings lawfully maintained by New York City. One who will be injured by another’s lawful use of money has no standing to assert that a third person’s action in providing the money will be illegal. Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, 302 U.S. 464, 480-481, 58 S.Ct. 300, 82 L.Ed. 374.
Affirmed.