ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
We granted transfer to consider whether a zoning ordinance that provides for the forfeiture of a prior nonconforming use if it is not registered constitutes an unconstitutional taking in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Although important individual property rights are at stake, we conclude that the zoning ordinance at issue served an important public purpose and did not effect an unconstitutional taking. The Court of Appeals concluded that a different result was required by our opinion in
Ailes v. Decatur County Area Planning Comm’n,
Factual and Procedural Background
Effective June 8, 1985, Bloomington passed a zoning ordinance that limited the occupancy of dwellings in certain neighborhoods to a maximum of three unrelated adults per unit. Bloomington Municipal Code [BMC] § 20.04.01.00. Among the af-. fected properties were two that had been continuously rented to more than three unrelated adults prior to 1985. At the time Bloomington adopted the zoning ordinance it also enacted a grandfathering provision that permitted owners of properties that became nonconforming uses under the zoning ordinance to preserve their lawful nonconforming use status if they registered it by October 1, 1985. BMC § 20.06.02.04(b). Notice of the zoning ordinance and grandfathering provision was published in the local newspaper during the summer of 1985. Notice of both was also mailed to all owners of rental property registered under a separate housing ordinance (BMC § 16.12.060) that required the registration of rental properties in order to facilitate their inspection for compliance with health and safety regulations. Because the two properties involved in this case were not registered under the housing ordinance, the then owners were not given mailed notice of the zoning change. Whether for that reason or otherwise, they did not register the nonconforming use.
Jack and Barbara Leisz purchased the properties in 1989. In 1993, the City of Bloomington notified the Leiszs that then-properties were in violation of the 1985 zoning ordinance. The Leiszs requested an administrative ruling that their properties were exempt from the ordinance as pre-existing lawful nonconforming uses. This request was denied by the planning director, and the Leiszs appealed to the Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA), which affirmed. The Leiszs sought review in the trial court, which initially affirmed BZA’s decision, but then reversed
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that decision in ruling on the Leiszs’ motion to correct error. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court.
Board of Zoning Appeals v. Leisz,
I. The Takings Issue
The Court of Appeals held that “a vested property interest in a nonconforming use may not be forfeited by the mere failure to register it under a grandfathering provision.”
Leisz,
A. The federal Takings Clause
“[WJhile property may be regulated to a certain extent, if regulation goes too far it will be recognized as a taking.”
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
The Court has identified two discrete categories of regulations that violate the Takings Clause regardless of the legitimate state interest advanced.
See generally
Randall T. Shepard,
Land Use Regulation in the Rehnquist Court: The Fifth Amendment and Judicial Intervention,
38 Cath. U.L.Rev. 847 (1989). The first consists of regulations that compel a property owner to suffer a physical
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invasion, no matter how minute, of his property.
Lucas,
A zoning ordinance that provides for the forfeiture of unregistered nonconforming uses does not fall into either of these prohibited categories. The forfeiture involved no physical invasion of the Leiszs’ property. It merely limits the use of their rental property to three unrelated adults instead of four, five or more. Second, the ordinance does not deny the Leiszs all economically beneficial or productive use of their land. Rather, it denies them at most 25% to 40% of the rental income that they might otherwise receive. 3
1. Legitimate state interest
Even if there is no per se taking, the Fifth Amendment is violated when a land-use regulation “does not substantially advance legitimate state interests!!]”
Id.
at 1016,
The purpose of the registration requirement, according to the BZA, was to establish an administrative process for making a onetime determination of pre-existing status that protects both the owner and the zoning authority from later lengthy disputes and extensive proof problems related to the validity of a nonconforming use. The landowners make a qualified concession in this regard: “The Leiszs concede that the city may require a grandfather registration form to be filled out by lawful, pre-existing, non-conforming use and that recordkeeping is useful for the BZA, and protects against problems of proof.” Thus, the Leiszs do not attack the registration requirement itself, but rather challenge only its forfeiture penalty.
In upholding a provision similar to Bloom-ington’s, the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas noted that
[t]he purpose of this registration ordinance is to provide [the City] with sufficient knowledge of the nature and extent of nonconforming uses claimed within the City so that the City can consider these nonconforming uses in planning and can monitor their abandonment. Without a registration scheme it would be impossible for [the City] to begin to implement the plan for the fair and reasonable return of the property to the character of the surrounding neighborhood.
Board of Adjustment of San Antonio v. Nelson,
clearly is to bring about conformance, through the zoning process, of nonconforming uses as speedily as possible. To accomplish this, the County Commissioners needed to know where the applicable nonconforming uses were located; thus, the required certification of the nonconforming uses within a specified time. In addition, the County Commissioners sought to prevent unlawful expansion of such uses; hence the requirement that information concerning the exact nature and extent of the nonconforming use was required to be furnished. Moreover, the County Commissioners provided a sanction *1030 for a landowner’s failure to comply with the certification requirement — the discontinuance of the nonconforming use.
County Comm’rs of Carroll County v. Uhler,
The very real problem associated with proving the existence of a nonconforming use several years in the past is highlighted by this case. The Leiszs offered affidavits and copies of old leases listing the names of four or five individuals living in the rentals when the ordinance was enacted. However, the BZA found this insufficient to prove uninterrupted occupancy by more than three adults since 1985.
4
Leisz,
Although they concede the value of requiring registration of nonconforming uses, the Leiszs seem to suggest that there should be no penalty for noncompliance. The forfeiture provision, however, is a necessary part of the registration requirement. By its very nature, registration requires that a deadline be set. In this case, the June 8, 1985 ordinance required registration of nonconforming uses by October 1, 1985. Allowing nonconforming uses to continue indefinitely after the expiration of the registration deadline would make the entire registration requirement an exercise in futility. In sum, we conclude that the registration requirement, including the forfeiture sanction, substantially advances a legitimate state interest.
2. Economic considerations
The U.S. Supreme Court has identified three factors of “particular significance” to an ad hoe takings inquiry: (1) “[t]he economic impact of the regulation on the claimant,” (2) “the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct investment-backed expectations,” and (3) “the character of the governmental action.”
Penn Central,
When a regulation is, as in this case, “reasonably related to the promotion of the general welfare,” the Supreme Court has “uniformly reject[ed] the proposition that diminution in property value, standing alone, can establish a ‘taking[.]’ ”
Id.
at 131,
The character of the governmental action points in the same direction. The registration requirement takes nothing from the landowner. Rather, it merely requires the filing of a form by a designated date. Noncompliance with the regulation, not the regulation itself, results in the forfeiture of a vested property right. The power to protect the property interest rests solely with the landowner. The Supreme Court addressed a similar situation in
United States v. Locke,
could have [been] avoided with minimal burden; it was their failure to file on time — not the action of Congress — that caused the property right to be extinguished. Regulation of property rights does not “take” private property when an individual’s reasonable, investment-backed expectations can continue to be realized as long as he complies with reasonable regulatory restrictions the legislature has imposed.
Id.
The claims in
Locke
were worth millions of dollars and reverted to the federal government.
Id.
at 89,
We conclude that the forfeiture of the Leiszs’ nonconforming use due to its nonregistration is not a taking under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The ordinance at issue serves important public purposes. Any diminution in the economic value of the Leiszs’ property is the direct result of their predecessors’ failure to comply with a reasonable registration requirement. Under these facts, the forfeiture of the Leiszs’ nonconforming use in no way offends notions of “fairness and justice.” This view is consistent with the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Locke
and also finds support in other jurisdictions that have considered and upheld similar provisions.
See, e.g., Uhler,
*1032 B. Reconsidering Ailes
The Court of Appeals drew guidance from our opinion in
Ailes v. Decatur County Area Planning Comm’n,
Most states allow local zoning authorities to phase out nonconforming uses with amortization provisions that require the owner to discontinue the nonconforming use after a certain period of time.
Leisz,
Because Ailes turns on the federal constitution, it is correct only to the extent consistent with U.S. Supreme Court precedent. The Supreme Court has never directly considered the constitutionality of amortization provisions. However, most other courts that have considered the issue have held that amortization provisions are not unconstitutional per se. See Jay M. Zitter, Annotation,
Validity of Provisions for Amortization of Nonconforming Uses,
With the sole exception of this Court’s decision in
Ailes,
state courts that have found amortization provisions unconstitutional have done so on the basis of then- state constitution.
Id.
at 419; see also
Hoffmann v. Kinealy,
II. Procedural Due Process
Although the Leiszs never directly raised a procedural due process challenge, both the trial court and Court of Appeals dealt with the issue. As stated by the trial court in its order granting the Leiszs’ motion to correct error, which was also quoted in the Court of Appeals opinion: “[The Leiszs’] right to nonconforming use would be very nohow indeed if it could be lost to a grandfa
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thering requirement, the notice of which was sent only to specific recipients, and which required registration within a very short period of time.”
Leisz,
In granting the Leiszs’ motion to correct error, the trial court stated “[o]bviously, the Leiszs (or their predecessors) could not have registered their properties for purposes of grandfathering because the notices were sent only to those who were registered as rentals.” We disagree. Notice was mailed to all property owners registered under BMC § 16.12.060, a housing ordinance that requires all rental units to be registered with the city engineer in order to subject them to inspections to ensure compliance with minimum health, safety, and public welfare standards.
Leisz,
does not require that “the procedures used to guard against an erroneous deprivation ... be so comprehensive as to preclude any possibility of error,” and in addition we have emphasized that the marginal gains from affording an additional procedural safeguard often may be outweighed by the societal cost of providing such a safeguard.
Walters v. National Ass’n of Radiation Survivors,
The trial court also expressed concern with the brevity of time allowed for the required registration. We assume that the registration form, although not contained in the record, was relatively short and simple. The four months given to complete and file this form is longer than the time allowed to file a federal or state income tax return. 8 It is enough to satisfy the Constitution.
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. This case is remanded with instructions to affirm the decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals. The remaining issues addressed by the Court of Appeals are moot in light of our holding on the issue of grandfather registration.
Notes
. The closest analogs are Indiana Constitution Article I, § 21, which provides "[n]o person's property shall be taken by law, without just compensation,” and Article I, § 12, which states "every person, for injury done to him in his person, property, or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.”
. As the Court noted in
Lucas,
however, regulations that prohibit all economically beneficially use of land are still permissible if they do no more than duplicate the result that could have been achieved under state nuisance law.
. One property is currently being rented to four individuals and the other to five. If limited to a maximum of three occupants per unit, the Leiszs presumably may charge each tenant at least the same rent, if not more.
. In addition to being considered by the City Planning Director and in the BZA Staff Report, this issue was litigated at the BZA appeal hearing, in the trial court, and in the Court of Appeals. Litigation of the issue appears to have triggered the very type of lengthy proceeding that the registration requirement seeks to prevent.
. The Leiszs do not contend that Bloomington failed to provide notice of the enactment of the ordinance or that the ordinance was not available for their review — both of which are mandated by statute. See Ind.Code § 36-7-4-610(a) & (b) (1998).
. A legitimate example of the frustration of distinct investment-backed expectation is found in
Mahon,
. The Court of Appeals cited
Appeal of Suburban General Hospital,
. Four months is, however, a shorter period of time than that given to the landowners in the cases discussed in Part I of this opinion. See
County Comm'rs of Carroll County v. Uhler,
