Appellants are owners of three apartment buildings in New York City. They sued the City of New York and various City agencies and officials, claiming that the City defendants imposed liens on the properties without giving appellants prior notice of the liens or securing the approval of the New York Housing Court, as required by an order of that court. Judge Pauley dismissed their complaint. We af *148 firm because the complaint itself alleges that the Housing Court order afforded appellants a right to notice and access to New York courts before the imposition of valid liens. The availability of this process satisfied due process.
BACKGROUND
Because this is an appeal from a dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), we view the facts alleged in the complaint in the light most favorable to the appellants.
Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc.,
The complaint alleged the following. Tenants of three apartment buildings in New York City commenced an action in the New York City Civil Court, Housing Part under Article 7A of the New York Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law. The tenants sought the appointment of a “7A Administrator” to oversee the properties and to remedy housing code violations. The Housing Court issued an order appointing Peter Nakos as the 7A Administrator for the properties.
The Housing Court’s order gave the 7A Administrator authority to collect and use rents, “subject to the Court’s direction, to remedy the conditions alleged in the Petition, any violations of record issued by [the New York City Housing Preservation Department (“HPD”) ] ... and to undertake work as authorized by the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law § 778(1).... ” The order authorized the 7A Administrator to use rent monies to “[o]rder the necessary materials, labor and services to remove or remedy the conditions alleged in the Petition, and to remedy all violations currently on record with HPD.... ” The 7A Administrator was also given authority to borrow money when necessary. In this respect, the Housing Court’s order provided that the 7A Administrator could:
Borrow funds from HPD or other governmental entity for repairs at the Premises that are necessary to implement the objectives of this Judgment and enter into an agreement with HPD or other governmental entity for the repayment of such monies.... The Administrator may apply for any loan from a bank or lending institution or grant available for the purposes of repair and rehabilitation of the Premises or which are otherwise made available through any governmentally administered or subsidized program.
However, the order limited the 7A Administrator’s authority to accept loans that would result in liens against the properties:
[A]ny loan which would result in a lien on the Premises may not be accepted without approval of the Court, which approval shall be sought upon notice to the Premises’ owner or attorney for the owner and all other parties to this proceeding. Said approval may be sought without formal motion procedure so long as at least eight days’ written notice of such approval is given to the owner or attorney thereof, and any other interested parties. The Court may set such procedures as are reasonable to hear any objections to such application, and if any party objects to its proposal loan they may bring an order to show cause or seek such other remedy as may be appropriate.
The Housing Court’s order also set forth record-keeping and reporting requirements. Within thirty days of the order’s issuance, the 7A Administrator was required to file with the HPD and with all relevant parties a plan for the provision of rehabilitative services. The order further required that the 7A Administrator submit to both the Housing Court and to HPD *149 monthly financial statements of all receipts and expenditures.
The provisions of the Housing Court’s order mirror statutory provisions in Article 7A that lay out the scope of authority given to a 7A administrator. That law provides in relevant part: “Any administrator is authorized and empowered in accordance with the direction of the court, to order the necessary materials, labor and services to remove or remedy the conditions specified in the judgment, and to make disbursements in payment thereof; and to demand, collect and receive the rents from the tenants.... ” N.Y. Real Prop. Acts. § 778(1) (emphasis added). As to a 7A administrator’s authority to encumber properties placed in its care, Article 7A provides:
In addition, such administrator is authorized and empowered in accordance with the direction of the court to accept and repay such moneys as may be received from the department charged with enforcement of the housing maintenance code of the city of New York for the purpose of replacing or substantially rehabilitating systems or making other repairs or capital improvements authorized by the court. All moneys expended by the department pursuant to the foregoing shall constitute a debt recoverable from the owner and a lien upon the building and lot, and upon the rents and other income thereof.
Id. (emphasis added). Article 7A also sets out similar reporting requirements. For example, it requires that the administrator submit work plans and make publicly available all receipts and expenditures. Id. at §§ 778, 779.
At some point after the appointment of Nakos as the 7A Administrator, appellants purchased the properties in question. They allege that the 7A Administrator subsequently accepted $712,567.55 in loans from HPD, all of which the New York City Department of Finance has “purported to deem ... to be liens” against the properties and has so filed them. It further alleges that HPD granted, and the 7A Administrator accepted, these loans without prior notice to appellants or court approval. The complaint asserts that this conduct not only deprived appellants of “rights that the plaintiffs plainly were entitled to under the Housing Court Order[ ]” but also of their due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. 1 In this respect, the complaint asserts that the 7A Administrator’s unilateral decision to encumber the properties deprived appellants of any “opportunity to contest the amount of the loans, or the necessity or appropriateness of the work which the 7A administrator planned to carry out with the proceeds of such loans.”
The complaint requests that the district court issue an order: (i) enjoining the City from placing any additional liens on the properties; (ii) prohibiting the City from either selling or transferring the existing liens to a third party; and (iii) directing that the City remove the existing $712,567.55 in liens from the properties immediately.
Applying the
Mathews v. Eldridge,
This appeal followed. We affirm but on different grounds.
DISCUSSION
As noted, we review the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss
de novo,
“construing the complaint liberally, accepting all factual allegations in the complaint as true, and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor.”
Chambers,
Appellants claim that the imposition of liens on the properties by the City violated their Fourteenth Amendment due process rights. “An essential principle of due process is that a deprivation of life, liberty, or property be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.”
Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
The parties dispute whether Mathews entitles appellants to a process affording a pre-deprivation hearing. The district court held that it does not, because of the need for expedition, the cost to the defendants, and the danger to tenants of continuing violations. We disagree.
Absent exigent or emergency circumstances, the property interest here was sufficiently significant, and the risk of erroneous deprivation sufficiently great, that some pre-deprivation procedural protection was required.
See Connecticut v. Doehr,
However, the kind of pre-deprivation hearing required by due process depends upon the nature of the issues and the relative weight of the
Mathews
factors.
Monserrate v. New York State Senate,
As for the need for expedition, the hearing can be tailored in the discretion of the pre-deprivation-hearing court to meet whatever exigencies exist in a particular case.
Karpova v. Snow,
Thus, the requirements of due process can be satisfied if lien or loan approval is largely based on papers already in existence (and usually in the record of proceedings of the Housing Court); the hearing can be limited to the reasonableness of the overall plan and its costs, avoiding quibbles over every length of pipe or sheet of wallboard. Moreover, nothing in due process requires that separate applications be made for each loan rather than an application for the total amount to be borrowed for particular aspects of the project.
As for the cost to the 7A administrator of seeking approval for loans, there is nothing before us to suggest that such costs will be exorbitant given the prior hearing leading to the Administrator’s appointment, the 7A administrator’s need to establish a plan before obtaining loans, and a hearing that focuses on overall legitimacy of need and reasonableness of the amount to be borrowed.
Moreover, the costs of seeking approval may benefit the tenants, the intended beneficiaries of the statutory scheme, because approval of the borrowing increases both the oversight and accountability of the Administrator. Authorizing borrowing without oversight or accountability is no more in the tenants’ interest than an owner’s use of a pre-deprivation hearing to increase the cost of the imposition of a lien.
Any ongoing danger to tenants is a vital consideration, but there is absolutely nothing before us to suggest that this was a factor in the present matter. For example, the dates of the Housing Court orders indicate that relevant events took place over months and years.
We turn now to the question of whether appellants were denied an appropriate pre-deprivation hearing. While appellants may have adequately alleged that liens invalid under state law were imposed on their properties, that allegation does not suffice to state a claim under Section 1983 for relief based on a procedural due process violation. Due process requires only that the state afford a party threatened with a deprivation of property a pro
*152
cess involving pre-deprivation notice and access to a tribunal in which the merits of the deprivation may be fairly challenged.
See Loudermill,
The problem with appellants’ claim is that the complaint itself alleges that New York afforded them pre-deprivation protection by means of court orders. According to the complaint, the Housing Court orders required notice and a court hearing, at which appellants could contest proposed loans that might result in liens. It is hard to conceive of a remedy more attuned to appellants’ claim than a court order preventing the imposition of a lien without a notice, hearing, and court approval. Indeed, such an order is much of the relief they seek in the present action. The Housing Court order, therefore, provided all the process that was constitutionally due at pertinent times.
The complaint does not allege what, if any, action was taken by appellants or the Housing Court to enforce the Housing Court order. Appellants suggested at oral argument that an unsatisfactory ruling had emanated from the Housing Court, from which they had taken an appeal, which is still pending. However, even if the Housing Court erred, such an error does not itself become a due process violation to be remedied in a Section 1983 action.
See, e.g., McDarby v. Dinkins,
This is not by any means to say that valid Section 1983 claims based on due process violations require exhaustion of state remedies. But “[w]hen § 1983 claims allege procedural due process violations, we nonetheless evaluate whether state remedies exist because that inquiry goes to whether a constitutional violation has occurred at all.”
Rivera-Powell,
CONCLUSION
We therefore affirm.
Notes
. The complaint also alleges a violation of due process under the New York Constitution.
. An owner of property for which an administrator has been appointed may be presumed to be informed of the property’s deficiencies at the time of the appointment or at any later time when the owner had access to the property. An owner who purchases the property after the appointment of an administrator, thereby knowing of the existence of deficiencies that may result in loans that become liens, may be given some access in the discretion of the court but, having voluntarily accepted the obvious risks, is in no position to delay matters unreasonably by demanding to learn more about the property purchased.
. Appellants’ arguments seek to gain some superficial appeal by conflating the governmental character of the party seeking to impose the liens, the City, with the governmental action challenged, the imposition of the liens. However, whether the party purporting to impose the liens is a public or private entity is irrelevant here because the constitutional harms claimed are the liens, the validity of which depends entirely on the Housing Court's authority. The appropriate constitutional analysis, therefore, focuses on the Housing Court’s processes and does not turn in any way on whether the lien is asserted by the City or a private bank.
Even if the pertinent constitutional harm was the City’s ”purport[ing] to deem” to have a lien, appellants would have difficulty surmounting the argument that no pre-deprivation notice and hearing was required because the deprivation was random and unauthorized.
See Rivera-Powell v. New York City Bd. of Elections,
. Similarly, we have recognized that a party cannot bring a Section 1983 claim for violation of the Takings Clause when no effort was made to seek compensation from the state, provided it has a "'reasonable certain and adequate provision for obtaining compensation.' "
Villager Pond, Inc. v. Town of Darien,
