Plaintiff-appellant Chiplin Enterprises, Inc. (“Chiplin”) built, operates, and collects rents from a 24-unit apartment complex in Lebanon, New Hampshire. The building permit for the project was granted only after five years of negotiations with local authorities and a trip through the New Hampshire courts. Once it had the permit in hand, Chiplin brought the present suit in the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire. It sought $2,000,000 in damages for “violation of plaintiff’s civil and constitutional rights” by the city of Lebanon, its building inspector, and the members of its planning board. After a brief hearing, the district court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction and granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss. 1 We affirm.
I.
The background of this suit is not disputed. Appellant first sought a building permit from the city’s building inspector in the fall of 1976. It was informed that the project required the approval of the Lebanon Planning Board, pursuant to section 504 of the city zoning ordinance, which called for “site plan review” by the board of any project that could have a “substantial impact” on the area. The board granted preliminary approval, but denied the permit after a public hearing, noting possibly severe traffic problems. On January 31, 1977, Chiplin submitted a modified propos *1526 al; this too was rejected after a public hearing. Chiplin then sought review in the New Hampshire Superior Court. See N.H. Rev.Stat.Ann. § 36:34. A hearing was held in May 1978, and on April 19, 1979, the court affirmed the board’s denial of a permit. 2
Chiplin appealed to the state Supreme Court. It argued, as it had below, that section 504 exceeded the scope of the state enabling legislation on which it was based, and that the board therefore had no power to review its plans. In an opinion issued February 14,1980, the New Hampshire Supreme Court agreed. It held that because the enabling legislation authorized planning board review of nonresidential uses only, it could not support review of Chiplin’s project. The enabling legislation had by that time been amended to grant planning boards explicit authority to review site plans for “multi-family dwelling units.” The court found, however, that the amendment came too late to help the city in this case. It remanded the case to the Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Lebanon had repealed section 504 and adopted a new zoning ordinance and master plan. Under the plan, Chiplin’s proposed complex was not permissible. The Superior Court ordered an interlocutory appeal concerning the effect of the new master plan, which the Supreme Court denied in August of 1980. The case was then reheard by the Superior Court, which found, in January 1981, that the project fell within a grandfather clause in the new master plan, and that the amendment to the enabling legislation did not retroactively salvage planning board review. A permit was finally issued on November 12, 1981; work began the following spring; and the apartments were completed in October of 1982.
II.
Chiplin filéd this section 1983 action in April 1982 seeking damages for the five-year delay between its initial application and the grant of the permit. The alleged constitutional violation is not the lengthy delay as such, however. Rather, under appellant’s theory, it is the denial itself that is actionable. The ensuing delay only established the extent of damage; it did not cause it. Had the delay been one year rather than five, or even, in theory, one day, the claim would be no weaker although damages would be much less.
Chiplin asserts that as it had met all legal requirements for the permit, the town had no valid reason to reject the application. It then aims in the general direction of the federal Constitution with buckshot, stating that this improper denial of a permit “unlawfully restricted and interfered with plaintiff’s use and enjoyment of its property,” “interfered with plaintiff’s prospective economic gain,” denied it the equal protection of the law, and took its property without due processor just compensation. As described in its brief to us, the “gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is that the individuals named as defendants denied the plaintiff due process by maliciously denying it a building permit for invalid and illegal reasons and in bad faith.”
III.
Even taking the factual allegations of the complaint to be true, we do not think Chiplin has made out a federal claim.
3
The Supreme Court has frequently noted the two essential elements of a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983: 1) that the conduct complained of was carried out under color of state law, and 2) that this conduct de
*1527
prived the plaintiff of rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States.
E.g., Parratt v. Taylor,
Chiplin’s claim is essentially identical to that rejected in
Creative Environments, Inc. v. Estabrook,
Chiplin asserts that what it sees as the appellees’ flouting of state law — their refusal to issue a permit “even though all reasonable requirements had been met”— provides a basis for a section 1983 action. Yet it is axiomatic that not every violation of a state statute amounts to an infringement of constitutional rights.
Paul v. Davis,
To be sure, additional factors might give rise to genuine constitutional issues in cases of this sort. In
Packish v. McMurtrie,
Here, however, the only path into the Constitution is via due process, and plaintiff’s claim is not even that he was denied procedural due process.
6
No other constitutional right is alleged to have been denied. While Chiplin does refer to the equal protection clause, this only relabels the claim: it has been deprived of the equal protection of the laws only to the extent that it has been deprived of its property without due process. In contrast, the plaintiffs in
Packish
and
Manego
at least alleged, though they could not support, the “different situation” we identified in
Creative Environments,
where we pointed out that “[djifferent considerations may also be present where recognized fundamental constitutional rights are abridged.”
We recently reemphasized that “even the outright violation of state law by local officials” in denying a license does not automatically raise a federal claim.
Roy v. City of Augusta,
In short, we see no meaningful distinction between the present claim and that rejected in Creative Environments. A mere bad faith refusal to follow state law in such local administrative matters simply does not amount to a deprivation of due process where the state courts are available to correct the error. Absent the allegation of a constitutional violation, no claim has been stated under section 1983.
IV.
This case was dismissed not for failure to state a claim but on jurisdictional grounds. The order, drafted by counsel for the defendants, stated that the court was “without proper subject matter jurisdiction” because “plaintiff asserts no substantial federal question.”
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1).
See generally Hagans v. Lavine,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The court’s order read as follows: “Plaintiffs complaint is dismissed, with prejudice. Plaintiff asserts no substantial federal question. This court is without proper subject matter jurisdiction over this matter.”
. In its brief, appellant conveniently omits any mention of the outcome in the Superior Court While not necessary to our decision, we do note that the fact that a neutral judicial officer upheld the planning board’s denial tends to undermine Chiplin’s claim that the denial was ungrounded, malicious, and in bad faith.
. The complaint also included a claim under the New Hampshire constitution. Although the district court’s order does not mention the state claim, the court plainly declined to retain jurisdiction over it once it had dismissed the federal claim. This was entirely proper. See
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
. This situation is analogous to that which sometimes arises in public employment cases. In that context we have pointed out that “a mere breach of a contractual right is not a deprivation of property without
constitutional
due process of law. Otherwise, virtually every controversy involving an alleged breach of contract by a government ... instrumentality would be a constitutional case.”
Jimenez v. Almodovar,
. The case closely parallels this one in that indemnification was ultimately granted, and the plaintiff sought damages for the delay.
. Chiplin received several administrative hearings, numerous meetings with local officials, and the consideration of the New Hampshire court system, including the Supreme Court, on three different occasions. Given this procedural history, we doubt that Chiplin could state a procedural due process claim.
See, e.g., Rogin
v.
Bensalem Township,
. Chiplin alleges that the defendants continued to drag their feet even after it had prevailed in the New Hampshire Supreme Court and then in the Superior Court, and that they acted “contemptuously of the highest court in the state.” These allegedly improper delays ended, however, with the grant of a permit.
