*1 Before W OOD , Chief Judge , and B AUER and R OVNER , Circuit Judges .
R OVNER , Circuit Judge. The plaintiffs in this case press a dormant commerce clause challenge to a local ordinance that requires a residential property owner who wishes to make *2 repairs to the residence either to obtain a license or to hire a licensed contractor; but a homeowner making repairs to the single-family residence he or she occupies is exempted from this requirement. The plaintiffs argue that this scheme discrim- inates against interstate commerce and to that extent is contrary to the dormant commerce clause. But the ordinance draws no distinction between in-state or out-of-state property owners and imposes no burden on interstate commerce. We therefore affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment against the plaintiffs.
I.
Plaintiff Christopher Regan lives in Cook County, Illinois, but owns real property in the City of Hammond, Indiana, that he leases or rents to others. The Northwest Indiana Creative Investors Association, Inc. (“NICIA”) is a trade assoсiation for real estate investors who likewise own and lease real property in Hammond. As landlords, Regan and NICIA members naturally have the need to make periodic repairs and improve- ments to their Hammond properties. In order tо repair or remodel their properties, the Hammond municipal code requires that they either obtain a license from the city or hire a Hammond-licensed general contractor. Hammond, Ind. Municipal Code §§ 150.15, 150.17. In order to obtain a license, a general contractor or landlord must, among other things, submit an application, pass a test and criminal background check, and pay a fee. (General contractors are subject to additional requirements and obtain a broader license.) The code makes an exception for an individual making repairs or improvements to a private, single-family residence in which he resides. Any work he performs will be subject to review and *3 inspection by the city building commissionеr (as would licensed work), but he need not obtain a license in order to do the work. §§ 150.15, 150.17.
Regan and NICIA contend that the license requirement,
coupled with the exemption, impermissibly burdens interstate
commerce by imposing costs on property owners who, like
Regan, do not reside in Hammond which locally-domiciled
homeowners do not have to pay. That burden, they argue, is
inconsistent with the dormant commerce clause. The district
court disagreed and entered summary
judgment for
Hammond.
Regan v. City of Hammond, Ind.
,
II.
The commerce clause gives Congress the power to regulate
commerce among the states. U.S. Const. Article I, § 8, cl. 3. This
provision “presumes a national market free from local legisla-
tion that discriminates in favor of local interests.”
C & A
Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, N.Y.
,
Our precedents place state and local laws into one of three
categories for purposes of commerce clause analysis, depend-
ing оn the degree to which they affect interstate commerce:
(1) laws that expressly discriminate against interstate com-
merce; (2) laws that, although neutral on their face, bear more
heavily on interstate than local commerce; аnd (3) laws that
may have a mild effect on interstate commerce but in practice
do not give local firms any competitive advantage over firms
located elsewhere.
Park Pet Shop
,
The plaintiffs are landlords, and as the ordinance concerns
landlords, it draws no distinction between those who are
domiciled in Hammond (or elsewhere in Indiana) and those
who are not;
all
landlords are subject to the license require-
ment. So the landlord who lives in Chicago and owns a rental
property in Hammond must obtain a licеnse or hire a licensed
contractor, but so must the landlord who lives next door to his
Hammond rental. The ordinance imposes no impediment or
burden for the non-Hammond landlord that it does not also
impose on the Hammond landlord. There is no disparity in
classification of local versus non-local landlords nor is there a
disparity in how the two are impacted by the ordinance.
See
Park Pet Shop
,
It is only the exception the ordinance makes for occupant homeowners that causes the plaintiffs to complain that the ordinance is inconsistent with the dormant commerce clause, because by definition only a property owner who lives in Hammond can be аn occupant of a Hammond residence. The occupant can, if he chooses, save himself the expense of obtaining a license or hiring a licensed contractor to make improvements to his property; and he is the only property owner who is given that option. But the exception is tied to occupancy of the property rather than the owner’s domicile; a Hammond-based landlord will not qualify for the exception even if his tenant lives next door to him in thе adjoining unit of a side-by-side duplex.
The premise of the plaintiffs’ commerce clause challenge is
that all owners of residential property in Hammond are
participants and competitors in the national housing market,
so that to give an occupant homeowner an exemption from the
license requirement is to discriminate in favor of the occupant
against the non-occupant homeowner, including in particular
the landlord who is not domiciled in Hammond. But occuрant
homeowners are not similarly situated with landlords, as the
district court recognized. The owner-occupant of a single-
family home typically is not deriving rental income from his
property, which means that he or she is not in meaningful
competition with lаndlords. Yes, both own property, and both
may ultimately sell that property in the national market, but
during the term of their ownership, they are using the property
for different purposes. Moreover, the occupant also bears the
consequenсes of repairs or improvements made to his home in
a way that a landlord does not. Of course, all repairs and
improvements are reviewed by the Hammond building
commissioner for compliance with municipal codes, so one
may prеsume the alterations by the occupant owner are good
enough to pass inspection; but compliance with local regula-
tions does not ensure that the craftsmanship is sound, effective
in resolving any problems that necessitatеd repairs, or suffi-
cient to prevent future problems. And as between the occupant
and the landlord, it is the former who will be without heat,
water, a working kitchen, a watertight roof, or a sound
staircase if the repairs or improvements are not made properly.
The occupant and the landlord alike ultimately may suffer the
economic consequences of bad work (a tenant might withhold
rent or abandon the lease), but only the occupant actually
*8
experiences the deterioration in living conditions with its
attendant hardships and dangers. In the district court’s words,
“While resident homeowners will bear the risk of their own
poor craftsmanship, building contractors and landlords impose
the risk of faulty construction upon current or future tenants.”
Given the material distinctions between occupant owners
and landlords, the exception for occupant owners does not
make the ordinance one that discriminates against non-
Hammond property owners, so as to trigger a presumption of
invalidity. “[L]aws that draw distinctions between entities that
are not competitors do not ‘discriminate’ for purposes of the
dormant commerce clause.”
Selevan v. N.Y. Thruway Auth.
, 584
F.3d 82, 95 (2d Cir. 2009) (quoting
Town of Southold v. Town of
E. Hampton
,
And for the same reasons that occupant homeowners are not similarly situated to landlords, the license requirement and exemption easily survive deferential review. Hammond has an obvious interest in the safety and habitability of the homes in *9 which its residents live, and the ordinance is a legitimate exercise of its authority to promote that interest. The license requirement serves to ensure not only that whoever performs the work, be it the property owner or a contractor, is fаmiliar with the local code requirements and is therefore capable of completing work in a sound manner that complies with those requirements, but that he lacks a criminal background that may place the property’s owner or oсcupant in jeopardy of fraud. Insofar as the exemption for occupant homeowners is concerned, it is reasonable for the city to think that such homeowners, who have a keen interest in the adequacy of repairs and imprоvements made to their own homes, will also endeavor to comply with all local requirements.
III.
Hammond’s licensing ordinance does not discriminate based on the domicile of a homeowner in name or effect and has the support of a rational basis; it therefore poses no problem under the dormant commerce clause. The district court property granted summary judgment to Hammond.
AFFIRMED
