This appeal requires us to decide whether a developer may state a claim for relief based on the allegedly arbitrary and irrational denial of a permit application. The district court said not, relying on our decision in
Armendariz v. Penman,
Crown Point appeals, arguing that it may proceed despite
Armendariz,
because the United States Supreme Court ruled 14453 in
Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc.,
I
According to its complaint, Crown Point is the developer of Crown Ranch, a 9.76 acre residential subdivision in Sun Valley, Idaho. The project has proceeded over a number of years and in five separate phases. Crown Ranch is zoned RM-2 which carries a minimum density requirement of four units per gross acre. To meet this standard, Crown Point was required to build 39 total units on the property.
It built 26 units during Phases 1 through 4. Originally, it planned to construct eight units in Phase 4 and 11 units in Phase 5. However, Sun Valley required Crown Point to reduce the number of units in Phase 4 from eight to six in order to receive approval. This meant that Crown Point had to propose constructing 13 townhouse units for Phase 5 in order to satisfy the minimum density requirement.
The Sun Valley Planning and Zoning Commission requested revisions, which Crown Point made, and the Commission approved the amended application. But a current Crown Ranch resident and the Crown Ranch Homeowners Association, being dissatisfied with the overall density of Phase 5, appealed to the City Council. When the Council denied the application, Crown Point sought judicial review in state court, which remanded for new Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. Another round of litigation ensued with respect to the new findings, with the Idaho district court eventually concluding that the City Council’s denial of Crown Point’s application was arbitrary and capricious. The Idaho Supreme Court reversed that ruling because the trial court had improperly expanded the administrative record, but again remanded because the revised findings of fact were still insufficient.
Crown Point Dev., Inc. v. City of Sun Valley,
Meanwhile, Crown Point filed this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. It alleges a single, substantive due process claim. Crown Point’s theory is that the City Council arbitrarily interfered with its property rights by denying the application for Phase 5 without any evidence in support and under circumstances forced by the City Council’s own prior actions.
Sun Valley moved to dismiss on the footing that well-settled law in this circuit does not allow substantive due process claims pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment when the interest at stake is real property, citing
Armendariz,
Regrettably, Crown Point did not assist the district court — as it should have done — by arguing there as it does here that
Lingle’s
repudiation of the “substantially advances” takings formula undercuts
Armendariz.
Still, it
did
argue that certain substantive due process rights continue despite
Armendariz,
and are not subsumed in the Takings Clause. This is the same argument now made, albeit supported by different authorities and reasoning. Although a discretionary call and a somewhat close one, we are hard-pressed to accept Sun Valley’s position that Crown Point waived the argument that
Lingle
modifies the reach of
Armendariz.
Where “the question presented is one of law, we
*854
consider it in light of ‘all relevant authority,’ regardless of whether such authority was properly presented in the district court.”
Ballaris v. Wacker Siltronic Corp.,
II
In
Armendariz,
a group of low-income property owners brought a § 1983 action challenging the City of San Bernardino’s allegedly overzealous enforcement of housing code provisions in order to drive the tenants out of a high-crime area and to allow a commercial developer to acquire the property “on the cheap.” We held that the right which the property owners sought to vindicate originated in the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause rather than in substantive due process, thus the claim failed in light of
Graham v. Connor,
More to the point here, in
Macri v. King County,
However, this understanding of the
Agins
’ “substantially advances” language — i.e., that it is a “stand-alone regulatory takings test” — was rejected by the Supreme Court in
Lingle.
In this, Lingle pulls the rug out from under our rationale for totally precluding substantive due process claims based on arbitrary or unreasonable conduct. As the Court made clear, there is no specific textual source in the Fifth Amendment for protecting a property owner from conduct that furthers no legitimate government purpose. Thus, the Graham rationale no longer applies to claims that a municipality’s actions were arbitrary and unreasonable, lacking any substantial relation to the public health, safety, or general welfare.
Sun Valley posits that Crown Point’s claim nevertheless remains controlled by the Takings Clause and Armendariz’s preemption analysis because the claim involves a deprivation of property whether or not the City’s action effected a taking. While a plausible view, yet another supervening decision,
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
Applying the
Lewis
rule to land use, the Fifth Amendment would preclude a due process challenge only if the alleged conduct is actually covered by the Takings Clause.
Lingle
indicates that a claim of arbitrary action is not such a challenge. Rather, it identifies three basic categories of regulatory action that generally will be deemed a taking for Fifth Amendment purposes: where government requires an owner to suffer a permanent physical invasion of property,
see Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
Accordingly, it is no longer possible in light of
Lingle
and
Lewis
to read
Armendariz
as imposing a blanket obstacle to all substantive due process challenges to land use regulation.
See Miller v. Gammie,
This said, there is scant basis for us to go further. We decline to do so, as fleshing out the parties’ positions with spe
*857
cific reference to the allegations in the complaint, or to a record adduced on summary judgment, mil give us the benefit of the district court’s informed analysis on a developed record.
See Dream Palace v. County of Maricopa,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We have since applied
Armendariz
in a number of similar contexts.
See, e.g., Buckles
v.
King County,
. “Primary among those factors are the economic impact of the regulation on the claimant and, particularly, the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct invest
*856
ment-backed expectations. In addition, the character of the governmental action — for instance whether it amounts to a physical invasion or instead merely affects property interests through some public program adjusting the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the common good — may be relevant in discerning whether a taking has occurred.”
Lingle,
