Crown Point I, LLC appeals the District Court’s dismissal of its complaint against
I.
We draw the facts from Plaintiffs well-pleaded complaint. Crown Point I, LLC is the owner of a portion of Crown Point Development, a multi-use development located in the Town of Parker, Colorado. In September 2000, after a series of public hearings, Parker approved the final plat for the Crown Point development which included a sixty-seven million dollar multifamily residential apartment complex on plaintiffs property.
Intermountain Rural Electric Association is a utility company that provides services to Parker and surrounding areas. On March 5, 2001, Intermountain announced its intention to construct a high voltage (115 kilovolt) transmission line in Parker running through open space to the east of plaintiffs property (the “Eastern Route”). This route had no impact on the Crown Point development.
Shortly after Intermountain provided notice, in July 2001, Parker passed an ordinance amending its Land Development Code classifying the construction of a transmission line as a “special use”. Parker Municipal Code § 13.04.205(a). The new ordinance required public notice and a hearing prior to the Town Council’s approval of such a special use. Id. In response to this ordinance, Intermountain filed a special review application with Parker in July 2001.
Before Parker had an opportunity to hold a hearing or to make a determination regarding the application, Intermountain filed an action against Parker in state court related to the passage of the new ordinance. Intermountain also declared a moratorium on all new electrical services in Parker pending the outcome of that suit. On September 17, 2001, pursuant to a settlement agreement reached between Intermountain and Parker, Parker passed Resolution Number 01-042, waiving the special use review requirement with respect to Intermountain’s transmission line. Parker waived the special use review pursuant to a provision in the Land Development Code which allows the Town Council to “authorize waivers from the provisions of this Chapter ... if [such waivers] are deemed by the Town Council to be in the public interest and does not impair the intent and purposes of this Title.” Land Development Code § 13.01.100(a).
As a condition of the waiver, Parker required Intermountain to change the route of its proposed transmission line to one that ran along the northern portion of Crown Point’s property (the “Northern Route”). The Northern Route placed transmission lines within thirty feet of Crown Point’s new apartment complex.
1
In order to prevent the construction along the Northern Route, on May 9, 2002, Crown Point filed the present action in District Court alleging that defendants violated its procedural due process rights by failing to give notice and hold a public hearing related to Intermountairis transmission line. Plaintiff amended its complaint on June 13, 2002, adding an allegation that defendants also violated substantive due process rights. Plaintiff requested injunctive relief to prevent the initiation of condemnation proceedings in state court by Intermountain against Crown Point’s property, and a declaratory judgment that Intermountain and Parker had violated its due process rights. Plaintiff also requested monetary damages in an amount “to be proven at trial” and attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
On June 4, 2002, Intermountain filed a petition in condemnation against Crown Point in Colorado state court seeking to condemn a thirty-two foot wide easement on plaintiffs property.
2
Crown Point moved for a temporary restraining order in the federal action requesting an injunction to prevent the state court case from proceeding. The District Court denied Crown Point’s motion and on July 9, 2002, dismissed its complaint. Crown Point appealed the dismissal and moved for an injunction pending appeal. A motion’s panel of this Circuit denied Crown Point’s motion for an injunction pending appeal concluding that the District Court “was obligated to abstain from enjoining the state court proceedings under
Younger v. Harris,
II.
We consider two issues on appeal: (1) whether the District Court was required to stay the proceedings based on
Younger v. Harris,
A. Younger Abstention
The applicability of
Younger
abstention was not raised by the parties below. However, the issue arose after a motions panel of this circuit determined,
sua sponte,
that the District Court was required to abstain from granting the plaintiffs request for injunctive relief based on the principles articulated in
Younger v. Harris.
We have noted that: “While a merits panel does not lightly overturn a decision made by a motions panel during the course of the same appeal, we do not apply the law of the case doctrine as strictly in that instance as we do when a second merits panel is asked to reconsider a decision reached by the first merits panel on an earlier appeal.”
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. v.
Younger
abstention “is the exception, not the rule.”
Joseph A. v. Ingram,
It is clear in this case, that the state court condemnation action is an “ongoing” proceeding for
Younger
purposes.
See Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
B. Crown Point’s Due Process Claim
In order to prevail on its 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim, plaintiff must demonstrate that it suffered a deprivation of a federally protected right.
See Hyde Park Co. v. Santa Fe City Council,
A property interest includes a “legitimate claim of entitlement” to some benefit created and defined by “existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
It is well established that “the mere existence of an entitlement to a hearing under state law, without further substantive limitation, does not give rise to an independent substantive [property] interest protected by the fourteenth amendment.”
Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs, Co. v. City of Lawrence,
As we explained in
Hyde Park,
when a party challenges a land use decision by a governing body on due process grounds, the proper inquiry is whether that body had limited discretion in granting or denying a particular zoning or use application.
See Hyde Park,
We find additional support for our conclusion in the Colorado Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Hillside Comty. Church v. Olson,
In the case before us, Crown Point states that it has legitimate claim of entitlement to participate in a hearing prior to Parker’s approval of Intermountain’s proposed land use. However, it fails to point to any limitation on Parker’s discretion that would create a protectible property interest in the special use review procedure.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court.
Notes
. Drawings prepared by Intermountain’s engineer indicate that the northeast corner of Crown Point Building A will be only 31 feet from a planned pole supporting the transmission line. The northwest corner of Building
. On September 19, 2002, the state court granted Intermountairis motion for immediate possession of the property in question and required it to pay a bond of $93,950.00 pending a just compensation hearing. Currently, a four day jury trial on the compensation issue is scheduled to begin on August 25, 2003. The court declined to consider Crown Point's due process defense prior to granting immediate possession on the grounds that Crown Point was collaterally estopped from raising the argument due to the District Court’s decision on the merits in the federal action.
. We note that the district court's order appears to find both that Crown Point had no property interest and that Crown Point's “more generalized Fourteenth Amendment due process protections are not ripe” for adjudication,
. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Hyde Park by arguing that the reasoning of the case should apply only to due process claims brought by a landowner who received an unfavorable decision on its own application for a particular land use, and not to a third party who has not made an application before the town council. This distinction fails. Crown Point seeks to challenge the decision of the Parker Town Council to grant Intermoun-tain's proposed land use on due process grounds. The inquiry in this case therefore, as in the situation presented in Hyde Park, is whether the Town had only limited discretion to grant or deny a particular land use.
