In July 2005 аppellee National Capital Revitalization Corporation (“NCRC”), an independent instrumentality of the District of Columbia, initiated condemnation proceedings against property owned by appellant Samuel Franco. Mr. Franco answered the complaint and raised seven defenses, asserting primarily that this taking was for a private use and that the declared public purpose for the condemnation was a pretext. Mr. Franco also asserted six counterclaims. NCRC moved to strike Mr. Franco’s defenses and counterclaims under Civil Rule 12(f), and the Superior Court granted that motion. The court then granted NCRC’s motion for immediate possession of the property. Mr. Franco appeals from the orders striking his defenses and granting immediate possession of the property to NCRC. (He does not challenge the decision striking his counterclaims.)
Although this is an eminent domain action, our analysis centers on proper application of Civil Rule 12(f). Concluding that the “pretext” defense raises an issue requiring proof, and cannot be stricken for insufficient pleading, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Samuel Franco owns a store called Discount Mart, which is part of the Skyland Shopping Center located in the southeast quadrant of the District of Columbia at the junction of Alabama Avenue, Good Hope Road, and Naylor Road. The shopping center contains about thirty businesses, including a Murry’s Steaks supermarket, a CVS pharmacy, an AutoZone auto-supply store, a United States Post Office annex, a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant, and other retail establishments.
In 1998 the Council of the District of Columbia created the National Capital Revitalization Corporation as an independent instrumentality charged with several public purposes, including “inducting] economic development and job creation by developing and updating a strаtegic economic development plan for the District; ... [and] removing slum and blight....” D.C.Code § 2-1219.02(b) (2001). To ac *163 complish its public purposes, NCRC is authorized to acquire and assemble land and real property by exercising the power of eminent domain. See D.C.Code § 2-1219.19 (2001).
In October 2002, NCRC entered into a Joint Development Agreement (“JDA”) with four private corporations (together referred to as the “Purchaser/Developer”) to redevelop the Skyland Shopping Center along with five acres of adjoining undeveloped land that was privately-owned and residentially-zoned (the “Skyland Site”). NCRC agreed to make “commercially reasonable good faith efforts” to acquire the properties within the Skyland Site through purchase agreements or by exercising the power of eminent domain, if its use was approved by the Council. The Purchaser/Developer agreed to prepare a plan to redevelop the site into a “first-class, quаlity mixed-use retail center.”
A. Authorizing Legislation
On March 2, 2004, Bill B15-752 was introduced to approve NCRC’s exercise of the power of eminent domain to acquire the Skyland Site. The draft bill included a finding that the component properties were “necessary and desirable for the public use,” but it did not explain why the properties were “necessary” or to what “public use” they would be devoted. On April 28, 2004, the Council’s Committee on Economic Development held a public hearing on the proposed legislation.
The Committee reported favorably on the Skyland bill on November 3, 2004, and the Council passed it on December 7, 2004. The version approved by the Council in-eluded a set of findings that were not in the bill on November 3. These included findings that: “[t]he Skyland Shopping Center is a blighting factor in the Hillcrest and nearby communities”; “[t]he Skyland Shopping Center is characterized by underused, neglected, and poorly maintained properties”; “[t]he fragmented and often absentee ownership of the properties has exacerbated [the shopping center’s] problems by allowing individual owners to avoid responsibility for safety and the reduction of crime, trash, and other blighting factors”; and “[n]either the police nor the community have been able to secure the cooperation of the current owners to deal with the numerous problems at the site despite years of efforts.” The Council also found that “[t]he assemblage of the properties comprising the Skyland Shopping Center and the construction of a new shopping center on the site ... will further many important public purposes,” including removal of garbage and other unsanitary conditions, reduction of crime, reorganization of the site, provision of needed job opportunities and retail options for residents of the surrounding neighborhoods, revitalization of an economically distressed community, and expansion of the tаx base of the District of Columbia. The Council did not hold any additional public hearings before adding these findings. Mayor Williams signed the bill on December 29, 2004, and the act became law after the Congressional review period ended on April 5, 2005. 1 NCRC acquired most of the properties contained in the Skyland Site through private negotiations and other condemnation actions. 2
*164 B. This Litigation
NCRC filed the complaint to condemn Mr. Franco’s property on July 8, 2005. In his answer, Mr. Franco denied that the Skyland Site was blighted and denied that NCRC had submitted a carefully considered development plan designed to serve a public purpose. Mr. Franco also raised seven defenses, asserting most prominently that the proposed condemnation would violate the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution because “it would authorize the taking of [the] property for a private use and not for a public use or purpose.” Franco alleged that the declared rеason for the taking was pretextual and that the true purpose was to confer a private benefit on a particular private party. Additionally, Mr. Franco’s answer included six counterclaims, the first entitled “Taking in Violation of the Takings Clause Public Use Provisions of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.”
On December 7, 2005, NCRC moved under Civil Rule 12(f) 3 to strike the defenses and the counterclaims in Mr. Franco’s answer. A few days later, NCRC moved for immediate possession of the property, arguing that because it had filed its Declaration of Taking with the Superior Court and had deposited its estimate of just compensation in the court registry, it had acquired title to the property pursuant to D.C.Code § 16-1314(b) (2001). Under the circumstances, NCRC urged that it be granted immediate possession of the property as authorized by D.C.Code § 16-1316.
The Superior Court concluded that Mr. Franco’s defenses were “legally insufficient” and therefore granted NCRC’s motion to strike them. The court also struck the counterclaims, concluding that they were prohibited by Civil Rule 71A (e). 4 It also granted NCRC’s motion for immediate possession, explaining that “[s]ince [Mr. Franco’s] defenses have been struck by virtue of this order, and title has vested in NCRC, it is appropriate to grant NCRC’s Motion for Immediate Possession of the property. There is no principled reason not to do so.”
II. Jurisdiction
This court has jurisdiction to review the decision granting NCRC’s motion
*165
for immediate possession because it is an interlocutory order “changing or affecting the possession of property.” D.C.Code § 11-721(a)(2)(C) (2001).
See generally Williams v. Dudley Trust Foundation,
“The exercise of pendent appellate jurisdiction is often suggested, occasionally tempting, but only rarely appropriate.”
Price v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
363 U.S.App. D.C. 404, 411,
We conclude that this is one of those rare instances where it is appropriate for us to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction. The order granting immediate possession is properly before us, and it is “inextricably intertwined with” the court’s decision to strike Mi*. Franco’s defenses.
See Swint,
III. Standard of Review
The trial court did not weigh the facts, and it did not grant a motion for summary judgment. Nor did it strike matters deemed “redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous.... ” Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(f). Therefore, our task is a limited one — to determine whether the trial court properly concluded that Mr. Franco had failed to plead a legally sufficient defense. We review that decision
de novo. Society of Lloyd’s v. Siemon-Netto,
372 U.S.App. D.C. 448, 453,
IV. Striking Defenses
Courts disfavor motions to strike.
E.g., Sweeney v. American Registry of Pathology,
A. The Impact of Kelo
Mr. Franco’s first defense alleged that the legislation authorizing NCRC to take his property violated the Takings Clause of the Constitution because the actual purpose of the cоndemnation was to confer a private benefit on a private party (the Purchaser/Developer). He claimed that the asserted public purpose for the taking was pretextual. In its decision, the trial court stated:
[T]he issue Franco raises, that private property cannot be taken for private use even if there is an overriding public purpose as determined by the legislature, is foreclosed by Kelo, in a situation like this, where the stated reason for the taking is the removal of slum and its *168 replacement by an economically developed area that will provide substantial benefits to the public. As mentioned above, that was the Council’s purpose in enacting the authorizing legislation, and it should not be second-guessed here.
The trial court did not undertake any factual inquiry to determine that the legislation had “an overriding public purpose” and “will provide substantial benefits to the public.” Thus, its discussion suggests that, once thе legislature has declared that there is a public purpose for a condemnation, an owner is foreclosed as a matter of law from demonstrating that the stated reason is a pretext. We do not interpret Kelo so broadly.
To be sure, the decision in
Kelo
emphasized that, apart from determining what compensation is just, courts play a limited role in condemnation cases. ‘Without exception, our cases have defined th[e] concept [of “public purpose”] broadly, reflecting our longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments in this field.”
Some questions have been settled. “Promoting economic development is a traditional and long accepted function of government. ... Clearly, there is no basis for exempting economic development from our traditionally broad understanding of public purpose.”
Id.
at 484-85,
On the other hand, “it has long been accepted that the sovereign may not take the property of
A
for the sole purpose of transferring it to another private party
B,
even though
A
is paid just compensation.”
Kelo,
*169
The
Kelo
Court did not address the sufficiency of the pleadings filed by the landowners. An extensive record had been developed during a seven-day bench trial, and the Court noted that “[t]he trial judge and all the members of the Supreme Court of Connecticut agreed that there was no evidence of an illegitimate purpose in this case.”
Id.
Based on the record presented, the Court concluded that “the City’s development plan was not adopted ‘to benefit a particular class of identifiable individuals.’”
Id.
at 478,
Although the Court determined that the taking at issue in
Kelo
was not pretextual, it emphasized, as we have noted, that a government would not “be allowed to take property under the mere pretext of a public purpose, when its actual purpose was to bestow a private benefit.”
Kelo,
B. Did Appellant Adequately Plead a “Pretext” Defense?
Because such a defense is sometimes viable, we must evaluate whether Mr. Franco adequately pled a defense of pretext. All facts underlying the defense “must be taken to be those set up in the ... answer.”
Kelly v. Kosuga,
Applying these standards, we hold that Mr. Franco sufficiently pled his pretext defense. His answer alleges that the legislation authorizing NCRC to take his property
would authorize the taking of said property for a private use and not for a public use or purpose by, among other things, having as its purpose conferring a private benefit on a particular private party, stating pretextually a public purpose but having as its actual purpose bestowing a private benefit....
*170
These allegations may be too conclusory by themselves to survive a motion to strike (a question we do not decide).
See
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 8(b) (“A party shall state in short and plain terms the party’s defenses to each claim asserted .... ”);
id.,
R. 8(e)(1) (“Each averment of a pleading shall be simple, concise, and direct.”).
Cf. Twombly,
Mr. Franco does not contest the decision to strike his counterclaims, as such, or the court’s refusal to re-designate the counterclaims as
additional
defenses.
See
Rule 71A (e) (providing that after the answer has been filed, “[n]o other pleading or motion asserting any additional defense or objection shall be allowed”). However, he urged the trial court to recognize that the allegations in the counterclaims “provide additional] detail to the respective defenses in the answer,” and we decline to ignore factual detail which elaborates on his defense that the prоposed taking would violate the Fifth Amendment.
See
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 8(c) (“When a party has mistakenly designated a defense as a counterclaim or a counterclaim as a defense, the Court on terms, if justice so requires, shall treat the pleading as if there had been a proper designation.”);
Horsford v. Romeo,
Therefore, we consider facts alleged in his counterclaims which support Mr. Franco’s defense of pretext (although we do not repeat all of those allegations in this opinion). In accordance with the standards discussed above, we assume these facts (as distinguished from his legal conclusions) are true and give Mr. Franco the benefit of reasonable inferences drawn from them. He alleges that NCRC entered into the JDA with a private developer in September 2002, two years before the first bill concerning the Skyland Site was intro *171 duced to the Council. The JDA provided that NCRC would share in the profits of the redevelopment. Mr. Franco alleged that NCRC then set about to obtain the funds and legal authority to acquire the Skyland Site. “NCRC’s sole objective in this intended acquisition [was] to perform its undertakings under the JDA” and then sell the property to the developer, who would “design and build a new shopping center on the site for his own account.” He asserted that NCRC had refused to discuss redevelopment of the site with any of the present owners, “despite said owners’ repeated requests.” He also alleged that NCRC planned to sell the site to the private developer for $25 million less than its value.
Mr. Franco asserted that the stores in the Skyland Shopping Center had been “fully leased for at least the last five years,” he named several of the tenants, and he denied that the center was either blighted оr located in a blighted area. He also detailed the actions of the Council in proposing and voting on the four Skyland bills. Mr. Franco alleged that none of the bills specified any use for the properties or stated why the Council considered the properties “necessary and desirable for the public use.” Finally, he alleged that the legislative findings inserted at the last minute “were and remain pretextual, wrong, inaccurate, baseless and substantially irrelevant.” For example, the permanent legislation recites that NCRC had “advised the Council that the Skyland Shopping Center is blighted,” but, according to Mr. Franco, NCRC admitted that it had made no such finding. He claimed that the Council revised the final Skyland bill to include this finding and fifteen others without giving public notice, conducting a public hearing, or giving owners, tenants, or interested members of the public an opportunity to contest the truth of these revisions.
Recognizing the limited role of the courts in eminent domain jurisprudence, we are especially careful not to indulge baseless, conclusory allegations that the legislature acted improperly.
Compare United States v. 416.81 Acres,
Nevertheless,
Kelo
makes clear that there is room for a landowner to claim that the legislature’s declaration of a public purpose is a pretext designed to mask a taking for private purposes, and we hold
*172
that Mr. Franco adequately pled such a defense. With the detailed allegations included in his “counterclaims,” the defense “fairly presented] a question of law or fact which the [trial] court ought to hear.”
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Gulf & Western Industries, Inc.,
C. Litigating the “Pretext” Defense
Unfortunately, “the
Kelo
majority did not define the term ‘mere pretext’ .... ”
Goldstein v. Pataki
Some guidance may be provided by the Court’s citation to
99 Cents Only Stores v. Lancaster Redevelopment Agency,
Although the Supreme Court has not clarified the meaning of “pretext,” Justice Kennedy focused hypothetically on the insubstantial quality of touted public benefits, stating “that transfers intended to confer benefits on particular, favored private entities, and with only incidental or pretextual public benefits, are forbidden by the Public Use Clause.”
The terms “purpose,” “motive,” and “intent” sometimes are used (imprecisely) as if they were interchangeable. In the present context, it is important to remember that “public purpose” is the modern mode of expressing the constitutional requirement of a “public use.”
See Kelo,
We conclude that a reviewing court must focus primarily on benefits the public hopes to realize from the proposed taking. 13 If the property is being transferred *174 to another private party, and the benefits to the public are only “incidental” or “pre-textual,” a “pretext” defense may well succeed. On the other hand, if the record discloses (in the words of the trial court) that the taking will serve “an overriding public purpose” and that the proposed development “will provide substantial benefits to the public,” the courts must defer to the judgment of the legislature. Harder cases will lie between these extremes.
Other courts applying
Kelo
have inquired whether the record demonstrates a public purpose for the taking.
See Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City v. Valsamaki,
Explaining why it was satisfied that there was no illegitimate purpose in
Kelo,
the Supreme Court emphasized several factors revealed by the record in that case. Although the affected area of New London, Connecticut, was not blighted, the government’s “determination that the area was sufficiently distressed to justify a program of economic rejuvenation [was] entitled to ... deference.”
Mr. Franco argues that the taking at issue here fails the public use requirement because some of the factors mentioned in
Kelo
are not present. (He argues especially that the identities of the benefiting private parties were known before the taking was authorized by the legislature and that there is no comprehensive plan for redeveloping the area.) However, nothing in
Kelo
suggests that the items of evidence mentioned therе set constitutional standards. Indeed, there are suggestions that the most important, perhaps determinative, consideration was that the plan “unquestionably serve[d] a public purpose.”
We are, of course, aware of the related decision in
Franco v. District of Columbia,
We emphasize that further proceedings, including discovery, should honor the “longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments” concerning the public purpose of a taking.
Kelo,
V. The Order Granting Immediate Possession
The trial court expressly linked the grant of immediate possession to its decision to strike Mr. Franco’s defenses. Because we have held that the court improp *176 erly struck the pretext defense, we in turn vacate its grant of immediate possession. NCRC argues that the court could have granted immediate possession without striking the defenses. That may be true, but we cannot be sure that the court would have done so. We therefore remand for further consideration of this issue.
We are concerned, however, about the practicalities of transferring possession back to Mr. Franco. We anticipate that NCRC will renеw its motion for immediate possession and will urge the trial court to grant that motion before resolving the pretext defense. Title has already passed to NCRC,
see
D.C.Code § 16-1314(b) (2001), and it is at least possible that the trial court will once again transfer immediate possession to NCRC. Because such a scenario would be disruptive, to say the least, we stay (for a period of ninety days following issuance of our mandate) any reversion of the property that may flow from this decision so that the parties may engage in further litigation on the possession issue in the Superior Court. We discern no harm in staying this portion of our judgment for a short period, since courts commonly consider possession of condemned property separately from the propriety of a taking.
See, e.g., Atlantic Seaboard Corp. v. Van Sterkenburg,
VI. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand for further consideration of Mr. Franco’s pretext defense. We also vacate the order granting NCRC’s motion for immediate possession (subject to the stay described above).
So ordered.
Notes
. Mr. Franco notes that between May 4, 2004, and September 30, 2004, the Council passed two emergency measures and a temporary bill substantially identical to the Skyland act signed December 29, 2004. None of those emergency or temporary bills contained any of the findings that were belatedly inserted in the original Skyland bill, and the Council held no separate hearings regarding the emergency and temporary measures.
. This is the first time our court has had occasion to address one of the Skyland condemnations. Nevertheless, the legislation has
*164
generated a great deal of litigation in the Superior Court and the federal courts. See
Rumber v. District of Columbia and NCRC,
. Civil Rule 12(f) stаtes in part: "Upon motion made by a party ... or upon the Court’s own initiative at any time, the Court may order stricken from any pleading any insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(f).
. Civil Rule 71A (e) provides, in relevant part: "If a defendant has any objection or defense to the taking of the property, the defendant shall serve an answer ... which ... state[s] all the defendant’s objections and defenses to the taking of the property.... No other pleading or motion asserting any additional defense or objection shall be allowed.” Super. Ct. Civ. R. 71A (e).
. "Because Super. Ct: Civ. R. 12 is identical to its federal counterpart, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12, we may look to court decisions interpreting the federal rule as persuasive authority in interpreting the local rule.”
Bible Way Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith of Washington, D.C. v. Beards,
. The decision in
SEC v. Gulf & Western
includes an alternative formulation: "[b]efore this type of motion can be granted the Court must be convinced that there are no questions of fact, that any questions of law are clear and not in dispute, and that under no set of circumstances could the defenses succeed.”
. Mr. Franco raised seven defenses to the condemnation of his property, but he does not challenge the Superior Court’s decision striking three оf them, and his own filings show that the other three are insufficient as a matter of law. For example, Mr. Franco claims that the Council violated his due process rights when it added the list of legislative findings to the Skyland bill and then passed the bill without any additional notice or hearing. However, he did receive notice of the proposed legislation and he participated in the hearing held by the Council. Assuming he has due process rights in this context, he does not have a right to a new hearing every time the draft legislation is altered.
Cf. Murphy v. Montgomery County,
Another defense asserted that the condemnation violated D.C.Code § 16-1311, because Mr. Franco’s land was not "needed” for any "authorized municipal use.” On appeal, he acknowledges that the defense is "subsumed in and dependent upon the answer to ... whether the taking is for a public purpose.” If any part of this defense is not redundant, it lacks a legal foundation. Once a public purpose for a taking is established, courts do not evaluate a legislature’s decision regarding what land is necessary to achieve that purpose.
See, e.g., Kelo v. City of New London, Connecticut,
. We apply the decision of the
Kelo
majority, written by Justice Stevens. Although Justice Kennedy’s concurrence discusses at some length a court’s role when presented with allegations of a pretextual public purpose, that discussion is not the holding of the court. Five justices, including Justice Kennedy,
.
See also
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 8(f) (“All pleadings shall be so construed as to do substantial justice.”);
United States v. 18.2 Acres of Land, More or Less, in Butte County, State of California,
. Some courts have converted Rule 12(f) motions into motions for partial summary judgment.
See, e.g., Marco Holding Co. v. Lear Siegler, Inc., 606
F.Supp. 204, 213 (N.D.Ill.1985) (District Court treated Rule 12(f) motion as one for partial summary judgment when bоth parties submitted materials outside the pleadings and “the challenge [was] directed at the substance, rather than at the form of defendant's pleading.”);
Ciprari v. Servicos Aereos Cruzeiro do sul,
S.A.,
. The United States Court of Appeals for this jurisdiction and its predecessor have long shied away from examining the motives of "local authorities” exercising the power of eminent domain.
See O’Hara v. District of Columbia,
79 U.S.App. D.C. 302, 304,
. For example, legislators may not be deposed or made to answer interrogatories in an attempt to disclose their individual motivations.
See
D.C.Code § 1-301.42 (2001);
see also, e.g., Dorsey v. District of Columbia,
.But see Kelo,
