OPINION
Glendon Energy Company [“GEC”], the plaintiff, initiated this lawsuit against the defendants Karin Brittain, the Borough of Glendon, and the following members of the Borough Council of Glendon: George Tombler, Jr., James McAllister, Joyce Moore, Leo Templeton, Lana Farmer, and Edwin Brittain. Except for Karin Brittain, all of the defendants are represented by the same counsel and will hereinafter be referred to as “the remaining defendants.” The plaintiff alleges violations of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and numerous state law claims. Currently, this court must decide whether the plaintiffs claims are ripe for review. For the reasons set forth below, the plaintiffs claims are not ripe, and therefore will be dismissed.
I) BACKGROUND
Karin Brittain and the remaining defendants each filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs claims. Additionally, the remaining defendants filed a motion for a protective order. While these motions were pending, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals issued its opinion in
Taylor Investment, Ltd. v. Upper Darby Township,
The lawsuit 'arises out of the plaintiffs efforts to develop a solid-waste-to-energy resource recovery facility and recycling center [“the Project”] in the Borough of Glendon, Northampton County, Pennsylvania. The process commenced in 1986 when the plaintiffs president met with the Council members of the Borough of Glendon. On September 3,1986, the Glendon Borough Council passed a favorable resolution regarding the plaintiffs Project. On June 3, 1987, the Glendon Council adopted Ordinance 87-1, which permitted the plaintiff to use the site for the proposed project. It also provided that the Borough and the plaintiff would execute a Host Community Agreement. The Agreement designated and authorized the site as a permitted use for the plaintiffs Project provided that the plaintiff complied with certain requirements. In August of 1987, the Borough adopted Ordinance 87-2, which states that resource recovery facilities are lawful in an area zoned as Industrial-Office. The land that the plaintiff had earmarked for the project was in such an area.
After these ordinances were adopted, the plaintiff obtained $75,000,000 in financing, and purchased the land to be used for the *1112 Project for $1,300,000. The plaintiff also paid $1,000,000 to the company that would reserve portions of its landfills for disposal of waste generated by the plaintiffs Project. The plaintiff also obtained several permits that were necessary to operate the facility. In February, 1987, the plaintiff also submitted to the zoning officer of Glendon an application for permission to undertake construction [“1987 Application”!. On numerous occasions either the Borough Engineer, or the Borough Zoning Officer-Building Inspector (or both) requested that the plaintiff file supplemental information. Ultimately, on August 11, 1989, Edwin Atkinson, the Borough Zoning Officer-Building Inspector, denied the plaintiffs request. The denial was purportedly based upon the Borough Council’s rejection of the site plan. The site plan had been rejected because it did not comply with 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 4000.511(a), which provides that “[t]he [Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources] shall not issue a permit for, nor allow the operation of ... a new resource recovery facility within 300 yards of ... parks ... existing prior to the date the department has received an administratively complete application____” Heil Park, which is owned by the City of Easton, was within 300 yards of the proposed site.
In February of 1992, the plaintiff purchased approximately nine acres of land, which was contiguous to the property that it had originally acquired. This acquisition enabled the plaintiff to reposition most of the Project more than 300 yards from Heil Park. On February 29, 1992, the plaintiff then filed a Conditional Use Application with the Borough. The sole difference between that application and the one in 1987 was the location of the project. At a hearing, GEC allegedly produced evidence to show that the Project complied with Borough regulations, and would inure to the health, safety, and welfare of the Borough. It also produced evidence to demonstrate that the completed facility would not cause any pollution problems. GEC alleges that Borough did not meaningfully rebut any of GEC’s evidence. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Council unanimously voted to deny GEC’s application. GEC maintains that the Council’s determination was not supported by evidence presented at the hearing, and that the hearing was a sham.
Meanwhile in 1987, local opposition to the project surfaced. Representatives of the opposition were then elected to the Glendon Borough Council. The plaintiff cites four separate attempts by the defendants to enact confiscatory special legislation, the effect of which would destroy its Project. First, the plaintiff contends that defendant Edwin Brittain, in his capacity as a Borough Councilman, introduced a motion to revoke the 1986 resolution, and the two ordinances adopted in 1987. Mr. Brittain also introduced a motion to amend ordinance 87-2 so that resource recovery facilities would not be an approved conditional use of the land, and a motion to rezone the plaintiffs property as residential. Despite advice from the Borough Solicitor that such acts were unlawful, on July 6,1988, the Borough Council adopted two ordinances that effectively destroyed the project. Three weeks later the Mayor of Glendon vetoed the two proposed ordinances.
The second alleged attempt to destroy the plaintiffs project came in 1989, when Mr. Brittain along with defendants Tombler and Templeton, who were also members of the Borough Council, introduced another ordinance to rezone the plaintiffs property. The Borough Council adopted this proposed ordinance on June 7, 1989. The Mayor of Glen-don vetoed this ordinance as well.
The third alleged attempt occurred when a petition was presented to the Borough Council that would amend the Borough Zoning Code in order to frustrate the plaintiffs project. This petition was signed by Mr. Brittain and defendant Karin Brittain, who is his wife. Defendant Lana Farmer, moved that the property be rezoned in accordance with the petition. The motion was subsequently withdrawn.
The fourth attempt allegedly occurred when the Borough Council secretly convened in order to rezone the plaintiffs property. The Council arranged to have an “executive session,” which would be closed to the public. At the executive session, the Council unanimously agreed to have a hearing regarding the rezoning of the plaintiffs property from *1113 Industrial-Office to Manufacturing-Office. After a hearing was held, the Council convened on August 5, 1992. At this meeting the Council unanimously voted to enact Ordinance 92-3, which would rezone the plaintiffs property. The same day, the Mayor of Glen-don signed the ordinance. The plaintiff did not challenge the validity of the ordinance or seek to obtain a zoning amendment or variance to permit the project to go forward. Instead, the plaintiff filed this lawsuit. On February 1,1993, the Borough enacted Ordinance 93-1. Ordinance 93-1 repealed Ordinance 92-3.
The plaintiffs complaint alleges that the Borough acted arbitrarily and took GEC’s property without compensation. Specifically, the plaintiff alleges that the denial of GEC’s application to undertake construction, the Borough’s denial of GEC’s application for a conditional use permit, and the enactment of Ordinance 92-3, each effectuated an unconstitutional taking. GEC also alleges that violations of substantive due process occurred when the defendants denied the 1987 Application and the 1992 Application. Finally, GEC avers that the defendants conspired, inter alia, to take its property without procedural due process of law when they failed to give the plaintiff proper notice of the bases for the Council’s actions.
II) STANDARD FOR MOTION TO DISMISS
Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), a party to a lawsuit may make a Motion to Dismiss for “lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter[.]”
1
A case is properly dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) “where the alleged claim under the Constitution ... clearly appears to be immaterial and made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction or where such a claim is wholly insubstantial and frivolous.”
Bell v. Hood,
Ill) DISCUSSION
As the Third Circuit Court of Appeals recently noted, “ripeness is ‘peculiarly a question of timing.’”
Taylor,
In the context of land-use cases, there are two ripeness issues that the court must address. First, whether the property owner
*1114
has satisfied the “finality rule.” Second, even if the property owner has satisfied the finality rule, the court must determine whether Pennsylvania has any procedures that would enable the property owner to seek compensation for the alleged taking. If so, the claim will not be ripe because the property owner must first seek compensation through those state-provided procedures.
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
A) FINALITY RULE
The essence of the finality rule is that constitutional challenges to decisions made by local land-planning authorities are not ripe unless the authorities have rendered a “final decision on the nature and extent of the impact of the zoning ordinances on plaintiffs property.”
Taylor,
In
Taylor,
the plaintiffs filed a civil rights action in district court after the zoning officer of Upper Darby Township revoked a use permit because the plaintiffs had allegedly submitted a false and misleading application. Although the plaintiffs could have reapplied for the use permit, appealed the revocation to the Township Zoning Board, or sought a variance or special exception, they opted to bring a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The court held that under the finality rule, “a property owner suffers no mature constitutional injury until the zoning authority defines the application of the zoning ordinance and defines the harm to the owner.”
Taylor,
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately determined that none of the plaintiffs’ claims were ripe for adjudication. With respect to the plaintiffs’ substantive due process claim, the court found that even though the zoning officer’s actions may have been arbitrary and capricious, the Township’s decision was not final.
Taylor,
GEC does not dispute that the finality rule applies to all of its constitutional claims. Instead, it contends that the decisions made by the Borough or its agents are final, and thus this case is ripe for review. Essentially, GEC identifies three distinct actions by the Borough that violated its constitutional rights: 1) the denial of GEC’s 1987 application to undertake construction; 2) the denial of GEC’s 1992 application for a conditional use permit; and 3) the campaign to rezone *1115 GEC’s property, culminated by the enactment of Ordinance 92-3. GEC also asserts that even if the government decisions are not final, the futility exception to the finality rule is applicable, and thus GEC’s claims are not premature.
1) THE DENIAL OF GEC’S 1987 APPLICATION TO UNDERTAKE CONSTRUCTION
GEC’s position is that the denial of its application to undertake construction is justiciable because the Borough issued a final decision. Edwin Atkinson, the Borough Zoning Officer-Building Inspector, denied the application on August 11, 1989. GEC alleges that Atkinson denied the application because the Borough Council denied GEC’s site plan proposal. 3 Assuming GEC’s allegation is true, as this court must on a motion to dismiss, it does not follow that Atkinson’s decision is final.
Neither the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 10101, et seq. [“MPC”], nor the 1987 Ordinance suggests that a zoning officer’s decision to deny a construction permit amounts to a final decision by the Borough. On the contrary, both the MPC and the 1987 Ordinance afford some sort of recourse for an aggrieved property owner. Specifically, 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 10909.1(a)(3) provides that the zoning hearing board will have exclusive jurisdiction and render final adjudications on “appeals from the determination of the zoning officer, including, but not limited to, the granting or denial of any permit____” In addition, § 7-3 of the 1987 Ordinance authorizes the zoning hearing board
upon an appeal by an affected landowner, ... to hear and decide:
7-3.1 Any matter where an appellant ... alleges that the Zoning Officer was in error in refusing to issue a building permit as a result of misinterpreting ... any section or part of this Ordinance ...
7-3.3 Any other matter relating to this Ordinance, where an appellant seeks a review of any decision, order or ruling made by a Zoning Officer....
GEC’s contention that the denial of the application is a final decision ignores the standard imposed by the court of appeals. No matter how much GEC tries to attribute the denial of the application to the Borough Council because the Council rejected the site plan, the determination was made by the zoning officer. As
Taylor
teaches, under such circumstances only a determination by the zoning hearing board would be final for purposes of ripeness.
Taylor,
2) THE DENIAL OF GEC’S 1992 CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT
A careful review of the MPC leads this court to conclude that the Borough Council’s denial of GEC’s 1992 application for a conditional use permit is final. 53 Pa.Stat. Ann. § 10107(a) contains definitions of words and phrases that are used in other sections of the MPC. Included in § 10107(a) is the phrase “governing body,” which includes, among other entities, borough councils. Therefore, the Glendon Borough Council is a governing body within the meaning of the MPC. In addition, 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 10909.-1(b) provides that
[t]he governing body, or except as to clauses (3), (4), and (5), the planning agency, if designated, shall have exclusive jurisdiction to hear and render final adjudications in the following matters: ...
(3) Applications for conditional use under the express provisions of the zoning ordinance pursuant to section [10603.-2(c)(2)]....
(emphasis added). The 1987 Ordinance does not designate a planning agency. Moreover, it expressly provides in § 4-5.3 that “[applications for conditional uses are subject to the *1116 action of the Borough Council....” No provision in the 1987 Ordinance enables a party whose conditional use application has been denied to appeal to the zoning hearing board. Accordingly, the decision by the Borough Council is final for purposes of ripeness.
The defendants contend that the decision is not final because there are other arrows in GEC’s administrative quiver. This court disagrees. Unlike the situation in
Taylor,
GEC did not have other options at its avail. The plaintiff could not have obtained a special exception because § 4-5.2 of the Ordinance, which covers special exception uses for property zoned as Industrial-Office, limits these uses to gasoline stations, motor vehicle repair shops, or outdoor storage of construction equipment. See §§ 4-5.21 and 4-5.22. Without such express authorization in the ordinance, the zoning hearing board may not grant a special use exception.
See
53 Pa. Stat.Ann. § 10912.1;
N. Pugliese, Inc. v. Palmer Township Zoning Hearing Board,
there [be] unique physical circumstances or conditions, including irregularity, narrowness, or shallowness of lot size or shape, or exceptional topographical or other physical conditions peculiar to the particular piece of property and the unnecessary hardship is due to such conditions and not the circumstances or conditions generally created by the provisions of the zoning ordinance in the neighborhood or district in which the property is located.
§ 10910.2(a)(1) (emphasis added). The hardship inflicted on GEC by the ordinance is unrelated to the physical circumstances of the land; and since the satisfaction of this criterion is necessary for the zoning hearing board to grant a variance, GEC’s failure to pursue one is not fatal to its claim.
Lastly, GEC could not appeal the denial of the conditional use to another administrative body. Appeals of an adverse determination on a conditional use permit are directly appealable to the “court of common pleas of the judicial district wherein the land is located.” 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 11002-A. Additionally, such an appeal is the
“exclusive mode
for securing review of any decision rendered pursuant to Article IX.” 53 Pa. Stat.Ann. § 11001-A (emphasis added). “A claim is ‘final,’ however, after the zoning hearing board has rendered-a decision. Finality does not require state court review of the board’s decision[,]” because a land-owner need not exhaust
4
its administrative remedies for purposes of finality.
Taylor,
3) THE EFFECT OF ORDINANCE 92-3
Ordinance 92-3 rezoned the property from Industrial-Office to Manufacturing-Office, and Resource Recovery Facilities are *1117 not permitted in areas so zoned. GEC never challenged the validity of the new zoning ordinance before the zoning hearing board, and maintains that such a challenge was unnecessary because it “has nothing to do with the doctrine of ripeness.” GEC’s Memorandum in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Complaint on the Grounds of Ripeness (“GEC Ripeness Memo”], at p. 6. GEC’s contention is erroneous because the mere enactment of an ordinance is not a final decision by the Borough. 6 Under the MPC
[t]he zoning hearing board shall have exclusive jurisdiction to hear and render final adjudications in the following matters: (1) Substantive challenges to the validity of any land use ordinance ...
(2) Challenges to the validity of a land use ordinance raising procedural questions or alleged defects in the process of enactment or adoption which challenges shall be raised by an appeal taken within 30 days after the effective date of said ordinance.
53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 10909.1(a). GEC did not afford the local authorities the opportunity to determine finally the scope of its injury. This omission ignores that “[l]oeal zoning authorities are flexible institutions ... that may ‘give back with one hand what they have taken with the other.’ ”
Taylor,
Even though GEC has not challenged the validity of the ordinance with the zoning hearing board, it nevertheless persists that its claim is ripe for review. The basis of GEC’s argument is that because the Borough repealed the ordinance before this court ruled on the ripeness issue, a final decision has been made by the township. Specifically, GEC argues that the abrogation of Ordinance 92-3 does not undo the injuries that it has already sustained as a result of the defendants’ actions. 7 See GEC’s Memorandum on the Effect of the Third Circuit’s Decision in Taylor Investment, Ltd. v. Upper Darby Township [“GEC Taylor Memo”], at p. 6. In fact, GEC maintains that because the revocation actually crystallizes its injury, the underlying purposes of the finality rule have been satisfied. This court construes GEC’s “crystallized injury” to mean that its taking claim has been transformed into a temporary taking claim. 8
GEC’s position misses the mark. Implicit in GEC’s argument that the revocation of Ordinance 92-3 satisfies the requirements of the finality rule is that it had in fact properly complied with all of the procedural requirements necessary to establish that a final decision had been made. The zoning hearing board is the body that originally determines whether the plaintiff suffered a constitutional injury. Simply because Ordinance 92-3 was repealed by Ordinance 93-1 does not mean that GEC suffered an injury when Ordinance 92-3 was enacted. Indeed, “in the face of
*1118
potential constitutional injuries, the [Supreme] Court has held that local authorities should be given the opportunity to fully and finally determine the scope of the injury before the federal claims ripen.”
Taylor,
Additionally, the fact that the Borough has taken corrective measures in the interim does not alter this conclusion. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court addressed a similar sequence of events in
Casey v. Zoning Hearing Board of Warwick Township,
In this case, like
Casey,
GEC challenged the ordinance long before Ordinance 93-1 was pending. The difference between the two is that GEC challenged the validity of the ordinance in this court rather than before the zoning hearing board. Nevertheless, GEC’s unfortunate choice of forums should not be fatal to its claim. The spirit of the holding in Casey
10
suggests that the zoning hearing board is the proper governmental entity to render a final decision on the validity of Ordinance 92-3. Moreover, strong policy considerations advise that local government, rather than federal courts, resolve land-use disputes.
See Village of Belle Terre v. Bomas,
4) THE FUTILITY EXCEPTION
Because the denial of the 1987 Application and the enactment of Ordinance 92-3 were not final decisions, this court examines GEC’s claim that this case is ripe under the “futility exception” to the finality rule. The futility exception states that an aggrieved party may forego the administrative process, and proceed in federal court on a constitutional claim, where special circumstances dictate that pursuing additional relief with the government agency would be fruitless.
See Gilbert v. City of Cambridge,
B) COMPENSATION THROUGH STATE-PROVIDED PROCEDURES
The only prong of GEC’s complaint that survives scrutiny under the finality rule is the Borough Council’s denial of GEC’s conditional use permit. GEC alleges that this particular action by the defendants gives rise to a taking without just compensation, and a denial of due process. However, a takings claim is not ripe for review in federal court if an aggrieved landowner may recover compensation through a state established procedure.
See Williamson,
In this case, the plaintiff has not satisfactorily demonstrated that Pennsylvania’s procedures for recovering just compensation are unavailable or inadequate. The Pennsylvania Courts, under the Eminent Domain Code, 26 Pa.Stat.Ann. §§ 1-101 — 1-903, may provide the plaintiff with just compensation for a taking. Specifically, § 1 — 502(a) enables the condemnee
13
to file a petition requesting the appointment of viewers to ascertain just compensation. The plaintiff contends, however, that because a regulatory taking, rather than physical taking, has occurred it may only challenge the ordinance pursuant to the Municipalities Planning Code [“MPC”], 53 Pa. Stat.Ann. §§ 10101-11202. The plaintiff further maintains that because the available relief under MPC is limited to invalidating the ordinance, Pennsylvania does not provide an adequate process for obtaining compensation. GEC cites
Odhner v. Toimiship of Woodward,
This court finds the plaintiffs position untenable. Although the plaintiff must
originally
seek relief pursuant to the MPC, suing under the MPC is not the
exclusive
method of relief available to it. Under the Eminent Domain Code, the plaintiff may recover just compensation for a regulatory taking once the ordinance in question is determined to be unconstitutional.
See Gaebel v. Thorribury Toimiship,
Finally, to the extent that the denial of the conditional use permit also gives rise to due process violations, this court finds that those claims are premature as well. GEC’s “due process claims will be greatly affected”,
Schertel,
IV) CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above the plaintiffs claims shall be dismissed without prejudice. At this juncture, the plaintiffs federal claims are not ripe for review because the plaintiff has either failed to satisfy the finality rule or failed to demonstrate that Pennsylvania has no adequate procedure for providing compensation. Should the plaintiff ultimately satisfy these criteria, it may refile its suit at that time. Moreover, since all of GEC’s federal claims will be dismissed without prejudice, and there is no diversity of citizenship between the plaintiff and the defendants, this court will also dismiss without prejudice GEC’s state law claims.
GLENDON ENERGY COMPANY v. BOROUGH OF GLENDON, et al.
MEMORANDUM ON RECONSIDERATION
Glendon Energy Company [“GEC”], the plaintiff, initiated this lawsuit against the Borough of Glendon, various members of the Borough Council of Glendon, and the spouse of one of the Council members. The plaintiff alleged violations of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and numerous state law claims. This court, in an Opinion issued on April 26, 1993, dismissed the case because the plaintiffs claims were not ripe. 1 Currently before this court is GEC’s Motion for Reconsideration. For the reasons set forth below, the plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration will be denied.
I) BACKGROUND
The plaintiff alleged, for purposes of jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a)(3), that the defendants’ conduct effectuated an unconstitutional taking, and violated the plaintiffs procedural and substantive due process rights. The facts, which are stated at length in this court’s Opinion dated April 26, 1993, will be developed only insofar as they pertain to the Motion before the Court.
The catalyst for this lawsuit is the defendants’ putative attempt to hamper the plaintiffs efforts to develop a solid-waste-to-energy resource recovery facility and recycling center [“the Project”] in the Borough of Glendon, Northampton County, Pennsylvania. After the plaintiffs president met with the Council members of the Borough of Glen-don in 1986, the Council passed a favorable resolution regarding the plaintiffs Project. In 1987, the Council adopted Ordinance 87-1, which permitted the plaintiff to use the site for the proposed project, and provided that the Borough and the plaintiff would execute a Host Community Agreement. The Agreement designated and authorized the site as a permitted use for the plaintiffs Project provided that the plaintiff complied with certain requirements. In August of 1987, the Borough adopted Ordinance 87-2, which designated that resource recovery facilities are lawful in an area zoned as Industrial-Office. The land that the plaintiff had earmarked for the project was in such an area.
In February, 1987, the plaintiff submitted to the zoning officer of Glendon an application for permission to undertake construction. Ultimately, on August 11, 1989, the plaintiffs request was denied. The denial was purportedly based upon the Borough Council’s prior rejection of the site plan. The site plan had been rejected because it did not comply with 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 4000.-511(a), which provides that “[t]he [Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources] [hereinafter “PaDER”] shall not issue a permit for, nor allow the operation of ... a new resource recovery facility within 300 yards of ... parks ... existing prior to the date the department has received an administratively complete application.... ” Heil Park, which is owned by the City of *1122 Easton, was within 300 yards of the proposed site.
In February of 1992, the plaintiff purchased approximately nine acres of land, which was contiguous to the property that it had originally acquired. This acquisition enabled the plaintiff to reposition most of the Project more than 300 yards from Heil Park. On February 29, 1992, the plaintiff then filed a Conditional Use Application with the Borough. The sole difference between that application and the one in 1987 was the location of the project. At a hearing, GEC allegedly produced evidence to show that the Project complied with Borough regulations and that the completed facility would not cause any pollution problems. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Council unanimously voted to deny GEC’s application. GEC maintains that the Council’s determination was not supported by evidence presented at the hearing, and that the hearing was a sham. To date the PaDER has still not issued a permit to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff contends that this court erroneously dismissed its substantive due process claim arising out of the denial of its 1992 Conditional Use Permit. The plaintiff argues, contrary to this court’s Opinion, that this substantive due process claim is ripe for judicial review. It contends that because the substantive process claims are allegedly ripe, their dismissal will recommence the statute of limitations period. See Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration at p. 9. Accordingly, the plaintiff is concerned that its substantive due process claim may be time barred when the state proceedings are completed. Id. at p. 10.
II) MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION
The rationale for a motion for reconsideration is to “correct manifest errors of law or fact or to pi’esent newly discovered evidence.”
Harsco Corp. v. Zlotnicki, 779
F.2d 906, 909 (3d Cir.1985),
cert, denied,
Ill) DISCUSSION
As the Third Circuit Court of Appeals recently noted, “ripeness is ‘peculiarly a question of timing.’ ”
Taylor Investment, Ltd. v. Upper Darby Township,
In
New Hanover Township,
the Third Circuit Court of Appeals found that the issues presented were not ripe for judicial review. New Hanover Township objected to the Army Corp of Engineers issuance of a general permit to New Hanover Corporation [“NHC”] to use land within the township as a municipal waste landfill. Notwithstanding the grant of a general permit by the Army Corp of Engineers, NHC had still not received a water quality certificate from the PaDER, and such approval was necessary for NHC to proceed with the landfill project. Therefore, the court concluded that the Army Corp of Engineer’s decision had no immediate impact on the Township.
New Hanover Township,
The
New Hanover Toimship
case controls the dispute at issue in this case. GEC’s attack on the refusal of the 1992 Conditional Use Permit, has no immediate impact on any of the parties.
2
GEC simply cannot begin construction of the Project until it has obtained PaDER approval. As the court in
New Hanover Township
astutely observed “The results of the Pennsylvania process cannot be predicted____ The [parties] should wait until Pennsylvania makes its decision and then, assuming that injury is impending, file suit.”
New Hanover Township,
IV) CONCLUSION
This court concludes that there were no manifest errors of law or fact in its original Opinion, and that there has been no newly discovered evidence that is relevant to this case. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above the plaintiffs motion for reconsideration shall be denied. Finally, any concerns that the plaintiff has about subsequent statute of limitations problems should be allayed because this court has determined as a matter of law that its substantive due process claims are not ripe for review.
Notes
. Since subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived, the court has a duty to raise the issue even if the parties fail to do so. 2A James W. Moore ct ah,
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶ 12.23 (2d cd. 1991);
see also Trent Realty Associates
v.
First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Philadelphia,
. The court of appeals did not analyze the extent to which state or local legislatures can define "finality” for federal procedural purposes.
. GEC has appealed the Borough Council’s decision denying the site plan proposal to the Court of Common Pleas for Northampton County.
. It is well settled that the exhaustion doctrine is conceptually distinct from the finality doctrine.
See Williamson,
While the policies underlying the two concepts overlap, the finality requirement is concerned with whether the initial decision-maker has arrived at a definitive position on the issue that inflicts actual, concrete injury; the exhaustion requirement generally refers to administrative and judicial procedures by which an injured party may seek review of an adverse decision and obtain a remedy if the decision is found to be unlawful or otherwise inappropriate.
Williamson,
. It should be emphasized that the land-owner's taking claim is not automatically ripe for review in federal court merely because an administrative agency's decision regarding the land-owner's property is final. The final decision simply satisfies the first prong of the ripeness test. The landowner must still seek compensation through state provided procedures because the "Fifth Amendment docs not proscribe the taking of property; it proscribes taking without just compensation."
Williamson,
.The mere enactment of an ordinance may amount to a taking when the ordinance is attacked facially.
See Agins
v.
City of Tiburón,
(
. GEC concedes that the enactment of Ordinance 93-1 ends the potential of it suffering prospective injuries resulting from the enactment of Ordinance 92-3. GEC Taylor Memo at p. 6.
. This court notes that, for purposes of the Fifth Amendment, there is no distinction between permanent takings and temporary takings.
See First Lutheran Church v. Los Angeles County,
. In this case the Borough of Glcndon enacted Ordinance 93-1 rather than amend Ordinance 92-3. Nevertheless, there is “little procedural difference" between an enactment of a zoning ordinance and an amendment to a zoning ordinance.
Appeal of Kasorex,
. This court notes that although the statutory provision considered in
Casey
has since been repealed, the reasoning of the decision is still sound.
See Femley
v.
Board of Supeivisors of Schuylkill Township,
. This holding docs not deprive GEC of an opportunity to recover from the injuries it has allegedly suffered. Should the zoning hearing board determine that Ordinance 92-3 is not valid, then GEC may pursue damages under the Eminent Domain Code, see Part III(B), infra. On the other hand, if the zoning hearing board determines that Ordinance 92-3 is valid, then finality rule will have been satisfied, and GEC's claim will be ripe for adjudication in federal court.
. In land-use cases, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has not, as of yet, adopted the "futility exception.” Indeed in Taylor, the court repeatedly emphasized that unless a final decision had been rendered, the property owner’s constitutional claim was premature. The court did not qualify its holding. Thus, Taylor may be fairly read to reject implicitly the futility exception in this circuit.
. Condemnee is defined as "the owner of a property interest taken, injured or destroyed, but docs not include a mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienholder.” 26 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 1-201(2).
. The court did not examine the plaintiff's state law claims. All of the plaintiff's federal claims were dismissed as unripe, and there was no diversity of citizenship. This court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute and, therefore, could not exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3).
. Indeed, GEC requests that, assuming this court grants its motion for reconsideration, any further proceedings be stayed until their other claims become ripe. See Plaintiff's Memorandum in Support of Motion for Reconsideration at p. 10.
