OPINION
Hacienda Valley Mobile Estates (“Hacienda”) brought this action to challenge the constitutionality of the City of Morgan Hill’s (“City’s”) vacancy control ordinance, Ordinance No. 1090 (“Ordinance”). The Ordinance prevents mobile home parks from raising the rent on a mobile home “pad” when the mobile home is sold. Hacienda alleges that the Ordinance allows existing tenants to capture a “premium” on the sales price of their mobile homes because the new tenants are guaranteed low rent. Hacienda argues that this premium is an unconstitutional taking.
District Judge Whyte found that Hacienda had not met the ripeness requirements imposed on regulatory taking cases by
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank,
I. Background
Hacienda operates a 165-unit mobile home park (“Park”) in Morgan Hill. Mobile home owners generally rent a space, or “pad,” in a mobile home park, while the park provides common areas and utilities. Because it is expensive to move mobile homes, they are rarely relocated once they are installed in a park. Instead, the home is sold to new owners who continue to rent the pad from the mobile home park.
*654 Since 1983, Morgan Hill has imposed a rent control scheme on mobile home par-kowners, limiting the amount by which parkowners can raise the rents in their parks. The present challenge addresses one of the newer elements of the rent control system. In 1992, the City amended its mobile home rent control ordinance to include a vacancy control provision, the Ordinance at issue in this case. The Ordinance prohibits a mobile home park from raising the rent on a mobile home pad when a mobile home is sold, while still allowing the park to collect a $25 administrative fee when the mobile home changes hands.
Morgan Hill’s rent control scheme is administered by the City’s Rent Control Commission (“Commission”). In April 2000, Hacienda petitioned the Commission for a rent increase of $200.00 per month. The Commission made its final determination in November 2000, granting Hacienda an increase of $4.03 per month. Less than one year later, on October 17, 2001, Hacienda filed this action against the City alleging that the Ordinance had combined with complex economic factors and the Commission’s refusal to grant a rent increase to create a “premium” on the spaces in its Park. Hacienda argues that the below-market rate rent it is required to charge makes its Park attractive to potential mobile home buyers. Sellers of mobile homes in the Park are therefore able to command a “premium” over and above the worth of the home for the right to continue to live in the Park at below-market rates. In effect, Hacienda is arguing, the Ordinance has created an income-transfer, with the sellers of mobile homes collecting the rent that Hacienda is not allowed to charge in the form of a premium on the sale of the mobile home. This premium, Hacienda argues, constitutes a taking of its property as the Ordinance is applied.
In the district court Hacienda brought five claims: (1) an action for declaratory relief, (2) a claim of violation of the 5th amendment, (3) a claim of violation of civil rights pursuant to § 1983, (4) a claim of denial of equal protection, and (5) a petition for writ of administrative mandamus. Hacienda Valley Mobile Estates v. City of Morgan Hill, No. C-01-20976- RMW, slip op. at 3 (N.D.Cal. Apr. 15, 2002). The district court dismissed the equal protection claim with prejudice for failing to file under § 1983 and for failing to meet the statute of limitations. Id. at 11. The claim for violation of the 5th Amendment was similarly dismissed with prejudice for failure to file under § 1983. Id. at 13. The claims for declaratory relief and for violation of civil rights pursuant to § 1983 were dismissed with prejudice to the extent that they were facial claims, and without prejudice to the extent that they constituted as-applied challenges. Id. at 13. Finally, the district court declined to extend supplemental jurisdiction to the petition for writ of administrative mandamus. Id. at 12.
Hacienda appeals only the taking claim that underlies both the action for declaratory relief and the § 1983 claim.
II. Standard of Review
We review district court decisions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction de novo.
McNatt v. Apfel,
III. Facial Claim
Hacienda challenges the constitutionality of the Ordinance, claiming that it creates a “premium” which amounts to an uncompensated regulatory taking. Ha *655 cienda vigorously argues that its challenge is as-applied. To place its argument in context we draw here the distinction between facial and as-applied challenges to regulatory taking claims.
The district court cites
Levald, Inc. v. City of Palm Desert,
To determine if facial claims are appropriately before the court, the court must perform a two-step analysis. First, it must determine whether the claim is ripe under
Williamson County.
Then the court must determine whether the claim is barred by a statute of limitations. The
Williamson County
ripeness analysis is also a two-step inquiry.
Facial challenges are exempt from the first prong of the
Williamson
ripeness analysis because a facial challenge by its nature does not involve a decision applying the statute or regulation.
Yee v. City of Escondido,
Thus, if Hacienda’s claim is treated as a facial claim it will either fail because it is not ripe, or, if it is ripe, it will be barred by the statute of limitations. Recognizing this, Hacienda argues that its claim is not a facial claim, but an “as-applied” or “mixed” claim. 3
*656 IV. Facial v. As-Applied Claims
If vacancy control ordinances always result in premiums, they should always be treated as facial claims because the harm alleged would arise automatically with the passage of the ordinance.
See Levald,
The district court relies on a string of cases originating with
Levald
for the proposition that premium challenges must be analyzed as facial challenges. In
Levald
the petitioner was challenging a vacancy control provision very similar to the one at issue in the case. Levald argued that the “statutory scheme” created a premium on the mobile homes in the park.
Levald,
A close reading of the opinion shows that it was
not
the fact that Levald was bringing a premium challenge that made it a facial challenge, but the
way
that Levald supported the argument — by attacking only the laws — that made it a facial challenge. In fact, we noted that an as-applied challenge to a premium was possible, but rejected it in the case because Levald had not argued the proposition appropriately.
Levald,
Here, Hacienda is careful to argue that the Ordinance alone is not the basis of its challenge. Instead, it alleges that the Ordinance, complex economic factors, and the Commission’s decision not to grant the bulk of Hacienda’s rent increase all combined to create a premium in the Park. We conclude that these allegations are sufficient to support an as-applied challenge. We must now determine whether the challenge is ripe. 5
*657 V. As-Applied Claims
As-applied challenges must meet both prongs of the
Williamson County
ripeness analysis. Before an as-applied challenge is ripe the appellant must have obtained a final decision from the entity charged with implementing the regulation and must have sought compensation through state remedies unless doing so would be futile.
Williamson County,
A. Final Decision
The district court found that Hacienda had fulfilled the first prong by getting a final decision from the Commission. We agree. Having received an adverse result at the Commission, Hacienda’s next step to challenge the decision under state procedures is to seek a writ of administrative mandamus in state superior court. In
Williamson County
the Supreme Court made it clear that resort beyond the “initial decision-maker” is not necessary to fulfill the final decision prong of the ripeness analysis.
The City contends that the recent Supreme Court case,
National Park Hospitality Ass’n v. Department of the Interior,
B. State Remedies
In
Williamson County
the Supreme Court concluded that a taking is not complete until compensation for a deprivation has been sought and denied. Therefore, the second prong of the
Williamson County
ripeness analysis requires the petitioners to seek state remedies unless doing so would be futile.
Hacienda argues that its application to and denial by the Commission fulfills this requirement. In land use regulatory taking cases, such as Williamson County, the initial interaction between the landowner and the government is not framed in terms of money. When passing the local ordinance at issue or making a zoning decision, the municipalities generally have not had an opportunity to address the financial impacts on individual landowners. As a result, landowners must take follow-up action to seek state remedies before their claim is ripe.
The situation of rent control adjustments is admittedly different. When the Commission granted only $4.03 of Hacienda’s requested rent increase, it had, at that moment, an opportunity to remedy the alleged taking it was creating by granting a higher increase. Borrowing from due process analysis, Hacienda calls that moment a “predeprivation opportunity” for *658 compensation. Hacienda argues that the Commission’s failure to take advantage of the opportunity gave two different and simultaneous significances to the decision.
First, Hacienda argues that the Commission’s refusal to grant a larger rent increase was the decisive factor in the establishment of a deprivation — the “taking” portion of a “taking without compensation.” If the Commission had granted the full increase presumably the premium would have disappeared and the “complex interaction” of the Ordinance and the economic environment that set up the taking would have been mitigated. The Commission’s decision not to grant the increase was the final factor in the creation of the premium, and therefore the deprivation. 6
Second, Hacienda contends that its application to the Commission for a rent increase was adequate pursuit of state remedies. If the taking
had
been complete before petition to the Commission, it seems logical that the first state remedy Hacienda should seek is a rent increase with the Commission. Whether such action would be sufficient pursuit of state remedies is a question we leave for another day. However, Hacienda is arguing that the taking was not complete until the Commission denied the petition. Therefore, to grant Hacienda’s claim, we would have to decide that the Commission’s denial of the increase acted as both a completion of the deprivation
and
a denial of compensation. Hacienda argues that this duality of significance is supported by the Supreme Court’s analogy to
Parratt v. Taylor,
Hacienda seems to be arguing that the reason that a pre-deprivation right has never been recognized in Just Compensation cases is that such a remedy is not convenient or practical in the permitting cases that make up most of the Just Compensation Clause jurisprudence. While we do not comment on the possibility of a predeprivation remedy in the Just Compensation Clause, we know that it is not required. We think the state must be aware that it is denying compensation to an alleged taking when it takes an action. When the Commission denied Hacienda’s rent increase, we are not convinced that it was aware that its actions would constitute a taking. As Hacienda itself argues, when it stood before the Commission, the “taking” had not yet occurred. We therefore conclude that a taking and the pursuit of a remedy for the taking were not simultaneous in this case.
1. Futility of State Remedies
Hacienda makes two arguments to support its claim that resort to state remedies would be futile. First it argues that the remedy available, the “Kavanau adjustment,” is inadequate. Second it argues that the standard of review employed by the California state courts in taking cases is unconstitutionally deferential to the government.
In
Kavanau v. Santa Monica Rent Control Board,
the California Supreme Court was asked to decide the appropriate
*659
way to pay damages for a taking claim arising out of a rent control ordinance.
Hacienda argues that it is not likely to receive adequate compensation for its taking claim if it is forced to apply to California courts for a
Kavanau
adjustment that will then be imposed by the Commission. Hacienda implies that it will not be compensated if it is forced to return to the agency that denied the petition in the first place. Unfortunately, Hacienda was not able to direct us to, nor did our own research reveal anything regarding how the
Kavanau
adjustment works in practice. Because we are left with uncertainty as to the efficacy of the adjustment, we cannot assume that its application would be futile. In
Austin v. City of Honolulu,
we held that unless the state courts have specifically heard the cause of action at issue and denied it, recourse to state courts cannot be considered futile.
Hacienda also argues that the
Kavanau
adjustment is an inadequate remedy because it requires the petitioner to go through the California court system once to get the remedy and potentially a second time to enforce the remedy. In
Palazzolo,
the Supreme Court cited
City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes,
Hacienda’s second futility argument is that the California courts apply a standard of review in taking cases that is unconstitutionally deferential to the government'. To meet the futility requirement, Hacienda must show that California state courts have explicitly rejected Hacienda’s theory in the case.
Levald,
Kavanau,
the leading California Supreme Court case relied on by Hacienda, does not decide the taking issue at all. Instead, the court decided that remedying the due process claim on which the taking claim was based would “obviate” the taking claim.
The second case put forward by the petitioner is
Santa Monica Beach, Ltd. v. Superior Court,
Although the California Supreme Court expressed deep reservations about the “substantially advance” level of scrutiny, it concluded that the rent control scheme at issue was constitutional whether examined under the “substantially advance” standard or the more deferential “arbitrary regulation of property rights” standard the court preferred.
Id.
at 1005. It is true that
Santa Monica Beach
shows the California Supreme Court’s reluctance to apply the “substantially advance” standard that this court has used to evaluate premium-based taking claims in the past.
See Richardson,
Hacienda cites
Montclair Parkowners Ass’n v. City of Montclair,
The theory put forward by the plaintiffs in Montclair is the closest to Hacienda’s of the three cases discussed by the appellant. It is, however, distinguishable. The most important distinction is the basis of the complaint. The petitioners in Montclair were bringing their claim under the California Constitution, having specifically reserved their federal rights. Id. at 789. Montclair is not a good predictor of how *661 the California courts will interpret a claim under the United States Constitution. Moreover, Montclair dealt with a facial challenge to a vacancy control ordinance. California courts could treat as-applied claims differently.
In sum, none of the cases Hacienda puts forward has actually explicitly declined to apply the substantially advance level of scrutiny to a premium-based taking claim. Therefore, we cannot conclude that it would be futile for Hacienda to pursue state remedies in California courts. Hacienda’s claim does not qualify for a futility exception to the state remedies requirement.
VI. Conclusion
Analyzing Hacienda’s as-applied taking claim under the Williamson County ripeness standards, we conclude that it is not ripe. Although Hacienda has met the final decision requirement by receiving a final decision from the Commission, it has not pursued state remedies, and therefore fails under the second prong of the analysis.
We are not convinced that Hacienda’s application to the Commission for a rent increase acted as a simultaneous taking and denial of a state remedy for the taking. We think that the taking and the remedy for the taking are two separate acts. Finally, we conclude that Hacienda has not shown that recourse to state remedies would be futile. Although the remedies offered by California are not automatic, it is not certain that Hacienda’s claim will be rejected. Therefore, it must pursue its state remedies before bringing its claim in federal courts.
We are sympathetic to the Hacienda’s concerns about issue preclusion and res judicata, but we believe that Hacienda may reserve its federal claims while it pursues its state remedies. If the California courts do apply an unconstitutionally deferential standard of review, Hacienda’s federal taking claim will not be precluded on appeal to federal courts because the issue will not have been properly litigated in state court.
See Dodd v. Hood River County,
Because we conclude that Hacienda’s claim is not ripe, we affirm the district court’s dismissal for .lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Hacienda argues that its application to the rent control board constituted adequate pursuit of state remedies. We disagree and address this question in Part V of this opinion.
. In 2002, California extended its statute of limitations for personal injury actions from one year to two years. See Cal.Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1 (2003).
.Hacienda argues that as-applied claims and mixed claims should be treated the same way.
*656
This argument is supported by
Santa Monica Beach, Ltd. v. Superior Court,
. The City's reliance on
Carson Harbor Village Ltd. v. City of Carson,
. Because we conclude that Hacienda’s claim is an as-applied claim and therefore eligible for review if ripe, we do not need to address its argument under
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
. Hacienda is making a fine point here when it argues that the taking was complete at the moment the Commission denied the majority of the rent increase. If the taking had actually arisen earlier, and the petition to the Commission were considered an attempted remedy, this claim would be barred by the statute of limitations.
