Two businesses located just outside West Peoria, Illinois can access their properties only from a public road that lies within the city’s limits. West Peoria enacted municipal ordinances regulating truck traffic on that road. Because deliveries by large trucks are integral to these businesses, they challenge the ordinances, alleging among other things that the ordinances effect takings of their properties and violate their constitutional right to equal protection. The district court properly dismissed the takings claims as prematurely filed in federal court. The plaintiffs have not pleaded a viable theory of recovery for violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Accordingly, we affirm.
I.
Plaintiff Hager operates a tire store and plaintiff Baker a landfill business, both of which are located off a private driveway at the end of West Rohmann Avenue in Peoria County, Illinois. The only access to their properties from any public road is through this private driveway. West Rohmann Avenue lies within the city limits of West Peoria, Illinois, which was incorporated in November 1993. Plaintiffs’ properties are contiguous with but outside the city limits. Large trucks approach their businesses daily from West Peoria via West Rohmann Avenue and the private driveway. Many of the companies and individuals that do business with plaintiffs use these large trucks for deliveries and pick-ups.
In 1994 the West Peoria city council determined that heavy trucks had become a burden on the city’s streets. The city council specifically noted that use of the streets by heavy trucks required “constant resurfacing,” and that those trucks created safety hazards during certain hours of the day. The council consequently determined it had “a need to restrict weight limits on certain streets.”
To address these concerns, the city council enacted Ordinance 94-30, which provided that truck traffic on the last three blocks of West Rohmann Avenue must weigh less than eight tons, although local vehicles under fifteen tons making local deliveries could apply for a permit to exceed that weight limit. Permits cost $12.50 per load for vehicles from eight to twelve tons and $20.00 per load for vehicles from twelve to fifteen tons. The ordinance prohibited vehicles in excess of fifteen tons. The city enforced this ordinance by placing a road weight limit sign on West Rohmann Avenue. The typical truck that serviced the landfill “coincidentally” weighed eight tons empty and over fifteen tons loaded.
Two months later the city council enacted Ordinance 94-31, which imposes weight restrictions for trucks and vehicles traveling on most West Peoria streets, including West Rohmann Avenue. The new ordinance provides that vehicles using city streets which exceed eight tons but not fifteen tons may apply for a permit for a fee of $12.50, and those which exceed fifteen tons but weigh less than twenty-six tons may apply for a permit for a fee of $20.00. Ordinance 94-31 exempts municipal vehicles, vehicles making deliveries to West Peoria residents, and vehicles of businesses performing construction services within the city limits. The city also enacted Ordinance 94-26, which erects a stop sign on Rohmann Avenue at the end of the private driveway leading to plaintiffs’ proper
Hager’s and Baker’s properties are zoned for commercial and industrial use. Plaintiffs anticipated using them for these purposes, which require access by heavy trucks. Before summer 1994 no road weight limit signs had graced West Rohmann Avenue leading to their properties. Faced with large trucks effectively losing access to their businesses, Hager and Baker filed this suit in federal court against the city and its street department manager challenging the ordinances as violating the U.S. Constitution and Illinois state law.
Hager and Baker complain that the ordinances violate their constitutional right to equal protection because they exempt similarly situated West Peoria businesses from having to obtain truck permits and pay fees. Plaintiffs further claim the ordinances inversely condemn their properties, severely reduce their value, and limit their potential industrial and commercial use without fair compensation. The complaint also contains state law allegations of tortious interference with plaintiffs’ delivery contracts with other trucking businesses.
Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), West Peoria moved to dismiss the takings claims as premature considering the remedies available under Illinois law for an alleged taking. West Peoria also sought dismissal of the equal protection claims on two grounds: (1) plaintiffs did not plead membership in a suspect class or deprivation of a fundamental right, and the ordinances are rationally related to legitimate governmental purposes; and (2) the permit fees in the ordinances are taxes insulated from constitutional challenge by the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341:
The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.
Because the lower court had only supplemental jurisdiction over the state tortious interference with contract claims, the city argued their dismissal would follow that of the federal question claims.
The district court conducted an evidentiary hearing at which West Peoria’s mayor testified. He stated that the city originally passed the ordinances to “get some money for maintaining this road.” He admitted on cross-examination, however, that the weight restrictions had generated a total of only $20.00 in revenue from a single permit fee, that all other permit fees had been waived, and that the single permit fee collected would have been waived as well had Baker negotiated with city officials. He also admitted that while the word “tax” did not appear in the ordinances, the term “regulate” did repeatedly, and that in addition to the city’s intention to raise revenue by the ordinances, it wanted to regulate West Rohmann Avenue for safety and resurfacing purposes. The district judge found the mayor to be a credible witness.
The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ takings claims as premature because they had yet to seek compensation through established state procedures. The court also considered whether the Tax Injunction Act precluded plaintiffs’ equal protection claims by deciding whether the permit fees charged by the city pursuant to the ordinances were a tax, and therefore within the scope of the Act, or a regulation, in which case the Act would not apply. “[Ajlthough a close question,” the district court concluded that the permit fees at issue were a tax rather than a regulatory measure. Accordingly, pursuant to the Tax Injunction Act, which applies to municipal as well as state taxes,
We review the district court’s decision de novo, accepting as true any well-pleaded
II.
A Takings/Inverse Condemnation Claims
In Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
Illinois law provides a judicially-created remedy of inverse condemnation for property owners aggrieved by municipal legislation. Plaintiffs admit this. This admission acknowledges that federal court is not the proper venue for plaintiffs’ takings claims. Only upon completion of existing state procedures and denial of just compensation may plaintiffs properly claim a taking without just compensation in federal court. “Until then [plaintiffs] cannot know whether [they] have suffered the only type of harm for which the just-compensation provision of the Constitution entitles [them] to a remedy.” Gamble,
The exhaustion requirement of Williamson County applies whether plaintiffs claim an uncompensated taking, inverse condemnation, or due process violation.
B. Equal Protection Claims
Hager and Baker also claim West Peoria’s ordinances violate their constitutional right to equal protection because they effectively exempt certain West Peoria businesses from having to obtain truck permits. The plaintiffs claim these municipal regulations are excessive and create an arbitrary, irrational, and discriminatory classification with no rational basis related to public safety or highway maintenance and diminish the value of their property.
We do not postpone consideration of plaintiffs’ equal protection claims under the ripeness doctrine applied above.
1.
The district court accepted the city’s argument that the Tax Injunction Act proscribes plaintiffs’ equal protection claims. It decided that because permit fee revenue went into West Peoria’s general fund, would allegedly be used for road repair, and could conceivably exceed the costs imposed by heavy truck traffic, the ordinances constituted a tax rather than a regulation, thereby precluding plaintiffs’ claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1341.
Courts faced with distinguishing a “tax” from a “fee” “have tended ... to emphasize the revenue’s ultimate use, asking whether it provides a general benefit to the public, of a sort often financed by a general tax, or whether it provides more narrow benefits to regulated companies or defrays the agency’s cost of regulation.” San Juan Cellular Tel. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n of Puerto Rico,
If the fee is a reasonable estimate of the cost imposed by the person required to pay the fee, then it is a user fee and is within the municipality’s regulatory power. If it is calculated not just to recover a cost imposed on the municipality or its residents but to generate revenues that the municipality can use to offset unrelated costs or confer unrelated benefits, it is a tax, whatever its nominal designation.
Id. at 1399.
The district court in this case seized on the fact that the permit fee revenue was earmarked for the general city fund, and reasoned that under the “ultimate use” test, the permit fees were a tax. We believe the district court misconstrued this fact. Rather than a question solely of where the money
It places form over substance to conclude that $20.00 actually collected and deposited in the city’s general coffers render these ordinances tax legislation. The revenue generated from the permit fees could not exceed the amount necessary to pay for the road repair made necessary by the heavy truck traffic when, as the mayor testified, only $20.00 had been collected and all other permit fees had been waived. “ ‘[A]n assessment levied for public purposes’ would not be a tax where it was part of a regulatory program.” Bidart Bros. v. The California Apple Comm'n,
The ordinances before us considered in their entirety fall to the “regulation” rather than the “tax” end of the spectrum. See San Juan Cellular Tel.,
We thus have no doubt that the ordinances were passed to control certain activities, not to raise revenues. That the ordinances generate a permit fee which goes to the general city fund is only incidental to its regulatory nature. The district court unduly relied on a single $20.00 fee collection to conclude the ordinances constituted a “tax.” Even were the permit fees to have been collected on a regular basis, regulatory fees that merely pay for the cost of regulation are not taxes. See, e.g., Government Suppliers Consolidating Services, Inc. v. Bayh,
Considering the ordinances in their entirety, and giving the “ultimate use” test for the Tax Injunction Act its proper context, the West Peoria ordinances cite authority, state intentions, and impose civil restrictions and criminal penalties which are regulatory in nature. Because West Peoria’s ordinances are better viewed as a regulatory fee than a tax, 28 U.S.C. § 1341 does not preclude consideration of plaintiffs’ equal protection claims.
2.
Because the district court concluded that the Tax Injunction Act deprived it of federal question jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ equal protection claims, it did not consider the city’s other arguments that these allegations should be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Our de novo standard of review allows us to consider them now. See Zavesky v. Miller,
Hager and Baker claim West Peoria erected a weight limit sign on West Rohmann Avenue in “an unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious exercise of the governmental police power.” They contrast their circumstances with that of Stever, a competing landfill business located within city limits. They allege Stever did not have to pay the large truck permit fees. Plaintiffs claim the additional cost of the permit fees forces them to raise prices, putting them at a disadvantage against non-fee-paying competitors. They assert that they belong to a class of business owners located outside of West Peoria which have no access to their properties other than by the city streets. Thus, they must pay permit fees while similar businesses located in West Peoria need not. They claim their constitutional right to equal protection has been violated and they challenge the enactment and the enforcement of the West Peoria ordinances.
Plaintiffs have not claimed they are “members of a vulnerable group, racial or otherwise,” such that unequal treatment would warrant strict scrutiny. See Esmail v. Macrane,
Accepting as true the allegations in the complaint and drawing all reasonable inferences in plaintiffs’ favor, “we apply the resulting ‘facts’ in light of the deferential rational basis standard.” Wroblewski,
Plaintiffs claim first that the ordinances as enacted violate equal protection. An ordinance may contain language of gener
More importantly, the language of the ordinances themselves demonstrates that West Peoria enacted them with legitimate ends and means rationally related to those ends. The stated purposes of the ordinances are to ensure proper road maintenance and public safety. These are legitimate ends for municipal legislation. See, e.g., Ruiz v. Comm’r of Dept. of Trans. of the City of New York,
The best argument Hager and Baker could seemingly make would emphasize that Ordinance 94-31 exempts vehicles providing municipal and quasi-municipal services and vehicles making deliveries to West Peoria residents and businesses and performing construction services within the city. This would imply that the city ordinance favors such activity merely because it is local, and conversely burdens plaintiffs merely because they are not.
Even if plaintiffs’ equal protection claims are so read, they do not necessarily have merit. Many jurisdictions have legitimate residency requirements. See, e.g., McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Service Comm’n,
Plaintiffs also challenge the ordinances as enforced. Although “[a]n ordinance generally applicable on its face but enforced for no legitimate reason against only an individual or a particular class may violate the Equal Protection Clause,” ProEco,
The ordinances as enacted and enforced pursue legitimate governmental ends by rational means and thus do not violate the Equal Protection Clause. The district court’s decision to dismiss these claims will be affirmed on this alternative basis.
III.
“[T]he remedy for excessive regulation is a suit for ... inverse condemnation — a suit that belongs in state court.” DeHart,
Notes
. The Tax Injunction Act has been held to apply to any tax, Schneider Transport, Inc. v. Cattanach,
. “[W]e have recognized the potential for a substantive due process claim in the context of land-use decisions that are arbitrary and unreasonable, bearing no substantial relationship to the public health, safety or welfare.” Doherty v. City of Chicago,
. In Himelstein we impliedly reserved the question whether equal protection claims such as plaintiffs’ are ripe for consideration in federal court. See
. Plaintiffs’ prayers for relief under their equal protection claims in two separate sections seek preliminary and permanent injunctive relief pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65 against the city enforcing the ordinances. They include only one sentence requests for damages.
. Ordinance 94-30 begins as follows:
WHEREAS, ... the City has the authority to impose weight limits and to prohibit the operation of trucks and commercial vehicles on City streets; and
WHEREAS, ... the City may regulate a vehicle carrying loads within the municipality and ... may license and control all vehicles carrying loads and establish reasonable regulations and rules and fines and penalties; and
WHEREAS, the City of West Peoria has determined that heavy trucks create an additional burden on the streets, and the streets which carry heavy truck traffic need constant resurfacing; and
WHEREAS, certain streets belonging to the City of West Peoria were not designed to maintain heavy truck traffic; and
WHEREAS, trucks also create an additional safety hazard during certain hours of the day; and
WHEREAS, the City of West Peoria has determined for the above stated reasons and other reasons presented to the City Council that the Ci1y has a need to restrict weight limits on certain streets in the City of West Peoria....
Ordinance 94—31 adds the following clause:
WHEREAS, ... the City has the authority to restrict the use of highways under its jurisdiction by weights of motor vehicles; ... and eliminates the safety hazard clause. Neither ordinance mentions raising revenues or taxes.
. This court's decision in Schneider,
. Because we determine plaintiffs fail to state a federal question claim upon which relief can be granted, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of their state law claims, which were based on supplementary jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367.
