Case Information
*1 Before TJOFLAT, FAY and ALARCÓN, Circuit Judges. [*]
ALARCÓN, Circuit Judge:
In this civil rights action, brought by Hillcrest Property, LLC (“Hillcrest”)
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Pasco County appeals from the District Court’s
decision granting a partial summary judgment on Hillcrest’s motion and issuing a
permanent injunction against enforcement of the Right-of-Way Preservation
Ordinance (“Ordinance”). The District Court held that the Ordinance facially
violates substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment, and that this
claim was not barred by the statute of limitations. It also denied Pasco County’s
motion for summary judgment on Hillcrest’s as-applied substantive due process
claim. No final judgment has been entered in this matter because Hillcrest’s as-
applied claim is still pending before the District Court. We have jurisdiction over
the District Court’s interlocutory order granting a permanent injunction pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We also have pendent jurisdiction over the District
Court’s order granting Hillcrest’s motion for partial summary judgment based on
its claim that the Ordinance is a facial substantive due process violation.
See
Bayshore Ford Trucks Sales, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.
(
In re Bayshore Ford Trucks
Sales, Inc.
),
I
The Pasco County Board of County Commissioners (“Commissioners”) enacted the Right-of-Way Preservation Ordinance on November 22, 2005. It is part of a comprehensive plan to expand public highways in the county by 2025. (Doc. No. 36, Exh. E.) One of the highways set for expansion within this plan is State Road 52 (“SR 52”). (Doc. No. 36, Exhs. B–D.) The Ordinance requires landowners whose property encroaches on SR 52 to convey in fee simple a portion of their property as a condition for receiving a development permit from the County. (ER 125; Pasco County Land Development Code § 901.2(H).) The Ordinance also contains a provision allowing developers to seek a dedication waiver upon a showing that the “amount of land required to be dedicated to the County . . . exceeds the amount of land that is roughly proportional to the transportation impacts of the proposed development site.” (ER 126–30; Pasco County Land Development Code § 901.2(I).)
Hillcrest, a property development company, has owned property encroaching on SR 52 since April 2001. (Doc. No. 36, Exh. A.) On October 21, 2003, the Commissioners approved Hillcrest’s request to modify the property’s zoning conditions to allow for its commercial development. (ER 28; Doc. No. 96 at 2; Doc. No. 77-2 at 1.) On December 18, 2006, Hillcrest submitted a preliminary site plan seeking a development permit from Pasco County to build a commercial retail shopping center. (ER 34; Doc. No. 96 at 4; Doc. 77-4 at 1.) Pasco County informed Hillcrest on February 3, 2007, that it would be required to dedicate a portion of its property fronting SR 52 as a condition for approval of the permit. (ER 35; Doc. No. 77-1 at 3; Doc. 77-4 at 1–2.) Negotiations between the parties to reach a settlement agreement failed. (Doc. No. 36 at 12–16.) Hillcrest filed suit in the District Court on April 7, 2010. (Doc. No. 1.)
II
Pasco County contends that the District Court erred in holding that Hillcrest’s facial due process claim did not accrue on November 22, 2005, the date the Ordinance was enacted. Instead, the District Court held that Hillcrest’s facial claim was timely filed within the four-year statute of limitations because it did not begin to run until Pasco County subjected Hillcrest to the Ordinance, either on December 18, 2006, when Hillcrest applied for site plan approval, or on February 3, 2007, when Pasco County denied the site plan. (ER 186.)
“The decision to grant or deny an injunction is reviewed for clear abuse of
discretion, but underlying questions of law are reviewed de novo.”
FEC v. Reform
Party of the U.S.
,
Section 1983 claims are subject to a forum state’s statute of limitations for
personal injury claims.
Burton v. City of Belle Glade
,
Some of our sister circuits, however, have applied this rule to facial
substantive due process claims alleging property deprivations.
See Action
Apartment Ass’n v. Santa Monica Rent Control Bd.
,
The Ninth Circuit distinguished between facial takings claims and other
types of facial challenges in
Levald, Inc. v. City of Palm Desert
,
This argument misapprehends the differences between a statute that effects a taking and a statute that inflicts some other kind of harm. In other contexts, the harm inflicted by the statute is continuing, or does not occur until the statute is enforced—in other words, until it is applied. In the takings context, the basis of a facial challenge is that the very enactment of the statute has reduced the value of the property or has effected a transfer of a property interest. This is a single harm, measurable and compensable when the statute is passed. Thus, it is not inconsistent to say that different rules adhere in the facial takings context and other contexts.
Id.
The Ninth Circuit reasoned in
Levald
that in the context of a facial takings
claim, the harm occurs immediately upon, and because of, the statute’s enactment:
the property value depreciates and a taking occurs as soon as the statute goes into
effect.
Id.
Thus, the injury necessarily occurs upon the statute’s enactment.
Id.
The Sixth Circuit subsequently relied upon
Levald
in determining when the
appellant’s facial takings and facial substantive due process claims accrued.
Kuhnle Bros., Inc.
,
The Ninth Circuit has also applied the accrual rule it developed in the facial
takings context to substantive due process claims alleging property deprivations.
In
Action Apartment Association
, an association of landlords filed suit in 2004
against the city of Santa Monica, alleging that a rent control ordinance, which was
first enacted in 1979, was a facial violation of substantive due process.
[T]he logic for the accrual rules in the takings context applies with equal force in the substantive due process context. Given the general rule that “the statute of limitations begins to run when a potential plaintiff knows or has reason to know of the asserted injury,” it stands to reason that any facial injury to any right should be apparent upon passage and enactment of a statute.
Id.
at 1027 (quoting
De Anza Props. X, Ltd. v. Cnty. of Santa Cruz
,
Extending the accrual rules for facial takings claims to facial substantive due
process claims was logical under the facts of
Action Apartment Association
, where,
as in
Levald
, the value of the property at issue depreciated when it became subject
to the rent control ordinance. The injury occurred at the time the ordinance was
enacted and would have been apparent to the current landowner upon the
ordinance’s passage and enactment. Any future owners could not arguably have
suffered an injury because the “price they paid for the [property] doubtless
reflected the burden of rent control they would have to suffer.”
Guggenheim v.
City of Goleta
,
We are persuaded by the reasoning expressed by our sister circuits in Kuhnle and Action Apartment Association . Hillcrest’s land became encumbered immediately upon the Ordinance’s enactment in 2005. Its property would have decreased in value at that time because any current or future development plans would have been subject to the Ordinance’s requirement that, in exchange for granting a commercial development permit, Hillcrest would have to deed part of the land to the county without payment for the acquisition. This injury should have been apparent to Hillcrest upon the Ordinance’s passage and enactment because it had been the owner of the property since 2001 and had been actively engaged in developing the property since at least 2003. See Asociación de Suscripción Conjunta del Seguro de Responsibilidad Obligatorio v. Juarbe-Jiménez , 659 F.3d 42, 50 (1st Cir. 2011) (“[A] plaintiff is deemed to know or have reason to know at the time of the act itself and not at the point that the harmful consequences are felt.”).
Conclusion
We are persuaded that Hillcrest’s facial substantive due process claim accrued when the Ordinance was enacted on November 22, 2005, and was time- barred when Hillcrest filed this action more than five years later on April 7, 2010.
Accordingly, we vacate the District Court’s order to the extent that it granted summary judgment and a permanent injunction in favor of Hillcrest on its facial substantive due process claim. We express no view as to the merits of Hillcrest’s pending as-applied substantive due process claim.
VACATED; and REMANDED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Arthur L. Alarcón, United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
