Attempting by heroic efforts to sail through straits left windless by recent Supreme Court precedent,
1
certain property owners asked the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts to overturn, on constitutional grounds, a rent control ordinance adopted in 1979 by the City of Cambridge (the Ordinance).
2
The district court did not allow the voyage to proceed.
Gilbert v. Cambridge,
I. BACKGROUND
In reviewing a dismissal under Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6), we treat all well-pleaded factual averments as true and draw all reasonable inferences therefrom in the appellants’ favor.
See Dartmouth Review v. Dartmouth College,
A. The Ordinance.
Although Cambridge has experienced some form of rent control for over two decades, there have been changes and revisions in the particulars of the system. The City’s present scheme was enacted in 1976, pursuant to powers granted under Chapter 36 of the Massachusetts Acts of 1976 (the Act). About three years later, the city council passed the Ordinance, thereby enlarging the 1976 law. Aware that a trend toward condominium conversion had been depleting scarce housing stock and exacerbating an already existing shortage of rental housing, the council opted to restrict the ready removal of residential units from the rental market. As stated in the Ordinance’s preface:
A serious public emergency continues to exist in the City with respect to the housing of a substantial number of its citizens .... The emergency has worsened since 1976 because of the removal of a substantial number of rental units from the market, by condominium conversion, demolition, and other causes. As a result, more than two thousand or over ten percent of the controlled rental units in *54 the city have been removed from the housing market since 1970, and the vacancy rate has fallen below one percent. In order to carry out the purposes of the Act, and to continue to provide a sufficient supply of decent, affordable rental housing accommodations especially for families of low and moderate income and for elderly people on fixed incomes, it is necessary ... to regulate the removal of controlled rental units from the market.
Cambridge City Code § 8.44.010.
The Ordinance applies to all housing units offered for rent prior to August 13, 1979. It prohibits an owner from “removing” any such unit from the rental market without first obtaining a permit from the Rent Control Board (the Board). As defined by the Ordinance, “removal from the market” includes, inter alia, the conversion of a “controlled rental unit” into a cooperative or a condominium. Cambridge City Code § 8.44.020(D). 3 The Ordinance establishes three overlapping criteria which the Board is to consider in deciding whether or not to grant a removal permit: (1) the effect of withdrawal in terms of the benefits to persons within the class which the rent control scheme sought to protect; (2) the hardships imposed on tenants of the affected units (and any mitigating provisions stipulated by the permit-seeker); and (3) any aggravation of the rental housing shortage (especially for the elderly, families of low-to-moderate income, and people on fixed incomes) that might result from the proposed change of use. Id. at § 8.44.050. The Ordinance imposes fines for withdrawing controlled rental units from the rental market in derogation of the permit process and, if violations become flagrant, authorizes the City to take the offending unit by eminent domain. Id. at § 8.44.090.
Applicable state law also contains criminal penalties for the willful withdrawal of a housing unit from the rental market without a removal permit, Act § 12(c);
see generally Commonwealth v. Kapsalis,
B. The Plaintiffs.
There are, in essence, two groups of appellants: the Southview plaintiffs and the Blevins plaintiffs.
1. The Southview Plaintiffs. This group comprises Southview Cooperative Housing Corporation (SCHC), the record owner of a residential building consisting of about 100 rental units, and eleven SCHC shareholders. In 1979, shortly before the Ordinance was adopted, the Southview plaintiffs took preliminary steps toward converting their building to a condominium. The Ordinance became effective before any sales were consummated, thereby subjecting the units to the permit process. In January 1980, Southview residents applied for forty-three removal permits. After holding a hearing, the Board denied the applications in April of that year.
Eschewing judicial review of the Board’s decision, the owners proceeded to form SCHC and to convert the building into a cooperative. They intended to market the individual residences not as rental units, but as cooperative apartments, on the theory that the Ordinance did not subject cooperatives to the permit requirements. This plan was soon stymied when the Board adopted an interpretive regulation declaring cooperative conversions to be covered by the Ordinance. An attempt to have the state courts rule that the Ordinance did not apply to cooperatives was unsuccessful.
Southview Co-operative Housing Corp. v. Rent Control Board,
In November 1980, the Southview plaintiffs again applied for permits, this time seeking to withdraw forty-seven rental units from the housing market. After a hearing, the Board again demurred. The plaintiffs did not pursue judicial review of the Board's action.
2. The Blevins Plaintiffs. This group comprises two trusts which together own four apartments buildings in Cambridge, aggregating more than 170 rental units. 4 In 1981, Charles Blevins formed a pair of condominium associations, intending to convert two of the properties into condominium aggregates and market the units. The Ordinance required that Blevins obtain permits to implement this plan. He never tried to do so-the trustees allege that such an attempt would have been futile- and the conversion plan was shelved. 5
II. PROCEEDINGS BELOW
The plaintiffs brought this suit on May 27, 1988. Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, they sought to have the Ordinance declared unconstitutional, both on its face and as applied. In the plaintiffs' view, the Ordinance constituted an impermissible taking of property without due process or just compensation (count 1) and a violation of the Equal Protection Clause (count 2). The plaintiffs also charged that the Ordinance abridged rights secured by the state constitution and claimed, in count 3, that the Board had omitted certain studies required under Cambridge City Code § 8.44.030 anent the number of available rental units. The defendants moved to dismiss for failure to state an actionable claim. Following oral argument and plethoric briefing, the district court granted the motion in its entirety. Gilbert,
The court held in substance that all claims of facial invalidity, together with the as-applied claims of the Southview plaintiffs, were barred by the expiration of a three-year limitation period. Id. at 45-49. The as-applied claims of the Blevins plaintiffs were dismissed as unripe. Id. at 49-50. As an alternative basis for dismissal, the court wrote that it would in any event decline to hear the case in its present posture because it viewed a federal declaratory judgment action as an inappropriate vehicle for resolving claims asserted under the Takings Clause of the federal Constitution. Id. at 50-56. In part, the court reasoned that no constitutional violation could be demonstrated unless and until the plaintiffs had utilized the inverse condemnation procedure described in Mass.Gen.L. ch. 79, § 10, and had been denied just compensation. Gilbert,
III. THE "TAKINGS" CLAIMS
We begin by examining the plaintiffs' claims under the Takings Clause, treating the facial and as-applied challenges separately.
A. The Facial Challenges.
The facial challenges of the two groups of plaintiffs rest on a common foundation. In seeking a declaratory judgment that the Ordinance is unconstitutional on its face, both sets of plaintiffs must cross the threshold requirement imposed by Article III, Section 2, of the federal Constitution and show that an "actual controversy"
*56
exists.
6
Steffel v. Thompson,
The Court has set forth a “fairly straightforward” test to be used in considering facial challenges of this genre: “A statute regulating the uses that can be made of property effects a taking if it ‘denies an owner economically viable use of his land....’ ”
Hodel,
In
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc.,
A requirement that a person obtain a permit before engaging in a certain use of his or her property does not itself “take” the property in any sense: after all, the very existence of a permit system implies that permission may be granted, leaving the landowner free to use the property as desired. Moreover, even if the permit is denied, there may be other viable uses available to the owner. Only when a permit is denied and the effect of the denial is to prevent “economically viable” use of the land in question can it be said that a taking has occurred.
Id.
at 127,
This jurisprudence could not be more directly on point, defenestrating appellants’ claim that passage of the permit requirement, without more, itself infracted their constitutional rights. The Ordinance does not presume to prohibit landlords, categorically, from putting their property to the uses to which appellants aspire (e.g., condominium conversions). To the exact contrary, the Ordinance makes available a procedure that enables landlords wishing to convert buildings from clusters of rental units to condominiums or cooperatives, to do so upon application for, and receipt of, municipal approvals. Given the availability of such a permit system and the promise implied thereby — that landlords may be granted leave to use their property as they wish — the mere enactment of the Ordinance cannot constitute a taking in the fifth amendment sense.
Accord, e.g., Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
What is more, even if the permit process were, as appellants contend, an illusion, the Ordinance, on its face, preserves an economically viable property use to landlords; after all, the enabling legislation upon which the Ordinance depends explicitly provides that property owners retain an en
*57
titlement to receive a "fair net operating income" on all their rent-controlled units. Act § 7(a). We view this assurance as adequate on its face to meet the second part of the Court's test. See Riverside,
For these reasons, appellants' facial challenges to the Ordinance presented no justi-ciable controversy. Therefore, those challenges were properly dismissed as unripe. 8
B. The As-Applied Challenge-Southview.
It is apodictic that, where a state law or municipal ordinance contains provisions for administrative relief, an as-applied claim can only arise when a property owner has actually sought, and been denied, a permit. See, e.g., Pennell v. San Jose, 485 U.5. 1, 10,
The limitation period applicable to a section 1983 claim is to be found in the general personal injury statute of the jurisdiction in which the claim arises. See Owens v. Okure,
1. Nature of Relief Sought. First, the Southview plaintiffs contend that the statute of limitations is inapplicable to an action cast, in the declaratory judgment mold. The argument is meritless. To prevent plaintiffs from making a mockery of the statute of limitations by the simple expedient of creative labelling-styling an action as one for declaratory relief rather than for damages-courts must necessarily focus upon the substance of an asserted claim as opposed to its form. It is settled, therefore, that where legal and equitable claims coexist, equitable remedies will be withheld if an applicable statute of limitations bars the concurrent legal remedy.
*58
See Cope v. Anderson,
Given this precedential guidance, we agree entirely with the Second Circuit that if "a claim for declaratory relief could have been resolved through another form of action which has a specific limitations period, the specific period of time will govern." Orangetown v. Gorsuch,
2. Anticipating One's Defenses. The Southview plaintiffs next claim that, as they are still under the lash of the Ordinance, it makes no sense to deny them declaratory relief since, in any future enforcement action, they would promptly raise the constitutionality of the Ordinance as a defense. We find this idea, albeit precocious, to be equally unavailing. The temporal bar cannot be sidestepped merely by asserting that the appellants' declaratory judgment suit was brought to establish defenses against the rainy day, in the future, when the Ordinance might be enforced against them. Cf., e.g., Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. United States EPA,
We refuse to subvert the realties of the case before us simply to suit a party's convenience. The Southview plaintiffs are, indeed, plaintiffs. They have been barred from bringing a claim for damages since three years after the denial of their permit appEcations. Draping their claim in the raiment of the Declaratory Judgment Act, home five years after the window of opportunity framed by the statute of limitations has closed, cannot elude this time bar.
3. Continuing Violation Theory. Finally, the Southview plaintiffs attempt to invoke tolling on the theory that the Board's denial of permits constituted a "continuing violation" of their constitutional rights. This approach, too, leads down a blind alley. As we have said in the Title VII context, "courts must be careful to differentiate between discriminatory acts and the ongoing injuries which are the natural, if bitter, fruit of such acts." Jensen v. Frank,
On the facts of this case, the Southview plaintiffs' argument obfuscates what we have termed the "critical distinction" between a continuing act and a singular act
*59
that brings continuing consequences in its roiled wake.
Altair,
C. The As-Applied Challenge — Blevins.
Having never sought removal permits, the Blevins plaintiffs occupy an even more vulnerable position. They must overcome the strong presumption that their as-applied claims are not ripe for judicial resolution.
See, e.g., Pennell,
1.
The Loretto Doctrine.
Appellants first assert that submitting to the permit process is not essential because the Ordinance effects a permanent physical occupation of their property, which is
per se
unconstitutional and cannot be saved from invalidity by a permit system. This asseveration invokes the specter of
Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
This argument overlooks, however, that there has been no permanent physical occupation of the kind envisioned in
Loretto. See id.
at 437,
[W]e do not agree ... that application of the physical occupation rule will have dire consequences for the government’s power to adjust landlord-tenant relationships. This Court has consistently affirmed that States have broad power to regulate housing conditions in general and the landlord-tenant relationship in particular without paying compensation for all economic injuries that such regulation entails.
Id.
at 440,
2.
The Futility Exception.
This brings us to the trustees’ second contention. Citing
Northern Heel Corp. v. Compo Indus., Inc.,
Other courts have recognized that there is a narrow “futility exception” to the final decision requirement for takings claims which, on rare occasion, may excuse the submission of an application for a variance or other administrative relief.
See, e.g., Southern Pacific,
The futility exception is far easier to conceptualize than to define. Since obtaining a final municipal decision should be the rule, however, the burden of establishing futility must lie with the party seeking to bypass the permit procedure — and any reasonable doubt ought to_be resolved against that party. Thus, although futility can excuse a plaintiffs eschewal of a permit application, the mere possibility, or even the probability, that the responsible agency may deny the permit should not be enough to trigger the excuse.
See United States v. Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co.,
Recognizing the difficulty of formulating precise guidelines for this exception, the Ninth Circuit, relying on
County of Yolo,
Moreover, there is no way, on the basis of what has been pled here, that the trustees can evade the preclusive force of noncompliance with the “one meaningful application” requirement. It strikes us as a leap of gargantuan proportions to reason that a factfinder could, on Blevins’ gossamer allegations, and in light of the detailed procedures and standards set forth for permit proceedings under the Ordinance,
14
draw an inference that it would “certainly” or “nearly certainly” have been futile for Blevins to file an application in 1988. Although we understand that, in the pleading stages, a plaintiffs burden to set out facts is relatively light, we have repeatedly warned that “minimal requirements are not tantamount to nonexistent requirements.”
Gooley v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
In this instance, appellants’ didactic claim of futility, on its face, appears altogether speculative, not only because the trustees never filed even one meaningful application with the Board to convert any of their buildings to condominiums, but also because of the utter lack of other fact-dominated allegations which would serve to bring the appellants within any possible futility exception. To the extent that appellants’ averments suggest that the permit process is a sham, the suggestion is a self-serving generality, counting for very little.
See Christopher W.,
In sum, the allegation of futility contained in the complaint is a matter of rank supposition. We are unable to say that the trustees have presented more than an “unsubstantiated conclusion[ ]” of the kind that our cases teach is inadequate to pass muster in the face of a motion to dismiss.
See Correa-Martinez,
D. Resort to State Procedures.
There is a further reason why the takings claims of both groups of plaintiffs are not velivolant: they have not sought compensation through the procedures Massachusetts has provided for that purpose. The fifth amendment provides in pertinent part that “private property shall not be taken for public use, without just compensation.” This provision “is designed not to limit the governmental interference with property rights
per se,
but rather to secure
compensation
in the event of otherwise proper interference amounting to a taking.”
First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. County of Los Angeles,
... because the Fifth Amendment proscribes takings without just compensation, no constitutional violation occurs until just compensation has been denied. The nature of the constitutional right therefore requires that a property owner utilize procedures for obtaining compensation before bringing a § 1983 action.
Williamson,
Appellants argue that this requirement does not apply to them because they are seeking declaratory relief, not money damages. They also contend that, since Massachusetts does not provide an adequate process for obtaining just compensation in the circumstances of this case, their claims are ripe. Neither argument withstands scrutiny.
1.
Absence of Prayer for Damages.
On the first issue, appellants assert that
Williamson, Ochoa,
and
Culebras
all involved only money damages, whereas appellants seek none.
16
They contrast these cases with earlier cases in which we suggested that, in certain circumstances, a federal court might grant a declaratory judgment as to whether or not a taking had occurred without requiring the property owner first to exhaust state compensation procedures.
See, e.g., Ortiz De Arroyo v. Barcelo,
As the district judge recognized, our underlying concern in
Pamel
and its progeny was the then-unresolved question of whether a temporary taking was compensable.
See Gilbert,
2. Adequacy of State Remedy. This brings us to appellants’ alternative argument that, even if a declaratory judgment action on a takings claim is unripe until the gauntlet of available state compensation procedures has been run, Massachusetts offers no remediation in this type of situation. The argument focuses upon the Massachusetts inverse condemnation statute, which says:
When the real estate of any person has been taken for the public use ... or has been entered for a public purpose, but such taking [or] entry ... was not effected by or in accordance with a formal vote or order of the board of officers of a body politic or corporate duly authorized by law ..., and by such taking ..., entry ... or use he has suffered an injury for which he is entitled to compensation, the damages therefor may be recovered under this chapter.
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 79, § 10. The statute further provides that an aggrieved property owner may bring an action in the State’s courts for an assessment of any such damages. See id. at § 14 (“A person entitled to an award of damages under [Chapter 79] ... may petition for the assessment of such damages to the superior court of the county in which the property taken or injured was situated.”).
Appellants contend that the language of section 10 excluding takings “effected by or in accordance with a formal vote” applies to the Ordinance (which was adopted by vote of the city council), thus barring their access to an inverse condemnation remedy. Appellees, on the other hand, insist that section 10’s reference to “a formal vote” cuts in only when the condemnation of property is direct, not inverse (as in eminent domain proceedings). The district court agreed with the appellees’ interpretation of the statute. As the alleged confiscation here was indirect, the court concluded that “the Massachusetts inverse condemnation procedure under § 10 provides
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the plaintiffs with an adequate means of obtaining just compensation for any alleged taking.”
Gilbert,
We believe that the district court’s construction of Chapter 79 is correct. 18 We need not probe the point, however, for a plaintiff seeking to invoke the Takings Clause in a federal court without first exhausting state remedies has the burden of proving the inadequacy of those remedies. Thus, in Culebras, where it was unclear whether the applicable statute would furnish plaintiffs with the “certain and adequate” relief that the Williamson Court contemplated, we wrote:
Lack of clarity is not unusual ... when legal rights are still in process of definition through case-by-case adjudication.... Plaintiffs have certainly not proven the inadequacy of [Puerto Rico’s] inverse condemnation remedy. We think they must pursue that remedy before they can maintain a federal damages claim, since, when fleshed out by the local court, that remedy could well provide the “certain and adequate” relief they seek.
Culebras,
IV. OTHER CONSTITUTIONAL CLAIMS
In addition to the takings claims, appellants’ complaint also asserted claims for violations of the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause. We agree with the lower court that these claims are bootless.
As we recently said in an analogous case involving a land use ordinance, a court facing a substantive due process challenge to municipal legislation of a social or economic nature “asks only whether a
conceivable
rational relationship exists between the ... ordinance and legitimate governmental ends.”
Smithfield Concerned Citizens for Fair Zoning v. Smithfield,
The appellants’ equal protection claim is no more robust. The Court has stated unambiguously that laws which do not burden a suspect class or a fundamental interest will not be overturned “unless the varying treatment of differing groups or persons is so unrelated to the achievement of any combination of legitimate purposes that [the Court] can only conclude that the legislature’s actions were irrational.”
See Pennell,
Given the applicable criteria, and the fact that, at bottom, appellants’ equal protection claim is but a reformulation of their substantive due process claim, count 2 of the complaint was properly dismissed. Whether or not the Ordinance has achieved its goal of assuring an adequate supply of low-cost housing, it comes well within the wide universe of acceptable legislative choices arguably designed to advance that end. No more was exigible.
See Montalvo-Huertas v. Rivera-Cruz,
The district court appropriately granted the motion to dismiss the due process and equal protection claims under accepted principles of rationality review. 20
V. CONCLUSION
The primary thrust of our holding today is that appellants’ takings claims are not timely. Their facial claims fail because of the existence of the removal permit procedure and the statutory assurance of a fair return on investment. Their as-applied claims fail because the Blevins plaintiffs have never utilized the permit process and the Southview plaintiffs utilized it too long ago. At any rate, all the takings claims are foreclosed because the plaintiffs have not invoked the State’s inverse condemnation procedure in search of just compensation. It follows, then, that appellants’ takings claims, being unripe for adjudication, were properly dismissed.
See, e.g., Tenoco,
We need go no further. 21 The plaintiffs waited nearly a decade after the Ordinance was enacted before deciding to enter the federal courts. Once they determined to do so, they were then too hasty, essaying a rush to judgment without due recourse to either the permit process or the State’s inverse condemnation procedure. Having chosen not to follow the accepted routes, the plaintiffs are becalmed. They cannot now expect a federal court to nurture their claims through a trial or to be tempted by unripe fruit into a premature consideration of potentially important constitutional issues — issues which may or may not actually materialize.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Pennell v. San Jose,
. The Ordinance effectively imposed a series of restrictions on the conversion of rental units to condominiums and cooperatives. The removal restrictions, which were originally codified as Ordinance 926 and subsequently recodified, with amendments, as Ordinance 966, have recently been blended into Chapter 8.44 of the Code of the City of Cambridge (1990). All references to the Ordinance will be the latest codification.
. No permit is needed for the conversion of a rental unit if it is to be occupied by an owner who is the current tenant, who has continuously occupied the unit as a tenant since before August 10, 1979, and who intends in good faith to occupy it indefinitely in the future. See Cambridge City Code § 8.44.020(D)(1).
. We have no need to differentiate between the trusts. When this suit began, Charles Blevins was the trustee of both trusts. Mter Blevins' death, the successor trustees, Benjamin Butcher, Donald B. Zinn, and Jonathan Keyes, were duly substituted as plaintiffs pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 25(a). For the sake of clarity and to facilitate reference, we shall refer to these plaintiffs as "the Blevins plaintiffs," "the trustees," or simply "Blevins."
. On July 24, 1981, Peter Mullane, one of Blevins' tenants, did apply for a removal permit to purchase and reside in a different apartment in the same building. The permit was granted. Mullane never exercised it.
. This requirement has been expressly incorporated into the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act, which provides in pertinent part:
In a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction ..., any court of the United States, upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be sought.
28 U.S.C. § 2201.
. The fifth amendment is, of course, made binding upon state actors by means of the fourteenth amendment.
Agins,
. The district court also rested its dismissal of these claims, in part, on the existence of a perceived time bar. Gilbert,
. Appellants’ reliance on Gordon v. Warren, 579 F.2d 386 (6th Cir.1978), is mislaid. Gordon stands for the unremarkable — and entirely dissimilar — proposition that, when a law is declared unconstitutional, the limitation period for a takings claim begins to run from the date of the statute’s invalidation. Id. at 391. The case at hand is, obviously, cut from a different bolt of cloth.
. To be sure, we do not suggest that all regulation of rental housing is outside the sweep of
Loretto.
Indeed, the
Loretto
Court itself hypothesized that the physical occupation rule might apply were "the government to requisition a certain number of apartments as permanent government offices,”
Loretto,
. These affidavits were filed with the district court several months before the motion to dismiss was heard. They were referred to by at least one side during oral argument on the motion. Yet, the district court made no reference to the affidavits and appears not to have converted the motion into one for summary judgment as allowed under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) ("matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56”). We need neither consider the effect, if any, of these affidavits, nor choose among the differing approaches to Rule 12(b).
Compare, e.g., Grand Union Co. v. Cord Meyer Development Corp.,
. There may be a further facet of the futility exception, applicable where the degree of hardship that would be imposed by waiting for the permit process to run its course is so substantial and severe, and the prospects of obtaining the permit so unlikely, that the ‘property may be found to be meaningfully burdened and the controversy concrete enough to warrant immediate judicial intervention.
See, e.g., Browning-Ferris Indus., Inc. v. Alabama Dept. of Env't Mgmt.,
. Requiring one meaningful application in a situation like this one does not run afoul of the principle that exhaustion of remedies is not ordinarily essential to the commencement of an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
See Patsy v. Florida Board of Regents,
. As these regulations were submitted as part of the complaint, they may be considered in determining a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. See 2A Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 12.07 at 12-68 (2d ed. 1990).
. For much the same reasons, even if the Southview plaintiffs could somehow avoid the time bar that inhibits their as-applied claims,
see supra
Part III(B), they would fare no better under the futility exception. The applications and denials were approximately eight years old when the Southview contingent opted to start suit. To be “meaningful,” an application for administrative relief must be essentially complete, must realistically describe the desired use, and must be reasonably current (or, at least, if it has been pending for some time, the agency's rejection of it must be reasonably fresh).
See, e.g., Kinzli,
. Insofar as appellants intimate that no relief apart from money damages was sought by the plaintiffs in
Williamson, Ochoa,
and
Culebras,
they are wrong.
See Williamson,
. We specifically reject appellants’ suggestion that
First Lutheran,
in holding that damages were available for the entire period of an unconstitutional regulatory taking, gutted the rationale of
Williamson.
Indeed, the
First Lutheran
Court explicitly disclaimed any inconsistency between the holding there and the Court’s statement in
Williamson,
This statement ... was addressed to the issue whether the constitutional claim was ripe for review and did not establish that compensation is unavailable for government activity occurring before compensation is actually denied. Though, as a matter of law, an illegitimate taking might not occur until the government refuses to pay, the interference that effects a taking might begin much earlier, and compensation is measured from that time.
. In arguing for an opposite result, the appellants place paramount reliance on a pair of cable television cases which show, in their view, that an inverse condemnation remedy is inapplicable to a regulatory taking unless expressly incorporated into the underlying legislative enactment. We do not believe either that these opinions stand for such a proposition or that they can carry the cargo which the appellants load on them. The first such case,
Greater Worcester Cablevision, Inc. v. Carabetta Enterprises, Inc.,
. Given Pennell’s teachings, and the nexus between substantive due process and socioeconomic legislation as charted in other recent Supreme Court opinions,
e.g., Kadrmas v. Dickinson Public Schools,
. Where, as here, due process and equal protection sorties comprise the same basic claim under two different labels, the same ripeness criteria apply to both claims.
See Eide,
.
Having concluded that the takings claims must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, we need not address defendants' argument that the district court was required to abstain under the principles of comity enunciated in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
