In this § 1983 аction, plaintiff, James E. Hernandez, appeals from the district court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of defendants, the City of Lafayette, Louisiana, and its mayor. The plaintiff alleged that the city, through its zoning ordinances and its failure to rezone his land, had deprived him of property without due process of law and without just compensation under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court granted defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, which was converted to a motion for summary judgment by the plaintiff’s filing of additional documentary evidence, 1 on the ground that the city and its mayor were *1190 immune from suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We affirm the district court’s judgment as to the mayor, but reverse as to the city.
Background
James E. Hernandez is the owner of a 16.7 acre tract of land situated within the corporate limits of the City of Lafayette, Louisiana. It is located immediately to the south of South College Drive at West Bayou Parkway and is bounded on the east by Coulee Mine, 2 on the west by West Bayou Parkway and the sewage treatment plant access road, and on the south by the South-side Sewerage Treatment Plant.
At the time this suit was filed in 1979, the Hernandez property had been zoned Rl-A (single family residential) for more than ten years. It remains zoned Rl-A to this day. On August 12, 1975, plaintiff made his first request with the Lafayette City Planning Commission for a change in zoning. He requested that the property be rezoned from Rl-A to Bl-M (medical office complex). Shortly thereafter, the city began planning a realignment of South College Drive and West Bayou Parkway, which borders plaintiff’s land. The proposed realignment would bisect the Hernandez property into two unequal parts, which would necessitate the city’s expropriation of the right-of-way by eminent domain proceedings.
In Decеmber of 1975, an ordinance to rezone the Hernandez property from Rl-A to Bl-M, which had been recommended by the planning commission’s staff, was introduced by unanimous vote of the Lafayette City Council. A vote on final approval of the rezoning ordinance was postponed several times during the early part of 1976. On March 16, 1976, the ordinance to rezone the Hernandez property to Bl-M was again scheduled to come up for final approval before the city council. At this meeting, the council was also to consider certain rights-of-way which plaintiff agreed to grant the city in return for final approval of the rezoning ordinance. Because of the impending city council election, however, the council voted to table the rezoning ordinance.
The council took no further action on the rezoning of plaintiff’s property until January 11, 1977, when it adopted a resolution requesting the planning commission to reconsider the matters contained in plaintiff’s rezoning petition filed in August of 1975. After public hearings on plaintiff’s rezoning petition, the planning commission recommended that the request to rezone plaintiff’s property from Rl-A to Bl-M be denied. The city council agreed, denying final approval to the rezoning ordinance. With respect to this rezoning ordinance, one councilman was recorded as stating that “if we change zoning to another classification we are going to have to pay more money when we create the right-of-way.”
On August 9, 1977, the plaintiff filed a request with the city to change the zoning classification of his property from Rl-A to R2 (multi-family residential). The staff of the city planning commission reсommended that an R2 classification be granted for the Hernandez property. After conducting a public hearing on the subject, the planning commission voted to recommend the change to R2 to the city council. On November 17, 1977, the city council tabled the rezoning request for an R2 classification and ordered the planning commission to conduct an additional hearing to study possible zoning options for the Hernandez property. The council’s reason for this action was to allow the planning commission to consider a Bl-M classification in addition to the R2 classification.
On December 18, 1977, the city council voted to appropriate $140,000 for an engineering feasibility study for the proposed realignment of West Bayou Parkway. On January 9, 1978, the city planning commission, contrary to the city council’s instructions, voted to exclude the Hernandez rezoning matter from a comprehensive hearing scheduled for February 8, 1978. The commission’s reason for this action was that it wanted to wait and see if the proposed *1191 realignment project would become a reality before it took any action. The city council upheld the planning commission’s action, basing its decision on the belief that it would be better to postpone any final decision on rezoning the Hernandez property until the city had determined the route of the proposed realignment project.
After attempting to obtain a change in zoning for two and one-half years, and believing that no zoning change would be forthcoming until the city had acquired a right-of-way over his property at either Rl-A prices 3 or as part of a concession by him in return for the desired zoning classification, the plaintiff, on February 3, 1978, filed suit in state court for a mandatory injunction to compel the city to change the Rl-A zoning classification on his property. On February 21,1978, the city council voted to rezone the Hernandez property to R2. The mayor, however, vetoed this measure, and the council failed to override the may- or’s veto. In January of 1979, the city attorney began negotiations with the plaintiff to settle the pending lawsuit in state court, which was set for trial on February 7, 1979.
An informal settlement agreement was reached whereby the city would rezone the plaintiff’s property to a Bl-0 classification (limited office). The settlement agreement was signed by both the city council and the mayor. The plaintiff notified the state court of the settlement agreement, and the trial date was canсelled. One month later, the mayor refused to sign the formal settlement agreement that would have terminated the state court suit. Moreover, the may- or subsequently vetoed an ordinance, unanimously passed by the city council, that would have rezoned the plaintiff’s land to a Bl-0 classification. The council was again unsuccessful in its attempt to overturn the mayor’s veto. A trial date in the state court suit was reset for January of 1980. 4 In the aftermath of these events, the city council repealed the ordinance declaring the West Bayou Parkway realignment a “public necessity” upon advice of the city’s legal counsel that the city would be in jeopardy of losing the state court lawsuit unless the proposed realignment project was abandoned.
In March of 1979, plaintiff filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He complains that becаuse the city planned to build a road through his property, it delayed making a final decision on the rezoning of his property in an effort to maintain the depressed market value of his land as zoned Rl-A so that the city’s expropriation costs of a right-of-way across plaintiff’s land would be kept to a minimum. The district court, noting that zoning is a legislative function of a municipality,
Four States Realty Co., Inc. v. City of Baton Rouge,
Absolute Legislative Immunity for the Mayor?
In
Tenney v. Brandhove,
Three courts of appeals, including this circuit by dictum, have interpreted the reasoning of
Lake Country Estates
to compel an extension of absolute immunity under § 1983 to local legislators.
Rheuark v. Shaw,
However, the panel in
Universal Amusement Co. v. Hofheinz
did not cite or discuss
Crowe v. Lucas,
We hold, in agreement with at least five of the Justices of the Supreme Court,
see Owen v. City of Independence,
Having decided that local legislators are entitled to absolute immunity from federal damage claims for conduct while acting in a legislative capacity, we now turn to the specific question raised here, that is, whether in this case the mayor of the City of Lafayette is entitled to absolute legislative immunity.
Although the mayor of the City of Lafayette is the elected chief executive officer of the city, he is entitled to absolute immunity from suit for acts taken in a legislative capacity.
See Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union of the United States,
“Thus, it is clear that the City of Lafayette, when exercising its legislative functions, is not absolutely immune from a 1983 action. It is not clear, however, that the city should have no immunity whatsoever. I do not here attempt to define the scope of the limited immunity which does exist. I do conclude that where, as here, the deprivation claimed is the result of a) a city’s failure to act promptly rather than its affirmative enactment of an unconstitutional law or official policy and b) no discrimination or equal protection deprivation is asserted, the city is immune from suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.”
The mayor’s veto, like the veto of the President or a state governor, is undeniably a part of the legislative process. It differs only in that it takes place on the local level. When the mayor exercises his veto power, it constitutes the policy-making decision of an individual elected official. It is as much an exercise of legislative decision-making as is the vote of a member of Congress, a state legislator, or a city councilman. We, therefore, hold that the district court properly dismissed plaintiff’s action against the may- or because the mayоr was absolutely immune from suit in connection with his vetoes of the ordinances to rezone plaintiff’s land. 12
Absolute Legislative Immunity From Damages for the City Itself?
Approximately five months before
Owen v. City of Independence,
Mo.,
In Owen v. City of Independence, the Supreme Court held that a municipality was not entitled to a qualified immunity under § 1983 based on the good faith of its officials. Justice Brennan, writing for the majority, summarized the Court’s decision in Owen as follows:
“In sum, our decision holding that municipalities have no immunity from damages liability flowing from their constitutional violations harmonizes well with developments in the common law and our own pronouncements on official immunities under § 1983....
“We believe that today’s decision, together with prior precedents in this area, properly allocates these costs among the three principals in the scenario of the § 1983 cause of action: the victim of the constitutional deprivation; the officer whose conduct caused the injury; and the public, as represented by the municipal entity. The innocent individual who is harmed by an abuse of governmental authority is assured that he will be compensated for his injury. The offending official, so long as he conducts himself in good faith, may go about his business secure in the knowledge that a qualified immunity will protect him from personal liability for damages that are more appropriately chargeable to the populace as a whole.! 16 ! And the public will be forced to bear only the cоsts of injury inflicted by the ‘execution of a government’s policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy.’ Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Services,436 U.S., at 694 ,98 S.Ct. at 2038 .”
The Supreme Court in
Owen
reasoned that the concerns that justified its previous decisions conferring immunities under § 1983 on various governmental officials “are less compelling, if not wholly inapplicable, when the liability of the municipal entity is at issue.”
In
Lake Country Estates,
the plaintiffs had brought a § 1983 suit against the members of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA), alleging that the regional planning agency had adopted a land use ordinance, which destroyed the economic value of their land, and thereby had “taken their property without due process of law and without just compensation in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution .... ” *
*1196 We consider the Supreme Court’s decision in Owen and its caveat in Lake Country Estates to be dispositive of the city’s argument and hold that the City of Lafayette is not entitled to a legislative immunity from damages under § 1983 in connection with its zoning regulations. Our decision is buttressed by language in Owen which squarely rejects the argument the city asserts here. There, in reviewing the history of municipal immunity from tort liability, the Court wrote:
“To be sure, there were two doctrines that afforded municipal corporations some measure of protection from tort liability. The first sought to distinguish between a municipality’s ‘governmental’ and ‘proprietary’ functions; as to the former, the city was held immune, whereas in its exercise of the latter, the city was held to the same standards of liability as any private corporation. The second doctrine immunized a municipality for its ‘discretionary’ or ‘legislative’ activities, but not for those which were ‘ministerial’ in nature. A brief examination of the application and the rationale underlying each of these doctrines demonstrates that Congress could not have intended them to limit a municipality’s liability under § 1983.”
Owen,
The city, however, attempts to distinguish Owen from the case before us and suggests that we should not extend Owen beyond its factual setting. The city asserts that “Owen was, as was Monell ..., an employment case where a wrongfully terminated employee sought back pay as damages from a municipal employer. As such, Owen is factually distinguishable from this case wherein Mr. Hernandez complains that zoning legislation of the City of Lafayette is unconstitutional.” Furthermore, the city argues that “[t]he immunity at issue in Owen was the qualified or limited ‘good faith’ immunity which attaches to the acts of executive, administrative and managerial officials, while the [district court in the present case] invoked an absolute legislative immunity from damages (not suit) for acts taken in a legislative capacity.”
The city misperceives the circumstances of the
Owen
case.
Owen
was not merely an employment case; it involved the termination of a high ranking city official — the city police chief. Moreover, the alleged constitutional violation giving rise to a § 1983 cause of action was not the police chief’s termination, since he had no property interest in that office under state law, but rather the city council’s false public accusations, which had blackened his reputation, thus depriving him of a liberty interest without due process of law.
In
Owen,
a city councilman had obtained a copy of an unpublished investigative report regarding the police chief’s administration of the police property room. At a regularly scheduled meeting of the city council, this councilman made a statement concerning the investigation. In his statement, the councilman made several allegations of misconduct and possible illegal activity on the part of the police chief. Thereafter, the city council passed a motion to release the investigative report to the news media and to turn over the information to the local prosecuting attorney for presentation to the grand jury. In the motion, the city council also directed the city manager to take appropriate action against all persons involved in the misconduct.
Therefore, the constitutional violation about which the plaintiff in
Owen
could legally complain was caused by the members of the city council while performing a legitimate legislative function,
i. e.
conducting an investigation, which is an established part of representative government.
See Tenney v. Brandhove,
Moreover, a finding concerning the existence of § 1983 immunity must be “predicated upon a considered inquiry into the immunity historically accorded the relevant official at common law and the interests behind it.”
Imbler v. Patchman,
“Where the immunity claimed by the defendant was well established at common law. at the time § 1983 was enacted, and where its rationale was compatible with the purposes of the Civil Rights Act, we have construеd the statute to incorporate that immunity. But there is no tradition of immunity for municipal corporations, and neither history nor policy support a construction of § 1983 that would justify the qualified immunity accorded the city of Independence by the Court of Appeals.”
In this case, the plaintiff has alleged that the city’s Rl-A zoning classification of his property has denied him any reasonable, economically viable use of his land, and, therefore, constituted a taking without just compensation in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The summary judgment evidence, viewed “in the light most favorable to the non-movant plaintiff,”
Lee v. National Life Assurance Co.,
The legislative history of § 1983 also contradicts a grant of absolute immunity from damages to a municipality for any uncompensated “taking” of private property for public use, occurring as a result of zoning regulations that deny property owners any economically viable use оf their land. As noted by the Supreme Court in
Monell,
Representative Bingham,
21
in discussing § 1 of the bill that eventually became the Civil Rights Act of 1871 — now codified as 42 U.S.C. § 1983 — explained “that he had drafted § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment with the case of
Barron v. Mayor of Baltimore,
After commenting that Representative Bingham’s remarks had clearly disclosed his view that such takings by cities, as had occurred in Barron, would be redressable under § 1983, 22 the Court stated:
“More generally, and as Bingham’s remarks confirm, § 1 of the bill [§ 1983] would logically be the vehicle by which Congress provided redress for takings, since that section provided the only civil remedy for Fourteenth Amendment violations and that Amendment unequivocally prohibited uncompensated takings. Given this purpose, it beggars reason to supposе that Congress would have exempted municipalities from suit, insisting instead that compensation for a taking come from an officer in his individual capacity rather than from the government unit that had the benefit of the property taken.”
Monell,
Finally, we are reassured in the correctness of our decision
here
— i.
e.
to deny the city immunity from a damage remedy for its uncompensated-takings of private property through a zoning law that denies the owner of certain property any economically
*1199
viable use thereof — by Justice Brennan’s most recent writing on this subjeсt in
San Diego Gas & Electric Co. v. City of San
Diego,-U.S. -, -,
In
San Diego Gas & Electric,
the city down-zoned some of plaintiff’s property from industrial to agricultural and also designated some 233 acres of plaintiff’s land as open space.
23
The plaintiff filed suit in state court alleging a “taking” of its property by “inverse condemnation”
24
and sought compensation. The trial court found a taking without just compensation, and the intermediate appellate court affirmed, holding “there was ‘substantial evidence to support the court’s conclusion [that] there was inverse condemnation.’ ”
San Diego Gas & Electric,
- U.S. at -,
The California Supreme Court, however, remanded the case for reconsideration in light of
Agins v. City of Tiburon,
The United States Supreme Court dismissed the appeal for lack of a final judgment because, although the California appellate court “has decided that monetary compensation is not an appropriate remedy for any taking of appellant’s property that may have occurred, ... it has not decided whether any other remedy is available because it has not decided whether any taking has in fact occurred.” - U.S. a t-,
In discussing the merits, Justice Brennan first opined in accordance with
Agins v. City of Tiburon,
Although
San Diego Gas & Electric
was a suit under state law, which was appeаled to the Supreme Court, as were
Agins
and
Penn Central Transportation Co.,
Justice Brennan’s reasoning therein is applicable with equal force to the § 1983 case before us. Section 1983 provides that “every person,” including a municipality,
see Monell,
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, and since there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether the Rl-A zoning classification denied plaintiff any viable economic use of his property, we hold that rendition of summary judgment in the city’s favor was improper and that the plaintiff is entitled to pursue his claim for damages in an amount equal to just compensation for the value of the property during the period of the “taking.”
However, in cases such as the one before us, where the application of a general zoning ordinance to a particular person’s property does not initially deny the owner an economically viable use of his land, but thеreafter does come to result in such a denial due to changing circumstances, or where a zoning classification initially denies a property owner an economically viable use of his land, but the owner delays or fails to timely seek relief from such a classification, 27 we conclude that a “taking” does not occur until the municipality’s governing body is given a realistic opportunity and reasonable time within which to review its zoning legislation vis-a-vis the particular property and to correct the inequity 28
*1201
During the pendency of such proceedings to review and correct a zoning classification that denies an owner any economically viable use of his property, “[m]ere fluctuations in value during the process of governmental decisionmaking, absent extraordinary delay, are ‘incidents of ownership. They cannot be considered as a “taking” in the constitutional sense.’ ”
Agins v. City of Tiburon,
The judgment of dismissal of the suit against the mayor is affirmed; the judgment in favor of the City of Lafayette is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
AFFIRMED in part, and REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
Notes
. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c).
. Coulee Mine is a medium-sized stream.
. It is undisputed that the market value of the Hernandez property would be greater under a zoning classification less restrictive than Rl-A.
. The state court rendered judgment in plaintiffs favor, finding that the city’s actions were unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious and had deprived the plaintiff of all practical use of his property.
.
Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
. The district court incorrectly stated that no discrimination or denial of equal protection was alleged in this case. In paragraphs eight and nine of his original complaint, the plaintiff alleged equal prоtection violations. That the district court incorrectly believed no equal protection violation was alleged makes no difference to our decision. For purposes of our opinion, we assume the absence of any equal protection claim by plaintiff.
. The Court reasoned that by enacting § 1983, Congress did not mean to abrogate the historical tradition of legislative immunity observed in England and the American Colonies and preserved in the formation of state and national governments here.
. In his dissent, Justice Marshall comments that
“the majority’s reasoning in this case leaves little room to argue that municipal legislators stand on a different footing than their regional counterparts. Surely the Court’s supposition that the ‘cost and inconvenience and distractions of a trial’ will impede officials in the ‘uninhibited discharge of their legislative duty’ ... applies with equal force whether the officials occupy local or regional positions.”
. In
Crowe v. Lucas,
this court accorded qualified, as opposed to absolute, immunity under § 1983 to a defendant who “wore two hats,” that of a municipal judge and that of a city alderman. The panel in
Crowe v. Lucas
concluded the jury could reasonably have found that the defendant’s actions in conspiring against the plaintiff and in ordering his arrest at a meeting of the board of aldermen were taken as an alderman rather than as a judge. The panel’s reasoning was that “[mjaintaining order at a Board of Aldermen’s meeting is normally a function performed by an Alderman rather than a Municipal Judge.”
After recognizing the Supreme Court has never decided whether the immunity accorded to officials in the positions of mayor and alderman is an аbsolute or “qualified” immunity, the panel in
Crowe v. Lucas
expressly rejected the defendant’s argument that it should rule in favor of absolute immunity. The defendants had argued the application of absolute immunity, citing
Tenney v. Brandhove, supra,
which accorded absolute immunity to state legislators. The
*1193
panel reasoned that since the Supreme Court, through language in
Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,
The Supreme Court’s language in Monell, from which the panel in Crowe inferred that municipalities possessed some degree of immunity, is as follows:
“Since the question whether local government bodies should be afforded some form'of official immunity was not presented as a question to be decided on this petition аnd was not briefed by the parties nor addressed by the Courts below, we express no views on the scope of any municipal immunity beyond holding that municipal bodies sued under § 1983 cannot be entitled to an absolute immunity, lest our decision that such bodies are subject to suit under § 1983 ‘be drained of meaning.’ Scheuer v. Rhodes,416 U.S. 232 , 248,94 S.Ct. 1683 , 1692,40 L.Ed. 90 (1974).”
. Moreover, as the
Crowe
opinion later clarifies, the defendant in question really was not “wearing two hats.” Instead, he legitimately wore only the hat of a municipal judge because a state court had previously issued an order voiding the results of the election in which the defendant had defeated the plaintiff for the office of city alderman, and under state law the plaintiff was entitled to serve as an alderman until another election could be held.
The panel, however, did recognize that if the defendant had been acting in a judicial capacity, he would have been entitled to absolute immunity from suit, unless such judicial acts were done in “clear absence of all jurisdiction.”
. In
Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
the United States Supreme Court held that the Virginia Supreme Court and the jus
*1194
tices thereof were entitled to absolute legislative immunity from suit in connection with the court’s promulgation of disciplinary rules for attorneys which comprised the State’s Bar Code. The Supreme Court reasoned that since .the Virginia court exercised the State’s entire legislative power with respect to regulating attorneys’ conduct, the members of that court were the State’s legislators for the purpose of issuing the Bar Code, and, therefore, that the Virginia court and its members were immune from suit when acting in their legislative capacity.
. On motion for new trial, the plaintiff argued that although the mayor might possess absolute immunity in connection with his vetoes, he would only be entitled to qualified immunity with respect to his other conduct complained about in the pleadings. We conclude the district court properly overruled the motion for new trial on the ground that the mayor’s vetoes were the culmination of all of plaintiffs complaints. This is so because the mayor’s other actions, aside from the vetoes of the rezoning ordinances, could not have resulted in a denial of any reasonable use of plaintiffs property and thus constituted an unconstitutional taking without just compensation.
. The district court stated:
. In this § 1983 action, the plaintiff has not sought injunctive or declaratory relief; insteаd, he seeks only damages to compensate him for an unconstitutional deprivation of property.
. Zoning is a legislative function of government.
South Gwinnett Venture v. Pruitt,
. In our case, the offending officials are protected by absolute legislative immunity.
. The evidence when viewed in the light most favorably to the plaintiff shows that the Hernandez property was not suited for an economically viable development under its present zoning classification (single family dwellings). This is so because it was bordered by a sewage treatment plant, the Coulee Mine flood plain extended on portions of the land, various easements limited the size and placement of residences on the proposed lots, and the irregular shape of the property limited the number of lots that could be created.
. The just compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment was made appliсable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment in
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. City of Chicago,
. For example, we note that under Louisiana law there is no immunity for the state and its political subdivisions from damages for an uncompensated “taking.”
See, e. g., Boothe v. Department of Public Works,
. Our refusal to bestow an absolute immunity from damages on the city for its uncompensated takings that result from the application of its zoning ordinances, the effect of which is to deny certain property owners any economically viable use of their land, is reinforced by the Supreme Court’s discussion of the general rules governing a municipality’s tort liability in damages in
Owen.
There, the Court wrote: “Under this general theory of liability, a municipality was deemed responsible for any private losses generated through a wide variety of its operations and functions, from personal injuries due to its defective sewers, thoroughfares, and public utilities, to property damage caused by its trespasses and
uncompensated takings." Owen,
. Representative Bingham was the author of § 1 of the fourteenth amendment.
See Monell,
.
See
Cong. Globe App., 42d Cong., 1st Sess. 85 (1871) (remarks of Rep. Bingham),
quoted in Monell,
. Pursuant to the “open space” designation, the city “prepared a report mapping appellant’s property for purchase by the city for open space use, contingent on passage of a bond issue.”
San Diego Gas &
Electric, -U.S. at -,
. For a good definitional discussion of inverse condemnation,
see United States v. Clarke,
“The phrase ‘inverse condemnation’ appears to be one that was coined simply as a shorthand description of the manner in which a landowner recovers just compensation for a taking of his property when condemnation proceedings have not been instituted. ‘Inverse condemnation is “a cause of action against a governmental defendant to recover the value of property which has been taken in fact by the governmental defendant, even though no formal exercise of the power of eminent domain has been attempted by the taking agenсy.” ’ ... A landowner is entitled to bring such an action as a result of ‘the self-executing character of the constitutional provision with respect to compensation .. . ’ ... A condemnation proceeding, by contrast, typically involves an action by the condemn- or to effect a taking and acquire title. The phrase ‘inverse condemnation,’ as a common understanding of that phrase would suggest, simply describes an action that is the ‘inverse’ or ‘reverse’ of a condemnation proceeding.”
Id. (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).
. Justice Brennan was joined by Justices Stewart, Marshall, and Powell.
. If a police power zoning regulation is not enacted in furtherance of the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare, there may be no “public use.” Although a municipality in such a case may not be compelled to pay just comрensation under the Fifth Amendment because there has been no “taking for public use,” the landowner whose property is thus “taken” — albeit not for “public use” — will nevertheless have a damage cause of action under § 1983 since such a “taking” would constitute the deprivation of property without due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See San Diego Gas &
Electric,U.S. at --,
. This would be accomplished either by petitioning the city council or other appropriate body for a rezoning of the property that would allow the owner an economically viable use thereof, or by contesting the initial general zoning regulation prior to its passage.
. We believe that such a rule is consistent with the “weight of authority .. . that in order to constitute a taking, the condemnor must have an intention to appropriate .. .. ”
Porter
v.
United States,
