The plaintiffs, homeowners in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Milwaukee and Dr. Constantine Panagis, in his official capacity as Commissioner of the Department of Health (“the Department”). Plaintiffs alleged the Department’s decision to grant the Lindner Brothers Trucking Company (“Lindner Brothers”), an adjacent business, a permanent variance from the municipal noise ordinance violated their rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. The plaintiffs claimed the decision was arbitrary and capricious, was made without providing them an opportunity to be heard, and deprived them of property without just compensation. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed the action. The plaintiffs appeal that determination.
I.
Because the district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, we accept the plaintiffs’ factual allegations as true and resolve any other genuine issues of material fact in their favor. Fed.R. Civ.P. 56(c);
Bishop v.
Wood,
The plaintiffs, James and Joan Barbian, husband and wife, own and reside in a single family dwelling in the City of Milwaukee. Since 1955, their lot has been zoned exclusively for residential use. However, a tract of land immediately adjacent to the rear of the Barbian lot was zoned for industrial or light manufacturing purposes. The Lindner Brothers Trucking Company *479 constructed a warehouse on that tract. The problem arose because access to the Lindner warehouse could be accomplished only by the use of a 100-foot wide strip also owned by Lindner Brothers, that extended from the warehouse tract along the side of the Barbian lot to the public street passing in front of the Barbian lot.
During construction of the warehouse, Lindner Brothers laid an asphalt driveway over the narrow strip, although it was zoned only for residential use, to allow construction vehicles and its semi-trailer trucks access to the warehouse. As a result, approximately forty semi-trailer trucks used the access road passing within fifteen feet of the Barbian home daily.
In August, 1976, the plaintiffs complained to the City of Milwaukee Building Inspector that the use of the access road by construction vehicles and Lindner Brothers’ trucks for non-residential purposes violated the municipal zoning ordinance. Though an official at the Building Inspector’s office initially issued an order halting construction of the warehouse, that agency rescinded the order four days later with the explanation that use of the access strip for industrial traffic was a legal non-conforming use. The Barbians then filed an action in state court challenging that administrative determination. However, in July, 1977, before the state court considered the question, the City of Milwaukee Common Council enacted a measure rezoning the access strip from “residential” to “industrial.”
The Barbians next filed an action for declaratory judgment in state court, alleging the rezoning decision violated state law and was an unconstitutional exercise of the municipal police power. The state court rejected those arguments. Evidence adduced, however, indicated that the noise generated by the trucks exceeded fifty-five decibels and, consequently, violated the municipal noise ordinance. Armed with that information, the Barbians requested that the Milwaukee Department of Health enforce the noise ordinance.
The Department conducted sound tests which confirmed that the truck noise exceeded the maximum level permitted under the ordinance. After a year during which considerable negotiating between the parties occurred, the Department of Health granted Lindner Brothers a permanent variance from the noise ordinance. The plaintiffs appealed that decision to the City of Milwaukee Administrative Review Board. Concluding that it lacked jurisdiction, the Administrative Review Board declined to consider the issue and dismissed the appeal.
The Barbians then filed this action under Section 1983, alleging that the Common Council’s access strip rezoning decision and the Department of Health’s grant of a permanent variance from the noise ordinance violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Barbians specifically alleged that because the trucks passed their house during all hours, day and night, the noise from the traffic disrupted their sleep, interfered with use of their property, and rendered their home uninhabitable. It was further alleged that the size and number of vehicles increased the danger of physical injury to all residents in the neighborhood and had a debilitating emotional and physical effect on the plaintiffs personally.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on both the rezoning and noise issues. The district court concluded that because the plaintiffs had previously litigated in state court the issues pertaining to the rezoning decision, the doctrine of res judicata prevented relitigation of the same issues in federal court. The plaintiffs do not appeal that part of the decision. On the noise variance, the district court concluded that the Department had not deprived the plaintiffs of property without due process of law, did not “take” the plaintiffs’ property without providing just compensation, and that the elemental notions of procedural due process had not been disregarded. The plaintiffs contest those conclusions.
II.
The plaintiffs first claim the Department’s noise variance decision was arbitrary *480 and capricious and, consequently, deprived them of property without due process of law since its sound tests conclusively demonstrated that the noise level exceeded by at least twenty-five decibels the maximum level permitted in residential neighborhoods. The plaintiffs contend the extreme disparity between that level and the maximum level set in the ordinance, combined with the lengthy delay which occurred before the Department acted upon their complaint, demonstrates the decision was arbitrary and capricious.
An action under Section 1983 does not provide a property owner a collateral forum in which to question the merits of a municipal agency’s administration of a local noise ordinance, but is limited to whether or not the Department’s decision was arbitrary and capricious and thereby deprived plaintiffs of their property. “[T]he guaranty of due process, as has often been held, demands only that the law shall not be unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious, and that the means selected shall have a real and substantial relation to the objective sought to be attained.”
Pruneyard Shopping Center
v.
Robins,
The rezoning of the access strip from a residential to an industrial classification occurred in 1977. Amending the zoning classification was a determination that the permanent disruption to the Barbians’ neighborhood did not outweigh the benefits to the general community from the establishment of the warehouse. Further, it was a determination that there would be serious injury to Lindner Brothers if the company could not use its warehouse tract for the legitimate purpose for which it was zoned. The truck noise was not considered a sufficient factor to deny altering the zoning classification of the access property to industrial.
When the state court attack on the rezoning failed, the Barbians challenged the disruption of their neighborhood environment under the noise ordinance. Faced with essentially the same issue presented to the Common Council, the Department suspended enforcement of the noise ordinance in order to effectuate the previous Common Council decision allowing access to the landlocked warehouse. A City of Milwaukee Development Organization study conclusively showed that development of an alternative access route was not feasible. Strict enforcement of the noise ordinance would have prevented access and nullified the Common Council zoning change already determined to be valid.
The Department, moreover, was not unresponsive to the Barbians’ concerns. The noise variance was not unconditional. The Department imposed several limitations on the Lindner Brothers’ use of its access strip requiring affirmative steps to reduce the noise. The district court found that the conditions had been substantially met. 1 Further, the Department reserved the authority to revoke the variance if Lindner *481 Brothers failed to adhere to the conditions of the variance or if some other access to the warehouse eventually became available. In addition, the City of Milwaukee, with Lindner Brothers’ cooperation, erected a barricade closing the road after business hours and on weekends to all traffic, including Lindner Brothers trucks.
The Milwaukee noise ordinance vests authority in the Department to grant variances from the general application of the ordinance.
2
A variance permits an individual to use his property in a manner which an ordinance, literally enforced, would otherwise prohibit.
Eastlake v. Forest City Enterprises, Inc.,
Considering the investment in the large warehouse and trucking business, Lindner Brothers’ need to use the particular access strip, and the required noise abatement conditions, the conclusion that strict enforcement of the noise ordinance would produce a severe and harsh result was neither unreasonable nor arbitrary. We agree with the district court that it was inevitable that the principal tract of land would be developed and that the Barbians’ property would be affected. Nor was it unexpected that the access strip would probably be necessary to reach the industrial tract. For two decades the local railroad had intermittently used the access strip to reach its tracks bordering the back of the industrial tract. The warehouse was already constructed and in operation when the Barbians first complained of the noise ordinance violations. In light of all the circumstances, the Department did not unreasonably conclude that substantial hardships would result from the strict enforcement of the noise ordinance and that a variance was necessary.
Finally, the plaintiffs argue that the effect of the noise ordinance and the lack of alternative access to the property were factors which Lindner Brothers should have considered before constructing the warehouse. Under Wisconsin law, a hardship created either from ignorance or deliberate disregard of existing land use ordinances does not justify granting a variance.
State ex rel. Markdale Corp. v. Board of Appeals,
A Section 1983 cause of action does not provide the Barbians a federal forum in
*482
which to contest the merits of a local administrative determination. The record indicates that the Barbians did not challenge the Department’s noise decision in state court. That decision may be set aside under the Fourteenth Amendment only if it was arbitrary and capricious.
Pruneyard Shopping Center,
III.
The Barbians argue that the Department’s decision to grant the noise variance rendered their home uninhabitable, contending that since the City of Milwaukee provided no compensation for the diminished value of their property, the Department’s action violated the Taking Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The Fifth Amendment provides that “private property” shall not “be taken for public use, without just compensation.” 4
Although the Department’s decision was neither arbitrary nor capricious, that fact does not resolve the separate issue of whether the Taking Clause required the City of Milwaukee to compensate the plaintiffs for the burdens the variance imposed upon them.
Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV
Corp., - U.S. -,-,
The Lindner Brothers argue, however, that the Barbians did not allege a deprivation of “property” under the Fourteenth Amendment. Lindner Brothers also assert that the plaintiffs lack a property interest in the enforcement of the noise ordinance and, as a result, may not sue under Section 1983 to require its enforcement. The definition of “property” under the Fifth Amendment, however, is not narrowly limited and applies to rights in the use of property as well as the title to it.
Kaiser Aetna v. United States,
[T]he Court has frequently emphasized that the term “property” as used in the Taking Clause includes the entire “group of rights inhering in the citizen’s [ownership].” United States v. General Motors Corp.,323 U.S. 373 [65 S.Ct. 357 ,89 L.Ed. 311 ] (1945). The term is not used in the “vulgar and untechnical sense of the physical thing with respect to which the citizen exercises rights recognized by law. [Instead, it] ... denote[s] the group of rights inhering in the citizen’s relation to the physical thing, as the right to possess, use and dispose of it.... The constitutional provision is addressed to every sort of interest the citizen may possess.” Id., at 377-78 [65 S.Ct. at 359-360 ],
Penn Central Transportation,
The district court did not expressly consider this argument, and it is not apparent from the record that the defendants advanced it below. The Barbians alleged that since the Department granted the variance the noise and volume of the trucks have made their home uninhabitable. The plaintiffs claimed to have lost the opportunity to sleep peacefully at night and relax during the day, that the increased traffic has endangered children playing in their yard, and that the market value of their home had therefore fallen. The Court has held that the Fifth Amendment requires the compensation of affected homeowners when government action produces similar inju
*484
ries.
See, e.g., United States v. Causby,
impossible for people in the house to converse or to talk on the telephone. The plaintiff and the members of his household ... were frequently unable to sleep even with ear plugs and sleeping pills; they would frequently be awakened by the flight and the noise of the planes; the windows of their home would frequently rattle and at times plaster fell down from the walls and ceilings; their health was affected and impaired, and they sometimes were compelled to sleep elsewhere. Moreover, their house was so close to the runways or path of glide that as the spokesman for the members of the Airlines Pilot Association admitted “If we had engine failure we would have no course but to plow into your house.”
However, while the plaintiffs sufficiently alleged a deprivation of “property” under the Fifth Amendment, the fact that government action severely burdens a particular parcel of land does not necessarily indicate that a taking has occurred.
Penn Central Transportation,
In
Goldblatt v. Hempstead,
Concededly the ordinance completely prohibits a beneficial use to which the property has previously been devoted. However, such a characterization does not tell us whether or not the ordinance is unconstitutional. It is an oft-repeated truism that every regulation necessarily speaks as a prohibition. If this ordinance is otherwise a valid exercise of the town’s police powers, the fact that it deprives the property of its most beneficial use does not render it unconstitutional.
The resolution of the question also depends upon the economic impact of the intrusion, Loretto,- U.S. at -,
government regulation ... involves the adjustment of rights for the public good. Often this adjustment curtails some potential for the use or economic exploitation of private property. To require compensation in all such circumstances would effectively compel the government to regulate by purchase. “Government hardly could go on if to some extent values incident to property could not be diminished without paying for every such change in the general law.” Andrus v. Allard,444 U.S. at 65 ,100 S.Ct. at 326 (quoting Pennsylvania Coal,260 U.S. at 413 ,43 S.Ct. at 159 ). These factors control the determination of the question.
The Fifth Amendment does not require the City of Milwaukee to compensate the Barbians for alleged damage which the Lindner Brothers trucks caused. The Supreme Court has never construed the Taking Clause to require the socialization of losses resulting from antagonistic uses of private property by neighboring landowners.
See Miller v. Schoene,
The City of Milwaukee has wide discretion in developing and implementing a plan for a better balanced and more attractive community.
Belle Terre v. Boraas,
In some later decisions in different circumstances the Court has held that the Taking Clause requires compensation when noise produced from the government’s use of its own property “in an enterprise capacity,”
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
IV.
As a final matter, the plaintiffs assert that the Department abrogated their right to procedural due process under the Fourteenth Amendment because it granted the variance without first holding a formal hearing. The district court originally granted the defendant’s summary judgment motion and dismissed the complaint without considering this issue. The plaintiffs, however, filed a motion petitioning the district court to reconsider its decision, claiming the court had ignored the “central” issue in the case — whether the plaintiffs had been denied the right to procedural due process. The district court rejected the plaintiff’s argument on two grounds.
The court found that the plaintiffs had failed to allege a deprivation of procedural due process rights in their complaint and, consequently, the question was never presented for consideration. A review of the complaint reveals that it makes no reference to any deficiency in procedure. The plaintiffs did not allege that the Department’s decision was made without a hearing, that the plaintiffs were entitled to a hearing under Wisconsin law, see Wis.Stat. 68.10, or that the Department’s variance unconstitutionally deprived them of their right to procedural fairness.
The plaintiffs’ minimal responsibilities in pleading under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are well-settled.
Conley v. Gibson,
The district court also concluded that plaintiffs had not been deprived of a fair opportunity to be heard on the merits of their grievance in light of the Department’s substantial efforts to accommodate the Barbians. Over the lengthy period of time during which the Barbians’ complaint was pending, the Department and Lindner Brothers made substantial efforts to confer and to mediate the controversy to monitor the noise abatement measures imposed on Lindner Brothers. Lindner Brothers, for example, offered to purchase the Barbians home and to erect a concrete wall as a barrier to shield the neighborhood from noise generated by its trucks. Negotiations were unsuccessful.
Plaintiffs claim they were entitled, nevertheless, to a formal evidentiary hearing.
See Dixon v. Love,
*488
It is well-settled that when the state deprives an individual of a recognized property right, the government must provide the individual an opportunity to be heard before, or in some cases after, the deprivation occurs.
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
In the present case, the facts underlying the Department’s decision had been extensively litigated and conclusively resolved at trial in the plaintiffs’ state court challenge to the Common Council rezoning decision. The plaintiffs do not contend that, given the opportunity, they could have presented new or additional evidence to dispute those findings. The Due Process Clause does not require that the plaintiffs be permitted to repeat the presentation of evidence which was previously fully litigated at trial by the parties.
Cf. United States v. Raddatz,
One significant difference exists, however, between
Codd v. Velger
and the instant case. In
Codd v. Velger
the plaintiff had been deprived of an opportunity to appear personally before the Department and to argue that, despite the infraction, he should not be discharged.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that all conditions had not been met and the Department acted arbitrarily in failing to revoke the variance on that basis. The district court found that Lindner Brothers had complied with all but one condition. Lindner Brothers had challenged, in state court, the Department’s authority to impose that particular condition which required Lindner Brothers to relocate the driveway on the access strip further from Barbians’ line. The Department did not act arbitrarily in refusing to revoke the variance before the state courts resolved the question of whether it actually had authority to impose that one condition.
. In pertinent part, the noise ordinance, Milwaukee, Wis., Ordinance 129, § 80-66(2)(a) (Aug. 10, 1973), provides:
Variance permits may be issued by the commissioner of health to exceed the noise standards set forth in this ordinance as follows:
(2) Variance Permits Of Indefinite Duration.
(a) It is recognized that it is not technically or economically feasible for certain business operations and equipment to comply with the standards set forth herein as of the date of this ordinance. The Commissioner of health shall therefore issue a variance permit on existing business operations and equipment which produces excessive noise if it is found that it is not technically or economically feasible to alter such operation to reduce noise to within the prescribed standards set forth in this ordinance.
. In the final analysis, a decision to grant a variance reflects
a conclusion that the overall benefit to the community outweighs the annoyance to the neighborhood affected____ [T]he considerations involved in the determination of what uses or structures to allow in an area [are not] limited to the nuisance impact that they will have upon their immediate neighbors. An industrial plant, besides producing too much noise for the comfort of those living near it, may produce too much traffic for the dimensions of the local roads. At least one relevant question, therefore, is whether the increased tax revenues justify the expense of widening the roads. Even the nuisance aspect cannot escape this sort of question. Are the tax revenues sufficiently important to the good of the whole community that a few members of that community should live near a source of discomforting noise? Each application for a building permit that raises this sort of question requires a response based both on technical judgments as to the impact of the proposed use on the area and on policy judgments as to the kind of community most of its residents want. Ideally, appeal boards should have access to experts who could assess the amount of smoke, traffic, or noise a particular plan would produce. The board itself should be politically responsive to ensure that community interests are not sacrificed to private profit.
Note, Administrative Discretion in Zoning, 82 Harv.L.Rev. 668, 673-74 (1969).
. U.S. Const.amend. V. The Fifth Amendment has been incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment and is, therefore, binding on state and local governments.
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
. In
San Diego Gas & Electric Co. v. City of San Diego,
. The government need not invoke the formal power of eminent domain to confiscate property for public use.
United States v. Clarke,
Police power regulations such as zoning ordinances and other land-use restrictions can destroy the use and enjoyment of property in order to promote the public good just as effectively as formal condemnation or physical invasion of property. From the property owner’s point of view, it may matter little whether his land is condemned ... or whether it is restricted by regulation to use in its natural state, if the effect in both cases is to deprive him of all beneficial use of it. From the government’s point of view, the benefits flowing to the public from preservation of open space through regulations may be equally great as from creating a wildlife refuge through formal condemnation....
San Diego Gas,
As defined by one land use planning expert, “fijnverse 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 agency.’ ” D. Hagman, Urban Planning and Land Development Control Law 328 (1971).
Clarke,
. The noise ordinance was passed under the local police power.
Belle Terre v. Boraas,
. A municipality does not “take” private property in derogation of the Fifth Amendment solely because it has declined to regulate loud or excessive noise in a particular neighborhood. The Supreme Court held in Transportation Co. v. Chicago, that some injuries directly produced by government action are “consequential” and to be borne by affected property owners without compensation from the state.
[Ajcts done in the proper exercise of governmental powers, and not directly encroaching upon private property, though their consequences may impair its use, are universally held not to be a taking within the meaning of the constitutional provision. They do not entitle the owner of such property to compensation from the State or its agents, or give him any right of action.
. In an affidavit from the plaintiffs’ counsel opposing the summary judgment motion, the plaintiffs asserted that the variance had been granted without a hearing. Even then the significance of that fact was not indicated. In context, the assertion was part of a detailed chronology of the events preceding the present action. There is no indication in the affidavit or elsewhere that the plaintiffs believed they had been denied an opportunity to fairly present their grievance to the Department.
The volume and pressure of the district court’s caseload does not allow the court the luxury of elaborate speculations about the nature of a plaintiffs’ claim. Although the district court must construe the complaint liberally on a motion for summary judgment, the court is not required to redraft the document or to refuse to dismiss the action because the plaintiffs may, theoretically, be entitled to recover under a body of facts never alleged in the complaint.
. We need not consider the defendants’ argument, based upon the Supreme Court decision in
O’Bannon v. Town Court Nursing Center,
*489
