Plaintiffs-Appellants The John Corporation and U.S. Vanguard, Limited, Inc. appeal from the district court’s judgment dismissing without prejudice their claims against the City of Houston and Cherry Moving Company, Inc., arguing that the lower court erred in finding that each of their federal claims is either unripe or frivolous. Although we agree that an Eighth Amendment claim is frivolous and that the takings claim is unripe, we conclude that other claims are ripe, and therefore reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1995, Van Ngoc Pham, president of The John Corporation, executed an earnest money contract with Winkler Investment Group to purchase an apartment complex for $1.9 million. The complex included fifty-three apartment buildings, six utility buildings, and a mailroom. Four years prior to Pham’s purchase, the City of Houston (“the City”) had issued demolition orders covering the apartment buildings.
Pham discussed a rehabilitation plan with the City. He executed a Bond Agreement with the City that set forth the conditions under which he would be allowed to rehabilitate the buildings, and posted a $70,000 bond to secure building permits. According to the complaint, renovation efforts were immediately undertaken, but were thwarted by a number of actions on the City’s part. Those actions included ordering the eviction of all tenants, and thereby restricting an income stream; refusing, after issuing a number of occupancy permits for renovated buildings, to issue further permits; and placing a hold on temporary electrical permits, thereby thwarting efforts to repair three buildings damaged by fire in June 1996. The City is also described as issuing a number of citations against The John Corporation for violations of ordinances after a broken water line was discovered and reported, and not removing those citations after it was determined that water line was on City property and the City was obligated to repair it. The City did not extend the time available for obtaining permits to compensate for the City’s refusal to issue permits while the water line remained un-repaired. In addition, the City is said to have filed liens and otherwise billed The John Corporation for work allegedly done by contractors and city officials. Finally, during the summer of 1997, Cherry Moving Company (“Cherry Moving”) demolished forty-one apartment buildings and portions of the fence surrounding the property.
The John Corporation, U.S. Vanguard Limited, Inc., and Pham filed suit in state court against the Winkler Investment Group, the City, and Cherry Moving, asserting violations of due process and equal protection rights under the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and violations of Texas state law and the Texas Constitution. The claims against the Winkler Investment Group were severed and tried. The plaintiffs subsequently moved to non-suit the City and Cherry Moving. Shortly thereafter, on May 29, 1998, The John Corporation and U.S. Vanguard (“Appellants”) filed this action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Their complaint, in addition to stating state-law claims of breach of contract, fraud, and misrepresentation, asserts that the City and Cherry Moving violated their rights under the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, and seeks actual and punitive damages, interest, and attorney fees. The complaint filed in federal court asserts claims generally similar to those filed in state court, but adds allegations that the City demolished the property “without a public purpose and without just compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment” and that the demolition was undertaken in violation of an injunction. On September 4, the City filed *576 a motion to remand, and Cherry Moving filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Construing the City’s motion as a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, the court granted both motions and dismissed the claims without prejudice to refiling in the appropriate state court. The two corporations timely appeal.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction de novo, using the same standards as those employed by the lower court.
See Rodriguez v. Texas Comm’n on the Arts,
Appellants assert jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. As the Supreme Court recently has reaffirmed, in federal question cases,
the District Court has jurisdiction if “the right of the petitioners to recover under their complaint will be sustained if the Constitution and laws of the United States are given one construction and will be defeated if they are given another” unless the claim “clearly appears to be immaterial and made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction or where such a claim is wholly insubstantial and frivolous.”
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
III. THE COMPLAINT
In their complaint, Appellants allege that the City, in undertaking a course of conduct that thwarted their attempts to renovate their property and that culminated in the destruction of forty-one buildings, violated rights guaranteed by the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The district court dismissed the Eighth Amendment claim, finding it frivolous. It interpreted the gravamen of Appellants’ complaint as asserting a takings claim, and because Appellants had not used state-provided procedures to attempt to obtain just compensation as required under
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
In order to resolve this issue, we must be clear on what the complaint alleges, for the “first step in any [§ 1983] claim is to identify the specific constitutional right allegedly infringed.”
Albright v. Oliver,
Other protections exist through incorporation.
3
For example, because principles embodied in the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment have been incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment,
see Samaad,
Appellants assert that (1) after requiring that Pham put up a $70,000 bond and become a party to a Bond Agreement as a condition for obtaining permits needed for renovation, the City undertook a sequence of actions that impeded or halted progress on Appellants’ renovation efforts; (2) a 1991 demolition order issued to the Wink-ler Investment Group was based on an unconstitutionally vague and overbroad statute; (3) the City is estopped from relying on the 1991 order to justify its demolition of buildings in 1997; (4) the City’s “Dangerous Building Ordinance” is unconstitutional, and the City continued to demolish buildings after August 5, 1997, in violation of an injunction against enforcement of relevant sections of an ordinance found unconstitutionally vague on its face; 4 (5) the City demolished buildings *578 that were at least partially renovated or previously had been issued occupancy permits; and (6) the Appellants were not provided due process before the destruction and were not personally issued a demolition order. These allegations form the basis of Appellants’ claims that the City destroyed their property “without public purpose and without compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment,” that they were denied their “rights to due process of law and equal protection of law ... as guaranteed under the Fifth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments,” that the City’s actions “constituted a denial of fundamental fairness in government decision making in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment,” and that the City “engaged in discriminatory practices against Plaintiffs in the methods by which it [chose] to enforce [the CURB] Ordinance.”
Appellants argue strenuously that their claims do not include a takings claim because they nowhere allege that the City used its power of eminent domain to take property for public use.
5
Instead, Appellants assert that the City relied on its police powers to destroy their property. Such a distinction between the use of police powers and of eminent domain power, however, cannot carry the day. The Supreme Court’s entire “regulatory takings” law is premised on the notion that a city’s exercise of its police powers can go too far, and if it does, there has been a taking.
See Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
We consider it telling that the complaint alleges in a paragraph that does not mention the Fourteenth Amendment or due process that the destruction of the buildings was in violation of the Fifth Amendment as it was not for a public purpose and was done without just compensation. 7 Thus, whether Appellants now wish to relabel their allegation as a substantive due process allegation is immaterial 8 — their complaint asserts a violation of a right arguably protected by the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause. 9 We therefore conclude that the complaint includes a takings claim. We also identify claims that the City violated Appellants’ equal protection, due process, and Eighth Amendment rights.
IV. SUBSTANTIAL CLAIMS
Simply because Appellants’ complaint states these claims, however, does not lead to the conclusion that the lower court had subject-matter jurisdiction. As we noted above, in order to invoke a federal court’s jurisdiction, claims cannot be “ ‘obviously without merit’ ” or “ ‘clearly foreclosed by the previous decisions of the United States Supreme Court.’ ”
Holland/Blue Streak v. Barthelemy,
Based on the facts alleged and the context of this case, we agree with the lower court that the Eighth Amendment claim is frivolous. Appellants argue that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Austin v. United States,
Austin,
however, did not overrule
Ingraham v. Wright,
V. RIPE CLAIMS
This brings us to the question of whether the district court erred in dismissing the takings, due process, and equal protection claims as unripe. We may quickly dispose of the takings claim. We note that Appellants do not assail the City’s right to demolish buildings that are dangerous or abandoned. They do not assert that the City demolished their property for a private purpose,
compare Ar-mendariz v. Penman,
*581
Because a violation of the Takings Clause does not occur until just compensation has been denied, see
Williamson County,
The district court, in response to Appellants’ arguments that state-provided procedures are inadequate because those procedures do not provide compensation where a governmental body’s police powers are used, found sufficient reason to hold that those procedures are adequate. We have no cause to conclude otherwise. Before us, however, Appellants contend that the state’s inverse condemnation procedures do not provide for compensation in cases involving allegations that the deprivation of property occurred for a nonpublic use. Based on our review of cases under Article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution, we conclude that Appellants have not met their burden, as set forth in
Samaad,
A. The Effect of Graham
Whether the dismissal of the takings claim means the Appellants’ other *582 claims must also be dismissed as unripe is a more complex question. In resolving it, we are guided not only by our own precedents, but also by several general principles announced by the Supreme Court. We begin with Gi"aham, the decision relied upon by the district court to reach its conclusion that Appellants’ remaining claims must be dismissed.
In
Graham,
the Court rejected use of the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process test and instead applied the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness standard to a claim that law enforcement officers used excessive force in the course of an investigatory stop.
See Graham,
The purpose of
Graham
is to avoid expanding the concept of substantive due process where another constitutional provision protects individuals against the challenged governmental action.
See id.
at 842,
This does not mean, however, that the applicability of the more explicit provision pre-empts due process protections.
See Lewis,
A number of circuit courts have used
Graham
to support considering a substantive due process claim as invoking the Takings Clause’s protections.
See, e.g., South County Sand & Gravel v. Town of South Kingstown,
Other courts, including our own, have analyzed substantive due process claims and takings claims separately without mentioning
Graham. See, e.g., Berger v. City of Mayfield Heights,
Although the above cited cases involve factual settings different from Appellants’, we can say that a blanket rule that under
Graham,
the Takings Clause subsumes any substantive due process claim relating to a deprivation of property is both inconsistent with our precedents and with the approach taken by a majority of other circuit courts.
17
Cf. Pearson v. City of Grand Blanc,
B. The Effect of Williamson County
That analysis is but the first step to an assessment of whether the claims a plaintiff asserts are ripe under
Williamson County.
The Court in
Williamson County
gave two reasons why a takings claim that involved a challenge to an application of a zoning ordinance was not considered ripe: (1) the absence of a final decision, and (2)
*584
the failure on the part of the plaintiffs in that case to seek just compensation from the state.
See Williamson County,
Since
Williamson County
was decided, courts have applied these principles to not only substantive due process claims, but also to procedural due process and equal protection claims. In most cases, however, only
Williamson
Comity’s finality requirement has been applied to claims other than the “due process takings” claim described in that case.
See, e.g., McKenzie v. City of White Hall,
In so doing, the court adopted the approach of the Tenth Circuit, which applies
Williamson County
to due process and equal protection claims “that rest upon the same facts as a concomitant takings claim.”
Bateman,
Given the Supreme Court’s discussions of
Graham,
its statements in
James Daniel Good Real Property
and
Soldal
regarding pre-emption and multiple claims, the other circuits’ treatment of comparable issues and, last but not least, our own precedent, we think it unwise to adopt the Tenth Circuit’s rule.
Graham
applies to substantive due process claims. Although we have previously held that a “related due process claim” was subject to
Wil- ' liamson
County’s ripeness requirements,
see Rolf,
C. Appellants’ Claims
We may now assess whether Appellants’ due process and equal protection claims are sufficient to invoke federal question jurisdiction under
Graham
and
Williamson County.
Reviewing Appellants’ complaint, we conclude that other than the claim we regard as a takings claim, the complaint includes only one “substantive due process” claim. Appellants assert that the demolition was carried out under unconstitutional laws (the CURB Ordinance and the law on which the 1991 demolition order was based). Given other language within the complaint, we read it to allege that the relevant ordinances are unconstitutionally vague, both facially and as applied. This claim invokes protections of the Due Process Clause,
see United States v. Insco,
Appellants’ procedural due process claims stand on more unstable ground. Appellants assert that the City’s actions violated the Takings Clause, and that they were not afforded due process prior to the demolition of their buildings. The takings claim is not yet ripe, and it will only be when a court may assess the takings claim that it will also be able to examine whether Appellants were afforded less procedure than is constitutionally required.
See Williamson County,
Appellants argue that our decision in
Hidden Oaks
suggests that procedural due process claims are not subject to
Williamson County’s
requirements.
See Hidden Oaks,
VI. CONCLUSION
Although we conclude that some of Appellants’ claims are properly dismissed, we find that others are sufficient to invoke subject-matter jurisdiction. We therefore AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. We leave to the district court matters related to the proper disposition of the claims we have determined to be ripe for review and of Appellants’ pendent state law claims, including whether under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) Appellants should be granted leave to amend their complaint. Each party shall bear its own costs.
Notes
. It is unclear whether the court viewed the due process claims as claims that Appellants’ procedural due process rights or substantive due process rights were violated, or viewed the complaint as raising both types of claims.
. Unlike the Due Process Clause, the Equal Protection Clause does not require that the governmental action work a deprivation of a constitutionally protected property or liberty interest.
See Brennan v. Stewart,
. As we explained in
Brennan,
“[o]ne form of 'substantive due process’ is the substantive protections in the Bill of Rights that have been ‘incorporated’ into the Fourteenth Amendment to limit the power of the States.”
.In a single paragraph, Appellants refer both to a "Dangerous Building Ordinance” and to the Comprehensive Urban Rehabilitation and Building Minimum Standards ("CURB”) Ordinance. We assume that these labels refer to a single ordinance. Appellants do not specify which sections of the CURB Ordinance were found unconstitutional, which clause of the U.S. Constitution the Ordinance allegedly violates, or which sections of the Ordinance were deemed to be applicable to Appellants’ *578 property. The CURB Ordinance was enacted in 1993, so that ordinance could not have been the basis for the 1991 demolition order. The injunction referenced in the complaint was issued by a judge hearing claims that included allegations that the CURB Ordinance was unconstitutionally vague and over-broad, both facially and as applied. See City of Houston v. Yetiv, No. 9459707 (Tex.App. Oct. 20, 1997) (unpublished).
. Appellants also argue that they do not assert a takings claim because “the City did not 'take' the Winkler Apartments and put them to public use. It simply tore them down To the extent that this argument rests on a notion that a governmental entity must appropriate property and put it to use for the general public in order for the government’s action to be a taking under the Fifth Amendment, it must be rejected.
See, e.g., Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
. Within the “due process” theory described in
Williamson County,
exercises of police power that go "too far” are violations of the Due Process Clause, not the Takings Clause. The
Williamson County
court declined to consider the merits of that theory.
See Williamson County,
. The same actions are alleged to be in, violation of Article 1, Section 17 of the Texas Constitution. That section provides that "No person's property shall be taken, damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate compensation being made, unless by the consent of such person....” Tex. Const. of 1876, art. I, § 17 (West 1997).
. Appellants’ complaint labels their basic claim as a “wrongful taking” claim.
. Appellants assert that the government's action was "without public purpose.” As we have noted previously, the question of whether governmental action undertaken without authority, e.g., a taking of private property for private use, is properly considered a violation of the Takings Clause or the Due Process Clause (or both) has not been definitively answered.
See Samaad,
. In fact, the only reference to
Ingraham
v.
Wright
came in a footnote and was in connection with Ingraham's discussion of the English Bill of Rights.
See Austin,
. As the lower court suggested, language in
Ingraham
pertaining to application of the Eighth Amendment to punishment imposed by a State is also relevant to the finding that Appellants’ claim is frivolous. In
Ingraham,
the Court noted that "the State does not acquire the power to punish with which the Eighth Amendment is concerned until after it has secured formal adjudication of guilt in accordance with due process of law. Where the State seeks to impose punishment without such an adjudication, the pertinent constitutional guarantee is the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
.In interpreting the complaint in this manner, we make no statement as to the viability of these claims under the U.S. Constitution. The issue before us is not whether Appellants state a viable claim under the Takings Clause (unless the entire claim can be said to be entirely foreclosed under Supreme Court precedent) but rather whether they assert a right to just compensation for the government's taking of their property.
Cf. Rolf,
.In bringing their claim for compensation to the state court, Appellants may be able to avail themselves of the steps outlined in
Guet-ersloh v. State of Texas,
. We recognize a possible inconsistency between Samaad and Rolf — Samaad held that claims of takings for private use are not subject to Williamson County's requirements, while Rolf held that a claim of a bad faith taking was unripe because plaintiffs had not pursued compensation through state-provided procedures. The two can be reconciled— though perhaps not entirely satisfactorily-^by reading Rolf to suggest that claims of takings for illegitimate, but not for private, purposes must fulfill Williamson County's requirements. Because we are held to prior panel's opinions, and because a way of reconciling the two opinions exists, we must follow Rolf's lead.
. As noted above, Appellants' complaint also asserts a violation of Article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution. The resolution of this claim in federal court does not satisfy the requirements of
Williamson County. See Sa-maad,
. We note that in
Macri,
plaintiffs had also asserted a takings claim.
. Given the effects of Williamson County, the application of such a rule would seem to preclude any examination of whether the substantive due process claim is better analyzed as a Fourth Amendment claim.
. After acknowledging that a First Amendment claim was, in effect, a substantive due process claim, it was noted that this was the only substantive due process claim alleged.
See Rolf,
. The City and Cherry Moving argue that Appellants' equal protection claim should be dismissed because it does not state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and cite
Guthrie v. Tifco Indus.,
. We note that Appellants do not assert that the procedures mandated by the ordinances authorizing demolition of dangerous buildings are constitutionally inadequate. Instead, they allege only that they were not provided due process prior to the demolition.
