New York allows telecommunications companies to exercise the state’s eminent domain powers to facilitate the construction and maintenance of telecommunications networks. Property owners are compensated by the company under the procedures outlined in state law. A putative plaintiff class alleges that Verizon installed multi-unit terminal boxes on their property without just compensation, and cites procedural due process violations in connection with the installation. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Irizarry, J.) dismissed the complaint because the claims were unripe under the test established by Williamson Cnty. Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
On appeal, the plaintiffs argue that Williamson County applies only to regulatory takings claims and not to their physical takings claims, and that Williamson County is inapplicable to their due process claims. We conclude that Williamson County does apply to physical takings, with the recognition that the finality requirement is satisfied by a physical taking. The exhaustion requirement, however, remains. As to the plaintiffs’ due process claims, we conclude that Williamson County applies to such claims arising from the same circumstances as a takings claim.
BACKGROUND
Telecommunications networks, particularly in congested urban areas, may require installation of network equipment on private property. Often, the company secures permission from the owner in the form of a license or easement. If consent cannot be obtained, however, New York law permits the company to employ the state’s power of eminent domain. Section 27 of the Transportation Corporations Law provides this authority:
Any [telephone] corporation may erect, construct and maintain the necessary fixtures for its lines upon, over or under any of the public roads, streets and highways ... and may erect, construct and maintain its necessary stations, plants, equipment or lines upon, through or over any other land, subject to the right of the owners thereof to full compensation for the same. If any such corporation can not agree with such owner or owners upon the compensation to be paid therefor, such compensation shall be ascertained in the manner provided in the eminent domain procedure law.
N.Y. Transp. Corp. Law § 27.
The plaintiffs allege that Verizon exercised this power of eminent domain to install multi-unit terminal boxes on their properties. These boxes, typically attached to an exterior wall or to a pole in the yard, split the local high-capacity cables into the lines that serve individual phone subscribers in nearby buildings. Thus, these boxes serve the neighborhood as well as the subscribers on the subject property.
The plaintiffs assert that Verizon failed to pay full compensation for placing terminals on their properties. They further assert that Verizon violated their procedural due process rights by: 1) concealing their right to full compensation, or failing to notify them of it; 2) offering them no compensation; 3) giving the false impression that they must consent if they wanted telephone service in their own buildings; and 4) placing the onus on them to initiate an eminent domain proceeding if no agreement was reached.
Two related cases in the New York state courts have bearing on the present matter. Both were filed by plaintiffs’ counsel here and both involve the same plaintiffs, or plaintiffs similarly-situated. The first, Corsello v. Verizon, was commenced in 2007 on behalf of a putative class represented by William and Evelyn Corsello. They alleged Verizon’s use of their property without consent and asserted claims premised on New York statutory and common law (not the Due Process and Takings Clause claims at issue here). After discovery, the Corsellos sought class certification. The New York Supreme Court, Kings County, denied certification on the grounds that individual inquiries into how Verizon acquired permission to install the terminals would predominate and that the Corsellos were not adequate class representatives. See generally Corsello v. Verizon N.Y. Inc., No. 39610/07,
Appeals of that certification decision (and other decisions made by the trial court) eventually reached the New York Court of Appeals, which held (inter alia) that the plaintiffs alleged a valid inverse condemnation claim, but affirmed the denial of class certification. See Corsello v. Verizon N.Y., Inc.,
The plaintiffs commenced this action in December 2010 and filed a Second Amended Complaint in July 2010. (As in Grillo, the Corsellos were originally named as class plaintiffs and later dropped.) The complaint alleged several causes of action under 48 U.S.C. § 1983 for wrongful taking of plaintiffs’ property without just compensation and for violation of their associated due process rights. The complaint also sought certification for a class consisting of all property owners with Verizon multi-property terminals other than those who have signed an easement or received compensation greater than one dollar.
Verizon moved to dismiss on the grounds that: 1) the district court lacked jurisdiction because the claims were unripe pursuant to the Supreme Court’s decision in Williamson County; 2) the plaintiffs lacked standing; 3) the claims were time-barred; 4) the complaint failed to state a cause of action; and 5) the declaratory judgment relief sought by the plaintiffs was an impermissible attempt to obtain an advisory opinion. The district court granted Verizon’s motion in September 2013, holding that Williamson County barred the plaintiffs’ claims. See generally Cor-sello v. Verizon N.Y., Inc.,
DISCUSSION
“We review de novo a district court’s determination that it lacks subject-matter jurisdiction on ripeness grounds.” Nat'l Org. for Marriage, Inc. v. Walsh,
I
“To be justiciable, a cause of action must be ripe — it must present a real, substantial controversy, not a mere hypothetical question.” Nat’l Org. for Marriage,
To test the ripeness of a constitutional takings claim in federal court, we consult Williamson County. In that case, a “plaintiff owner of a tract of land sued a Tennessee regional planning commission alleging that the commission’s application of various zoning laws and regulations to the plaintiffs property amounted to an unconstitutional ‘taking’ under the Fifth Amendment.” Dougherty v. Town of N. Hempstead Bd. of Zoning Appeals,
As to finality, “a claim that the application of government regulations effects a taking of a property interest is not ripe until the government entity charged with implementing the regulations ... has reached a final decision regarding the application of the regulations to the property at issue.” Williamson County,
The Fifth Amendment’s proscription of a taking without just compensation underlies Williamson County’s exhaustion requirement: “the Fifth Amendment [does not] require that just compensation be paid in advance of, or contemporaneously with, the taking; all that is required is that a reasonable, certain and adequate provision for obtaining compensation exist at the time of the taking.” Id. at 194,
II
Plaintiffs argue that Williamson County was a case about regulatory takings, and that it does not govern claims in which, as in theirs, the taking is physical. We disagree. The finality and exhaustion requirements are both derived from elements that must be shown in any takings claim: [i] a “taking” [ii] “without just compensation.” See id. at 190-91,194-95,
While Williamson County applies to regulatory and physical takings alike, a physical taking in itself satisfies the need to show finality. “[A]n alleged physical taking is by definition a final decision for the purpose of satisfying Williamson [County’s] first requirement.” Juliano v. Montgomery-Otsego-Schoharie Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth.,
The plaintiffs further argue that a physical taking also satisfies the test of exhaustion, and thereby obviates Williamson County altogether, because it is unconstitutional to require them to initiate a suit for compensation after a taking occurs. The cases cited by the plaintiffs do not support this argument. For example, the venerable Bloodgood v. Mohawk & Hudson R.R. Co.,
The cases relied on by plaintiffs are inapposite. See Kruse v. Vill. of Chagrin Falls, Ohio,
The plaintiffs’ takings claim here is unripe. Although the pleading of a physical taking sufficiently shows finality,
Ill
Williamson County’s applicability to the plaintiffs’ due process claims is less clear. After Williamson County, courts have attempted to settle questions of ripeness in the several contexts of due process claims: substantive or procedural; substantive claims alleging regulatory overreach or those alleging arbitrary and capricious conduct; claims arising from the same nucleus of fact as a takings claim, or not; and regulatory or physical takings. Myriad permutations can result. The plaintiffs’ due process claims present one such permutation that is not considered in precedent. Though the precedents we have are distinguishable, they are instructive nevertheless.
We start with Williamson County itself. The plaintiff there pursued a substantive due process claim of regulatory overreach arising from the same set of facts as the takings claim: when a “regulation ... goes so far that it has the same effect as a taking by eminent domain [such that it] is an invalid exercise of the police power.”
Since Williamson County, this Court has considered its applicability to due process claims on only a few occasions. Substantive due process claims have been treated differently based on the nature of the claim. Claims alleging regulatory overreach, such as the one considered in Williamson County, must satisfy the finality and exhaustion requirements to be ripe. See Southview Assocs., Ltd. v. Bongartz,
The plaintiffs’ due process claims fall within a gap in our precedents: procedural due process claims arising from a physical taking.
We are persuaded by those courts holding that Williamson County applies to due process claims arising from the same nucleus of facts as a takings claim. See, e.g., B. Willis, C.P.A., Inc. v. BNSF Ry. Corp.,
Applying Williamson County more broadly to these due process claims confers other benefits. It prevents evasion of the ripeness test by artful pleading of a takings claim as a due process claim. See Bateman v. City of West Bountiful,
We conclude that the Williamson Comity ripeness requirement (finality and exhaustion) applies to all procedural due process claims arising from the same circumstances as a taking claim.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Sixth Circuit's opinion in Kruse does suggest that Williamson County exhaustion need not be shown when there has been a physical taking. See
. Williamson County generally controls for substantive due process claims based on the same nucleus of facts as a takings claim, on the principle that courts should not use a generalized notion of substantive due process when the Constitution provides an explicit source of protection against the conduct alleged. See Graham v. Connor,
. The plaintiffs also argue Williamson County does not apply to their substantive due process claim of arbitrary and capricious conduct, citing Villager Pond and Southview Associates. However, the plaintiffs’ complaint and arguments in the district court refer only to procedural due process violations. This argument is, therefore, waived.
. The plaintiffs also argue that Williamson County does not apply to claims for declaratory and injunctive relief. The cases cited by the plaintiffs, however, do not support this argument. This case is not one in which we need to decide whether a particular state statute facially violates the Fifth Amendment. See Wash. Legal Found. v. Legal Found. of Wash.,
