Plaintiff Lena Schnuck brought this action attacking the Santa Monica, California, Rent Control Law on several constitutional grounds. The district court entered summary judgment against her, and she appeals. We affirm.
FACTS
In 1979, Santa Monica voters adopted by initiative an amendment to the City Charter imposing a comprehensive rent control system within the City. Santa Monica City Charter, Article XVIII, § 1800 et seq. This Rent Control Law, as we will call it, defined certain rental properties as controlled units, and limited the rents that could be charged for those units. The Law also prescribed grounds for eviction. It authorized a landlord to evict a tenant from a controlled rental unit to permit the landlord to occupy the unit herself. It did not authorize such an eviction for the purpose of owner occupancy, however, if the landlord already resided elsewhere on the property. Rent Control Lav/ § 1806(h)(2).
Schnuck, an elderly widow, owns an eight-unit apartment building in Santa Monica. She lives in a third-floor apartment and rents out the others. The rented units are subject to the Rent Control Law. After Schnuck suffered a stroke in July 1987, she desired to move to a first-floor apartment so that she could avoid climbing stairs. Schnuck’s daughter accordingly asked a first-floor tenant whether she would agree to move so that Schnuck might move in. The tenant responded that she would exchange apartments with Schnuck if the rent remained the same. The daughter rejected this offer because it would have brought Schnuck’s unit into the rent control system at what Schnuck regarded as too low a level. The daughter also informed the tenant that Schnuck would not pay relocation expenses if the tenant agreed to vacate and move elsewhere. The tenant consequently refused to move. The daughter called the Santa Monica Rent Control Board to determine whether Schnuck could evict the tenant. An unnamed employee told her that she *173 could not, because Schnuck already lived on the property.
Schnuck then sued the City under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the Rent Control Law transgressed the Constitution in various ways. The complaint set forth fifteen counts, but the district court dismissed ten counts in a ruling that Schnuck has not contested on appeal. The remaining five counts allege three constitutional violations: (1) a taking of Schnuck’s property without just compensation; (2) violations of due process in that the Rent Control Law does not rationally serve its intended purposes; and (3) a violation of equal protection in discriminating against landlords as a group. We will deal with these claims in turn.
ANALYSIS
I. Taking
Schnuck claims that she has been subjected not only to a regulatory taking of her property but also to an actual physical occupation, both without just compensation. These claims present a threshold issue of ripeness.
Ripeness
In
Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
The second requirement of
Williamson County
is that a plaintiff must seek compensation through the procedures the state has provided before a claim of taking is ripe.
Williamson County,
Schnuck did not seek compensation from the state or city for a taking. Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
First English Evangelical Lutheran Church,
we had excused such failures in California because California provided no remedy in damages for a taking by a regulatory ordinance, but gave only injunctive or declaratory relief.
See Furey v. City of Sacramento,
On June 7, 1987, however, the Supreme Court decided First English Evangelical Lutheran Church, which held California’s denial of a damages remedy unconstitutional. From that time on, California could not deny a damages remedy for a taking by regulation. At oral argument of Schnuck’s case, counsel agreed that the taking in this case, if it occurred, occurred when Schnuck attempted in August 1987 to gain possession of her first floor apartment from her *174 tenant, and was prevented from doing so by the Rent Control Law. It is clear, then, that a procedure for seeking compensation from the state was available to Schnuck.
Schnuck contends that she nevertheless was not required to seek compensation from the state. She argues that the state courts had already made it abundantly clear that they would reject any taking claim based on the Santa Monica Rent Control Law and that, accordingly, the damages remedy was illusory. Schnuck relies primarily on
Nash v. City of Santa Monica,
Schnuck has not shown that bringing her claims in state court would be futile. Her reliance on
Nash
is misplaced: whereas the landlord in
Nash
proposed to remove an entire apartment building from rent control, Schnuck's proposal would result in no net loss of units from the rent-controlled market. Her allegation of mere generalized hostility of the state courts to takings claims does not excuse her failure to seek relief there.
See Sinaloa Lake Owners,
II. Due Process
Rent controls violate due process only if “arbitrary, discriminatory, or demonstrably irrelevant” to a legitimate governmental purpose.
Pennell v. City of San Jose,
*175
Schnuck questions whether Santa Monica had a legitimate government purpose for enacting the Kent Control Law because she claims that two purported problems prompting the Rent Control Law, rapidly rising rents and a housing shortage, never existed. That question is generally left to the legislature, or in this case, the voters. Schnuck’s own expert admits that prior to the enactment of the Rent Control Law in Santa Monica, “double-digit annual rent increases that [were] related more to avarice than operating costs and reasonable profit abound[ed].”
2
Santa Monica had a legitimate interest in protecting tenants from such unreasonable rent increases.
See Nash,
Schnuck contends that the Rent Control Law does not “substantially advance” its purpose, which she misperceives as only to help the poor, elderly, minorities, and families with children. 5 The Rent Control Law’s stated purpose is to help all Santa Monica tenants, not just those within the mentioned groups, and not those who wish to become tenants there. See Santa Monica Charter, § 1800, Statement of Purpose. 6 Controlling rents to a reasonable level and limiting evictions substantially alleviate hardships to Santa Monica tenants. That rent control may unduly disadvantage others, or that it may exert adverse long-term effects on the housing market, are matters for political argument and resolution; they do not affect the constitutionality of the Rent Control Law. Her due process claim fails.
III. Equal Protection
Schnuck’s equal protection claims, that the Rent Control Law discriminates
*176
against landlords and is not rationally related to providing aid to its beneficiaries, are without merit. “[W]e will not overturn [a statute that does not burden a suspect class or a fundamental interest] unless the varying treatment of different groups or persons is so unrelated to the achievement of any combination of legitimate purposes that we can only conclude that the legislature’s actions were irrational.”
Pennell,
CONCLUSION
The district court did not err in granting summary judgment to the City of Santa Monica in the face of Schnuck’s challenge to the Rent Control Law. The judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has upheld numerous constitutional challenges to rent control laws.
See Pennell v. City of San Jose,
. Dr. Richard Devine concludes that Santa Monica’s rents rose moderately during the 1970’s and he doubts that a severe housing shortage ever existed there. His report also notes that prior to enactment of the Rent Control Law, Santa Monica had an "extremely tight” housing market, many Santa Monica renters (over 40%) paid more than the 30% of their income for housing that the federal government considers burdensome, and median rent increased 1.6 percent more than median family income.
. In
Nash,
the Supreme Court of California noted the following as fact. “In the late 1970’s, the city [Santa Monica] was confronted with a severe shortage of its traditionally scarce housing stock, precipitated in large measure by what came to be known as the ‘Demolition Derby.’ This term was coined to describe a 15-month period during which Santa Monica landlords razed over 1,300 rental units and converted hundreds of other such units into condominiums. Rental housing units were removed from the market at 10 times the rate of removals (relative to population) of neighboring Los Angeles."
Nash,
. Schnuck’s contention that rent control can only be constitutional when justified by war or emergency is without merit.
See Pennell,
. Schnuck presented evidence that 1) many economists believe that imposition of rent ceilings for other than short emergency periods tends to reduce housing quantity and quality, 2) small percentages of elderly, poor, minorities, and families with children have become new tenants in Santa Monica in the last two years, 3) some persons pay high brokers fees and advertise rewards to obtain rent control apartments in Santa Monica, and 4) new residential housing construction has declined in Santa Monica. Her evidence calls into question the wisdom of the Rent Control Law, but not its constitutionality.
. The following is part of the Statement of Purpose. "A growing shortage of housing units resulting in a low vacancy rate and rapidly rising rents ... constitute a serious housing problem ... [for] Santa Monica residents.... These conditions endanger the public health and welfare of Santa Monica tenants, especially the poor, minorities, students, young families, and senior citizens. The purpose of this Article, therefore, is to alleviate the hardship caused by this serious housing shortage.... ” (emphasis added).
