The Kinzli plaintiffs (Kinzlis) brought this action against the City of Santa Cruz (City), alleging that the City violated their federal and state rights as property owners. The Kinzlis now appeal the district court’s holdings in favor of the City, specifically: (1) the district court’s dismissal on the merits of the Kinzlis’ claim that the adoption of a local ordinance deprived them of their property without just compensation in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments of the United States Constitution; (2) the district court’s dismissal on the merits of the Kinzlis’ claim of a violation of their right to equal protection; (3) the district court’s dismissal of their claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; and (4) the district court’s grant of the City’s motion for summary judgment on the Kinzlis’ claim of denial of substantive due process rights and their claim of federal constitutional violations arising from the City’s 1970 condemnation of their property. We hold that all of the Kinzlis’ claims were not ripe for adjudication by the district court, and therefore vacate the district court’s judgment.
I
A
The factual background of the Kinzlis’ claims is exhaustively presented in the district court’s published opinion,
Kinzli v. City of Santa Cruz,
The Kinzli property which is the subject of this action is located adjacent to the city limits of Santa Cruz and was purchased by the Kinzli family in 1925. Over the years, the Kinzli property gradually became surrounded by urban development, although the property has retained its rural character. Id. at 611.
In 1968, the City filed a condemnation action in state court to acquire approximately 4 acres of the Kinzli property for the construction of a public street, Broadway-Brommer Road. A stipulated judgment was entered in this condemnation proceeding in 1970, granting the City a right-of-way through the property. Since this time, the City has represented to the Kinzlis that Broadway-Brommer Road would be built and that their property could be developed for commercial and higher density residential purposes. These representations apparently continued until at least October of 1978, when the City filed, then abandoned, a second condemnation action to acquire more of the Kinzli property. The Broadway-Brommer Road was never built. Id. at 611-12.
In 1979, the voters of the City adopted an initiative ordinance entitled “City of Santa Cruz Measure 0 Greenbelt and Low Growth General Plan Policy Ordinance” (Measure 0). Measure O limits the uses available to greenbelt land, which includes the Kinzli property, through 1990. There are eight land uses allowed under section 3 of the Measure, including one catchall: “Other uses [are allowed] which maintain *1452 the open space character of the land.” 1 Section 4 of Measure 0 prohibits the City from providing certain urban services to the greenbelt land. The City is required under section 5 to revise its General Plan in accordance with the Measure. Finally, under section 8, no part of Measure 0 may be “amended or repealed except by a vote of the people.” Id. at 613.
The Santa Cruz City Council subsequently enacted the Greenbelt Overlay Ordinance (GBO), which implements the Measure and explains the requirements for special use permits and conditions for the extension of urban services to greenbelt land. Santa Cruz Municipal Code ch. 24.53, § 24.53.2000 (1981). The GBO allows a number of specific uses under special use permits, including uses which “maintain the open space character of the land.” Id. § 24.53.2010. 2 The GBO allows the extension of urban services to greenbelt land if such extension is consistent with the GBO and is approved by both the City Department of Water and the Department of Public Works. Id. § 24.53.2040.
The Kinzli property falls within the greenbelt land covered by Measure O and the GBO. The City acknowledges that Measure O affects the uses available for the Kinzli property, such that if Measure O and the GBO had not been adopted and the superseded 1964 General Plan was still in force, the Kinzli property would now be designated for high density development.
Kinzli,
The Kinzlis attempted to sell the property in 1978 and 1979 under contracts which were conditioned upon the receipt of permits from the City for residential development. One potential purchaser/developer filed an application on behalf of the Kinzlis with the City for residential units on the property. However, he did not pursue the application once he was told by a staff engineer for the Department of Public Works that the City could not provide water services to the property. An unofficial map then used by the Department indicated that this was the case. Id.
While Measure O prevents the uses contemplated in this abandoned application, the Kinzlis have not submitted an application for a permit allowing any other potential use. Id. at 613. The securing of a development permit is a process requiring the consideration and approval of an application by numerous state and local agencies. It entails negotiation, modification of plans, and the filing of an Environmental Impact Report. This process has not been set in motion by the Kinzlis; the developer initiated the permit process but withdrew his application for a residential use permit at an early stage. Id. at 613-14.
B
In 1980, the Kinzlis brought this action against the City, charging that the adoption of Measure O, as applied to their property, and the City’s conduct relating to the 1970 condemnation proceedings, violated their federal constitutional and civil rights and their rights under California law. At trial, the district court focused on the questions of whether the Kinzlis’ taking claim was ripe for adjudication and, if so, whether a taking had occurred.
In a published decision, the district court held that there had been no taking of the Kinzlis’ property and therefore no violation of their rights under the fifth and fourteenth amendments, such that they were
*1453
not entitled to relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Kinzli,
On appeal, the Kinzlis argue that: (1) the district court erred in finding that beneficial uses for the property remained and, therefore, that the City’s restrictions on the property’s available uses did not effect a taking in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments; (2) the district court violated procedural due process by finding that the City’s regulation of the Kinzli property did not deny the Kinzlis their equal protection rights where their equal protection claim was not heard at trial; and (3) the district court erred in dismissing claims based upon the City’s 1970 condemnation proceedings as not ripe for adjudication.
II
We first address the Kinzlis’ contention that the district court erred in finding that the adoption of Measure 0 did not deprive them of property without compensation in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments 3 and that, as a result, they were not entitled to relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We believe that the district court erred, not because the court should have found that a taking had occurred, but because it should have dismissed the takings claim as not ripe for adjudication. The district court applied an incorrect ripeness test, prematurely reaching the merits and resting its decision on the finding of “no taking.” Id. at 616-17, 624. 4
The district court properly recognized that under Supreme Court authority, the Kinzlis’ claim that Measure 0 effected a “taking” as applied to their property does not, as a rule, present a concrete controversy ripe for adjudication unless the Kinzlis have first submitted a development plan or applied for a land use permit.
Kinzli,
To establish this first component of a regulatory takings claim, “an essential prerequisite” must be present: there must be
a final and authoritative determination of the type and intensity of development legally permitted on the subject property. A court cannot determine whether a regulation has gone “too far” unless it knows how far the regulation goes.
Id.
This “final and authoritative determination” must expose “the nature and extent of permitted development.”
Id.
at 2567.
See also Norco Construction, Inc. v. King County,
The Supreme Court has expounded the requirements for a “final and authoritative determination.” In
Hamilton Bank,
the Supreme Court not only set forth the re
*1454
quirement that the plaintiff must first have submitted a development plan which was rejected, but also explained that the plaintiff must seek variances which would permit uses not allowed under the regulations.
Nevertheless, their takings claim may be ripe under the Ninth Circuit’s “futility exception” to the threshhold requirement of a final decision. Under this exception, the requirement of the submission of a development plan is excused if such an application would be an “idle and futile act.”
Martino v. Santa Clara Valley Water Dist.,
The district court found that this futility exception applied to the Kinzlis’ taking claim, and that their claim was therefore ripe for adjudication.
Kinzli,
We reject the district court’s view that futility may be determined, absent any rejected development plan, by inquiring whether any beneficial use remains or whether the regulatory regime inhibits the property’s marketability. Adoption of such standards would require courts to speculate as to what potential uses may be lurking in the hopes of the property owner and in the minds of developers and city planners. This would result in the same sort of speculation that the ripeness doctrine prohibits.
The precise test for whether the futility exception applies has not been clearly articulated. In
Norco,
this court explained in dictum that the futility exception may apply if it is “clear beyond peradventure that excessive delay in such a final determination [would cause] the present destruction of the property’s beneficial use.”
The Supreme Court has indicated that
at least one
application must be submitted before the futility exception applies. In
MacDonald,
the Court arguably gave ap
*1455
proval to the California Court of Appeal’s conclusion that the futility test is not met where a “meaningful application has not yet been made.”
Under these principles, the Kinzlis cannot rely upon the futility exception. We need not determine the point at which reapplications for development become futile. Under MacDonald and Hamilton Bank, at least one “meaningful application” must be made. The Kinzlis have neither submitted a development plan nor applied for a variance. The application made by the developer was not meaningful since it was abandoned at an early stage in the application process. 6
The Kinzlis’ takings claim, therefore, is not ripe: they have failed to secure a “final decision” from the City regarding acceptable uses, and the futility exception does not excuse this failure since no “meaningful application” has been made.
The second component of a regulatory takings claim is a showing that the proffered compensation is not “just.”
MacDonald,
Ill
The district court disposed of the Kinzlis’ equal protection claim by explaining that “implicit in its findings of fact was that the city had a rational basis for its action,” and therefore there had been no denial of equal protection.6
7
The Kinzlis contend that the district court erred in dismissing their claim and denied them procedural due process by not allowing the Kinzlis to fully argue this claim. Apparently, it is true that the trial was limited to other specific issues.
Kinzli,
IV
The Kinzlis also claim that their substantive due process rights were violated by the City’s restrictions on their property. Moreover, the Kinzlis argue that the district court’s dismissal of their substantive due process claim as unripe without considering this claim at trial is a denial of procedural due process.
The district court, in its unpublished order, correctly cited
Hamilton Bank
as authority for finding that “even if a Fifth Amendment claim would arguably be
recast
as a due process claim, it would be premature____” (citing
Hamilton Bank,
The appropriate explanation for this claim’s prematurity, however, is that the City has not yet made a final decision regarding the property. As discussed in Section II, the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hamilton Bank
requires that the Kinzlis first obtain final decisions regarding the application of the regulations to their property and the availability of variances.
V
The Kinzlis contend that the district court improperly granted the City’s motion for summary judgment on their various claims arising from the City’s alleged failure to keep promises made to them relating to the 1968-1970 condemnation proceedings. The Kinzlis allege that the City promised that Broadway-Brommer Road would be built and that their property could be developed for high-density uses.
Kinzli,
The 1980 stipulated judgment granting the City a right-of-way through the Kinzli property constitutes a final determination of permitted uses and the amount of compensation to be paid.
See City of Alameda v. Cohen,
The ripeness requirement of first seeking additional compensation from the City is excused only if the state does not have an available and adequate inverse condemnation procedure.
Hamilton Bank,
There is an “available” procedure in California for the consideration of the Kinzlis’ inverse condemnation claims. Their claims arising from the City’s actions subsequent to the 1970 condemnation judgment can be
recharacterized
as a
new
inverse condemnation action.
See People v. Adamson,
California procedures are also “adequate,” particularly since the state courts may award monetary damages for those of the Kinzlis’ claims which are ripe. It is apparently unlikely that the Kinzlis would be awarded monetary damages in California for inverse condemnation claims based upon the enactment of land use regulation.
See Furey,
VI
In light of Hamilton Bank and MacDonald, the Kinzlis’ action was not ripe for adjudication. The district court therefore erred in reaching the merits of the Kinzlis’ takings claim and equal protection claim. However, the district court correctly determined that the substantive due process claim was unripe, although we believe this conclusion is compelled by the absence of a meaningful application for development of the property. We also agree with the district court’s conclusion that the Kinzlis’ claims based upon the 1970 condemnation were not ripe. In light of these conclusions, the Kinzlis’ claims should have been dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. 8
REVERSED, with orders to VACATE decisions on the merits.
Notes
. The eight uses available under section 3 are:
1) Timber production and harvesting;
2) Agriculture, including grazing;
3) Private recreation;
4) Public recreation;
5) Wildlife habitat;
6) Watershed or groundwater recharge;
7) Scientific or educational purposes which maintain the open space character of the land; and
8) Other uses which maintain the open space character of the land.
Kinzli v. City of Santa Cruz,
. The special permit uses available under the GBO include those listed in Measure O,
see supra
n. 1, with the exception of wildlife habitat and watershed or ground water recharge. Two new uses are also allowed under the GBO: single-family dwellings and accessory buildings.
Kinzli,
. The fifth amendment’s prohibition of the taking of property without just compensation applies to the states through the fourteenth amendment.
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. Co. v. City of Chicago,
. We review the district court’s finding regarding the ripeness of the Kinzlis’ claim de novo.
Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes v. Board of Oil and Gas,
. In this case, an application by the Kinzlis would not be futile under the
Norco
"delay” analysis, since there is no showing that an application would take an "excessive” amount of time. An excessive amount of time would have to be considerable, since the Supreme Court has held a claim to be unripe even where the application process covering a development project required approximately eight years.
See Hamilton Bank,
. Under
Hamilton Bank's
ripeness requirements, a plaintiff must also show that an application for a variance was denied.
. The equal protection clause is violated here only if the City’s treatment of the Kinzlis bears no rational relationship to a legitimate government purpose.
San Antonio Independent School Dist.
v.
Rodriguez,
. Therefore, the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the City was improper.
