ON REMAND
This сase is before us on remand from the Supreme Court for a decision on whether
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Detroit City Ordinance No. 556-H "unconstitutionally deprives property owners of their property interests without due process of law or just compensation.”
Defendants’ due process challenge to Ord. 556-H is a narrow one. Defendants argue that Ord. 556-H authorizes the city to confiscate privately owned property for a public purpose and thus involves the exercise of the city’s power of еminent domain rather than its police powers. Defendants then conclude that the omission of a provision in the ordinance requiring just compensation renders the ordinance violative of the property owners’ due process rights. Const 1963, art 10, § 2;
Pennsylvania Coal Co v Mahon,
Section 12-11-46.1 of Ord. 556-H sets forth the legislative findings on which the Detroit City Council relied in еnacting the nuisance abatement ordinance:
(a) Scattered throughout the city are a large *202 number of unoccupied dwellings which are constantly broken into, vandalized, used for unsanitary or immoral purposes and are potential fire hazards.
Os) There are many unoccupied dwellings in the city which, because of their vacant status, constitute hazards to the health, safety, and welfare of the public.
(c) Certain vacant dwellings have reaсhed a stage of disrepair and deterioration which create a public nuisance or exert a downgrading or blighting influence on the surrounding neighborhood, resulting in discouraging neighbors from making improvements tо properties and thus adversely affecting the tax revenue of the city.
(d) Throughout the city, the number of vacant and deteriorated dwellings constituting public nuisances has become so high that traditional mеans of abating such nuisances have been ineffectual, and blight and deterioration of emergency proportions have resulted.
(e) Currently, tax delinquent abandoned dwellings revert to the state and are then deeded to the city through the state tax reversion process. However, this process takes several years, during which time many dwellings are lost through vandalism and deterioration.
(f) Permitting families to rеpair and move into abandoned homes within the city will preserve the residential housing stock of the city, increase neighborhood stability and provide needed homes for Detroit families.
These statеd purposes fall within the city’s powers to "provide for the public peace and health of its citizenry and promote the safety of persons and properties within its boundaries.”
Although we reject defendants’ reliance on the law of eminent domain, our conclusion that Ord. 556-H represents an exercise of the city’s police powers does not entirely resolve the issue of whether the ordinance unconstitutionally deprives property owners of their property interests without adequate compensation. See
Loretto v Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp,
Ord. 556-H does not by itself transfer title of property to the city or to the nuisance abatemеnt *204 contractor. 1 Transfer of title must be achieved by the city through an action to quiet title, MCL 600.2932; MSA 27A.2932, or through delinquent tax proceedings, MCL 211.47; MSA 7.91. 2 Ord. 556-H simply creates a temporary right 3 in third parties to enter, occupy and repair a vacant home which has been deсlared by lawful authority to be an unlawful nuisance. At the end of the abatement period, the city will have obtained title to the property through prescribed judicial proceedings so that the proрerty may then be sold by the city to the nuisance abatement contractor. Ord. 556-H, § 12-11-46.5(g). We note that the property owner is notified of the activity on his or her property at all stages of the abatemеnt process and is provided numerous opportunities to assert ownership of the property, thereby terminating the nuisance abatement contract. It is significant that defendants in this case do not аssert any due process challenge to the notice and hearing provisions of Ord. 556-H.
Since Ord. 556-H does not authorize permanent occupancy of private property by third persons, defendants’ reliance on Loretto, supra, is not dis-positive. The Supreme Court in Loretto, repeatedly emphasized that its decision is based upon the permanency of the government-authorized occupancy challenged therein. Defendants’ reliance on Loretto stems from an erroneous interpretation of Ord. 556-H as authorizing the city to take title to real property._
*205 Correctly interpreted, Ord. 556-H simply amends the city’s original building code and creates an alternative to demolition or costly repairs by government or third persons who do not gain rights to occupy the property. Defendants agree that the city may authorize a third party to enter private property in order to demolish a building identified as a public nuisance and that the property owner has no right to just compensation for this taking. Defendants further admit that just compensation is not required where the city contracts with a third party to repair a building identified as a public nuisance. It is the nuisance abatement contractor’s occupancy of the property while making repairs whiсh defendants now challenge as unconstitutional.
Defendants, however, fail to adequately distinguish between a taking authorized under the original building code and the taking authorized under Ord. 556-H. Under both the original building code and Ord. 556-H, third parties are authorized by the city to enter onto private property for the purpose of abating a public nuisance. Although the entry and physical possession authorized under Ord. 556-H extends the duration of the physical occupancy and allows the third party to make general use of the property while abating the nuisance, obviously such possession is not more intrusive than demolition.
In any event, the dispositive inquiry is whether this extended physical possession is reasonable under the circumstances. We believe that it is. As noted by Justice Stevens in
Young v American Mini Theatres, Inc,
Defendants briefly argue that Ord. 556-H is arbitrary and discriminatory because property owners will be treated differently based on the whims of nuisance abatement contractors regarding which houses will be occupied. While it is true that some houses capаble of rehabilitation will be the subject of nuisance abatement contracts while others will be demolished or repaired by nonoccupant third parties, this difference in treatment is neither arbitrary nоr unfair. We hold that it is a reasonable effort to solve a difficult problem. It may not work but it should be tried.
Defendants raise several other issues on appeal which we decline to address because the Supreme *207 Court remanded this case to us for the sole purpose of considering defendants’ due process challenge.
Affirmed.
Notes
As evidenced by their brief on appeal after remand, defendants apparently believe that § 12-11-46.6 authorizes the city to seize title to the property upon which a nuisance is located. However, that section merely creates a statutory presumptiоn of intent to abandon which may then be asserted in an action to quiet title.
Defendants do not challenge the constitutionality of either of these two judicial proceedings.
The maximum period during which the city may contract with a nuisance abatement contractor is thirty-six months.
