RIVER PARK, INC., and Country Club Estates, Ltd.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 93-3017.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 16, 1994.
Decided April 25, 1994.
Paul E. Slater (argued), Mitchell H. Macknin, Robert D. Cheifetz, Sperling, Slater & Spitz, Chicago, IL, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Stephen R. Swofford, Thomas S. Malciauskas, Donald L. Mrozek, Hinshaw & Culbertson, William R. Quinlan (argued), Michael K. Bartosz, Pope, Cahill & Devine, Chicago, IL, for defendant-appellee.
Before EASTERBROOK and MANION, Circuit Judges, and McDADE, District Judge.*
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Federal courts are not boards of zoning appeals. This message, oft-repeated, has not penetrated the consciousness of property owners who believe that federal judges are more hospitable to their claims than are state judges. Why they should believe this we haven't a clue; none has ever prevailed in this circuit, but state courts often afford relief on facts that do not support a federal claim. Is it that they have omitted the steps necessary to obtain review in state court and hope for the best in a second-chance forum? Well, we are not cooperating. Litigants who neglect or disdain their state remedies are out of court, period.
River Park, Inc., owned the Highland Park Country Club in Highland Park, Illinois. Although used as a golf course, the land's R1 zoning permitted River Park to construct residential housing--but no more than one house per three acres. River Park decided to build a residential subdivision, with a half acre per lot. This required R4 zoning, which it duly requested. River Park insists, and we shall assume, that state law required the City to grant its application. Local sentiment preferred a golf course to more housing. A member of the City Council organized a citizens' committee called "Save the Open Space," which the City Manager supported. Stalling tactics ensued. Officials nominally approved the rezoning, but the City Engineer, who had to pass on technical details, raised one niggling objection after another and eventually went incommunicado. He twiddled his thumbs for so long, an entire year, that the zoning application expired and had to be refiled. After River Park filed a second application, city officials found a new delaying tactic and directed it to begin from scratch yet again. By this time River Park was bankrupt. Its lender foreclosed. River Park retained one asset--this action, under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, seeking damages from the City for a violation of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment.
The Constitution says that no "State [may] deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law". The district court dismissed the complaint, ruling that River Park had not been deprived of any "property."
For the reasons the district court gave, River Park may well have lacked a property interest in one classification rather than another. But it surely had a property interest in the land, which it owned in fee simple, and it is therefore entitled to contend that the City's regulation of that land deprived it of property without due process. The references to "property" in the Constitution reflect its Lockean heritage. The founding generation viewed "property" in concrete terms--land and chattels acquired by the investment of effort or purchase from another. An owner may build on its land; that is an ordinary element of a property interest. Zoning classifications are not the measure of the property interest but are legal restrictions on the use of property. See Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,
It has become useful to think of some governmental promises as "property." In a world characterized by many "positive liberties"--public education, grants and subsidies, public employment and the like--the arbitrary power of petty bureaucrats is checked by calling these promises "property" and requiring the government to supply due process. Goldberg v. Kelly,
So River Park was entitled to due process of law. We know from Eastlake v. Forest City Enterprises, Inc.,
There is a reason why such scant process is all that is "due" in zoning cases: so far as the Constitution is concerned, state and local governments are not required to respect property owners' rights, and there is therefore no obligation to provide hearings to ascertain a protected core. State and local governments may regulate and even take property; they must pay for what they take but are free to use the land as they please. True, there remains some possibility that a taking for a private use would violate the Constitution (perhaps under the rubric of substantive due process), but this esoteric concern has no pertinence here, for River Park does not contend that the City was substantively forbidden to keep the land as an open space. Cf. Williamson County Regional Planning Commission,
Illinois provided River Park with ample means to contest the runaround it was receiving at the hands of Highland Park. If because the City refused to make a formal decision the standard means were cut off, the common law writ of certiorari remained. The opportunity to apply for that writ is enough, we have held, even when rights under the first amendment are at stake. Graff v. Chicago,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Hon. Joe Billy McDade, of the Central District of Illinois, sitting by designation
