Vinсent and Janet Dressel (the “Dressels”) are developers who remodel and convert private homes into student residences. A group of homeowners and community organizations (collectively, “Logan Neighborhood”), concerned that the Dressels’ construction was degrading and devaluing the historic character of their neighborhood, brought suit in federal district court seeking injunctive and declaratory relief. Logan Neighborhood principally contends that the city’s alleged failure to enforce provisions of its zoning code intended to preserve historic districts violated the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Proсess Clause. Notwithstanding Logan Neighborhood’s understandable concerns about the aesthetics and ambiance of the neighborhood, we conclude it has not stated a federal constitutional claim. Although not preempted by the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause,
see Crown Point Dev., Inc. v. City of Sun Valley,
BACKGROUND 1
The Mission Avenue Historic District (“District”) lies just north of Gonzaga University in the city of Spokane, Washington (“Spokane”). The District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, a designation conferred by the Secretary оf the Interior pursuant to the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (“NHPA”). See 16 U.S.C. § 470a(a). It is architeetur *1085 ally noteworthy because it includes a “significant collection of late 19th and early 20th century houses located on one of the city’s oldest landscaped boulevards.” On both sides of Mission Avenue are a “variety of Queen Anne, Four Square, Craftsman, and bungalow style houses that reflect the substantial architecture of the period and the original suburban character of the area.”
In March 2005, Spokane granted the Dressels a building permit to construct a duplex addition to 428 East Mission, a clapboard-sided, Four Square house located within the Distriсt and inventoried on the District’s nomination for the National Register of Historic Places. The Dressels demolished an existing garage on the property and erected a “box-like dormitory building! ] ... attached” to the original house.
We summarize the municipal ordinances that Logan Neighborhood alleges have been violated. In 1981, the city amended the Spokane Municipal Code (“SMC”) to provide “criteria and procedures for the ... management of historic landmarks.” A newly created Historic Landmarks Commission was charged with the “stewardship of historic and architecturally-significant properties ... to effect the recognition and preservation of such properties.” Two of its responsibilities are relevant here: reviewing applications for “certificates of appropriateness,” as provided by SMC 17D.040.200, and reviewing requests for “administrative special permits,” as provided by SMC 11.19.270. See SMC 17D.040.080(C)(l)(d), (f).
SMC 17D.040.200 requires owners to obtain a certificate of appropriateness for “work that affects the exterior ... of ... property within an historic district” or for “development or new construction within an historic district.” In evaluating an application for a certificate of appropriateness, the Historic Landmarks Commission “uses thе Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation and other general guidelines established and adopted by the commission.” SMC 17D.040.210(B). The owner of a property and the Commission may negotiate “different management standards for a specific piece of property,” subject to the approval of the Spokane City Council. See SMC 17D.040.270-.280.
SMC 11.19.270 provides for special “development standards” that apply “only to those historic districts for which ‘defining characteristics’ have been prepared by the landmarks commission, and those structures or properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places.” Whеn these standards apply, proposed construction requires an “administrative special permit” from the director of planning services. The Historic Landmarks Commission “make[s] recommendations concerning the approval or denial of the special permit.” SMC 17D.040.080(C)(l)(f). It “issues a certificate of appropriateness in support of approval” only if the construction is “of a character which is consistent with the defining characteristics of the historic district, or the U.S. Department of Interior standards in the case of structures or properties listed in the National Register but not located within an histоric district.” SMC 11.19.270(D)(3)(b). If no action is taken within 35 days, the application is “deemed approved.” SMC 11.19.270(D)(3)(c). In any event, the Commission’s recommendation “will not otherwise preclude” the director of planning services from reaching a “contrary decision” upon “consideration of other factors of public interest.” Id.
The Dressels did not seek a certificate of appropriateness or an administrative special permit for their development of the 428 East Mission property, nor has Spokane taken any steps to require them to do so. Logan Neighborhood alleges that the Dressels’ construction has compromised *1086 the historic character of the Mission Avenue Historic District, resulting in harm to its “cultural, architectural, educational, recreational, aesthetic, historic, and economic interests.” Its complaint asserts three claims: (1) that Spokane violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, by not enforcing the Spokane Municipal Code; (2) that Spokane and the Dressels violated the National Historic Preservation Act; and (3) that Spokane and Spokane employees violated the Spokane Municipal Code. The district court granted Spokane’s motion for summary judgment and the Dressels’ motion to dismiss.
DISCUSSION
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
2
We review de novo the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, dismissal for failure to state a claim and grant of summary judgment.
Holcombe v. Hosmer,
I. Due Process Clause
Logan Neighborhood complains that Spokane and its employees failed to enforce the Spokane Municipal Code and take action “sufficient ... to protect the Mission Avenue Historic District.” 3 Spokane’s alleged failure to “discharge its mandatory duties” under the Spokane Municipal Code was, Logan Neighborhood asserts, “arbitrary, capricious, ... and not in accordance with ... [the] procedure required by law.” By issuing a building permit to the Dressels without first requiring that they obtain a certificate of appropriateness and an administrative special permit, Spokane allegedly deprived Logan Neighborhood of constitutionally protected property interests.
As we shall explain, we agree with Logan Neighborhood that the Takings Clause of the Constitution does not invariably preempt a real property owner’s challenge under the Due Process Clause.
See Crown Point,
A. Preemption by the Takings Clause
Relying on
Squaw Valley Dev. Co. v. Goldberg,
Logan Neighborhood would have us stop there, reverse the district cоurt’s judgment and remand for further proceedings. We decline to do so because Logan Neighborhood has not stated a viable claim on either a substantive due process or a procedural due process theory. 4
B. Substantive Due Process
To state a substantive due process claim, the plaintiff must show as a threshold matter that a state actor deprived it of a constitutionally protected life, liberty or property interest.
See Action Apartment,
Logan Neighborhood urges that Spokane applied the law improperly and therefore took an affirmative step beyond simply not enforcing it at all. It contends that Spokane unlawfully and arbitrarily issued a building permit to the Dressels because it did not first require them to obtain a certificate of appropriateness and administrative special permit. We do not agree that the issuance of a building permit to the Dressels made their conduct fairly attributable to Spokane in the sense required for § 1983 liability. Without more, Spokane’s “[m]ere approval of or acquiescence in” the Dressels’ construction is “not sufficient to justify holding[it] responsible for [that construction] under the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Blum v. Yaretsky,
But even if Logan Neighborhood could show, for example, that the decrease in value of its homes caused by the Dressels’ construction amounted to a
governmental
deprivation of a property interest — and we hold above that it cannot, on these facts— its substantive due process claim would fail for the independent reason that it has not alleged executive action on Spokane’s part that rises to the level of the constitutionally arbitrary. The Supreme Court has “long eschewed ... heightened [means-ends] scrutiny when addressing substantive due process challenges to government regulation” that does hot impinge on fundamental rights.
Lingle,
When executive action like a discrete permitting decision is at issue, only “egregious official conduct can be said to be ‘arbitrary in the constitutional sense’ it must amount to an “abuse of power” lacking any “reasonable justification in the service of a legitimate governmental objective.”
Lewis,
The conduct Logan Neighborhood alleges — a routine, even if perhaps unwise or legally erroneous, executive decision to grant a third-party a building permit — ■ falls short of being constitutionally arbitrary. There is no suggestion, for instance, of a sudden change in course, malice, bias, pretext or, indeed, anything more than a lack of due care on Spokane’s part.
7
Compare Kawaoka v. City of Arroyo Grande,
We reject as an erroneous legal conclusion Logan Neighborhood’s assertion that Spokane and its employees acted in a constitutionally arbitrary manner.
See Western Mining Council v. Watt,
C. Procedural Due Process
We are also not convinced by Logan Neighborhood’s argument that it has been deprived of procedural due process because it did not have fair noticе and an opportunity to be heard before Spokane issued the Dressels a building permit. Logan Neighborhood claims a constitutionally protected property interest in the denial of the permit unless the city “complied] with *1090 the Spokane Municipal Code applicable to historic districts.” It contends that the historic preservation provisions obliged Spokane to hold a public “design review taking into account the Mission Avenue Historic District” and complying with the certificate of appropriateness and administrative special permit requirements. 8 Even if Logan Neighborhood’s interpretation of the Spokane Municipal Code is correct — the parties dispute whether construction in the District is subject to those additional requirements — it has not stated a viable claim.
The claim is an unusual one; more typically, the plaintiff asserts that it personally was denied a permit without due process of law, not that someone else was granted a permit without the decisionmaker following the procedure established by state law.
See Gagliardi,
We apply our conventional analytic framework.
See Crown Point I, LLC v. Intermountain Rural Elec. Ass’n,
Logan Neighborhood does not have a legitimate claim of entitlement to the denial of the Dressels’ permit in accordance with the historic preservation provisions. Only if the governing statute compels a result “upon compliance with certain criteria, none of which involve the exercise of discretion by the reviewing body,” does it create a constitutionally protected property interest.
Thornton v. City of St. Helens,
We have not been directed to any statutory language that “impose[s] particularized standards ... that significantly constrain” Spokane’s discretion to issue the permits in question and would create a protected property interest in the permits’ denial.
See Fidelity Fin. Corp. v. Fed. Home Loan Bank of San Francisco,
From this it follows that Logan Neighborhood’s procedural due process claim
*1092
fails. Absent a substantive prbperty intеrest in the outcome of procedure, Logan Neighborhood is not constitutionally entitled to insist on compliance with the procedure itself. “To hold otherwise would immediately incorporate virtually every regulation into the Constitution.”
Clemente v. United States,
Nothing we say here condones unlawful official action, and we express no view about the legality of Spokane’s permitting decision as a matter of state law.
See, e.g.,
Wash. Rev.Code § 36.70C.040 (Washington Land Use Petition Act);
Clemente,
II. National Historic Preservation Act
The district court also correctly dismissed Logan Neighborhood’s claim that Spokane and the Dressels violated the National Historic Preservation Act. Section 106 of the NHPA does not create a private right of action against the federal government.
See San Carlos Apache Tribe v. United States,
III. Spokane Municipal Code
Logan Neighborhood lastly contends that its claim under the Spokane Municipal Code independently creates federal subject matter jurisdiction. ' A state-law claim invokes 28 U.S.C. § 1331 jurisdiction only if it “necessarily rаise[s] a stated federal issue, actually disputed and substantial, which a federal forum may entertain without disturbing any congressionally approved balance of federal and state judicial responsibilities.”
Grable & Sons Metal Prod., Inc. v. Dane Eng’g & Mfg.,
First, Logan Neighborhood’s state-law claim presents no “necessarily raised” or “actually disputed” federal issue. According to Logan Neighborhood, its claim that Spokane аnd the Dressels violated the Spokane Municipal Code cannot be decided without looking to the “Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation” and the NHPA itself. This is incorrect. Mission Avenue Historic District’s listing on the National Register of Historic Places is not controverted. Spokane has not attempted to apply the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation to the Dressels’ construction. Logan Neighborhood’s state-law claim turns entirely on Spokane’s compliance with its own municipal code, and does not require the construction or application of federal law.
Sеcond, a federal interest in the availability of a federal forum to adjudicate Logan Neighborhood’s state-law claim is also missing.
Cf. Grable,
Third, allowing Logan Neighborhood’s state-law claim to go forward in federal court would undermine “Congress’s intended division of labor between state and federal courts.”
Grable,
CONCLUSION
After Lingle, neither Armendariz nor its progeny categorically preclude due process challenges to impermissible governmental action that deprives a person of real property. The analysis of a property owner’s due process claim does not end there, however. Applying our ordinary Due Process Clause jurisprudence, we conclude that Logаn Neighborhood has not stated a viable due process claim. We also reject Logan Neighborhood’s claims under the NHPA and Spokane’s Municipal Code.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On a motion to dismiss, we take the complaint's allegations of fact as true and construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See Vasquez v. Los Angeles County,
. Although we reject Logan Neighborhood’s claims on the merits, they are not so "insubstantial, implausible, foreclosed by prior decisions of this Court, or otherwise completely devoid of merit as not to involve a federal controversy.”
See Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. County of Oneida,
. We affirm the dismissal of this claim as to the Dressels because Logan Neighborhood has not pursued on appeal its argument that they acted under color of law.
See Kim v. Kang,
. The claim is ripe for review because the challenged governmental conduct — the city’s issuance of a building permit and alleged refusal to enforce the Spokane Municipal Code — has already occurred, and any injuries stemming from that conduct are ongoing.
See Kawaoka v. City of Arroyo Grande,
.
DeShaney's
rule "that members of the public have no constitutional right to sue state actors who fail to protect them from harm inflicted by third parties 'is modified by two exceptions: (1) the 'special relationship' exception; and (2) the 'danger creation exception,’' ” neither of which applies here.
See Johnson v. City of Seattle,
. We express no view about whether Spokane’s "approval or acquiescence” would suffice to make the city a proximate cause of Logan Neighborhood’s alleged damages under, for example, Washington’s state law of municipal liability.
. The Historic Landmarks Commission has never issued certificates of appropriateness or administrative special permits for properties in the Mission Avenue Historic District. Spokane officials are of the view that the provisions of SMC 11.19.270 are presently inoperative because no "defining characteristics” have been prepared fоr the Mission Avenue Historic District. The cases suggesting that an individual who has been singled out for differential treatment in an "irrational and wholly arbitrary” manner could bring a substantive due process or "class of one” equal protection claim are therefore inapposite.
Cf., e.g., Engquist v. Oregon Dep’t of
Agric., -U.S. -,
. The Spokane Municipal Code directs the "official responsible for processing the application” for "action which may require a certificate of appropriateness” — for example, a building permit — to request review by the Historic Landmarks Commission. See SMC 17D.040.240. The ordinance then provides for a public comment period, as well as a noticed public hearing. See SMC 17D.040.260(C)(1)-(3).
. Claims premised on the government’s treatment of a third-party must satisfy stringent constitutional standing requirements.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
.
Cf. Asche
v.
Bloomquist,
. The plaintiffs in Stop H-3 unremarkably sought enforcement of a federal statute's mandate— § 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966 — against a federal agency in federal court. See id. at 437-48 (citing 23 U.S.C. § 138(a)). We held that the Secretary of the Interior's determination that a location was eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places triggered § 4(f)’s applicability notwithstanding a state official’s finding that the site had only marginal historic significance. See id. at 441.
