ORDER
This case is before the court on Defendant City of Winter Springs’ (Winter Springs’) motion to dismiss Plaintiffs second amended complaint (Doc. 16). Plaintiff Sullivan Prop *590 erties, Inc. (Sullivan) removed this case from state court, and alleges that Winter Springs violated Sullivan’s constitutionally protected rights by denying Sullivan a permit to dig a “borrow pit” within Winter Springs’ jurisdiction. Sullivan has filed two counts in its complaint, claiming that Winter Springs violated (1) Sullivan’s right to equal protection under the law, and (2) Sullivan’s substantive due process rights. Winter Springs has responded by asserting that Sullivan has failed to state a claim for which relief may be granted in either count. The court concludes that Sullivan has filed an adequate complaint alleging a violation of his equal protection rights and his rights protected by the procedural component of the Due Process Clause.
I. Facts
When considering a motion to dismiss, the court must view the allegations made in the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and assume the allegations in the complaint are true.
See Quality Foods de Centro Am., S.A v. Latin Am. Agribusiness Dev. Corp., S.A,
Sullivan submitted a preliminary development plan to the City of Winter Springs for approval, along with a request for a borrow pit permit to construct the lake system. The City Engineer, after review of the applicable codes and ordinances and with the aid of independent consultants, approved the construction of the borrow pit. Nevertheless, the Winter Springs City Commission (Commission) insisted that Sullivan provide additional information before granting the permit, though no statute or ordinance required any additional submissions. Sullivan obtained these required engineering and environmental studies and appeared before the Commission, who allegedly denied the borrow pit permit "without justification. Instead, the Commission demanded that Sullivan take further action to ensure that no environmental harm would result from the borrow pit excavation. Over the course of one year, Sullivan and its consultants met with various city and state officials to satisfy the Commission’s requests. The Winter Springs Board of Adjustment unanimously granted a variance to construct a “wet bottom” retention pond as part of the lake system.
All of the plans, studies and other reports that Sullivan submitted met or exceeded all requirements for the borrow pit’s construction, allegedly rendering the -issuance of a permit by the Commission a ministerial act. However, the Commission expressed continued concern about environmental issues and demanded that Sullivan pay a disinterested consultant to review Sullivan’s engineering and environmental studies. After learning that this consultant would agree with Sullivan’s conclusions, the Commission then intentionally delayed the submission of the consultant’s report until it could find another basis for denying the permit. After the consultant issued his report, the Commission denied the borrow pit permit by asserting Winter Springs’ Comprehensive Plan prohibited “mining.” Sullivan asserts that its permit application should not have been affected by the subsequent enactment of the Comprehensive Plan, or alternatively that the Commission could not change the definitions in the Comprehensive Plan without following established procedures.
Sullivan contends that the Commission denied its permit application because the Commission was concerned that the reduction in the development’s density would have a direct effect on the amount of revenue Winter Springs could collect for sewer use. Winter Springs had previously purchased a local util *591 ity company and relied on expected sewer revenues to pay for the company. Sullivan also asserts that Winter Springs historically has permitted property owners and developers to construct borrow pits in accordance with their development plans. According to Sullivan, Winter Springs permitted the Florida Department of Transportation to dig a borrow pit immediately adjacent to Sullivan’s property in order to construct a state road without requiring environmental or engineering studies.
Sullivan originally filed this action in the Circuit Court of Florida’s Eighteenth Judicial Circuit on March 24, 1993. The original complaint named the City of Winter Springs and three former members of the City Commission, and sought damages for violations of Sullivan’s constitutional rights. These defendants then removed the action to federal court. On July 6, 1993, Sullivan moved to amend the complaint by deleting all federal causes of action and asked the court to remand the ease to state court. The Honorable Anne C. Conway, United States District Judge for the Middle District of Florida, granted Sullivan’s motion to amend the complaint and to remand the case to state court. However, on October 3, 1994, the Honorable O.H. Eaton, Jr., Circuit Judge for Florida’s Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, dismissed Sullivan’s first amended complaint in its entirety and granted Sullivan leave to amend again. Sullivan then raised federal claims against Winter Springs in its second amended complaint, and Winter Springs again removed the ease to federal court.
II. Legal Discussion
In its motion to dismiss, Winter Springs must demonstrate that Sullivan can prove no set of facts consistent with the pleadings which would entitle it to relief.
See Conley v. Gibson,
A. Judicial Estoppel
Winter Springs asserts that, under the doctrine of judicial estoppel, because Sullivan previously announced it would dismiss its federal causes of action in order to remand the case to state court, Sullivan cannot plead federal claims again and remove this action to federal court. “Judicial estoppel is a doctrine whereby a party is estopped from asserting a proposition in the present proceeding ‘merely by the fact of having alleged or admitted in his pleadings in a former proceeding under oath’ an allegation to the contrary.”
Bregman v. Alderman,
At its core, the doctrine of judicial estoppel ensures that a party will not argue “inconsistent positions to gain an unfair advantage over its adversary.”
Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. United Airlines, Inc.,
In this case, Sullivan initially declared it would drop its federal claims in order to remand the case to state court, at least in part because it recognized the merit of the individual defendants’ qualified immunity defenses. Now Sullivan has reasserted federal claims against Winter Springs, and finds itself again in federal court. Sullivan has not gained any advantage by dropping and then reasserting federal claims; it is in the same position as it was two years ago, and the only effect of Sullivan’s legal maneuvering has been to delay the hearing of its substantive claims. Because Sullivan has not gained any advantage by withdrawing and then reasserting federal claims, the court will not dismiss Sullivan’s complaint based on the doctrine of judicial estoppel.
B. Standing
Winter Springs next contends that Sullivan does not have standing to bring this action. Winter Springs notes that Sullivan was not the owner of the property involved when it applied for a permit to construct its borrow pit. Rather, Sullivan was a contract purchaser of the property, and therefore Winter Springs claims that Sullivan did not possess a property interest sufficient to raise a constitutional claim. While the existence of a cognizable property interest is relevant for due process claims, see infra Part D.I., a plaintiffs property interest only indirectly affects an inquiry into his standing to bring suit.
The court interprets Winter Springs’ assertion as an allegation that as a mere contract purchaser Sullivan has not sustained sufficient injury to be able to bring an action. The Supreme Court has established that to establish standing a “plaintiff must have suffered an ‘injury in fact’ — -an invasion of a legally-protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) ‘actual or imminent, not “conjectural” or “hypothetical.” ’ ”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
C. Equal Protection Claim
Winter Springs argues that Count I of Sullivan’s complaint, alleging Winter Springs’ denial of its equal protection rights, fails to state a claim for which relief may be granted. In its complaint, Sullivan asserts that Winter Springs had never previously required an applicant to undergo the expensive battery of engineering and environmental studies that Sullivan completed. Sullivan alleges that Winter Springs’ reason for doing so was its desire to protect funds collected from sewer connection fees, and not legitimate purposes. Winter Springs claims that Sullivan fails to properly identify the persons who have been treated more favorably, and that Sullivan fails to allege that these persons were similarly situated. Also, Winter Springs asserts that in considering and ultimately rejecting Sullivan’s application it was “clearly” concerned about a number of legitimate state interests, including environmental concerns and the safety and welfare of its citizens.
In cases involving economic regulation, courts apply a rational basis test to regulations challenged on equal protection grounds. “Legislation is presumed to be valid and will be sustained if the classification
*593
drawn by the statute is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.”
Executive 100, Inc. v. Martin County,
D. Substantive Due Process Claim
Winter Springs essentially has raised three arguments in contending that Sullivan’s substantive due process claim should be dismissed. First, Winter Springs states that Sullivan did not possess a property interest in the building permit sufficient to support a due process claim. Second, Winter Springs asserts that Sullivan cannot establish that the City’s actions amounted to a violation of constitutional rights. Finally, the City contends that Sullivan cannot raise a substantive due process claim for this set of facts under the precedent set by
McKinney v. Pate,
1. Constitutionally Protected Property Interest
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects property interests created by “existing rules or understandings ... that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.”
Spence v. Zimmerman,
Courts interpreting Florida law have noted that the doctrine of equitable estoppel may create rights in a building permit when a permit has not been issued, “if the owner expends significant sums of money in rebanee upon existing zoning and preliminary approvals obtained from the regulatory governmental body even though final approvals have not yet been obtained.”
Lake Jackson, supra,
2. Winter Springs’ Acts
Winter Springs next contends that its acts cannot support Sullivan’s due process claim as a matter of law. Winter Springs first notes that not all wrongful deprivations of building permits constitute violations of constitutional rights. “[N]ot every wronged party has a valid claim for a constitutional violation whenever a local building official makes an incorrect decision regarding a building permit.”
Spence v. Zimmerman,
Winter Springs does grudgingly acknowledge that there are constitutional limits on the power of zoning, boards to deny permits. Winter Springs’ arguments are more appropriate for a summary judgment motion, when a plaintiff must present affidavits and sworn testimony to support his contentions. At this stage, the court must accept all of Sullivan’s allegations as true. Sullivan alleges that Winter Springs was not motivated by legitimate concerns but rather denied Sullivan’s application out of malice and a desire to preserve sewer revenues. The court cannot dismiss Sullivan’s complaint because of a factual dispute.
S. McKinney v. Pate’s Impact on Substantive Due Process
Finally, the court must consider the impact of
McKinney v. Pate,
Explaining its decision, the Eleventh Circuit announced that the “substantive component of the Due Process Clause protects those rights that are ‘fundamental,’ that is, rights that are ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.’ ”
Id.
at 1556 (quoting
Palko v. Connecticut,
Besides the source of the underlying right, another characteristic that distinguishes substantive from procedural due process cases is that in substantive due process cases, “the claimant seeks compensatory damages for the value of the deprived right. In procedural due process cases, however, although the claimant may seek compensatory damages, the primary relief sought is equitable: for instance, in an employment-case, the claimant typically seeks reinstatement and a properly conducted pretermination hearing.”
McKinney,
The question before the court in this case is whether
McKinney’s
analysis of due process rights for government employment cases should apply to zoning disputes. The test used to determine whether an employee’s due process rights have been violated through termination is remarkably similar to that used for a prospective builder who has been denied a permit. In improper termination cases, a violation of due process rights occurs “when an employer deprives the employee of a ‘property interest for an improper motive and by means that [are] pretextual, arbitrary and capricious,’ regardless of whether a hearing was held.”
Nolin v. Douglas County,
The source of all zoning regulations is state law and local ordinances, not the Constitution. In
Spence v. Zimmerman,
A certain group of zoning and other governmental land use decisions appears to provide substantive due process protection. A line of precedents dating back 70 years has provided that land, use restrictions will be declared unconstitutional if they are “clearly arbitrary and unreasonable, having no substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare.”
Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,
These cases, however, all confront legislative enactments made by municipal bodies, which are distinct from the executive acts of granting or denying individual applications for building permits and zoning variances. The Eleventh Circuit noted this distinction between legislative acts and executive acts in
McKinney,
and explicitly declared that its analysis of substantive and procedural due process only applied to executive act eases.
McKinney,
The court concludes that the Eleventh Circuit’s approach in zoning cases parallels that for employment cases before
McKinney,
and that because property rights to building permits are created by state law they are protected only by the procedural component of the Due Process Clause. The court therefore interprets
McKinney
as overruling the cases that provide a substantive due process cause of action for plaintiffs complaining of wrongful executive zoning decisions.
Cf. Bowman v. Alabama Dep’t of Human Resources,
In his complaint Sullivan does not contend that Winter Springs’ zoning ordinance itself violated Sullivan’s rights, but that the Winter Springs City Commission maliciously denied it the building permit for improper reasons. Winter Springs’ conduct therefore must be considered a set of executive acts. For the reasons stated above, the court considers this to be an allegation of a procedural due process violation, and not a substantive due process issue.
See McKinney,
III. Conclusion
Sullivan adequately states a complaint alleging violations of its rights under the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. However, under McKinney Sullivan may only bring a procedural due process claim for Winter Springs’ alleged violations of Sullivan’s rights. The court DENIES Defendant’s motion to dismiss (Doc. 16).
It is SO ORDERED.
