On Junе 26, 1967, defendant Town of Orangetown, a municipal corporation of the State of New York, adopted a local law thаt rezoned part of the town, including an area contiguous to the New Jersey border, from a residential district of one acre plots to an “office park” district. At the time the local law was passed the land that was rezoned was “mostly wooded and slope[d] up from the Hackensack River to Gilbert Avenue.” The zoning ordinance was enacted with a view to making possible the construction of a large office-research complex.
Plaintiffs are the Township of River Vale, a municipal corрoration of the State of New Jersey, and individual residents of that township.
We need not consider the claims of the individual plaintiffs bеcause their failure to allege that the amount in controversy exceeds $10,000 renders the complaint jurisdictionally defective as to them. 2A Moore, Federal Practice ¶8.11 (2d ed. 1968). See Arnold v. Troccoli,
Since, as the district court ruled, no claim is stated against defendants The Irving Trust Company and Uris Building Corporatiоn, the dismissal of the complaint as to them is also affirmed.
The township alleges that it will be injured by the reduction in revenues which will result from depreciation in the value of River Vale property because of the erection of the office complex, and by the necessity for additional expenditures “to provide for adequate traffic and other related expenses аrising from said rezoning;” it seeks damages in excess of $10,000 and declaratory relief.
Defendants moved pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 for summary judgment dismissing the сomplaint for failure to state a claim. The district court dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction. 1 As applied to the township we reverse that determination.
The township alleges in its cоmplaint that its property “has been and will be depreciated in value without due process of law” and that its constitutional rights have been violated. That allegation, although it could and should have been made more explicit, see 2A Moore, Fedеral Practice ¶ 8.09[1] (2d ed. 1968), is adequate to invoke the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. Cf. Miller v. County of Los Angеles,
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The Supreme Court has entertained suits attacking local zoning ordinances on fourteenth amendment grounds. In Goldblatt v. Town of Hеmpstead,
Appellees contend that the cited cases are not appliсable here because the claimant is someone other than a resident of Orangetown. However there is no reasоn to limit the application of the fourteenth amendment in any such arbitrary manner.
Appellees urge that because the tоwnship is a political subdivision of the state it cannot assert rights under the due process clause, citing several cases from the Supreme Court and one from this court. None of these cases is in point. In each of them a municipality was challenging a law of its own state. See Williams v. Mayor & City Council,
We hоld that a municipal corporation like any other corporation is a “person” within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment and is entitled to its protection.
The district court ruled that since plaintiff was not “directly” injured by the zoning ordinance it could not сhallenge that ordinance. In Nectow v. City of Cambridge, supra, the injury to plaintiff’s land occurred when the zoning ordinance restricted it to residential uses although it was substantially more valuable for use in industry. The crux of the issue was whether the zoning ordinance arbitrarily diminished thе value of plaintiff’s land. Here the claim that reduction in the value of land within *687 the township with resulting reduction in township revenues alleges a sufficiently direct injury to give the township standing to sue.
The district court considered important for the purpose of determining jurisdictiоn the fact that the township was in New Jersey whereas the ordinance was adopted in New York. The equal protection сlause of the fourteenth amendment is confined to persons within the jurisdiction of the enacting state; the due process clause is not so confined.
Of course we express no opinion on the merits of the plaintiff’s claim and it may prove difficult to establish that the challenged zoning ordinance was arbitrary and capricious. But the court has jurisdiction to hear the claim.
We reverse the dismissal by the district court and remand.
Notes
. In a supplemental memorandum Judge Ryan noted that because he had dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction, he was without power tо grant summary judgment. He added, however, that if the court had had jurisdiction he would have granted summary judgment for defendants.
. While Goldblatt v. Town of Hеmpstead and Nectow v. City of Cambridge were state court cases, Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co. was a federal court case. The jurisdiction of the federal courts in
Euclid
was not an issue in the Supreme Court, and was apparently not seriously challenged in the district court. See
