I.
On April 13, 2000, William and Judy Daniels filed a complaint, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Area Plan Commission of Allen County violated the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, as well the Indiana Constitution, when it vacated a restrictive covenant attached to their property that was designed to preserve the residential character of the surrounding neighborhood. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court concluded that the Plan Commission violated the Daniels’ Fifth Amendment right by vacating the restrictive covenant without a public purpose. The court entered a permanent injunction ordering the Plan Commission to reverse its removal of the covenant and prohibiting the Plan Commission from further removal of the covenants for any private purpose. The court also found that Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11, under which the Plan Commission had vacated the covenant, was unconstitutional because it does not require the Commission to follow the procedures set forth in the state’s eminent domain statute for determining public use. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
II.
William and Judy Daniels (“the Daniels”) are the current owners and residents of the property located at 1735 Broadmoor Avenue in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The Daniels’ property is in a subdivision commonly known as the Broadmoor Addition (“Broadmoor”). Broadmoor was surveyed and platted for 80 lots in 1940 and the Daniels own lot 10. The plat of the Broadmoor Addition has had a restrictive covenant limiting lots to residential use since the subdivision was platted. Specifically, the plat’s restrictive covenant states: “No building other than a single family dwelling and a private garage shall be built on any one lot.”
The Broadmoor lots numbered three through five (collectively referred to as “Lots”), located in the 8800 block on the west side of Lima Road, are the subject of the current litigation. Along with lots one and two, these properties form the eastern perimeter of Broadmoor along Lima Road. Lima Road is a north-south corridor into Fort Wayne, Indiana, where each day over thirty thousand cars travel. In October 1999, HNS Enterprises, LLC and LST, LLC (collectively “HNS”), as the owners of the Lots, submitted a rezoning petition and application for primary development to the Area Plan Commission of Allen County (“Plan Commission”). As part of the application, HNS requested that the Plan Commission vacate their Lots and the associated restrictive covenants from the Broadmoor plat pursuant to Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11. 1 HNS also petitioned the *450 Commission to rezone the Lots to C-2A/Neighborhood Shopping Center and approve a primary development plan for the Lots consisting of a 12,000 square foot shopping center which contained five stores within a single story building (the “Broadmoor Shops”). At the time, each of the Lots contained an uninhabited residence.
On December 9, 1999, the Plan Commission held a public hearing on the petitions and numerous residents of Broadmoor objected to the granting of any of HNS’ petitions. Also at the hearing, the Daniels’ counsel appeared and argued that the Plan Commission did not have the authority to remove the restrictive covenants requiring that all structures built within Broadmoor be single-family residential homes. The Daniels’ counsel further argued that the vacation and rezoning of lots three through five of Broadmoor would constitute an unconstitutional taking of private property for a private use. HNS filed a statement of reasons for the proposed vacation along with its petition to the Plan Commission. In their statement of reasons, HNS claimed that the conditions relating to the Lots had changed so as to defeat the purpose of the plat. HNS also contended that vacating the covenant would be in the public interest because without the residential restriction, HNS could develop the property with commercial uses which would serve as a buffer between Lima Road and the remaining residences. Finally, HNS claimed that the covenant vacation would not diminish the value of the remaining single-family homes in the plat and could in fact increase their value due to the rundown nature of the uninhabited houses currently on the Lots.
At a second meeting held on January 20, 2000, the Plan Commission adopted a “do pass” recommendation approving HNS’ rezoning petition. The Plan Commission also granted conditional approval to the vacation of the Lots from the plat of the Broadmoor Addition and for the primary development plan for the Broadmoor Shops. The Plan Commission specifically found that it was in the public interest to vacate the Lots and covenants from the Broadmoor plat because:
it would allow the site to be redeveloped with commercial uses which could be a more appropriate use for the property and could be a benefit to the immediate neighborhood. The uninhabited and deteriorating residential structures would be removed from the site.
In addition the Plan Commission found that the value of the other lots in Broadm-oor would not be diminished by the vacation because:
redevelopment of the site for commercial uses will require development plan review by the plan commission. This review will address land use comjpatibility issues resulting from commercial use of the property, and will preserve property values in the remainder of the subdivision. The uninhabited and deteriorating residential structures would be removed from the site. •
The Plan Commission also imposed several conditions designed to limit the impact of the development of the “Broadmoor Shops” on Broadmoor’s residential character. The conditions impose frontage, transportation and state agency approval requirements. The Plan Commission apparently also added limitations on the future commercial uses of the Lots, although those conditions are not in the record.
*451
On April 13, 2000, before HNS began to develop the Lots,
2
the Daniels filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for declaratory-relief and a permanent injunction in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. Under Ind. Code § 36-7-3-11, the Daniels could have challenged the Plan Commission’s action in state court by filing of a writ of certiorari to the circuit or superior court of Allen County.
See Ind.Code
§ 36-7-4-1016 & § 36-7-4-1004. However, the Daniels did not file the petition to state court and instead proceeded directly to federal court. The Daniels’ federal complaint alleged that the Plan Commission’s actions violated their constitutional rights by taking the Daniels’ property for private use in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and the Indiana Constitution. The Plan Commission filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the Daniels failed to exhaust their administrative remedies and thus their claim was not ripe, or alternatively because the Daniels failed to allege damages. The district court denied the Plan Commission’s motion to dismiss, finding that exhaustion of administrative remedies was not required under
Patsy v. Board of Regents of Florida,
The district court granted the Daniels’ summary judgment motion.
Daniels v. Area Plan Comm’n of Allen County,
III.
On appeal the Plan Commission maintains that because the Daniels’ claims were not ripe for review the district court erred in concluding that it had subject matter *452 jurisdiction. Additionally, the Plan Commission argues that even if the Daniels’ claims were ripe, the district court erred in concluding that its actions constituted a taking for a private purpose. Finally the Plan Commission contends that the statute is not facially unconstitutional.
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The Plan Commission argues that the district court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over the Daniels’ claims. Because the Daniels failed to exhaust their remedies in state court, the Plan Commission asserts that the Daniels’ claims are not ripe for review. We review
de novo
a district court’s decision that it had subject matter jurisdiction.
CCC Inform. Services, Inc. v. Amer. Salvage Pool Assoc.,
In the recent eases of
Forseth v. Village of Sussex,
In
Williamson County,
the Supreme Court held that prior to initiating a civil action for a taking in federal court, a plaintiff must demonstrate that he has both received a “final decision regarding the application of the [challenged] regulations to the property at issue” from “the government entity charged with implementing the regulations,”
id.
at 186,
In this case the Daniels did not seek redress in state court for either equitable relief or compensation after the Plan Commission issued its decision on the plat vacation. They claim that they bypassed state court first because they were not seeking monetary compensation, which is the only remedy available through the state’s inverse condemnation procedure, and second, state court relief is not mandated in Takings Clause cases where plaintiffs are only seeking equitable remedies. Instead, the Daniels proceeded to federal court by filing a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court denied the Plan Commission’s motion, to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, relying on
Patsy v. Board of Regents of Florida,
The district court’s conclusions are not without foundation as we have commented in the past on the tension between Patsy and Williamson County. See Gamble, 5 F.3d at 288. 4 In general, Patsy does not “require exhaustion of judicial remedies as a precondition to bringing a federal civil rights suit.” Id. However, the additional ripeness requirements of Williamson County create a takings claim exception to Patsy’s general requirement that exhaustion is not required in § 1983 suits. Id. at 287. Therefore litigants, like the Daniels in this case, who assert a takings claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 may not rely solely on Patsy, but must meet the Court imposed ripeness requirements of Williamson County prior to bringing a federal claim. 5
Unlike some circuits, this Circuit has consistently maintained a strict requirement that Takings Clause litigants must first take their claim to state court even when plaintiffs, such as the Daniels, are alleging a taking for private purpose.
See Forseth,
*454
Under
Williamson County,
federal courts are precluded from adjudicating a claim of a taking for a private purpose until litigants have met two requirements: “(1) the ‘Final Decision Requirement’: . the plaintiff must demonstrate that he or she received a ‘final decision’ from the relevant government entity; and (2) the ‘Exhaustion Requirement’: the plaintiff must have sought ‘compensation through the procedures the State has provided for doing so.’”
Forseth,
1. Final decision requirement.
Under the ripeness analysis of
Williamson County,
the plaintiffs first requirement is to show that he received a final definitive determination by the agency responsible for deciding the permitted development on the land.
See MacDonald, Sommer & Frates v. Yolo County, All
U.S. 340, 351,
2. Exhaustion requirement.
Under the second requirement for ripeness imposed by
Williamson County,
the plaintiff must seek compensation from the state prior to proceeding to federal court. The Supreme Court has explained that
Williamson County’s
exhaustion requirement “stems from the Fifth Amendment’s proviso that only' takings without ‘just
*455
compensation’ infringe that Amendment.”
Suitum v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
Initially we note that the Plan Commission’s claim that the Daniels should have sought state certiorari review is clearly not required by
Williamson County.
The only remedies available to plaintiffs under certiorari review of a covenant vacation are reversal, affirmation or modification.
See
Ind.Code § 36-7-4-1009, 1016. In
Williamson County,
the Court specifically contrasted this type of review procedure, and “those for obtaining a declaratory judgment ... with procedures that allow a property owner to obtain compensation for a taking. Exhaustion of review procedures is not required.”
Williamson County,
However, the availability and adequacy of an inverse condemnation claim in state court is a different matter. In
SGB Financial Services, Inc. v. Consolidated City of Indianapolis-Marion County, Indiana,
Generally an inverse condemnation comes into play when property not actually taken or condemned is detrimentally affected by a threatened condemnation or the actual condemnation of an adjoining parcel of land. For example if condemnation of parcel A limits access to (or even landlocks) parcel B, the owner of parcel B could have a cause of action for the diminished value of his parcel that was not actually taken. After utilizing a state remedy, such as a suit for inverse condemnation, if the owner does not receive what he believes is just compensation, he may proceed with a Takings Clause claim in federal court. But what happens with a condemnation that leaves no diminished value to the property of an adjacent owner? That is the question before us.
The Daniels did not file a state inverse condemnation action prior to filing their § 1983 claim in federal court. They claim that while under Williamson County they would normally be required to seek compensation through the state court’s inverse condemnation proceedings, under the facts of this case, such a proceeding would be futile because there is no monetary loss that begs compensation. Therefore they insist that their federal claim is ripe. 9
In
Williamson County,
the Supreme Court adopted a limited exception to its exhaustion requirement based on the futility of seeking state court relief. Specifically, the Court held that a plaintiff may be excused from the exhaustion requirement if he demonstrates that “the inverse condemnation procedure is unavailable or inadequate.”
Williamson County,
In Indiana, an inverse condemnation action is one “against an entity with the power to condemn (usually a governmental defendant) to recover the value of property which has been taken in fact, even though no formal exercise of the power of eminent domain has been attempted by the taking agency.”
City of
Gary
v. Belovich,
The plan commission shall approve the petition for vacation of all or part of a plat only upon a determination that:
3. the value of that part of the land in the plat not owned by the petitioner will not be diminished by vacation.
In this case the Plan Commission found that the value of the land in the plat would not be diminished because
redevelopment of the site for commercial uses will require development plan review by the plan commission. This review will address land use compatibility issues resulting from commercial use of the property, and will preserve property values in the remainder of the subdivision. The uninhabited and deteriorating residential structures would be removed from the site.
The Plan Commission does not dispute this admission on appeal. In fact, the Daniels’ property value may have even increased, at least according to HNS’ assertion to the Plan Commission that property values will be enhanced by the commercial development. 10 Both parties effectively agree that vacating the plat and the covenant did not diminish the value of the Daniels’ property. Therefore, a suit for monetary relief under Indiana’s inverse condemnation proceedings would be futile, if not frivolous.
This does not mean that a taking has not occurred, or that the Daniels are not entitled to relief.
11
Indiana courts have held injunctive relief instead may be necessary to remedy interference with a landowner’s property rights for a private purpose.
See Indiana Dept. of Transp. v. Southern Bells,
B. Takings for a Public Purpose
Having concluded that the Daniels’ takings claim is ripe; we now proceed to the merits. We first address whether the vacation statute was applied unconstitutionally to ■ the Daniels and then address their facial challenge.
Cf. Renne v. Geary,
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides, “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” This limitation on governmental power has been imposed on the States through the Fourteenth Amendment,
see Phillips,
The property interest at issue here is the restrictive covenant that was included in the plat of Broadmoor limiting construction in the plats to single-family residences. By removing the Lots from the Plat and the restrictive covenants included therein, the Plan Commission has prevented the enforcement of the residential covenant against the current or future owners of the Lots. Under Indiana law it is well established that a restrictive covenant constitutes a constitutionally protected property interest.
Pulos v. James,
Next, we look to the Daniels’ claim that their property was taken not for a “public use.” The Supreme Court has held that implicit in the Fifth Amendment is a requirement that the government not take property for private purposes: “one person’s property may not be taken for the benefit of another private person without a justifying public purpose, even though compensation be paid.”
Thompson v. Consolidated Gas Utils. Corp.,
Even though the Supreme Court has required the existence of a public use to justify a taking, the burden on the state is remarkably light. When a state’s exercise of eminent domain power is “rationally related to a conceivable public purpose, the Court has never held a compensated taking to be proscribed by the Public Use Clause.”
Midkiff,
In this case, however, the legislature has not made a specific determination of what
*461
constitutes a “public use” under Ind.Code 36-7-3-ll(e) and instead has delegated that duty to the local Plan Commission.
See
Ind.Code 36 — 7—3—11(e) (“a plan commission shall approve the petition for vacation of all or part of a plat only upon a determination that ... it is in the public interest to vacate all or part of the plat.”). This has not been the situation in prior case law prescribing deference to state “public use” determinations. For example, in
Midkiff,
the Court ruled that the decisions of the Hawaii Housing Authority in determining whether state acquisition of a certain tract of land effectuated the public purposes of the Land Reform Act of 1967, as passed by the Hawaiian Legislature, would not be disturbed unless shown to be irrational.
Midkiff si
242,
Instead we are faced with a situation where a local plan commission is making legislatively unrestrained decisions as to what constitutes a public use. The Ninth Circuit has warned that takings made by local agencies without legislative authority serve to undermine the public use requirement.
See Armendariz v. Penman,
In this case, pursuant to Indiana Code § 36-7-3-ll(e) the Plan Commission determined that the vacation was in the public interest because “it would allow the site to be redeveloped with commercial uses which could be a more appropriate use for the property and could be a benefit to the immediate neighborhood. The uninhabited and deteriorating residential structures would be removed from the site.” In approving the rezoning and primary development plan, the Plan Commission also made several findings of fact:
(1) Nearby commercial development and increased traffic along Lima Road have made this property less desirable for residential use.
*462 (2) Redevelopment of the site for commercial uses will require development plan review by the plan commission. This review will address land use compatibility issues resulting from commercial use of the property, and will preserve property, values in the remainder of the subdivision.
(3) The proposed redevelopment of the site would create a commercial development which could be an asset to the surrounding neighborhood. Site development plan review will mitigate any negative impacts on the adjacent residential properties.
(4) The proposed rezoning will establish a desirable precedent in the area because: it will continue the established precedent for commercial development or redevelopment of properties fronting on Lima Road in this area.
At the same time that the Plan Commission approved the covenant vacation, it also rezoned the area for commercial uses and conditionally approved HNS’s development plan for the Lots that provided for a development of a 12,000 sq. ft. commercial space. Based on a plain reading of the Plan Commission’s findings it is apparent that the public benefit of the vacation and zoning action will not materialize absent any promised commercial development of the Lots by HNS or a subsequent owner. HNS is thus the primary beneficiary of the vacation of the restrictive covenant, and not Allen County. The direct benefit to HNS is emphasized further by the fact that rather than build the proposed shopping center, the property is currently up for sale as commercial property for $695,000. The residents of Allen County will see none of the possible improvement in their health, safety and welfare until HNS either sells the property to a potential developer or commercially develops the property itself. This private benefit does not necessarily doom the covenant vacation under current takings jurisprudence, as even takings that transfer property from one private person to another have been deemed valid as long as there is a public purpose underlying the transfer.
Hawaii Housing Auth. v. Midkiff,
1. Legislatively Determined Public Purposes
The Plan Commission’s stated purpose for the covenant vacation is the. development of commercial property and the removal of empty homes. The Indiana legislature has addressed, in other enactments, the public purpose requirement of eminent domain procedures in areas of commercial development and vacated homes in blighted areas. The Plan Commission’s statement of public use fails under either scenario.
First, under Indiana law, the Plan Commission may not condemn property if “commercial development” is the sole public purpose. In Indiana, local governments may designate areas “economic development areas” and establish redevelopment commissions based on findings that increased development in the region will promote employment, attract a new business enterprise, increase the property tax base, improve diversity of the economic base and create other similar benefits. Ind.Code 36-7-14-41(b)(4). Redevelopment commissions have several powers in economic development zones including purchasing, selling and leasing property, maintaining structures, providing financial assistance to local entities, and contracting
*463
to construct necessary structures. Ind. Code 36-7-14-12.2. However, Ind.Code 36-7-14-43(a)(7) specifically prohibits a commission from exercising the right of eminent domain in an economic development area.
See also, Evansville v. Reising,
Instead, redevelopment commissions must treat an area as “blighted” in order to use eminent domain to achieve the purpose of commercial development. Id. at 1111-12. Under Indiana law the clearance of blighted areas constitutes a public purpose sufficient to enable the exercise of eminent domain. Ind. Code § 36-7-14-2(a) (“The clearance, replanning, and redevelopment of blighted areas under this chapter are public uses and purposes for which public money may be spent and private property may be acquired.”). However, the determination of blight is a significant step that requires more than just a finding of a couple of vacant houses. See Ind.Code § 36-7-9-4.5. For vacant structures the Indiana legislature has authorized local governmental bodies to enact regulatory standards for repair and maintenance, and order repair or at most removal of the structure itself, providing certain procedural requirements are met. Id.; see also Ind.Code § 36-7-9-5.
Even if there were an argument that these structures constitute a blight, Indiana has established specific and detailed processes through which a local commission must go in order to make that determination. Ind.Code § 36-7-14-15. The code provides in part:
Whenever the redevelopment commission finds that an area in the territory under their jurisdiction has become blighted to an extent that cannot be corrected by regulatory processes or the ordinary operations of private enterprise without resort to this chapter, and that the public health and welfare will be benefitted by the acquisition and redevelopment of the area under this chapter, the commission shall cause to be prepared:
(1) maps and plats showing:
[the affected areas and designated public uses of those areas]
(2) lists of the owners of the various parcels of property proposed to be acquired; and
(3) an estimate of the cost of acquisition and redevelopment.
Ind.Code § 36-7-14-15.
Once these findings are made “the redevelopment commission shall adopt a resolution declaring that the blighted area is a menace to the social and economic interest of the unit and its inhabitants.” Id. The resolution must then be submitted to the plan commission which determines whether the resolution and the redevelopment plan conform to the plan of development for the unit and approve or disapprove the resolution and plan proposed. Ind.Code 36-7-14-16.
Obviously, the Plan Commission did not pursue this statutory option. Instead, it simply justified the vacation based on con-elusory and largely unsupported statements as to the state of the homes on *464 HNS properties. Because the Plan Commission has neglected to follow the statutory requirements for determining blight, they cannot now rely on that legislatively determined public use in order to justify their taking. To hold otherwise would obviate the procedural requirements of Indiana’s blight code. Because the Plan Commission has not relied on a legislative determination of public use, the traditional deference given to those determinations is not appropriate in this case. 18
2. Plan Commission’s Stated Public Purpose
Next we will examine whether the Plan Commission’s stated public purpose satisfies the Fifth Amendment’s public use requirement. As we have stated, the Court has held that the public use requirement is coterminous with the scope of a sovereign’s police powers.
See Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
First, this case contrasts sharply even with those cases where courts have pushed
*465
the limits of the Public Use Clause and have held that a state transfer of property to a private entity served a public interest. For example in
Poletown Neigh. Council v. City of Detroit,
Similarly, in
Hawaii Hous. Auth. v. Midkiff
the Supreme Court validated takings of private property for transfer to individuals under the Hawaii Land Reform Act.
Midkiff,
Here there is no determination that commercial development in and of itself would serve some overriding public purpose. In fact there is no limit as to the actual commercial or residential purposes that HNS may use the property. Under § 3-6-13-2 of the Allen County Zoning Ordinance land zoned C-2A may be used to provide “goods and services that meet day-to-day needs.” However, owners of areas that are zoned C-2A may also use the property for most C-1A and C-l uses such as “a service station, a tire store, a car wash, a laundromat, a tavern, a package liquor store, a massage salon, a bowling alley, a pool hall, billboards, and manufactured or mobile homes.”
See Daniels,
Secondly, the Plan Commission did not find that any eventual commercial development
would
be an asset to the community, merely that it
could
be an asset to the community. This type of possible public use does not satisfy the Fifth Amendment requirements. The Supreme Court has held that when there is a delegation of power to a local government to determine a public use, “it is not enough that property
may be devoted hereafter
to a public use for which there may be an appropriate condemnation.”
Vester,
In sum, because the Plan Commission has not followed legislative determinations of what constitutes a valid public use, nor provided any facts that demonstrate that the covenant vacation is substantially related to a public interest, we conclude that the Plan Commission has violated the pub- *467 lie use requirement of the Takings Clause by vacating the restrictive covenant for a private purpose.
C. Facial Challenge
In addition to holding that the Plan Commission violated the Daniels’ Fifth Amendment rights by vacating the restrictive covenant, the district court also held that Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11 was facially invalid under the Takings Clause. Subsection (e) of Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11 provides, in pertinent part:
The Plan Commission shall approve the petition for vacation of all or part of a plat only upon determination that:
1. Conditions in the platted area have changed so as to defeat the original purpose of the plat;
2. It is in the public interest to vacate all or part of the plat; and
3. The value of that part of land in the plat not owned by the petitioner will not be diminished by vacation.
Ind.Code § 36-7-3-ll(e). 22
A zoning regulation may be challenged on the basis that the “mere enactment” of the regulation is unconstitutional and constitutes a taking of property.
Agins v. City of Tiburon,
The Daniels argue that Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11 is facially invalid because it does not define what constitutes a public purpose. However, neither the Supreme Court nor this court has ever required a specific legislative statement as to the limits of a public purpose to avoid a Fifth Amendment facial challenge. It is true that in determining if the state action satisfies the Fifth Amendment’s Public Use Clause the Supreme Court has relied primarily, if not exclusively, upon legislative determinations of public purposes within the taking statute.
See, e.g., Hawaii Housing, Auth. v. Midkiff,
Also, the United States Constitution does not prescribe any particular allocation or separation of powers among the states.
See Markham v. Clark,
Even assuming,
arguendo,
that the Daniels could show that the covenant vacation statute was an impermissible delegation of legislative authority under Indiana law,
see, e.g., Telecommunications Ass’n of Indiana, Inc. v. Indiana Bell Tel. Co.,
The Daniels further challenge the procedures authorized by Indiana Code § 36-7-3-11 because those procedures demonstrate that the statute authorizes takings for private purpose. Under the procedures mandated by the statute, the Daniels claim that plat vacations only occur when a private individual requests that a plan commission alter plats (to the possible detriment of other private individuals) solely for the petitioner’s benefit. As a result, even though a typical petitioner could not have any motive for making a request other than for his sole benefit, the Plan Commission need only make eonelu-sory, written findings that the vacation of the covenants is “in the public interest.”
The statute, however, is not that porous. As stated above, the Public Use Clause is only violated if a person’s property is “taken for the benefit of another private person without a justifying public purpose, even though compensation be paid.”
Thompson,
IV.
In conclusion, the district court properly asserted subject matter jurisdiction over the Daniels’ claim, although not under Patsy, but because they were exempted from Williamson County’s ripeness requirements due to futility. The district court also properly concluded that Indiana Code 36-7-3-11 was unconstitutionally applied against the Daniels by effectuating a public taking for a private purpose. However the district court improperly found that Indiana Code 36-7-3-11 was unconstitutional on its face. The statute could be constitutionally applied and the Constitution does not prohibit specific delegations of state legislative power. For these and the foregoing reasons we Affirm the injunction against the Plan Commission from vacating the restrictive covenant of the Broadmoor Addition for a private purpose, but Reverse the district court decision finding Ind.Code § 36-7-3-11 facially unconstitutional.
Notes
. Broadmoor, with the exception of lot 1, was zoned RS-l/Suburban Residential at the time *450 of the petition. Lot 1, located on the corner of the plat on Lima Road, was explicitly exempted from the residential use requirement in the restrictive covenant at the time the subdivision was platted and was instead zoned C-l/Limited Commercial.
.
At oral argument, the Plan Commission verified that the Lots are currently listed for sale with a local Ft. Wayne realtor for $695,000.
See also Daniels v. Area Plan Comm’n of Allen County,
. In
Suitum v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
.
See also Samaad v. City of Dallas,
. In determining whether or not the Daniels claim is ripe for review under
Williamson County
it is immaterial whether the Daniels are classifying their federal claim as a Fifth Amendment takings claim or a substantive due process claim under the Fourteenth Amendment. We have chosen to review ripeness concerns in claims for takings for a private purpose under the Fifth Amendment's taking’s analysis even if a litigant has claimed that his property was taken in violation of his substantive due process rights.
See, e.g., Forseth,
.Other circuits have disagreed with this requirement. In
Montgomery
v.
Carter County, Tennessee,
The Sixth Circuit concluded that to the extent-that a plaintiff claims that her property was taken for a private use, the claim is ripe and the plaintiff may sue immediately without resorting to state remedies
Id.
at 771. Both the Fifth and Ninth Circuits have .also followed this line of reasoning.
See Samaad
v.
City of Dallas,
. In 2002, Ind.Code 32-24-1-16 replaced the prior inverse condemnation statute, Ind.Code 32-11-1-12, which was relied on by both parties. The new statute is substantively identical to its predecessor.
. Cf. Hoehne v. County of San Benito, 870
F.2d 529, 533 (9th Cir.1989) (takings claim ripe for review because California did not provide an inverse condemnation remedy at time of the alleged taking);
Corn v. City of Lauderdale Lakes,
. In this manner the case presented before us is distinguished from
Forseth, Covington Court
and
Gamble.
In all three of those cases, the plaintiffs had incurred pecuniary damages from an adverse zoning decision.
See Forseth,
. Whether a taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment exists under these circumstances is a separate issue and one discussed infra at III, 2.
.
Cf. Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Environ. Study Group, Inc.,
.Of course, the Daniels had the option of bringing their claim for equitable or declaratory relief in state court, but they were not *458 required to do so under Williamson County's ripeness requirements.
. The Daniels eventually amended their complaint to include a facial challenge to the constitutionality of the statute. Litigants are not required to meet the
Williamson County
ripeness requirements when solely mounting a pre-enforcement facial challenge to the constitutionality of a statute under the Fifth Amendment.
Yee v. City of Escondido,
. The Daniels' theory of the case has consistently been that the taking in this case resulted in a violation of the Takings Clause as opposed to a violation of their substantive due process rights. We have had an opportunity in the past to examine whether a taking for private purpose claim is more properly analyzed under the standards of the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause or the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
See Forseth,
. Indiana courts have also held that a restrictive covenant is a “species of. express contract,”
Columbia Club, Inc. v. American Fletcher Realty Corp.,
.
See also Cincinnati v. Vaster,
. We made a similar observation in 1993 in
Gamble v. Eau Claire County,
noting that we could find "no case in the last half century where a taking was squarely held to be for a private use.”
See Gamble,
. While there are other legislatively defined public purposes in the Indiana Code, we are not aware of any which could justify a taking by the Plan Commission in this case. See, e.g., Ind.Code 36-7-18-2 ("[t]he clearance, replanning, and reconstruction of the areas in which unsanitary or unsafe housing conditions exist and the providing of safe and sanitary dwelling accommodations for persons of low income are public uses and purposes for which public money may be spent and private property may be acquired.”); Ind.Code 36-9-11-5 (municipal parking facilities are public use); Ind.Code 36-9-2-17 (the improvement of drains in order to increase the public health is a public use).
. The Court has
not
defined, nor attempted to define when this test is met and has stated that "[a]n attempt to define its reach or trace [the police power's] outer limits is fruitless, for each case must turn on its own facts.”
Berman,
. For example, if HNS chose not to commercially develop the property but instead sold the Lots for residential uses, then the Plan Commission plat vacation would have no ef-feet on the plat or local community. If there is no effect on a local community then there can be no public purpose.
.
But see Rindge Co. v. Los Angeles, 262
U.S. 700, 707,
. This current version of § 36-7-3-11 incorporates amendments to the statute made in 1981 and 1986 after the Indiana Supreme Court found that it unconstitutionally permitted takings without a public purpose.
Pulos v. James,
