Lead Opinion
These two separate appeals, which .we have consolidated for purposes of this opinion, follow from the housing remedy portions of a prior judgment, entered in the
This case concerns the consent decree (“Consent Decree”) reached between the City of Yonkers, the United States and the Yonkers chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) designating 7 public housing sites for 200 units of housing east of the Saw Mill River Parkway. Two of these sites currently are owned by petitioners-appellants Yonkers Racing Corporation (the “Raceway”) and St. Joseph’s Seminary and College (the “Seminary”), respectively. Pursuant to the terms of the Consent Decree approved by the Yonkers city council (the “City Council”) and entered by the district court on January 28, 1988, the City initiated, under pain of contempt, condemnation proceedings in state court against the Raceway and Seminary sites. Thereafter, the Raceway and the Seminary filed separate petitions against the City in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Westchester County, pursuant to Article 78 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR), seeking to enjoin the condemnation of their respective properties. On May 27, 1988, Judge Sand ordered the City of Yonkers to remove the Article 78 proceedings to the district court.
The Raceway and the Seminary appeal from an order denying their motions to remand the Article 78 proceedings back to state court and from an order dismissing their Article 78 petitions on the merits. The district court held that removal was authorized under the federal removal statutes, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441, 1443, and the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651. In addition, the court determined that the extraordinary nature of the proceedings warranted application of statutory exemptions from the notice, hearing and review requirements of the New York Eminent Domain Procedure Law (EDPL) and from the provisions of the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA). The district court also found that, even if such exemptions did not apply, there was such substantial compliance with the notice, hearing and review provisions of state law that petitioners’ statutory rights were not violated. Finally, the district court considered the Seminary’s first and fourteenth amendment free exercise challenge to the taking of its property and held that, since the inclusion of the Seminary’s property was an integral part of the Consent Decree and thus essential to efforts designed to remedy racial segregation in housing, no valid claim for a violation of the first amendment had been advanced.
On appeal, the Raceway and the Seminary principally contend that removal was improper under the federal removal statutes and the All Writs Act since only a defendant is permitted to remove and the City of Yonkers was a plaintiff, not a defendant, in the underlying condemnation proceedings. Petitioners further contend that not only are the exemptions to the EDPL and SEQRA inapplicable but that full compliance with the notice, hearing and review provisions of the statutes is required. The Seminary separately argues that the district court erred in rejecting its free exercise defense to the condemnation of its property without the benefit of a hearing to determine whether other reasonable alternatives exist to the taking of religiously owned and used property.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s order denying petitioners’ motions to remand for lack of federal removal jurisdiction, but solely on the authority of the All Writs Act. We also affirm the court’s order dismissing the Article 78 petitions in all respects except with regard to the Seminary’s first amendment
BACKGROUND
The underlying facts of the Yonkers litigation are set forth in exhaustive fashion in Judge Kearse’s recent opinion affirming the district court’s finding of liability against the City under both Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (the “Fair Housing Act”), 42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq., and the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment, and therefore need not be restated here. For our purposes, it suffices simply to emphasize that this court concluded, as did Judge Sand, that “ ‘the extreme concentration of subsidized housing that exists in Southwest Yonkers today is the result of a pattern and practice of racial discrimination by City officials, pursued in response to constituent pressures[,] to select or support only sites that would preserve existing patterns of racial segregation, and to reject or oppose sites that would threaten existing patterns of segregation.’”
To remedy the statutory and constitutional violations, the district court in part ordered the City to fulfill its preexisting commitment with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to provide sites for 200 units of public housing east of the Saw Mill River Parkway funded by HUD’s Community Development Block Grant program.
Two of the privately owned properties included the Raceway site, a 1.2-acre parcel now used as a parking lot and currently slated for 24 units of housing, and the Seminary site, a 2-acre parcel on the border of the Seminary’s 44-acre property and also currently slated for 24 units of housing. On January 25, 1988 — the date that the City reached agreement with the United States on the Consent Decree — the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York on behalf of the Seminary issued a statement concerning the designation of the Seminary site:
The Archdiocese of New York has been informed that there has been a recent decision to build units of affordable housing upon property now belonging to the Archdiocesan Major Seminary, Saint Joseph’s, in the Dunwoodie section of Yonkers. Since it has been decided to proceed with these plans, the Archdiocese will do everything possible to promote the success of the effort....
Advised of the Cardinal’s intent to facilitate the construction of public housing on the Seminary site, Judge Sand welcomed the Church’s participation and support. A month later, the City of Yonkers, pursuant to the terms of the Consent Decree, made offers of purchase to the owners of each privately owned site; the Archdiocese rejected the City’s offer on March 18, 1988. On March 21, John Cardinal O’Connor wrote to Judge Sand stating that while the Archdiocese supported the addition of public housing in Yonkers, it believed there were “serious problems in the current plan.” Cardinal O’Connor expressed concern that four of the seven housing sites
The district court responded by suggesting that the City and the Archdiocese consider substituting an alternate site in place of the Seminary property. In the interim, the court ordered the City of Yonkers to initiate eminent domain proceedings against the Seminary as well as against the Raceway, which also had rejected the City’s offer to purchase its property. On April 24, 1988, two days after the City filed condemnation petitions in state court, the Cardinal declared that the Consent Decree was “fatally flawed.” In addition, he said he was “deeply resentful” of the process which led to the condemnation action and which put the Archdiocese in the “humiliating position” of being perceived as “so resistant to making the property available that the court had to require the city to condemn the property.”
The City of Yonkers then attempted to vacate the Consent Decree on the basis of a “mutual mistake” between the City Council and the Archdiocese. In support of its motion to vacate under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) dated May 2, 1988, the City argued that the Cardinal’s endorsement of the Consent Decree and his willingness to sell the Seminary site had been essential to the City’s approval of the decree — the support of the Catholic Church being critical in order to achieve acceptance of the housing plan by the City’s residents, a substantial proportion of whom are Catholic. At oral argument on the motion to vacate, the district court determined that while the Cardinal’s support for the Consent Decree had been a “welcome occurrence,” it had not been so crucial that his subsequent withdrawal of support was sufficient to invalidate the decree. In any event, the court noted that, even assuming there had been a mistake, the proper course of action for the City was simply to propose a modification of the Consent Decree designating an alternative to the Seminary site. Judge Sand thereupon directed the City to meet with the Archdiocese to see if some accommodation could be reached.
Meanwhile, the Seminary and the Raceway filed answers with affirmative defenses to the condemnation petitions, and on May 11, 1988, instituted Article 78 proceedings against the City claiming that the proposed condemnations were “null and void.” The parties also sought injunctive relief preventing the City from acquiring the two sites. By the end of May, once it became clear that the City and the Archdiocese had failed to reach any agreement regarding the designation of an alternate housing site and that the City Council would not propose any modification of the Consent Decree, the United States filed an order to show cause in the district court seeking removal of the Article 78 proceedings from state court. On May 27, 1988, the district court granted the order directing the City to remove the Article 78 proceedings to federal court and permitted the United States and the NAACP, plaintiffs in the underlying civil rights litigation, to intervene as respondents.
In ordering removal of the Article 78 proceedings, the district court explained:
During the informal discussions which preceded entry of the consent decree, the question was raised whether [the] condemnation proceedings should be commenced in [the district] court or in state court. It was then the understanding of the parties that the sole issue which would be present in the condemnation proceedings related to value, that is, the amount to be paid to the property owner whose land was condemned by the City of Yonkers in implementation of the housing remedy order. It was with that understanding and intention that the consent decree did not contain a provision requiring that the condemnation proceedings go forward in [the district] court....
Judge Sand also found a “significant risk” if removal were not ordered that the City
Following removal, petitioners filed motions to remand the Article 78 proceedings to state court. On June 8, 1988, the district court heard argument from counsel on the motions to remand, the merits of the Article 78 proceedings and the City’s motion to vacate the Consent Decree. With regard to the motions to remand, the court held that removal was authorized under the general federal removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441, the civil rights removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1443, and the All Writs Act. The court further stated that removal was appropriate because the petitioners’ defenses to the condemnations were best litigated in federal court with the benefit of an existing record, that removal would not deprive petitioners of their right to be heard on the merits of their Article 78 petitions, and that removal would eliminate the possibility of inconsistent orders from two courts.
On the merits of the Article 78 petitions, the district court concluded that the “emergency situation” provision of section 206(D) of the EDPL applied in the instant case to exempt the City of Yonkers from compli-anee with the notice, hearing and review requirements of the statute, and that the proposed condemnations were exempt from SEQRA pursuant to the court order provisions of SEQRA’s implementing regulations. 6 NYCRR § 617.2(q). Moreover, according to the district court, the process by which the public housing sites were designated and reviewed constituted substantial compliance with the purposes of the notice, hearing and review requirements of state law.
As for the Seminary’s free exercise challenge, the district court indicated that aside from the issue of the validity of the Seminary’s claim of a protectible religious purpose for the two-acre site under the first amendment, the alleged interference with the pastoral contemplative atmosphere of the only seminary in the Archdiocese had to be balanced against the need to vindicate the federal constitutional rights of those citizens of Yonkers who have been denied fair housing. In striking the balance in favor of vindication of fair housing rights, the court found the inclusion of the Seminary site in the Consent Decree to be essential.
Accordingly, the district court denied petitioners’ motions to remand and the City’s motion to vacate the Consent Decree,
DISCUSSION
I. JURISDICTION
A. The Removal Statutes
Section 1441(a) of Title 28 provides in pertinent part that “any civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have origi
The initial question to be considered on this appeal is whether the City of Yonkers was correctly deemed by the district court to be a defendant for removal purposes under either statute. Appellants argue that Yonkers was not a proper party to petition the state court to remove the Article 78 proceedings since it was the plaintiff in the underlying condemnation proceedings, and the Article 78 proceedings were merely state law procedural vehicles for raising defenses to the condemnation petitions. See Matter of Piotrowski v. Town of Glenville,
The United States and the NAACP,
Both Supreme Court decisions cited by appellants involved Iowa eminent domain statutes under which the condemnee was required to initiate a proceeding contesting the assessment of the condemned property’s value arrived at by a sheriff’s jury. In that separate proceeding, the condemnee was the plaintiff under state law. In each case, the Supreme Court held that in construing the removal statute, federal law determined who was the plaintiff and who was the defendant, Chicago, Rock Island,
Intervenors contend that the Article 78 proceedings were fundamentally different from the state court actions in Mason City and Chicago, Rock Island, which constituted challenges to property valuations. Their argument essentially is that the issues decided in the removed Article 78 proceedings — whether the City complied with state procedural requirements, whether the sites were properly designated, and wheth
In view of the foregoing, we have serious doubts in light of Mason City and Chicago, Rock Island whether the removal statutes provided a proper basis to compel the City of Yonkers to remove the Article 78 proceedings to federal court. Quite simply, a party who is in the position of a plaintiff cannot remove. Cf. White v. Wellington,
B. The All Writs Act
The All Writs Act (the “Act”) provides that federal courts “may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). The Act “authorizes a federal court in exceptional circumstances to issue such orders to persons ‘who, though not parties to the original action or engaged in wrongdoing, are in a position to frustrate the implementation of a court order or the proper administration of justice, and encompasses even those who have not taken any affirmative action to hinder justice.’” Benjamin v. Malcolm,
Petitioners maintain that the federal removal statutes are the exclusive sources of removal jurisdiction. We disagree. In Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction, the Supreme Court expressly left open the question of the availability of the All Writs Act in exceptional circumstances to issue the writ when traditional statutory procedures clearly are inadequate. See
The obligation of the City of Yonkers under the Constitution of the United States to remedy violations of civil rights is paramount. See, e.g., Cooper v. Aaron,
This court previously has held that the All Writs Act enables a federal court in an exceptional case to exercise its “residual jurisdictional authority” to issue orders against non-parties to a civil rights action in order to vindicate the constitutional rights of existing parties. See Benjamin v. Malcolm,
In the instant case, the record indicates that had the district court known from the outset that the Raceway and the Seminary would challenge the designation of their properties for condemnation as “null and void,” the Consent Decree would have included a provision requiring that the condemnation proceedings be instituted in federal court, presumably under the “residual jurisdictional authority” of the All Writs Act. In retrospect, the assertion by the district court of jurisdiction in the first instance over the condemnation of petitioners’ properties might have been a better course of action. We certainly would be less troubled by the use of the All Writs Act to initiate the condemnation proceedings in federal court had Judge Sand deemed petitioners to be necessary third parties to the implementation of the Consent Decree in the underlying civil rights litigation. Nevertheless, we must decide the case before us, and as a practical matter we see no reason why it is any less “necessary or appropriate” at this stage of the proceedings to invoke the authority of the All Writs Act. Cf. In re Baldwin-United Corp.,
In sum, we agree with the district court that this is indeed an exceptional case. While we too have confidence in the “ability, objectivity, [and] integrity of the state court” to render an appropriate decision in an Article 78 proceeding, the fact remains, as the district court recognized, that “the issues raised [by the Article 78 proceed-
Despite the City’s assurances through its counsel that it would vigorously defend against the Article 78 petitions, we have serious doubts whether a reluctant con-demnor, which at every opportunity has resisted implementation of the Housing Remedy Order, could be counted on in state court to adequately protect the integrity of the Consent Decree. To believe otherwise would be to ignore the fact that Yonkers entered into the Consent Decree and instituted the condemnation proceedings only after being threatened by the district court with sanctions for contempt. “One must realistically deal with the fact,” Judge Sand explained, “that the positions which the city would be compelled to take in [state court] would be significantly contrary to positions taken by [it] in [the district] court.” The inconsistency of these positions convinces us, therefore, of the necessity to exercise removal jurisdiction to prevent frustration of the Housing Remedy Order.
Accordingly, we hold that removal was proper under the All Writs Act. We do so because removal was necessary to protect the integrity of the Consent Decree and because the issues raised by the Article 78 petitions cannot be separated from the relief provided by the Consent Decree. Cf. Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ.,
II. THE MERITS OF THE ARTICLE 78 PETITIONS
A. EDPL
The Raceway and the Seminary contend on the merits that the City failed to comply with the notice, hearing and review requirements of Article 2 of New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law (EDPL). In its condemnation petitions, the City
Section 201 of the EDPL provides that, “prior to acquisition, the condemnor, in order to inform the public and to review the public use to be served by a proposed public project and the impact on the environment and residents of the locality where such project will be constructed, shall conduct a public hearing.” The hearing must be' held on at least ten days prior notice, EDPL § 202, and following the hearing, the condemnor is required, within ninety days, to make findings and a determination of the public purpose to be served by the proposed condemnation. EDPL § 204. The factors to be considered in making such determination and findings include:
(1) the public use, benefit or purpose to be served by the proposed public project;
(2) the approximate location for the proposed public project and the reasons for the selection of that location;
(3) the general effect of the proposed project on the environment and residents of the locality;
(4) such other factors as [the condemnor] considers relevant.
Id. § 204(B).
A condemnor is exempt from compliance with the provisions of Article 2 of the EDPL when, inter alia, “because of an emergency situation the public interest will be endangered by any delay caused by the public hearing requirement in this article.” Id. § 206(D). The district court found that “[contrary to the claims of St. Joseph’s and the Raceway, the City of Yonkers, in a very real sense, is faced with an emergency” (emphasis in original). As the court further explained, “[t]his matter must end” because it is “tearing Yonkers apart and Yonkers is bleeding.”
We believe that the district court's factual finding of such an “emergency situation” is amply supported by the record. See id. § 207(C)(3), (4) (“scope of the review shall be limited to whether ... determination and findings were made in accordance with procedures set forth in [Article 2], and [whether] a public use, benefit or purpose will be served by the proposed acquisition”); see also Gerges v. Koch,
Appellants maintain that the only emergency in this case is the result of Yonkers own intransigence, and consequently that full compliance with the terms of the statute cannot be excused. We disagree. An assessment of blame regarding the predicament in which Yonkers presently finds itself is quite frankly irrelevant to a determination of whether or not Yonkers is faced with an “emergency situation” under the statute. Cf. Gerges,
Appellants concede that the construction of low income housing in Yonkers required by the Housing Remedy Order would serve a valid public purpose. In addition, as the district court stated, “[t]he process by which the public housing sites designated in the Consent Decree were determined, the notoriety of that process, the review already given to those sites and the continuing review ... by HUD certainly satisfied the substance of the State law provisions upon which St. Joseph’s and the Raceway predicate their claims.” See also Aswad v. City School Dist.,
Consequently, given the undisputed public purpose inherent in the implementation of the Housing Remedy Order and the nature and extent of the review process, we are convinced that there was a valid determination that the proposed condemnations would be in the public interest as required under Article 2 of the EDPL.
B. SEQRA
The New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA), Environmental Conservation Law (ECL) § 8-0101 et seq., requires the preparation of an environmental impact statement (EIS) by state and local agencies “on any action they propose or approve which may have a significant effect on the environment.” Id. § 8-0109(2) (emphasis added). Pursuant to regulations adopted thereunder, the Department of Environmental Conservation has determined the types of actions having such a “significant effect” (“Type I” actions) for which an EIS must be prepared. 6 NYCRR § 617.12. When an EIS is required, the full panoply of procedures prescribed under SEQRA comes into play. See ECL § 8-0109. If, on the other hand, it is determined that the proposed action is one not likely to have a significant effect on the environment (“Type II” action), then such action “do[es] not require [an] environmental impact statementf ] or any other determination or procedure” under SEQRA. 6 NYCRR § 617.13; see Jackson v. New York State Urban Dev. Corp.,
Although appellants concede that the proposed condemnations of the two sites are not Type I actions requiring the preparation of an EIS, see 6 NYCRR § 617.12(b),
In any event, we agree with the district court that the proposed condemnations of the Raceway and the Seminary sites are exempt from compliance with SEQRA. The implementing regulations to SEQRA expressly provide an exemption for actions “required to be undertaken pursuant to a judgment or order” and for “actions ... of any court.” 6 NYCRR § 617.2(q)(l), (5). Accordingly, in view of the fact that the City was compelled by a federal court order to institute condemnation proceedings against the subject properties and that there was, as the district court found, a “meticulous inquiry” regarding environmental factors, we conclude that, the requirements of SEQRA were satisfied in all respects.
C. The First Amendment
We come finally to the Seminary’s challenge to the condemnation of its property on first amendment grounds.
The first amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law ... prohibiting the free exercise [of religion].” U.S. Const. amend. I; see Cantwell v. Connecticut,
The Seminary’s free exercise challenge to the proposed taking of its property raises an issue which has only very rarely been presented. While the condemnation of church property for public use is not unheard of, see, e.g., United States v. 564.54 Acres of Land, More or Less,
In Pillar of Fire, an evangelical sect sought to enjoin a municipal urban renewal agency from condemning a church building said to have unique religious significance. The building was alleged to be sui generis and the birthplace of the Pillar of Fire denomination. However, the record contained no findings indicating that the trial court weighed the competing interests of church and state regarding the proposed condemnation. After expressing concern about “direct confrontations of the sort in this ease [which] have been avoided because legislatures and administrative bodies have generally accorded great respect to religious organizations,”
In support of its claim of a free exercise infringement, the Seminary, during the June 8, 1988 proceedings before the district court, relied principally on an affidavit of Monsignor Edwin O’Brien, the Rector at St. Joseph’s, who stated that the Seminary grounds, including the two acres designated for public housing, form an “apron” of
The district court considered without resolving the question of whether the taking of the Seminary’s property would constitute an interference with the free exercise rights of the Archdiocese. Counsel for the Seminary argued before the district court that, because the use of the two acres would substantially affect the work at the Seminary, the condemnation of the site would violate the first amendment. He added, however, that that “doesn’t mean ... the church could not agree voluntarily ... to the use of the property ..., but [the property] is not going to be ... willingly subjected to condemnation under this plan.” Clearly perplexed by the “varying positions” of the Archdiocese regarding the inclusion of its property as part of the Consent Decree, the district court described the Seminary’s claim of religious interference as equivocal: “if there [is] agreement by the Archdiocese with the overall plan, it [would] allow the use of this property, and that would not interfere with free exercise rights; but since the Archdiocese has reservations ... with respect to the overall plan, it is resisting the taking on free exercise grounds.” Nevertheless, the district court assumed the validity of the Archdiocese’s claim of religious use of the property and proceeded to balance the competing interests of church and state, finding that the purported constitutional necessity to include the Seminary property into the Consent Decree outweighed the Seminary’s first amendment rights.
The Seminary argues on appeal that “while it is very true that a remedy for the proven segregative policies of the City is necessary, it is just as true that the Seminary property is not necessary to that remedy.” Reply Brief at 22 (emphasis in original). The Archdiocese further contends that the City’s refusal to modify the decree because it believed there were no “politically acceptable” alternatives to the Seminary site is hardly a sufficient reason to justify infringement of a first amendment privilege. In the Seminary’s view, therefore, the district court’s conclusion concerning the compelling need for the Seminary’s property was simply not supported by the record.
Appellees respond first by claiming that under Lyng the Seminary was unable to show that the condemnation of its property would have a coercive or penal effect on the practice of religion. See
Appellees seize upon the first amendment principles considered in Lyng in support of their contention that the free exercise clause does not prohibit governmental action that would substantially interfere with the practice of religion so long as the government’s conduct is not actually coercive or penal in nature. We disagree. The Lyng Court declined to determine the “exact line between unconstitutional prohibitions on the free exercise of religion and the legitimate conduct by government of its own affairs.” Id. The Supreme Court merely held that “whatever” the effect completion of the roadway might have on traditional Indian religious practices, the government could not be denied use of its own land. Id. at 1327 (citing with approval Bowen v. Roy,
The Seminary’s initial willingness to sell the two-acre parcel in January 1988 does not alter our determination that the proposed taking of the Seminary’s property raises a significant question under the first amendment. As the district court itself stated, “if [the] taking [of] these two acres [constitutes] an interference with [the] free exercise of a religion[,] that is the case regardless of what the attitude of the church is to the overall [housing] plan.” There is in our judgment an enormous difference between the Archdiocese agreeing to sell its property and the government proceeding to condemn it. We certainly do not take lightly the Seminary’s claim of interference with a first amendment right. In any event, the district court assumed for purposes of its decision the validity of the Seminary’s claim of religious interference. To have held otherwise, the district court would have had to hold a plenary hearing on the issue. Indeed, since the record before us does not reflect a considered judgment on the religious interference question, we do not preclude the district court on remand from addressing this issue. Never
Turning to the question of whether the condemnation of the Seminary’s property is essential to achieve a compelling state interest, it is well settled that a limitation by the government on the free exercise of religion is permitted only when the state can demonstrate that a compelling interest justifies the restriction and that no alternate means of accomplishing the state’s compelling interest are available. See Brandon v. Board of Educ.,
We do not agree that this is necessarily so. Although the district court considered the universe of reasonable alternate sites to be limited to those “capable of being utilized in a federal decree [with] a reasonable timetable for implementation,” the court also clearly recognized the availability of such sites since it was willing to permit the City to designate a substitute for the Seminary property. Thus, the City’s steadfast refusal to propose a modification of the Consent Decree to delete the Seminary site does not provide a sufficient basis to justify interference with petitioner’s first amendment rights. While the City now takes the position that the “framework for remedying the constitutional violation found by the district court cannot be modified simply by substituting sites [because t]here are no politically acceptable alternatives,” City of Yonkers Brief at 35, the fact remains that political expediency is far from a compelling reason to force the Seminary to give up its property in derogation of a constitutional right.
Consequently, assuming as we do for purposes of this appeal that the taking otherwise impermissibly burdens the Seminary’s free exercise rights, the Seminary is entitled to be heard on the issue whether the taking is necessary to vindicate a compelling state interest. At such a plenary hearing with expert testimony from both sides and in which the competing interests of church and state are fully addressed and the availability of reasonable alternate sites seriously considered, the district court will be able to determine whether the public interest in remedying discrimination can be reasonably accomplished without the taking of the Seminary’s property. The point is that on the basis of the existing record before us, we are not in a position to make an intelligent judgment in this matter one way or the other. The protections afforded by the first amendment require at the very least that the Seminary have a full and fair opportunity to have its rights considered in an attempt — consistent with the “great respect” courts accord religious groups — to avoid a direct confrontation between church and state. See Pillar of Fire,
One final word is in order. The patience exhibited by the district court under enormously trying circumstances is commendable. Judge Sand has always kept sight of the decisive objective in this case: “[t]hat is, to build the [200 units of] housing as quickly as possible in a manner ... which
CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court’s order denying petitioners’ motions to remand for lack of federal removal jurisdiction under the authority of the All Writs Act. We also affirm the court’s order dismissing the Article 78 petitions in every respect except with regard to the Seminary’s first amendment challenge to the taking of its property which is remanded to the district court for further consideration consistent with the views expressed in this opinion. The mandate shall issue in 7 days, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed in part, vacated and remanded in part.
Notes
. The City of Yonkers has not sought appellate review of the denial of its motion to vacate the Consent Decree and indeed is precluded from doing so under the terms of that decree.
. In the district court, the City of Yonkers opposed Judge Sand's assertion of removal jurisdiction over the Article 78 proceedings. In its brief on appeal, the City has again questioned whether the district court properly “divest[ed] the New York Supreme Court of jurisdiction to resolve the Article 78 proceedings.” The City of Yonkers Brief at 8. Nevertheless, because in the City’s view, "it would be wasteful to require the matters to be relitigated in the state court," id. at 9, the City has argued on appeal in favor of an affirmance on the jurisdictional issue as well as on the disposition of the merits of the Article 78 petitions.
. The Seminary also challenges the proposed taking of its property under Article I, § 3, of the New York State Constitution. The Seminary did not make any argument in the district court or in its brief on appeal, however, based specifically on New York law. We thus are afforded no grounds to consider whether New York’s "free exercise and enjoyment of religious ... worship” clause provides any broader protection than the first amendment regarding the City's proposed acquisition of the Seminary site, cf. Brown v. McGinnis,
. On remand, the trial court found that, despite Pillar of Fire’s allegations to the contrary, the church property was neither the birthplace nor the mother church of the Pillar of Fire denomination. When the case returned to the Colorado Supreme Court on appeal, the court upheld the trial court’s subsequent finding that the church property was not sui generis and also cited evidence from the record supporting the state’s “weighty and substantial" need for the property. Denver Urban Renewal Auth. v. Pillar of Fire,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. In my view, the Article 78 proceedings were improperly removed and should be remanded to state court. Accordingly, I would not reach the merits.
The facts respecting the removal are straightforward. The City commenced condemnation proceedings against the Raceway and the Seminary, as required by the Consent Decree, on April 21, 1988. The Raceway and the Seminary filed answers and, on May 18, 1988, filed Article 78 petitions as well, presumably for protective reasons.
On the morning of May 27, 1988, before any significant action had been taken in state court with respect either to the condemnation or Article 78 proceedings, the district court signed an order to show cause bringing on, later that morning, a motion by the United States in the federal litigation to compel the City to petition for removal of the Article 78 proceedings to the federal district court. The motion was granted, and the City so ordered, later that day. Accordingly, the City filed a petition for removal on May 31, 1988, whereupon the Raceway and Seminary moved to remand the Article 78 proceedings to state court.
On June 8, 1988, the district court heard arguments on both the motions to remand and the merits of the Article 78 proceedings. That day, the district court denied the motions to remand, rejected all of the claims raised by the Raceway and the Seminary concerning the merits of the Article 78 proceedings, and dismissed the Article 78 proceedings. The district court then ordered:
that St. Joseph’s and the Raceway shall forthwith each serve on the State court in the pending eminent domain proceedings against their properties a copy of this Order and present to such Court a proposed order stating that, insofar as all substantive grounds for objection to the proceedings in question have been fully litigated and resolved in this Court, the City of Yonkers’ petitions in those actions should be granted and the eminent domain proceedings shall go forward in accordance with State law in order to determine the sole remaining issue of valuation of St. Joseph’s and the Raceway’s properties.2
As to the general and civil rights removal statutes, both allow removal only by a “defendant” (or, in the case of section 1441, “defendants,” presumably a distinction without a difference), and the Supreme Court has twice held that whatever labels state law may apply, a condemnee is a defendant for purposes of federal removal statutes. See Chicago, Rock Island & Pac. R.R. v. Stude,
In all candor, given the clear language of the pertinent statutes and the equally clear holdings of two Supreme Court decisions, I do not regard this question as difficult, or even close. Removal is manifestly not warranted by 28 U.S.C. § 1441 (1982 and Supp. IV 1986) or 28 U.S.C. § 1443 (1982). This brings us to the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a) (1982). Cf. 28 U.S.C. § 2283 (1982) (federal court stay of state court proceedings).
Echoing the rationale expressed by the district court, the majority concludes that “because of the significant risk of inconsistent decrees from two courts, it was ‘necessary or appropriate’ [within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a) (1982) ] for the district court to invoke the residual jurisdictional authority of the All Writs Act.” The majority notes also that, in light of the history of the underlying federal litigation, the City is likely to be a reluctant and ineffective party to the state condemnation proceedings, whatever assurances it may give to the federal district court in that regard.
In reaching this conclusion, the majority cites and discusses the leading Supreme Court case on this issue, Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction v. United States Marshals Service,
The All Writs Act is a residual source of authority to issue writs that are not otherwise covered by statute. Where a statute specifically addresses the particular issue at hand, it is that authority, and not the All Writs Act, that is controlling. Although the Act empowers federal courts to fashion extraordinary remedies when the need arises, it does not authorize them to issue ad hoc writs whenever compliance with statutory procedures appears inconvenient or less appropriate.
Id. at 42-43,
Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction held that the pertinent habeas corpus statute, which stated that the writ should be directed “to the person in whose custody the party is detained,” did not authorize direction of the writ to a noncustodian; and that the All Writs Act should not be invoked for that purpose in view of the statute specifically addressed to the situation and making a different provision. Id. at 42-45,
There may be exceptional circumstances in which a district court can show clearly the inadequacy of traditional habeas corpus writs, such as where there are serious security risks. In such circumstances, a district court may find it “necessary or appropriate” for Marshals to transport state prisoners. We therefore leave open the question of the availability ofthe All Writs Act to authorize such an order where exceptional circumstances require it.
Id. at 42-43,
When the issue which this court must decide is properly framed in terms of the controlling authority of Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction, it is apparent that the removal undertaken below and approved by the majority here was not warranted by the All Writs Act. Whatever the difficulties in the underlying federal civil rights litigation, to which of course the Raceway and the Seminary are not parties, I see no warrant for a preemptive strike upon a state court which had not even begun to consider the eminent domain proceedings pending before it.
Both the district court below and the majority here acknowledge the “ability, objectivity, [and] integrity of the state court.” The officers of that state court are, it might be added, sworn to support the Constitution of the United States. U.S. Const. Art. VI, cl. 3. Accordingly, the state court was entitled to a presumption at the outset of the condemnation proceeding that it would proceed with sensitivity to and awareness of the legal and social context in which the condemnations are occurring.
The authorities cited by the majority in support of removal are easily distinguishable. United States Alkali Export Ass’n, Inc. v. United States,
The All Writs Act was invoked in Benjamin v. Malcolm,
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ.,
There was no analogue in Swann, moreover, to the action of the district court here in removing the Article 78 proceedings from state court, purporting to determine all the substantive issues in that proceeding the same day the removal occurred, and then directing the parties to present a proposed order to the state court, before which the related condemnation proceedings remained pending, reciting that all the substantive issues in the condemnation proceedings had been decided and the state court should accordingly proceed “to determine the sole remaining issue of valuation.”
I am afraid that the fevered and highly publicized situation in Yonkers has led both the district court and my colleagues to a novel and unwarranted application of the All Writs Act which is abusive both of the condemnees and, more importantly, of the most elementary principles of the comity that should exist between federal and state courts. I would not, of course, following Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction, rule out the use of the extraordinary residual authority provided by that statute if future circumstances warrant its invocation. In my view, however, its application in the circumstances presented by this record was manifestly premature and improper. I therefore respectfully dissent.
. Compare Piotrowski v. Town of Glenville,
. Because only the Article 78 proceedings had been removed, the condemnation proceedings remained pending before the state court, thus providing a basis for a state court determination as to value.
. It was similarly premature to allow removal on the assumption that the City would be a reluctant condemnor when, whatever weight is accorded to that hypothesis, the United States and/or the N.A.A.C.P. could seek to intervene in the state court proceedings, and it appears likely that such an application would be granted. See N.Y.Civ.Prac. L. & R. 1013 (1976); Bay State Heating & Air Conditioning Co. v. Am. Ins. Co.,
. 22 U.S.C. § 2283 (1982) provides:
A court of the United States may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court except as expressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.
