Matsuda v. City and County of Honolulu ( 2008 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    SALLY A. MATSUDA, Trustee of the   
    Sally A. Matsuda Self-Trusteed
    Trust dated October 15, 1993;
    RALPH JAMES MITCHELL; LUCY
    MITCHELL; NOOSHA FESHARAKI;
    EARL KIDDER; JEENIE MARIE
    KIDDER; JAMES RAPISARDA;
    JONATHAN VON BRANA; THOMAS
    PRESTON; LOREN HOHMAN; HERBERT
    CAPLAN; ELENA PECILE, Co-Trustee
    of the Herbert Caplan and Elena
    V. Pecile Trust dated March 27,          No. 06-15337
    2003; WILMA PARKER, Trustee of
    the Wilma I. Parker Trust dated           D.C. No.
    CV-05-00125-DAE
    March 16, 1989 as amended; TROY           OPINION
    WILLIAMS; LARRY WEISNER;
    DELORES WEISNER; MARIANNE
    MARION JAEGER; RICHARD JOHNSON;
    WILLIAM GARRETT FUSON; KANG
    YUK LEE; SUK JA LEE; CLAUDE
    ROTHE, Trustee of the Claude R.
    Rothe Living Trust dated March
    26, 1998; ALVIN OLSON, Trustee
    under Alvin R. Olson Revocable
    Trust Agreement dated July 20,
    1998;
    
    395
    396                 MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    NATALIA INDRASARI; WARREN              
    SWEET, Trustee of the Sweet John
    Revocable Trust dated June 21,
    1991; RHEBA ALICE SWEET; ROBERT
    MEHRING; AYUMI WATANABE
    MEHRING; ARNOLD FLEMMINGS;
    MARIANA FLEMMINGS, Co-Trustee
    of the Arnold Theodore
    Flemmings and Mariana
    Flemmings Revocable Living
    Trust dated December 6, 1999;
    MELVIN TAKEO MATSUOKA; DELWIN
    SCHNEIDER; KATHERINE SCHNEIDER,
    
    Trustee under the Delwin Byron
    Schneider and Katherine Louise
    Schneider Family Trust dated
    October 14, 1996; RONALD
    SILVERMAN; FARHAD SIMYAR; FRANK
    WINSTON KERN,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Hawaii
    David A. Ezra, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 2, 2007—Honolulu, Hawaii
    Filed January 14, 2008
    Before: Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, A. Wallace Tashima, and
    Milan D. Smith, Jr., Circuit Judges.
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU        397
    Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                  399
    COUNSEL
    David A. Nakashima, Alston Hunt Floyd & Ing, Honolulu,
    Hawaii, argued the cause for the plaintiffs-appellants, and
    filed briefs; Lerisa L. Heroldt and Clyde J. Wadsworth, Als-
    ton Hunt Floyd & Ing, Honolulu, Hawaii, were on the briefs.
    Don S. Kitaoka, Deputy Corporation Counsel, City and
    County of Honlulu, Hawaii, argued the cause for the
    400                   MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    defendant-appellee and filed a brief; Carrie K.S. Okinaga,
    Corporation Counsel, Paul M. Iguchi and Derek T.
    Mayeshiro, Deputy Corporation Counsels, City and County of
    Honolulu, Hawaii, were on the briefs.
    OPINION
    O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:
    We are called upon to determine whether the United States
    Constitution imposes any limit on the City of Honolulu’s
    power to repudiate a contract to convey property to a private
    citizen in connection with its leasehold conversion program.
    I
    A
    In 1991, the City and County of Honolulu (the “City”)
    enacted an ordinance, later codified at Chapter 38 of the
    Revised Ordinances of Honolulu (“Chapter 38”), which cre-
    ated a mechanism allowing owners of leasehold interests in
    condominium units to convert their leasehold interests into fee
    interests by using the City’s power of eminent domain.1 We
    upheld the constitutionality of Chapter 38 in Richardson v.
    City and County of Honolulu, 
    124 F.3d 1150
    (9th Cir. 1995).
    As we explained in that case, Chapter 38 was a response to
    Hawaii’s long history of feudal land ownership, which sur-
    vived well after American acquisition. 
    Id. at 1153.
    At the time
    of Chapter 38’s enactment, a small handful of landowners
    owned the vast majority of land in the State. Despite the
    efforts of Hawaii’s leaders to divide these large Hawaiian
    land estates, the system persisted, driving the price of land in
    Hawaii to exorbitant heights. Taking advantage of this status
    1
    The Hawaii Legislature has delegated the power of eminent domain to
    local bodies such as the City. Haw. Rev. Stat. § 46-1.5(6) (2006).
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                    401
    quo, Hawaiian landowners rarely sold their estates. Instead,
    they frequently leased their land for long terms, often to
    developers who would construct condominiums on the prop-
    erty and then sell the units subject to the ground lease. 
    Id. at 1153-54.
    To break up this pattern and to increase the opportunity for
    land ownership, the City enacted Chapter 38. Chapter 38 pro-
    vided that when a sufficient number of condominium unit
    owners within a condominium complex applied, the City
    would take steps to acquire the property on which their con-
    dominium complex was built from the landowner by power of
    eminent domain. The City would then convey each condo-
    minium unit and the appurtenant land to the lessee-applicants
    in fee simple.
    Specifically, Chapter 38 required an application from a
    minimum of either 25 condominium owners within a develop-
    ment or the owners of at least 50% of the condominium units
    within the development to trigger its condemnation mecha-
    nism. Revised Ordinances of Honolulu § 38-2.2(a)(1). Upon
    such application, the City’s Department of Housing and Com-
    munity Development (the “Department”) would hold a duly-
    noticed public hearing to determine whether the acquisition of
    the property though eminent domain would “effectuate public
    purposes” as defined in Chapter 38. 
    Id. § 38-2.2(a)(2).
    If the
    Department issued a finding answering that question in the
    affirmative, the Department would initiate condemnation pro-
    ceedings unless the landowner agreed to convey the fee inter-
    ests to the lessee-applicants directly. 
    Id. Finally, before
    condemnation could begin, the City Council was required to
    adopt a resolution approving the exercise of eminent domain
    and appropriating the necessary funds to pay just compensa-
    tion. Id.; City & County of Honolulu Rules for Residential
    Condominium, Cooperative and Planned Development Lease-
    hold Conversion § 2-12.
    402                 MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    B
    Sally Matsuda and the other appellants in this suit (the
    “Lessees”) hold leasehold interests in condominium units at
    the Discovery Bay condominium complex in Honolulu,
    Hawaii. The Lessees applied to the City under Chapter 38 to
    convert their leasehold interests into fee simple interests in
    their units and the appurtenant land. Upon receipt of the Les-
    sees’ applications, the City entered into individual written
    contracts with each Lessee in which the Lessee promised to
    pay the City $1,000 in exchange for the City’s promise that,
    upon its successful acquisition of the property at Discovery
    Bay, the City would convey a fee interest to each Lessee in
    her unit and the appurtenant land. Each contract was expressly
    conditioned on the City’s successful acquisition of the prop-
    erty pursuant to Chapter 38, and each party agreed to use its
    best efforts to effectuate the acquisition.
    On July 3, 2004, after a duly-noticed public hearing, the
    Department announced its finding that condemnation of the
    property at Discovery Bay would serve the public purpose
    required by Chapter 38. A few months later, in late October
    or early November, the Lessees received written notice of
    their final approval to proceed with Chapter 38’s leasehold
    conversion procedure. Finally, on November 24, the Depart-
    ment designated the Lessees’ leasehold interests in the real
    property and other common elements at Discovery Bay for
    acquisition through the City’s exercise of eminent domain,
    finding that the Lessees had satisfied Chapter 38’s numerosity
    requirement, that the condemnation would effectuate the pub-
    lic purpose of Chapter 38, and that no agreement for a volun-
    tary sale by the landowner had been made.
    As the Lessees’ application was progressing, however, the
    Honolulu City Council began considering a proposed bill that
    would repeal Chapter 38. As the proposed bill’s statement of
    purpose explained, some members of the Council had deter-
    mined that Chapter 38’s goal of “provid[ing] affordable hous-
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                          403
    ing” and “strengthen[ing] the economy through fee
    ownership” had largely been satisfied, rendering the provision
    unnecessary.
    On November 10, 2004, a councilmember introduced a
    measure seeking a City Council resolution to approve the ini-
    tiation of condemnation proceedings at Discovery Bay. Even
    though the Lessees’ applications had met all the requirements
    of Chapter 38, the Council deferred consideration of the reso-
    lution pending the possible repeal of Chapter 38.
    On January 26, 2005, the Council enacted Ordinance 05-
    001, repealing Chapter 38. The ordinance permitted any con-
    demnation proceeding approved by City Council resolution
    before the effective date of the repeal to continue, but because
    the City Council never took such a step to approve the con-
    demnation of the property at Discovery Bay, the project
    failed.
    The Lessees filed suit against the City in the district court,
    arguing that Ordinance 05-001 violated the Contracts Clause,
    the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, and 42
    U.S.C. § 1983, and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.2
    Shortly thereafter, the Lessees moved for a preliminary
    injunction to enjoin the implementation of the ordinance,
    which the district court denied. The Lessees then filed a
    motion for summary judgment, which the district court denied
    as well, granting summary judgment in favor of the City
    instead. Matsuda v. City and County of Honolulu, 378 F.
    Supp. 2d 1249 (D. Haw. 2005). The district court concluded
    that the Lessees could not challenge Ordinance 05-001 under
    the Contracts Clause because the Lessees’ contracts with the
    City were unenforceable. It reasoned that the “reserved pow-
    ers” doctrine precluded the City from entering into the con-
    2
    The Lessees also argued that the ordinance was an unconstitutional bill
    of attainder, U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, a claim they do not raise on this
    appeal.
    404                    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    tracts because they purported to limit the City’s discretion
    over the use of its eminent domain power, a power which has
    been labeled an “essential attribute of sovereignty.” 
    Id. at 1255
    (quoting United States v. Winstar Corp., 
    518 U.S. 839
    ,
    888 (1996)).
    The Lessees timely appeal.
    II
    We begin with the Lessees’ claim that Ordinance 05-001
    impaired their contracts with the City in violation of the Con-
    tracts Clause of the United States Constitution. The Contracts
    Clause provides that “[n]o State shall . . . pass any . . . Law
    impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” U.S. Const. art. I,
    § 10. Despite the sweeping terms of its literal text, the
    Supreme Court has construed this prohibition narrowly in
    order to ensure that local governments retain the flexibility to
    exercise their police powers effectively. See Allied Structural
    Steel Co. v. Spannaus, 
    438 U.S. 234
    , 240 (1978); El Paso v.
    Simmons, 
    379 U.S. 497
    (1965); Home Bldg. & Loan Ass’n. v.
    Blaisdell, 
    290 U.S. 398
    (1934). Nevertheless, when a state’s
    action interferes with its own contractual obligations, as
    opposed to mere private contracts, the Court has made clear
    that we are to examine the state’s conduct with a higher level
    of scrutiny.3 U.S. Trust Co. v. New Jersey, 
    431 U.S. 1
    , 20-21
    (1977).
    Under this heightened scrutiny test, first announced in U.S.
    Trust, we consider (1) “whether the state law has, in fact,
    operated as a substantial impairment of a contractual relation-
    ship,” Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Kan. Power & Light
    Co., 
    459 U.S. 400
    , 411 (1983) (citations and internal quota-
    tion marks omitted); (2) whether the state law is justified by
    3
    The Contracts Clause applies to a municipality such as the City. See
    Rui One Corp. v. City of Berkeley, 
    371 F.3d 1137
    , 1141, 1147 (9th Cir.
    2003).
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                      405
    a “significant and legitimate public purpose,” id.; and (3)
    whether the impairment resulting from the law is both “rea-
    sonable and necessary to fulfill [such] public purpose,” S. Cal.
    Gas Co. v. City of Santa Ana, 
    336 F.3d 885
    , 889-90 (9th Cir.
    2003) (per curiam) (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    In the case before us, however, the district court did not
    apply the U.S. Trust test to the Lessees’ Contracts Clause
    claim, concluding instead that heightened scrutiny was not
    appropriate because the reserved powers doctrine rendered the
    Lessees’ contracts with the City void ab initio. 
    Matsuda, 378 F. Supp. 2d at 1255
    .
    A
    [1] The reserved powers doctrine is a label the Supreme
    Court has applied to describe the uncontroversial proposition
    that a state may not enter a contract that “surrenders an essen-
    tial attribute of its sovereignty” and that, as a consequence,
    the Contracts Clause may not be used to compel a state to
    adhere to a contract that purports to achieve such a result. U.S.
    
    Trust, 431 U.S. at 23
    . Although a complete list of the essential
    attributes of sovereignty which may not be contracted away
    has never been established, it is well-settled that “a State can-
    not be bound to a contract forbidding the exercise of its police
    power,” U.S. 
    Trust, 431 U.S. at 24
    n.21 (citing Stone v. Mis-
    sissippi, 
    101 U.S. 814
    , 817 (1880)), and that “a State cannot
    contract away [its] power of eminent domain,” 
    id. (citing West
    River Bridge Co. v. Dix, 
    47 U.S. 507
    (1848)).
    [2] Despite this, most contracts in which a state agrees to
    limit its power to act in the future will not be subject to prohi-
    bition. 
    Id. at 24-25.
    Indeed, as “the Court has regularly held,”
    a state will be bound by contracts that limit the use of its tax-
    ing and spending powers, even though such contracts limit the
    state’s future exercise of discretion in material ways. 
    Id. 406 MATSUDA
    v. HONOLULU
    In turning to the question of whether the City’s contracts
    with the Lessees in this particular case are subject to the
    reserved powers doctrine, we note that the Supreme Court has
    explained that our initial task is to determine whether the state
    had the “power to create irrevocable contract rights in the first
    place.” 
    Id. at 23.
    The City argues that it did not, because these
    contracts purport to limit its discretion over its essential
    power of domain. The Supreme Court has twice decided cases
    in which a Contracts Clause claim implicated a state’s power
    of eminent domain, as the City argues has occurred here, and
    so, we examine those precedents.
    In West River Bridge, a corporation received a charter from
    the State of Vermont which entitled it to operate a toll bridge
    across a river and to collect tolls from 
    passengers. 47 U.S. at 530
    . Several years later, the State initiated condemnation pro-
    ceedings which extinguished the corporation’s franchise and
    converted the bridge into a free public highway. 
    Id. at 531.
    Just compensation was assessed. 
    Id. The corporation
    asserted
    a Contracts Clause claim, which the Court rejected, conclud-
    ing that the Constitution did not prohibit the State from using
    its eminent domain power, even where the property taken was
    previously conveyed by the State. 
    Id. at 532-33.
    As the Court
    explained, all contracts, whether they are between a state and
    a private actor or private actors alone, are made subject to the
    understanding that the state may one day take the subject
    property for public use, provided that just compensation is
    paid. 
    Id. A similar
    situation arose in Contributors to Pennsylvania
    Hospital v. City of Philadelphia, 
    245 U.S. 20
    (1917). In that
    case, a hospital entered a contract with the State of Pennsylva-
    nia which resulted in a state statute specifically forbidding the
    State from opening any street or alley on hospital grounds
    without the hospital’s consent. 
    Id. at 21.
    Several years later,
    however, the City of Philadelphia, through the power con-
    ferred upon it by the State, initiated condemnation proceed-
    ings against the hospital’s land for the purpose of opening a
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                           407
    public street. 
    Id. at 21-22.
    The hospital asserted a Contracts
    Clause claim, which the Court again rejected, concluding that,
    regardless of Pennsylvania’s promise to the hospital, states
    lack the power to divest themselves of their right to perform
    “essential governmental duties” such as exercising the power
    of eminent domain when a public need so requires. 
    Id. at 23-24.
    [3] West River Bridge and Contributors to Pennsylvania
    Hospital stand for the proposition that the Contracts Clause
    cannot be used to bind a state to a contract that prevents it
    from exercising its power of eminent domain. Yet such facts
    have not been alleged here. In this case, the Lessees have not
    accused the City of impairing its contracts with them by exer-
    cising its power of eminent domain to take for public use
    property which it previously conveyed to the Lessees. Instead,
    the Lessees accuse the City of reneging on its contractual
    promise to use its best efforts to effectuate a condemnation
    proceeding against the property at Discovery Bay and, if suc-
    cessful, to convey the property to the Lessees. Accordingly,
    we find the Lessees’ claim to be distinct from those Contracts
    Clause claims to which the Supreme Court has applied the
    reserved powers doctrine in the past.
    The district court held otherwise, concluding that the con-
    tracts at issue required the City to exercise its eminent domain
    power and that “[a] contract requiring a sovereign to exercise
    the power [of eminent domain] is just as limiting as a contract
    prohibiting it from doing so.” 
    Matsuda, 378 F. Supp. 2d at 1257
    (emphasis added).4 We disagree.
    4
    The district court drew support for this conclusion from Kelo v. City
    of New London, 
    545 U.S. 469
    (2005). As the district court noted, Kelo
    emphasized that states remain free to impose limitations on their own
    exercise of any power, including the takings power, stricter than the limi-
    tations required by the United States Constitution. 
    Id. at 489.
    Yet Kelo
    provides no guidance regarding the question presented here: whether a
    state actor’s contract to convey property if successfully acquired through
    eminent domain is subject to U.S. Trust’s heightened scrutiny analysis or
    is void on its face.
    408                     MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    As an initial matter, the City’s contracts with the Lessees
    did not expressly require the City to condemn the property at
    Discovery Bay. As discussed above, Chapter 38 imposed sev-
    eral requirements for a successful condemnation which were
    beyond the City’s power to control, and the City only agreed
    to use its best efforts to achieve those results. Thus, if an
    insufficient number of condominium owners applied to the
    City or if the public hearing held by the Department failed to
    produce a finding that condemnation would serve a valid pub-
    lic purpose, the City would not have been obligated under the
    contracts to proceed with the condemnation.
    [4] More importantly, however, the City’s contracts with
    the Lessees do not restrict its ability to exercise its eminent
    domain power in any way. The contracts reflect the City’s
    voluntary undertaking to use its best efforts to effect a con-
    demnation of the property at Discovery Bay and to convey
    that property to the Lessees if successful. The contracts do not
    purport to require the City to refrain from the exercise of any
    sovereign power, including the power of eminent domain.5
    Instead, the contracts reflect the City’s decision to initiate pro-
    ceedings to exercise its power of eminent domain over the
    property at Discovery Bay, and to convey the property to the
    Lessees if successful. This is not the type of agreement to
    which the reserved powers doctrine applies and, accordingly,
    we conclude that U.S. Trust’s heightened scrutiny test pro-
    vides the mandatory analysis.6
    5
    Indeed, there is no provision in the contracts that purports to prevent
    the City from conveying the property to the Lessees and later taking the
    property for public use. Thus, these contracts contain none of the same
    elements the Court found unenforceable in West River Bridge and Con-
    tributors to Pennsylvania Hospital.
    6
    Indeed, as a survey of our Contracts Clause jurisprudence indicates,
    Ordinance 05-001 is quite analogous to the state actions this court and the
    Supreme Court have assessed under U.S. Trust. See U.S. 
    Trust, 431 U.S. at 1518
    (holding that concurrent and parallel New York and New Jersey
    statutes that retroactively repealed a covenant between the States and
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                            409
    B
    [5] Turning to the U.S. Trust test, our first inquiry is
    whether Ordinance 05-001 “operated as a substantial impair-
    ment of a contractual relationship.” 
    Cayetano, 183 F.3d at 1101
    (quoting Gen. Motors Corp. v. Romein, 
    503 U.S. 181
    ,
    186 (1992) (internal quotation marks omitted)). The Supreme
    Court has subdivided this inquiry into three separate ques-
    tions: (1) “whether there is a contractual relationship”; (2)
    “whether a change in law impairs that contractual relation-
    ship”; and (3) “whether the impairment is substantial.” Seltzer
    v. Cochrane, 
    104 F.3d 234
    , 236 (9th Cir. 1996) (quoting Gen.
    Motors 
    Corp., 503 U.S. at 181
    ).
    [6] The parties do not dispute that a contractual relationship
    existed prior to the enactment of Ordinance 05-001. Turning
    to the questions of whether the ordinance impaired that con-
    tractual relationship and whether such impairment was sub-
    stantial, the parties are in disagreement and the record is not
    fully developed.7 Whether there was a substantial impairment
    is precisely the question U.S. Trust instructed the district court
    to answer in the first step of its analysis. Because the district
    court determined that the reserved powers doctrine rendered
    bondholders in the state-owned Port Authority was subject to Contracts
    Clause analysis); 
    Winstar, 518 U.S. at 888-89
    (concluding that a congres-
    sional statute that prohibited federal entities from complying with their
    contracts to provide various financial institutions with certain accounting
    treatment was subject to the Contracts Clause and that the reserved powers
    doctrine did not relieve the federal government from liability); 
    Cayetano, 336 F.3d at 1099
    (determining that a Hawaii statute that repealed the pay-
    roll system for state employees agreed to under a collective bargaining
    agreement and implemented a new system in its place was subject to a
    Contracts Clause claim).
    7
    The contracts were “expressly conditioned” upon the City’s successful
    acquisition of the property, but it is unclear whether the repeal of Chapter
    38 under a mechanism such as Ordinance 05-001 was contemplated under
    the agreement, although as the City conceded at oral argument, the City
    was, at minimum, under an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing.
    410                  MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    the City’s contracts unenforceable, it never reached this
    threshold question. We believe this analysis is most appropri-
    ate for the district court to engage in on remand as a matter
    of first impression.
    [7] Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment to City on the Lessees’ Contracts Clause
    claim and remand to allow the district court to consider the
    Lessees’ claim under the framework set forth in U.S. Trust.
    III
    [8] Having addressed the Lessees’ Contracts Clause claim,
    we next turn to their contention that Ordinance 05-001 vio-
    lates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    The Due Process Clause provides that no State shall “deprive
    any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of
    law.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV. We have held that contracts
    such as the Lessees’ may give rise to property interests pro-
    tected by this provision. See Brewster v. Bd. of Educ., 
    149 F.3d 971
    , 982-83 (9th Cir. 1998). Further, the Due Process
    Clause confers both procedural and substantive rights. Rich-
    
    ardson, 124 F.3d at 1162
    (citing United States v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 746 (1987)). In evaluating a substantive due process
    claim such as the Lessees’, we have determined that state
    action which “neither utilizes a suspect classification nor
    draws distinctions among individuals that implicate funda-
    mental rights” will violate substantive due process only if the
    action is “not rationally related to a legitimate governmental
    purpose.” 
    Id. (quoting Munoz
    v. Sullivan, 
    930 F.2d 1400
    ,
    1404 (9th Cir. 1991)).
    [9] The burden this places on the plaintiff is “extremely
    high.” 
    Id. (citing Del
    Monte Dunes v. City of Monterey, 
    920 F.2d 1496
    , 1508 (9th Cir. 1990)). To prove that the City’s
    enactment of Ordinance 05-001 violated their substantive due
    process rights, the Lessees must demonstrate first that their
    contracts were the type of property the Due Process Clause
    MATSUDA v. HONOLULU                      411
    protects and, second, that the City deprived them of their
    rights under the contracts in a way that “shocks the con-
    science” or “interferes with rights implicit in the concept of
    ordered liberty.” Nunez v. City of Los Angeles, 
    147 F.3d 867
    ,
    871 (9th Cir. 1998) (quoting 
    Salerno, 481 U.S. at 746
    ) (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted).
    [10] The district court did not evaluate the Lessees’ claim
    under this framework because it determined that the reserved
    powers doctrine relieved the City of its obligations and left
    the Lessees without any enforceable contractual rights that
    could be protected by the Due Process Clause. 
    Matsuda, 378 F. Supp. at 1258
    . Because we have already concluded that the
    district court’s application of the reserved powers doctrine
    was in error, we remand to the district court to reconsider the
    Lessees’ due process claim once it has determined whether
    the Lessees had any contractual rights that could give rise to
    a protected property interest.
    We express no opinion as to whether any property interests
    potentially arising from the Lessees’ contracts could meet the
    “exceedingly high” burden our Due Process jurisprudence
    imposes. Furthermore, we express no opinion as to whether
    our decision in Armendariz v. Penman, 
    75 F.3d 1311
    (9th Cir.
    1996) (en banc), precludes the Lessees from asserting a sub-
    stantive due process claim in this case, where the Contracts
    Clause provides a specific source of constitutional protection
    against the government conduct of which they complain. 
    Id. at 1318.
    IV
    [11] Finally, we turn to the Lessees’ contention that the
    City’s alleged violations of the Contracts Clause and Due Pro-
    cess Clause violate § 1983. As an initial matter, we note that
    from the face of the Lessees’ complaint and their subsequent
    filings in the district court, it is unclear whether they have pre-
    served a claim for damages under § 1983 in the event the dis-
    412                  MATSUDA v. HONOLULU
    trict court determines on remand that a constitutional violation
    has occurred. Nevertheless, both the Contracts Clause and the
    Due Process Clause may give rise to a claim under § 1983.
    See S. Cal. Gas 
    Co., 336 F.3d at 886-87
    (holding that a Con-
    tracts Clause violation may support a § 1983 claim); Young-
    berg v. Romeo, 
    457 U.S. 307
    (1982) (recognizing a plaintiff’s
    § 1983 claim predicated on an alleged violation of his sub-
    stantive due process rights). Accordingly, because we con-
    clude that the district court erred in applying the reserved
    powers doctrine to find that no constitutional violations
    occurred, we vacate the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment to the City on the Lessees’ § 1983 claims and
    remand. If the district court on remand determines that the
    Lessees’ contractual rights survived Chapter 38’s repeal, the
    Lessees may be able to assert a claim under § 1983 under
    either constitutional provision.
    V
    Based on the foregoing, we VACATE the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment in favor of the City and
    REMAND for further proceedings. Each party shall bear its
    own costs on appeal.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-15337

Filed Date: 1/14/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/14/2015

Authorities (20)

arthur-j-brewster-v-the-board-of-education-of-the-lynwood-unified-school , 149 F.3d 971 ( 1998 )

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Contributors to the Pennsylvania Hospital v. City of ... , 38 S. Ct. 35 ( 1917 )

The West River Bridge Company v. DIX , 12 L. Ed. 535 ( 1848 )

Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Kansas Power & Light Co. , 103 S. Ct. 697 ( 1983 )

Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus , 98 S. Ct. 2716 ( 1978 )

City of El Paso v. Simmons , 85 S. Ct. 577 ( 1965 )

Youngberg v. Romeo Ex Rel. Romeo , 102 S. Ct. 2452 ( 1982 )

General Motors Corp. v. Romein , 112 S. Ct. 1105 ( 1992 )

United States v. Winstar Corp. , 116 S. Ct. 2432 ( 1996 )

Kelo v. City of New London , 125 S. Ct. 2655 ( 2005 )

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