Chainey v. Street ( 2008 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2008 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    4-14-2008
    Chainey v. Street
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 06-1061
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    Recommended Citation
    "Chainey v. Street" (2008). 2008 Decisions. Paper 1295.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2008/1295
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 06-1061 & 06-1256
    NANNIE CHAINEY;
    LEROY HAMPTON, JR.; ERNESTINE M. RICE;
    TRINA McCLAIN; LYNNE JOHNSON;
    TERESA A. GRAYER-CAMPBELL;
    CASSANDRA CARTER JOHNSTON;
    THOMAS MAPP SR.; BETTY MAPP H/W;
    BETTY MAPP1; ERNEST HUBBARD;
    ESTHER HUBBARD H/W; ESTHER HUBBARD1;
    ROBERT FORD; GWENDOLYN FORD H/W;
    GWENDOLYN FORD1; OLAITAN ODENIYI;
    ADEOLA ODENIYI H/W; ADEOLA ODENIYI1;
    LUCRETIA WILSON; ANNE LEE;
    GERALD RENFROW; CONSTANCE RENFROW H/W;
    VIRGINIA COX; HAZEL TAYLOR;
    MILTON WILLIAMS; SHERRY WILLIAMS H/W;
    FRANK LEWIS; EVA LEWIS H/W; EVA LEWIS1;
    KERMIT BOSTIC; ELIZABETH BOSTIC H/W;
    MARY J. JACKSON; SAMUEL MATTAWAY;
    YVETTE MATTAWAY H/W; YVETTE MATTAWAY1;
    CHARLES RENFROW, JR.; GERALD RENFROW1;
    CARRIE F. FOSKEY; BERIDAN PAYNE;
    CONSTANCE RENFROW1,
    Appellees at 06-1061/
    Cross-Appellants at 06-1256
    v.
    JOHN STREET, MAYOR, CITY OF PHILADELPHIA;
    CITY OF PHILADELPHIA;
    EDWARD McLAUGHLIN, COMMISSIONER,
    DEPARTMENT OF LICENSES AND INSPECTIONS;
    HERBERT E. WETZEL, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR;
    REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
    OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA,
    Appellants at 06-1061/
    Cross-Appellees at 06-1256
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    D.C. Civil Action No. 03-cv-06248
    (Honorable John P. Fullam)
    Argued January 23, 2007
    Before: SCIRICA, Chief Judge,
    FUENTES and CHAGARES, Circuit Judges
    2
    (Filed April 14, 2008 )
    CRAIG R. GOTTLIEB, ESQUIRE (ARGUED)
    RICHARD G. FEDER, ESQUIRE
    City of Philadelphia Law Department
    One Parkway, 17th Floor
    1515 Arch Street
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102
    Attorney for Appellants/Cross-Appellees
    ROBERT T. VANCE, JR., ESQUIRE (ARGUED)
    100 South Broad Street, Suite 1530
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19110
    ADRIAN J. MOODY, ESQUIRE
    Law Offices of Adrian J. Moody
    1616 Walnut Street, Suite 700
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
    Attorney for Appellees/Cross-Appellants
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    SCIRICA, Chief Judge.
    This is an appeal from the District Court’s partial denial
    of defendants’ post-trial motion after a jury verdict against the
    3
    City of Philadelphia based on its decision to halt repairs on
    houses rebuilt in the aftermath of the 1985 MOVE bombing.
    Defendants are the city, the city Redevelopment Authority, and
    three former city officials: Mayor John Street, former Licenses
    and Inspections Commissioner Edward McLaughlin, and
    Redevelopment Authority Executive Director Herbert Wetzel.
    Plaintiffs are twenty-four of the sixty-one homeowners whose
    houses were destroyed in a fire caused by the MOVE bombing.
    In 1986, the city agreed to rebuild plaintiffs’ houses and to
    repair defects for up to ten years. After having spent $12.8
    million over 14 years, the city decided in July 2000 it would
    make no further repairs to the houses. A federal jury rendered
    a partial verdict for plaintiffs. Defendants filed post-trial
    motions, which the District Court granted in part, reducing the
    jury award. Both parties appealed. We will affirm in part and
    reverse in part. We will remand for an analysis of the
    substantive due process claim and Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 waiver and,
    if the issue has not been waived, for a determination of whether
    each plaintiff proved causation and damages.
    I.
    This case arises from the city’s 1985 bombing during the
    administration of Mayor Wilson Goode (mayoral term
    1984–1992) of a home occupied by MOVE, a group formed in
    the 1970s as part of a “back to nature” movement. In 1978, the
    city attempted to execute an eviction order on MOVE members
    living in a home in the Powelton Village neighborhood of
    Philadelphia. MOVE members resisted with gunfire, killing one
    4
    police officer and wounding other officers and firefighters.
    Nine MOVE members were convicted and sentenced for the
    officer’s murder.
    By 1985, at least thirteen MOVE members had relocated
    to a single family home at 6221 Osage Avenue in West
    Philadelphia. Disrupting the neighborhood with loudspeakers,
    MOVE members made violent and profane threats to neighbors,
    police, and city officials. According to a police probable cause
    affidavit submitted to support arrest and search warrants,
    MOVE members carried weapons, blocked the windows of their
    house with wooden slats, constructed a bunker on the roof, and
    threatened to blow up the entire neighborhood. Arrest and
    search warrants were issued on May 11, 1985. On May 12, the
    police evacuated residents from the surrounding neighborhood,
    anticipating a raid on the MOVE house.
    In the early morning of May 13, police officers and
    firefighters surrounded the MOVE residence. At 5:30 a.m., with
    a bullhorn, police announced they had arrest warrants for four
    MOVE members and gave them fifteen minutes to surrender.
    The MOVE members resisted, shouting back threats that they
    were prepared for a gun battle. After fifteen minutes, police
    fired tear gas and smoke projectiles at the house. Firefighters
    sprayed the house with water to provide cover for advancing
    police officers. Some minutes later, the police came under fire
    from gunshots fired from inside the house. Muzzle flashes were
    seen coming from the rooftop bunker.
    5
    A massive gun battle ensued. Police were unable to enter
    the house because the walls of the house were fortified. Police
    retreated, and considered other methods to breach the defenses
    MOVE had erected. Later that afternoon, a police helicopter
    dropped a bomb on the roof of the MOVE residence. The
    bomb’s detonation ignited several barrels of gasoline, starting a
    fire that killed eleven of the thirteen residents. Houses on the
    Pine and Osage blocks were consumed in the blaze. The
    bombing, the resultant deaths, and the destruction of neighbors’
    homes were viewed as a national tragedy.
    This case involves the owners of houses on the Pine and
    Osage blocks. In the fire’s aftermath, the city engaged in
    extensive negotiations with the owners of the sixty-one
    destroyed houses.      In June 1985, the city asked the
    Redevelopment Authority to use its eminent domain authority to
    acquire the damaged area for “develop[ment] as a
    redevelopment project.” The homeowners filed objections to
    the eminent domain/redevelopment plan. In April 1986, the
    Philadelphia City Council enacted Ordinance 861, obligating the
    city to rebuild the sixty-one houses “destroyed in the
    conflagration.” The city also agreed to provide a ten-year
    warranty for certain defects from the day each homeowner
    moved into his/her home.
    In September 1986, the parties entered into an agreement
    (the 1986 Agreement), in which the city agreed to build and
    warrant sixty-one new houses in compliance with all applicable
    Philadelphia Codes, as required by Ordinance 861, and plaintiffs
    6
    agreed to waive damages claims in the eminent domain
    proceeding. The city enlisted the Redevelopment Authority,
    which selected a developer, Edwards & Harper, a corporation
    specifically formed to rebuild the houses. The city allocated
    $6.7 million to Edwards & Harper through the Urban Local
    Development Corporation to finance the rebuilding project.
    Edwards & Harper hired a general contractor, Ebony
    Construction Company, Inc., of which Ernest Edwards was a
    director.
    Edwards misappropriated funds and was prosecuted and
    convicted of theft. See Commonwealth v. Edwards, 
    582 A.2d 1078
    , 1082–90 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1990). Edwards & Harper failed
    to complete the project. The city and the Redevelopment
    Authority hired another general contractor to complete the
    houses. In February 1986, when Edwards’s companies
    defaulted, the new general contractor was left with over one
    million dollars of unpaid costs.
    For two years, plaintiffs lived in substitute housing at the
    city’s expense. In 1987, plaintiffs moved into their newly
    constructed homes. But the houses were defective. Within
    weeks of moving in, several homeowners experienced problems
    including: leaking roofs, defective bathroom and kitchen
    plumbing, improper or inadequate flooring, nails popping out of
    walls, bursting pipes, defective electrical wiring, flooded
    basements and backyards, and non-functioning appliances. In
    June 1987, the city amended Ordinance 861 to authorize the city
    to hire the Redevelopment Authority to warrant the houses
    7
    against “construction, design and related defects.” In January
    1988, the city and the Redevelopment Authority entered into a
    new agreement (the 1988 Agreement)—the Redevelopment
    Authority agreed to perform the city’s repair obligations and the
    city agreed to compensate the Redevelopment Authority.
    Between 1988 and 1997, when the warranties were set to
    expire, the Redevelopment Authority conducted piecemeal
    repairs of reported problems, replacing roofs, stoves,
    dishwashers, and garbage disposals. The record suggests a
    continuous flow of money into the project, but does not present
    a clear picture of the total expenditures during that time.1 In
    1995, the Redevelopment Authority estimated it would cost $8.5
    million to repair the original defective construction.
    The city and the Redevelopment Authority hired the
    United States Army Corps of Engineers to evaluate the cost of
    the remaining repairs.       In 1997, the Corps issued a
    comprehensive report outlining the remaining necessary repairs,
    estimating it would cost the city and the Redevelopment
    Authority $1.657 million to fulfill their warranty obligations and
    to bring each house into compliance with city building codes.
    The Corps determined that repairs to the building envelope—the
    roofing, bricks, sliding doors, siding, and windows—would
    account for seventy percent of the total projected remaining
    cost.
    1
    Between 1988 and 1990, the city allocated $720,400 to the
    Redevelopment Authority for repairs.
    8
    In 1998, the city, the Redevelopment Authority, and the
    Corps designed a solicitation for bids from private contractors
    to complete the repair work. On August 30, the Redevelopment
    Authority entered into a $1,765,538 contract with the successful
    bidder, Allied Construction Company (the Redevelopment
    Authority-Allied Construction Agreement). The city allocated
    $2 million to pay Allied Construction for the repairs. Shortly
    thereafter, Allied Construction workers uncovered several other
    problems hidden from view until discovered in the course of
    conducting repairs. The Redevelopment Authority subsequently
    authorized payment of an additional $800,000. But by the end
    of 1999, the estimated cost for modifications rose from
    $800,000 to between $2.1 million and $3.5 million, an increase
    attributable to items not covered under the work’s original
    scope: changed window types, brick wall modifications and
    window sill replacements, additional framing, and modifications
    to interior walls.2 None of these additional costs had been
    included in Allied Construction’s original estimate.
    2
    The total hard construction-cost estimates increased to
    between $3.3 million and $4.4 million (including the original
    $1.7 million). Additional costs included $439,000 to $482,000
    in soft costs for the United States Army Corps of Engineers
    contract, an energy consultant contract, and Redevelopment
    Authority staff, and $416,000 to $556,000 for warranty
    settlement items including interior repairs to be made by
    homeowners, lost energy payments, and owners’ administrative
    fees.
    9
    Accordingly, the Redevelopment Authority requested another
    $2.9 million from the city to satisfy Allied Construction’s
    requests and to comply with the warranty obligations.
    On December 22, 1999, outgoing Mayor Edward Rendell
    sent a letter (the Rendell Letter) to the homeowners reaffirming
    the city’s intent to complete the necessary repairs. But after
    Mayor John Street took office in January 2000, city officials
    balked at the Redevelopment Authority’s request for the
    additional $2.9 million. In a memorandum dated January 4,
    2000, the city audit manager estimated the final cost of each
    warranty at $129,000 for each of the sixty-one houses, for a total
    cost of $7,869,000. On February 10, 2000, the city controller
    reported that the city had already incurred almost $13 million for
    warranty repairs, or $211,286 per house. In March 2000, the
    city estimated the additional cost would range between $4.5
    million and $11 million. In the 1986 Agreement, the city
    determined the fair-market value of the houses as of May 12,
    1985, to be approximately $26,000 per house, or $1,586,000
    total. At trial, Plaintiffs’ expert report estimated that as of
    March 23, 2005, plaintiffs would need to be reimbursed “in the
    neighborhood of $250,000” for each house in order to relocate
    to a similar house in another Philadelphia neighborhood.
    In mid-2000, the city’s Department of Licenses and
    Inspections inspected the houses and reported that no defects
    rendered the houses imminently dangerous. But the report noted
    a problem with air vents—an original construction defect that
    could potentially draw carbon monoxide into the houses. None
    10
    of the residents had reported any carbon monoxide problems,
    but the city’s commerce director prepared a plan for relocating
    all of the residents. City officials soon concluded the air-vent
    problem rendered the houses imminently dangerous and that the
    houses should be treated as a blighted area. On July 21, 2000,
    plaintiffs were summoned to a meeting with the mayor at City
    Hall. At that meeting, Mayor John Street presented plaintiffs
    with a letter informing them that the city would pay $125,000
    per house, plus $25,000 for relocation expenses, but that the
    parties would be required to vacate their premises no later than
    September 6, 2000. The residents were told that if they did not
    move, their homes would be taken through eminent domain.
    Thirty-seven of the sixty-one sets of residents accepted this (or
    a subsequent lower) offer; the remaining twenty-four rejected
    the offer, and later initiated this suit.
    Shortly thereafter, Philadelphia Gas Works began to
    “red-tag” plaintiffs’ houses, the first step in terminating gas
    service. Plaintiffs obtained an injunction in state court against
    Philadelphia Gas Works to continue service and against the city
    to refrain from demolishing plaintiffs’ houses without a court
    order or until the conclusion of the eminent domain proceeding.
    Coles v. Philadelphia, No. 0395 (Philadelphia County Ct.
    Comm. Pl. Oct. 3, 2000) (order granting injunction).
    On October 22, 2003, plaintiffs filed suit in state court
    and defendants removed to federal court. At a federal jury trial,
    plaintiffs sought to prove claims based on breach of contract,
    substantive due process, the takings clause, state-law conspiracy,
    11
    equal protection, and specific performance. On the contract
    claim, the jury was instructed to decide liability and damages for
    breach of contract on three alleged contracts: the 1988
    Agreement,3 the Redevelopment Authority-Allied Construction
    Agreement, and the Rendell Letter.
    The jury found the city and the Redevelopment Authority
    liable for breach of two contracts—the 1988 Agreement and the
    Rendell Letter, but not the Redevelopment Authority-Allied
    Construction Agreement. The jury awarded $250,000 per
    plaintiff in contract damages, consisting of $150,000 in
    expectation damages against the city and the Redevelopment
    Authority and $100,000 in emotional distress damages against
    the city ($6 million total). The jury awarded $152,083.33 per
    plaintiff for substantive due process violations, consisting of
    $70,000 per plaintiff in compensatory damages against Mayor
    John Street, $30,000 in compensatory damages against the city,
    and $52,083.33 in punitive damages against Mayor John Street
    in his individual capacity ($3.65 million total). For the takings
    clause claims, the jury awarded $80,000 per plaintiff against the
    city ($1.92 million total). The jury also awarded $52,500 per
    plaintiff in conspiracy damages against defendants, consisting
    of $20,000 in compensatory damages against the mayor,
    $14,000 in compensatory damages against the city, $2,000 each
    in compensatory damages against Wetzel, McLaughlin, and the
    Redevelopment Authority, $4,166.67 in punitive damages
    3
    The jury instructions did not reference the 1986 Agreement.
    12
    against the city, and $8,333.33 in punitive damages against the
    mayor ($1.26 million total). The District Court entered
    judgment against defendants for a total of $12.816 million, with
    each of the twenty-four plaintiffs receiving an aggregate award
    of $534,000.
    The case was tried before Judge Clarence Newcomer,
    who died after the jury verdict. Defendants filed post-trial
    motions.      Newly assigned Judge John Fullam granted
    defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law with respect
    to the takings, civil conspiracy, and punitive damages claims,
    but rejected defendants’ motion for a new trial. See Chainey v.
    Philadelphia, No. Civ.A. 03-06248-JF, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    (E.D.
    Pa. Dec. 1, 2005). The court upheld liability on claims for
    breach of contract (under both the 1988 Agreement and the
    Rendell Letter) and substantive due process. 
    Id. at *3–4.
    On
    breach of contract, the court upheld the jury’s award of
    $150,000 per plaintiff in repair damages ($3.6 million total) and
    $100,000 per plaintiff for emotional distress ($2.4 million total).
    
    Id. at *5–6.
    Although the court upheld the substantive due
    process verdict against the city and against Mayor John Street in
    his official capacity, it awarded no recovery because plaintiffs
    sought only emotional distress damages for this claim. 
    Id. The court
    found an unacceptable overlap between the $2.4 million
    contractual emotional distress award and the identical award for
    substantive due process violations. 
    Id. Moreover, the
    court
    found that any award in excess of $100,000 per plaintiff for
    emotional distress damages, caused by either breach of contract
    13
    or substantive due process violations, was excessive. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    District Court entered judgment for
    breach of contract against the city and judgment for substantive
    due process against the city and against Mayor John Street in his
    official capacity. The aggregate award for each plaintiff was
    reduced to $250,000 for a total of $6 million.4
    II.
    All parties have appealed. Defendants contend the
    District Court erred by denying judgment as a matter of law on
    the breach of contract claims and substantive due process
    claims, and by denying their motion for a new trial. Plaintiffs
    contend the District Court erred by overturning the takings
    clause verdict and the punitive damage award against Mayor
    John Street.
    A. Breach of Contract Claims
    4
    Jurisdiction is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The District
    Court had subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331,
    1343, and 1367. We exercise plenary review over this appeal
    and cross-appeal from a final judgment, granting in part and
    denying in part defendants’ post-trial motion for judgment as a
    matter of law. Marinelli v. City of Erie, 
    216 F.3d 354
    , 359 (3d
    Cir. 2000). We review defendants’ request for a new trial based
    on alleged prejudicial questioning for abuse of discretion.
    United States v. Adedoyin, 
    369 F.3d 337
    , 342 (3d Cir. 2004).
    14
    The District Court declined to disturb the jury’s damage
    award based on breach of contract under both the 1988
    Agreement and the Rendell Letter. Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *3–4. The court held defendants waived their
    statute of limitations defense against the contract claims based
    on the 1988 Agreement by failing to raise the defense until post-
    trial motions. 
    Id. at *4.
    It also rejected defendants’ argument
    that Mayor Rendell was not authorized to bind the city,
    concluding he had apparent authority. 
    Id. at *3.
    We will affirm liability under the 1988 Agreement, but
    not under the Rendell Letter. Accordingly, we will affirm the
    award of contractual expectation damages based upon the 1988
    Agreement and reverse the award of contractual emotional
    distress damages based on the Rendell Letter.
    1. 1988 Agreement
    a. Statute of Limitations
    Defendants contend that Pennsylvania’s four-year statute
    of limitations for written contracts bars recovery under the 1988
    Agreement. 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5525(a)(8). Defendants
    maintain the 1988 Agreement expired no later than November
    1996, requiring plaintiffs to assert their claims by November
    2000. The District Court found defendants waived the statute of
    limitations defense by failing to timely raise it. We agree.
    Affirmative defenses should be asserted in the
    appropriate responsive pleadings. Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(c). “Failure
    15
    to raise an affirmative defense by responsive pleading or by
    appropriate motion generally results in the waiver of that
    defense.” Charpentier v. Godsil, 
    937 F.2d 859
    , 863 (3d Cir.
    1991).5 Although “a [statute of] limitations defense does not
    necessarily have to be raised in the answer[,] . . . it does not
    follow that a limitations defense can be raised at any time.”
    Robinson v. Johnson, 
    313 F.3d 128
    , 135 (3d Cir. 2002). In this
    case, it was raised too late. A statute of limitations defense,
    raised for the first time in a post-trial motion, is generally
    waived. See Bradford-White Corp. v. Ernst & Whinney, 
    872 F.2d 1153
    , 1161 (3d Cir. 1989) (finding statute of limitations
    defense waived when raised in the answer but never pursued
    until post-trial motions); see also United States v. Big D
    Enterprises, Inc., 
    184 F.3d 924
    , 935 (8th Cir. 1999) (finding
    statute of limitations defense waived when “[a]ppellants failed
    to raise the statute of limitations argument until their posttrial
    [sic] motion for remittitur”).
    5
    “The purpose of requiring the defendant to plead available
    affirmative defenses in his answer is to avoid surprise and undue
    prejudice by providing the plaintiff with notice and the
    opportunity to demonstrate why the affirmative defense should
    not succeed.” Robinson v. Johnson, 
    313 F.3d 128
    , 134–35 (3d
    Cir. 2002) (citing Blonder-Tongue Labs., Inc. v. Univ. of Ill.
    Found., 
    402 U.S. 313
    , 350 (1971)). Permitting the limitations
    defense after the close of all evidence contradicts the articulated
    purpose of the rule.
    16
    Defendants first raised the statute of limitations defense
    to the 1988 Agreement in post-trial motions. They justify their
    failure to plead it earlier by contending the 1988 Agreement was
    never pleaded nor did it become an articulated theory of
    recovery until mentioned in the District Court’s jury
    instructions. But in their Amended Complaint, plaintiffs alleged
    that “[d]efendants breached the express and implied terms and
    conditions of the Settlement Agreement, the Allied
    [Construction] Contract, and their other legal obligations . . . ”
    and that “[a]s a direct and proximate result of . . . Defendants’
    breaches of the Settlement Agreement, Mayor Rendell’s
    December 22, 1999 letter, the Allied [Construction] Contract
    and related contractual obligations, . . . Plaintiffs were injured
    . . . .” Although it should have been specifically pleaded, the
    reference to “related contractual obligations” covers the related
    contractual obligation in the 1988 Agreement. Furthermore, the
    proposed jury instructions expressly referenced the “1988
    warranty agreement” as a theory of recovery. Defendants raised
    no objection.
    In Bradford-White Corp. v. Ernst & Whinney, we found
    a statute of limitations defense waived where, even though
    pleaded in the answer, it was not pursued before or at the 
    trial. 872 F.2d at 1160
    –61 (defendant “did not file a motion or present
    argument before the district court on the statute of limitations
    issue at any time before or at the trial”). After the jury verdict,
    defendant raised its statute of limitations arguments in post-trial
    motions. We found “it would be grossly unfair to allow a
    17
    plaintiff to go to the expense of trying a case only to be met by
    a new defense after trial.” 
    Id. at 1161.
    Defendants here never
    raised the statute of limitations defense to the 1988 Agreement
    until after trial. They have waived the statute of limitations
    defense.
    Defendants cite Eddy v. Virgin Islands Water & Power
    Auth., 
    256 F.3d 204
    (3d Cir. 2001), as authority to amend at the
    post-trial stage. In Eddy, we held the defense of qualified
    immunity is not necessarily waived by a defendant who fails to
    raise it until the summary judgment stage. 
    Id. at 210.
    Eddy is
    inapposite.
    b. The City’s Liability
    Defendants contend plaintiffs cannot recover against the
    city as a matter of law because the contractual obligations in the
    1988 Agreement ran only between the Redevelopment Authority
    and the city. Contending only the Redevelopment Authority
    promised to repair plaintiffs’ homes, defendants argue the
    Redevelopment Authority was the only party responsible to
    plaintiffs under the 1988 Agreement.6 But the city assumed
    responsibility to repair plaintiffs’ houses in the 1986 Agreement.
    6
    Defendants cite no case law, referring instead to the
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 304, which states: “A
    promise in a contract creates a duty in the promisor to any
    intended beneficiary to perform the promise, and the intended
    beneficiary may enforce the duty.”
    18
    It then delegated that duty to the Redevelopment Authority in
    the 1988 Agreement, and promised to fund the repairs. Before
    payment, the Redevelopment Authority was required to provide
    the city with bills and vouchers. Plaintiffs were third-party
    beneficiaries of the 1988 Agreement, and may properly assert
    claims based on the 1988 Agreement against both the city and
    the Redevelopment Authority. Accordingly, we agree with the
    District Court that the 1988 Agreement was a valid basis for the
    jury’s contract award against the city.
    2. The Rendell Letter
    Defendants contend the Rendell Letter was not a binding
    contract because it lacked the approval of the City Law
    Department and Finance Department as required by the
    Philadelphia Home Rule Charter. See 351 Pa. Code § 4.4-
    400(c);7 351 Pa. Code § 6.6-104.8 Plaintiffs presented no
    7
    Contracts and Bonds. The [City Law] Department
    shall prepare or approve all contracts, bonds and
    other instruments in writing in which the City is
    concerned, and shall approve all surety bonds
    required to be given for the protection of the City.
    It shall keep a proper registry of all such
    contracts, bonds and instruments.
    351 Pa. Code § 4.4-400(c).
    8
    Contracts. Before any contract shall be effective,
    the [City] Director of Finance shall approve it as
    19
    evidence that the City Law Department or Finance Department
    prepared or approved the Rendell Letter. Nonetheless, plaintiffs
    contend defendants bore the burden and failed to put forth
    evidence to show the letter was not approved in accordance with
    the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter. Plaintiffs are incorrect.
    Under Pennsylvania law, the party asserting the validity of a
    contract bears the burden of proof. Linn v. Employers Reins.
    Corp., 
    153 A.2d 483
    , 485 (Pa. 1959); Hazleton Area Sch. Dist.
    v. Krasnoff, 
    672 A.2d 858
    , 862 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1996).
    At issue is whether Mayor Rendell had actual or apparent
    authority to contract for the city, absent the approval of the City
    Law and Finance Departments. The Philadelphia Home Rule
    Charter provides: “the [City Law] Department shall prepare or
    approve all contracts . . . .” 351 Pa. Code § 4.4-400(c).
    Furthermore, “[b]efore any contract shall be effective, the [City]
    Director of Finance shall approve it as to the availability of
    appropriated funds.” 351 Pa. Code § 6.6-104. Under
    Pennsylvania decisional law, government officials cannot bind
    to the availability of appropriated funds. He shall
    designate on every such contract, the
    appropriation under which it is made and shall
    give it a number in the order of its date. He shall,
    in the order in which each contract is numbered,
    charge the appropriation out of which
    expenditures thereunder will be made.
    351 Pa. Code § 6.6-104.
    20
    the government without the necessary statutory approval. See
    City of Scranton v. Heffler, Radetich & Saitta, LLP, 
    871 A.2d 875
    , 880 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2005) (“‘Where a municipality must
    execute a contract in a particular manner under legislative
    pronouncement, failure to comply with the pronouncement
    renders the contract unenforceable.’” (quoting Alco Parking
    Corp. v. Public Parking Auth. of Pittsburgh, 
    706 A.2d 343
    , 348
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 1998))); Pittsburgh Baseball, Inc. v. Stadium
    Auth. of Pittsburgh, 
    630 A.2d 505
    , 508–09 (Pa. Commw. Ct.
    1993) (finding an oral contract with a city mayor was not
    binding on the city); see also Innes v. Sch. Dist. of Nanticoke, 
    20 A.2d 225
    , 227 (Pa. 1941) (“‘Persons contracting with a
    governmental agency must, at their peril, know the extent of the
    power of its officers making the contract.’” (quoting Charleroi
    Lumber Co. v. Sch. Dist. of Bentleyville, 
    6 A.2d 88
    , 92 (Pa.
    1939))).
    In Scranton, the Commonwealth Court considered
    whether the City of Scranton could be liable for the mayor’s
    written promise to pay plaintiff to audit medical claims paid by
    the city’s insurance carrier. After plaintiff submitted invoices
    for several months of auditing services, the city refused to pay.
    Finding the statutory requirements for execution of municipal
    contracts mandatory, the court held there was no legally binding
    contract. 
    Scranton, 871 A.2d at 880
    . The City of Scranton’s
    Administrative Code provided “all contracts must be reviewed
    and approved by the City Solicitor and signed by the Mayor and
    the Controller or their designated substitutes and attested to by
    21
    the City Clerk.” 
    Id. Because these
    requirements had not been
    met, the court found no valid contract. 
    Id. Similarly in
    Pittsburgh Baseball, Inc., plaintiff was
    attempting to enforce an alleged oral promise by the mayor of
    the City of Pittsburgh to contribute $25 million towards the
    purchase and operation of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball
    franchise. The Commonwealth Court held the alleged oral
    contract with the mayor was not binding on the city where the
    relevant city code required all contracts with the city to be in
    writing and to be signed by the mayor and appropriate
    department head and where the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter
    required that all contracts involving city affairs be authorized by
    resolution of the city council. Pittsburgh Baseball, 
    Inc., 630 A.2d at 508
    –09. Construing the plain language of the statute,
    the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter, and Pennsylvania
    decisional law, we find the Rendell letter lacked actual authority
    to bind the city.
    Even if lacking actual authority, the District Court held
    the mayor had apparent authority to bind the city: “[It] may well
    be [that the mayor lacked actual authority], but he certainly had
    apparent authority . . . .” Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *3. To
    establish apparent authority, a third party must demonstrate that
    he reasonably relied on his agent’s alleged appearance of
    authority. Revere Press, Inc. v. Blumberg, 
    246 A.2d 407
    , 410
    (Pa. 1968). Citing William B. Tanner Co., Inc. v. WIOO, Inc.,
    
    528 F.2d 262
    , 268 (3d Cir. 1975), plaintiffs assert they
    reasonably believed the mayor, as the city’s chief executive, had
    22
    the power to contractually bind the city. In Tanner, an agent of
    a radio station who held himself out as a general manager
    entered into contracts on behalf of the radio station. We held
    that a reasonable person might believe the radio station gave the
    agent authority. 
    Id. at 266–67.
    But that case did not involve
    apparent authority where a statute, ordinance, or in this case, a
    statute and a city home rule charter dictated the approval
    necessary to bind the city.
    Where a statute gives public notice of the required
    procedures for governmental contract approval, Pennsylvania
    courts have held there is no apparent authority for contracting
    government agents who are not authorized by the statute. See
    Berkheimer Associates v. Norco Motors, 
    842 A.2d 966
    , 970–71
    (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2004); 
    Krasnoff, 672 A.2d at 862
    . In Norco,
    the Commonwealth Court refused to enforce a settlement
    agreement between a local tax collector and a taxpayer over
    township and school district delinquent taxes because it was not
    approved by a majority vote of the school board, as required by
    the Public School Code for contracts exceeding $100. The
    taxpayer contended the tax collector had apparent authority to
    settle, citing case law holding that a lawyer may sometimes have
    apparent authority to settle a case on behalf of the client even
    absent express authority. 
    Norco, 842 A.2d at 969
    –70. In
    rejecting this argument, the court found, “the cases relied on by
    Norco and the trial court do not involve a school district where
    a statute puts all persons dealing with it on notice that contracts
    over $100.00 require approval of the school board.” 
    Id. at 970.
    23
    Similarly in Krasnoff, the Commonwealth Court rejected
    the argument that school board members had apparent authority
    to contract absent approval by a majority vote of the school
    board. In Krasnoff, an architect contracted with the school
    district to perform renovations. After meeting with individual
    school board members, the architect provided services beyond
    the scope of his original contract. The Commonwealth Court
    determined the Public School Code required approval by an
    affirmative vote of the school board to create a binding contract
    for the additional services.9 
    Krasnoff, 672 A.2d at 862
    (citing
    Matevish v. Sch. Dist. of Ramey, 
    74 A.2d 797
    (Pa. Super. Ct.
    1950)). Consistent with these cases, the Rendell Letter cannot
    constitute a binding contract as the mayor lacked both actual and
    apparent authority under the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter to
    enter into such a contract. See 351 Pa. Code § 4.4-400(c); 351
    Pa. Code § 6.6-104.
    9
    Moreover, the discussion of equitable estoppel in Scranton
    counsels against finding apparent authority. The Scranton court
    considered whether equitable estoppel bound the city, and
    concluded that entering into a contract without the express
    approval of the solicitor was unreasonable as a matter of law,
    given the requirements of the Scranton Administrative Code.
    
    Scranton, 871 A.2d at 882
    . The unreasonableness was
    particularly manifest considering that the plaintiff relied upon
    statements from a “member[] of the outgoing administration in
    its waning months.” 
    Id. at 881.
    24
    Alternatively, plaintiffs contend defendants ratified the
    Rendell Letter. “It is well settled that a municipal corporation
    may ratify contracts which are within its corporate powers and
    made by its officers without authority, or in excess of their
    authority.” Eckert v. Pierotti, 
    553 A.2d 114
    , 118 (Pa. Commw.
    Ct. 1989). A “municipality may waive an irregularity of a
    municipal contract and ratify that contract.” 
    Scranton, 871 A.2d at 881
    (citing 
    Eckert, 553 A.2d at 118
    ). Ratification may consist
    of affirmative action by the proper officials or by other action or
    inaction that amounts to approval of the contract under the
    circumstances. 
    Id. But where
    a previously unauthorized
    contract is retroactively ratified by post-contract approval, such
    post-contract ratification must be approved by “everyone whose
    approval was [previously] required under applicable law.” Id.;
    see also Pittsburgh Baseball, 
    Inc., 630 A.2d at 509
    (finding no
    ratification); cf. 
    Eckert, 553 A.2d at 118
    (holding ratification
    existed based upon formal post-contract approval of the contract
    at issue). In Scranton, where the court found the alleged
    contract lacked the required approval of the city solicitor, among
    others, the court also held that there was no post-contract
    ratification because the evidence “reveal[ed no] approval of the
    City Solicitor” between the time of the contract and the alleged
    ratification. 
    Scranton, 871 A.2d at 881
    . Similarly here,
    plaintiffs presented no evidence of post-contract approval from
    either the City Law Department or Finance Department, so they
    cannot establish ratification.
    3. Contractual Damages
    25
    Defendants contend the award of contractual emotional
    distress damages should be overturned. The trial court
    explained to the jury: “I instruct you that only the [Rendell
    Letter] is eligible for emotional distress damages . . . .” The jury
    awarded $100,000 per plaintiff in emotional distress damages.
    In denying the motion for a new trial, the District Court declined
    to overturn the award of emotional distress damages totaling
    $2.4 million.10 Because the Rendell Letter was not a valid
    contract, this award must be overturned as well.
    The District Court declined to overturn the jury’s award
    of $150,000 in expectation damages based on the Rendell Letter
    and the 1988 Agreement. The trial court instructed the jury they
    could award expectation damages for a breach of any of the
    three contracts. The trial court instructed that the parties had
    stipulated that expectation damages should be the same whether
    the jury found that one or all of the potential contracts had been
    breached: “[I]f you find that there were three contracts, and all
    three of them were breached, your award would be the same as
    if there was but one contract breached.” The jury found the city
    breached two of the contracts, the 1988 Agreement and the
    Rendell Letter. Accordingly, the breach of the 1988 Agreement
    supports the jury’s award of expectation damages. We will
    affirm the jury award of contractual expectation damages.
    10
    The District Court molded the $2.4 million award to cover
    the jury’s awards for the contractual emotional distress claim
    and substantive due process claim.
    26
    B. Substantive Due Process
    The jury awarded $152,083.33 per plaintiff for
    substantive due process violations, consisting of $70,000 per
    plaintiff in compensatory damages against Mayor John Street,
    $30,000 per plaintiff in compensatory damages against the city,
    and $52,083.33 per plaintiff in punitive damages against Mayor
    John Street in his individual capacity ($3.65 million total). The
    District Court reduced this award to $2.4 million, striking the
    punitive damages, and awarded this amount based on both the
    emotional distress claims and the substantive due process
    claims, finding the jury awards on these claims duplicative.
    Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *5–6.
    Plaintiffs contend the jury’s substantive due process
    verdict was grounded in evidence the city made inadequate
    repairs 11 and then used strong-arm tactics to remove plaintiffs
    11
    The city and the Redevelopment Authority made repairs at
    significant expense, but often these repairs were substandard or
    temporary. Some homeowners testified they paid for their own
    repairs because the city either did not respond promptly or
    simply failed to correct certain problems. The problems
    persisted for almost ten years. In 1997, the Army Corp of
    Engineers report noted several deficiencies in the homes and
    estimated the cost of repairs at slightly less than $1.7 million.
    As noted, in 1999, the Redevelopment Authority hired Allied
    Construction and paid approximately $2 million for repairs.
    Soon thereafter, Allied Construction requested an additional
    27
    from their “defective” homes.12 Mayor John Street took office
    in January 2000, as work on the homes stalled. Over the next
    few months, city agencies decided the continuing cost of repairs
    would exceed Allied Construction’s estimates. During this time,
    Mayor John Street met with homeowners on at least two
    occasions. According to several homeowners, he initially gave
    the impression that the repair work would resume. At a meeting
    in April 2000, he stated that the city would inspect all houses.
    In June 2000, after inspecting the homes, the Department
    of Licenses and Inspection noted an original construction defect
    involving certain air vents through which carbon monoxide
    could possibly enter the homes. But the Department of Licenses
    and Inspection concluded this defect did not render the homes
    imminently dangerous. Less than one month later, in July 2000,
    the mayor sent the homeowners a letter asking them to come to
    $800,000 to complete the repairs. But by the end of 1999, it
    increased that amount to $2.9 million.
    12
    As noted, the city determined the fair-market value of the
    houses as of May 12, 1985, was approximately $26,000 per
    house, or $1,586,000 total. Plaintiffs’ expert report estimated
    that as of March 23, 2005, plaintiffs would need to be
    reimbursed “in the neighborhood of $250,000” for each house
    in order to relocate to a similar house in another Philadelphia
    neighborhood. Plaintiffs were living in their homes at the time
    of the trial.
    28
    City Hall on July 21.
    Homeowners testified they expected Mayor John Street
    to explain how the city would restart repairs. Instead, the mayor
    handed each of them a letter stating that their homes were
    “imminently dangerous” because of possible carbon monoxide
    problems with the air vents. The letter gave the homeowners ten
    days to accept $150,000 from the city in exchange for leaving
    their homes within forty-seven days, by September 6, 2000.13
    The letter explained that if an owner did not accept the offer,
    “the City will have no choice but to take your property by
    eminent domain proceedings.”
    There was evidence presented at trial that the city and
    Mayor John Street “manufactured” the “imminently dangerous”
    designation to pressure the homeowners to accept the city’s
    offer and move out. The air vents were installed in 1987, but
    every homeowner who testified about the issue—most of whom
    had detectors in their homes—stated they experienced no
    problems with carbon monoxide.14 In August 2000, some of the
    homeowners hired a private contractor who tested twelve homes
    and found no signs of carbon monoxide. According to one city
    13
    The offer was $125,000 for the home and $25,000 for
    relocation expenses.
    14
    One homeowner, who has acute asthma, testified that a
    carbon monoxide system she installed in 1987 had never gone
    off.
    29
    official, it would have taken only about one month to replace the
    heaters if the city had chosen to remedy the “air vent issue”
    rather than declare the homes imminently dangerous.
    Significantly, just weeks before the July 2000 meeting, the
    Department of Licenses and Inspection concluded that the
    homes were not imminently dangerous. Even defendants
    “accept on appeal that the jury could have found Mayor Street’s
    July 21 letter was at least partly pretextual, and that the various
    declarations were motivated at least in part to force [p]laintiffs
    to accept the Mayor’s $150,000 offer.” Brief for Defendants at
    55. But defendants also assert that these “improper motives”
    were not legally cognizable because the amount offered for the
    homes was reasonable and the mayor’s actions were not for
    personal gain.
    Twenty-four homeowners, the plaintiffs in this suit,
    rejected the city’s offer. According to their testimony, they were
    upset by how the city had treated them for years, they believed
    they had been lied to by Mayor John Street, they did not think
    the city’s financial offer was fair, and they simply did not want
    to move. 15 Soon after deciding to reject the mayor’s offer,
    plaintiffs obtained injunctive relief in state court. But the city
    15
    For example, one plaintiff explained that “I don’t think the
    City has a right to force me to sell my house to them or to move
    out of the neighborhood that I chose to be in,” while another
    testified that he “would never trade [his neighbors] for anything
    in the world.”
    30
    allegedly continued to pressure them to move out. In August,
    the city gas agency turned off gas and water heaters in the
    homes because of an “unsafe condition” and “red-tagged” them,
    meaning they could not be used. By October, a state court
    enjoined the city from demolishing the homes without
    conducting full eminent domain proceedings and ordered the
    city to pay for replacement heaters.
    In declining to overturn the substantive due process
    damages award, Judge Fullam held that “[n]ot without some
    difficulty, I conclude that reasonable minds could well differ as
    to whether the defendants’ actions in this case were sufficiently
    egregious to constitute a violation of substantive due process.”
    Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *4. But the court noted that “the
    issue is not of crucial importance, since . . . I conclude that most,
    if not all, of the damages attributable to the substantive due
    process violation would also be recoverable under some of
    plaintiffs’ other theories . . . .” 
    Id. Holding that
    overlapping
    damages were awarded for the emotional distress and
    substantive due process claims, the court molded the verdict. 
    Id. at *5.
    As noted, we will overturn the emotional distress claim.
    Therefore the $2.4 million damage award will depend entirely
    on the viability of the substantive due process claim.
    The trial court instructed the jury that plaintiffs could
    recover damages for substantive due process violations based
    upon: “physical pain, emotional pain and suffering, mental
    anguish, discomfort, inconvenience, loss of enjoyment of life,
    distress, embarrassment, and humiliation.” The bases for the
    31
    substantive due process claim, instructed the trial court, were the
    city’s alleged failure to repair the houses, the “red-tagging” of
    houses in the neighborhood, the offer to purchase plaintiffs’
    houses, the threat to seize the houses through eminent domain,
    and the charge that the houses were imminently dangerous. The
    jury instructions limited the relevant conduct to the city’s actions
    between July 21, 2000 and the present.
    Defendants contend plaintiffs cannot recover on a
    substantive due process claim because plaintiffs never properly
    proved damages for emotional distress. In order to recover
    compensatory damages for mental distress, a plaintiff must
    present evidence of actual injury. Gunby v. Pennsylvania Elec.
    Co., 
    840 F.2d 1108
    , 1121 (3d Cir. 1988) (citing Carey v. Piphus,
    
    435 U.S. 247
    (1978); Spence v. Bd. of Educ. of Christina Sch.
    Dist., 
    806 F.2d 1198
    , 1200 (3d Cir. 1986)). In Gunby, we held
    that testimony of a disappointed job applicant that he was “very
    upset” was insufficient to support an award for emotional
    
    distress. 840 F.2d at 1120
    –22. In Carey, the Supreme Court
    noted that “[a]lthough essentially subjective, genuine injury . .
    . may be evidenced by one’s conduct and observed by 
    others.” 435 U.S. at 264
    n.20. Competent evidence is required to support
    a damage award for an injury. 
    Id. (citing Gertz
    v. Robert Welch,
    Inc., 
    418 U.S. 323
    , 350 (1974)). Defendants contend the
    testimony of several plaintiffs fails to demonstrate that the
    failure to properly repair the houses caused emotional distress
    damages.
    Defendants point to varying testimony on injury and
    32
    damages from the twenty-four plaintiffs, breaking down their
    testimony into five categories. First, some plaintiffs testified
    they suffered no harm. See, e.g., Trial Tr. at 91 (Mar. 29, 2005)
    (“Q: And Ms. Campbell, have you suffered, had any type of
    medical—strike that. Have you suffered in any way because of
    this incident? A: No, ma’am.”). Second, some plaintiffs failed
    to testify that they suffered any emotional distress. Third, some
    plaintiffs claimed emotional harm, but testified the harm was
    caused by the 1985 MOVE bombing, rather than by the city’s
    later actions:
    Q:     Mr. Williams, have you and your
    family suffered from this situation?
    A:     Quite a bit.
    Q:     How?
    A:     Well, we’ve had counseling after
    1985, my sons, my wife and I, we
    sought counseling.
    Q:     Okay. And is counseling of the
    whole family–
    A:     Well, back then, yes.
    Q:     And this is due from?
    A:     From the original fire, right.
    Q:     Are you still seeking any type of
    counseling now?
    A:     No. Just stressed.
    Trial Tr. at 76 (Mar. 29, 2005). See also Trial Tr. at 17 (Mar.
    31, 2005) (“Q: Did you or your family seek any medical
    33
    treatment because of this incident? A: In the beginning, after
    the bomb was dropped . . . .”). Fourth, some plaintiffs were
    unclear whether their harm arose from the 1985 MOVE
    bombing or from the alleged July 2000 breach, and allege harm
    that the city did not cause:
    Q:     How did your family suffer because
    of this incident?
    A:     Well, my mother and them–she’s
    old . . . and she can’t do nothing.
    And my father, . . . he died last year
    ....
    Q:     Well, let me ask you, is that in
    relation to what happened with this
    M[OVE] incident?
    A:     Yeah—no—I mean, yeah, yeah.
    Q:     Is there anything else that has
    happened to them through suffering
    because of the M[OVE] incident?
    A:     She got Old Timers, Altheimer’s
    (sic), what do you call it?
    Q:     Alzheimer’s?
    A:     Yes.
    Trial Tr. at 116–17 (Mar. 30, 2005). Fifth, some plaintiffs gave
    vague testimony about “suffering” because of “this incident” or
    not being secure because of “this situation.” See, e.g., Trial Tr.
    at 109, 155 (Mar. 30, 2005). Defendants contend this testimony
    is insufficient to support recovery for emotional distress and
    34
    could relate either to the 1985 MOVE bombing or the city’s
    later actions.
    At the same time, some plaintiffs testified they suffered
    damages from the city’s actions. One resident testified she
    developed high blood pressure, lost weight, and could not sleep
    after the July 2000 meeting with Mayor John Street. Trial Tr. at
    35–37 (Mar. 31, 2005). Some residents sent the city a letter in
    August 2000 indicating they needed stress counseling, and
    others testified to the indignity of living in a neighborhood filled
    with boarded-up houses. See, e.g., Trial Tr. at 50, 98–99 (Mar.
    29, 2005).
    Judge Fullam faced a difficult and sensitive task.
    Inheriting a case tried by another judge, he was obliged to sort
    through some contradictory rulings and jury instructions. As a
    consequence, he did not reach or address defendants’ sufficiency
    of the evidence argument. Nor did he analyze the substantive
    due process claim because “the issue is not of crucial
    importance, since . . . I conclude that most, if not all, of the
    damages attributable to the substantive due process violation
    would also be recoverable under some of plaintiffs’ other
    theories . . . .” Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *4. But as 
    noted supra
    , these damages are not recoverable under the Rendell
    Letter. Thus, an analysis of the substantive due process claim is
    now crucial.
    In addition, the court erroneously relied upon a fictitious
    stipulation that “if plaintiffs were entitled to recover damages
    35
    for ‘emotional distress’ each set of plaintiffs should be awarded
    the same amount of money . . . .” 
    Id. at *1.
    The court held, as
    a result, “counsel must be deemed to have stipulated that each
    set of plaintiffs was to be awarded the same amount of damages,
    if damages were found to be recoverable.” 
    Id. But no
    such
    stipulation exists. Post-briefing, we directed all parties to
    identify the record citation for the purported stipulation, or if
    written, to provide a copy. In letter brief responses, neither
    party was able to identify it. Defendants asserted that “we are
    not aware of such a stipulation.” The only stipulation identified
    by plaintiffs was that damages for breach of one contract would
    be the same regardless of how many contracts were breached.
    This is not a class action suit; each plaintiff must prove
    he or she is entitled to damages. There are twenty-four sets of
    plaintiffs owning separate homes and presenting different and
    at times contrasting views of the events in question, including
    causation and damages. Even in the class action context, the
    ability of each plaintiff to prove damages is often a key issue.
    See Newton v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 
    259 F.3d 154
    , 188 (3d Cir. 2001) (“The ability to calculate the
    aggregate amount of damages does not absolve plaintiffs from
    the duty to prove each investor was harmed by the defendants’
    practice.”). By relying upon the erroneous stipulation, the court
    reviewed the sufficiency of the substantive due process award
    36
    collectively instead of individually.16
    Also, the court failed to address waiver with respect to
    both plaintiffs and defendants on the sufficiency of the evidence
    issue. “[A] defendant’s failure to raise an issue in a Rule
    50(a)(2) motion with sufficient specificity to put the plaintiffs
    on notice waives the defendant’s right to raise the issue in their
    Rule 50(b) motion.” Williams v. Runyon, 
    130 F.3d 568
    , 571–72
    (3d Cir. 1997). But if a plaintiff does not object to a defendant’s
    Rule 50(b) motion “specifically on the grounds that the issue
    was waived by an inadequate Rule 50(a) motion, the [plaintiff’s]
    right to object on that basis is itself waived.” 
    Id. at 572.
    Post trial, Judge Newcomer, in an August 9, 2005 Order,
    directed the parties to supplement their post-trial motions with
    briefing on “whether Defendants have properly maintained a
    16
    It is also likely that the court’s erroneous reliance on “the
    stipulation” explains the absence of other important analyses.
    The court did not reach defendants’ alternative motion for a new
    trial based on plaintiffs’ failure to prove that defendants’ actions
    caused emotional distress. The court only addressed defendants’
    new trial request alleging improper cross-examination of Mayor
    John Street. Also, the court noted the lack of “significant
    objections to the court’s charge,” but it did not review the
    charge for plain error. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 51(d)(2); Alexander
    v. Riga, 
    208 F.3d 419
    , 426–27 (3d Cir. 2000).
    37
    portion of their Rule 50 Motion.”17 Both parties briefed this
    issue for the trial court. But the court’s post-trial opinion neither
    decides nor refers to the Rule 50 waiver motions.
    For understandable reasons, the District Court did not
    address the substantive due process claim, which is now critical
    on appeal. Furthermore, the erroneous reliance on a stipulation
    never agreed to and the absence of analysis on important
    procedural issues weigh in favor of a remand. Accordingly, we
    do not reach the merits of the defendants’ contentions, but
    instead will remand to the district court for a substantive due
    process and Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 waiver analysis and, if the issue
    has not been waived, a determination of whether each plaintiff
    can establish causation and prove damages.
    D e f en d a n ts c o n t e n d t h e r e a r e m o re f u n d a m e n ta l
    problems with the substantive due process verdict. Section 1983
    provides remedies for deprivations of rights established by the
    Constitution, including substantive due process under the
    Fourteenth Amendment. Kaucher v. County of Bucks, 
    455 F.3d 418
    , 423 (3d Cir. 2006). “To state a § 1983 claim, a plaintiff
    must demonstrate the defendant, acting under color of state law,
    deprived [plaintiff] of a right secured by the Constitution or the
    17
    The Order further recited: “The Parties shall specifically
    brief this Court on (1) whether Defendants have properly made
    their Rule 50 Motion against Plaintiffs’ Breach of Contract
    Claims, and if they have not, (2) whether Plaintiffs have waived
    their right to object on this ground.”
    38
    laws of the United States.” 
    Kaucher, 455 F.3d at 423
    (citing
    American Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan, 
    526 U.S. 40
    , 49–50
    (1999)). Accordingly, “[t]he first step in evaluating a section
    1983 claim is to ‘identify the exact contours of the underlying
    right said to have been violated’ and to determine ‘whether the
    plaintiff has alleged a deprivation of a constitutional right at
    all.’” Nicini v. Morra, 
    212 F.3d 798
    , 806 (3d Cir. 2000) (en
    banc) (quoting County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 
    523 U.S. 833
    ,
    841 n.5 (1998)). Furthermore, “the core of the concept [of due
    process is] protection against arbitrary action” and “only the
    most egregious official conduct can be said to be arbitrary in the
    constitutional sense.” 
    Lewis, 523 U.S. at 845
    –46; see also
    United Artists Theatre Circuit, Inc. v. Twp. of Warrington, 
    316 F.3d 392
    , 399 (3d Cir. 2003). The Supreme Court has
    consistently “spoken of the cognizable level of executive abuse
    of power as that which shocks the conscience.” 
    Lewis, 523 U.S. at 846
    ; see also United 
    Artists, 316 F.3d at 399
    .
    To establish a substantive due process claim, a plaintiff
    must prove the particular interest at issue is protected by the
    substantive due process clause and the government’s deprivation
    of that protected interest shocks the conscience. United 
    Artists, 316 F.3d at 400
    –02. For example, we have held “ownership is
    a property interest worthy of substantive due process
    protection.” DeBlasio v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment for Twp. of
    W. Amwell, 
    53 F.3d 592
    , 600 (3d Cir. 1995) overruled on other
    grounds by United 
    Artists, 316 F.3d at 401
    . In other words,
    here, plaintiffs must have been deprived of a fundamental
    39
    property interest under the Constitution.     See Gikas v.
    Washington Sch. Dist., 
    328 F.3d 731
    , 736 (3d Cir. 2003).
    As noted, plaintiffs contend the city deprived them of the
    peaceful enjoyment of their residences caused by the failure to
    repair the houses resulting in poor conditions, the “red-tagging”
    of their houses, the declaration of eminent domain, the city’s
    determination that the houses were imminently dangerous, and
    the undue pressure applied by Mayor John Street to accept the
    offer to purchase their houses. The crux of plaintiffs’ claim is
    that the city falsely declared their homes imminently dangerous
    as a pretext to avoid completing the promised repairs. Because
    plaintiffs remained in their houses at all times, defendants
    contend no deprivation occurred. In response, plaintiffs claim
    that courts can find a deprivation of substantive due process
    without an actual property loss.
    Further, defendants contend the relevant conduct after
    July 21, 2000 does not “shock the conscience.” 18 Deprivation
    violates due process only when it “‘shocks the conscience,’”
    which encompasses “‘only the most egregious official
    conduct.’” United 
    Artists, 316 F.3d at 400
    (quoting 
    Lewis, 523 U.S. at 846
    ). Applying the “shocks the conscience” standard
    “prevents us from being cast in the role of a ‘zoning board of
    18
    Defendants argue, inter alia, that the city’s offer of
    $150,000 for each home, an amount almost double the $80,000
    per home the jury awarded as just compensation on the takings
    claims, cannot shock the conscience.
    40
    appeals.’” 
    Id. at 402
    (quoting Creative Environments, Inc. v.
    Estabrook, 
    680 F.2d 822
    , 833 (1st Cir. 1982) (quoting Village
    of Belle Terre v. Boraas, 
    416 U.S. 1
    , 13 (1974) (Marshall, J.,
    dissenting))). While the meaning of the standard varies
    depending upon factual context, merely alleging an improper
    motive is insufficient, even where the motive is unrelated to the
    merits of the underlying decision. 
    Id. at 400.
    In Eichenlaub v.
    Twp. of Indiana, 
    385 F.3d 274
    (3d Cir. 2004), we applied the
    shocks the conscience standard in a zoning dispute. Plaintiffs
    alleged that the township “maligned and muzzled” them, applied
    standards not applied to similar properties, delayed permits and
    approvals, improperly increased tax assessments, and pursued
    unannounced and unnecessary enforcement actions in denying
    zoning requests. 
    Id. at 286.
    But in affirming the trial court’s
    finding that the alleged conduct did not shock the conscience,
    we noted there were no allegations of corruption, self-dealing,
    bias against an ethnic group, or additional facts that suggested
    conscience-shocking behavior. 
    Id. We do
    not address these issues at this time because the
    trial court did not analyze the substantive due process claim or
    the Rule 50 waiver issue and erred in not requiring individual
    proof of causation and damages. We will remand for an analysis
    of the substantive due process claim and Fed. R. Civ. P. 50
    waiver and, if the issue has not been waived, a determination of
    whether each plaintiff has adequately proven causation and
    damages.
    41
    C. New Trial Based on Trial Court’s Questioning
    of Mayor John Street
    In post-trial motions, defendants contended Judge Fullam
    should have ordered a new trial based on Judge Newcomer’s
    prejudicial questioning of M ayor John Street. 1 9
    19
    Defendants referenced three particular instances:
    THE COURT:           In the course of your tenure on City
    Council and as Mayor, has there
    ever been any event that has been
    as traumatic in the City of
    Philadelphia as this event at Osage
    Avenue?
    THE WITNESS:         This is way up there, your Honor.
    It is way up there.
    THE COURT:           Can you explain why you don’t
    have a better understanding of all
    these questions that are being asked
    of you?
    THE WITNESS:         That’s easy to explain.
    THE COURT:           I wish you would.
    THE WITNESS:         Because I am Mayor of the fifth
    largest city in the country . . . .
    [describing other duties as Mayor
    of Philadelphia].
    THE COURT:           Yet, you can’t remember—
    THE WITNESS:         I just can’t remember the details.
    42
    THE COURT:           Let me finish. That’s an impressive
    list [of duties of the Mayor].
    THE WITNESS:         That’s just short or part of the list.
    THE COURT:           Among your responsibilities, aren’t
    you also responsible for the welfare
    and the well-being of all of the
    citizens of Philadelphia and
    wouldn’t that include the people
    who live at Osage Avenue.
    THE WITNESS:         Absolutely, your honor.
    THE COURT:           So, if that is your answer to my
    question, so be it.
    THE WITNESS:         Can I explain?
    THE COURT:           I think you have.
    Trial Tr. at 86–88 (Mar. 31, 2005).
    [THE WITNESS]: Because there are—this is a very
    complicated situation that has been
    going on . . . for a long, longtime.
    The incident that occurred that gave
    rise to all of this litigation, occurred
    in May of 1985. By the time that I
    got to be the Mayor, in January of
    2000, it is 15 years later . . . . I am
    telling you that I do not agree that
    the city was responsible . . . .
    43
    THE COURT:     Just a minute. That’s not what your
    counsel has informed the Court or
    this jury. Counsel has informed the
    Court and the jury unless I’m
    grossly in error, that the city has
    accepted responsibility for the
    damage caused on that occasion.
    [DEFENDANTS’
    ATTORNEY]:    Your Honor, the plaintiff counsel is
    asking—
    THE COURT:     Am I correct or incorrect?
    [DEFENDANTS’
    ATTORNEY]:   I would like to explain that.
    THE COURT:     Just tell me am I correct or
    incorrect, have you not so stated for
    the record?
    [DEFENDANTS’
    ATTORNEY]:   I stated for the record, that the city
    had accepted responsibility.
    THE COURT:     Very well, that’s what I thought I
    just said.
    [DEFENDANTS’
    ATTORNEY]:   Y o u r H on or, I w o u ld lik e to
    explain. First of all, that—
    THE COURT:     No, this is not a time to explain. I
    just wanted you to respond, in view
    44
    of the Mayor’s        most   recent
    testimony here.
    [DEFENDANTS’
    ATTORNEY]:         Then I have an objection to the
    question as drawing on the—asking
    for a legal conclusion from the
    witness.
    THE COURT:           Overruled. Proceed.
    Trial Tr. at 90–91 (Mar. 31, 2005).
    THE COURT:           My next question is, do you have
    any way of knowing, have you ever
    conducted a study or do you have
    an opinion, as to what it would cost
    in the aggregate to fix all of these
    houses, put them in the shape that
    they were intended to be in?
    THE   WITNESS:       Today, now?
    THE   COURT:         Today.
    THE   WITNESS:       I don’t know.
    THE   COURT:         Did you ever do that, ever develop
    a study?
    THE WITNESS:         There were people who were
    responsible for it, trying to figure
    out how much it would cost.
    THE COURT:           I’m asking you.
    45
    Defendants contend these questions demonstrated animosity
    toward Mayor John Street and defendants’ counsel, and
    suggested to the jury an answer to the ultimate issue before
    them. Defendants maintain the trial judge misunderstood the
    difference between the acceptance of responsibility for the
    original MOVE incident and for the current repairs, contending
    THE WITNESS:         Did I ever personally do it? No,
    your Honor.
    THE COURT:           Someone working for you?
    THE WITNESS:         I think someone working for the
    city, did that on numerous
    occasions.
    THE COURT:           You should have some kind of
    response to my question, shouldn’t
    you?
    THE WITNESS:         I can get a response, your Honor, I
    don’t have that with me. I don’t
    have it in front of me. Nobody told
    me to bring any documents. People
    told me to bring my body.
    THE COURT:           You are here because you are the
    Mayor of the city. You already
    testified that it would not be
    feasible to perform repairs, that’s
    why I’m asking you the question.
    Trial Tr. 115–16 (Mar. 31, 2005).
    46
    the jury was either left with the mistaken impression that Mayor
    John Street did not accept responsibility for the 1985 MOVE
    bombing or that the court believed that the city was legally
    responsible for the 2000 repairs.
    Judge Fullam characterized these questions by the trial
    judge as “expressing surprise” that Mayor John Street could not
    recall key occurrences and suggesting the Mayor should have
    “been more solicitous of the welfare of his citizens.” Chainey,
    
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *6. But as Judge Fullam noted, the trial
    judge immediately issued a curative instruction to the jury after
    the third exchange. 
    Id. Moreover, Judge
    Fullam noted the
    questions might have influenced only the punitive damages
    award against the Mayor, which he overturned. 
    Id. Because the
    evidence on the breach of contract claims likely entitled
    plaintiffs to judgment as a matter of law, said Judge Fullam, any
    error would be harmless. 
    Id. We review
    for abuse of discretion. 
    Adedoyin, 369 F.3d at 342
    (citing Fed. R. Evid. 614(b)). Evidence Rule 614(b)
    provides that the court may interrogate witnesses. 
    Id. This has
    been an important and longstanding practice on the part of trial
    judges and should not be discouraged. See Riley v. Goodman,
    
    315 F.2d 232
    , 234 (3d Cir. 1963) (“We have long abandoned the
    adversary system of litigation which regards opposing lawyers
    as players and the judge as a mere umpire whose only duty is to
    determine whether infractions of the rules of the game have
    been committed.”). Of course, a judge must not “abandon his
    [or her] proper role and assume that of an advocate.” United
    47
    States v. Green, 
    544 F.2d 138
    , 147 (3d Cir. 1976). But the
    abuse of discretion standard is a deferential one and in order to
    meet the standard the conduct of a trial judge must be “inimical
    and partisan, clearly evident and prejudicial.” 
    Riley, 315 F.2d at 235
    . In making this determination, “[e]ach case must be
    viewed in its own setting.” 
    Id. at 234.
    The trial judge instructed the jury that his questioning of
    Mayor John Street was directed toward the city’s acceptance of
    responsibility for the MOVE bombing itself, not the city’s
    responsibility to warranty the rebuilt houses, the central issue in
    this case. 20 Furthermore, we fail to see prejudice. See United
    States v. Beaty, 
    722 F.2d 1090
    , 1093 (3d Cir. 1983) (“We must
    determine whether [the trial judge’s] conduct was so prejudicial
    as to deprive defendant . . . of a fair, as opposed to a perfect,
    trial.”) (citations omitted).
    Defendants also contend the trial judge’s questions
    affected their ability to disclaim responsibility for the repairs.
    20
    To support their argument, defendants rely on United States
    v. Filani, 
    74 F.3d 378
    (2d Cir. 1996), a criminal case. In Filani,
    the defendant was the only defense witness and his credibility
    was determinative. The trial judge challenged the defendant
    several times and interfered repeatedly with the defense
    counsel’s cross-examination of witnesses. 
    Id. at 381–82.
    In this
    case, the crux of the claim was a written contract. Furthermore,
    Judge Newcomber emphasized to the jury that they alone must
    determine the facts.
    48
    But insofar as the jury awarded contractual expectation
    damages, they were based on the 1988 Agreement and the
    expectations of the homeowners, not the testimony of Mayor
    John Street. We agree with Judge Fullam that the trial judge’s
    questioning did not affect the outcome. Accordingly, we will
    affirm the denial of a new trial on this ground.
    D. Takings Clause Verdict
    The jury entered a verdict for plaintiffs on their takings
    clause claims and awarded $80,000 per plaintiff. The District
    Court reversed this verdict, finding no takings occurred because
    at all times plaintiffs continued to reside in their homes. Hence,
    there was no deprivation. The District Court noted that if a
    taking had occurred “plaintiffs would have been entitled to
    pursue remedies under the state eminent domain statute . . . .”
    Chainey, 
    2005 WL 3263042
    , at *4. Plaintiffs contend we
    should reinstate both the verdict and the damage award because
    they proved defendants deprived them of all economically viable
    uses of their property. They contend they have no remedy under
    the state eminent domain code because the city’s actions
    “poisoned the market” for their homes.
    The takings claims are not ripe because plaintiffs never
    pursued their takings clause claims in state court. A plaintiff
    must first “seek compensation through the procedures the State
    has provided for doing so” before asserting a federal takings
    claim. Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton
    Bank of Johnson, 
    473 U.S. 172
    , 194 (1985). In Williamson,
    49
    after the plaintiff purchased land to develop residential housing,
    defendant-county adopted a zoning ordinance restricting the
    permissible density. Plaintiff alleged a taking, claiming he was
    deprived of all economically viable use of the land. 
    Id. at 177–83.
    The Court rejected plaintiff’s claim because, as yet,
    there had been no denial of just compensation. Construing the
    Fifth Amendment (“[N]or shall private property be taken for
    public use, without just compensation.”), the Court explained
    the “Fifth Amendment does not proscribe the taking of
    property;” instead, it only “proscribes takings without just
    compensation.” 
    Id. at 194
    & n.13 (emphasis in original).
    The Fifth Amendment does not require at the time of the
    taking that just compensation be paid, but only that a
    “reasonable, certain and adequate provision for obtaining
    compensation exist.”         
    Id. at 194
    (citations omitted).
    Accordingly, if there is an adequate provision for compensation,
    “no constitutional violation occurs until just compensation has
    been [subsequently] denied.” 
    Id. at 194
    n.13. In Williamson,
    because Tennessee law provided a procedure by which plaintiff
    could obtain just compensation for the alleged diminution in
    value of plaintiff’s property, plaintiff’s claim was not ripe. 
    Id. at 196;
    see also Stern v. Halligan, 
    158 F.3d 729
    , 734 (3d Cir.
    1998) (“The plaintiffs have not, so far as the record shows,
    sought compensation through state proceedings. Accordingly,
    plaintiffs’ takings claim must be rejected.”); cf. County Concrete
    Corp. v. Twp. of Roxbury, 
    442 F.3d 159
    , 168 (3d Cir. 2006)
    (holding takings claim was ripe because plaintiff had exhausted
    50
    state procedures). As the Supreme Court recently stated:
    there is scant precedent for the litigation in federal
    district court of claims that a state agency has
    taken property in violation of the Fifth
    Amendment’s takings clause. To the contrary,
    most of the cases in our takings jurisprudence . .
    . came to us on writs of certiorari from state
    courts of last resort.
    San Remo Hotel, L.P. v. City and County of San Francisco, 
    545 U.S. 323
    , 347 (2005); cf. First English Evangelical Lutheran
    Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles, 
    482 U.S. 304
    , 312
    n.6 (1987) (distinguishing Williamson because California had no
    just compensation procedures).
    Pennsylvania provides adequate process for plaintiffs to
    obtain just compensation. Pennsylvania’s Eminent Domain
    Code provides inverse condemnation procedures through which
    a landowner may seek just compensation for the taking of
    property. See 26 Pa. Cons. Stat. §§ 308, 502(c), 709. Here,
    plaintiffs failed to pursue an inverse condemnation. They
    contend they did not need to pursue the takings clause claims in
    state court because they were not seeking just compensation.
    But in fact that is the basis of their claim—just compensation for
    the reduction in fair market value of their homes.
    In Cowell v. Palmer Twp., 
    263 F.3d 286
    , 290 (3d Cir.
    2001), plaintiffs in a federal suit alleged a taking when the
    municipality allegedly reduced the property’s value by
    51
    improperly imposing liens on plaintiffs’ property. We rejected
    plaintiffs’ argument that they were not required to file a claim
    in state court. 
    Id. at 291.
    Where there is a procedure for seeking
    just compensation, “the property owner cannot claim a violation
    of the [Takings] Clause until it has used the procedure and been
    denied just compensation.” 
    Williamson, 473 U.S. at 195
    .
    Accordingly, plaintiffs claims are not ripe, and we do not
    reach the issue of whether a deprivation occurred. The District
    Court correctly acknowledged that if a taking had occurred,
    plaintiffs must pursue their claim in state court. As noted, the
    District Court held that no taking occurred and set aside the jury
    award on the takings claims. We will affirm but on different
    grounds. We will set aside the jury award on the ground that
    plaintiffs’ takings claims are not ripe for adjudication.
    III.
    For the reasons set forth, we will affirm in part and
    reverse in part the judgment of the District Court. We will
    remand on the issues of substantive due process, Fed. R. Civ. P.
    50 waiver, and, if the issue has not been waived, whether each
    plaintiff proved causation and damages for the substantive due
    process claims.
    52
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-1061

Filed Date: 4/14/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (40)

Creative Environments, Inc. v. Robert Estabrook , 680 F.2d 822 ( 1982 )

United States v. Joseph Omotunde Filani , 74 F.3d 378 ( 1996 )

William B. Tanner Co., Inc., and Pepper & Tanner, Inc. v. ... , 528 F.2d 262 ( 1975 )

Charles GUNBY, Jr., Appellant in 86-3707, v. PENNSYLVANIA ... , 840 F.2d 1108 ( 1988 )

Eric Robinson v. Philip L. Johnson the District Attorney of ... , 313 F.3d 128 ( 2002 )

eileen-cowell-richard-cowell-sylvester-pany-eastgate-land-development , 263 F.3d 286 ( 2001 )

BRADFORD-WHITE CORPORATION, Appellant in 88-1781 v. ERNST & ... , 872 F.2d 1153 ( 1989 )

united-states-v-lawrence-famakinde-adedoyin-aka-lawrence-famakinde , 369 F.3d 337 ( 2004 )

George C. Riley and Lester Riley v. George F. Goodman, ... , 315 F.2d 232 ( 1963 )

county-concrete-corporation-jc-soil-gravel-llc-john-c-crimi , 442 F.3d 159 ( 2006 )

john-kaucher-dawn-kaucher-hw-v-county-of-bucks-michael-fitzpatrick , 455 F.3d 418 ( 2006 )

davon-williams-v-marvin-t-runyon-postmaster-general-united-states-postal , 130 F.3d 568 ( 1997 )

catherine-l-spence-v-board-of-education-of-the-christina-school-district , 806 F.2d 1198 ( 1986 )

United States v. Beaty, William Edwin, in 83-5021 and ... , 722 F.2d 1090 ( 1983 )

james-gikas-v-washington-school-district-washington-board-of-school , 328 F.3d 731 ( 2003 )

alfred-deblasio-v-zoning-board-of-adjustment-for-the-township-of-west , 53 F.3d 592 ( 1995 )

david-eichenlaub-ike-construction-daniel-eichenlaub-barbara-eichenlaub-v , 385 F.3d 274 ( 2004 )

gabrielle-eddy-v-virgin-islands-water-and-power-authority-james-brown-john , 256 F.3d 204 ( 2001 )

ronald-alexander-faye-alexander-fair-housing-partnership-of-greater , 208 F.3d 419 ( 2000 )

steven-b-stern-michele-stern-the-lorenzo-trust-v-francis-x-halligan-jr , 158 F.3d 729 ( 1998 )

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