F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
March 1, 2006
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
JICARILLA APACHE NATION,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 04-2320
RIO ARRIBA COUNTY; MOISES
MORALES; ALFREDO MONTOYA,
in his individual capacity; RAY
TAFOYA, in his individual capacity;
DAVID SALAZAR, in his individual
capacity; LORENZO VALDEZ,
Rio Arriba County Manager;
ARTHUR R. RODARTE, Rio Arriba
County Assessor; AGAPITO
CANDELARIA, Rio Arriba County
Chief Appraiser; and unknown John
and Jane Does; each such natural
persons in both his and her official
and individual capacities; ANDREW
CHAVEZ, Rio Arriba County
Commissioner; ELIAS CORIZ,
Defendants-Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO
(D.C. No. CIV-02-1470 JB/RLP)
Daniel I.S.J. Rey-Bear (Jenny J. Dumas, Nordhaus, Haltom, Taylor, Taradash &
Bladh, LLP, Albuquerque, New Mexico, with him on the briefs), Nordhaus,
Haltom, Taylor, Taradash & Bladh, LLP, Albuquerque, New Mexico, for
Plaintiff-Appellant.
Harriet J. Hickman (R. Galen Reimer, Gallagher, Casados & Mann, P.C.,
Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her on the briefs), Gallagher, Casados & Mann,
P.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before EBEL, HENRY, and McCONNELL, Circuit Judges.
McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.
Tax assessment is not an exact science, and the outcomes are rarely
popular. Using small budgets and limited information, local assessors must make
difficult judgments based on uncertain valuations—with the knowledge that
higher tax bills are more likely to produce complaints of unfair treatment than
thank you cards. Despite these limitations on exactingly precise tax assessment,
the Jicarilla Apache Nation (“Nation”) believes that the Rio Arriba County
Assessor (“Assessor”) violated the Equal Protection Clause in 2000 by changing
the tax classification on thousands of acres of the Chama Ranch (“Ranch”), an
upscale hunting resort in New Mexico owned by the Nation. In the year 2000,
after learning that the Nation purchased the Ranch for $25 million and that Ranch
income was largely derived from elk hunting and related activities, the Assessor
reclassified the Ranch from agricultural to miscellaneous non-agricultural, and
ceased to classify the elk themselves as livestock. The effect was to increase the
Nation’s property tax bill by over $110,000 a year. The Assessor has not
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reclassified any other properties in a similar fashion, even though some of them
derive substantial income from similar elk hunting activities.
The Nation does not allege that the Assessor discriminated against Indians
as a protected class. Instead, the Nation advances the theory that it is a “class of
one” that has been subjected to “irrational and wholly arbitrary” treatment.
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech, 528 U.S. 562, 564-65 (2000) (per curiam). On
this theory, the Nation brought 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and § 1985 claims against Rio
Arriba County (“County”) and a number of county officials. The Nation seeks to
recover in damages the additional taxes attributable to the reclassification, and it
asks for declaratory relief and an injunction preventing use of the classification in
the future.
This is not the only lawsuit sparked by the novel interpretation of state tax
law used by the Assessor to reclassify the land in question. The Nation appealed
the reassessment on state tax law grounds, losing initially, prevailing in the New
Mexico Court of Appeals, and ultimately losing before the Supreme Court of New
Mexico. The combination of the difficulty of uniform tax assessment and the fact
that the Assessor’s reading of the state tax code was ultimately upheld by the state
courts means that the Nation faces an imposing burden to show that the
reassessment did not demonstrate the minimal competence necessary to avoid
being “irrational and wholly arbitrary.” We conclude that the Nation has not met
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this burden and AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the
Defendants.
I.
The Chama Ranch is a 32,075.80 acre property in Rio Arriba County,
located about one-quarter mile from the Nation’s reservation. The Nation
purchased the Ranch in 1995 from the Chama Land & Cattle Company in a
bankruptcy sale. Within the Ranch are two state-licensed Class A game parks,
each encompassing 3,200 acres. For the years prior to tax year 2000, including
the years when the Ranch was under the Nation’s ownership, the Assessor
classified this acreage as either agricultural grazing land (valued at $2 per taxable
acre) or irrigation land (valued at $55 per taxable acre). The Assessor also
classified the elk on the Ranch as livestock, a classification which entitled the
Ranch to favorable tax treatment.
In May 1996, the Nation sent a letter to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
requesting that the United States acquire title to the Ranch in trust for the Nation
pursuant to 25 C.F.R. §§ 151.9-151.14. Should that happen, the Ranch would go
off the County tax rolls altogether. In June 1996, the County sent a letter to the
BIA objecting to the potential transfer of the Ranch’s title. To explain why the
financial impact of the proposed transfer was greater than past tax assessments of
the property would suggest, the County stated that the assessment did not yet
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reflect the Ranch’s recent purchase price of $25 million or its current use as an
elk hunting resort.
In October 1999, the BIA, after conducting an extensive review of the
Nation’s request, sent a letter to the Nation, with a copy to the County, approving
federal trust acquisition of the Ranch. The County appealed this decision to the
Interior Board of Indian Appeals (IBIA) of the United States Department of the
Interior. In its appeal papers, the County noted that the acquisition would
increase the land in Rio Arriba County held in federal trust from roughly 23
percent to 27 percent, and argued that the transfer would violate the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo. 1 Based on the $25 million price the Nation paid for the land,
the County estimated that, after reassessment, property taxes for the Ranch would
rise from roughly $21,000 per year to about $124,000 per year.
The reassessment process began in February 2000, when the Chief
Appraiser of Rio Arriba County submitted a letter to the County Manager
estimating that the property taxes on the Ranch after reassessment would be
$151,914 for the 2000 tax year. The County submitted this estimate to the IBIA
1
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American
War, reserved the property rights of Mexican citizens. See Christine A. Klein,
Treaties of Conquest: Property Rights, Indian Treaties, and the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, 26 N.M. L. Rev. 201, 208-09 (1996). The County argued
that the Ranch property is within the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant, and thus
belongs to the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant heirs. This issue is not before the
Court.
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in support of its appeal. The Assessor then issued the Nation a valuation for the
2000 tax year, which classified 26,860.80 acres as miscellaneous non-residential
(valued at $221.34 per taxable acre). The Nation appealed, claiming that the
predominant use of the land was agricultural and that the reassessment violated
state tax laws.
In the state court appeal of this reclassification, the Assessor justified his
decision on the basis of the income and land use information contained in the
October 1999 letter from the BIA. This letter suggested to the Assessor that the
primary use of the property was recreational rather than agricultural. For
example, the Assessor learned from the letter that in 1997 the Ranch derived
$1,109,575 from what were considered non-agricultural sources such as lodging,
other activities, and game animals, compared to $214,500 from what were
considered agricultural sources such as cattle and timber. The Assessor also cited
a July 2000 visit to the Ranch, the Ranch’s website, and a promotional video to
support the view that the primary use of the land was not agricultural.
Throughout the litigation contesting the reassessment, the County has continued
to tax the Ranch using the new classification. The BIA has not yet completed its
acquisition of the land in trust.
A.
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The Nation appealed the reassessment of the Ranch to the Rio Arriba
Valuation Protests Board (“Protests Board”). See N.M. Stat. Ann. § 7-38-25(A).
The parties stipulated to most of the facts and were able to distill the dispute to
two basic questions of state law: (1) whether the Assessor should have continued
to classify 27,040.80 acres of Ranch land as agricultural, and (2) whether the elk
on the Ranch qualified as livestock. 2
In February 2000, the Protests Board issued a decision and order rejecting
the Nation’s argument. The Protests Board concluded that the disputed land was
used primarily as elk habitat, a non-agricultural use under state law. The Protests
Board also concluded that revoking the classification of the elk as livestock was
in accordance with state law. The Nation appealed the Protests Board ruling
through the New Mexico state courts. The Court of Appeals agreed with the
Nation and reversed the decision of the Protests Board, see Jicarilla Apache
Nation v. Rio Arriba County Assessor, 92 P.3d 642 (N.M. Ct. App. 2003), but the
New Mexico Supreme Court reversed the decision of the New Mexico Court of
Appeals in September 2004, agreeing with the Protests Board that the
2
The 2000 notice of valuation classified 26,860.80 acres of land at the
Chama Ranch as miscellaneous non-residential, but the 2000 tax bill and the
subsequent tax bills apply this classification to 27,040.80 acres. The difference
of 180 acres is not explained.
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reclassification for tax year 2000 was authorized under state law, see Jicarilla
Apache Nation v. Rodarte, 103 P.3d 554 (N.M. 2004).
B.
The Nation filed this complaint in federal court in November 2002, after
the Protests Board rendered its decision but before the New Mexico Court of
Appeals issued its opinion reversing the Protests Board. Because the Nation
appeals a number of procedural issues, we recount in some detail the tortuous
path of this litigation. The complaint named as defendants Rio Arriba County,
three County Commissioners, the County Manager, the County Assessor, the
Chief Appraiser, and unknown persons in their individual and official capacities.
The complaint alleged that the Defendants violated the equal protection rights of
the Nation under color of state law in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and that the
Defendants conspired to violate the equal protection rights of the Nation in
violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985. After the Defendants filed their answer, the
parties stipulated to a stay of discovery pending a ruling on the Defendants’ soon-
to-be-filed motion to dismiss. Instead of moving to dismiss, however, the
Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming that the Nation could
not prove intentional discrimination and asserting a defense of qualified immunity
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for the Defendants sued in their individual capacities. The Nation then filed an
unopposed motion pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(f) to stay
consideration of the discriminatory intent issue pending discovery. It also filed a
cross-motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity.
The district court granted the Nation’s Rule 56(f) motion, allowing the
Nation to initiate discovery regarding discriminatory intent. Before the Nation
completed its desired discovery, the Defendants moved to stay discovery until the
district court ruled on qualified immunity. In response, the Nation argued that it
should be allowed to continue discovery on the issue of intentional
discrimination. The district court denied the Nation’s request and, in the same
order, granted the Defendants’ motion asking the court to make a qualified
immunity determination before permitting discovery on the intentional
discrimination issue. In March 2004, the district court issued a brief order
granting the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment with respect to qualified
immunity for the individual Defendants. In its order, the court indicated that it
would later issue an opinion explaining the rationale for granting summary
judgment. Subsequently, the district court suggested that the Defendants file a
motion seeking a disposition on the remaining claims.
The Defendants then filed a second motion for summary judgment, which
asserted that the Nation had not proved intentional discrimination. The Nation
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filed a second Rule 56(f) motion requesting that the court stay consideration of
the second summary judgment motion pending an opportunity to conduct
discovery on the factual issues raised in the Defendants’ motion. The district
court denied this motion but lifted the discovery stay and permitted the Nation to
raise its discovery concerns at the hearing on the motion for summary judgment.
Thereafter, the Nation resumed discovery by reviewing documents at assessors’
offices in Tierra Amarilla and Española. As the Nation attempted to begin taking
depositions, the Defendants sought and obtained a protective order preventing the
depositions from being taken. Several weeks after entry of that order, the district
court issued a memorandum opinion explaining its previous grant of summary
judgment on qualified immunity to the Defendants sued in their individual
capacities. The district court also granted summary judgment to the Defendants
sued in their official capacities and to the County. The Nation appeals both
summary judgment orders, as well as the district court’s refusal to withhold
judgment pending discovery under Rule 56(f).
II.
We begin by addressing jurisdiction. This Court had concerns that prior
litigation in the state courts might have deprived us of jurisdiction to address
retrospective relief under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, as well as concerns that
the Nation’s claim for prospective relief was moot because of legislation enacted
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by the New Mexico legislature in April 2005. The parties submitted supplemental
briefing on both points, which we address in turn.
A.
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine limits the power of lower federal courts to
review decisions of state courts. Parties aggrieved by decisions of state courts
may obtain federal review only by writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme
Court, not by collateral litigation in federal district court. See Rooker v. Fidelity
Trust Co., 263 U.S. 413 (1923); D.C. Ct. of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462
(1983). At first blush, the doctrine might seem to apply in this case, since the
state Protests Board and ultimately the state supreme court held that the
Assessor’s reclassification of the Ranch complied with state law. In effect, this
lawsuit asks a lower federal court to reverse the result of a state court decision.
In light of recent Supreme Court decisions limiting the scope of the Rooker-
Feldman doctrine, however, we conclude that the doctrine is not applicable. In a
footnote in Verizon Maryland, Inc. v. Public Service Commission of Maryland,
535 U.S. 635, 644 n.3 (2002), the Court held that Rooker-Feldman does not apply
to judicial review of state agency decisions. This means that Rooker-Feldman
does not insulate the decision of the Protests Board from review by a federal
court. See Jicarilla Apache Nation v. Rodarte, 103 P.3d 554, 561 (N.M. 2004)
(characterizing the Protests Board as a state agency). Moreover, the Court held in
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Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp., 125 S. Ct. 1517, 1521-22
(2005), that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine restricts federal jurisdiction only when
the state court has rendered its decision “before the federal district court
proceedings commenced.” At the time this suit was filed in district court, the
Protests Board had issued its order, but no state court had rendered a decision in
the case. The Rooker-Feldman doctrine, therefore, does not prevent this Court
from exercising jurisdiction. 3
B.
After the decision by the New Mexico Supreme Court, and after the appeal
was filed in this Court, the New Mexico legislature amended the tax statute in
question. The new statute, passed in April 2005, expands the definition of
“agricultural use” to include the “production” of “captive deer or elk.” N.M. Stat.
Ann. § 7-36-20(B). It also requires that tax assessors classify as grazing land any
land that has “the production of captive deer or elk” as its “bona fide and primary
use.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 7-36-20(D)(3). This statute resolves the underlying state
tax questions for the future in the Nation’s favor. It also renders this controversy
moot insofar as the Nation seeks prospective injunctive relief for tax years after
the effective date of the statute. Because it effectively restores the classification
3
By not raising a res judicata defense the County has tacitly waived it. See
Kenmen Eng’g v. City of Union, 314 F.3d 468, 479 (10th Cir. 2002). We decline
to raise the defense sua sponte.
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of the Ranch and the elk on the property to their pre-2000 status as agricultural
land and livestock, respectively, the statute gives the Nation all that it sought to
achieve through its injunctive action. Any claims the Nation may have about the
future enforcement of the new statute are not ripe.
The Nation’s claims for retrospective relief—namely, damages—in
connection with the tax years before the statute’s effective date remain a live
controversy. See Kirchberg v. Feenstra, 450 U.S. 455, 459 n.6 (1981) (approving
an appellate court’s rejection of mootness for a claim that arose before an
amended statute came into effect). Moreover, the effective date of the amended
statute is disputed, and the County continues to classify the Nation’s property
under the unamended statute for the 2005 tax year. With respect to the 2005 tax
year, therefore, injunctive relief may be appropriate and the Nation’s claim
seeking it is not moot. Accordingly, this Court has jurisdiction to consider the
Nation’s claims for damages, declaratory relief, and injunctive relief in
connection with the tax years after the County’s reassessment decision but before
the County’s application of the new statute to the Ranch.
III.
We therefore turn to the merits. The Nation raises three issues. First, the
Nation asserts that the district court erred by twice concluding that there was
insufficient evidence of a constitutional violation to survive summary judgment.
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Second, the Nation argues that the district court erred in denying the Nation’s
motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity. Third, the Nation contends
that the district court abused its discretion by denying the Nation’s motions to
stay adjudication pending further discovery on the subjective intent of the
Defendants. All three issues turn, to one degree or another, on the class-of-one
theory advanced by the Nation. Accordingly, we begin our analysis with a review
of the law governing this type of equal protection violation.
A.
The Supreme Court formally recognized class-of-one equal protection
actions in Olech , 528 U.S. at 564-65. In that case, a municipality conditioned
water service for a property on the owner’s granting a 33-foot easement, even
though it required only a 15-foot easement from every other property owner. Id.
at 563. The Supreme Court allowed an equal protection claim to survive a motion
to dismiss because the municipality’s demand was alleged to be “irrational and
wholly arbitrary.” Id. at 565. In a concurring opinion, Justice Breyer expressed
“concern about transforming run-of-the-mill zoning cases into cases of
constitutional right.” Id. at 566 (Breyer, J., concurring in the result).
In the paradigmatic class-of-one case, a public official inflicts a cost or
burden on one person without imposing it on those who are similarly situated in
material respects, and does so without any conceivable basis other than a wholly
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illegitimate motive. See Lauth v. McCollum , 424 F.3d 631, 633 (7th Cir. 2005)
(citations omitted):
The paradigmatic “class of one” case, more sensibly conceived, is one in
which a public official, with no conceivable basis for his action other than
spite or some other improper motive (improper because unrelated to his
public duties), comes down hard on a hapless private citizen. Perhaps he is
the holder of a license from the state to operate a bar or restaurant or other
business, and the official deprives him of a valuable property right that
identically situated citizens toward whom the official bears no ill will are
permitted the unfettered enjoyment of. As one moves away from the
paradigmatic case, the sense of a wrong of constitutional dignity, and of a
need for a federal remedy, attenuates.
Most circuits, including this one, have proceeded cautiously in applying the
theory, sensitive to Justice Breyer’s warning against turning even quotidian
exercises of government discretion into constitutional causes. See, e.g., Jennings
v. City of Stillwater, 383 F.3d 1199, 1210-11 (10th Cir. 2004). An approach that
reads Olech too broadly could transform the federal courts into “general-purpose
second-guessers of the reasonableness of broad areas of state and local
decisionmaking: a role that is both ill-suited to the federal courts and offensive to
state and local autonomy in our federal system.” Id. at 1211. Such a pervasive
threat of federal litigation could straightjacket local governments that have
neither the capacity to document the reasoning behind every decision nor the
means to withstand an onslaught of lawsuits.
B.
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The Plaintiffs first argue that the district court erred in granting summary
judgment for the Defendants before the Plaintiffs had completed discovery
designed to uncover evidence that the Defendants’ actions were motivated by
subjective ill will. We disagree.
The possibility of a requirement of subjective ill will has its origin in
Justice Breyer’s concurrence in Olech . To avoid the prospect that class-of-one
cases could be overused, Justice Breyer emphasized the presence of an “extra
factor”—that the municipality bore some sort of subjective ill will toward the
class-of-one plaintiff. Olech , 528 U.S. at 566 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The majority, however, did not require subjective ill will and instead left it to the
circuit courts to give content to the phrase “irrational and wholly arbitrary.”
Since Olech , this Court has struggled with the question whether class-of-one
claims require an allegation of subjective ill will. See, e.g., MIMICS, Inc. v.
Village of Angel Fire, 394 F.3d 836, 849 (10th Cir. 2005) (suggesting that a class-
of-one claim requires “‘persecution due to some animosity’” but also finding
evidence that the official action was “objectively unreasonable” (quoting Bartell
v. Aurora Pub. Sch., 263 F.3d 1143, 1149 (10th Cir. 2001)); Jennings, 383 F.3d at
1211-12 (noting the absence of allegations of ill will but basing the decision on
the plaintiff’s failure to show that the official action lacked legitimate
justification”). Other courts have similarly divided on the question. See, e.g.,
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Racine Charter One, Inc. v. Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 424 F.3d 677, 683-84 (7th
Cir. 2005) (noting contradictory lines of cases in the Seventh Circuit and
reserving the question); Bizzaro v. Miranda, 394 F.3d 82, 88 (2d Cir. 2005)
(reserving the question); Boone v. Spurgess, 385 F.3d 923, 932 (6th Cir. 2004)
(not requiring proof of an illegitimate motive); Shipp v. McMahon, 234 F.3d 907,
916 (5th Cir. 2000) (requiring “illegitimate animus or ill-will”), overruled on
other grounds, McClendon v. City of Columbia, 305 F.3d 314, 322 n.4 (5th Cir.
2002) (en banc) (per curiam).
In this case, it is not necessary to resolve the issue. Even if subjective ill
will is a necessary condition for a class-of-one claim, it is not a sufficient one.
See Barstad v. Murray County, 420 F.3d 880, 887 (8th Cir. 2005); Olech v.
Village of Willowbrook, 160 F.3d 386, 388 (7th Cir. 1998) (“[A] tincture of ill
will does not invalidate governmental action.”), aff’d Olech, 528 U.S. 562 (2000).
If there was an objectively reasonable basis for the Defendants’ actions in this
case, the district court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of the
Defendants on that ground without allowing further discovery on the question of
subjective ill will.
C.
We proceed now to the merits of the district court’s decision to grant
summary judgment. Drawing all reasonable factual inferences in favor of the
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Nation, we consider (1) whether the defendants advanced grounds that are not
“irrational and wholly arbitrary” for the County’s decision to reassess the Chama
Ranch without similarly reassessing other properties, and (2) whether the
compared properties were similarly situated in every material respect. See
Jennings, 383 F.3d at 1212-13. If we find either a rational basis for the treatment
or a material difference between the properties, then summary judgment for the
Defendants on the constitutional claim was appropriate. We consider these issues
in turn.
1.
The Supreme Court has held state taxation policies unconstitutional under
the Equal Protection Clause only when similarly situated properties were treated
differently because of systematic policies, not because of individualized
decisions. For example, in Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. County Commission
of Webster County, 488 U.S. 336, 338 (1989), the tax assessor had an established
practice of valuing property on the basis of recent purchase price and making only
small adjustments to properties that had not been sold recently. Over time, this
practice produced “gross disparities” in generally similar classes of property, even
though the state Constitution promised equal and uniform taxation of real
personal property according to its value. Id. The Court found an equal protection
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violation because the disparities were massive, systematic, and persistent. Id. at
344-46; see Nordlinger v. Hahn, 505 U.S. 1, 16 (1992) (distinguishing Allegheny
Pittsburgh and describing it as “the rare case where the facts precluded any
plausible inference that the reason for the unequal assessment practice was to
achieve the benefits of an acquisition-value tax scheme”). Because Allegheny
Pittsburgh speaks to long-standing policies that produce systematic inequality, it
has little bearing on an individualized assessment that was the first instance of a
novel interpretation of state tax law ultimately upheld by the state supreme court.
Systematic effects are not necessary in class-of-one cases, of course, but the
Court’s willingness to scrutinize such entrenched inequality says little about
second-guessing the daily decisions of individual tax assessors.
The Defendants offer several seemingly reasonable justifications for the
Assessor’s decision to reclassify only one property, the Ranch. 4 One such
4
At oral argument, the panel questioned counsel for the Defendants
regarding an additional justification that had support in the record: that the
Assessor’s reassessment of the Chama Ranch was a test case which, if successful,
would be followed by similar reassessments of other elk hunting properties. See,
e.g., Declaration of Wayne E. Quinlan, R. Vol. IV at 731 (“Based on my
understanding of the tax dispute concerning the Chama Ranch, if Rio Arriba wins
that dispute, the same sort of huge tax increase could also apply to my ranch and
many other ranchers, too.”). Cf. United States v. Amon, 669 F.2d 1351, 1361
(10th Cir. 1981) (Logan, J., concurring) (“Selective enforcement without
malicious intent may be justified when a test case is needed to clarify a doubtful
law . . . .”). Because the Defendants did not raise this as a justification for their
action, we decline to consider it.
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justification is that the Assessor had received a letter from the BIA containing
unusually detailed information about the agricultural and non-agricultural income
of the Chama Ranch and the recreational opportunities available to the Ranch’s
guests. The Defendants contend that this information, which was not available
about other ranches, provided a reason for adjusting the classification of land at
the Ranch, without doing so for other properties in the area.
The Defendants’ stated reason certainly seems rational. Using information
gained at little or no cost to an assessor is an effective way to value property
without draining scarce resources. The letter was a bird in hand, and even a
burdensome effort to solicit similar information from other properties might not
have revealed facts sufficient to support a change in land classification. The
Equal Protection Clause imposes no duty under a class-of-one analysis to
disregard costs or to ferret out information about other parties who may or may
not be similarly situated. To ask state taxation officials to ignore relevant
information that falls into their laps would hinder the already difficult job of
property tax assessment.
The Nation argues that this reason for revaluing the Chama Ranch, but not
other elk-hunting properties in the area, was pretextual. Because a class-of-one
plaintiff must show that the official action was objectively irrational and abusive,
however, pretext is not an issue. We ask not whether the Defendants’ proffered
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justifications were sincere, but whether they were objectively reasonable. The
Nation cites Equal Protection cases in which the courts considered the possibility
of pretext, but these were all cases of alleged group-based animus. See, e.g., City
of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 450 (1985). They cite no
class-of-one cases on this point. For the same reasons we reject the Plaintiffs’
argument that they were entitled to discovery on the issue of subjective ill will
(see pages 16-17), we reject their argument that proof of pretext would be
sufficient to render unconstitutional an otherwise objectively reasonable rationale
for differential treatment, under a class-of-one theory.
The Nation suggests that the Defendants already had information about
similar properties that would have supported changing those properties’
classifications from agricultural to miscellaneous non-residential. But the record
contains no evidence that information comparable to the income and land use
details in the BIA letter was available to the Assessor concerning similar
properties when the decision was made to alter the classification of land on the
Ranch. The Nation’s brief claims that the Defendants were aware of similar
properties since “at least 2000,” Aplt. Br. 38, but because the only citation to the
record justifying this assertion is a 2003 memo and printouts from the website of
another ranch, also from 2003, we disregard this claim.
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The Nation asserts that an internal memo from the Assessor’s Office, dated
February 3, 2003, demonstrates that the Defendants later became aware of a
somewhat similarly situated elk hunting property, the Quinlan Ranch. It was
proposed, within the Assessor’s Office, that grazing land on the Quinlan property
should be reclassified as miscellaneous non-residential, but for reasons unclear
from the record, the Assessor decided against doing so. The Nation points to this
memo as evidence that the Defendants engaged in intentional discrimination when
they continued to apply the new classification scheme to the Chama Ranch,
without applying it to the Quinlan Ranch. But as we have explained, it was
neither irrational nor wholly arbitrary at the time to reclassify only the Nation’s
property, given the unique information in the BIA letter. When the internal memo
was written, Defendants were in the midst of litigation before the New Mexico
Court of Appeals on the legality of reclassifying elk hunting properties as non-
agricultural, see Jicarilla Apache Nation v. Rio Arriba County Assessor, 92 P.3d
642 (N.M. Ct. App. 2003). The Nation has suggested no reason why it was
irrational for the Defendants to await the outcome of that litigation before
pursuing similar cases.
2.
Another defect in the Nation’s Olech claim is the lack of similarly situated
comparators. The requirement that a plaintiff show that similarly situated persons
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were treated differently “is especially important in class-of-one cases.” Jennings,
383 F.3d at 1213. Because the Supreme Court considered Olech on a motion to
dismiss, it had nothing more than an allegation that the plaintiff was similarly
situated to others. Since then, appellate courts have examined Olech claims at the
summary judgment stage, where the factual record is more thoroughly developed.
In such cases, courts have insisted that plaintiffs demonstrate similarity in all
material respects. See id. at 1213-14; Neilson v. D’Angelis, 409 F.3d 100, 104
(2d Cir. 2005). This requirement comports with the intuition that the degree of
similarity an equal protection plaintiff needs to show will vary inversely with the
size of the relevant class. If a plaintiff belongs to a large class, a systematic
difference in treatment probably is not caused by individualized differences or
statistical aberrations. But when the class consists of one person or entity, it is
exceedingly difficult to demonstrate that any difference in treatment is not
attributable to a quirk of the plaintiff or even to the fallibility of administrators
whose inconsistency is as random as it is inevitable. Accordingly, courts have
imposed exacting burdens on plaintiffs to demonstrate similarity in class-of-one
cases. See, e.g., Jennings, 383 F.3d 1214 (holding that it is “imperative for the
class-of-one plaintiff to provide a specific and detailed account of the nature of
the preferred treatment of the favored class”); Neilson, 409 F.3d at 105 (requiring
a class-of-one plaintiff to show that “no rational person could regard the
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circumstances of the plaintiff to differ from those of a comparator to a degree that
would justify the differential treatment on the basis of a legitimate government
policy”); McDonald v. Village of Winnetka, 371 F.3d 992, 1002 (7th Cir. 2004)
(requiring that the other parties be “very similar indeed”); Purze v. Village of
Winthrop Harbor, 286 F.3d 452, 455 (7th Cir. 2002) (insisting that a plaintiff
demonstrate that the compared properties are “prima facie identical in all relevant
respects”).
This already substantial burden will be especially difficult to satisfy in the
context of property tax assessment, where state actors must make highly
contextual judgments about the worth of property. The difficulty of comparing
properties means that there may be material distinctions between allegedly
similarly situated parties, as well as a ready supply of rational and not wholly
arbitrary reasons for differential treatment. Thus, the Nation cannot prevail if
there is any material difference between it and allegedly similarly situated parties
that relates to a governmental interest.
The Defendants distinguish the Chama Ranch from other elk hunting
ranches because it offers more lodging options and outdoor activities. They assert
that the Chama Ranch offers guests not only elk hunting but also hiking, fishing,
cross-county skiing, skeet shooting, and other pursuits, which together are
sufficient to distinguish the properties for a class-of-one claim. The Nation
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disputes this distinction, arguing that differences in lodging should not be
considered for classifying hunting land. If its lodge is excluded, the Nation
contends, no distinction remains between its elk hunting land and the elk hunting
land of other ranches. Yet this argument ignores the additional recreational
activities, all non-agricultural, that take place on the Nation’s land. The hiking,
fishing, cross-country skiing, skeet shooting, and similar pursuits presumably take
place outside of the lodge. Nothing in the record suggests that the other ranches
offer the same breadth of activities. Indeed, the declarations submitted by owners
of other hunting ranches indicate a different business model. None of the other
ranches serves outdoor enthusiasts of wide variety of interests. Of these four
other properties, three offer only elk hunting and one, the Mundy Ranch, also
offers fishing.
These differences are sufficient to distinguish the Chama Ranch from the
other allegedly similarly situated properties. The additional outdoor activities
offered at the Ranch arguably give the land a different character for tax
assessment purposes. The Chama Ranch might draw higher-paying customers and
its diversification could make its income more consistent over time. Put another
way, there are rational reasons to believe that this land generates more income,
and is thus more valuable, than the land on the allegedly similarly situated
properties. Taxing higher-value land at a higher rate is a legitimate interest for an
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assessor. Given this legitimate interest and the differences between the Chama
Ranch and the other properties, we cannot agree with the Nation’s argument that
the other parties are sufficiently similarly situated to sustain a class-of-one claim.
IV.
Having concluded that the reclassification is not a constitutional violation,
we consider the remaining issues in this case. We need not determine whether the
law was clearly established with respect to the Defendants sued in their individual
capacities, because the lack of a constitutional violation makes it unnecessary to
further address qualified immunity. See Butler v. Rio Rancho Pub. Sch. Bd. of
Educ., 341 F.3d 1197, 1200 (10th Cir. 2003). We also need not address the
Nation’s appeal of the order denying further discovery on subjective ill will,
because the class-of-one claim fails on other grounds, namely that the
Defendants’ actions were not “irrational and wholly arbitrary” and that the other
ranches were not similarly situated. Further discovery would therefore be futile.
See DeVargas v. Mason & Hanger-Silas Mason Co., 911 F.2d 1377, 1393 (10th
Cir. 1990) (finding no abuse of discretion where the district court denied further
discovery because further factual development was unnecessary). Finally, we
note that our ruling on the § 1983 claim disposes of the Section 1985 claim. The
latter claim requires that the Nation demonstrate it was “injured as a result of a
conspiracy to deprive any person [of] equal protection of the laws.” Ford v. West,
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222 F.3d 767, 772 (10th Cir. 2000). If there was no equal protection violation
there was no § 1985 claim. Section 1985 prohibits conspiracies to deprive
persons of equal protection, not conspiracies to engage in rational taxation.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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