07-2537-cv
Daniel Goldstein v. George Pataki
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
______________
August Term, 2007
Argued: October 9, 2007 Decided: February 1, 2008
Docket No. 07-2537-cv
______________
DANIEL GOLDSTEIN , JERRY CAMPBELL, as the putative administrator of the estate of Oliver St.
Clair Stewart and in his individual capacity, GELIN GROUP, LLC, CHADDERTON ’S BAR AND
GRILL, INC ., d/b/a Freddy’s Bar and Backroom, MARIA GONZALEZ , JACKIE GONZALEZ , YESENIA
GONZALEZ , HUDA MUFLEH -ODEH , JAN AKHTAR , DAVID SHEETS, PETER WILLIAMS ENTERPRISES,
INC ., 535 CARLTON AVE . REALTY CORP ., PACIFIC CARLTON DEVELOPMENT CORP ., AARON
PILLER , and ROCKWELL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
—v.—
GOVERNOR GEORGE E. PATAKI, NEW YORK STATE URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION , d/b/a
Empire State Development Corporation, BRUCE C. RATNER , JAMES P. STUCKEY , FOREST CITY
ENTERPRISES, INC ., FOREST CITY RATNER COMPANY , RATNER GROUP, INC ., BR FCRC, LLC, BR
LAND , LLC, FCR LAND , LLC, BROOKLYN ARENA , LLC, ATLANTIC YARDS DEVELOPMENT
COMPANY , LLC, MICHAEL BLOOMBERG , DANIEL DOCTOROFF, ANDREW M. ALPER , JOSHUA
SIREFMAN , CITY OF NEW YORK , NEW YORK CITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION ,
EMPIRE STATE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION , and CHARLES A. GARGANO ,
Defendants-Appellees.
______________
B e f o r e:
JACOBS , Chief Judge, KATZMANN and LIVINGSTON , Circuit Judges.*
* The Honorable Edward R. Korman of the Eastern District of New York, originally a member
of this panel sitting by designation, recused himself following oral argument and had no role in
the preparation of this decision. Accordingly, Chief Judge Dennis Jacobs was appointed as the
______________
Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
New York (Garaufis, J.) granting defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint.
______________
FOR PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS : MATTHEW D. BRINCKERHOFF (Andrew G. Celli, Jr.,
Eric Hecker., of counsel) Emery Celli Brinckerhoff &
Abady LLP New York, NY
Jennifer Levy
South Brooklyn Legal Services,
Brooklyn, NY
FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES: PREETA D. BANSAL (Douglas M. Kraus, of counsel)
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, New York,
NY (on behalf of the Empire State Development
Corporation appellees)
Laura R. Johnson, Assistant Solicitor General, Barbara D.
Underwood, Solicitor General, Benjamin N. Gutman,
Deputy Solicitor General for Andrew M. Cuomo, Attorney
General of the State of New York, New York, NY (on
behalf of the New York State appellees)
Jeffrey R. Braun, Karen L. Mintzer, Kerri B. Folb, Jessica
J. Glass, Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP, Richard G.
Leland, Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP, New
York, NY (on behalf of the Forest City Ratner appellees)
Jane L. Gordon, Edward F.X. Hart for Michael A. Cardozo,
Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, New York,
NY (on behalf of the New York City appellees)
______________
KATZMANN , Circuit Judge:
third member of the panel pursuant to interim Local Rule § 0.14(b). At the time he was added to
the panel, Judge Jacobs was furnished with a transcript and audio recording of oral argument as
well as the briefs and the record on appeal.
2
Few powers of government have as immediate and intrusive an impact on the lives of
citizens as the power of eminent domain. For affected property owners, monetary compensation
may understandably seem an imperfect substitute for the hardships of dislocation and the loss of
a home or business. But federal judges may not intervene in such matters simply on the basis of
our sympathies. Just as eminent domain has its costs, it has its benefits, and in all but the most
extreme cases, Supreme Court precedent requires us to leave questions of how to balance the two
to the elected representatives of government, notwithstanding the hardships felt by those whose
property is slated for condemnation.
Against this backdrop, we must decide if a complaint has sufficiently alleged that an
eminent domain action violates the Public Use Clause of the Fifth Amendment. In our view, the
plaintiffs-appellants effectively acknowledge, albeit reluctantly, that the well-publicized, multi-
billion dollar development project they challenge would result, inter alia, in a new stadium for
the New Jersey Nets, a public open space, the creation of affordable housing units and the
redevelopment of an area in downtown Brooklyn afflicted for decades with substantial blight.
They contend, however, that the project’s public benefits are serving as a “pretext” that masks its
actual raison d'être: enriching the private individual who proposed it and stands to profit most
from its completion. Following Supreme Court precedent, we conclude that the plaintiffs have
not mounted a viable Fifth Amendment challenge. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
I.
Because this appeal follows the grant of a motion to dismiss, we must derive our version
of the facts of record, including our description of the Atlantic Yards Project, from the
allegations set forth in the plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, “taking [them] as true . . . and
3
drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff[s].” Stuto v. Fleishman, 164 F.3d 820,
824 (2d Cir. 1999).1
The Atlantic Yards Arena and Redevelopment Project (the “Atlantic Yards Project” or
the “Project”) is a publicly subsidized development project set to cover twenty-two acres in and
around the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s Vanderbilt Yards, an area in the heart of downtown
Brooklyn, New York. The plan for the Project, which will be designed in part by the architect
Frank Gehry, includes the construction of a sports arena that will play home to the National
Basketball Association franchise currently known as the New Jersey Nets, no fewer than sixteen
high-rise apartment towers, and several office towers. The Project site is bounded generally by
Dean Street, Atlantic Avenue, Fourth Avenue, and Vanderbilt Avenue.
Announced to the public in December 2003, the Project is being carried out, in part,
through the assistance of the New York State Urban Development Corporation, which also
operates as the Empire State Development Corporation (“ESDC”), a public-benefit corporation
and political subdivision of New York State. The involvement of the ESDC is critical.
Although approximately half the proposed footprint for the Project lies within the Atlantic
Terminal Urban Renewal Area (“Renewal Area”), a heavily blighted area owned in part by the
Metropolitan Transit Authority (“MTA”), the Project site also includes an adjacent parcel of land
with less blight (referred to in the complaint as the “Takings Area”) that is currently held by
private parties. Under the plan for the Project, the ESDC, if necessary, will acquire the rest of
1
Additionally, in assessing this motion, we may consider the “‘documents plaintiffs had
either in [their] possession or had knowledge of and upon which they relied in bringing suit.’”
Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc., 282 F.3d 147, 153 (2d Cir. 2002) (quoting Cortec Indus., Inc. v.
Sum Holding L.P., 949 F.2d 42, 48 (2d Cir. 1991)).
4
the privately held land in the Takings Area through the use of eminent domain.
Consistent with the strictures of New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law, the ESDC
held a public hearing, which it publicized in advance, on August 23, 2006, at which it discussed
the proposal for the Project in detail. See N.Y. Em. Dom. Proc. Law § 202. Thereafter, in
September 2006, members of the public were invited to attend a community forum on the Project
where they could voice their concerns.
II.
Plaintiffs-appellants are fifteen property owners whose homes and businesses in the
Takings Area are slated for condemnation to make way for the Project. In October 2006, they
filed this action in the Eastern District of New York, naming as defendants Appellee Bruce
Ratner, the private developer carrying out the Project, several entities affiliated with him
(collectively, the “Forest City Ratner Appellees” or “Ratner Group”) and various officials,
agencies, and subdivisions of New York State and New York City (respectively, the “State
Appellees” and “City Appellees”).2 The action was assigned to the Hon. Nicholas G. Garaufis.
Apparently, after being consolidated, this action represented the first challenge in federal
court to the Atlantic Yards Project. The original complaint raised three federal-law claims,
asserting that the use of eminent domain in furtherance of the Project would violate the “Public
Use” Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Thereafter, the plaintiffs amended the complaint, asserting the same
2
Defendants initially took the position that these claims were not ripe for adjudication,
On appeal, however, they concede the ripeness issue because the condemnation process is much
further along than it was at the filing of this action. As we have been given every indication that
the takings at issue are imminent, we do not address ripeness.
5
three federal-law causes of action against all defendants, and adding a cause of action under New
York state law against defendant ESDC.
Each of the claims relies on slightly different allegations.3 The heart of the complaint,
however, and the centerpiece of the instant appeal, is its far-reaching allegation that the Project,
from its very inception, has not been driven by legitimate concern for the public benefit on the
part of the relevant government officials. Appellants contend that a “substantial” motivation of
the various state and local government officials who approved or acquiesced in the approval of
the Project has been to benefit Bruce Ratner, the man whose company first proposed it and who
serves as the Project’s primary developer. Ratner is also the principal owner of the New Jersey
Nets. In short, the plaintiffs argue that all of the “public uses” the defendants have advanced for
the Project are pretexts for a private taking that violates the Fifth Amendment.
The defendants timely moved to dismiss all the claims on various grounds, among them
that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
3
In support of the first cause of action, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the plaintiffs alleged that
the defendants violated their Fifth Amendment rights by using the power of eminent domain
where the “claims of public benefit are a pretext.” The plaintiffs specifically allege in support of
this claim that the “public does not benefit from the taking of plaintiff’s properties” and
“[a]lternatively . . . any benefit from the taking of plaintiffs’ properties . . . is secondary and
incidental to the benefit that inures to [the Ratner Group]” because the “desire to confer a private
benefit to [the Ratner Group] was a substantial, motivating factor, in defendants’ decision to
seize plaintiffs’ property and transfer it to [the Ratner Group].” The second cause of action rests
on the claim that the defendants have violated the Equal Protection Clause by “[e]levating the
status of one citizen or group of citizens” (namely, the Ratner defendants) and by “singling out
plaintiffs, for unequal, adverse[] treatment” without a rational basis. The third cause of action
alleges primarily that, in circumventing the local review process (and instead working at the state
level with the ESDC), plaintiffs violated defendants’ procedural due process rights. The fourth
cause of action–whose dismissal without prejudice is not challenged unless we reinstate one or
more of the federal claims–alleges various violations of N.Y. Em. Dom. Proc. Law § 207 as
against defendant ESDC.
6
12(b)(6). Magistrate Judge Robert Levy, to whom the Rule 12 motion practice was referred,
issued a Report and Recommendation (“R&R”) recommending that the district court abstain
from deciding the issue under Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 319 U.S. 315 (1943). See Goldstein v.
Pataki, 2007 WL 1695573 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 23, 2007). After objections were filed, Judge
Garaufis rejected this aspect of the R&R, and, instead, dismissed the federal claims in the
amended complaint with prejudice. See Goldstein v. Pataki, 488 F. Supp. 2d 254 (E.D.N.Y.
2007). In a ruling that is not challenged on appeal, the district court declined to retain
supplemental jurisdiction over the state claim, dismissing it without prejudice.
With respect to the claim made under the Public Use Clause, the district court concluded,
after a thorough and careful analysis, that no such claim was available. By the plaintiffs’ own
admission, the court noted, the Project here would serve several well-established public uses
such as the redress of blight, the construction of a sporting arena, and the creation of new
housing, including 2,250 new units of affordable housing. Id. at 286-87. The district court
additionally held that a “pretext” argument provided a valid basis for a public-use challenge
under the Supreme Court’s decision in Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005), but
was not available here because “even if Plaintiffs could prove every allegation in the Amended
Complaint, a reasonable juror would not be able to conclude that the public purposes offered in
support of the Project [were] ‘mere pretexts’ within the meaning of Kelo.” Id. at 288. As to the
plaintiffs’ equal-protection claim, the district court determined that it was not viable because,
inter alia, any distinction between the plaintiffs and other persons has a rational basis. Id. at
291. As to the plaintiffs’ due process claim, the district court held that such a claim was ill-fated
in view of our holding in Brody v. Village of Port Chester, 434 F.3d 121 (2d Cir. 2005), in which
7
we determined that section 207 of New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law was sufficient
to satisfy the requirements of due process. Id. This appeal followed.
III.
The primary contentions raised on appeal are that the district court overlooked substantial
and specific allegations that Ratner is the sole beneficiary of the Project and that the public uses
invoked by appellees are “pretexts” advanced by corrupt and coopted state officials. (Appellants
also press their equal protection and due process claims, but give these appropriately short
discussion.) The following passage from the appellants’ brief captures the essence of their
argument:
Defendants’ decision to take Plaintiffs’ properties serves only one purpose: it allows
Ratner to build a Project of unprecedented size, and thus reap a profit that Defendants,
tellingly, have attempted to conceal at every turn. This is not merely favoritism of a
particular developer . . . . Here, the “favored” developer is driving and dictating the
process, with government officials at all levels obediently falling into line. . . . The
imminent seizure of Plaintiffs’ properties in the Takings Area selected by Ratner has
been accomplished through a wholesale abdication of governmental responsibility . . . .
That abdication has allowed Ratner to co-opt the power of eminent domain; and to wield
it in service of his understandable desire to expand the Project to truly mammoth
proportions, thus increasing the profit to himself, his companies and his shareholders.
Although the claim is far-reaching, the specific allegations underlying it are less so. Almost
without exception, the appellants’ arguments can be grouped into one of five discrete categories.
First, the appellants point to a series of allegations that follow logically from the acknowledged
fact that Ratner was the impetus behind the Project, i.e., that he, not a state agency, first
conceived of developing Atlantic Yards, that the Ratner Group proposed the geographic
boundaries of the Project, and that it was his plan for the Project that the ESDC eventually
adopted without significant modification. Second, the appellants emphasize certain allegations
that relate not to the passage of the Project, but to some purported departures from convention in
8
the process through which the MTA (which is not a defendant in this case) accepted a bid from
the Ratner Group to develop land owned principally by the MTA. Third, certain allegations are
invoked to suggest that the public uses being proffered by appellees (and relied upon by the
district court) were post hoc justifications, for example, the charge in the appellants’ brief that
“Defendants never claimed that the Takings Area was blighted until years after the Project was
officially announced and Kelo had been decided.” Fourth, while conceding that the ESDC has at
all times abided by the letter of the strict requirements of state law, the appellants make various
conclusory allegations in the complaint to suggest that the ESDC has nonetheless violated the
spirit of these rules, to wit, that the “ESDC . . . engaged in a sham ‘public’ review process whose
outcome was predetermined long before.” Finally, the appellants make reference to several
lawsuits that have been filed in state court in connection with this Project, but do not claim that
any of those lawsuits addressed the issue of whether the public use of the Project was pretextual,
which is the gravamen of the primary claim here.
IV.
We review the grant of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo, “construing the
complaint liberally, accepting all factual allegations in the complaint as true, and drawing all
reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.” Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc., 282 F.3d 147,
152 (2d Cir. 2002). In setting forth the pleading standard for this cause of action, the district
court looked for guidance to the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Bell Atlantic Corp. v.
Twombly, 127 S. Ct. 1955 (2007), which disavowed the oft-quoted statement from Conley v.
Gibson, 355 U.S. 41 (1957), that “‘a complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a
claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his
9
claim which would entitle him to relief.’” 127 S. Ct. at 1968 (quoting Conley, 355 U.S. at
45-46). Twombly requires instead that the complaint’s “[f]actual allegations be enough to raise a
right to relief above the speculative level on the assumption that all the allegations in the
complaint are true.” Id. at 1965 (internal citation omitted).
Because the disavowed language in Conley had been a part of our court’s jurisprudence
for decades, “‘[c]onsiderable uncertainty’ surrounds the breadth of the . . . decision.” In re
Elevator Antitrust Litig., 502 F.3d 47, 50 (2d Cir. 2007) (quoting Iqbal v. Hasty, 490 F.3d 143,
155 (2d Cir. 2007)). The appellants concede on appeal that Twombly applies to the pleading
standard in their action. Even though the precedents in this area “are less than crystal clear,” see
Iqbal, 490 F.3d at 178 (Cabranes, J., concurring), we need not take this occasion to contemplate
the outer limits of the Twombly standard. As all parties acknowledge, at a bare minimum, the
operative standard requires the “plaintiff [to] provide the grounds upon which his claim rests
through factual allegations sufficient ‘to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.’” See
ATSI Commc’ns., Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd., 493 F.3d 87, 98 (2d Cir. 2007) (quoting Twombly,
127 S. Ct. at 165). In view of what they have effectively conceded in prosecuting this lawsuit,
the appellants cannot meet this standard.
V.
We have recognized that the power of eminent domain is “a fundamental and necessary
attribute of sovereignty, superior to all private property rights.” Rosenthal & Rosenthal, Inc. v.
New York State Urban Dev. Corp., 771 F.2d 44, 45 (2d Cir. 1985) (per curiam) (citing Georgia
v. City of Chattanooga, 264 U.S. 472, 480 (1924) and Albert Hanson Lumber Co. v. United
States, 261 U.S. 581, 597 (1923)). But as the Fifth Amendment ensures, this power is not
10
without limits, among them what has come to be known as the public-use requirement.4 Among
its crucial protections, the Fifth Amendment provides, “nor shall private property be taken for
public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. This language has long been
understood to guarantee that “one person’s property may not be taken for the benefit of another
private person without a justifying public purpose, even though compensation be paid.”
Thompson v. Consol. Gas Utils. Corp., 300 U.S. 55, 80 (1937); see also Hawaii Hous. Auth. v.
Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229, 245 (1984) (“A purely private taking could not withstand the scrutiny of
the public use requirement; it would serve no legitimate purpose of government and would thus
be void.”).
But both in doctrine and in practice, the primary mechanism for enforcing the public-use
requirement has been the accountability of political officials to the electorate, not the scrutiny of
the federal courts. Over the last century, reflecting the direction of Supreme Court case law,
federal courts have had a much greater role in addressing what type of governmental action
constitutes a taking and what level of compensation is just, leaving to legislatures to determine,
in all but the most extreme cases, whether a taking fulfills the public-use requirement. See
generally William Michael Treanor, The Original Understanding of the Takings Clause and the
Political Process, 95 Colum. L. Rev. 782, 803-10 (1995); Vicki Been, “Exit” as a Constraint on
Land Use Exactions: Rethinking the Unconstitutional Conditions Doctrine, 91 Colum. L. Rev.
473, 497 (1991). “There is, of course, a role for courts to play in reviewing a legislature’s
judgment of what constitutes a public use, even when the eminent domain power is equated with
4
This public-use requirement has been made applicable to the states through the
Fourteenth Amendment. See Phillips v. Washington Legal Found., 524 U.S. 156, 163-64 (1998).
11
the police power,” Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 240, but the Supreme Court has repeatedly “made clear
that it is ‘an extremely narrow’ one.” Id. (quoting Berman v. Parker, 348 U.S. 26, 32 (1954)).
Speaking for a unanimous Supreme Court in Midkiff, Justice O’Connor explained the
rationale behind the very limited scope of federal judicial review in this area:
Judicial deference is required because, in our system of government, legislatures are
better able to assess what public purposes should be advanced by an exercise of the
taking power. State legislatures are as capable as Congress of making such
determinations within their respective spheres of authority. Thus, if a legislature, state or
federal, determines there are substantial reasons for an exercise of the taking power,
courts must defer to its determination that the taking will serve a public use.
467 U.S. at 244 (internal citation omitted). The Supreme Court has therefore instructed lower
courts not to “substitute [their] judgment for a legislature’s judgment as to what constitutes a
public use ‘unless the use be palpably without reasonable foundation.’” Id. at 241 (quoting
United States v. Gettysburg Elec. Ry. Co., 160 U.S. 668, 680 (1896)); see also Kelo v. City of
New London, 545 U.S. 469, 480 (2005) (“Without exception, our cases have defined [public use]
broadly, reflecting our longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments in this field.”);
Berman, 348 U.S. at 32 (“[W]hen the legislature has spoken, the public interest has been
declared in terms well-nigh conclusive.”). To that end, we have said that our review of a
legislature’s public-use determination is limited such that “‘where the exercise of the eminent
domain power is rationally related to a conceivable public purpose,’ . . . the compensated taking
of private property for urban renewal or community redevelopment is not proscribed by the
Constitution.” Rosenthal, 771 F.2d at 46 (quoting Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 241).
By way of brief illustration, in Berman, the Supreme Court rejected a Fifth Amendment
challenge from the owner of a department store slated for condemnation as part of a larger
redevelopment plan targeting blight in Washington, D.C. 348 U.S. at 31. The owner argued that
12
because his particular store was not blighted, and his land would be transferred to a private
developer, the taking violated the Public Use Clause. The Supreme Court disagreed, reasoning
that “[o]nce the question of the public purpose has been decided, the amount and character of
land to be taken for the project and the need for a particular tract to complete the integrated plan
rests in the discretion of the legislative branch.” Id. at 35-36. In Rosenthal, applying Berman,
we reached a similar result when we rejected a challenge to a plan redressing “the physical,
social and economic blight that ha[d] afflicted the Times Square area of Manhattan” in spite of
the fact that the private developer who had been selected to acquire the land in connection with
the project was allegedly connected to then New York City Mayor Edward Koch. 771 F.2d at
45; see also Rosenthal & Rosenthal, Inc. v. N.Y. State Urban Dev. Corp., 605 F. Supp. 612, 616
(S.D.N.Y. 1985).
With echoes of Rosenthal, the instant complaint calls the “alleged ‘public benefits’ . . .
either wildly exaggerated or simply false. At best, [they] are incidental; at worst, they are non-
existent.” Read carefully, however, the specific allegations in the complaint foreclose any
blanket suggestion that the Project can be expected to result in no benefits to the public. See
Hirsch v. Arthur Andersen & Co., 72 F.3d 1085, 1092 (2d Cir. 1995) (noting that “conclusory
allegations need not be credited . . . when they are belied by more specific allegations of the
complaint”). Instead, their collective import is that the costs involved, measured in terms of
either government spending or the impact the Project will have on the character of the
neighborhood and its current residents, will dwarf whatever benefits result.
In other words, the appellants have effectively conceded what Rosenthal found to have
been a complete defense to a public-use challenge: that viewed objectively, the Project bears at
13
least a rational relationship to several well-established categories of public uses, among them the
redress of blight, the creation of affordable housing, the creation of a public open space, and
various mass-transit improvements. But the plaintiffs then expend considerable effort explaining
why these proffered public uses should nonetheless be rejected as “pretextual,” not because they
are false, but because they are not the real reason for the Project’s approval.5
For example, on the subject of whether the Project will redress blight, the complaint
alleges that this is a “pretext with no basis in fact,” explaining that “far from being ‘blighted,’ the
Takings Area [as distinct from the Renewal Area] rests smack in the middle of some of the most
valuable real estate in Brooklyn.” But the complaint does not allege, nor could it, that either the
Renewal Area or the Takings Area are devoid of blight. The claim made is that the “City of
New York . . . never declared that the Takings Area [as opposed to the Renewal Area] was
‘blighted’ and . . . never designated it for redevelopment” until three years after the project was
announced, an implicit acknowledgment of the fact that the Renewal Area, which makes up
“[n]early half” of the Project site, was first designated as blighted in 1968, a designation that has
since been reaffirmed by New York City ten times, most recently in 2004. By the same token,
although alleging that none of their own properties are blighted, the plaintiffs have conceded that
even within the Takings Area, many properties are blighted and that the Project, as a whole,
targets an area more than half of which is significantly blighted. The blight study commissioned
by ESDC in 2006 determined that the conditions of blight extended well into the Takings Area,
and the complaint alleges no facts to the contrary. The study concluded that “the non-rail yard
5
The Complaint does not address the public open space rationale or the improvements to
mass transit, nor does it in any way suggest that the Project will not include a stadium.
14
portion of the project site is characterized by unsanitary and substandard conditions including
vacant and underutilized buildings, vacant lots, irregularly shaped lots, building facades that are
in ill-repair (e.g., crumbling brickwork, graffiti, flaking paint), and structures suffering from
serious physical deterioration.”
As to the issue of affordable housing, the complaint contends that “[f]undamentally, the
Project is comprised of luxury housing” because 69% of the housing units will be “market rate,
luxury units” and the remaining units will, for the most part, be introduced as part of the second
phase of development, which is not guaranteed. But the complaint concedes in the ensuing
allegations that at least 550 below-market units (roughly 5% of the total number of units
proposed) are slated to be built in the first phase of development, and that roughly three times
that number are slated for the next phase.6 Viewed carefully, the plaintiffs’ contention is not that
the Project will result in no below-market housing, but that when viewed “from the perspective
of [potential] residents’ income, the affordable [housing] units proposed from the Project will not
remotely offset the impact of the luxury housing.”
We need not go further. As Berman and Rosenthal illustrate, the redevelopment of a
blighted area, even standing alone, represents a “classic example of a taking for a public use.”
Rosenthal, 771 F.2d at 46; see also Kelo, 545 U.S. at 483-84. Nor does it matter that New York
has enlisted the services of a private developer to execute such improvements and implement its
development plan. Once we discern a valid public use to which the project is rationally related,
it “makes no difference that the property will be transferred to private developers, for the power
6
The “affordable housing” discussed here refers to below-market housing for middle
class occupants, not subsidized housing for the poor. No units are slated for households with
incomes below $21,000.
15
of eminent domain is merely the means to the end.” Rosenthal, 771 F2d at 46.
Similarly, we are without authority to provide the appellants the relief they seek based on
the fact that their individual lots are not blighted, notwithstanding the understandable frustration
this must cause them. The appellants do not dispute the presence of significant blight in the
Takings Area and even greater blight in the adjacent Renewal Area. “[O]nce it has been shown
that the surrounding area is blighted, the state may condemn unblighted parcels as part of an
overall plan to improve a blighted area.” In re G. & A. Books, Inc., 770 F.2d 288, 297 (2d Cir.
1985). This is “because ‘community redevelopment programs need not, by force of the
Constitution, be on a piecemeal basis–lot by lot, building by building.’” Rosenthal, 771 F.2d. at
46 (quoting Berman, 348 U.S. at 35). The public-use requirement will be satisfied as long as the
purpose involves “developing [a blighted] area to create conditions that would prevent a
reversion to blight in the future.” Kelo, 545 U.S. at 484 n.13 (emphasis omitted).
Lastly on this point, we must reject the argument that the ESDC is undeserving of such
deference because it is merely a state agency deputized by the legislature. The Supreme Court
has expressly extended deference in such matters to both “Congress and its authorized agencies.”
Berman, 348 U.S. at 33. In this context, “State legislatures are as capable as Congress of making
such determinations within their respective spheres of authority.” Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 244.
Indeed, Midkiff suggested it would be “ironic” if “state legislation [were] subject to greater
scrutiny under the incorporated ‘public use’ requirement than is congressional legislation under
the express mandate of the Fifth Amendment.” Id. at 244 n.7. Nor do we see why it is relevant
to the constitutional analysis that the ESDC, which in any case is not the only participant in this
16
story, is organized under state law as a public-benefit corporation.7 See N.Y. Unconsol. Law§
6254(1) (McKinney 2007) (providing that the ESDC “shall be a corporate governmental agency
of the state, constituting a political subdivision and public benefit corporation”).
VI.
Because it correctly rejected, on the basis of the complaint and the documents referenced
therein, the argument that the Project was not rationally related to a public use, the district court
concluded that the appellant’s claim would have necessarily failed under the precedents
established in Berman and Midkiff. But the district court’s analysis did not end there because it
determined that Kelo opened up a separate avenue for a takings challenge under which a plaintiff
could claim a taking had been effectuated “‘under the mere pretext of a public purpose, when
[the] actual purpose was to bestow a private benefit.’” Goldstein, 488 F. Supp. 2d at 282
(quoting Kelo, 545 U.S. at 478).
Primarily underlying this claim is a passing reference to “pretext” in the Kelo majority
opinion in a single sentence. See id. at 478 (“Nor would the City be allowed to take property
under the mere pretext of a public purpose when its actual purpose was to bestow a private
benefit.”). Fortunately, the Supreme Court’s guidance in Kelo need not be interpreted in a
vacuum. Kelo posed a novel question of law precisely because the City of New London had “not
[been] confronted with the need to remove blight.” Id. at 482. The Supreme Court granted
certiorari on the limited question of “whether a city’s decision to take property for the purpose of
7
We also take judicial notice of the fact that on December 21, 2006, the New York State
Public Authorities Control Board (a body that included then Governor George Pataki, the
Speaker of the State Assembly, and the Majority Leader of the State Senate) issued a resolution
approving of the Atlantic Yards Project. See Fed. R. Evid. 201.
17
economic development satisfies the ‘public use’ requirement of the Fifth Amendment.” Id. at
477. Accordingly, the issue of pretext must be understood in light of both the holding of the
case, which, in permitting a taking solely on the basis of an economic development rationale,
reaffirmed the “longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments in this field,” id. at
480, as well as the decision’s self-identification with a tradition of public use jurisprudence that
“[f]or more than a century . . . has wisely eschewed rigid formulas and intrusive scrutiny in favor
of affording legislatures broad latitude in determining what public needs justify the use of the
takings power.” Id. at 483.8
Prior to Kelo, no Supreme Court decision had endorsed the notion of a “pretext” claim,
although a few lower court cases contained language suggesting that a pretextual public use may
be invalid. See, e.g., 99 Cents Only Stores v. Lancaster Redevelopment Agency, 237 F. Supp. 2d
1123, 1129 (C.D. Cal. 2001) (“No judicial deference is required . . . where the ostensible public
use is demonstrably pretextual”), appeal dismissed as moot, 60 F.App’x 123 (9th Cir. 2003);
Aaron v. Target Corp., 269 F. Supp. 2d 1162, 1177 (E.D. Mo. 2003) (same), rev’d on other
grounds, 357 F.3d 768 (8th Cir. 2004); Cottonwood Christian Ctr. v. Cypress Redev. Agency,
218 F. Supp. 2d 1203, 1229 (C.D. Cal. 2002) (same). But see Montgomery v. Carter County,
8
We find it instructive that Justice O’Connor, in a dissent that was joined by three other
Justices, maintained that the result reached by the majority represented a “mov[e] away from our
decisions sanctioning the condemnation of harmful property use,” contending that the Court’s
precedents stood only for the more limited proposition that “[b]ecause each taking directly
achieved a public benefit, it did not matter that the property was turned over to private use.”
Kelo, 545 U.S. at 500-01 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). Justice O’Connor therefore agreed without
reservation that, in addition to redressing blight, the “sovereign may transfer private property to
private parties . . . who make the property available for the public's use–such as with a railroad,
a public utility, or a stadium.” Id. at 498 (emphasis added). As such, the instant challenge to the
Project hinges on a proposition of law that would appear to fare no better under the Kelo dissent.
18
Tenn., 226 F.3d 758, 765-66 (6th Cir. 2000) (observing that “[v]ery few takings will fail to
satisfy that standard [and] the examples suggested in the reported cases tend to be highly
implausible hypotheticals”). These claims have come in all shapes and sizes. See Cottonwood
Christian Ctr., 218 F. Supp. 2d at 1228 (challenging taking where the “evidence does not
necessarily support a finding of blight”); 99 Cents Only Stores, 237 F. Supp. 2d at 1130
(challenging taking premised on the assumption that the departure of Costco would result in
future blight); Aaron, 269 F. Supp. 2d at 1174-75 (entertaining claim of pretext where the
requisite “findings of blight rested in part on the condition of [the beneficiary’s own] personal
property, and on the substandard condition of property [the beneficiary] was obligated to
maintain under the various leases”). Tellingly, it appears that in each of these district court
cases, the plaintiff had contested whether any public use would be served by the taking.9
In contrast, the particular kind of “pretext” claim the plaintiffs in this case advance bears
an especially dubious jurisprudential pedigree: The plaintiffs have effectively acknowledged the
Project’s rational relationship to numerous well-established public uses, but contend that it is
constitutionally impermissible nonetheless because one or more of the government officials who
approved it was actually–and improperly–motivated by a desire to confer a private benefit on
9
In 99 Cents Only Stores, for example, the challenged taking had been justified not by
reference to any existing blight, but by a professed concern for “future blight” that the court
found may not qualify as a valid public use. See 237 F. Supp. 2d at 1130. Similarly, in
Cottonwood Christian Center, the district court concluded that the “evidence does not
necessarily support a finding of blight.” See 218 F. Supp. 2d at 1228. In Aaron v. Target, the
challenged development plan was proposed by Target to acquire its leases from its landlord. 269
F. Supp. 2d at 1175. The district court noted, inter alia, the suspicious timing of the blight study
and the fact that the purported “findings of blight rested in part on the condition of Target’s
personal property, and on the substandard condition of property Target itself was obligated to
maintain under the various leases.” Id. at 1174-75.
19
Mr. Ratner. The allegations in support of this claim primarily involve purported excesses in the
costs of the plan as measured against its benefits. The appellants seek to use these alleged
failings to gain discovery into the process by which the ESDC approved this Project. Among
other things, as was made clear at oral argument, they seek depositions of pertinent government
officials, along with their emails, confidential communications, and other pre-decisional
documents. They also dispute various plausible assumptions underlying the Project’s budget.
Allowing such a claim to go forward, founded only on mere suspicion, would add an
unprecedented level of intrusion into the process. See Kelo, 545 U.S. at 488 (remarking that the
“disadvantages of a heightened form of review are especially pronounced in this type of case.
Orderly implementation of a comprehensive redevelopment plan obviously requires that the legal
rights of all interested parties be established before new construction can be commenced.”).
Prior to Kelo, it was well settled that “it is only the taking’s purpose, and not its mechanics that
must pass scrutiny under the Public Use Clause.” Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 244.
Accordingly, we must reject the notion that, in a single sentence, the Kelo majority
sought sub silentio to overrule Berman, Midkiff, and over a century of precedent and to require
federal courts in all cases to give close scrutiny to the mechanics of a taking rationally related to
a classic public use as a means to gauge the purity of the motives of the various government
officials who approved it. See Kelo, 545 U.S. at 483 (characterizing more than a century of
Public Use Clause jurisprudence as having “wisely eschewed rigid formulas and intrusive
scrutiny in favor of affording legislatures broad latitude in determining what public needs justify
the use of the takings power”); Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 241 (“[W]here the exercise of the eminent
domain power is rationally related to a conceivable public purpose, the Court has never held a
20
compensated taking to be proscribed by the Public Use Clause.”); Berman, 348 U.S. at 32 (“The
role of the judiciary in determining whether [the takings] power is being exercised for a public
purpose is an extremely narrow one”); United States ex rel. Tenn. Valley Auth. v. Welch, 327
U.S. 546, 552 (1946) (“Any departure from this judicial restraint would result in courts deciding
on what is and is not a governmental function . . . a practice which has proved impracticable in
other fields.”); Old Dominion Land Co. v. United States, 269 U.S. 55, 66 (1925); (“[T]he
declaration by Congress of what it had in mind . . . . is entitled to deference until it is shown to
involve an impossibility.”); United States v. Gettysburg Elec. Ry. Co., 160 U.S. 668, 680 (1896)
(“[W]hen the legislature has declared the use or purpose to be a public one, its judgment will be
respected by the courts, unless the use be palpably without reasonable foundation.”); cf. Franco
v. Nat'l Capital Revitalization Corp., 930 A.2d 160, 171 (D.C. 2007) (recognizing that in this
context, courts must be “especially careful not to indulge baseless, conclusory allegations that
the legislature acted improperly”).
We do not read Kelo’s reference to “pretext” as demanding, as the appellants would
apparently have it, a full judicial inquiry into the subjective motivation of every official who
supported the Project, an exercise as fraught with conceptual and practical difficulties as with
state-sovereignty and separation-of-power concerns. Beyond being conclusory, the claim that
the “decision to take Plaintiffs’ properties serves only one purpose” defies both logic and
experience. “Legislative decisions to invoke the power to condemn are by their nature political
accommodations of competing concerns.” Brody v. Vill. of Port Chester, 434 F.3d 121, 136 (2d
Cir. 2005). And as Justice Scalia observed in words, if anything, more pertinent in this case:
[W]hile it is possible to discern the objective “purpose” of a statute (i.e., the public good
at which its provisions appear to be directed) . . . . discerning the subjective motivation of
21
[a legislative body] is, to be honest, almost always an impossible task. The number of
possible motivations, to begin with, is not binary, or indeed even finite. . . . To look for
the sole purpose of even a single legislator is probably to look for something that does
not exist.
Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 636-37 (1987) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (emphasis in
original). Thus, while “a legislature may juggle many policy considerations in deciding whether
to condemn private property,” the task of a federal court reviewing the constitutionality of such a
taking should be one of “patrolling the borders” of this decision, viewed objectively, not second-
guessing every detail in search of some illicit improper motivation. See Brody, 434 F.3d at 135.
We reach this conclusion preserving the possibility that a fact pattern may one day arise
in which the circumstances of the approval process so greatly undermine the basic legitimacy of
the outcome reached that a closer objective scrutiny of the justification being offered is required.
In this area, “hypothetical cases . . . can be confronted if and when they arise.” Kelo, 545 U.S. at
487; see also id. at 487 n.19. But we hold today that where, as here, a redevelopment plan is
justified in reference to several classic public uses whose objective basis is not in doubt, we must
continue to adhere to the Midkiff standard, i.e., that the Atlantic Yards Project:
may not be successful in achieving its intended goals. But ‘whether in fact the [Project]
will accomplish its objectives is not the question: the [constitutional requirement] is
satisfied if . . . the . . . [state] rationally could have believed that the [taking] would
promote its objective.’
Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 242 (quoting Western & Southern Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization,
451 U.S. 648, 671-672 (1981) (emphasis in Midkiff)).
The appellants urge that we reach a contrary result because, unlike in Kelo, the Atlantic
Yards Project was allegedly proposed in the first instance by Ratner himself. The sequence of
events was certainly one of the factors considered in Kelo. However, here, New York long ago
22
decided by statute not to restrict the ESDC’s mandate to those “projects in which it is the prime
mover.” E. Thirteenth St. Cmty. Ass’n v. N.Y. State Hous. Fin. Agency, 630 N.Y.S.2d 517, 518
(App. Div. 1995); see also N.Y. Unconsol. Law § 6252 (McKinney 2007) (providing the ESDC
should “encourag[e] maximum participation by the private sector of the economy”). And as
Kelo reaffirmed, the mere fact that a private party stands to benefit from a proposed taking does
not suggest its purpose is invalid because “[q]uite simply, the government’s pursuit of a public
purpose will often benefit individual private parties.” Kelo, 545 U.S. at 485.
Moreover, in this case, substantial factors not present in Kelo support our result.10 As we
have already illustrated, private economic development is neither the sole, nor the primary
asserted justification for the Atlantic Yards Project. The appellants have conceded, if only
reluctantly, that the Atlantic Yards Project will target a long-blighted area, result in the
construction of a publicly owned (albeit generously leased) stadium, create a public open space,
increase the quantity of affordable housing, and render various improvements to the mass transit
10
Justice Kennedy, who joined with the majority opinion, nonetheless wrote separately to
state his view that a “court confronted with a plausible accusation of impermissible favoritism to
private parties should treat the objection as a serious one and review the record to see if it has
merit, though with the presumption that the government’s actions were reasonable and intended
to serve a public purpose.” Kelo, 545 U.S. at 491 (Kennedy, J., concurring). Justice Kennedy
may well have intended this caveat to apply exclusively to cases where the sole ground asserted
for the taking was economic development. He framed the issue by explaining his “agreement
with the Court that a presumption of invalidity is not warranted for economic development
takings in general, or for the particular takings at issue in this case.” Id. at 493. In any case,
Justice Kennedy has analogized the sort of heightened review he envisions to a more searching
“rational-basis review under the Equal Protection Clause.” Id. at 491 (citing Cleburne v.
Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 446-47 (rational basis case); Dep’t of Agric. v. Moreno,
413 U.S. 528, 533-36 (1973) (rational basis case)). None of the Equal Protection Clause cases
Justice Kennedy relied upon involved deposing legislators or subpoenaing their confidential
emails. Accordingly, even assuming, arguendo, we were to apply a version of Justice
Kennedy’s standard here, we would scrutinize objectively and find no “plausible” accusations of
favoritism.
23
system. Furthermore, they have failed to allege any specific examples of illegality in the
elaborate process by which the Project was approved, any specific illustration of improper
dealings between Mr. Ratner and the pertinent government officials, or any specific defect in the
Project that would be so egregious as to render it, on any fair reading of precedent, “palpably
without reasonable foundation.” Midkiff, 467 U.S. at 241.
This case has been very well litigated on both sides. At the end of the day, we are left
with the distinct impression that the lawsuit is animated by concerns about the wisdom of the
Atlantic Yards Project and its effect on the community. While we can well understand why the
affected property owners would take this opportunity to air their complaints, such matters of
policy are the province of the elected branches, not this Court.
VII.
Finally, we must reject the due process and equal protection claims brought by the
appellants for essentially the reasons stated by the district court. Accordingly, for the foregoing
reasons, we hereby AFFIRM the judgment of the district court dismissing the federal claims with
prejudice and the state claim without prejudice.
24