Susan Boggs v. FAA

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 2019
Docket18-3242
StatusUnpublished

This text of Susan Boggs v. FAA (Susan Boggs v. FAA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Boggs v. FAA, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0108n.06

No. 18-3242

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

SUSAN BOGGS, FOUAD RACHID, NICOLE ) FILED RACHID, FOUAD, INC., ) Mar 07, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Petitioners, ) ) ON PETITION FOR REVIEW v. ) FROM THE FEDERAL ) AVIATION FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION ) ADMINISTRATION (FAA), ) ) Respondent. )

Before: BATCHELDER, SUTTON, DONALD, Circuit Judges.

BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge. The Boggs/Rachid family has long

attempted to force the City of Cleveland (“City”) to purchase their property in Olmsted Falls based

on allegations that the Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (“Airport”) has rendered it

worthless. The latest installment is a complaint they filed with the Federal Aviation

Administration, pursuant to 14 C.F.R. § 16, claiming that the City violated assurances it made to

the FAA regarding the Airport. Two specific assurances lie at the heart of the administrative claim:

that the City would hold good title to all Airport property, and that the City would mitigate all

airspace hazards. The family argues that when the City extended the Airport’s runways, the

Airport’s landing area encroached onto the family’s property, and the pine trees on the family

home became airspace hazards. The City countered that the maps the family provided

demonstrated there was no crossover of the property lines, and that the FAA had previously

determined that the pine trees were not hazardous. After considering the evidence, the FAA No. 18-3242, Boggs v. FAA

granted summary judgment in favor of the City. The family now appeals, arguing that the FAA

misapplied its own regulations and did not have substantial evidence to support its findings. We

disagree. The law does not support the family’s attempt to expand what constitutes “airport

property” to cover their own home. Moreover, the family was not in a position to challenge the

FAA’s determination of airspace hazards through the type of administrative complaint they filed.

For those reasons, we AFFIRM the agency decision.

BACKGROUND

The Parties. Petitioners Susan Boggs, her husband Fouad Rachid, and their daughter

Nicole Rachid live in a home in Olmsted Township, Ohio, located at 24505 Barrett Road

(“Home”). Mr. Fouad and Ms. Boggs both own and control Fouad, Inc., an Ohio corporation,

which in turn owns the Home. The City owns and operates the Airport. Due to an expansion of

the Airport, the edge of the Property now sits 3,473 feet away from Runway 6L24R.

Litigation History. Since 2002, Petitioners have filed several complaints against various

governmental entities regarding the Airport’s effect on the value of the Home. The first complaint

was against the City in state court in 2002. The state court dismissed the lawsuit for lack of

standing. See Boggs v. City of Cleveland, 655 F.3d 516, 518 (6th Cir. 2011) (reciting litigation

history). The second case was filed in 2008, also against the City and in state court. The City

removed the case to the Northern District of Ohio. Boggs v. City of Cleveland, No. 1:08-cv-1253

(N.D. Ohio 2008). The parties stipulated to dismiss the case without prejudice and to toll the

statute of limitations while Petitioners exhausted their administrative remedies.

-2- No. 18-3242, Boggs v. FAA

In 2016, Petitioners initiated an administrative proceeding against the City pursuant to

14 C.F.R. § 16 (“Part 16”). That proceeding underlies the current appeal.1 Under Part 16, any

“person directly and substantially affected by any alleged noncompliance” with “assurances and

other Federal obligations contained in grant-in-aid agreements” may file a complaint with the

FAA. Id. at §§ 16.23(a), 16.1(a)(3). In other words, when an airport receives money from the

FAA, the operator of the airport agrees to maintain the airport in a specific manner in exchange

for that money, and if it fails to do those things it promised to do, an interested party can complain

to the FAA for investigation and enforcement. Here, Petitioners filed their Part 16 complaint and

alleged that the City had violated a host of assurances it had made to the FAA. Although they

recite several assurances, their complaint depended only on two of them: Grant Assurance 4, which

concerns the City’s ownership of airport property; and Grant Assurance 20, which concerns the

City’s obligation to mitigate airport hazards, each set out as follows:

Grant Assurance 4 Good Title. [The City], a public agency or the Federal Government, holds good title, satisfactory to the Secretary, to the landing area of the airport or site thereof, or will give assurance, satisfactory to the Secretary, that Good title will be acquired. 49 USC 47105(d).

Grant Assurance 20 Hazard Removal and Mitigation. [The City] will take appropriate action to assure that such terminal airspace as is required to protect instrument and visual operations to the airport (including established minimum flight altitudes) will be adequately cleared and protected by removing, lowering, relocating, marking, or lighting or otherwise mitigating existing airport hazards and by preventing the establishment or creation of future airport hazards.

How did the City allegedly violate these assurances? Petitioners assert that it did so by

extending the Airport’s runways. That extension, argues Petitioners, placed the Home within the

Airport’s landing area and made some of the Home’s tall pine trees obstruct navigable airspace.

1 Petitioners also filed a complaint with the FAA in 2012, but that complaint was dismissed because Petitioners failed to follow the FAA’s procedural rules. -3- No. 18-3242, Boggs v. FAA

As relief for allegedly violating these assurances, Petitioners requested the FAA to “conduct

investigations and find non-compliance with the City’s Grant Agreements.”

The Director’s Order. On January 24, 2017, and on review of the documents submitted

by Petitioners and the City, the FAA’s Director of Compliance (“Director”) entered an order

granting summary judgment to the City. Two conclusions were essential to the result: 1) that the

Home did not sit in the Airport’s landing area, and 2) that the FAA had already determined that

the Home did not present a hazard to navigable airspace.

Final Agency Order. Petitioners appealed the Director’s Order to the Associate

Administrator of the FAA (“Associate Administrator”). They were met with the same result. In

addition to affirming the Director, the Associate Administrator made two key findings: 1) that the

airport property does not include airspace, and 2) that a Part 16 proceeding is an improper vehicle

by which to challenge the FAA’s determination of hazardous objects.2

The Associate Administrator affirmed the decision of the Director to dismiss Petitioners’

Rule 16 complaint on the ground that no genuine issue of material fact existed warranting further

proceedings. The Associate Administrator’s decision was a final order of the FAA, 14 C.F.R.

§ 16.33(b), subject to judicial review, 49 U.S.C. § 46110(a). Petitioners filed a timely appeal with

this Court. See id.

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