Tri County Industries, Inc., a Maryland Corporation v. District of Columbia, a Municipal Corporation

104 F.3d 455, 322 U.S. App. D.C. 412, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 505, 1997 WL 9837
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1997
Docket96-7022
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 104 F.3d 455 (Tri County Industries, Inc., a Maryland Corporation v. District of Columbia, a Municipal Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tri County Industries, Inc., a Maryland Corporation v. District of Columbia, a Municipal Corporation, 104 F.3d 455, 322 U.S. App. D.C. 412, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 505, 1997 WL 9837 (D.C. Cir. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.

STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:

On September 20, 1993 the acting director of the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (“DCRA”), Hampton Cross, summarily and without a hearing suspended a building permit issued to Tri County Industries, Inc. Tri County contends that the suspension deprived it of its property without due process of law, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Although we reject its “substantive due process” claim, *457 we agree that the suspension violated Tri County’s procedural rights.

Tri County is in the business of decontaminating soil tainted with oil and other hazardous materials. In July 1992 it applied to the District of Columbia government for a building permit to convert an empty warehouse in Washington, D.C. into a facility for its decontamination work. In pursuing the application, it sought and obtained both an air quality permit and a waiver of the requirement that it file an environmental impact statement. Both were prerequisites to the issuance of Tri County’s building permit. See District of Columbia Municipal Regulations §§ 20-200.1, 20-7200.1.

On February 26, 1993 the DCRA issued the building permit. Its licensing in place, Tri County completed some work renovating the facility, but nearly six months later was not yet ready to begin operations, primarily because of delays in the delivery of the decontaminating equipment. On September 7 it was issued a citation for storing soil at the facility without the required certificate of occupancy.

In the meantime, public opposition to the project had grown. On September 20, 1993 D.C. officials held a public meeting, attended by residents of the nearby community, representatives of Tri County, Hampton Cross of the DCRA, and one Merrick Malone, a representative of D.C.’s Department of Housing and Community Development. The meeting was by all accounts a loud and sometimes unruly affair. In the course of it Malone stated, incorrectly as it later turned out, that a new public housing project was to be built immediately adjacent to the facility. Cross thereupon stated that he was suspending Tri County’s building permit, to the applause of the crowd. According to his later testimony, he acted on the basis of Malone’s statement. This suspension, Tri County contends, also suspended its air quality permit.

Two days later, on September 22, Tri County was issued a stop work order for continuing operations without a certificate of occupancy in violation of the September 7 citation. Tri County took no action to challenge either the September 20 suspension, which all parties now agree had no legal basis at all, or the stop work order, which is not challenged here and which all agree was a legally sufficient bar to Tri County’s continuing work on the facility. See District of Columbia Municipal Regulations § 12-118.0.

More trouble followed. On October 15, 1993, Tri County was sent a letter by an official working for Cross requesting additional information on the environmental effects of the project. This request was also of dubious legal authority. Although it cited authorization from § 4(c)(3)(C) of the District’s Environmental Policy Act (D.C.Code § 6-983(c)(3)(C)), the review process referenced in that section presumably had ended when the waiver was granted. In any case, Tri County had already answered many of the same questions as part of that original review process. Tri County did not respond. On December 6, Cross sent another letter, again without clear basis in the D.C.Code, rescinding the environmental waiver and stating that the District would soon start proceedings to revoke the building permit. In fact it appears that the District never did start the revocation proceedings. (In all probability the permit would have expired by now as a result of the permittee’s abandonment of the authorized work. See District of Columbia Municipal Regulations § 12-112.8.) Tri County did nothing in response to this last missive except to remove the soil that had been the basis of the September 7 citation.

One year to the day after the fateful public meeting, Tri County filed suit in féderal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging deprivation of its property without procedural or substantive due process. It identifies as deprivations not only the suspension of its building permit on September 20, 1993 but also the implied simultaneous suspension of its air quality permit on the same date and the explicit rescission of its environmental waiver on December 6,1993.

The district court granted the District’s motion for summary judgment. It rejected the substantive due process claim on the ground that Cross’s actions were at most *458 negligent and the procedural due process claim on the ground that the budding permit suspension was only an “interim suspension” for which Cross had “sufficient factual basis” and for which prompt review was available, citing Barry v. Barchi, 443 U.S. 55, 64, 99 S.Ct. 2642, 2649, 61 L.Ed.2d 365 (1979). See Tri-County Industries, Inc. v. District of Columbia, 932 F.Supp. 4, 6, 7 (D.D.C.1996). We review de novo. See Diamond v. Atwood, 43 F.3d 1538, 1540 (D.C.Cir.1995).

We first dispose of Tri County’s claim that the implied suspension of the air quality permit on September 20, and the explicit rescission the environmental waiver on December 6, were deprivations that require our review. As to the air quality permit, the only ground for regarding it as suspended at all is the idea that it was joined at the hip with the building permit, so that the suspension of the budding permit equady suspended the air quality permit. That may wed be true: the letter issuing the permit says that it wid not become vadd (as authorization for a stationary source of air podution) untd a valid budding permit is received by the issuing office. See letter of December 11,1992 to Tri County from the Environmental Regulation Administration of the DCRA. But it would seem to fodow that reactivation of the budding permit would reactivate the air quadty permit. Accordingly, it is hard to see how the latter’s suspension adds anything to that of the budding permit.

Of course the air quadty suspension might generate an additional issue if the District defended the suspension (if indeed there was a suspension) as an appdcation of procedures expdcitly laid out for suspension of air quadty permits; in that event we would be caded on to review the constitutionadty of the specified procedures. But the District makes no such claim. Rather, as we discuss in detad below, since the suspension of both permits did not fit any authorized procedure, we evaluate Cross’s act, for procedural due process purposes, by inferring a hypothetical procedure from his actual conduct. That conduct was, of course, identical for both permits. Accordingly, the air quadty permit seems to add nothing to the case that is not encompassed in analysis of the budding permit.

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104 F.3d 455, 322 U.S. App. D.C. 412, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 505, 1997 WL 9837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-county-industries-inc-a-maryland-corporation-v-district-of-cadc-1997.