This action for declaratory and injunctive relief and damages
was brought by certain of the petitioners against respondent town
of Penfield (a suburb of Rochester, N.Y.), and respondent members
of Penfield's Zoning, Planning, and Town Boards, claiming that the
town's zoning ordinance, by its terms and as enforced, effectively
excluded persons of low and moderate income from living in the
town, in violation of petitioners' constitutional rights and of 42
U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, and 1983. Petitioners consist of both the
original plaintiffs -- (1) Metro-Act of Rochester, a not-for-profit
corporation among whose purposes is fostering action to alleviate
the housing shortage for low and moderate income persons in the
Rochester area; (2) several individual Rochester taxpayers; and (3)
several Rochester area residents with low or moderate incomes who
are also members of minority racial or ethnic groups -- and
Rochester Home Builders Association (Home Builders), embracing a
number of residential construction firms in the Rochester area,
which unsuccessfully sought to intervene as a party plaintiff, and
the Housing Council in the Monroe County Area (Housing Council), a
not-for-profit corporation consisting of a number of organizations
interested in housing problems, which was unsuccessfully sought to
be added as a party plaintiff. The District Court dismissed the
complaint on the ground,
inter alia, that petitioners
lacked standing to prosecute the action, and the Court of Appeals
affirmed.
Held: Whether the rules of standing are considered as
aspects of the constitutional requirement that a plaintiff must
make out a "case or controversy" within the meaning of Art. III,
or, apart from such requirement, as prudential limitations on the
courts' role in resolving disputes involving "generalized
grievances" or third parties' legal rights or interests, none of
the petitioners has met the threshold requirement of such rules
that to have standing a complainant must clearly allege facts
demonstrating that he is a proper party to invoke judicial
resolution of the dispute and the exercise of the court's remedial
powers. Pp.
422 U. S.
498-518.
Page 422 U. S. 491
(a) As to petitioner Rochester residents who assert standing as
persons of low or moderate income and, coincidentally, as members
of minority racial or ethnic groups, the facts alleged fail to
support an actionable causal relationship between Penfield's zoning
practices and these petitioners' alleged injury. A plaintiff who
seeks to challenge exclusionary zoning practices must allege
specific, concrete facts demonstrating that such practices harm
him, and that he personally would benefit in a tangible way from
the court's intervention. Here, these petitioners rely on little
more than the remote possibility, unsubstantiated by allegations of
fact, that their situation might have been better had respondents
acted otherwise, and might improve were the court to afford relief.
Pp.
422 U. S.
502-508.
(b) With respect to petitioners who assert standing on the basis
of their status as Rochester taxpayers, claiming that they are
suffering economic injury through increased taxes resulting from
Penfield's zoning practices having forced Rochester to provide more
tax-abated low or moderate cost housing than it otherwise would
have done, the line of causation between Penfield's actions and
such injury is not apparent. But even assuming that these
petitioners could establish that the zoning practices harm them,
the basis of their claim is that the practices violate the
constitutional and statutory rights of third parties -- persons of
low and moderate income who allegedly are excluded from Penfield.
Hence, their claim falls squarely within the prudential standing
rule that normally bars litigants from asserting the rights or
legal interests of others in order to obtain relief from injury to
themselves. Pp.
422 U. S.
508-510.
(c) Petitioner Metro-Act's claims to standing as a Rochester
taxpayer and on behalf of its members who are Rochester taxpayers
or persons of low or moderate income are precluded for the reasons
applying to the denial of standing to the individual petitioner
Rochester taxpayers and persons of low and moderate income. In
addition, with respect to Metro-Act's claim to standing because 9%
of its membership is composed of Penfield residents, prudential
considerations strongly counsel against according such residents or
Metro-Act standing where the complaint is that they have been
harmed indirectly by the exclusion of others, thus attempting, in
the absence of a showing of any exception allowing such a claim, to
raise the putative rights of third parties.
Trafficante v.
Metropolitan Life Ins., 409 U. S. 205,
distinguished. Pp.
422 U. S.
512-514.
Page 422 U. S. 492
(d) Petitioner Home Builders, which alleges no monetary injury
to itself, has no standing to claim damages on behalf of its
members, since whatever injury may have been suffered is peculiar
to the individual member concerned, thus requiring individualized
proof of both the fact and extent of injury and individual awards.
Nor does Home Builders have standing to claim prospective relief
absent any allegation of facts sufficient to show the existence of
any injury to members of sufficient immediacy and ripeness to
warrant judicial intervention. Pp.
422 U. S.
514-516.
(e) Petitioner Housing Council has no standing where the
complaint and record do not indicate that any of its members, with
one exception, has made any effort involving Penfield, has taken
any steps toward building there, or had any dealings with
respondents. With respect to the one exception, this petitioner
averred no basis for inferring that an earlier controversy between
it and respondents remained a live, concrete dispute. Pp.
422 U. S.
516-517.
495 F.2d 1187, affirmed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and STEWART, BLACKMUN, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. DOUGLAS,
J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
422 U. S. 518.
BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which WHITE and
MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
422 U. S.
519.
Page 422 U. S. 493
MR. JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners, various organizations and individuals resident in
the Rochester, N.Y. metropolitan area, brought this action in the
District Court for the Western District of New York against the
town of Penfield, an incorporated municipality adjacent to
Rochester, and against members of Penfield's Zoning, Planning, and
Town Boards. Petitioners claimed that the town's zoning ordinance,
by its terms and as enforced by the defendant board members,
respondents here, effectively excluded persons of low and moderate
income from living in the town, in contravention of petitioners'
First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights and in violation of
42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, and 1983. The District Court dismissed the
complaint and denied a motion to add petitioner Housing Council in
the Monroe County Area, Inc., as party plaintiff and also a motion
by petitioner Rochester Home Builders Association, Inc., for leave
to intervene as party plaintiff. The Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit affirmed, holding that none of the plaintiffs, and
neither Housing Council nor Home Builders Association, had standing
to prosecute the action. 495 F.2d 1187 (1974). We granted the
petition for certiorari. 419 U.S. 823 (1974). For reasons that
differ in certain respects from those upon which the Court of
Appeals relied, we affirm.
I
Petitioners Metro-Act of Rochester, Inc., and eight individual
plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and all persons similarly
situated, [
Footnote 1] filed
this action on January 24,
Page 422 U. S. 494
1972, averring jurisdiction in the District Court under 28
U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343. The complaint identified Metro-Act as a
not-for-profit New York corporation, the purposes of which are
"to alert ordinary citizens to problems of social concern; . . .
to inquire into the reasons for the critical housing shortage for
low and moderate income persons in the Rochester area and to urge
action on the part of citizens to alleviate the general housing
shortage for low and moderate income persons. [
Footnote 2]"
Plaintiffs Vinkey, Reichert, Warth, and Harris were described as
residents of the city of Rochester, all of whom owned real property
in and paid property taxes to that city. [
Footnote 3] Plaintiff Ortiz, "a citizen of
Spanish/Puerto Rican extraction," App. 7, also owned real property
in and paid taxes to Rochester. Ortiz, however, resided in Wayland,
N.Y., some 42 miles from Penfield, where he was employed. [
Footnote 4] The complaint described
plaintiffs Broadnax, Reyes, and Sinkler as residents of Rochester
and "persons fitting within the classification of low and moderate
income as hereinafter defined. . . ." [
Footnote 5]
Ibid. Although
Page 422 U. S. 495
the complaint does not expressly so state, the record shows that
Broadnax, Reyes, and Sinkler are members of ethnic or racial
minority groups: Reyes is of Puerto Rican ancestry; Broadnax and
Sinkler are Negroes.
Petitioners' complaint alleged that Penfield's zoning ordinance,
adopted in 1962, has the purpose and effect of excluding persons of
low and moderate income from residing in the town. In particular,
the ordinance allocates 98% of the town's vacant land to
single-family detached housing, and allegedly by imposing
unreasonable requirements relating to lot size, setback, floor
area, and habitable space, the ordinance increases the cost of
single-family detached housing beyond the means of persons of low
and moderate income. Moreover, according to petitioners, only 0.3%
of the land available for residential construction is allocated to
multifamily structures (apartments, townhouses, and the like), and
even on this limited space, housing for low and moderate income
persons is not economically feasible because of low density and
other requirements. Petitioners also alleged that, "in furtherance
of a policy of exclusionary zoning,"
id. at 22, the
defendant members of Penfield's Town, Zoning, and Planning Boards
had acted in an arbitrary and discriminatory manner: they had
delayed action on proposals for low and moderate cost housing for
inordinate periods of time; denied such proposals for arbitrary and
insubstantial reasons; refused to grant necessary variances and
permits, or to allow tax abatements; failed to provide necessary
support services for low and moderate cost housing projects; and
had
Page 422 U. S. 496
amended the ordinance to make approval of such projects
virtually impossible.
In sum, petitioners alleged that, in violation of their "rights,
privileges and immunities secured by the Constitution and laws of
the United States,"
id. at 17, the town and its officials
had made
"practically and economically impossible the construction of
sufficient numbers of low and moderate income . . . housing in the
Town of Penfield to satisfy the minimum housing requirements of
both the Town of Penfield and the metropolitan Rochester area.
[
Footnote 6] Petitioners
alleged, moreover, that, by precluding low and moderate cost
housing, the town's zoning practices also had the effect of
excluding persons of minority racial and ethnic groups, since most
such persons have only low or moderate incomes."
Petitioners further alleged certain harm to themselves. The
Rochester property owners and taxpayers -- Vinkey, Reichert, Warth,
Harris, and Ortiz -- claimed that, because of Penfield's
exclusionary practices, the city of Rochester had been forced to
impose higher tax rates on them and others similarly situated than
would otherwise have been necessary. The low and moderate income,
minority plaintiffs -- Ortiz, Broadnax, Reyes, and Sinkler --
claimed that Penfield's zoning practices had prevented them from
acquiring, by lease or purchase, residential property in the town,
and thus had forced them and their families to reside in less
attractive environments. To relieve these various harms,
petitioners asked the District Court to declare the Penfield
ordinance unconstitutional, to enjoin the defendants from enforcing
the ordinance, to order the defendants to enact and administer a
new ordinance designed to alleviate the effects of their past
actions, and to award $750,000 in actual and exemplary damages.
Page 422 U. S. 497
On May 2, 1972, petitioner Rochester Home Builders Association,
an association of firms engaged in residential construction in the
Rochester metropolitan area, moved the District Court for leave to
intervene as a party plaintiff. In essence, Home Builders'
intervenor complaint repeated the allegations of exclusionary
zoning practices made by the original plaintiffs. It claimed that
these practices arbitrarily and capriciously had prevented its
member firms from building low and moderate cost housing in
Penfield, and thereby had deprived them of potential profits. Home
Builders prayed for equitable relief identical in substance to that
requested by the original plaintiffs, and also for $750,000 in
damages. [
Footnote 7] On June
7, 1972, Metro-Act and the other original plaintiffs moved to join
petitioner Housing Council in the Monroe County Area, Inc., as a
party plaintiff. Housing Council is a not-for-profit New York
corporation, its membership comprising some 71 public and private
organizations interested in housing problems. An affidavit
accompanying the motion stated that 17 of Housing Council's member
groups were or hoped to be involved in the development of low and
moderate cost housing, and that one of its members -- the Penfield
Better Homes Corp. -- "is and has been actively attempting to
develop moderate income housing" in Penfield, "but has been stymied
by its inability to secure the necessary approvals." [
Footnote 8]
Upon consideration of the complaints and of extensive supportive
materials submitted by petitioners, the District Court held that
the original plaintiffs, Home Builders, and Housing Council lacked
standing to prosecute
Page 422 U. S. 498
the action, that the original complaint failed to state a claim
upon which relief could be granted, that the suit should not
proceed as a class action, and that, in the exercise of discretion,
Home Builders should not be permitted to intervene. The court
accordingly denied the motion to add Housing Council as a party
plaintiff, denied Home Builders' motion to intervene, and dismissed
the complaint. The Court of Appeals affirmed, reaching only the
standing questions.
II
We address first the principles of standing relevant to the
claims asserted by the several categories of petitioners in this
case. In essence, the question of standing is whether the litigant
is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or
of particular issues. This inquiry involves both constitutional
limitations on federal court jurisdiction and prudential
limitations on its exercise.
E.g., Barrows v. Jackson,
346 U. S. 249,
346 U. S.
255-256 (1953). In both dimensions, it is founded in
concern about the proper -- and properly limited -- role of the
courts in a democratic society.
See Schlesinger v. Reservists
to Stop the War, 418 U. S. 208,
418 U. S.
221-227 (1974);
United States v. Richardson,
418 U. S. 166,
418 U. S.
188-197 (1974) (POWELL, J., concurring).
In its constitutional dimension, standing imports
justiciability: whether the plaintiff has made out a "case or
controversy" between himself and the defendant within the meaning
of Art. III. This is the threshold question in every federal case,
determining the power of the court to entertain the suit. As an
aspect of justiciability, the standing question is whether the
plaintiff has "alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the
controversy" as to warrant his invocation of federal court
jurisdiction and to justify exercise of the court's remedial powers
on
Page 422 U. S. 499
his behalf.
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.
S. 186,
369 U. S. 24
(1962). [
Footnote 9] The Art.
III judicial power exists only to redress or otherwise to protect
against injury to the complaining party, even though the court's
judgment may benefit others collaterally. A federal court's
jurisdiction therefore can be invoked only when the plaintiff
himself has suffered "some threatened or actual injury resulting
from the putatively illegal action. . . ."
Linda R. S. v.
Richard D., 410 U. S. 614,
410 U. S. 617
(1973).
See Data Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.
S. 150,
397 U. S.
151-154 (1970). [
Footnote 10]
Apart from this minimum constitutional mandate, this Court has
recognized other limits on the class of persons who may invoke the
courts' decisional and remedial powers. First, the Court has held
that when the asserted harm is a "generalized grievance" shared in
substantially equal measure by all or a large class of citizens,
that harm alone normally does not warrant exercise of jurisdiction.
E.g., Schlesinger v. Reservists to Stop the War, supra; United
States v. Richardson, supra; Ex parte Levitt, 302 U.S. 633,
634 (1937). Second, even when the plaintiff has alleged injury
sufficient to meet the "case or controversy" requirement, this
Court has held that the plaintiff generally must assert his own
legal rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on
the legal rights or interests of third parties.
E.g., Tileston
v. Ullman, 318 U. S. 44
(1943).
See United States v. Raines, 362 U. S.
17 (1960);
Barrows v.
Page 422 U. S. 500
Jackson, supra. Without such limitations -- closely
related to Art. III concerns but essentially matters of judicial
self-governance -- the courts would be called upon to decide
abstract questions of wide public significance even though other
governmental institutions may be more competent to address the
questions and even though judicial intervention may be unnecessary
to protect individual rights.
See, e.g., Schlesinger v.
Reservists to Stop the War, 418 U.S. at
418 U. S. 222.
[
Footnote 11]
Although standing in no way depends on the merits of the
plaintiff's contention that particular conduct is illegal,
e.g., Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83,
392 U. S. 99
(1968), it often turns on the nature and source of the claim
asserted. The actual or threatened injury required by Art. III may
exist solely by virtue of "statutes creating legal rights, the
invasion of which creates standing. . . ."
See Linda R. S. v.
Richard D., supra at
410 U. S. 617
n. 3;
Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.
S. 727,
405 U. S. 732
(1972). Moreover, the source of the plaintiff's claim to relief
assumes critical importance with respect to the prudential rules of
standing that, apart from Art. III's minimum requirements, serve to
limit the role of the courts in resolving public disputes.
Essentially, the standing question in such cases is whether the
constitutional or statutory provision on which the claim rests
properly can be understood as granting persons in the plaintiff's
position a right to judicial relief. [
Footnote 12] In some circumstances, countervailing
Page 422 U. S. 501
considerations may outweigh the concerns underlying the usual
reluctance to exert judicial power when the plaintiff's claim to
relief rests on the legal rights of third parties.
See United
States v. Raines, 362 U.S. at
362 U. S. 22-23.
In such instances, the Court has found, in effect, that the
constitutional or statutory provision in question implies a right
of action in the plaintiff.
See Pierce v. Society of
Sisters, 268 U. S. 510
(1925);
Sullivan v. Little Hunting Park, Inc.,
396 U. S. 229,
396 U. S. 237
(1969).
See generally 422 U. S.
infra. Moreover, Congress may grant an express right of
action to persons who otherwise would be barred by prudential
standing rules. Of course, Art. III's requirement remains: the
plaintiff still must allege a distinct and palpable injury to
himself, even if it is an injury shared by a large class of other
possible litigants.
E.g., United States v. SCRAP,
412 U. S. 669
(1973). But so long as this requirement is satisfied, persons to
whom Congress has granted a right of action, either expressly or by
clear implication, may have standing to seek relief on the basis of
the legal rights and interests of others, and, indeed, may invoke
the general public interest in support of their claim.
E.g.,
Sierra Club v. Morton, supra at
405 U. S. 737;
FCC v. Sanders Radio Station, 309 U.
S. 470,
309 U. S. 477
(1940).
One further preliminary matter requires discussion. For purposes
of ruling on a motion to dismiss for want of standing, both the
trial and reviewing courts must accept as true all material
allegations of the complaint, and must construe the complaint in
favor of the complaining party.
E.g., Jenkins v.
McKeithen, 395 U. S. 411,
395 U. S.
421-422 (1969). At the same time, it is within the trial
court's power to allow or to require the plaintiff to supply, by
amendment to the complaint or by affidavits, further particularized
allegations of fact deemed supportive of plaintiff's standing. If,
after this opportunity,
Page 422 U. S. 502
the plaintiff's standing does not adequately appear from all
materials of record, the complaint must be dismissed.
III
With these general considerations in mind, we turn first to the
claims of petitioners Ortiz, Reyes, Sinkler, and Broadnax, each of
whom asserts standing as a person of low or moderate income and,
coincidentally, as a member of a minority racial or ethnic group.
We must assume, taking the allegations of the complaint as true,
that Penfield's zoning ordinance and the pattern of enforcement by
respondent officials have had the purpose and effect of excluding
persons of low and moderate income, many of whom are members of
racial or ethnic minority groups. We also assume, for purposes
here, that such intentional exclusionary practices, if proved in a
proper case, would be adjudged violative of the constitutional and
statutory rights of the persons excluded.
But the fact that these petitioners share attributes common to
persons who may have been excluded from residence in the town is an
insufficient predicate for the conclusion that petitioners
themselves have been excluded, or that the respondents' assertedly
illegal actions have violated their rights. Petitioners must allege
and show that they personally have been injured, not that injury
has been suffered by other, unidentified members of the class to
which they belong and which they purport to represent. Unless these
petitioners can thus demonstrate the requisite case or controversy
between themselves personally and respondents, "none may seek
relief on behalf of himself or any other member of the class."
O'Shea v. Littleton, 414 U. S. 488,
414 U. S. 494
(1974).
See, e.g., Bailey v. Patterson, 369 U. S.
31,
369 U. S. 32-33
(1962).
Page 422 U. S. 503
In their complaint, petitioners Ortiz, Reyes, Sinkler, and
Broadnax alleged in conclusory terms that they are among the
persons excluded by respondents' actions. [
Footnote 13] None of them has ever resided in
Penfield; each claims at least implicitly that he desires, or has
desired, to do so. Each asserts, moreover, that he made some
effort, at some time, to locate housing in Penfield that was at
once within his means and adequate for his family's needs. Each
claims that his efforts proved fruitless. [
Footnote 14]
Page 422 U. S. 504
We may assume, as petitioners allege, that respondents' actions
have contributed, perhaps substantially, to the cost of housing in
Penfield. But there remains the question whether petitioners'
inability to locate suitable housing in Penfield reasonably can be
said to have resulted, in any concretely demonstrable way, from
respondents' alleged constitutional and statutory infractions.
Petitioners must allege facts from which it reasonably could be
inferred that, absent the respondents' restrictive zoning
practices, there is a substantial probability that they would have
been able to purchase or lease in Penfield, and that, if the court
affords the relief requested, the asserted inability of petitioners
will be removed.
Linda R. S. v. Richard D., 410 U.
S. 614 (1973).
We find the record devoid of the necessary allegations. As the
Court of Appeals noted, none of these petitioners has a present
interest in any Penfield property; none is himself subject to the
ordinance's strictures; and none has ever been denied a variance or
permit by respondent officials. 495 F.2d at 1191. Instead,
petitioners claim that respondents' enforcement of the ordinance
against third parties -- developers, builders, and the like -- has
had the consequence of precluding the construction of housing
suitable to their needs at prices they might be able to afford. The
fact that the harm to petitioners may have resulted indirectly does
not, in itself, preclude standing.
Page 422 U. S. 505
When a governmental prohibition or restriction imposed on one
party causes specific harm to a third party, harm that a
constitutional provision or statute was intended to prevent, the
indirectness of the injury does not necessarily deprive the person
harmed of standing to vindicate his rights.
E.g., Roe v.
Wade, 410 U. S. 113,
410 U. S. 124
(1973). But it may make it substantially more difficult to meet the
minimum requirement of Art. III: to establish that, in fact, the
asserted injury was the consequence of the defendants' actions, or
that prospective relief will remove the harm.
Here, by their own admission, realization of petitioners' desire
to live in Penfield always has depended on the efforts and
willingness of third parties to build low and moderate cost
housing. The record specifically refers to only two such efforts:
that of Penfield Better Homes Corp., in late 1969, to obtain the
rezoning of certain land in Penfield to allow the construction of
subsidized cooperative townhouses that could be purchased by
persons of moderate income; and a similar effort by O'Brien Homes,
Inc., in late 1971. [
Footnote
15] But
Page 422 U. S. 506
the record is devoid of any indication that these projects, or
other like projects, would have satisfied petitioners' needs at
prices they could afford, or that, were the court to remove the
obstructions attributable to respondents, such relief would benefit
petitioners. Indeed, petitioners' descriptions of their individual
financial situations and housing needs suggest precisely the
contrary -- that their inability to reside in Penfield is the
consequence of the economics of the area housing market, rather
than of respondent' assertedly illegal acts. [
Footnote 16]
Page 422 U. S. 507
short, the facts alleged fail to support an actionable causal
relationship between Penfield's zoning practices and petitioners'
asserted injury.
In support of their position, petitioners refer to several
decisions in the District Courts and Courts of Appeals
acknowledging standing in low income, minority group plaintiffs to
challenge exclusionary zoning practices. [
Footnote 17] In those cases, however, the plaintiffs
challenged zoning restrictions as applied to particular projects
that would supply housing within their means, and of which they
were intended residents. The plaintiffs thus were able to
demonstrate that, unless relief from assertedly illegal actions was
forthcoming, their immediate and personal interests would be
harmed. Petitioners here assert no like circumstances. Instead,
they rely on little more than the remote possibility,
unsubstantiated by allegations of fact, that their situation might
have been better had respondents acted otherwise, and might improve
were the court to afford relief.
Page 422 U. S. 508
We hold only that a plaintiff who seeks to challenge
exclusionary zoning practices must allege specific, concrete facts
demonstrating that the challenged practices harm him, and that he
personally would benefit in a tangible way from the court's
intervention. [
Footnote 18]
Absent the necessary allegations of demonstrable, particularized
injury, there can be no confidence of "a real need to exercise the
power of judicial review" or that relief can be framed "no broader
than required by the precise facts to which the court's ruling
would be applied."
Schlesinger v. Reservists to Stop the
War, 418 U.S. at
418 U. S.
221-222.
IV
The petitioners who assert standing on the basis of their status
as taxpayers of the city of Rochester present a different set of
problems. These "taxpayer petitioners" claim that they are
suffering economic injury consequent to Penfield's allegedly
discriminatory and exclusionary zoning practices. Their argument,
in brief, is that Penfield's persistent refusal to allow or to
facilitate construction of low and moderate cost housing forces the
city of Rochester to provide more such housing than it otherwise
would do; that, to provide such housing, Rochester must allow
certain tax abatements; and
Page 422 U. S. 509
that, as the amount of tax-abated property increases, Rochester
taxpayers are forced to assume an increased tax burden in order to
finance essential public services.
"Of course, pleadings must be something more than an ingenious
academic exercise in the conceivable."
United States v.
SCRAP, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 688.
We think the complaint of the taxpayer petitioners is little more
than such an exercise. Apart from the conjectural nature of the
asserted injury, the line of causation between Penfield's actions
and such injury is not apparent from the complaint. Whatever may
occur in Penfield, the injury complained of -- increases in
taxation -- results only from decisions made by the appropriate
Rochester authorities, who are not parties to this case.
But even if we assume that the taxpayer petitioners could
establish that Penfield's zoning practices harm them, [
Footnote 19] their complaint
nonetheless was properly dismissed. Petitioners do not, even if
they could, assert any personal right under the Constitution or any
statute to be free of action by a neighboring municipality that may
have some incidental adverse effect on Rochester. On the contrary,
the only basis of the taxpayer petitioners' claim is that
Penfield's zoning ordinance and practices violate the
constitutional and statutory rights of third parties, namely,
persons of low and moderate income who are said to be excluded from
Penfield. In short, the claim of these petitioners falls squarely
within the prudential standing rule that normally bars litigants
from asserting the rights or legal interests of others in order to
obtain relief from injury to themselves. As we have observed above,
this rule of judicial self-governance is subject to exceptions, the
most prominent of which is that Congress may remove it by statute.
Here, however,
Page 422 U. S. 510
no statute expressly or by clear implication grants a right of
action, and thus standing to seek relief, to persons in
petitioners' position. In several cases, this Court has allowed
standing to litigate the rights of third parties when enforcement
of the challenged restriction against the litigant would result
indirectly in the violation of third parties' rights.
See,
e.g., Doe v. Bolton, 410 U. S. 179,
410 U. S. 188
(1973);
Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.
S. 479,
381 U. S. 481
(1965);
Barrows v. Jackson, 346 U.
S. 249 (1953). But the taxpayer petitioners are not
themselves subject to Penfield's zoning practices. Nor do they
allege that the challenged zoning ordinance and practices preclude
or otherwise adversely affect a relationship existing between them
and the persons whose rights assertedly are violated.
E.g.,
Sullivan v. Little Hunting Park, Inc., 396 U.S. at
396 U. S. 237;
NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449,
357 U. S.
458-460 (1958);
Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
268 U.S. at
268 U. S.
534-536. No relationship, other than an incidental
congruity of interest, is alleged to exist between the Rochester
taxpayers and persons who have been precluded from living in
Penfield. Nor do the taxpayer petitioners show that their
prosecution of the suit is necessary to insure protection of the
rights asserted, as there is no indication that persons who, in
fact, have been excluded from Penfield are disabled from asserting
their own right in a proper case. [
Footnote 20] In sum, we discern no justification for
recognizing in the Rochester taxpayers a right of action on the
asserted claim.
V
We turn next to the standing problems presented by the
petitioner associations -- Metro-Act of Rochester,
Page 422 U. S. 511
Inc., one of the original plaintiffs; Housing Council in the
Monroe County Area, Inc., which the original plaintiffs sought to
join as a party plaintiff; and Rochester Home Builders Association,
Inc., which moved in the District Court for leave to intervene as
plaintiff. There is no question that an association may have
standing in its own right to seek judicial relief from injury to
itself and to vindicate whatever rights and immunities the
association itself may enjoy. Moreover, in attempting to secure
relief from injury to itself, the association may assert the rights
of its members, at least so long as the challenged infractions
adversely affect its members' associational ties.
E.g., NAACP
v. Alabama, supra at
357 U. S.
458-460;
Anti-Fascist Committee v. McGrath,
341 U. S. 123,
341 U. S.
183-187 (1951) (Jackson, J., concurring). With the
limited exception of Metro-Act, however, none of the associational
petitioners here has asserted injury to itself.
Even in the absence of injury to itself, an association may have
standing solely as the representative of its members.
E.g.,
National Motor Freight Assn. v. United States, 372 U.
S. 246 (1963). The possibility of such representational
standing, however, does not eliminate or attenuate the
constitutional requirement of a case or controversy.
See Sierra
Club v. Morton, 405 U. S. 727
(1972). The association must allege that its members, or any one of
them, are suffering immediate or threatened injury as a result of
the challenged action of the sort that would make out a justiciable
case had the members themselves brought suit.
Id. at
405 U. S.
734-741. So long as this can be established, and so long
as the nature of the claim and of the relief sought does not make
the individual participation of each injured party indispensable to
proper resolution of the cause, the association may be an
appropriate representative of its members, entitled to invoke the
court's jurisdiction.
Page 422 U. S. 512
A
Petitioner Metro-Act's claims to standing on its own behalf as a
Rochester taxpayer, and on behalf of its members who are Rochester
taxpayers or persons of low or moderate income, are precluded by
our holdings in Parts
422 U. S. S.
508|>IV,
supra, as to the individual petitioners, and
require no further discussion. Metro-Act also alleges, however,
that 9% of its membership is composed of present residents of
Penfield. It claims that, as a result of the persistent pattern of
exclusionary zoning practiced by respondents and the consequent
exclusion of persons of low and moderate income, those of its
members who are Penfield residents are deprived of the benefits of
living in a racially and ethnically integrated community. Referring
to our decision in
Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
Co., 409 U. S. 205
(1972), Metro-Act argues that such deprivation is a sufficiently
palpable injury to satisfy the Art. III case or controversy
requirement, and that it has standing as the representative of its
members to seek redress.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that
Trafficante is
not controlling here. In that case, two residents of an apartment
complex alleged that the owner had discriminated against rental
applicants on the basis of race, in violation of § 804 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 83, 42 U.S.C. § 3604. They claimed
that, as a result of such discrimination,
"they had been injured in that (1) they had lost the social
benefits of living in an integrated community; (2) they had missed
business and professional advantages which would have accrued if
they had lived with members of minority groups; (3) they had
suffered embarrassment and economic damage in social, business, and
professional activities from being 'stigmatized' as residents of a
'white ghetto.'"
409 U.S. at
409 U. S. 208.
In light of the clear congressional purpose
Page 422 U. S. 513
in enacting the 1968 Act, and the broad definition of "person
aggrieved" in § 810(a), 42 U.S.C. § 3610(a), we held that
petitioners, as "person[s] who claim[ed] to have been injured by a
discriminatory housing practice," had standing to litigate
violations of the Act. We concluded that Congress had given
residents of housing facilities covered by the statute an
actionable right to be free from the adverse consequences to them
of racially discriminatory practices directed at and immediately
harmful to others. 409 U.S. at
409 U. S.
212.
Metro-Act does not assert on behalf of its members any right of
action under the 1968 Civil Rights Act, nor can the complaint
fairly be read to make out any such claim. [
Footnote 21] In this, we think, lies the
critical distinction between
Trafficante and the situation
here. As we have
Page 422 U. S. 514
observed above, Congress may create a statutory right or
entitlement the alleged deprivation of which can confer standing to
sue even where the plaintiff would have suffered no judicially
cognizable injury in the absence of statute.
Linda R. S. v.
Richard D., 410 U.S. at
410 U. S. 617
n. 3, citing
Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins., Co.,
supra at
409 U. S. 212
(WHITE, J., concurring). No such statute is applicable here.
Even if we assume,
arguendo, that, apart from any
statutorily created right, the asserted harm to Metro-Act's
Penfield members is sufficiently direct and personal to satisfy the
case or controversy requirement of Art. III, prudential
considerations strongly counsel against according them or Metro-Act
standing to prosecute this action. We do not understand Metro-Act
to argue that Penfield residents themselves have been denied any
constitutional rights, affording them a cause of action under 42
U.S.C. § 1983. Instead, their complaint is that they have been
harmed indirectly by the exclusion of others. This is an attempt to
raise putative rights of third parties, and none of the exceptions
that allow such claims is present here. [
Footnote 22] In these circumstances, we conclude that
it is inappropriate to allow Metro-Act to invoke the judicial
process.
B
Petitioner Home Builders, in its intervenor complaint, asserted
standing to represent its member firms engaged in the development
and construction of residential housing in the Rochester area,
including Penfield. Home Builders alleged that the Penfield zoning
restrictions,
Page 422 U. S. 515
together with refusals by the town officials to grant variances
and permits for the construction of low and moderate cost housing,
had deprived some of its members of "substantial business
opportunities and profits." App. 156. Home Builders claimed damages
of $750,000, and also joined in the original plaintiffs' prayer for
declaratory and injunctive relief.
As noted above, to justify any relief, the association must show
that it has suffered harm, or that one or more of its members are
injured.
E.g., Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.
S. 727 (1972). But, apart from this, whether an
association has standing to invoke the court's remedial powers on
behalf of its members depends in substantial measure on the nature
of the relief sought. If, in a proper case, the association seeks a
declaration, injunction, or some other form of prospective relief,
it can reasonably be supposed that the remedy, if granted, will
inure to the benefit of those members of the association actually
injured. Indeed, in all cases in which we have expressly recognized
standing in associations to represent their members, the relief
sought has been of this kind.
E.g., National Motor Freight
Assn. v. United States, 372 U. S. 246
(1963).
See Data Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.
S. 150 (1970).
Cf. Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
23(b)(2).
The present case, however, differs significantly, as here an
association seeks relief in damages for alleged injuries to its
members. Home Builders alleges no monetary injury to itself, nor
any assignment of the damages claims of its members. No award
therefore can be made to the association as such. Moreover, in the
circumstances of this case, the damages claims are not common to
the entire membership, nor shared by all in equal degree. To the
contrary, whatever injury may have been suffered is peculiar to the
individual member concerned, and both the fact and extent of injury
would require individualized
Page 422 U. S. 516
proof. Thus, to obtain relief in damages, each member of Home
Builders who claims injury as a result of respondents' practices
must be a party to the suit, and Home Builders has no standing to
claim damages on his behalf.
Home Builders' prayer for prospective relief fails for a
different reason. It can have standing as the representative of its
members only if it has alleged facts sufficient to make out a case
or controversy had the members themselves brought suit. No such
allegations were made. The complaint refers to no specific project
of any of its members that is currently precluded either by the
ordinance or by respondents' action in enforcing it. There is no
averment that any member has applied to respondents for a building
permit or a variance with respect to any current project. Indeed,
there is no indication that respondents have delayed or thwarted
any project currently proposed by Home Builders' members, or that
any of its members has taken advantage of the remedial processes
available under the ordinance. In short, insofar as the complaint
seeks prospective relief, Home Builders has failed to show the
existence of any injury to its members of sufficient immediacy and
ripeness to warrant judicial intervention.
See, e.g., United
Public Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75,
330 U. S. 86-91
(1947);
Maryland Cas. Co. v. Pacific Coal & Oil Co.,
312 U. S. 270,
312 U. S. 273
(1941).
A like problem is presented with respect to petitioner Housing
Council. The affidavit accompanying the motion to join it as
plaintiff states that the Council includes in its membership "at
least seventeen" groups that have been, are, or will be involved in
the development of low and moderate cost housing. But, with one
exception, the complaint does not suggest that any of these groups
has focused its efforts on Penfield or has any specific
Page 422 U. S. 517
plan to do so. Again with the same exception, neither the
complaint nor any materials of record indicate that any member of
Housing Council has take any step toward building housing in
Penfield, or has had dealings of any nature with respondents. The
exception is the Penfield Better Homes Corp. As we have observed
above, it applied to respondents in late 1969 for a zoning variance
to allow construction of a housing project designed for persons of
moderate income. The affidavit in support of the motion to join
Housing Council refers specifically to this effort, and the
supporting materials detail at some length the circumstances
surrounding the rejection of Better Homes' application. It is
therefore possible that, in 1969, or within a reasonable time
thereafter, Better Homes itself and possibly Housing Council as its
representative would have had standing to seek review of
respondents' action. The complaint, however, does not allege that
the Penfield Better Homes project remained viable in 1972 when this
complaint was filed, or that respondents' actions continued to
block a then-current construction project. [
Footnote 23] In short, neither the complaint nor
the record supplies any basis from which to infer that the
controversy between respondents and Better Homes, however vigorous
it may once have been, remained a live, concrete dispute when this
complaint was filed. ,
VI
The rules of standing, whether as aspects of the Art. III case
or controversy requirement or as reflections of prudential
Page 422 U. S. 518
considerations defining and limiting the role of the courts, are
threshold determinants of the propriety of judicial intervention.
It is the responsibility of the complainant clearly to allege facts
demonstrating that he is a proper party to invoke judicial
resolution of the dispute and the exercise of the court's remedial
powers. We agree with the District Court and the Court of Appeals
that none of the petitioners here has met this threshold
requirement. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals
is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Plaintiffs claimed to represent, pursuant to Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
23(b)(2), classes constituting
"all taxpayers of the City of Rochester, 11 low and moderate
income persons residing in the City of Rochester, all black and/or
Puerto Rican/Spanish citizens residing in the City of Rochester and
all persons employed but excluded from living in the Town of
Penfield who are affected or may in the future be affected by the
defendants' policies and practices. . . ."
App. 9.
[
Footnote 2]
Id. at 8-9.
[
Footnote 3]
Plaintiff Harris was further described in the complaint as "a
negro person who is denied certain rights by virtue of her race. .
. ." App. 5. We find no indication in the record that Harris had
either the desire or intent to live in Penfield were suitable
housing to become available. Indeed, petitioners now appear to
claim standing for Harris only on the ground that she is a taxpayer
of Rochester.
See Brief for Petitioners 9, 12.
[
Footnote 4]
According to Ortiz' affidavit, submitted in answer to
respondents' motion to dismiss, he was employed in Penfield from
1966 to May, 1972. App. 3636-67.
[
Footnote 5]
In fact, however, the complaint nowhere defines the term "low
and moderate income" beyond the parenthetical phrase "without the
capital requirements to purchase real estate."
E.g., id.
at 18. In addition to the inadequacy of this definition, the record
discloses wide variations in the income, housing needs, and money
available for housing among the various "low and moderate income"
plaintiffs.
See 422 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 6]
App. 226.
[
Footnote 7]
Home Builders also asked the District Court to enjoin the
defendants from carrying out threatened retaliation against its
members if Home Builders joined this litigation.
[
Footnote 8]
Id. at 174.
[
Footnote 9]
See P. Bator, P. Mishkin, D. Shapiro, & H.
Wechsler, Hart & Wechsler's The Federal Courts and the Federal
System 156 (2d ed.1973).
[
Footnote 10]
The standing question thus bears close affinity to questions of
ripeness -- whether the harm asserted has matured sufficiently to
warrant judicial intervention -- and of mootness -- whether the
occasion for judicial intervention persists.
E.g., Lake
Carriers' Assn. v. MacMullan, 406 U.
S. 498 (1972);
Hall v. Beals, 396 U. S.
45 (1969).
See Anti-Fascist Committee v.
McGrath, 341 U. S. 123,
341 U. S.
154-156 (1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 11]
Cf. Scott, Standing in the Supreme Court -- A
Functional Analysis, 86 Harv, L. Rev, 645 (1973),
[
Footnote 12]
A similar standing issue arises when the litigant asserts the
rights of third parties defensively, as a bar to judgment against
him,
e.g., Barrows v. Jackson, 346 U.
S. 249 (1953);
McGowan v. Maryland,
366 U. S. 420,
366 U. S.
429-430 (1961). In such circumstances, there is no Art,
III standing problem, but the prudential question is governed by
considerations closely related to the question whether a person in
the litigant's position would have a right of action on the claim,
see 422 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 13]
Petitioner Ortiz also alleged that, as a result of such
exclusion, he had to incur substantial commuting expenses between
his residence and his former place of employment in Penfield, and,
in supporting affidavits, each petitioner recites at some length
the disadvantages of his or her present housing situation, and how
that situation might be improved were residence in Penfield
possible. For purposes of standing, however, it is the exclusion
itself that is of critical importance, since exclusion alone would
violate the asserted rights, quite apart from any objective or
subjective disadvantage that may flow from it.
[
Footnote 14]
In his affidavit submitted in opposition to respondents' motion
to dismiss petitioner Ortiz stated:
"Since my job at that time and continuing until May of 1972 was
in the Town of Penfield, I initiated inquiries about renting and/or
buying a home in the Town of Penfield. However, because of my
income being low or moderate, I found that there were no apartment
units large enough to house my family of wife and seven children,
nor were there apartment units that were available reasonably
priced so that I could even afford to rent the largest apartment
unit. I have been reading ads in the Rochester metropolitan
newspapers since coming to Rochester in 1966, and during that time
and to the present time, I have not located either rental housing
or housing to buy in Penfield."
App. 37.
Petitioner Reyes averred that, for some time before locating and
purchasing their present residence in Rochester, she and her
husband had searched for a suitable residence in suburban
communities:
"[O]ur investigation for housing included the Rochester bedroom
communities of Webster, Irondequoit, Penfield and Perinton. Our
search over a period of two years led us to no possible purchase in
any of these towns."
Id. at 428. Petitioner Sinkler stated that she had
"searched for alternate housing in the Rochester metropolitan
area," including the town of Penfield, and had found that "a black
person has no choice of housing. . . ." In particular, "there are
no apartments available in the Town of Penfield which a person of
my income level can afford."
Id. at 452-453. Petitioner
Broadnax said only that she had
"bought newspapers and read ads and walked to look for
apartments until I found the place where I now reside. I found that
there was virtually no choice of housing in the Rochester
area."
Id. at 407.
[
Footnote 15]
Penfield Better Homes contemplated a series of one- to
three-bedroom units and hoped to sell them -- at that time -- to
persons who earned from $5,000 to $8,000 per year. The Penfield
Planning Board denied the necessary variance on September 9, 1969,
because of incompatibility with the surrounding neighborhood,
projected traffic congestion, and problems of severe soil erosion
during construction.
Id. at 629-633, 849-859, 883-884.
O'Brien Homes, Inc., projected 51 buildings, each containing four
family units, designed for single people and small families, and
capable of being purchased by persons "of low income and
accumulated funds" and "of moderate income with limited funds for
downpayment. . . ."
Id. at 634. The variance for this
project was denied by the Planning Board on October 12, 1971; a
revision of the proposal was reconsidered by the Planning Board in
April, 1972, and, from all indications of record, apparently
remains under consideration. The record also indicates the
existence of several proposals for "planned unit developments," but
we are not told whether these projects would allow sale at prices
that persons of low or moderate income are likely to be able to
afford. There is, more importantly, not the slightest suggestion
that they would be adequate, and of sufficiently low cost, to meet
these petitioners' needs.
[
Footnote 16]
Ortiz states in his affidavit that he is now purchasing and
resides in a six-bedroom dwelling in Wayland, N.Y., and that he
owns and receives rental income from a house in Rochester. He is
concerned with finding a house or apartment large enough for
himself, his wife, and seven children, but states that he can
afford to spend a maximum of $120 per month for housing.
Id. at 370. Broadnax seeks a four-bedroom house or
apartment for herself and six children, and can spend a maximum of
about $120 per month for housing.
Id. at 417-418. Sinkler
also states that she can spend $120 per month for housing for
herself and two children.
Id. at 452-453. Thus, at least
in the cases of Ortiz and Broadnax, it is doubtful that their
stated needs could have been satisfied by the small housing units
contemplated in the only moderate cost projects specifically
described in the record. Moreover, there is no indication that any
of the petitioners had the resources necessary to acquire the
housing available in the projects. The matter is left entirely
obscure. The income and housing budget figures supplied in
petitioners' affidavits are presumably for the year 1972. The vague
description of the proposed O'Brien development strongly suggests
that the units, even if adequate for their needs, would have been
beyond the means at least of Sinkler and Broadnax.
See
n 15,
supra. The
Penfield Better Homes projected price figures were for 1969, and
must be assumed -- even if subsidies might still be available -- to
have increased substantially by 1972, when the complaint was filed.
Petitioner Reyes presents a special case: she states that her
family has an income of over $14,000 per year, that she can afford
$231 per month for housing, and that, in the past and apparently
now, she wants to purchase a residence. As noted above,
see n 5,
supra, the term "low and moderate income" is nowhere
defined in the complaint; but Penfield Better Homes defined the
term as between $5,000 and $8,000 per year.
See n 15,
supra. Since that
project was to be subsidized, presumably petitioner Reyes would
have been ineligible. There is no indication that, in nonsubsidized
projects, removal of the challenged zoning restrictions -- in 1972
-- would have reduced the price on new single-family residences to
a level that petitioner Reyes thought she could afford.
[
Footnote 17]
See, e.g., Park View Heights Cop. v. City of Black
Jack, 467 F.2d 1208 (CA8 1972);
Crow v. Brown, 457
F.2d 788 (CA5 1972),
aff'g 332 F.
Supp. 382 (ND Ga.1971);
Kennedy Park Homes Assn. v. City of
Lackawanna, 436 F.2d 108 (CA2 1970),
cert. denied,
401 U.S. 1010 (1971);
Dailey v. City of Lawton, 425 F.2d
1037 (CA10 1970).
Cf. United Farmworkers of Florida Housing
Project, Inc. v. City of Delray Beach, 493 F.2d 799 (CA5
1974).
[
Footnote 18]
This is not to say that the plaintiff who challenges a zoning
ordinance or zoning practices must have a present contractual
interest in a particular project. A particularized personal
interest may be shown in various ways, which we need not undertake
to identify in the abstract. But usually the initial focus should
be on a particular project.
See, e.g., cases cited in
n 17,
supra. We
also note that zoning laws and their provisions, long considered
essential to effective urban planning, are peculiarly within the
province of state and local legislative authorities. They are, of
course, subject to judicial review in a proper case. But citizens
dissatisfied with provisions of such laws need not overlook the
availability of the normal democratic process.
[
Footnote 19]
Cf. United States v. SCRAP, 412 U.
S. 669,
412 U. S. 688
690 (1973).
But see Roe v. Wade, 410 U.
S. 113,
410 U. S.
127-129 (1973).
[
Footnote 20]
See generally Sedler, Standing to Assert Constitutional
Jus Tertii in the Supreme Court, 71 Yale L.J. 599 (192).
Cf. Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U. S. 809,
421 U. S.
815-817 (1975).
[
Footnote 21]
The
amicus brief of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil
Rights under Law argues, to the contrary, that petitioners'
allegations do state colorable claims under the 1968 Act, and that
Metro-Act's Penfield members are "person[s] aggrieved" within the
meaning of § 810(a). It is significant, we think, that petitioners
nowhere adopt this argument. As we read the complaint, petitioners
have not alleged that respondents
"refuse to negotiate for the sale or rental of, or otherwise
make unavailable or deny, a dwelling to any person
because of
race, color, . . . or national origin,"
or that they
"discriminate against any person in the terms, conditions, or
privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling, or in the provision of
services or facilities in connection therewith,
because of
race, color, . . . or national origin. . . ."
42 U.S.C. §§ 3604(a) and (b) (emphasis added). Instead, the
gravamen of the complaint is that the challenged zoning practices
have the purpose and effect of excluding persons of low and
moderate income from residing in the town, and that this, in turn,
has the consequence of excluding members of racial or ethnic
minority groups. This reading of the complaint is confirmed by
petitioners' brief in this Court. Brief for Petitioners 41. We
intimate no view as to whether, had the complaint alleged
purposeful racial or ethnic discrimination, Metro-Act would have
stated a claim under § 804.
See Park View Heights Corp. v. City
of Black Jack, 467 F.2d 1208 (CA8 1972).
[
Footnote 22]
Metro-Act does not allege that a contractual or other
relationship protected under §§ 1981 and 1982 existed between its
Penfield members and any particular person excluded from residing
in the town, nor that any such relationship was either punished or
disrupted by respondents.
See Sullivan v. Little Hunting
Park, 396 U. S. 229,
396 U. S. 237
(1969).
[
Footnote 23]
If it had been averred that the zoning ordinance or respondents
were unlawfully blocking a pending construction project, there
would be a further question as to whether Penfield Better Homes had
employed available administrative remedies, and whether it should
be required to do so before a federal court can intervene.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
With all respect, I think that the Court reads the complaint and
the record with antagonistic eyes. There are in the background of
this case continuing strong tides of opinion touching on very
sensitive matters, some of which involve race, some class
distinctions based on wealth.
A clean, safe, and well heated home is not enough for some
people. Some want to live where the neighbors are congenial and
have social and political outlooks similar to their own. This
problem of sharing areas of the community is akin to that when one
wants to control the kind of person who shares his own abode.
Metro-Act of Rochester, Inc., and the Housing Council in the Monroe
County Area, Inc. -- two of the associations which bring this suit
-- do, in my opinion, represent the communal feeling of the actual
residents, and have standing.
The associations here are in a position not unlike that
confronted by the Court in
NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.
S. 449 (1958). Their protest against the creation of
this segregated community expresses the desire of their members to
live in a desegregated community -- a desire which gives standing
to sue under the Civil Rights Act
Page 422 U. S. 519
of 1968 as we held in
Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
Co., 409 U. S. 205
(1972). Those who voice these views here seek to rely on other
Civil Rights Acts and on the Constitution, but they too should have
standing, by virtue of the dignity of their claim, to have the case
decided on the merits.
Standing has become a barrier to access to the federal courts,
just as "the political question" was in earlier decades. The
mounting caseload of federal courts is well known. But cases such
as this one reflect festering sores in our society, and the
American dream teaches that, if one reaches high enough and
persists, there is a forum where justice is dispensed. I would
lower the technical barriers and let the courts serve that ancient
need. They can, in time, be curbed by legislative or constitutional
restraints if an emergency arises.
We are today far from facing an emergency. For, in all
frankness, no Justice of this Court need work more than four days a
week to carry his burden. I have found it a comfortable burden
carried even in my months of hospitalization.
As MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN makes clear in his dissent, the alleged
purpose of the ordinance under attack was to preclude low and
moderate income people and nonwhites from living in Penfield. The
zoning power is claimed to have been used here to foist an
un-American community model on the people of this area. I would let
the case go to trial and have all the facts brought out. Indeed, it
would be better practice to decide the question of standing only
when the merits have been developed.
I would reverse the Court of Appeals.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE
MARSHALL join, dissenting.
In this case, a wide range of plaintiffs, alleging various kinds
of injuries, claimed to have been affected by the
Page 422 U. S. 520
Penfield. zoning ordinance, on its face and as applied, and by
other practices of the defendant officials of Penfield. Alleging
that, as a result of these laws and practices, low and moderate
income and minority people have been excluded from Penfield, and
that this exclusion is unconstitutional, plaintiffs sought
injunctive, declaratory, and monetary relief. The Court today, in
an opinion that purports to be a "standing" opinion but that
actually, I believe, has overtones of outmoded notions of pleading
and of justiciability, refuses to find that any of the variously
situated plaintiffs can clear numerous hurdles, some constructed
here for the first time, necessary to establish "standing." While
the Court gives lip service to the principle, oft repeated in
recent years, [
Footnote 2/1] that
"standing in no way depends on the merits of the plaintiff's
contention that particular conduct is illegal,"
ante at
422 U. S. 500,
in fact, the opinion, which tosses out of court almost every
conceivable kind of plaintiff who could be injured by the activity
claimed to be unconstitutional, can be explained only by an
indefensible hostility to the claim on the merits. I can appreciate
the Court's reluctance to adjudicate the complex and difficult
legal questions involved in determining the constitutionality of
practices which assertedly limit residence in a particular
municipality to those who are white and relatively well off, and I
also understand that the merits of this case could involve grave
sociological and political ramifications. But courts cannot refuse
to hear a case on the merits merely because they would prefer not
to, and it is quite clear, when the record is viewed with
dispassion, that at least three of the groups of plaintiffs have
made
Page 422 U. S. 521
allegations, and supported them with affidavits and documentary
evidence, sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss for lack of
standing. [
Footnote 2/2]
I
Before considering the three groups I believe clearly to have
standing -- the low income, minority plaintiffs, Rochester Home
Builders Association, Inc., and the Housing Council in the Monroe
County Area, Inc. -- it will be helpful to review the picture
painted by the allegations as a whole, in order better to
comprehend the interwoven interests of the various plaintiffs.
Indeed, one glaring defect of the Court's opinion is that it views
each set of plaintiffs as if it were prosecuting a separate
lawsuit, refusing to recognize that the interests are intertwined,
and that the standing of any one group must take into account its
position
vis-a-vis the others. For example, the Court says
that the low income minority plaintiffs have not alleged facts
sufficient to show that, but for the exclusionary practices
claimed, they would be able to reside in Penfield. The Court then
intimates that such a causal relationship could be shown only if
"the initial focus [is] on a particular project."
Ante at
422 U. S. 508
n. 18. Later, the Court objects to the ability of the Housing
Council to prosecute the suit on behalf of its member, Penfield
Better Homes Corp., despite the fact that Better Homes had
displayed an interest in a particular project, because that project
was no longer live. Thus, we must suppose that, even if the low
income plaintiffs had alleged a desire to live in the Better Homes
project, that allegation would
Page 422 U. S. 522
be insufficient because it appears that that particular project
might never be built. The rights of low income minority plaintiffs
who desire to live in a locality, then, seem to turn on the
willingness of a third party to litigate the legality of preclusion
of a particular project, despite the fact that the third party may
have no economic incentive to incur the costs of litigation with
regard to one project, and despite the fact that the low income
minority plaintiffs' interest is not to live in a particular
project, but to live somewhere in the town in a dwelling they can
afford.
Accepting, as we must, the various allegations and affidavits as
true, the following picture emerges: the Penfield zoning ordinance,
by virtue of regulations concerning
"lot area, set backs, . . . population density, density of use,
units per acre, floor area, sewer requirements, traffic flow,
ingress and egress[, and] street location,"
makes "practically and economically impossible the construction
of sufficient numbers of low and moderate income" housing. App. 25.
The purpose of this ordinance was to preclude low and moderate
income people and nonwhites from living in Penfield,
id.
at 15, and, particularly because of refusals to grant zoning
variances and building permits and by using special permit
procedures and other devices,
id. at 17, the defendants
succeeded in keeping "low and moderate income persons . . . and
non-white persons . . . from residing within . . . Penfield."
Id. at 18.
As a result of these practices, various of the plaintiffs were
affected in different ways. For example, plaintiffs Ortiz, Reyes,
Sinkler, and Broadnax, persons of low or moderate income and
members of minority groups, alleged that, "
as a result" of
respondents' exclusionary scheme,
id. at 18, 21, 23-24,
26, 29 (emphasis supplied), they could not live in Penfield,
although they
Page 422 U. S. 523
desired and attempted to do so, and consequently incurred
greater commuting costs, lived in substandard housing, and had
fewer services for their families and poorer schools for their
children than if they had lived in Penfield. Members of the
Rochester Home Builders Association were prevented from
constructing homes for low and moderate income people in Penfield,
id. at 153, harming them economically. And Penfield Better
Homes, a member of the Housing Council, was frustrated in its
attempt to build moderate income housing,
id. at 174.
Thus, the portrait which emerges from the allegations and
affidavits is one of total, purposeful, intransigent exclusion of
certain classes of people from the town, pursuant to a conscious
scheme never deviated from. Because of this scheme, those
interested in building homes for the excluded groups were faced
with insurmountable difficulties, and those of the excluded groups
seeking homes in the locality quickly learned that their attempts
were futile. Yet the Court turns the very success of the allegedly
unconstitutional scheme into a barrier to a lawsuit seeking its
invalidation. In effect, the Court tells the low income minority
and building company plaintiffs they will not be permitted to prove
what they have alleged -- that they could and would build and live
in the town if changes were made in the zoning ordinance and its
application -- because they have not succeeded in breaching, before
the suit was filed, the very barriers which are the subject of the
suit.
II
Low come and Minority Plaintiffs
As recounted above, plaintiffs Ortiz, Broadnax, Reyes, and
Sinkler alleged that "as a result" of respondents' exclusionary
practices, they were unable, despite attempts,
Page 422 U. S. 524
to find the housing they desired in Penfield, and consequently
have incurred high commuting expenses, received poorer municipal
services, [
Footnote 2/3] and, in
some instances, have been relegated to live in substandard housing.
[
Footnote 2/4] The Court does not,
as it could not, suggest that
Page 422 U. S. 525
the injuries, if proved, would be insufficient to give
petitioners the requisite "personal stake in the outcome of the
controversy as to assure the concrete adverseness which sharpens
the presentation of issues,"
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.
S. 186,
369 U. S. 204
(1962);
Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83,
392 U. S. 99
(1968). Rather, it is abundantly clear that the harm alleged
satisfies the "injury in fact, economic or otherwise,"
Data
Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U. S. 150,
397 U. S. 152
(1970), requirement which is prerequisite to standing in federal
court. The harms claimed -- consisting of out-of-pocket losses as
well as denial of specifically enumerated services available in
Penfield but not in these petitioners' present communities,
see nn.
422
U.S. 490fn2/3|>3 and
422
U.S. 490fn2/3|>4,
supra -- are obviously more
palpable and concrete than those held sufficient to sustain
standing in other cases.
See United States v. SCRAP,
412 U. S. 669,
412 U. S. 686
(1973);
Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.
S. 727,
405 U. S. 735
n. 8,
405 U. S. 738,
and n. 13 (1972).
Cf. Data Processing, supra at
397 U. S.
154.
Instead, the Court insists that these petitioners' allegations
are insufficient to show that the harms suffered were caused by
respondents' allegedly unconstitutional practices, because
"their inability to reside in Penfield [may be] the consequence
of the economics of the area housing market, rather than of
respondents' assertedly illegal acts."
Ante at
422 U. S.
506.
True, this Court has held that to maintain standing, a plaintiff
must not only allege an injury, but must also assert a "
direct'
relationship between the alleged injury
Page 422 U. S.
526
and.the claim sought to be adjudicated," Linda R. S. v.
Richard D., 410 U. S. 614,
410 U. S. 618
(1973) -- that is,
"[t]he party who invokes [judicial] power must be able to show .
. . that he has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining
some direct injury
as the result of [a statute's]
enforcement."
Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U.
S. 447,
262 U. S. 488
(1923) (emphasis supplied);
Linda R. S., supra, at
410 U. S. 618.
But as the allegations recited above show, these petitioners have
alleged precisely what our cases require -- that,
because
of the exclusionary practices of respondents, they cannot live in
Penfield and have suffered harm. [
Footnote 2/5]
Thus, the Court's real holding is not that these petitioners
have not
alleged an injury resulting from respondents'
action, but that they are not to be allowed to prove one,
because
"realization of petitioners' desire to live in Penfield always
has depended on the efforts and willingness of third parties to
build low and moderate cost housing,"
ante at
422 U. S. 505,
and "the record is devoid of any indication that . . . [any]
projects, would have satisfied petitioners' needs at prices they
could afford."
Ante at
422 U. S.
506.
Certainly, this is not the sort of demonstration that can or
should be required of petitioners at this preliminary stage. In
SCRAP, supra, a similar challenge was made: it was claimed
that the allegations were vague, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 689
n. 15, and that the causation theory
Page 422 U. S. 527
asserted was untrue,
id. at
412 U. S. 689.
We said:
"If . . . these allegations were, in fact, untrue, then the
appellants should have moved for summary judgment on the standing
issue and demonstrated to the District Court that the allegations
were sham and raised no genuine issue of fact. We cannot say . . .
that the appellees could not prove their allegations which, if
proved, would place them squarely among those persons injured in
fact."
Id. at
412 U. S.
689-690. [
Footnote 2/6]
See also Jenkins v. McKeithen, 395 U.
S. 411,
395 U. S.
421-422 (1969).
Here, the very fact that, as the Court stresses, these
petitioners' claim rests in part upon proving the intentions and
capabilities of third parties to build in Penfield suitable housing
which they can afford, coupled with the exclusionary character of
the claim on the merits, makes it particularly inappropriate to
assume that these petitioners' lack of specificity reflects a fatal
weakness in their theory of causation. [
Footnote 2/7] Obviously they cannot be expected,
Page 422 U. S. 528
prior to discovery and trial, to know the future plans of
building companies, the precise details of the housing market in
Penfield, or everything which has transpired in 15 years of
application of the Penfield zoning ordinance, including every
housing plan suggested and refused. To require them to allege such
facts is to require them to prove their case on paper in order to
get into court at all, reverting to the form of fact pleading long
abjured in the federal courts. This Court has not required such
unachievable specificity in standing cases in the past,
see
SCRAP, supra, and
Jenkins, supra, and the fact that
it does so now can only be explained by an indefensible
determination by the Court to close the doors of the federal courts
to claims of this kind. Understandably, today's decision will be
read as revealing hostility to breaking down even unconstitutional
zoning
Page 422 U. S. 529
barriers that frustrate the deep human yearning of low income
and minority groups for decent housing they can afford in decent
surroundings,
see nn.
422
U.S. 490fn2/3|>3 and
422
U.S. 490fn2/4|>4,
supra.
III
Associations Including Building Concerns
Two of the petitioners are organizations among whose members are
building concerns. Both of these organizations, Home Builders and
Housing Council, alleged that these concerns have attempted to
build in Penfield low and moderate income housing, but have been
stymied by the zoning ordinance and refusal to grant individual
relief therefrom.
Specifically, Home Builders, a trade association of concerns
engaged in constructing and maintaining residential housing in the
Rochester area, alleged that "[d]uring the past 15 years, over 80%
of the private housing units constructed in the Town of Penfield
have been constructed by [its] members." App. 147. Because of
respondents' refusal to grant relief from Penfield's restrictive
housing statutes, members of Home Builders could not proceed with
planned low and moderate income housing projects,
id. at
157, and thereby lost profits.
Id. at 156.
Housing Council numbers among its members at least 17 groups
involved in the development and construction of low and
middle-income housing. In particular, one member, Penfield Better
Homes, "
is and has been actively attempting to develop
moderate income housing in . . . Penfield" (emphasis supplied),
id. at 174, but has been unable to secure the necessary
approvals.
Ibid.
The Court finds that these two organizations lack standing to
seek prospective relief for basically the same reasons: none of
their members is, as far as the allegations show, currently
involved in developing a particular
Page 422 U. S. 530
project. Thus, Home Builders has "failed to show the existence
of any injury to its members of sufficient immediacy and ripeness
to warrant judicial intervention,"
ante at
422 U. S. 516
(emphasis supplied), while "the controversy between respondents and
Better Homes, however vigorous it may once have been, [has not]
remained a live, concrete dispute."
Ante at
422 U. S.
517.
Again, the Court ignores the thrust of the complaints and asks
petitioners to allege the impossible. According to the allegations,
the building concerns' experience in the past with Penfield
officials has shown any plans for low and moderate income housing
to be futile, for, again according to the allegations, the
respondents are engaged in a purposeful, conscious scheme to
exclude such housing. Particularly with regard to a low or moderate
income project, the cost of litigating, with respect to any
particular project, the legality of a refusal to approve it may
well be prohibitive. And the merits of the exclusion of this or
that project is not at the heart of the complaint; the claim is
that respondents will not approve any project which will provide
residences for low and moderate income people.
When this sort of "pattern and practice" claim is at the heart
of the controversy, allegations of past injury, which members of
both of these organizations have clearly made, and of a future
intent, if the barriers are cleared, again to develop suitable
housing for Penfield, should be more than sufficient. The past
experiences, if proved at trial, will give credibility and
substance to the claim of interest in future building activity in
Penfield. These parties, if their allegations are proved, certainly
have the requisite personal stake in the outcome of this
controversy, and the Court's conclusion otherwise is only a
conclusion that this controversy may not be litigated in a federal
court.
I would reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83,
392 U. S. 99
(1968);
Data Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.
S. 150,
397 U. S. 153,
397 U. S. 158
(1970);
Schlesinger v. Reservists to Stop the War,
418 U. S. 208,
418 U. S. 225
n. 15 (1974).
See Barlow v. Collins, 397 U.
S. 159,
397 U. S. 176
(1970) (opinion of BRENNAN, J.).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Because at least three groups of plaintiffs have, in my view,
alleged standing sufficient to require this lawsuit to proceed to
discovery and trial, I do not deal in this dissent with the
standing of the remaining petitioners.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Specifically, petitioner Ortiz claims, among other things, that
the Penfield schools offer a much broader curriculum, including
vocational education, than the school his children attend, as well
as special tutoring and counseling programs not available to his
children. Penfield also provides a comprehensive recreational
program, while his community offers very little, and a full-time,
comprehensive public library, while his community has only limited
library services. App. 377-400.
Petitioner Broadnax claimed that, if she lived in Penfield,
there would be playgrounds for her children, effective police
protection, and adequate garbage disposal, all of which are lacking
in her present community.
Id. at 419. As a result, her
children are not safe and there are mice, rats, and roaches in her
house.
Id. at 416-417, 419.
Petitioner Reyes stated, similarly, that she is currently living
with inadequate police protection,
id. at 426, and sending
her children to inferior schools,
id. at. 433.
Finally, petitioner Sinkler also said that, in her current home,
police protection is inadequate,
id. at 443, there are no
play areas for children,
id. at 449, and the schools are
totally inadequate.
Id. at 454.
These are only summaries of the affidavits, which are quite
specific in detailing the inadequacies of petitioners' current
communities and the injuries suffered thereby as well as, in Ortiz'
affidavit, the services provided by Penfield which would alleviate
many of these problems.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Petitioner Broadnax said that, because of the poor choice of
housing available at her income, she was forced to rent an
apartment which has "many leaks in the roof, bad wiring, roach
infestation, rat and mice infestation, crumbling house foundation,
broken front door, broken hot water heater, etc."
Id. at
410. As a result, aside from the ordinary dangers such conditions
obviously present, one son's asthma condition has been exacerbated.
Id. at 413.
Petitioner Sinkler stated that, again because only housing in
Rochester central city is available to moderate-income, minority
people, she is living in a seventh-floor apartment with exposed
radiator pipes, no elevator, and no screens, and violence, theft,
and sexual attacks are frequent.
Id. at 441-446.
Once again, the above are short summaries of long, detailed
accounts of the harms suffered.
[
Footnote 2/5]
This case is quite different from
Linda R. S. v. Richard
D. In
Linda R. S., the problem was that, even if
everything alleged were proved, it was still quite possible that
petitioner's husband would not be prosecuted for nonsupport, or
that, if prosecuted, he would still not contribute to his
children's support. Nothing which could be proved at trial could
possibly show otherwise. Here, if these petitioners prove what they
have alleged, they will have shown that respondents' actions did
cause their injury.
[
Footnote 2/6]
There is some suggestion made in the briefs that, by virtue of
the inclusion in the record of affidavits and documents, the motion
to dismiss was, under Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 12(b), converted into a
Rule 56 motion for summary judgment. In terms, the portion of Rule
12(b) concerning conversion to a Rule 56 motion applies only to a
motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action, and not
to a motion to dismiss for other reasons. At any rate, respondents
filed no counter-affidavits proper under Rule 56(e), so that, even
if Rule 56 were applied, respondents have not at this stage
disproved the allegations.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Court, glancing at the projects mentioned in the record
which might have been built but for the exclusionary practices
alleged, concludes that petitioners Ortiz and Broadnax earned too
little to afford suitable housing in them, and that petitioner
Reyes earned too much.
Ante at
422 U. S.
506-507, n. 16. As the Court implicitly acknowledges,
petitioner Sinkler, at least, may well have been able to live in
the Better Homes Project. Further, there appears in the record as
it stands a report of the Penfield Housing Task Force on Moderate
Income Housing, App. 487-581, prepared for the Penfield Town Board
itself, which defines "moderate income families as families having
incomes between $5,500 and $11,000 per year, depending on the size
of the family,"
id. at 492, and moderate-income housing as
housing "priced below $20,000 or [carrying] a rental price of less
than $150 a month,"
id. at 493.
See also, with
respect to "low income,"
id. at 527. Thus, while the Court
might not know what was meant by "low" and "moderate" income
housing,
ante at
422 U. S.
494-495, n. 5, and
422 U. S.
506-507, n. 16, respondents clearly did. The petitioners
here under discussion fell within the Board's own definition of
moderate-income families, except for petitioner Reyes, who alleges
that she could afford a house for $20,000 but not more. App. 428.
And the Task Force Report does set out,
id. at 503-516,
changes in the zoning ordinance and its application which could
result in housing which moderate-income people could afford, even
to the extent of setting out a budget provided by a builder for a
house costing $18,900,
id. at 507. The causation theory
which the Court finds improbable, then, was adopted by a task force
of the Town Board itself. Of course, we do not know at this stage
whether the particular named plaintiffs would certainly have
benefited from the changes recommended by the task force, but at
least there is a good chance that, after discovery and trial, they
could show they would.