Raso v. Lago ( 1998 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 97-1279

    ALFRED RASO, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    MARISA LAGO, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Mark L. Wolf, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Boudin and Stahl,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Chester Darling for appellants. _______________
    Saul A. Schapiro with whom Nina F. Lempert, Thomas Bhisitkul, _________________ _________________ _________________
    Rosenberg & Schapiro, Merita Hopkins, Corporation Counsel, Kevin S. _____________________ _______________ ________
    McDermott and Amanda P. O'Reilly, Assistant Corporation Counsel, City _________ __________________
    of Boston Law Department, were on briefs for appellees Marisa Lago,
    Director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority, the Boston
    Redevelopment Authority, Thomas A. Menino, Mayor of Boston, City of
    Boston, Victoria L. Williams, Director of the Boston Fair Housing
    Commission, Boston Fair Housing Commission, Sandra Henriquez, Director
    of the Boston Housing Authority and Boston Housing Authority.
    Rudolph F. Pierce with whom Lynne Alix Morrison, David W. ___________________ _____________________ _________
    Fanikos, Goulston & Storrs, P.C., Richard M. Bluestein, Paul Holtzman _______ _______________________ ____________________ _____________
    and Krokidas & Bluestein were on brief for Robert H. Kuehn, Jr., _____________________
    President of Keen Development Corp., and as Trustee of the Lowell
    Square Nominee Trust, Keen Development Corp., Reverend Michael F.
    Groden, Director of the Planning Office for Urban Affairs, Inc., and
    as Trustee of the Lowell Square Nominee Trust, Planning Office for
    Urban Affairs, Inc., Lowell Square Associates Joint Venture, Lowell
    Square Cooperative Limited Partnership, Mark Maloney, President of
    Maloney Properties, Inc., and Maloney Properties, Inc.















    Susan M. Poswistilo, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for Henry G. _______________
    Cisneros, Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
    and Department of Housing and Urban Development.



    ____________________

    January 27, 1998
    ____________________





















































    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. The plaintiffs in this case are _____________

    former residents of Boston's Old West End who were forced to

    relocate when their homes were taken by eminent domain for

    urban renewal. They claim that Massachusetts law entitles

    them to first preference for tenancy of all new residential

    units built on the land, and that they are being denied this

    preference in a new development called West End Place because

    most former West Enders are white. The district judge

    dismissed the complaint, leading to this appeal.

    The background facts are undisputed. In May 1956, the

    Boston Housing Authority, the forerunner to the current

    Boston Redevelopment Authority ("the BRA"),1 prepared a plan

    for urban renewal of Boston's Old West End, a downtown

    neighborhood lying just north of Beacon Hill. The plan was

    approved as required under Massachusetts law, and in 1958,

    the BRA ordered a taking by eminent domain of a large area,

    displacing over three thousand households of diverse

    heritages, but including few African Americans.

    The BRA executed a lease agreement with a private

    developer, Charles River Park, Inc. ("Charles River"). Over

    the next ten years, Charles River razed buildings in the Old

    West End and built offices, condominiums, and luxury


    ____________________

    1The BRA is an entity established by the Commonwealth of
    Massachusetts to undertake urban renewal projects and to
    relieve housing shortages. See Collins v. Selectmen of ___ _______ ____________
    Brookline, 325 Mass. 562, 564-66 (1950). _________

    -3- -3-













    residential units. The new buildings were either

    nonresidential or so expensive that very few of the former

    West Enders could afford to occupy them.

    In 1970, the BRA terminated Charles River as the project

    developer and, in 1986, solicited proposals for the

    development of Lowell Square, located at the intersection of

    Lomasney Way and Staniford Street, the only remaining large

    undeveloped section of the Old West End. A proposal was

    submitted by the Lowell Square Cooperative Limited

    Partnership (the "developer") to build a new development

    called West End Place at Lowell Square.2

    The BRA eventually awarded the developer the

    redevelopment contract. One restriction in the agreement

    between the BRA and the developer mirrors a provision of

    Massachusetts law requiring the BRA to obligate the developer

    as follows:

    (c) to give preference in the selection of tenants
    for dwelling units built in the project area to
    families displaced therefrom because of clearance
    and renewal activity who desire to live in such
    dwelling units and who will be able to pay rents or
    prices equal to rents or prices charged other
    families for similar or comparable dwelling units
    built as a part of the same redevelopment; and

    (d) to comply with such other conditions as are
    deemed necessary to carry out the purposes of this
    chapter, or requirements of federal legislation or

    ____________________

    2The partnership later underwent a name change and, in
    addition, the complaint names other private entities and
    individuals associated with it. For convenience, all are
    referred to as "the developer."

    -4- -4-













    regulations under which loans, grants or
    contributions have been made or agreed to be made
    to meet a part of the cost of the project.

    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 121B, 49 (1986).

    The BRA also required that the developer work closely

    with former West Enders in developing the property. To that

    end, a number of former West Enders formed the Old West End

    Housing Corporation. This nonprofit entity and the developer

    signed a participation agreement, which stated, inter alia, __________

    that former West Enders would have first preference in the

    purchase or rental of residential units in West End Place,

    subject to applicable local, state, and federal laws.

    The developer sought out numerous sources of financing,

    including government funding from local, state, and federal

    agencies. In particular, the federal Department of Housing

    and Urban Development ("HUD") funded a grant of $2.5 million

    for construction, and it also committed $7 million in rent

    subsidies for the low-income units in West End Place. See 42 ___

    U.S.C. 1437f (1994). Like most federal housing assistance,

    these funds were contingent on compliance with federal fair

    housing requirements. See 24 C.F.R. 1.5, 5.105 (1997). ___

    One such requirement is that developer recipients of

    federal housing funds must carry out an affirmative program

    to attract minority, as well as majority, applicants; the

    pertinent regulation contemplates mailings to minority

    organizations, assurances of nondiscrimination, and like



    -5- -5-













    measures. Each applicant is required to set forth its

    "affirmative fair housing marketing plan" on a HUD form and

    secure its approval by HUD. See 24 C.F.R. 200.620 (1997). ___

    In addition, HUD is subject to a 1991 consent decree

    based on a finding that HUD had failed to meet statutory

    obligations to ensure that the minority population of Boston

    had equal access to public housing. NAACP, Boston Chapter v. _____________________

    Kemp, No. 78-850-S (D. Mass. Mar. 8, 1991) (consent decree). ____

    The consent decree provides that all Boston area HUD

    affirmative fair housing marketing plans "shall have as their

    goal and measure of success the achievement of a racial

    composition, in HUD-assisted housing located in neighborhoods

    which are predominantly white, which reflects the racial

    composition of the City [of Boston] as a whole." Id. at 2.3 ___

    In preparing its affirmative fair housing marketing

    plan, the developer attempted to reconcile the explicit

    statutory obligation of a first preference for former West

    Enders with HUD's consent-decree goal of a tenancy reflecting

    the makeup of the City of Boston. Minority races made up 41

    percent of Boston's population, but according to HUD's

    ____________________

    3The consent decree ended lengthy litigation, which included
    an appeal to this court, over HUD's duties to foster
    integrated housing. See NAACP, Boston Chapter v. Pierce, 624 ___ _____________________ ______
    F. Supp. 1083 (D. Mass. 1985), vacated and remanded, NAACP v. ____________________ _____
    Secretary of Hous. & Urban Dev., 817 F.2d 149 (1st Cir. __________________________________
    1987), on remand, NAACP, Boston Chapter v. Kemp, 721 F. Supp. _________ _____________________ ____
    361 (D. Mass. 1989). The decree provided that its provisions
    did not "constitute" and should not be "construed as" a
    quota.

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    estimate, only about 2 percent of the former West Enders.

    HUD indicated that it viewed an unqualified preference for

    former West Enders as contrary to federal fair housing

    requirements and the consent decree.

    The developer, the government agencies, and the Old West

    End Housing Corporation submitted the matter to mediation.

    The mediator, a former United States Attorney for

    Massachusetts, proposed that former West Enders receive a

    preference as to 55 percent of the units in West End Place,

    and all other applicants have equal access to the remaining

    45 percent. The developer and the agencies agreed; the Old

    West End Housing Corporation did not. Nevertheless, the

    mediator's solution was included in the developer's

    affirmative fair housing marketing plan, which HUD approved

    in 1996.

    The plan operates as follows. West End Place contains

    183 residential units that fall into three rent-based

    categories: 58 "low-income" units (subsidized by HUD funds),

    48 "moderate-income units," and 77 units to be rented at

    market rates. Under the plan, the developer is to give

    former West Enders first preference as to 101 of 183 units,

    that is, 55 percent of the total. These 101 units are

    unevenly distributed over the three rent categories: former

    West Enders have a preference as to 19 low-income units (33





    -7- -7-













    percent), 24 moderate-income units (50 percent), and 58

    market-rate units (75 percent).

    The tenant selection works by lottery. Each preliminary

    application is assigned a random number. The applications

    are then separated into two pools: pool A contains

    applications from displaced former West Enders and pool B

    contains all other applicants. Then, for the low-income

    units, the top-ranked applicant from pool A is selected,

    followed by the two top-ranked applicants from pool B; this

    yields a total of 33 percent pool A applicants (33 percent

    former West Enders) in the low-income units. The process is

    then repeated until all 58 units are tentatively allocated.

    The same lottery approach is used for the other two

    categories of apartments. For moderate-income units, the

    draw ratio is one-to-one (50 percent former West Enders); for

    the market-rate units, three-to-one (75 percent former West

    Enders). Applicants who have been selected in this process

    are then invited to complete a full application and undergo a

    more thorough screening process, which can include

    verifications of personal references and credit history. The

    same process can supply additional applicants if needed.

    From August 26 to September 26, 1996, a real estate

    manager hired by the developer coordinated community outreach

    efforts to stimulate preliminary applications. The manager

    also contacted former West Enders as well as the Old West End



    -8- -8-













    Housing Corporation. The manager eventually received 1,858

    timely preliminary applications, 308 of which identified the

    applicants as former West Enders. Of the 308 former West

    Ender applicants, 12 identified themselves as black, one as

    Latino, and 19 did not identify their race.

    On September 26, 1996, the individual plaintiffs--four

    former West Enders--filed a complaint in the district court

    challenging the tenant selection process and the plan on

    numerous grounds; they purported to represent former West

    Enders as a class. The Old West End Housing Corporation was

    also named as a plaintiff. The numerous defendants divide

    into four categories: the BRA and its director; HUD and its

    Secretary; the City of Boston and various of its officials;

    and, finally, the developer and other private parties

    associated with the development of West End Place.

    On October 21, 1996, the plaintiffs filed an emergency

    motion for a preliminary injunction to halt the lottery,

    which was later withdrawn when the defendants agreed to let

    the former West Enders' representatives monitor the lottery.

    In the lottery, which took place on October 29, 1996, two of

    the named plaintiffs received rankings in the lottery that

    make it unlikely that they will receive units in West End

    Place.

    The developer and various other defendants moved to

    dismiss the complaint, Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), and the



    -9- -9-













    district court heard argument on the motion on November 20,

    1996. On January 6, 1997, the district court issued an

    opinion dismissing many of the claims with prejudice. Raso ____

    v. Lago, 958 F. Supp. 686 (D. Mass. 1997). After the former ____

    West Enders declined to amend their complaint to allege

    discriminatory implementation of the plan--an opportunity

    offered by the district court--the district court dismissed

    all claims with prejudice and entered judgment for the

    defendants on February 11, 1997.

    The former West Enders appeal from the dismissal of only

    two of the numerous claims they made in the district court:

    first, a claim under 42 U.S.C. 1983 that the plan violates

    equal protection principles because it comprises a forbidden

    racial classification, and second, a claim that section 49

    creates a trust that subjects the BRA and developer to a

    trustee's fiduciary duties in favor of the former West

    Enders. There are also a few references to the Tenth

    Amendment and to federal statutes but these references are

    not seriously developed in plaintiffs' briefs.

    We begin with section 1983, which pertinently provides

    that no person may deprive any person of his or her

    constitutional rights under color of state law. 42 U.S.C.

    1983. The City of Boston and the BRA are both "state

    actors," see Monell v. Department of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. ___ ______ __________________________

    658, 690 (1978), and the BRA played a central role in



    -10- -10-













    developing and fostering the plan challenged by plaintiffs.

    HUD is a federal entity not subject to section 1983, but its

    officials are directly constrained by equal protection

    principles.4

    In their complaint, the former West Enders allege that

    race was a motive for curtailing the statutory preference

    otherwise available to them. Specifically, the complaint

    cites the defendants' reliance upon the consent decree as

    comprising a racial purpose and goal and asserts that, as a

    result, the former West Enders were deprived of a benefit--a

    statutory preference for all of the apartments--based upon "a

    racial classification." In their appeal brief, plaintiffs'

    shorthand version is that the preference was curtailed

    "because" the former West Enders were predominantly white.

    Factual assertions in a complaint are normally accepted

    as true for purposes of a motion to dismiss, see, e.g., __________

    Berner v. Delahanty, 129 F.3d 20, 25 (1st Cir. 1997); in ______ _________

    addition, the defendants do not dispute that racial concerns

    and the consent decree prompted their effort to cut back upon

    the statutory preference. The reason is apparent: the


    ____________________

    4The Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause embodies the core
    of the equal protection doctrine, see Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 ___ _______ ______
    U.S. 497, 499-500 (1954), and the Secretary of HUD, a named
    defendant in this case, is subject to suit for injunctive
    relief for violations of the Constitution. See, e.g., Larson _________ ______
    v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp., 337 U.S. 682, 689-91 __________________________________
    (1949); E. Chemerinsky, Federal Jurisdiction 9.1.1, at 451- ____________________
    52 (1989).

    -11- -11-













    former West Enders are almost entirely white, and without

    some limitation on the preference rights of former West

    Enders, HUD would have been funding subsidized apartments

    from which minorities were effectively excluded.

    HUD apparently thought that this outcome would violate

    the consent decree and its statutory obligation to promote

    fair housing. See 42 U.S.C. 3601-3619 (1994); 24 C.F.R. ___

    200.600-200.640 (1997). HUD may have misunderstood both

    the consent decree and the federal statute, but whether it

    did or not, its purpose to increase minority opportunities _______

    for apartments in West End Place by curtailing the statutory

    preference is evident. To this end, it appears that HUD

    simply declined to authorize funding unless and until some of

    the apartments were made available to applicants other than

    former West Enders.

    This undenied racial motive distinguishes the case from

    those others involving facially neutral actions--like a

    zoning law or employee qualification test--where the state

    actor denies any racial purpose or concern.5 But the

    plaintiffs are mistaken in treating "racial motive" as a

    synonym for a constitutional violation. Every


    ____________________

    5See, e.g., Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan __________ _______________________________ ____________
    Hous. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 270-71 (1977) (upholding a _________________
    refusal to rezone property to allow construction of multi-
    dwelling buildings); Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 247- __________ _____
    48 (1976) (upholding a police department literacy exam that
    excluded mostly black applicants).

    -12- -12-













    antidiscrimination statute aimed at racial discrimination,

    and every enforcement measure taken under such a statute,

    reflect a concern with race. That does not make such

    enactments or actions unlawful or automatically "suspect"

    under the Equal Protection Clause.

    It is quite true that government action taken out of

    hostility to a racial group can be condemned out of hand,

    e.g., Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 373-74 (1886), but ____ ________ _______

    there is no allegation whatever in the complaint that the

    defendants were hostile to whites. Nor would any such motive

    be remotely plausible. Benign intentions do not immunize

    government action, but they substantially narrow the inquiry.

    The primary test is that any government action--regardless of

    benign intent--is suspect if it has been taken on the basis

    of a "racial classification"; in such cases, the

    classification must be justified by a compelling state

    interest and narrow tailoring. See Adarand Constructors, ___ ______________________

    Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 235 (1995). ____ ____

    Despite the use of the "racial classification" label,

    the complaint alleges no facts that would bring that label _____

    into play. See Shaw v. Digital Equipment Corp., 82 F.3d ___ ____ ________________________

    1194, 1216 (1st Cir. 1996). The term normally refers to a

    governmental standard, preferentially favorable to one race

    or another, for the distribution of benefits. E.g., Adarand, ____ _______

    515 U.S. at 226-27; City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., 488 ________________ _______________



    -13- -13-













    U.S. 469, 493 (1989) (plurality opinion). Yet under the plan

    adopted in this case, the apartments freed from the statutory

    preference are made available to all applicants regardless of ___

    race.

    West End Place was built with federal help and its

    apartments made especially desirable through federal

    subsidies. It might not seem remarkable that the government

    should insist, as a condition of this investment, that a fair

    number of the apartments should be effectively open to

    application by tenants of all races. Nor have we been able

    to find any case where the government has been required to

    show a compelling interest, or narrow tailoring of remedies,

    for a condition framed so as to secure equal treatment of _____

    applicants regardless of race.

    Language in a few Supreme Court decisions could be taken

    to mean that any action in which race plays a role is ___

    constitutionally suspect. However, the governmental actions

    in those cases were fundamentally different and more

    provocative. In Adarand, the statute gave special incentives _______

    to government contractors to hire minority subcontractors.6

    The redistricting cases concern state voting districts




    ____________________

    6See Adarand, 515 U.S. at 205-06; see also Croson, 488 U.S. ___ _______ ________ ______
    at 493-94; Wygant v. Jackson Bd. of Educ., 476 U.S. 267, 279- ______ ____________________
    80 (1986) (plurality opinion); R. Rotunda & J. Nowak,
    Constitutional Law 18.10(a)(1) (2d ed. 1992 & Supp. 1997). __________________

    -14- -14-













    designed to concentrate minority voters and effectively to

    reserve seats for minority candidates.7

    Taken by itself, HUD's action in this case is almost the

    opposite of the racial preferences that the Court viewed as

    questionable in Adarand and the redistricting cases. Here, _______

    the government's condition on federal funds was that some of

    the apartments--which otherwise would have almost

    automatically been occupied by whites--be made available to

    all applicants on a race-blind basis. We cannot view this as

    a "racial classification[]" reserving benefits for a favored

    race, Adarand, 515 U.S. at 235, or as "an effort to segregate _______

    the races," Shaw, 509 U.S. at 642-43. ____

    Several other equal protection arguments made by the

    former West Enders need no lengthy discussion, either because

    they have been essentially abandoned on appeal or because

    they are clearly unpersuasive. The former category includes

    the former West Enders' attack on HUD requirements that the

    apartments be publicized in minority communities;8 the latter

    includes the attempt to charge HUD with treating the consent

    ____________________

    7See Bush v. Vera, 116 S. Ct. 1941, 1955 (1996) (plurality ___ ____ ____
    opinion); Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900, 906-09 (1995); ______ _______
    Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 635-36 (1993). ____ ____

    8HUD's regulations require affirmative outreach in both
    majority and minority communities, see 24 C.F.R. ___ ___
    200.620(a); and in any case outreach efforts are not the real
    source of the plaintiffs' problem--rather, it is the partial
    loss of their preference. The defendants are no less guilty
    of muddling the issue in their pretense that outreach efforts
    are all that are involved in this case.

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    decree's numerical "goal" as if it were a quota--a notion

    belied by the substantial preference retained for the former

    West Enders.

    The story, however, is not quite over. It is one thing

    for HUD to insist that the apartments it subsidizes must

    effectively be open to all races; it would be quite another

    if HUD planned to impose this requirement only where the

    beneficiaries of the statutory preference were white. That,

    we think, would be government action based on a "racial

    classification" and would need to be narrowly tailored to

    serve a compelling government interest.

    The difficulty is that we are dealing here with an ad __

    hoc administrative action. Accepting the truth of the ___

    complaint's factual allegations, HUD's actions were prompted

    not by any general, racially skewed policy toward statutory

    preferences but by the peculiar interplay of Boston's consent

    decree, the Massachusetts statute, and the respective racial

    makeups of the Boston population and the former West Enders.

    What HUD would do in some other, hypothetical case is

    unknown, but it is certainly not precluded, either by the

    consent decree or anything else, from challenging statutory

    preferences that exclude whites. Cf. Otero v. New York City ___ _____ _____________

    Hous. Auth., 484 F.2d 1122, 1125 (2d Cir. 1973). ___________

    The plaintiffs have alleged no facts that, if proven,

    would reveal any secret discriminatory standard, pattern of



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    past practice, or motive beyond the one HUD has admitted,

    namely HUD's concern that the preference in this instance, if

    unmodified, would restrict the apartments to whites and

    subject HUD to sanctions under the consent decree.

    Plaintiffs simply think that this purpose is enough to

    condemn HUD'saction. Forthe reasons already given,we do not.

    We turn now to plaintiffs' second and distinct claim on

    appeal that Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 121B, 49, "has the effect

    of creating a trust for the benefit of people displaced by

    urban renewal." The district court ruled that there was no

    demonstrated legislative intent to create a trust and that

    the trust argument failed for a further more technical

    reason. See 958 F. Supp. at 700 (citing New Eng. Trust Co. ___ __________________

    v. Sanger, 337 Mass. 342, 348 (1958)). On appeal, plaintiffs ______

    devote five pages of their brief to discussing the requisites

    for trust creation under Massachusetts law.

    Whether or not Massachusetts law created a trust for the

    former West Enders appears to us to be beside the point. If

    we assume arguendo that the former West Enders are entitled ________

    to, and can enforce, whatever priority is provided under

    section 49, subject always to superseding federal law, the

    trust concept is nothing more than a possible alternative

    remedy for enforcing any unpreempted rights that section 49

    may provide. The question to be answered, before remedies

    are even pertinent, is the extent of those rights.



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    By its terms section 49(c) creates a priority for

    displaced former residents, and subsection (d) arguably

    qualifies this priority by also obligating the developer to

    comply with "requirements of federal legislation or

    regulations under which loans, grants, or contributions have

    been made or agreed to be made to meet a part of the cost of

    the project." Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 121B, 49(d). The

    defendants' position, adopted by the district court, is that

    such federal requirements--as a matter of Massachusetts law--

    qualify the statutory priority. Plaintiffs have not

    challenged this ruling on appeal.

    The plaintiffs might have argued that the limitation

    adopted here is not itself a "requirement" of "federal

    legislation or regulations" but is merely a developer

    proposal that HUD has chosen to bless. Possibly, plaintiffs

    thought that this arguable distinction did not matter because

    a federal administrative measure, even if not statute or

    regulation, might override state legislation under the

    Supremacy Clause--assuming always that it was an authorized

    measure. This is by no means clear, but arguments on this

    point have not been made and need not be pursued.

    In the district court, it appears that plaintiffs' trust

    argument may have been advanced primarily as an adjunct to a

    different constitutional claim, namely a claim that the plan

    in question impaired a property interest without due process



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    or just compensation. The alleged trust, in this context,

    would be a way of expressing a claimed property interest. It

    is not obvious why a trust interest would be more entitled to

    this status than section 49's simple expression of a priority

    in favor of former tenants.

    In all events, whether called a trust or something else,

    any property interest created by section 49(c) is arguably

    subject to section 49's own explicit reservation in section

    49(d). As already noted, the plaintiffs on this appeal have

    not challenged the district court ruling that subsection (d)

    qualifies subsection (c) and also embraces the disputed plan.

    Taking these district court rulings as unchallenged, the

    trust argument adds nothing to the due process argument,

    which itself has not itself been renewed in the plaintiffs'

    briefs in this court.

    This is a case that stirs conflicting sympathies, for

    those ousted from their West End neighborhood by "urban

    renewal" many years ago no less than for minorities wrongly

    denied fair housing opportunities in Boston. But we have

    properly sought to decide this appeal based upon Supreme

    Court precedent, as best we can discern it, recognizing that

    the case is a difficult and unusual one on the edge of

    developing law. Affirmed. ________

    Dissent follows. _______________





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    Stahl, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part. There is Stahl, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part. _____________

    for me considerable appeal in the majority's resolution of

    plaintiffs' equal protection claims. The governmental

    conduct these claims challenge involves a patently good faith

    and facially reasonable effort to accommodate the competing

    interests of two historic losers in Boston's housing wars:

    the racial and ethnic minorities entitled to invoke the

    protections of the consent decree in NAACP v. Kemp and _____ ____

    federal fair housing laws, and the former West Enders, an

    ethnically diverse, lower middle class group which, in the

    name of "urban renewal," was forced from its neighborhood and

    could not afford to return.

    Nonetheless, I cannot join the portion of the

    majority opinion that affirms the district court's pleadings-

    based dismissal of the equal protection claims. While I

    agree with the majority that reverse discrimination claims

    like the present one are "on the edge of developing law,"

    ante at 19, I do think it settled that, when the government ____

    withdraws benefits from a class of citizens because of the

    race or ethnicity of the class, courts are to scrutinize

    strictly the government's conduct so as to ensure that it

    furthers a compelling governmental interest and is narrowly

    tailored to advance that interest. See Adarand Constructors, ___ _____________________

    Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 226-227 (1995). For the reasons ____ ____

    that follow, I believe plaintiffs' complaint fairly alleges



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    such a withdrawal of benefits. And I do not see how we can,

    at this stage of the litigation, conclude that such a

    withdrawal of benefits passes strict scrutiny.

    The complaint alleges that the governmental

    defendants curtailed plaintiffs' statutory preference in

    order to comply with the consent decree in NAACP v. Kemp. _____ ____

    See ante at 11. Because the purpose of that consent decree ___ ____

    is "the achievement of a racial composition, in HUD-assisted

    housing located in neighborhoods which are predominantly

    white, which reflects the racial composition of the City of

    Boston as a whole," id. at 6, a reasonable inference to be ___

    drawn from plaintiffs' complaint, see Aybar v. Crispin-Reyes, ___ _____ _____________

    118 F.3d 10, 13 (1st Cir. 1997) (reasonable inferences are to

    be drawn in favor of the party opposing a Fed. R. Civ. P.

    12(b)(6) motion), is that defendants acted as they did

    because the putative plaintiff class was predominantly white.

    The fact that defendants "do not dispute" this accusation,

    ante at 11, only underscores our obligation to subject ____

    defendants' conduct to strict scrutiny, see Adarand, 515 U.S. ___ _______

    at 224 ("[A]ny person, of whatever race, has the right to

    demand that any governmental actor subject to the

    Constitution justify any racial classification subjecting

    that person to unequal treatment under the strictest judicial

    scrutiny.").





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    The majority reaches a contrary conclusion--that

    strict scrutiny does not apply--because it regards the facts

    plaintiffs have pleaded in support of their equal protection

    claims insufficient to describe a "racial classification."

    See ante at 13-16 (holding that this case is outside the ___ ____

    principle of Adarand). In reaching its conclusion, the _______

    majority emphasizes the effect of curtailing the preference ______

    on non-parties to this litigation, see ante at 13 ("[T]he ___ ____

    apartments freed from the statutory preference are made

    available to all applicants regardless of race."), and the ___

    defendants' intent in enacting the curtailment, see id. at 14 ______ ___ ___

    ("It might not seem remarkable that the government should

    insist . . . that a fair number of the apartments should be

    effectively open to application by tenants of all races.").

    The majority also reads the complaint to allege only that

    defendants acted as they did because plaintiffs are racially

    identifiable; it does not read the complaint to allege that

    defendants acted as they did because plaintiffs are white.

    Id. at 15. ___

    Taking this last point first, I simply disagree

    with the majority's reading of the complaint. The complaint

    does not allege that the preference was curtailed because

    plaintiffs are racially monolithic; it alleges that the

    preference was curtailed because of the consent decree. And,

    as I have stated, because the consent decree operates only in



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    favor of racial and ethnic minorities, it could not be read

    to require curtailment of the preference if the former West

    Enders were predominantly black. Thus, for purposes of

    evaluating defendants' Rule 12(b)(6) motion, I believe we

    must read into the complaint the allegation the majority

    believes necessary to trigger strict scrutiny, see ante at ___ ____

    16: that defendants would not have acted as they did had the

    plaintiff class been predominantly of color. See Aybar, 118 ___ _____

    F.3d at 13; see also Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 47-48 ___ ____ ______ ______

    (1957) (Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2) does not require a complaint

    to set forth specific facts in support of a general

    allegation of discrimination).

    Even if the majority has properly construed the

    complaint, I believe plaintiffs' equal protection claims are

    sufficient to withstand a Rule 12(b)(6) motion and to trigger

    strict scrutiny. In the redistricting cases, the Supreme

    Court has emphasized that government action which

    subordinates race neutral considerations to an overriding

    racial purpose is constitutionally suspect: "We recognized

    in Shaw[v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630 (1993)] that, outside the ____ ____

    districting context, statutes are subject to strict scrutiny

    under the Equal Protection Clause not just when they contain

    express racial classifications, but also when, though race

    neutral on their face, they are motivated by a racial purpose

    or object." Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900, 913 (1995) ______ _______



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    (affirming the invalidation, under equal protection

    principles, of a Georgia congressional redistricting plan

    designed to increase the number of majority black districts

    in Georgia) (citation omitted). It remains to be seen

    whether the Court will press this principle to its outer

    limit and strictly scrutinize even governmental conduct

    which, though predominantly motivated by a racial purpose,

    would not appear to burden any person because of his or her

    race--e.g., a public university's efforts at recruiting fully ____

    qualified applicants of color for its first year law school

    class. But it seems apparent that defendants' lack of

    hostility towards whites in particular, cf. ante at 13, does ___ ____

    not shield their conduct--which has burdened plaintiffs

    because they are, as a group, racially identifiable--from the

    most searching judicial inquiry. See Miller, 515 U.S. at ___ ______

    913. This leads to a final point. I

    think the majority runs afoul of Adarand in concentrating its _______

    focus so heavily on both defendants' intent and the effect of

    defendants' actions on non-parties to this case. The Supreme

    Court has squarely rejected the argument that classifications

    motivated by "benign" considerations should not be

    scrutinized strictly. See Adarand, 515 U.S. at 226. And ___ _______

    though this case does appear unique in that the government

    conduct at issue is more a withdrawal of a special benefit

    from whites than a giving of special benefits to members of



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    minority groups,9 the clear import of Adarand is that it is _______

    the plaintiff's "personal right to equal protection of the ________

    laws," 515 U.S. at 227, and not some non-party's interest in

    competing for that which would be the plaintiff's but for his

    or her race, that is constitutionally safeguarded. Thus, in

    evaluating the constitutionality of defendants' conduct, we

    must not look to its effect and motivation with respect to

    others; we must look at its effect and motivation with

    respect to plaintiffs. And here, quite clearly, defendants'

    conduct has had the effect of depriving plaintiffs of a

    benefit and was prompted by the fact that plaintiffs are

    mostly white.

    Because defendants' conduct should have been

    strictly scrutinized, their motion to dismiss plaintiffs'

    equal protection claim should have been denied and they

    should have been required to produce evidence that their

    conduct was narrowly tailored to advance a compelling

    governmental interest. See Adarand, 515 U.S. at 227 ___ _______

    (reciting the components of the strict scrutiny inquiry); see ___

    also Aiken v. City of Memphis, 37 F.3d 1155, 1163 (6th cir. ____ _____ _______________

    1994) ("When, as here, a race-based affirmative action plan

    is subjected to strict scrutiny, the party defending the plan

    ____________________

    9It is important to note that there is no indication that the
    benefit originally given (i.e., the full preference) was
    given to plaintiffs because they were predominantly white;
    rather, the preference was given because plaintiffs were
    ousted from their homes.

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    bears the burden of producing evidence that the plan is

    constitutional."). Plaintiffs should then have been put to

    the burden of proving the unconstitutionality of defendants'

    conduct. See Aiken, 37 F.3d at 1162 ("The party challenging ___ _____

    [a racially-preferential] plan retains the ultimate burden of

    proving its unconstitutionality."). To the extent that the

    majority has reached a different conclusion, I most

    respectfully dissent.





































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