District Court When initially heard by the
US District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Euclid moved to dismiss the complaint entirely, arguing that Ambler Realty had no right to sue in the first place without taking the issue before the Euclid Zoning Board, as required by the zoning ordinance. Euclid based their argument on a legal doctrine which has come to be known as the
exhaustion of administrative remedies. The District Court denied this motion, finding that the zoning ordinance did in fact constitute an act of
taking by Euclid of Ambler Realty's property, and that the ordinance was
unconstitutional. The ordinance defined the use and size of buildings permissible in each district. Ambler Realty's land spanned multiple districts, and the company was therefore significantly restricted in the types of buildings it could construct on the land. Thus, there was no reason for the company to abide by the ordinance's requirement. Euclid's motion was denied and the lower court decided in favor of Ambler Realty. Prominent lawyer
Newton D. Baker argued the case for Ambler Realty and
James Metzenbaum represented Euclid.
Supreme Court The Supreme Court agreed with the lower court's denial of the dismissal motion, but overturned the outcome of the case and sided with the Village of Euclid. The Court held that the zoning ordinance was not an unreasonable extension of the village's
police power and did not have the character of arbitrary fiat, and thus it was not unconstitutional. Further, the Court found that Ambler Realty had offered no evidence that the ordinance had any effect on the value of the property in question, but based their assertions of depreciation on speculation only. The Court ruled that speculation was not a valid basis for a claim of takings. Ambler Realty had argued their case on the basis of the
14th Amendment's due process clause. The Court noted that the challenger in a due process case would have to show that the law in question is discriminatory and has no rational basis. The Court found that Euclid's zoning ordinance in fact did have a rational basis. Planner and lawyer
Alfred Bettman, supported by the
Ohio Planning Conference (now APA-Ohio, a chapter of the
American Planning Association), submitted an
amicus brief on behalf of Euclid, arguing that zoning is a form of nuisance control and therefore a reasonable police power measure. In short the Court ruled that zoning ordinances, regulations and laws must find their justification in some aspect of police power and asserted for the public welfare. Benefit for the public welfare must be determined in connection with the circumstances, the conditions and the locality of the case. ==Significance==