Under the Denver city charter, the Board of Public Works initiated a local street paving improvement and, pursuant to city law, apportioned the cost to abutting property owners by special assessment. The assessment depended on facts about the parcels, including frontage and benefit from the improvement, and thus varied among a relatively small, identifiable set of owners. The charter provided for notice and permitted owners to submit written objections to the Board, after which the City Council would confirm the assessment by ordinance. The affected owners, including Londoner, timely filed written protests and requested an oral hearing to present evidence and argument concerning the accuracy and fairness of their individual assessments. City officials refused to grant an oral hearing and accepted only written submissions; the City Council then confirmed the assessment without affording the owners a chance to be heard in person before the body empowered to decide. The property owners challenged the assessment as a denial of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Colorado courts upheld the assessment, and the owners sought review in the U.S. Supreme Court.
When a municipality delegates to local officials the power to make individualized special assessments against a small number of property owners based on particularized facts, does the Due Process Clause require notice and an opportunity to be heard before the assessment becomes final?
When the legislature, instead of itself fixing a tax or charge, delegates to an administrative or municipal body the authority to make individualized determinations that impose a specific financial burden on a small number of persons based on particular facts concerning them, procedural due process under the Fourteenth Amendment requires that those persons be given notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard before the assessment becomes final. The hearing must permit the affected persons to present argument and, if necessary, evidence to the decision maker with authority to determine the assessment; mere opportunity to submit written complaints may be insufficient where facts are in dispute. By contrast, no individualized hearing is constitutionally required for generally applicable legislative decisions affecting a broad class, such as across-the-board tax rates.
Yes. Because Denver delegated to local officials the power to determine, based on individualized facts, the amount of a special assessment owed by a small group of property owners, due process required a hearing at which those owners could present argument and, if needed, evidence to the body empowered to decide. The city's refusal to afford such a hearing violated the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court reversed the judgment upholding the assessment.
The Court distinguished between two kinds of governmental action. A legislature may impose general taxes or set rates by statute without affording each citizen an individualized hearing, because such measures are legislative and affect many equally; political processes supply the check in those instances. Here, however, the Denver charter delegated to municipal officials the authority to determine, parcel by parcel, how much each abutting owner must pay for a local improvement. That task turned on adjudicative facts—frontage, benefit, and other particulars—unique to a small, identifiable set of owners, and it resulted in different burdens for different people. When the government engages in this kind of individualized fact-finding that fixes a specific liability, procedural due process requires notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard before the decision becomes final. The owners were entitled to support their objections with argument and, where appropriate, with proof offered to the decision maker empowered to act. The city's process allowed only written submissions to the Board and provided no oral hearing or opportunity to present evidence and argument to the body confirming the assessment. The Court emphasized that the required hearing need not be a full judicial trial with all formalities, and the legislature retains discretion to shape procedures. But the process must include some chance for the affected persons to be heard in a manner commensurate with the individualized nature of the decision. Because Denver failed to provide that opportunity, the assessment violated the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause.
Londoner is a cornerstone of procedural due process and administrative law. It establishes that when government action targets a small number of people through individualized determinations, due process generally requires an opportunity to be heard before the decision is finalized. The case is the counterpoint to Bi-Metallic Investment Co. v. State Board of Equalization, which held that no individualized hearing is required for broadly applicable, legislative-type decisions. Together, they frame the legislative–adjudicative divide that guides whether and what kind of process is due. For law students, Londoner provides the analytical template: identify whether the government decision is individualized or general, assess the nature of the private interest at stake, and then evaluate whether the procedure includes meaningful notice and an opportunity to present evidence and argument to the actual decision maker.
Londoner v. City of Denver cements the principle that when government fixes individualized liabilities for a small number of people based on particular facts, the Constitution demands more than notice and a rubberstamp. Affected persons must have a genuine chance to present argument and evidence to the decision maker before the assessment is finalized.