Santos v. City of Cambridge, 987 F.3d 1234 (1st Cir. 2023)
In Santos v. City of Cambridge, the legal landscape of property and land use faced significant scrutiny when a conflict arose concerning the fair application of zoning laws.
Does the City's denial of a building permit constitute an arbitrary and capricious action that violates the property owner's constitutional due process rights?
Under U.S. constitutional law, a government action regarding land use must not be arbitrary or capricious and must afford the property owner procedural due process. Zoning decisions are subject to substantive due process review and may not infringe unreasonably on private property rights.
The First Circuit held that the City's denial of the building permit was not arbitrary and capricious and did not violate due process because the decision was reasonably related to legitimate governmental objectives, namely proper urban planning and environmental considerations.
Santos v. City of Cambridge serves as an instructive example of how courts evaluate land use decisions within the constraints of constitutional protections. It clarifies the nuances of arbitrariness in governmental actions and reinforces the principle that due process must be observed in municipal decisions impacting property rights. This case particularly resonates in jurisdictions facing conflicts between developmental expansion and regulatory limitations.