South Commons Condo. Ass’n v. Charlie Arment Trucking, Inc., No. 13-2244 (1st Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseIn 2011, a tornado ripped through the downtown area of the City of Springfield, Massachusetts and caused significant damage. City officials quickly determined that the South Commons Condominiums were among the properties that suffered substantial damage. The City hired a private company to demolish most of those buildings the next evening. The owners of the condos brought suit against the City, its officials, and the demolition company that took down the buildings, claiming violations of the owners’ procedural and substantive due process rights under 42 U.S.C. 1983, as well as various violations of Massachusetts state law. The district court dismissed the federal claims for failure to state a claim and dismissed the state claims without prejudice as an exercise of its discretion to deal with pendent claims. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that when a city decides buildings are so damaged that they must be immediately demolished, and when the city does so pursuant to a state law that authorizes the use of summary procedure to respond to such an emergency, the remedy for any wrong, absent behavior that objectively “shocks the conscience,” must come from the remedies the state itself supplies rather than from a federal suit premised on the U.S. Constitution’s due process clause.
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