El Dorado Estates v. City of Fillmore, No. 12-55549 (9th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseEl Dorado, a mobile home park owner located in the City of Fillmore alleged that the City interfered with an application for a subdivision of its seniors-only mobile home park by causing unreasonable delays and imposing extralegal conditions because of a fear that subdivisions would lead to El Dorado opening the Park to families. El Dorado's complaint was dismissed for lack of standing. The court concluded, however, that El Dorado had Article III standing where El Dorado suffered a concrete and particularized, actual, injury, in the form of added expenses caused by the City's interference of the application. Accordingly, the court reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
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Court Description: Fair Housing Act / Standing. The panel reversed the dismissal, for lack of Article III standing, of a seniors-only mobile home park owner’s action claiming violations of the Fair Housing Act when the City of Fillmore, California, allegedly interfered with an application for a subdivision of the mobile home park by causing unreasonable delays and imposing extralegal conditions because of a fear that subdivision would lead to the opening of the park to families. The panel held that, under the facts alleged in the complaint, the mobile home park owner suffered a concrete and particularized, actual injury, in the form of added expenses caused by the city’s interference with the subdivision application, and therefore had Article III standing to prosecute the action. The panel reversed the district court and remanded for further proceedings.
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