The Best Hope to Rein in Rent Control Is Lurking on the Supreme Court's Docket
The U.S. Supreme Court keeps putting off deciding whether to take up a challenge to New York's rent control scheme.

Those wishing the U.S. Supreme Court would reverse its longstanding blessing of the constitutionality of rent control were dealt a harsh blow last month, when the justices decided not to take up a major challenge to New York's extensive rent regulations.
Yet hope springs eternal.
Currently idling on the Supreme Court's docket is another petition for a writ of certiorari from New York City landlords. This one, in the case 74 Pinehurst LLC v New York, asks the court to consider the constitutionality of a state law that limits their ability to raise rents, choose their tenants, or even withdraw their apartment from the rental housing market.
Since August, the plaintiffs' petition has repeatedly been placed on the agenda of the justices' weekly conferences, where they decide whether to take up cases. The justices keep putting off deciding whether to take up the case. It was last on the conference agenda on Friday, but neither that day nor this morning has the Supreme Court's orders mentioned it.
That's stirred some limited optimism that the court may end up taking up the case, or that one of the justices will at least produce a dissent to a denial of the landlords' petition that will outline how a subsequent rent control challenge might make it back to the Supreme Court.
"I suspect that one or more of the justices are taking their time to file a dissent to the denial" of cert, says Jim Burling, an attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation. "That dissent is going to tell us what the next steps might be."
The plaintiffs in 74 Pinehurst are challenging a series of 2019 changes made to New York's decades-old rent stabilization law, which regulates rent increases for nearly a million apartments in the New York City area.
Prior to 2019, building owners were able to take a rent-stabilized unit off the market if they, or an immediate family member, wished to make it their personal residence. But the new amendments limited landlords to reclaiming only one rent-controlled unit for their family's use. Any other units they owned would have to remain on the market and subject to rent stabilization regulations.
That's caused problems for 74 Pinehurst plaintiffs Dimos and Vasiliki Panagoulias, immigrants from Greece who own a 10-unit building in the Long Island City neighborhood of New York City. The law prevents them from recovering a unit to give to their daughter, because their son already lives in the building, according to their cert petition.
The 2019 amendments also closed off a number of avenues that landlords had to "deregulate" (charge market rates) for their units and to recover the costs of repairs and capital improvements.
Both those changes helped tank the property values of rent-stabilized buildings. According to their petition, the Panagoulias' value fell by 20 to 40 percent after the 2019 changes.
Throughout the process, the 74 Pinehurst plaintiffs, which include several other building owners, have argued that the 2019 limitations on landlords' ability to recover a unit amount to a physical taking. The financially damaging limits on rent increases and inability to deregulate units amount to a regulatory taking, they further argue.
Very similar arguments were made by plaintiffs in a more prominent challenge to New York's rent control scheme, Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP) v New York.
New York's law amounted to an "effective commandeering of private property for what is essentially perpetual rental housing," said the plaintiff's attorney, Andrew Pincus, to Reason in July.
That made the law a physical taking, argued Pincus. CHIP, a landlord trade association, also argued in its lawsuit that the law created a regulatory taking by slashing property values and holding rents below what was necessary to make a reasonable profit.
The CHIP lawsuit was broader than the 74 Pinehurst because it also challenged pre-2019 features of New York's law.
Nevertheless, a U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York rejected both cases in a single opinion issued in September 2020. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals likewise ruled against the plaintiffs in the CHIP and 74 Pinehurst cases in February 2023.
That sweeping appeals court opinion asserted that even if New York's rent stabilization law was forcing some building owners to operate at a loss, the fact that it wasn't forcing all business owners to operate at a loss meant it wasn't taking.
CHIP and the 74 Pinehurst plaintiffs both appealed to the Supreme Court in April. Supportive amicus briefs flooded in from landlord associations and pro-market think tanks.
Nevertheless, in October, the Supreme Court rejected the CHIP petition in an unsigned order. Meanwhile, Pinehurst 74 keeps rattling around on the conference schedule.
Burling speculates that some justices are attempting to avoid making another major, polarizing decision after making several controversial rulings on guns and abortion.
"The moderate wing may want to be holding their fire back," he says.
If that's the case, it's yet another obstacle to what's proven to be the very tall order of getting a rent control case before the Supreme Court.
Stretching back to the beginning of the 20th century, courts have been generally unwilling to put limits on state and local governments' ability to regulate land use. The Supreme Court hasn't shown much interest in getting involved in the issue either.
It doesn't help that most rent control laws are passed in areas under liberal-leaning appeals courts. That creates fewer opportunities for split appeals court opinions that might prompt the Supreme Court to intervene.
But with the 74 Pinehurst case, there's still a possibility that the high court might take up a challenge to rent control. And if it doesn't, there's a chance that a lengthy dissent might pave the way for a future case to get to the Supreme Court.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Almost every single action governments take is because some previous action was necessary to sidestep some other previous action.
Once one dives down these rabbit holes back to whatever passes for a beginning, it is easy to see how sticking to clear simple principles made all subsequent sidesteps unnecessary. But someone got butthurt, someone wanted to help a friend, sidesteps were necessary, and here we are, every sidestep making a dozen more necessary.
False there are two cases that scotus is considering the second one 335-7 LLC has continually owned the property since the 1930s.
I have to ask, what happens if an owner simply walks away from a building because they are being forced to operate at a loss?
They lose their investment at least. And how exactly do you tell the government that your name on the deed is now meaningless and the building has no official owner?
The city forecloses. This isn't rocket science.
“They lose their investment at least.”
At some point that’s better than on-going never ending operating losses.
“And how exactly do you tell the government that your name on the deed is now meaningless and the building has no official owner?”
If you still have a mortgage on the building, you call the bank and tell them you are defaulting on the lone and turning the collateral over to the bank.
There was news earlier this year that a major hotel operator walked away from a $750 Million mortgage on two hotels in San Francisco.
This is one of the ways apartment fires get started.
Not anymore, at least here in NYC. Real estate is at all time high values. The landlords are raking in the big bucks. The fires are from improperly charging e bikes. It is fun for those on the Right to trash Bill De Blasio but he fought very hard to keep them from becoming legalized.
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.
How R/C does not meet the test for a 'taking' seems impossible.
Nothing is taken. The rent controls were in effect when the landlords purchased the properties.
The armed-criminals were just waiting for their next opportunity so that makes it all okay... /s
See my other comment. The market took into account rent controls in the sales price. These plaintiffs are trying to get a huge windfall through the courts.
The market took into account armed-theft in the sales price.
You really aren't helping your argument at all; just rephrasing it.
"Nothing is taken. The rent controls were in effect when the landlords purchased the properties."
Not in my case.
It's dumb but my understanding is generally RC doesn't impact you the day it's passed, it just limits all future decisions. So you have time to get out, knew about it going in or the losses are purely speculative (some of which is sun rises in east level, but still).
It definitely does meet the test.
Only commies, who think the government can tell you what you can do with your own property, don't think so.
War cases make bad law.
During WW2, NYC's rent control was reasonable.
(2a) Higher rents would not spur the construction of new housing, because every loose dollar was being sucked into the war effort.
(2b) Breadwinners could not take second jobs to pay higher rents, because they were confined to military bases thousands of miles away.
It is unfortunate, however, that Federal courts did not look at rent control with fresh eyes once WW2 was over.
The problem was that the population grew so fast after WW2 that rent controls had to be maintained. In recent years the problem has been NIMBY zoning that has restricted supply. The last two Democrats who have been Mayors of NYC have run roughshod over the NIMBYs but even their work has been inadequate. And suburbanites *want* the NIMBY zoning to keep out the riffraff and to artificially inflate the value of their own property. Welfare for the upper middle class.
Is the riffraff somehow entitled to suburbanite homes? Did they *earn* it? If they *earned* it wouldn't they be an owner of a suburbanite home. I just love how left-retards pretend nothing has to be *earned* it's all just who STEALS the most WINS!
All the while complaining about the injustices in the world while they throw away justice for their armed-theft plans.
Talk about an oxymoron.
The problem was that the population grew so fast after WW2 that rent controls had to be maintained.
This assumes that it's impossible to move out of New York City.
Rent control is never acceptable. If the government wants to drastically reduce supply of housing, rent control is a primary means to accomplish it.
"The problem was that the population grew so fast after WW2 that rent controls had to be maintained..."
Assertions from lefty shits =/= evidence or argument.
None of that generates cause for or justification of rent control.
" . . . or even withdraw their apartment from the rental housing market."
If that isn't a taking, it is slavery.
1. You don't own that property! The government does!
2. So wait. Why am I working for other people then?
3. It's okay the government will pay you to watch TV if you chose.
4. Now nobody wants to work to keep the TV on.
5. Now nobody wants to grow food.
6. Now nobody wants to build shelter.
It's an ideology that eats itself. 'guns' don't make sh*t and government is nothing but a gun-enforcement agency.
And just before we all starve and freeze to death the 'guns' will be used to force you into labor camps. The writing on the wall is as solid as stone.
Find me an owner landlord who purchased the property before the rent controls were instituted in the 1940s and maybe there is a case. Every landlord who has invested since knew what the rules are. They are trying to use the courts to give themselves a huge windfall that they didn't earn.
Rent controls are a problem but if you get rid of them without getting rid of the NIMBY zoning you have terminated the middle class. And a lot of one percenters love the NIMBY zoning. Donald Trump has even weaponized it to get votes for Republicans.
Short of heavily mortgaged by government loans and/or subsidies how do you pretend "they didn't earn" it? Just because [WE] mob RULERS have stolen it with their gov-gun 'rules'? (armed-theft)?
Nothing has been stolen. The landlords got the properties for far less than they would have paid had there not been rent controls. Now if you make them pay the difference between the fair market price and the government depressed price, adjusted for inflation, if they win this case, you might have a point.
Indeed. The injustice in gov rent control price manipulation is the very curse of the injustice in big landlord profits. A socialist government is the real monopoly threat on the people. Correctly termed as Crony Socialism.
"Nothing has been stolen..."
Like turd, I can't if you are that stupid or that dishonest, but regardless, you are a lefty pile of shit.
The other case scotus is considering 335-7 LLC has an owner who has continually owned it since the 1930s.
Just don't self report renting to your daughter.
Except there's no way to empty a unit for her now. It's not like the person getting a great deal on below market rent is going to move otherwise.