In a case discussed earlier here and here, Congregation Etz Chaim has filed a Petition for Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc in the Ninth Circuit in The League of Residential Neighborhood Advocates v. City of Los Angeles, No. 06-56211 (Aug. 21, 2007).

In that opinion, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit determined that Los Angeles agreed as part of a settlement of the Congregation’s RLUIPA claim to issue a conditionaluse permit (CUP) to the congregation.  Neighbors complained that citycould not override the CUP process in a settlement agreement, whichwould have provided the neighbors notice and hearing under state law.  The Ninth Circuit agreed, voiding the settlement agreement unlessthere had been a specific finding that federal law was violated. 

The petition argues that the panel got it wrong factually: the settlement did not grant the Congregation a CUP, rather, it was premised on the idea that a CUP was not necessary and the Congregation could use its property for worship without a permit.  The petition also argues that the panel’s ruling, by requiring a finding of “actual violation,” undercuts the courts’ and the litigants’ ability to settle lawsuits without having to litigate a case to a judgment, and differs from the law in the Seventh and Third Circuits (i.e., a circuit split). 

Download the petition here.  The oral arguments in the Panel decision is here (8mb wma)

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