Barrani v. Salt Lake City
What's at Stake
Hundreds if not thousands of Salt Lake City, Utah, residents have nowhere safe to stay and must live and sleep in public. This case—brought by a small group of residents and businesses—involves the question whether this citywide homelessness crisis constitutes a nuisance under Utah state law. It also presents the question whether Salt Lake City can be ordered to clear encampments, forcibly relocate people who are unhoused, and enforce vague and overbroad laws criminalizing homelessness where doing so will likely, if not certainly, violate unhoused people’s state and federal constitutional rights. The ACLU’s State Supreme Court Initiative and Trone Center for Justice and Equality, along with the Ƶof Utah and the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association, represent amici curiae in the trial court who oppose the plaintiffs’ nuisance claims and their request for relief.
Summary
In September 2023, a group of nine residents and business owners sued in Utah state court against Salt Lake City, alleging that the city had created both public and private nuisances by allowing unhoused community members to live and sleep in local streets, sidewalks, and parks. The plaintiffs claim that the City created these nuisances by refusing to enforce a broad range of ordinances against unhoused individuals. Those ordinances include prohibitions on camping in parks or on public grounds; obstruction of sidewalks with encroachments or by standing, lying, or sitting for more than two minutes, obstruction of highways and streets, and public alcohol possession and use. Violations of these local ordinances carry potential misdemeanor or infraction penalties. Plaintiffs asked the trial court to enter a declaratory judgment and preliminary and permanent injunctions directing the City to abate “any and all nuisances caused by the unhoused” on any City property, not just the immediate areas where plaintiffs reside.
The ACLU, Ƶof Utah, The National Homelessness Law Center, Crossroads Urban Center, and the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association (SLLDA) filed an amici curiae brief opposing the plaintiffs’ request for an emergency injunction. Attorneys for the ACLU’s State Supreme Court Initiative and Trone Center for Justice, along with attorneys from the Ƶof Utah and SLLDA, are counsel for amici.
The brief explains that the preliminary injunction should be denied because, among other flaws fatal to plaintiffs’ arguments, the injunction would be adverse to the public interest. It explains that the requested injunction would likely, if not certainly, result in violations of unhoused people’s rights to due process, to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and excessive fines, and to be free from cruel and unusual punishment or unnecessary rigor in the process of arrest or conviction. The brief also explains why plaintiffs’ requested relief would make the problem of homelessness worse, not better.
After oral argument, the case was dismissed with prejudice in favor of the ACLU. The City's motion to dismiss was granted based on the public duty doctrine. Plaintiffs appealed, arguing that the public duty doctrine does not apply and that the Court should hold that “unlawfulness” in the public nuisance context has a broad meaning including the quiet use and enjoyment of land. Plaintiffs asked the City to abate “any and all nuisances caused by the unhoused."
In September 2024, the SSCI, filed an amicus brief in the Utah Supreme Court. This case involves the question of whether a city-wide homelessness crisis constitutes a “nuisance” to be abated under Utah state law, as the plaintiffs in that case allege. Our brief explains why this lawsuit threatens the constitutional rights of unsheltered Utahns and warns that treating people experiencing homelessness as a “nuisance” ignores the gravity of the problem.
Legal Documents
-
09/23/2024
Supreme Court Amicus Brief -
03/27/2024
Decision -
11/07/2023
Motion for Amicus Brief -
11/02/2023
Motion to Dismiss -
11/02/2023
Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Application for Preliminary Injunction -
09/28/2023
Barrani Application for a PI -
09/28/2023
Barrani Complaint -
11/07/2023
Barrani Amicus Brief
Date Filed: 09/23/2024
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 03/27/2024
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 11/07/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 11/02/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 11/02/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 09/28/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 09/28/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah
Date Filed: 11/07/2023
Court: Utah Supreme Court
Affiliate: Utah