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Case 1:22-cv-00247-DKW-RT Document 85 Filed 12/21/23 Page 10 of 28 PagelD.3070 <br /> In response, the City raises several new legal arguments.9 First, the City <br /> contends that the Court should decide all of the pending dispositive motions or <br /> abstain from addressing Count I based on the Pullman doctrine.10 Dkt. No. 72 at <br /> 3-6. Should the Court address Count I, the City argues that Ordinance 22-7 should <br /> be upheld against HILSTRA's preemption challenge as it is a rental regulation <br /> not a zoning ordinance—and therefore, not precluded by HRS § 46-4(a). Id. at 6- <br /> 15. Finally, the City contends that even if the Court does find Ordinance 22-7 to <br /> be a zoning regulation, that the general nonconforming use protections of LUO <br /> § 21-4.110 apply to protect existing uses, such that it saves the Ordinance from <br /> preemption. Id. at 15-22. <br /> A. Pullman Abstention <br /> Pullman abstention permits a district court to abstain from "the exercise of <br /> federal jurisdiction when `a federal constitutional issue . . . might be mooted or <br /> presented in a different posture by a state court determination of pertinent state <br /> law."' C-Y Dev. Co. v. City of Redlands, 703 F.2d 375, 377 (9th Cir. 1983) <br /> (quoting Cnty. of Allegheny v. Frank Mashuda Co., 360 U.S. 185, 189 (1959)). It <br /> applies where three elements are present: <br /> 9The Court notes that each of the City's arguments in opposition to summary judgment is legal in <br /> nature and could have been raised at the time of the preliminary injunction. Instead, the City <br /> raises each of these arguments now for the first time. <br /> 1Olt is, of course, curious that the City never asked the Court to abstain, based on Pullman or for <br /> any other reason, before the Court addressed Count I at the preliminary injunction stage, ruling <br /> in favor of HILSTRA. <br /> - 10 - <br />