Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This case involves the effect of a county land use plan on real property lying within a river valley in La Plata County. The landowner, a sand and gravel company, initiated an inverse condemnation action against the county. The company alleged that the restrictions placed on its property, pursuant to the plan, result in a compensable taking. In this opinion, we apply the United States Supreme Court decision, Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
Furthermore, in this opinion, we address the appropriate scope of a takings inquiry. We hold that a court must look to the regulation's effect on the entire parcel owned by the landowner. Thus, it is inappropriate to limit a takings inquiry solely to one particular right in the land, or, to a particular part of the land.
Because the court of appeals erred by deciding that the economic viability test is dispositive and by focusing only on the portion of the landowner's property most severely affected by the regulation, we reverse and remand.
I.
In 1961, Animas Valley Sand and Gravel (AVSG) purchased 46.57 acres of real property in La Plata County, Colorado. AVSG intended to use the land for sand, gravel, and heavy mineral mining. At the time of purchase, no county, state, or federal regulations governing sand and gravel operations existed.
In 1979, AVSG divided the original property into two tracts: Tract A, comprising 4.65 acres, and Tract B, comprising 41.92 acres. AVSG then sold Tract A to James Hanks, who is currently the president and majority shareholder of AVSG. Tract B remains under AVSG's ownership and is the parcel at issue here.
Following the county's categorization of the parcel, AVSG requested that the county designate all of Tract B, rather than merely eight acres of it, as Industrial property. The county denied this request. AVSG then sought relief in the district court, pursuant to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(d). The district court denied AVSG's request for certiorari relief, as well as its subsequent motion to reconsider. No appeal was taken from this judgment.
Thereafter, AVSG filed a second lawsuit claiming inverse condemnation pursuant to the Colorado Constitution. AVSG asserted that the mineral estate on the thirty-three acres of River Corridor property is rendered economically idle by the plan. In the alternative, AVSG argued that even if a reasonable economic use remains, a compensable taking still should be found under a fact-specific inquiry because the plan goes too far. After a two-day bench trial, the trial court determined that the plan did not effect a compensable taking. The court focused its inquiry on the River Corridor property but looked at the plan's effect on that property without separating out the effect on the mineral rights. The court determined that a regulation must foreclose all reasonable use of the property for it to effect a taking. It held that because AVSG failed to prove that the plan rendered the River Corridor property economically idle, the plan did not effect a taking.
AVSG appealed the trial court's decision to the court of appeals. The court of appeals agreed with the trial court's definition of the property at issue-agreeing that while certain rights in the land may not be severed, the land may be geographically severed to ascertain the economic viability of the most severely affected portion of the land. Animas Valley,
AVSG petitioned this court to review the decision of the court of appeals, asserting that the court erred in holding that the economic use test is dispositive in a regulatory takings claim and in refusing to examine mineral rights separately. The county filed a cross-petition asserting that the court of appeals erred in limiting its focus only to the River Corridor property rather than examining the plan's effect on Tract B as a whole. We granted certiorari.
Inverse condemnation is a claim for relief brought by a landowner against a government defendant in which the landowner seeks compensation for a taking of its property, even though the governmental entity has not instituted formal condemnation proceedings. A taking may be effected by the government's physical occupation of the land or by regulation. While a landowner is not entitled to the most beneficial use of his or her land, see Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. New York City,
Takings jurisprudence balances the competing goals of compensating landowners on whom a significant burden of regulation falls and avoiding prohibitory costs to needed government regulation. Compare Krupp v. Breckenridge Sanitation Dist.,
Both the federal and the Colorado constitutions include takings clauses. The federal takings clause provides, "mor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation." U.S. Const. amend. V. This provision is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. Chicago, B. & Q.R. Co. v. Chicago,
Because AVSG brought this claim pursuant to the Colorado Constitution only, it is first necessary to address the scope of Article II, section 15 of the Colorado Constitution as compared to that of the Fifth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. This court has interpreted the "damage" language in Colorado's takings clause to provide broader rights than does the federal clause but only insofar as it allows recovery to landowners whose land has been damaged by "the making of ... public improvements abutting their lands, but whose lands have not been physically taken by the government." City of Northglenn v. Grynberg,
Other than this specific additional coverage, this court has interpreted the Colorado takings clause as consistent with the federal clause. See Cent. Colo. Water Conservancy Dist. v. Simpson,
IIL
The first issue on which this court granted certiorari is whether there can be a compen-sable regulatory taking when some economically viable use remains on the property. Like the trial court, the court of appeals determined that the economic viability test is dispositive in a regulatory takings inquiry. Animas Valley,
The United States Supreme Court has established two per se tests under which a regulation can effect a taking absent a physical encroachment onto the land. First, a regulation constitutes a per se taking when it "does not substantially advance legitimate state interests." Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
The United States Supreme Court has noted that whether or not a taking has occurred "depends largely 'upon the particular cireum-stances [in that] case." " Penn Cent.,
In the most recent of these cases, Lucas, the Court found that the regulation deprived the landowner of reasonable economic value. The Court did imply, however, that in situations in which a reasonable value remains, a second inquiry is appropriate:
[An owner [for whom economic value remains] might not be able to claim the benefit of our categorical formulation, but, as we have acknowledged time and again, 'the economic impact of the regulation on the claimant and ... the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct investment-backed expectations' are keenly relevant to takings analysis generally.
The opinions of our court reflect the lack of clarity of the United States Supreme Court decisions. While much of our precedent implies that a regulation does not effect a taking unless there is a nearly complete loss of economic value, Jafay v. Bd. of County Comm'rs,
A recent United States Supreme Court decision resolves any doubt that there is a two-tiered inquiry in regulatory takings cases. -If a landowner fails to meet its burden of proving a per se taking, it can still prove a taking under a fact-specific inquiry. Palazzolo,
In Palazzolo, the petitioner claimed a regulatory taking after the State of Rhode Island designated his land as coastal wetlands property. The trial court rejected his claim and the Rhode Island Supreme Court affirmed. Palazzolo v. State,
Where a regulation places limitations on land that fall short of eliminating all economically beneficial use, a taking nonetheless may have occurred, depending on a complex of factors including the regulation's economic effect on the landowner, the extent to which the regulation interferes with reasonable investment-backed expectations, and the character of the government action.
Id. at 2457 (citing Penn Cent.,
Thus, Palazzolo endorses a two-tiered inquiry in a regulatory inverse condemnation claim. First, a court must determine whether a per se taking has occurred. Second, if a landowner is unable to prove a per se com-pensable takings claim (because the regulation has a legitimate purpose and her land has not been rendered economically idle), the landowner still may be able to prove a taking has occurred under a fact-specific inquiry.
Although the Palazzolo Court did not address what level of interference a government regulation must have caused to constitute a taking under a fact-specific inquiry, a mere decrease in property value is not enough. This is true because a landowner is not entitled to the highest and best use of his property.
We draw this conclusion from several sources. First, we point to Justice Holmes's famous dictum that permits regulation without compensation unless the regulation goes "too far." Mahon,
Thus, the Court's current formulation of the fact-specific inquiry seems to contemplate a situation in which the property in question retains more than a de minimis value but, when its diminished economic value is considered in connection with other factors, the property effectively has been taken from its owner. It provides a safety valve to protect the landowner in the truly, unusual case.
The present case must be retried because the trial court determined, prior to trial, that the cconomic use test was dispositive. A new trial will permit the district court to apply the proper legal test and the parties to present evidence relevant to the ad hoe factual inquiry. Although there is ample evidence in the record to establish the nature of the regulation,
The two Penn Central factors on which more evidence is needed are the economic impact of the plan, and the plan's impact on investment-backed expectations. First, as a threshold matter, it is unclear whether the plan itself has had any economic impact on AVSG's land.
Assuming at least some restriction can be attributed to the plan, the trial court must then quantify the resulting diminution in value, if any, of the property. The court must ascertain the net value of the land's use before and after the plan, and compare these two values. It is not enough to simply quantify the value of the sand and gravel deposits that could not be mined as a result of the plan. Rather, the court must measure the diminution, if any, in the fair market value caused by the regulatory imposition. See 2A Julius L. Sackman, Nichols On Eminent Domain § 12.01 (3d ed.2001).
AVSG and the county may chose to raise other factors for the trial court's consideration.
In sum, if AVSG is to prevail, it must show that it falls into the rare category of a landowner whose land has a value slightly greater than de minimis but, nonetheless, given the totality of the cireumstances, has bad its land taken by a government regulation.
IV.
The second and third issues on which we granted certiorari deal with the definition of the property interest at stake. Because both the per se economic viability test and the Penn Central factual test involve a comparative analysis between the value of the property before and after the regulation, the definition of the relevant parcel of land is key to the inquiry. See Keystone,
AVSG suggests that in defining the relevant portion of the property, two forms of conceptual severance are appropriate: first, a geographical severance separating out the thirty-three acres of River Corridor property from Tract B as a whole; second, a rights severance, separating out the mineral rights from the full bundle of rights in the land. Conversely, the county claims that the appropriate seope of a takings inquiry is the entire parcel that the landowner owns.
Both the trial court and the court of appeals held that the appropriate scope of the takings inquiry is the full "bundle" of property rights, rather than simply the mineral rights. However, these courts did sever conceptually the acreage of the property-focusing only on the thirty-three acres of River Corridor property without regard to the remainder of Tract B.
We agree that mineral rights should not be considered in isolation. However, because we hold that the appropriate seope of a takings inquiry is the entire parcel of property owned by AVSG, we find that the court of appeals and trial court erred in limiting the focus of their inquiries to merely the River Corridor property.
First, AVSG asserts that in assessing whether or not a regulation has effected a taking, it is appropriate to examine the regulation's effect on one distinct right in the property (in this case, mineral rights) rather than on the entire bundle of rights. The trial court and court of appeals in this case rejected this argument. We agree.
The United States Supreme Court has consistently held that in a regulatory takings case, a court must determine the regulation's effect on the full rights in the land.
In Penn Central, the landowner asserted that because New York City's Landmarks Preservation Law significantly reduced its ability to build on top of Grand Central Terminal, the law effected a compensable taking of its land. In addressing the appropriate scope of the takings inquiry, the landowner argued that the Court should ascertain the law's effect on one aspect of the property interest, ie., the airspace above the terminal. The Court rejected such a conceptual severance as "quite simply untenable." Penn Cent.,
The Court applied the same reasoning in Keystone. There, the petitioners, an association of coal mining companies, claimed that Pennsylvania's Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land Conservation Act effected a regulatory taking of their property. The act, in part, required coal mining companies to leave at least fifty percent of the coal beneath certain protected structures in place to ensure proper surface support so that the land would not subside. Keystone,
Thus, in this case, the trial court and court of appeals were correct in holding that the appropriate focus of a takings inquiry is the property rights as an aggregate rather than merely the mineral rights.
B.
Second, AVSG contends that in assessing the cconomic effect of the plan, a court should look to the diminution in value of only the thirty-three acres designated as River Corridor property rather than of the entirety of Tract B. Both the trial court and the court of appeals agreed with AVSG and identified the River Corridor property as the relevant focus of the takings inquiry. This was in error. The appropriate "denominator" for determining the economic impact of a regulation is the contiguous parcel of property owned by the landowner, not merely the segment most severely affected.
'Taking' jurisprudence does not divide a single parcel into discrete segments and attempt to determine whether rights in a particular segment have been entirely abrogated. In deciding whether a particular governmental action has effected a taking, this Court focuses rather both on the character of the action and on the nature and extent of the interference with rights in the parcel as a whole. ...
Penn Cent.,
Thus, in determining the economic ramifications of a regulatory act, a court must look at the contiguous parcel of land owned by the petitioner, not merely the portion most drastically affected by the regulation. Were we to accept AVSG's position that a court should evaluate the effect of a regulation with respect to only one segment of the parcel, virtually any land use regulation would effect a taking if the landowner defined the relevant parcel small enough. For example, were partitioning allowed, a zoning ordinance that required a setback would effect a taking of the land between the lot line and the building line. Such a regime would defeat the balance of interests reached in takings jurisprudence. Accord Keystong,
Nonetheless, AVSG claims that such a partition is appropriate because the River Corridor property is the only portion affected by the plan. This characterization is incorrect. The county regulated the entire forty-four acres of Tract B under the plan. To segment out only the portion most adversely affected by the plan would be to ignore the possibility that the county designated eight acres as Industrial property precisely to allow AVSG an economically viable use of Tract B.
Thus, the trial court and the court of appeals erred in identifying only the River Corridor property rather than Tract B in its entirety as the relevant parcel of land.
v.
For the reasons discussed above, we reverse the court of appeals and remand this case for return to the trial court. On remand, the trial court is directed to retry the case and apply the fact-specific inquiry to Tract B in its entirety.
Notes
. The court of appeals agreed with both parties that a landowner in an inverse condemnation action has the burden of proving lack of reasonable use by a preponderance of the evidence. The trial court did not specify which burden applied to AVSG. However, it cited cases that applied a clear and convincing standard and that applied a beyond a reasonable doubt standard. Accordingly, the court of appeals remanded, instructing the trial court to clarify the burden to which it held AVSG. This aspect of the court of appeals' decision is not al issue in this appeal.
. Specifically, this court granted certiorari on the following issues:
1. Whether a compensable regulatory taking can occur under Colo. Const. art. II, § 15, when the complained of regulation "goes too far" and substantially diminishes the value of the property, even in circumstances where the property retains some economically viable use.
2. Whether a regulation that prohibits the mining of property constitutes a compensable taking of the property owner's mineral rights under Colo. Const. art. II, § 15.
3. Whether, in analyzing a portion of property to determine if a land use regulation results ina "taking," the court must consider the impact of the challenged action on the property as a whole.
. The record is unclear as to whether the plan is, in effect, a zoning ordinance or a master plan. However, the district court, in the first AVSG suit, noted that the county conceded that the plan is mandatory. In its order, the district court concluded that [whether zoning or planning, it is clear that the [plan] contain{s] mandatory standards." CRCP. 106(a)(4) Findings and Order, 8. The C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) order was not appealed and the mandatory nature of the plan has not been an issue in the second AVSG suit. Thus, the extent of the binding power of the plan is not at issue here.
. See Penn Cent.,
. This factor weighs in favor of the county. The record shows that there was no physical invasion of AVSG's property and that the plan serves a legitimate governmental purpose. In addition, the plan was properly adopted after public hearings in which AVSG participated. See Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
. It is undisputed that the plan allows precisely the same use of AVSG's land as had occurred prior to the plan's enactment. See Esposito v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
. In weighing the significance of past regulation, the trial court should keep in mind that the United States Supreme Court has noted that landowners cannot establish a takings claim "simply by showing that they have been denied the ability to exploit a property interest that they heretofore had believed was available for development ... ". Penn Cent.,
. For example, the county may assert that AVSG gained benefits from the implementation of the plan (often termed, "average reciprocity of advantage"). See Dolan,
. A footnote in Lucas may leave the door open to rights severance if the right at issue is fundamental. In a discussion of the "denominator question," the Court notes:
The answer to this difficult question may lie in how the owner's reasonable expectations have been shaped by the State's law of property-ie., whether and to what degree the State's law has accorded legal recognition and protection to the particular interest in land with respect to which the takings claimant alleges a diminution in (or elimination of) value."
Lucas,
. | It is highly unlikely that the trial court's finding that the plan did not effect a per se taking will be altered by the additional consideration of the Industrial property. If land that includes only the River Corridor property remains economically viable, surely land containing the River Corridor property and the Industrial property is economically viable as well.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I join the majority's conclusion that this case must be remanded to the trial court for a new trial under the correct legal standard. However, I disagree with the majority's construction of that standard. First, I would apply the Colorado Constitution and would not limit it as the majority does. Second, even under federal law, I suggest that the majority has imposed unwarranted restrictions on the applicable test for determining when a regulation works a taking. Accordingly, I respectfully concur in the result of the majority opinion, but write separately to identify my concerns.
L.
The undisputed facts of this case demonstrate that before the Board of County Commissioners of La Plata County (the Board) adopted the Animas Valley Land Use Plan (the Plan), Animas Valley Sand & Gravel,
The trial court bifurcated the proceedings and first addressed the question of whether there had been a taking, leaving the issue of damages and just compensation for a possi-bie later trial-which never occurred. In the first trial, the trial court required AVSG to prove that, after the adoption of the Plan, there was no reasonable use remaining on the AVSCG property.
The trial court did not address reasonable investment-backed expectations in the property, as measured by the feasibility of additional sand and gravel mining; and the trial court did not permit AVSG to introduce evidence concerning the value of its property before adoption of the Plan and after adoption of the Plan. The trial court erred as a matter of law, and the court of appeals upheld that error. The majority correctly remands the case back to the trial court to correct those errors.
IL
Initially, however, I differ with the majority's reading of the Colorado Constitution. As the majority recites, Article II, section 15 of the Colorado Constitution provides that "[plrivate property shall not be taken or damaged, for public or private use, without just compensation." Its federal counterpart contains no reference to "damage." See U.S. Const. amend. V.
When the state constitution differs in language or in historical context from the United States Constitution-and only in those instances-this court should give effect and has historically given effect to the differences. At the time of drafting of our constitution, Colorado still had land available for homesteading. We were primarily agricultural and populated by individuals who were attracted to open spaces and opportunity-in the form of property rights.
Within that framework, this court has, for over a century, concluded that our constitution provides broader protection to private property rights than does the United States Constitution. E.g., Cent. Colo. Water Conservancy Dist. v. Simpson,
In 1894, the court reiterated that the purpose of inserting "damaged" in the constitution was to add an additional right of action for landowners. City of Pueblo v. Strait,
some right in, user of, or interest pertaining to property ... has been wholly or partially destroyed.... The right disturbed may be either public or private, but it must be a right which she enjoyed in connection with her property, and whichgave to it an additional value, and without which, or as affected by the disturbance, the property itself is damaged. The disturbance of the right or easement may be at a distance from the property injured, but the interference must be with some right held with regard to that property.
Hence, we have a rich history of interpreting our constitution to provide broad protection to private property interests. The majority construes that case law in a very limiting fashion so as to constrain the "damage" clause of the Colorado Constitution solely to those instances where landowners claim that they have been damaged by governmental invasion or possession of abutting lands, without any physical taking of their own property. See maj. op. at 68. For that proposition, the majority cites City of Northglenn v. Grynberg,
Northglenn did nothing which would have impaired GGrynberg's exploration for or mining of coal in the coal lease.
Furthermore, there is no evidence that Northglenn obstructed Grynberg's ingress or egress to his property. There is no evidence that Northglenn's acts affected a right or interest he enjoyed in connection with his property which is not shared with or enjoyed by the public generally. In other words, the law of constitutional dam-agings does not apply to the undisputed facts of this case.
Grynberg,
Hence, although the majority here cites Grynberg for the proposition that the "damage" clause of the Colorado Constitution is limited to a narrow area of damage visited upon property abutting a governmental activity, in fact, the court applied that clause much more broadly in G@rynberg to analyze just the issues that I suggest courts should appropriately analyze.
Indeed, in Simpson, we cited Grynberg for the proposition that the takings clause of our constitution prohibits governmental conduct that might not be deemed a taking for purposes of the federal constitution because the "Colorado Constitution permits property owners whose property is substantially damaged by governmental action to obtain legal redress for such damage even though the action does not constitute a physical invasion of the property." Simpson,
Colorado has long recognized that a property owner who has suffered damage to his rights of ownership or use by operation of governmental action in a manner that differs in kind from that suffered by the public generally is entitled to compensation. The damage must differ in kind, not merely in degree. Gilbert v. Greeley, S.L. & P. Ry.,
We are bound by that precedent. Under that case law, AVSG need only produce evidence that its vested rights were damaged by the Plan and the value of its property was accordingly diminished. John J. Delaney & Emily J. Vaias, Recognizing Vested Development Rights as Protected Property in Fifth Amendment Due Process and Takings Claims, 49 Wash. U.J. Urb. & Contemp. L. 27, 38 (1996).
IIL
More broadly, even if this case is governed by federal law, I would offer broader and more complete directions to the trial court concerning the application of Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
I do agree that Palazzolo specifically clarifies that courts are to evaluate regulatory action at two levels: first, if the action denies all economically productive or beneficial use of the land, it is a per se taking that requires compensation. Id.. at 2457. Second, even if the action does not go that far, but does economically affect the landowner and interfere with the landowner's reasonable investment-backed expectations, it may nonetheless be a compensable taking depending upon various factors. Id. As to this latter category, the Court concluded that such an "ad hoe" inquiry is mandated by the purpose of the Takings Clause, which is "to prevent the government from 'forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole." " Id. at 2457-58 (quoting Armstrong v. United States,
The majority in Palazzolo remanded that case to the trial court to enable the landowner to attempt to establish a compensable taking under the second, fact-specific inquiry. Palazzolo,
Accordingly, I suggest that the majority here is correct in answering the first question on which we accepted certiorari in the affirmative. Even in federal law, after Pa-lazzolo, it is clear that there may, indeed, be a compensable, regulatory taking when some economically viable use remains on the property. Palazzolo,
B.
Other courts that have addressed Palazgo-lo have taken a broad approach. Two cases are, perhaps, relevant as we attempt to determine how to apply Palazzolo. The Alaska Supreme Court decided a case recently in which it held that a landowner was not entitled to compensation for damage caused to his right to develop a twenty-foot strip of land adjacent to a regulated wetlands setback area. R & Y, Inc. v. Municipality of Anchorage,
In a California Court of Appeal's case, Cwynar v. City & County of San Francisco,
Thus, the two courts that have applied Palazzolo since its announcement have both concluded that the inquiry should be broad and inclusive. I would urge a similar application here, which would give the trial court tools with which to measure the impact of any taking.
C.
I also note that the adoption by the United States Supreme Court of the second portion of the inquiry in a takings case greatly diminishes the importance of the "denominator" question, and under both state and federal law, we need not wade into that quagmire. Prior to Palazzolo, under Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
I suggest that Palazzolo rightfully eliminates that shell game from the process of determining whether a governmental regulation "goes too far," and suggests a different approach completely. Under Palazzolo, a regulation can go too far if it economically affects the landowner and impacts reasonable investment-backed expectations: it no longer need work a taking of all economically viable uses. Palazzolo,
D.
An additional factor that a court must consider in assessing a takings claim in this context is the legitimacy of the governmental action itself. Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. New York City,
A master plan is the broadest of all planning tools available to local governmental entities. It is intended to encourage visionary thinking, which contemplates and designates in a descriptive and explanatory manner the general location of various uses within the county. § 30-28-106(3), 9 C.R.S. (2001). A master plan "is advisory only," § 30-28-106(3)(F), and this court has specifically observed that master plans are not the equivalent of zoning, nor binding upon the zoning authority. Theobald v. Bd. of County Comm'rs,
In this case, the Plan deprived AVSG of any right to continue the extraction of sand and gravel at any time, rather than merely restricting some speculative prospective use. Further, the Plan was not adopted as a part of any specific and exact zoning or subdivision regulation. Hence, the trial court should carefully examine the legitimacy of the governmental action based on whether the master plan properly governed the use of AVSG's property, absent further implementing regulation or zoning.
IV.
In conclusion, I suggest that the majority appears to hold AVSG to a standard more akin to a per se takings analysis, warranted neither by the United States nor Colorado Constitutions. In my view, on remand, the trial court should consider the legitimacy of the governmental action in light of the nonbinding status of a master plan. Further, the trial court should determine the value of the entire property owned by AVSG and contained within the River District both before and after the Plan's adoption. If there is a diminution in value after adoption, the trial court should then determine: () whether the diminution is attributable to the Plan; and (ii) whether the diminution relates to AVSG's reasonable investment-backed expectations. If the answer to both of those questions is yes, then AVSG should be awarded the difference in value as a compensable inverse condemnation of certain uses of its
I am authorized to state that Justice COATS joins in this special concurrence. ©
. Article I, section 18 of the Alaska Constitution contains the same provision that "private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation" as does our constitution.
