OPINION
Cаpital Metropolitan Transportation Authority condemned real property located in Austin, Texas, to use for its bus maintenance facility. AVM-HOU, Ltd. had operated a business on the property as a lessee. Following judgment in the statutory eminent domain proceeding, in which the amount of compensation due for the taking was established, and following apportionment of the condemnation proceeds between the landowner and the lessee, AVM filed suit in district court against Capital Metro, seeking compensation for the taking of its business, based on the theory that, because AVM was unable to relocate its business due to the unique nature of the location for the type of business involved, the taking of the real property resulted in a taking of the business. The district court granted Capital Metro’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed all of AVM’s claims. We agree with the district court that there is no cause of action in Texas for compensation for the loss of a business that is damaged by the taking of the entire property on which the business is located independent from the lost value of the property itself. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
Factual and Procedural Background
AVM and its affiliates operate adult video stores, with existing locations in several Texas cities, including one in south Austin under the name “Adult Video Mega-plexxx.” In July 2003, AVM leased property at 9325 Burnet Road in Austin, Tеxas, from 9325, Inc., the landowner, with plans to open a new Megaplexxx location in north Austin. AVM purchased the existing business on the property, which, operating under the name “Nirvana,” sold tobacco products and some adult-oriented materials. In conjunction with the lease and purchase, AVM obtained from the City of Austin a zoning change on the property to allow its use as an “adult-oriented business.” 1
Shortly after the commencement of the lease, AVM learned that Capital Metro had identified 9325 Burnet Road as a site to be acquired by eminent domain — the entirety of the tract in fee simple — to provide road access to a bus maintenance facility tо be located on a nearby tract of land. Based on this information, AVM cancelled its plans to remodel the store at 9325 Burnet Road to make it similar to AVM’s other stores in appearance, inventory, and operation. Instead, AVM undertook a search for a new location in Austin to operate its business. However, according to AVM, it was unable to find a suitable location, due, in part, to the zoning required for operating an adult-oriented business.
that AVM/HOU, Ltd., is not by this judgment being compensated for any possible claim for an inverse taking of their business or any other non real property interest and that the filing of the judgment shall not serve to prejudice their ability to bring such an inverse condemnation action or recover thereon, if entitled.
The portion of the suit apportioning the condemnation proceeds between 9325, Inc. and AVM was severed into a separate cause number. AVM also pursued an independent action against 9325, Inc. in Travis County district court, allеging fraud and other claims. AVM and the landowner eventually reached an agreement through mediation by which AVM received $210,500 of the condemnation proceeds, settling both lawsuits between the parties.
On February 13, 2006, AVM filed suit in Travis County district court against Capital Metro, claiming inverse condemnation. AVM alleged in its petition that when it was forced by Capital Metro’s actions to vacate the real property leased at 9325 Burnet Road, “there was no suitable alternative location for AVM’s business.” Based on this alleged taking of its business, under the authority of article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution and the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, AVM sought the value of the business, its good will, and lоst profits.
Both Capital Metro and AVM filed traditional motions for summary judgment on whether AVM could establish its inverse condemnation claim, and both parties filed no evidence motions for summary judgment on whether there was a suitable alternative location for AVM’s business. On August 17, 2007, the district court granted Capital Metro’s motion for summary judgment in part, and denied AVM’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety. The district court denied Capital Metro’s no evidence motion on the issue of a suitable alternative location. However, the district court entered judgment against AVM on the following grounds asserted by Capital Metro in its traditional motion for summary judgment:
1. Plaintiff, as a matter of law, has no cause of action for inverse condemnation with respect to 9325 Burnet Road, Austin, Texas, because an action for inverse condemnation occurs when an owner seeks compensation for property taken for public use without formal condemnation proceedings having been instituted, and, in this case, formal eminent domain proceedings had been previously initiated and completed with respect to Plaintiffs leasehold property interests in 9325 Burnet Road, Austin, Texas, and, further, no taking is alleged or occurred outside of the formal eminent domain proceedings.
2. There is no cause of action in Texas, as a matter of law, for a tenant to recover аlleged lost profits and/or good will of a business located upon realty which was acquired, in its entirety, for public use by eminent domain.
3. Even if such a cause of action for a tenant existed under Texas law, AVM, as a matter of law, has not established a claim thereunder, because AVM did not establish or operate at 9325 Burnet Road, Austin, Texas, the “Megaplexxx”business for which AVM seeks recovery of alleged lost profits and/or good will.
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6. Even if such a cause of action for a tenant existed under Texas law, AVM, as a matter of law, cannot establish a claim thereunder because ... the condemnation award for 9325 Burnet Road included a premium on the value of the location resulting from the “sexually oriented business” zoning obtained by AVM....
Discussion
We review summary judgments de novo.
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott,
In an action to condemn real property, lost profits for a business located on the property are not recoverable as a separate item of damages over and above the fair market value of the land taken.
State v. Travis,
In this action, however, AVM has asserted an
inverse
condemnation claim independent from the statutory condemnation action. An eminent domain action under which the government takes real property is a statutory cause of action.
See
Tex. Prop.Code Ann. §§ 21.011-.024 (West 2004
&
Supp.2007). An inverse condemnation claim is a constitutional claim.
See
Tex. Const, art. I, § 17. An inverse condemnation claim is “initiated by a property owner to recover compensatory damages for injury done to his property by the act of an entity having, but not then exercising, the power of eminent domain.”
City of Austin v. Casiraghi,
It is not disputed that a landowner or lessee might be able to obtain lost profits where, upon a taking of a portion of the real property (a partial taking), the government’s additional act related to the tak
A similar argument was made to the Dallas Court of Appeals in 1946. In
Reeves v. City of Dallas,
After reviewing all the authorities submitted, we are of the opinion that theyare in accord with the rule that future rights, business losses and profits are not recoverable where the whole of the estates are “taken” for public use.... Homestead rights, business rights and all other cоnsequential rights incident to possession of physical properties ... must be subservient to the public’s right of eminent domain.
Id. at 584.
For an answer to Reeves, AVM looks to Texas cases decided since Reeves. The court in Reeves, in its discussion, noted that there were “no Texas cases with the factual background as involved in this case.” Id. at 583. AVM in its briefing indicates that this is no longer the case, stating that “Texas courts have allowed recovery of business damages when the underlying physical property has been condemned, or have indicated that such a recovery properly pled and proven could result in recovery.” However, none of the cases relied on by AVM stand for this proposition.
In
City of Austin v. Casiraghi,
the City sought to acquire by eminent domain three lots, in their entirety, on which the owners operated a restaurant.
See
The court in
State v. Rogers,
In
State v. Sungrowth VI, California, Ltd.,
the State had initiated an eminent domain proceeding, taking a strip оf land for highway-widening purposes from a property on which the landowners operated an apartment complex.
See
The court in
State v. Whataburger, Inc.,
AYM also points to the fact that
Reeves
predates
City of Dallas v. Jennings,
[W]hen a governmental entity physically damages private property in order to confer a public benefit, that entity may be liable under Article I, Section 17 if it (1) knows that a specific act is causing identifiable harm; or (2) knows that the specific property damage is substantially certain to result from an authorized government action....
Id. at 314. We are not persuaded that this language — relating to whether a city knowingly harms private property in the process of conferring a public benefit — has any impact on the Reeves court’s conclusion that damage to business interests is not compensable when it results from a total taking of real property.
The court in
Jennings
was faced with the question of what level of intent or knowledge by the City is required for the property owner to be entitled to compensation for damages caused by the City’s act in “taking” property, when there was no actual physical occupancy of the property by the City.
See id.
at 313. AVM submits that its case is similar, in that Capital Metro’s act of condеmnation caused damages to AVM’s business, even though Capital Metro did not actually “occupy” the business. However, the rule established by the court in
Reeves
does not turn on a question of intent or knowledge. On the contrary, the court in
Reeves
was concerned, as we are here, with the separate question of what
type
of harm is compensable.
Cf. State v. Schmidt,
AVM has not directed us to any Texas case that, in the sixty-plus years since
Reeves
was decided, has questioned
Reeves’s
conclusion that damages to business interests are not compensated when they occur as a result of the statutory taking of the entirety of the property on which the business is lоcated.
3
The Texas
AVM also points to federal case law applying the United States Constitution. In construing the takings provision of the Texas Constitution, we may look to the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the federal Takings Clause.
City of Austin v. Travis County Landfill Co.,
Indeed, the court in
Reeves,
in reaching its holding, consulted federal case law for this purpose.
See Reeves,
The sovereign ordinarily takes the fee. The rule in such a case is that compensation for that interest does not include future loss of profits, ... the loss of goodwill which inheres in the location of the land, or other like consequential losses which would ensue the sale of the property to someone other than the sovereign .... We are not to be taken as departing from the rule they have laid down, which we think sound.
United States v. General Motors Corp.,
AVM contends that the federal Constitution permits AVM’s claim based on the holding in
Kimball Laundry Co. v. United States,
In order to conclude that Kimball supports the notion that business lоsses are recoverable where there is a total taking and an inability to relocate, however, we would need to ignore the Supreme Court’s language in Kimball expressly acknowledging the general rule to the contrary. Prior to setting forth the “inevitable effect” language relied on by AVM, the Court in Kimball indicated that its reasoning did not extend to a taking of fee title to land:
When a condemnor has taken fee title to business property, there is reason for saying that the compensation due should not vary with the owner’s good fortune or lack of it in finding premises suitable for the transference of going-concern value. In the usual case most of it can be transferred; in thе remainder the amount of loss is so speculative that proof of it may justifiably be excluded. By an extension of that reasoning the same result has been reached even upon the assumption that no other premises whatever were available.
Kimball,
The tеmporary interruption as opposed to the final severance of occupancy so greatly narrows the range of alternatives open to the condemnee that it substantially increases the condemnor’s obligation to him. It is a difference in degree wide enough to require a difference in result.
Id.
at 15,
Contrary to AVM’s argument that the federal Takings Clause enables it to obtain compensation for the loss of its business, according to the United States Supreme Court, “[t]o recover, they must show some statutory right conferred.”
See Mitchell v. United States,
Lastly, AVM asserts that Capital Metro’s motion for summary judgment did not address “the other inverse condemnation theories pled by AVM in their Second Amended Petition.” In addition to AVM’s theory that the impossibility of relocation made its lost business a compensable taking, AVM alleged in its pеtition that the taking of real property constituted a denial of access to its business.
See Avenue Corp.,
We disagree that the motion for summаry judgment granted by the district court did not articulate grounds that en
Conclusion
When real property is acquired by eminent domain, in fee simple and in its entirety, there is no cause of action in Texas, as a matter of law, for inverse condemnation to recover for the loss of a business located upon the realty taken. 7 We affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Prior to the zoning change, the existing business could sell adult-oriented products, but no more than 35 percent of its gross floor area could be devoted to such business.
. Capital Metro disputes whether AVM can bring an inverse condemnation suit independently from the statutory condemnation action through which Capital Metro took the property on which AVM's business was located. Capital Metro argues that the "single action” rule required AVM to seek any damages arising from the taking — including any losses relating to its business — as consequential damages in the statutory сondemnation action, and cannot obtain a “second bite at the apple” through this inverse condemnation action.
See City of La Grange v. Pieratt,
We need not, however, resolve this dispute. We hold that the summary judgment was properly granted based on the second ground provided by the district court for its decision. Because our holding is dispositive as to all of AVM’s claims, we need not decide whether the type of lost business damages that AVM seeks would, in concept, be consequential damages arising from the statutory taking of the property on which AVM’s business was located and be recoverable in a statutory condemnation proceeding.
. AVM attempts to distinguish
Reeves
by pointing out that "the tenant in
Reeves
did not bring a separate inverse condemnation action,” and, thus, the "only issue before the jury in that in rem statutory condemnation case was the value of the real property interests involved.” We agree with AVM that the tenant in
Reeves
limited its recovery in the
. The Court used the term "trade routes” to refer to "the lists of customers built up by solicitation over the years and for the continued hold of the Laundry upon their patronage.”
Kimball Laundry Co. v. United States,
. We observe that
General Motors
may have been overruled in part by
Kimball,
in that the Court in
General Motors,
although distinguishing a temporary taking from a taking in fee title, did not permit the recovery of damages to a business from the temporary taking "as independent items of damage.”
United States v. General Motors Corp.,
. We might be compelled to undertake a different inquiry, for instance, if Capital Metro’s taking was merely temporary,
see Kimball,
. This holding is dispositive as to all of AVM’s claims. Therefore, we need not address the other grounds on which the district court based its summary judgment. We express no opinion on the other grounds for granting summary judgment set out in the district court's order.
