Opinion
Under
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier
(1972)
I
Background
A. Factual Allegations
Because this appeal emanates from the granting of a motion for judgment on the pleadings, we assume the truth of the material factual allegations of the complaint.
(Macias
v.
State of California
(1995)
Since 1957, plaintiffs have owned and operated a dairy which includes about 90.47 acres in Chino, and another 120 acres about 3 miles away in Corona. The present case concerns the Chino property, and further references to plaintiffs’ property refer to that property.
In 1986, Congress authorized construction оf the Santa Ana mainstem flood control project to provide flood protection for parts of Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties. A major component of the project is the Prado Dam project, which involves raising the level of the dam and requires *562 the acquisition of flowage rights up to an elevation of 566 feet in the adjacent area. Plaintiffs’ Chino property, which is in the area affected, includes about 31.317 acres at an elevation below 566 feet. The dam project therefore will require acquisition of a flowage easement or a fee interest in that portion of plaintiffs’ property, plus 1.11 acres for an access road.
At various times since the late 1960’s, defendant Orange County Flood Control District (District) and the Army Corps of Engineers advised plaintiffs their property was targeted for acquisition as part of the dam project. Beginning in 1975, preliminary studies were conducted, and environmental and design reports were circulated in the area throughout the 1980’s. In December 1989, the District, the Corps of Engineers, and the flood control districts of Riverside and San Bernardino Counties entered into a local cooperation аgreement under which the District was authorized to handle land acquisition for the dam project. Subsequently, the District made numerous public statements indicating plaintiffs’ property was within the scope of the project and published maps showing the District’s proposed flowage easement through the center of plaintiffs’ property.
In May 1990, the District issued a public bulletin to property owners in the area of the dam, including plaintiffs, to inform them their property “may” be affected by the project. The bulletin also set forth a timetable calling for more detailed surveys from July 1990 until 1993, appraisals between 1991 and 1994, and acquisition offers from 1991 through 1994, “subject to the availability of funds.” Construction on the dam was scheduled to start in 1996, “subject to the availability of Federal funds.”
The District surveyed plaintiffs’ property between 1992 and 1993. However, it did not begin to acquire property for the project until 1994. An appraiser hired by the District inspected plaintiffs’ property in August 1994. In December 1994, however, Orange County filed for bankruptcy, and acquisition of property for the project was canceled. At that point, the District had acquired about 13 properties and had outstanding offers on about 10 others.
The District never negotiated or made an offer to purchase plaintiffs’ property or an easement over it. It did, however, complete an appraisal of the property in February 1995 and purchased a nearby property in November 1995. Sufficient funding was availáble to acquire the part of plaintiffs’ property needed for the project at all times since 1992.
Plaintiffs cannot operate their dairy profitably if one-third of their property is taken by the District. From 1990 to the present, it has been difficult to *563 find land suitable for dairy farming. Plaintiffs therefore knew they would have to act promptly to relocate their operations in order to avoid a major loss to their business. In 1992, plaintiffs purchased 570 acres in Tulare County for relocation of their dairy operation. 1 They were required to borrow about $2 million to buy the Tulare property.
Plaintiffs began using the Tulare property in their operations pending the District’s acquisition of the Chino property. However, the District’s conduct and unreasonable delay prevented plaintiffs from selling, leasing, or developing the property slated for acquisition and diminished the value of the entire Chino property. Plaintiffs also have incurred interest expenses on the Tulare property and additional expenses of maintaining two properties since 1993. These expenses will continue unless and until the District acquires the part of the Chino property needed for the project. As a result, the value of the Chino property and improvements has decreased more than $2 million. In addition, plaintiffs’ entire dairy business has sustained a loss of income and goodwill.
B. Procedural Background
Plaintiffs sued the District for inverse condemnation in February 1996, seeking damages for diminution in value of their real property, improvements, fixtures and equipment, and for loss of income and/or goodwill of their business. The District moved for judgment on the pleadings, asserting plaintiffs had not stated a viable claim under Klopping because they had failed to allege special injury to their interest in the property, failed to allege an official act by the District toward acquisition of the property, and failed to allege unreasonable delay on the part of the District. After hearing argument, the court granted the motion but allowed plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint.
Plaintiffs filed their first amended complaint, and the District again moved for judgment on the pleadings, making the same arguments as in its previous motion. After again hearing argument, the court granted the motion without leave to amend and entered judgment for the District.
II
Discussion
A. Requirements for Klopping Compensation
Article I, section 19, of the California Constitution provides that property may be taken or damaged for public use only if just compensation
*564
is paid to the owner. That provision authorizes not only an eminent domain proceeding instituted by a public entity to acquire private property, but also an inverse condemnation action initiated by a landowner to obtain compensation for a claimed taking or damaging of his оr her property.
(Holtz
v.
San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist.
(1976)
In
Flopping,
the Supreme Court recognized a right of inverse condemnation for an entity’s
precondemnation
activities not amounting to an actual taking of property. It had already been established that particularly oppressive acts by a public authority, involving a physical invasion or a direct legal restraint on the use of the property, could amount to a “de facto taking” of the property even without formal condemnation of it.
(Klopping, supra,
Accordingly, the court in
Klopping
held, “a condemnee must be provided with an opportunity to demonstrate that (1) the public authority acted improperly either by unreasonably delaying eminent domain action following an announcement of intent to condemn or by other unreasonable conduct prior to condemnation; and (2) as a result of such action the property in question suffered a diminution in market value.”
(Klopping, supra,
Subsequent decisions have emphasized that recovery under
Klopping
requires some “direct” and “special” interference with the landowner’s use of the property. In
Selby Realty Co.
v.
City of San Buenaventura
(1973)
Absent a formal resolution of condemnation, the public entity’s conduct must hаve “significantly invaded or appropriated the use or enjoyment of’ the property.
(Contra Costa Water Dist.
v.
Vaquero Farms, Inc.
(1997)
With these principles in mind, we consider the viability of plaintiffs’ Flopping claim in this case.
B. Plaintiffs’ Theory of Recovery
In their complaint, plaintiffs claimed damages for “diminution in value” of their property and for “loss of income and/or Goodwill [szc].” On appeal, however, they concede they cannot recover for diminution in market value because there has been no de facto taking. They also appear to concede they cannot recover for lost goodwill per se at this juncture (since there has been no actual condemnation of their property), but assert that their true claim is for “costs of mitigating their loss of business goodwill.” (Italics added.) Thus, they contend, they had to acquire the Tulare property to avoid a complete loss of goodwill upon condemnation of their Chino property, when they would no longer be able to operate the dairy at all. Consequently, plaintiffs contend, they are entitled to recover as Flopping damages the costs of acquiring and maintaining the Tulare property, including interest on the Tulare loan and the additional expenses of maintaining two properties, for as long as the District delays acquisition of the Chino property.
*566
Although normally an appellant may not assert on appeal a legal theory not asserted below, this principle does not apply where, as here, the case was resolved at the pleading stage without leave to amend being granted. In that situation, the appеllate court must consider whether the plaintiff’s allegations state a cause of action under any legal theory, whether or not asserted in the trial court.
(Economic Empowerment Foundation
v.
Quackenbush
(1997)
C. Analysis
1. Recovery of Lost Goodwill
“The provisions of the state and federal Constitutions which mandate just compensation for the taking of private property for public use do not require compensation for the loss of business goodwill.”
(Redevelopment Agency
v.
International House of Pancakes, Inc.
(1992)
Section 1263.510, subdivision (b), defines “goodwill” to mean “the benefits that accrue to a business as a result of its location, reputation for
*567
dependability, skill or quality, and any other circumstances resulting in probable retention of old or acquisition of new patronage.” Although there is no single method by which to measure goodwill, it generally represents the present value of the anticipated profits of the business.
(People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Leslie
(1997)
The Supreme Court considered the application of section 1263.510 in
People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller
(1984)
The court in Muller rejected the Department of Transportation’s argument that section 1263.510 only authorized compensation for lost patronage, not for increased expenses without any loss of customers or gross income. (People ex rel. Dept of Transportation v. Muller, supra, 36 Cal.3d at pp. 268-269.) In dictum, it noted that, even under the department’s definition of goodwill, the owner would be entitled not only to compensation for lost patronage itself, but also “for expenses reasonably incurred in an effort to prevent a loss of patronage.” Since the owner eleсted to pay the higher rent so that he could relocate close to his former premises and thereby avoid a loss of patronage, the rent increase would have been recoverable as mitigation damages even under the department’s interpretation of section 1263.510. (Muller, supra, at pp. 271-272.)
Muller
was an eminent domain proceeding, not an inverse condemnation action. In
Chhour
v.
Community Redevelopment Agency
(1996)
Under
Muller
and
Chhour,
upon either direct or inverse condemnation, plaintiffs could seek to recover for loss of goodwill attributable to the move to Tulare, provided they proved, as required by section 1263.510, that the loss could not reasonably have been prevented and would not otherwise be compensated. Under the dictum in
Muller,
plaintiffs also could claim any expenses incurred in mitigating the loss of goodwill. (See also
Redevelopment Agency
v.
Arvey Corp.
(1992)
However, neither
Muller
nor
Chhour,
nor any other authority of which we are aware, has considered whether a business owner may recover as
Klopping
damages
prior to
actual condemnation the costs of acquiring and maintaining a replacement property in
anticipation
of eventual loss of the existing location.
4
In
Muller,
the landowner recovered his lost goodwill аt the trial of a condemnation action brought by the Department of Transportation. (Pe
ople
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller, supra,
Additionally, both
Muller
and
Chhour
were based on section 1263.510.
Muller
expressly predicated its holding on the statute.
(People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller, supra,
Additionally, Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.530 provides that section 1263.510 is not intended to address “inverse condemnation claims for temporary interference with or interruption of business.” Plaintiffs’ claim for precondemnation costs of mitigating anticipated lost goodwill would appear to be the type of claim excludеd by section 1263.530, since it would involve a claim for temporary interruption of a business. Indeed, plaintiffs themselves characterize their claim as “a temporary loss of profitability during the period of unreasonable delay.”
Having found no existing authority dispositive of plaintiffs’ Klopping claim, we proceed to consider whether the claim can be sustained under the general principles articulated in Klopping and the cases following it.
*570 2. Recovery of Costs of Mitigating Loss of Goodwill as Klopping Damages
For several reasons, we conclude the mitigation damages claimed by plaintiffs here are not properly сompensable as precondemnation damages under
Klopping.
First, as discussed
ante,
absent a formal resolution of condemnation, recovery under
Klopping
requires that the public entity’s conduct “directly and specially affect the landowner to his injury.”
(Selby Realty Co.
v.
City of San Buenaventura, supra,
Liability in such circumstances “has been invoked sparingly to remedy the most egregious examples of official overreaching.”
(Contra Costa Water Dist.
v.
Vaquero Farms, Inc., supra,
For this reason, actionable injury under
Klopping
must go beyond the unavoidable consequences of an agency’s designation of property for possible acquisition. The degree of impairment of a landowner’s property rights which is required for a compensable
Klopping
injury is illustrated in the Supreme Court’s decision in
Jones
v.
People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
(1978)
*571 The District’s alleged activities in this case are not materially different from the conduct the Supreme Court stated in Jones would not give rise to Klopping liability. The District adopted the flood control plan, designated plaintiffs’ property for future acquisition, and acquired adjacent properties. It did nothing, however, to interfere with plaintiffs’ profitable use of their property. Unlike the plaintiff in Klopping, who could not rent his property while the threatened acquisition remained pending, plaintiffs could and did continue to operate their dairy business on the Chino property.
Contra Costa Water Dist.
v.
Vaquero Farms, Inc., supra,
Plaintiffs argue Vaquero is distinguishable because, while the landowner in Vaquero suffered no diminution in profitability while it continued to use the property during the precondemnation period, in this case “there is an alleged loss of profitability of the business conducted on thе affected land.” However, the “affected land” in this case is the Chino property, since that is the only land subject to potential acquisition. The District did nothing to impair plaintiffs’ profitable use of that land. Indeed, plaintiffs acknowledge that, if they had not acquired the Tulare property, they “would have continued to enjoy the profitable operation of the dairy at the Chino location until the District got around to acquiring the flowage easement.”
Thus, any impairment of plaintiffs’ dairy operations was the direct result of their own conduct in purchasing the Tulare property, not- the conduct of the District directed toward acquisition of the Chino property. Consequently, the kind of direct interference required for a Klopping claim is lacking. Indeed, recognition of liability under these circumstances would invite a landowner to take whatever actions it deemed necessary to relocate its operations at public expense, without any assurance that the public entity would actually acquire the original property. It would be as if the plaintiff in Klopping were permitted to purchase a substitute rental property, receive rent *572 from that property while continuing to rent the original property, and hold the city responsible for the costs of carrying two properties.
Nothing in
Klopping
or any other authority supports such a result. To the contrary, the right of just compensation mandates that the government “put the property owner in as good a position had his property not been taken.”
(People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Leslie, supra,
Plaintiffs contend they were effectively
required
by section 1263.510 to seek and acquire a relocation site for their business, because they could not recover lost goodwill under that section unless they showed the loss could not reasonably have been prevented by relocating. “ ‘The duty to minimize damages does not require an injured person to do what is unreasonable or impracticable, and, consequently, when expenditures are necessary for minimization of damages, the duty does not run to a person who is financially unable to make such expenditures.’ ”
(Jordan
v.
Talbot
(1961)
Finally, we reject plaintiffs’ argument that, because what constitutes a sufficient impairment of property rights for purposes of
Klopping
is a question of fact, the court lacked authority to determine the matter on a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Where, as here, it is evident from the complaint that the facts do not justify recovery under
Klopping,
it is proper to decide the issue at the pleading stage. (See, e.g.,
Johnson
v.
State of California, supra,
*573 D. Motion to Dismiss *
III
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. The District’s motion to dismiss, and for an award of appraisal costs, is denied. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
McKinster, Acting P. J., and Gaut, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 3, 1998, and appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 30, 1998. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Plaintiffs needed 570 acres, as opposed to their existing 90- and 120-acre parcels, due to State of California requirements which limited the number of cattle per acre.
In full, section 1263.510 provides: “(a) The owner of a business conducted on the property taken, or on the remainder if such property is part of a larger parcel, shall be compensated for loss of goоdwill if the owner proves all of the following: [f] (1) The loss is caused by the taking of the property or the injury to the remainder. [U (2) The loss cannot reasonably be prevented by a relocation of the business or by taking steps and adopting procedures that a reasonably prudent person would take and adopt in preserving the goodwill. flO (3) Compensation for the loss will not be included in payments under Section 7262 of the Government Code. [T1 (4) Compensation for the loss will not be duplicated in the compensation otherwise awarded to the owner. [1Q (b) Within the meaning of this article, ‘goodwill’ consists оf the benefits that accrue to a business as a result of its location, reputation for dependability, skill or quality, and any other circumstances resulting in probable retention of old or acquisition of new patronage.”
Plaintiffs could not, however, recover under section 1263.510 relocation expenses that are payable under the Relocation Assistance Act (Gov. Code, § 7262).
(Redevelopment Agency
v.
Arvey Corp., supra,
In
Redevelopment Agency
v.
Contra Costa Theatre, Inc.
(1982)
The plaintiff in
Chhour
did, in fact, seek precondemnation damages under
Klopping.
Without much discussion, the court rejected the claim, noting the plaintiff had not alleged any specific “additional damages” beyond the deleterious impact on his business caused by the agency’s effective condemnation of the premises. Since compensation for that impact presumably would be determined in conjunction with the plaintiff’s claim for lost goodwill, no additional recovery under
Klopping
was warranted.
(Chhour
v.
Community Redevelopment Agency, supra,
See footnote, ante, page 558.
