This is an inverse-condemnation case. Appellant Phelix Byrd (Byrd) appeals from the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment for Respondent City of Hartsville (the City). We certified the case pursuant to Rule 204(b), SCACR. We affirm.
FACTS
Byrd owned land that lay partly in the City (the City Tract) and partly in Darlington County. The property was part of what used to be Coker Farms, a National Historic Landmark *654 (NHL). 1 After Coker Farms was dividеd and sold piecemeal, the NHL designation remained over all of the parcels, including Byrd’s. As discussed below, the City’s desire to maintain the NHL designation is central to this action.
Byrd wanted to subdivide his property and sell parcels to developers. He eventually found someone interested in buying and developing a small parcel (the Small Parcel) of the City Tract. The City Tract was zoned for agricultural use, however, and the sales contract was conditioned on the Small Parcel being zoned for commercial use. Thus, a petition to rezone the Small Parcel was filed with the City.
The City Council repeatedly deferred action on the matter. The City feared that commercial development of any part of Coker Farms without the blessing of the National Park Service would lead to revocation of the NHL designation for all of Coker Farms. 2 In fact, a non-profit organization was working with the National Park Service on preserving the Coker Farms NHL designation through an agricultural trust. The City believed that a premature rezoning would disrupt that effort, and it delayed action on the petition until it was satisfied that rezoning the Small Parcel would not jeopardize the NHL.
Eleven months after the petition was filed, the City announced that it was assured that rezoning Byrd’s property would not affect the NHL. The City therefore zoned the Small Parcel for commercial use. By this time, though, Byrd’s purchaser had lost the financing necessary to develop the property, and the sale never closed.
Three months later, Byrd filed a petition to zone the rest of the City Tract for commercial use. The City granted this request less than two months after it was made.
*655 Soon thereafter, Byrd entered into contracts to sell parcels of the City Tract for development. These sales were not consummated, however, because Darlington County (the County), which maintained the reсords for both County and City property, would not approve the deeds. The reason was that the tax records for Byrd’s property contained “flags” restricting the issuance of deeds. 3 In an attempt to protect the NHL designation, the County had placed these flags on the tax records for all Coker Farms property, whether located in the County or the City. The flags were not removed from Byrd’s records until about three years after the City Tract had been rezoned.
PROCEDURAL POSTURE
Byrd asserted two causes of action against the City. First, he claimed that the delay of the zoning petitions effected a regulatory inverse condemnation of the City Tract. Second, he claimed that the City engaged in a civil conspiracy with the County in flagging the tax recоrds. 4
In separate orders, the circuit court granted summary judgment for the City on both the inverse-condemnation and conspiracy claims. With respect to the latter, the court held that even if there were a conspiracy, the City would be immune from liability under the Tort Claims Act.
5
Byrd did not appeal from that ruling, so it is not before the Court.
See S.C. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. S.E.C.U.R.E. Underwriters Risk Retention Group,
ISSUE
Whether the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment for the City on Byrd’s inverse-condemnation claim.
*656 STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same standard as the circuit court.
Osborne v. Adams,
ANALYSIS
Both the United States Constitution and the South Carolina Constitution provide that if the government takes private property for public use, then it must compensate the owner for the value.
6
While the government typically takes property through an eminent-domain proceeding,
7
a taking may occur without such a proceeding. That is called “inverse cоndemnation.”
See First English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles,
*657
Whether physical or regulatory, this Court has held that there are four elements to inversе condemnation: (1) affirmative conduct of a government entity; (2) the conduct effects a taking; (3) the taking is for public use; and (4) the taking has some degree of permanence.
See, e.g., Berry’s On Main, Inc. v. City of Columbia,
First, we remove the element “some degree of permanence,” for it conflicts with the principle that the government must compеnsate for even a temporary taking.
See First English,
Second, the element requiring the taking be for “public use” does not apply to regulatory-takings cases.
Tahoe-Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency,
I. Affirmative Conduct
Byrd has presented evidence of affirmative conduct on the part of the City in ruling on the zoning petitions. But for the City’s zoning ordinances, the petitions would have been unnecessary. Regulatory delay is part of the regulatory process, so indeed it is the product of gоvernmental action.
Byrd is incorrect, however, in asserting that the City engaged in a single course of conduct — a thirteen-month delay of a decision to rezone his property. Byrd’s argument overlooks that there was a three-month gap between the City’s granting the petition to rezone the Small Parcel and the filing of the petition to rezone the rest of the City Tract. Thе City *658 engaged in two separate courses of conduct, one being the eleven-month delay of the decision whether to rezone the Small Parcel; the other being the two-month delay of the decision whether to rezone the remainder of the City Tract. We separately address the takings issue with respect to these two delays.
II. Taking
First, we find that this case is governed by
Penn Central Transportation Company v. City of New York,
A. Penn Central Governs This Case
Byrd’s regulatory-inverse-condemnation action is governed by
Penn Central
because it stems from Byrd’s having suffered a temporary denial of less than all economically viable use of his property.
8
Until recently, there might have been some confusion as to whether a case like Byrd’s was governed by
Penn Central, Agins v. City of Tiburon,
The general rule is that regulatory-takings cases require “essentially ad hoc, factual inquiries,” balancing all relevant circumstances to determine whether the government has taken property.
Penn Central,
When, however, it has been factually determined that a property owner has been deprived оf all economic use of his property, there is a taking
per
se.
10
Lucas v. S.C. Coastal Council,
In
Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
the Court held that
Lucas
does not apply when the property owner has suffered a temporary loss of all economically viable use.
The City argues that Byrd’s case is distinguishable from Tahoe-Sierra in that Byrd has not alleged a temporary loss of all economically viable use. As a matter of law, the City asserts, there is no taking if the property owner has suffered a temporary loss of only part of the economicаlly viable use of the property. We disagree. While this case might be factually different from Tahoe-Sierm, there the United States Supreme Court expressly rejected the adoption of categorical rules in the context of regulatory takings. If Lucas does not apply, then Penn Central does. 11 That is the case here.
B. Penn Central And Regulatory Belay
In the context of regulatory delay, the
Penn Central
inquiry is whether the delay ever became unreasonable. Byrd is not entitled to compensation merely because he had to obtain a zoning change to develop his property.
See Tahoe-Sierra, 535
U.S. at 334-35,
C. The Eleven-Month Delay
As mentioned above, for eleven months the City delayed action on the petition to zone the Small Parcеl for commercial use. Byrd has presented no evidence that this delay effected a taking of the City Tract.
Preserving the NHL designation was a legitimate governmental interest, 14 and delaying the zoning decision was a reasonable means of furthering that interest. Commercial development might have caused the National Park Service to remove the designation. 15
*662
Further, there is no evidence that the City’s interest ever became disproportionate to the economic impacts on Byrd.
16
First, the delay did not affect the use to which Byrd was putting the City Tract before the rezoning petition was filed. The land was zoned for agricultural use, and Byrd’s ability to farm the land was never disturbed.
See Penn Central,
In sum, there is no issue of material fact regarding the legitimacy of the City’s conduct or the slight nature of the economic impact on Byrd. Byrd therefore cannot demonstrate that the delay ever became unreasonable, which means that he cannot demonstrate a taking.
D. The Two-Month Delay
Similarly, there is no evidence that the two-month delay of the decision to rezone the rest of the City Tract ever became unreasonable. Byrd does not even argue that the City should generally grant a zoning petition in less than two months. Further, it is undisputed that the delay did not affect Byrd’s ability to farm the property or that Byrd had no investment-backed expectations with which the delay interfered. Consequently, Byrd cannot demonstrate that the two-month delay effected a taking.
CONCLUSION
The evidence presented demonstrates that no material issue of fact exists and that the City is entitled to judgment as a *663 matter of law. Byrd cannot demonstrate that the City inversely condemned his property through regulatory delay. Accordingly, the grant of summary judgment for the City is
AFFIRMED.
I respectfully dissent. The majority asserts that the City acted reasonably in delaying Appellant’s investment-backed zoning request for a period totaling eleven months. I disagree.
Both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution recognize that the government has the authority to interfere with a private citizen’s property rights to promote the common good.
See Dolan v. City of Tigard,
In my opinion, the City’s decision to delay the land’s rezoning was ultra vires and unreasonable. The record indicates that rezoning the land for commercial purposes would not have affected the NHL status of the land. In аddition, the City had ample opportunity to determine that rezoning the land would not have affected the land’s NHL status.
The majority focuses on the City’s concern that the rezoning would likely cause the land to lose its NHL status. In my opinion, under the facts of this case, eleven months was more than enough time for the City to investigate and determine whether it had a legitimate public interest in delaying rezoning. In my view, according to the facts of this case and the United States Supreme Court’s ruling in
Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. City of New York,
Notes
. The National Park Service, a division of the United States Dеpartment of the Interior, has authority over NHL designations.
. According to the unsworn statements of two employees of the National Park Service, NHL status does not prohibit the property owner from developing the property, but the service might remove the designation if development changes "the integrity of the designation.” These employees also stated that the National Park Service might assist a property owner who wants to retain NHL status and also improve his property. The parties stipulated that these unsworn statements would be admissible at a trial of this case.
. The flags stated: "N'ti Park Ser. Ord/No Per Or Deeds Issued.”
. The County settled with Byrd.
. The circuit court relied on the provision that a "governmental entity is not liable for loss resulting from: employeе conduct ... which constitutes ... intent to harm....” S.C.Code Ann. § 15-78-60(17) (Supp.2003).
. The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides "nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const, amend. V. The Takings Clause applies to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1;
Chicago, B. & Q.R. Co. v. City of Chicago,
In addition, the South Carolina Constitution states, "Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation being first made therefor.” S.C. Const. art. I, § 13. Takings analysis under South Carolina law is the same as the analysis under federal law.
Westside Quik Shop, Inc. v. Stewart,
. See The South Carolina Eminent Domain Procedure Act, S.C.Code Ann. §§ 28-2-10 through 28-2-510 (1991 and Supp.2004).
. It was less than all use because Byrd was able, and periodically did, farm his property throughout the delay. This use was permitted because the land was then zoned for agricultural use.
.
Agins
was decided two years after
Penn Central,
and the
Agins
Court used different language to describe the takings test. The Court held that a taking was effected if: (1) a legitimate state interest was not substantially advanced; or (2) the landowner was denied economically viable use of his or her property.
Agins,
After
Agins
was decided, some courts separately applied
Penn Central
and
Agins
to determine whether a taking had occurred.
See, e.g., Main v. Thomason,
. There is an exception: the government need not compensate for a total economic loss if "the proscribed use interests were not part of [the owner’s] title to begin with.”
Lucas,
. We overrule our prior suggestions that a property owner cannot demonstrate a taking unless he has been denied all economically viable use of his property.
See Glover v. County of Charleston
. We can thus immediately dispose of Byrd's claim that a taking commenced when the petition to rezone the Small Parcel was filed.
. The City argues that under the parcel-as-a-whole doctrine, the Court should treat the City Tract and the portion of Byrd’s property in the County as one tract because the two were contiguous. We disagree. The City had no jurisdiction over the property in the County.
. In fact, presеrving landmark status was the interest involved in
Penn Central,
and the landowners did not challenge the legitimacy of the interest.
. The dissent raises valid concerns regarding government interference with private property that is related to no legitimate interest. In our view, however, preserving the NHL designation was a legitimate interest. Further, a careful review of the record reveals that Byrd has presented no evidence that at any point during the eleven-month delay, the City’s fear of losing the NHL designation was unreasonable. In fact, the only evidence in the record is to the contrary.
In addition, contrary to Byrd’s claim, there is no evidence that the delay was the result of bad faith on the part of the City.
See, e.g., Bass Enter. Prod. Co. v. United States,
. The dissent focuses on the duration of the delay without considering the economic impact, as required under
Penn Central.
As explained above,, the duration of the delay is not determinative.
Tahoe-Sierra,
