Andrea WILLIAMS, Appellant, v. CENTRAL MISSOURI PIZZA, INC., and Division of Employment Security, Respondents.
No. SC 88217.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
June 12, 2007.
227 S.W.3d 431
Larry R. Ruhmann, MO Dept. of Labor and Industrial Relations, Jefferson City, for respondents.
PER CURIAM.
Andrea Williams worked for a pizza delivery service. She was scheduled to work Christmas eve beginning at 5:00 p.m. Although requested to do so, her supervisor declined to adjust the schedule. Williams did not report for work as scheduled and was discharged.
Williams sought unemployment benefits. The commission determined Williams was discharged for misconduct connected with her work and denied benefits. Williams appeals.
The order of the commission is supported by competent and substantial evidence on the whole record. An opinion would have no precedential value. The commission‘s decision is affirmed pursuant to
All concur.
CENTENE PLAZA REDEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, Respondent, v. MINT PROPERTIES, et al., Appellants.
No. SC 88487.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
June 12, 2007.
227 S.W.3d 431
Thomas B. Weaver, James E. Mello, Jeffery T. McPherson, Timothy J. Tryniecki, Jovita M. Foster, Armstrong Teasdale, LLP, St. Louis, MO, for Respondent.
Kevin M. O‘Keefe, Paul Martin, Clayton, MO, City of Clayton, for Amicus Curiae.
Patricia A. Hageman, City of St. Louis Counselor, Patricia Redington, St. Louis County Counselor, Michael A. Gross, Counsel for MO Municipal League, St. Louis, MO, Albert A. Riederer, Jackson County Special Counselor, Kansas City, MO, Missouri Municipal League, City of St. Louis, Missouri, Jackson County, Missouri and St. Louis County, Missouri, for Amicus Curiae.
PER CURIAM.1
Overview
The city of Clayton solicited redevelopment plans for one block of Forsyth Boulevard. Centene Plaza Redevelopment Corporation submitted the plan approved by Clayton, which included condemnation authority. When Centene failed to reach agreement with all the property owners to acquire the properties, it filed this condemnation action. Mint Properties and several other defendants resisted the condemnation on the basis that the property was not blighted, as defined by
Development of the plan
Centene purchased property located at 7700 Forsyth and 21 Hanley with the intent to expand its current office and parking space. Centene also sought to purchase a garage owned by the city adjacent
The city subsequently issued a general request seeking proposals from developers to redevelop the entire block of Forsyth bordered by South Bemiston Avenue, Hanley Road, and Carondelet Avenue. Centene submitted the only response to the request for proposals. Centene proposed a three-phase project that included formation of a redevelopment corporation, tax abatement, and the power of eminent domain.
The city reviewed Centene‘s response and then commissioned Peckham, Guyton, Albers, & Viets (“PGAV“) to conduct an analysis of the area to determine whether it qualified as a blighted area. PGAV‘s analysis ultimately concluded that the property qualified as a blighted area.
The city subsequently passed an ordinance declaring the area to be blighted and approving Centene‘s plan. The area included defendants’ properties. After approval of the plan, Centene sought to acquire the affected properties. When these efforts failed, condemnation actions were filed.
Standard of review
This Court examines the record to determine whether there is substantial evidence to support the legislative decision. Binger v. City of Independence, 588 S.W.2d 481, 486 (Mo. banc 1979).2
Blight requires a showing of “social liability”
Although the term “social liability” is not specifically defined by statute or in case law, the historical context suggests the definition of “social liability” focuses upon the health, safety, and welfare of the public. In that regard, it has been noted that the transformation of this country from primarily agricultural to a predominantly industrial society resulted in significant growth in the cities. Tax Increment Financing Com‘n of Kansas City v. J.E. Dunn Const. Co., Inc., 781 S.W.2d 70, 78 (Mo. banc 1989). One result of this growth was blighted areas, which constituted a “menace injurious to the public health, safety, morals and welfare” of the residents. Id. The blighted areas also presented economic concerns. Id. The need to eliminate these conditions as a “breeding ground for juvenile delinquency, infant mortality, crime and disease” prompted a movement toward redevelopment. Id.
The evidence of social liability was insufficient
Based on the foregoing definition of “social liability,” the evidence was insuffi
Tom Burn, the chief of police, also submitted a memorandum to Schoedel, indicating the number of police calls to the properties in the redevelopment area dating back to 1999. There were a total of 143 calls for five properties over approximately seven years, but this was less than half the number of calls for a single property located across the street during that time frame.
Although Schoedel expressed some potential concerns regarding safety, crime, fire hazards, and vandalism due to vacancies in the area, the information he received from the fire and police departments did not validate these concerns. In addition, there was no evidence presented regarding any public health concerns resulting from the condition of the area.
According to Schoedel, the PGAV blighting study commissioned by the city was a critical component in the city‘s determination of blight. However, while the PGAV study did conclude that the area was an economic liability because of the age, obsolescence, inadequate or outmoded design, and physical deterioration of some of the properties, it did not make any conclusions regarding the social liability of the area. Moreover, the PGAV study did not find that any of these conditions were injurious to the public health or safety. In fact, John Brancaglione, PGAV‘s employee, testified that the factors existent in the area did not constitute a social liability in the way he “understood that to be applicable to these situations.” Instead, Brancaglione testified that the area was a social liability only to the extent that it constituted an economic liability because of its inability to pay reasonable taxes. Nevertheless, Centene argues that the blighting study prepared by PGAV was not the only factor in the city‘s determination of blight. However, as noted, Schoedel specifically testified that the PGAV study was a critical component in the determination of blight.
Centene also claims that the determination of blight was supported by substantial evidence by citing the increase in jobs the redevelopment would provide and the “vibrant,” pedestrian-friendly atmosphere that would result from the redevelopment. However, this evidence focuses only upon the prospective benefits of redevelopment—not the current state of the properties themselves. The city‘s ultimate goals for the area cannot serve as probative evidence of social liability in light of the lack of evidence concerning the public health, safety, and welfare in the record. Furthermore, if evidence to support a finding of economic liability could also constitute evidence to support a finding of social liability, the plain language of
Finally, while under
Conclusion
The judgment is reversed.
WOLFF, C.J., TEITELMAN, LIMBAUGH and RUSSELL, JJ., concur.
STITH, J., concurs in separate opinion filed.
LYNCH, Sp.J., concurs in opinion of STITH, J.
WHITE, J., dissents in separate opinion filed.
PRICE, J., not participating.
I concur in the result reached by the principal opinion but do not fully agree with its analysis or that argued by Appellants for determining what constitutes a social liability.
Appellants’ argument in this Court focuses on the fact that Clayton is a vibrant, economically successful community with many desirable business, retail, and residential neighborhoods within it. This does not fit with the popular perception of what constitutes a blighted neighborhood, to wit, an area that is rundown and located in a marginal community, one that offers little attraction to businesses and, thus, must resort to incentives, including the opportunity to acquire property by eminent domain, to encourage investment.
All agree that the City of Clayton is not such a marginal or rundown community. Appellants’ references to Clayton‘s general wealth implicitly suggest that a successful community like Clayton simply cannot contain blighted property and that to so find would be inconsistent with what this Court should say constitutes “blight.” Admittedly, this argument has a surface appeal; a finding of blight and use of eminent domain to combat blight makes the most sense in communities that have high crime, deteriorated infrastructure, and/or health problems. But, it is not for this Court to create its own definition of “blight” based on what this Court believes is appropriate public policy. Rather, it is our duty to apply the definition of “blight” adopted by the legislature.
Missouri‘s legislature considered whether to limit the definition of “blight” to such marginalized communities and whether to bar the use of eminent domain as a means of enhancing economic development following the United States Supreme Court‘s decision in Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005).1 In 2006, however, the legislature rejected all attempts to narrow the definition of “blighted area.”2 It was and still is defined as:
that portion of the city within which the legislative authority of such city determines that by reason of age, obsolescence, inadequate or outmoded design or physical deterioration have become economic and social liabilities, and that such conditions are conducive to ill health, transmission of disease, crime or inability to pay reasonable taxes.
This language does not limit the definition of what constitutes a “blighted area” to rundown, marginal communities. Rather, as both parties acknowledged during oral argument, what constitutes blight may vary from community to community. An area of the city that is perfectly acceptable in a more economically distressed community may be considered “blighted” in a city like Clayton because it is out of keeping with the remainder of the community “by reason of age, obsolescence, inadequate or outmoded design or physical deterioration.” Id. If the local legislative body determines that a particular portion of its city fits this definition and, therefore, has become an “economic and social liability,” then it may declare that area a blighted one and permit a qualifying developer to acquire property in that area by eminent domain.
A city acts in its legislative capacity in determining whether an area is blighted, and this Court reviews whether this legislative determination was supported by substantial evidence. Allright Missouri, Inc. v. Civic Plaza Redevelopment Corp., 538 S.W.2d 320, 324 (Mo. banc 1976) (upholding determination of blight because “evi
Centene, however, presented substantial contrary evidence showing that the redevelopment property is an economic liability. In particular, Centene relied on the PGAV study, which found evidence of age, obsolescence, inadequate and outmoded design and physical deterioration to varying degrees in some of the properties in the redevelopment area. The same study also found that the average annual increase in the assessed value of the properties in the redevelopment area was below that of other properties in the area and that sales tax collections from the properties significantly declined in the last ten years while sales tax collections city-wide remained stable. The PGAV study concluded, and the City apparently agreed, that “the evidence of the extent and distribution of the existence of age, obsolescence, inadequate or outmoded design, and physical deterioration are such that the Area has become an economic liability and demonstrates an inability to pay reasonable taxes.”
The principal opinion does not address this evidence of economic liability other than noting its existence. Instead, the principal opinion goes directly to the issue of whether the property is a social liability. The term “social liability” is not defined in Missouri‘s statutes or in Missouri cases. And although the term is often used in other states’ statutes and in articles about redevelopment, neither the parties, the principal opinion, nor this author‘s independent research has identified an accepted definition of the term.
The principal opinion nonetheless concludes that “the historical context suggests the definition of ‘social liability’ focuses upon the health, safety, and welfare of the public” because such concerns were the reason that blighted areas have been identified and have led to the application of eminent domain. The trend to providing incentives for economic development may have centered historically on the desire to eliminate conditions that are a “breeding ground for juvenile delinquency, infant mortality, crime and disease.” But, whatever may be the merit of these general historical considerations, Missouri‘s blight statute does not limit a finding of “social liability” to situations in which a portion of a community has so deteriorated that it has become a “breeding ground” for crime and disease.
To the contrary, the statute specifically states that economic and social liabilities, if they exist, are conditions that are “conducive to ill health, transmission of disease, crime or inability to pay reasonable taxes.”
Second, an area may constitute an “economic and social liability” if the condition of the area is “conducive to” either ill health, crime “or an inability to pay reasonable taxes.” The statute, as now written, thus plainly permits a social liability to be found based upon considerations that lead to an inability to pay reasonable taxes. A showing that crime or ill health is present, or even likely to develop, is not required. The principal opinion is, thus, incorrect in focusing so strongly on the fact that Clayton has done an admirable job of keeping its city safe and that few crimes or emergency calls occur in the redevelopment area. To the extent the principal opinion suggests that the presence of crime or ill health is necessary in order to find social liability, it confuses the definition of “social liability” and goes beyond the language of the statute.
Nonetheless, I agree that Centene simply failed to present substantial evidence that the area constitutes a social liability. Because the term “social liability” is not defined in the statutes, this Court applies the ordinary meaning of the term as found in the dictionary. Cook Tractor Co., Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 187 S.W.3d 870, 873 (Mo. banc 2006). The definition of “social” includes “of, relating to, or concerned with the welfare of human beings as members of society” and “of or relating to the interaction of the individual and the group.” Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary (1993). “Liability” means “something that works as a disadvantage.” Id. Thus, under the plain meaning of the term, “social liability” can be anything that works to the disadvantage of the welfare of members of a given community or of interaction among such members. This is a very broad definition that can be satisfied by any number of circumstances.
The difficulty is that, although the PGAV report quotes the language from
When asked about the issue, the expert witness for Centene testified that the redevelopment area is a social liability because the term is equated with the economic liability when the resulting detriment claimed is, as here, an inability to pay reasonable taxes. The witness explained that he believes the area is “a social liability from the standpoint that it‘s not generating revenue, and therefore it has a broader impact on the ... municipal revenue sources and how it supports the rest of the City.” As he explained it, “every time you find the inability to pay reasonable taxes that also means that you have satisfied the requirements of the statute for a finding of” both social liability and economic liability.
In arguing that an inability to pay reasonable taxes is a social liability, Centene collapses together two separate parts of the statutory definition of “blight.” The statute says that a social and economic
It may be that the area is a social liability and that evidence that it is could be presented at some future point. It was not presented on this record, however. For that reason, I concur in the principal opinion‘s determination to reverse the order of condemnation because substantial evidence did not support the legislative determination that the area constituted a social liability.
RONNIE L. WHITE, Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. In my view, Centene presented sufficient evidence from which the City of Clayton reasonably could have determined that the redevelopment area had become an “economic and social liability.” This phrase demonstrates the legislature‘s recognition of the causal connection between economics and social welfare. A decline in the former inevitably undermines the latter, and I would interpret the statute as such. Even assuming the two must be evaluated separately, I would adopt Judge Stith‘s definition of “social liability” but would conclude that the City‘s finding was supported by enough evidence to withstand this Court‘s review. Therefore, I would affirm the order of condemnation.
In the Matter of the CARE AND TREATMENT OF Larry L. COFFMAN, Appellant.
No. SC 87803.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
June 12, 2007.
227 S.W.3d 439
