Opinion
Two licensees of a golf course owned by the City of Needles appeal from a portion of a preliminary injunction which enjoins them from preventing the city from taking possession of and using their private personal property. Concluding that the injunction deprives the licensees of their property without constitutionally guaranteed just compensation, we modify the injunction by striking that invalid portion. As modified, the injunction is affirmed.
Factual and Procedural Background
Pursuant to a written agreement, Robert Olin Griswold and River Horizon Golf Club, Inc. (hereinafter, collectively Griswold) were licensed to operate a golf course owned by the City of Needles (City). Under the license agreement, Griswold was obligated to provide whatever personal property was necessary to equip, operate, maintain, and supply inventory for the golf course and its attendant pro shop and restaurant. Some of that personalty was leased from the City, but the balance was to be purchased or otherwise obtained by Griswold.
The agreement was entered into on March 20, 1987, for an initial term of five years. Prior to the expiration of that term, the City was authorized to terminate the license, without cause, upon 180 days’ notice. The City also had the ability to terminate the license for cause, in the event that Griswold failed to cure a default in his obligations after 30 days’ notice of the existence of the breach. Finally, the agreement provided that “[a]ny controversy or claims arising out of or relating to this License, or the breach thereof, shall be settled by arbitration in accordance with the Rules of the American Arbitration Association . . . .”
In January of 1990, the City became dissatisfied with Griswold’s management of the golf course, and elected to exercise its right to terminate the license without cause. On January 16, 1990, the City notified Griswold that the license would terminate in 180 days, which would expire on July 15, 1990.
While the 180-day period was running, the golf course continued to deteriorate. Believing that the physical damage to the course and the resulting loss of goodwill among golfers would soon be irreparable, the City
An extraordinarily complicated chain of procedural events ensued, of which only certain aspects are pertinent to this appeal. On April 9, 1990, the City filed an action for declaratory relief, damages for breach of contract, an accounting, and injunctive relief in the justice court. On the same date, the City applied ex parte for a temporary restraining order (TRO) and an order to show cause (OSC) re preliminary injunction. After the justice court judge recused himself, a judge of the municipal court issued the TRO and OSC on April 11, 1990, restraining Griswold “[fjrom interfering with the City’s immediate entry to the golf course for the purpose of operating and managing said golf course to the exclusion of defendants” and “[fjrom interfering with the City’s immediate exclusive control over the City Equipment the subject of the Equipment Lease between the City and defendants, or some of them.” The TRO did not address the personal property belonging to Griswold which was used in the operation of the golf course.
After successfully defending against several intervening procedural attempts to prevent the enforcement of the TRO, the City took possession of the golf course on April 20, 1990. At the same time, it took possession of a variety of personal property belonging to Griswold, including 60 golf carts, modular building units, trucks, mowers, maintenance equipment, kitchen improvements, office machines, and parts and supplies.
Meanwhile, Griswold opened another front in the litigation. On April 10, 1990, citing the mandatory arbitration clause in the license agreement, Griswold filed a petition in superior court to compel arbitration and to stay the lower court proceedings. The hearing on that petition was set for May 3, 1990.
On May 2, 1990, when the City’s order to show cause re preliminary injunction came on for hearing, the municipal court judge denied the application for the preliminary injunction, and dissolved the TRO. However, the City did not surrender possession of either the golf course or Griswold’s personalty. Instead, the City immediately filed an ex parte application in Griswold’s superior court action, seeking another TRO and OSC.
The superior court granted the City’s request on May 3, 1990. This time, however, the TRO did not restrict itself to possession of the personal property which Griswold had leased from the City. Instead, it enjoined Griswold “[fjrom interfering with the City’s continued exclusive control over the equipment, or personal property necessary to properly operate the
After the hearing on the OSC re preliminary injunction on May 31, 1990, the superior court took the matter under submission, and subsequently granted the request for the injunction on June 19, 1990. The formal order, signed July 3, 1990, repeated the same terms as the TRO, and thus allowed the City to assume possession of any “necessary” personalty, including that belonging to Griswold. The court ordered the City to pay any rental or lease payments due from Griswold to third party lessors during the period the City would be using Griswold’s property, but refused to provide for any compensation to Griswold for the City’s use of the personalty they owned outright or in which they had an equity interest. Instead, the court deferred all such issues to the arbitrator. Griswold filed a timely appeal from the preliminary injunction order.
Issues on Appeal
Griswold challenges only that portion of the preliminary injunction which permits the City to assume possession of their personal property. In doing so, they contend that, by depriving them of possession of their personal property and awarding the use of that property, pendente lite, to the City, the effect of the injunction was to take his private property for public use. Griswold also argues that the trial court’s decision to defer any attempt to determine the compensation to which Griswold was entitled for such use until the final judgment following arbitration violated his constitutional right to just compensation for such a taking. 1
The issues presented by his appeal, therefore, are whether (1) there has been a taking of property from Griswold (2) for a public purpose (3) without the constitutionally required compensation. We answer each part of that question in the affirmative, and strike that portion of the preliminary injunction. For the guidance of the trial court, we also explain that, even if concurrent compensation had been paid or deposited, the preliminary injunction would still have been improper.
A. Was There a Taking of Griswold’s Property?
The City concedes that one consequence of the issuance of the injunction “was a temporary transfer to the City of [Griswold’s] personal property that was necessary to operate the golf course.” While it never explicitly concedes that the transfer constituted a taking, it does not argue to the contrary. Instead, it focuses upon the issue of whether compensation had to be paid prior to or concurrently with that taking. Even in the absence of an express concession, however, it is clear that the City’s possession and use of the personal property pending the trial on the merits—albeit temporary, preliminary, or interlocutory—is a taking.
1. A Temporary Deprivation of Property Rights Is a Taking.
“[T]he Fifth Amendment’s just compensation provision is ‘designed to bar 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.’ [Citation.]”
(First Lutheran Church
v.
Los Angeles County
(1987)
2. A Deprivation of Property Rights Pendente Lite Is a Taking.
A temporary taking ordered during the pendency of an action to determine whether the taking may be made permanent, enjoys no constitutional exception. That point was decided nearly a century ago in
Steinhart
v.
Superior Court
(1902)
The condemnor contended that since actual title to the property would not pass until the proceedings concluded in a judgment, “taking possession and using the property during the pendency of the proceeding is not a taking,
Here, of course, the action pending was not one for condemnation. However, that is not the only forum in which a taking may occur. “While the typical taking occurs when the government acts to condemn property in the exercise of its power of eminent domain, the entire doctrine of inverse condemnation is predicated on the proposition that a taking may occur without such formal proceedings.”
(First Lutheran, supra,
In short, an interlocutory order transferring possession of property from its owner to a public agency, even though made while an action was pending to determine the agency’s right to assume title to that property, nevertheless constitutes a taking.
3. The Duration of the Taking Was Not Insignificant.
Conceptually, some uses of private property for the public good may be of such brief duration and of such little consequence to the owner that they do not impose any unfair burden, and thus do not rise to the level of takings. Similarly, the City attempts to minimize the magnitude of the taking here by arguing that, according to the license agreement, title to Griswold’s personal property passed to the City when the license was terminated on July 15, 1990. That date being less than three months after the City took possession of that property, the desired implication appears to be that the deprivation of possession suffered by Griswold was of such short duration that it is insignificant.
There are at least two responses to that suggestion. First of all, it is by no means clear that the City’s construction of the license agreement is correct. The City relies on paragraph 30(c), which provides in relevant part that
However, the City fails to acknowledge paragraph 30(f) on the next page of the agreement: “Notwithstanding any of the foregoing, if Griswold desires to dispose of any of its personal property used in the operation of said golf course upon expiration or termination of this License, then City shall have the first right to acquire or purchase said personal property.” Similarly, paragraph 45 refers to the City’s “first right to purchase” the furnishings of the golf course if Griswold chooses to sell them.
While these provisions are clear and unambiguous when read in isolation, paragraph 30(c) appears to be irreconcilable with paragraphs 30(f) and 45: Why would the City need to purchase Griswold’s personal property if title to all of such property had passed to the City? Extrinsic evidence may be introduced at trial to resolve the ambiguity which results from that inconsistency. In the absence of that evidence, however, paragraphs 30(f) and 45 would have to be given effect over paragraph 30(c), pursuant to the rule that ambiguities are resolved “against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist.” (Civ. Code, § 1654.) The license agreement was obviously drafted by the City. Thus, it would appear that the City has retained Griswold’s property for over two years, not merely three months.
Second, even assuming that the City’s construction of the license agreement is correct, from the current state of the record it would be unreasonable to conclude that the City’s use and possession of Griswold’s property for nearly three months was so brief and of so little detriment to Griswold as to be de minimis. Thus, Griswold’s constitutional challenge cannot be defeated solely upon the alleged brevity of the deprivation of possession.
B. Was the Property Taken for Public Use?
“ ‘Public use’ within the meaning of [the Constitution] is defined as a use which concerns the whole community or promotes the general interest in its relation to any legitimate object of government.”
(Bauer
v.
County of Ventura
(1955)
For instance, it alleged and presented evidence that the golf course was the City’s primary recreational resource and an important tourist attraction, particularly for winter “snowbirds.” If the deteriorated condition of the golf course caused those tourists to go elsewhere, the City’s tourist industry would suffer for years. In particular, revenue would be lost by “local retail establishments, including places of lodging, food and general merchandise stores.” The cumulative effect would be long-term damage to the reputation of the City as a destination resort. It continues to advance those same contentions on appeal.
C. Was the Property Taken Without Constitutionally Required Compensation?
“Eminent domain is the power of government to take private property for public use.”
(County of San Diego
v.
Miller
(1975)
The exercise of this power is subject to constitutional limitations.
(Rose
v.
State of California
(1942)
The City admits that it may be required to compensate Griswold for the value of his property, or at least the value of its interim use of his property. In dispute is the timing of that compensation. Griswold contends that payment of compensation must be made concurrently with the order permitting the taking. The City, on the other hand, argues that the determination and payment of the compensation due may be deferred until final judgment after trial (or in this case, arbitration). Griswold is correct.
While the federal Constitution does not expressly state when compensation is to be paid with respect to a taking, California’s constitution does: “Private property may be taken or damaged for public use only when just compensation, ascertained by a jury unless waived, has first been paid to, or into court for, the owner.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 19, italics added.) To this general rule requiring payment in advance, the Constitution permits one exception: “The Legislature may provide for possession by the condemnor following commencement of eminent domain proceedings upon deposit in court and prompt release to the owner of money determined by the court to be the probable amount of just compensation.” (Ibid.) The Legislature has enacted such provisions. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1255.010-1255.480.)
Thus, the Constitution presents a public agency with two alternative courses of action before it may exercise its power to take private property for public benefit. First, it may comply with the general rule by trying the action before a jury, allowing the jury to determine the amount of compensation due to the property owner, and taking possession only after that sum has been paid to the owner (or deposited it into court if the owner is appealing). Second, it may avail itself of the right to file a condemnation action, ask the court to estimate the probable amount of compensation which will be found to be due at trial, deposit that sum with the court for the owner’s benefit, and take immediate possession of the property while that action is pending.
Here, the City took possession without trying the issue of compensation, and without making any deposit of probable compensation into court. Since it took Griswold’s property without complying with either of the only two constitutionally authorized means of compensating him for the taking, its possession of his property is unconstitutional. The preliminary injunction must be modified to delete that portion which forced a transfer of possession of that property to the City.
2. There Is No Exception for Temporary Takings.
The City argues that it is excused from these constitutional limitations on its eminent domain power because, until foundational issues such as the ownership of the personal property upon termination of the license agreement are tried, the total amount of compensation due cannot be finally adjudicated. However, the courts of this state have long held that compensation must be paid in advance, even if the property interest taken is mere possession rather than title.
The requirement that the compensation precede the taking was expressly stated in the Constitution when it was revised in 1879: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation having been first made to, or paid into Court for, the owner, and no right of way shall be appropriated to the use of any corporation other than municipal until full compensation therefor be first made in money or ascertained and paid into Court for the owner, irrespective of any benefit from any improvement proposed by such corporation, which compensation shall be ascertained by a jury, unless a jury be waived, as in other civil cases in a Court of record, as shall be prescribed by law.” (Cal. Const, of 1879, art. I, former § 14, italics added.)
The effect of the new constitutional language was explained and applied to a temporary taking of possession in
Steinhart
v.
Superior Court, supra,
As previously discussed, the court held that the occupation of property prior to the judgment in the condemnation proceedings “ ‘is a taking of the property within the meaning of the constitution.’ ”
(Steinhart, supra,
The type of prejudgment possession which the Legislature attempted to authorize by Code of Civil Procedure former section 1254 was subsequently sanctioned when the Constitution was again amended in 1918.
(People
v.
Peninsula Title Guar. Co.
(1956)
Here, as we have seen, the City made no such deposit, and thus failed to satisfy the prerequisites for the application of that exception. Accordingly, the City’s claimed right to prejudgment possession must be evaluated, not by the unavailable exception, but by applying the general rule: i.e., that an agency may not take even temporary, pendente lite possession until compensation has been paid.
(Steinhart, supra,
D. The Statutory Right to Prejudgment Possession May Not Be Exercised Except Through a Condemnation Action.
As noted above, by authorizing the City to take possession of Griswold’s property without immediate compensation, the injunction contravened the constitutional limitations on the City’s eminent domain power, and is thus invalid. No further discussion is necessary for our disposition. However, we do not want to leave the trial court with the mistaken impression that the constitutional deficiency in the injunction can be cured by requiring the City to deposit some reasonable estimate of the compensation owed to Griswold for the use of his property. Even if the City were to
In
Jacobsen
v.
Superior Court
(1923)
In granting the owners’ petition for a writ of prohibition, the Supreme Court held: “The only legal procedure provided by the constitution and statutes of this state for the taking of private property for a public use is that of a condemnation suit which the constitution expressly provides must first be brought before private property can be taken or damaged for a public use.” (Jacobsen v. Superior Court, supra, 192 Cal. at p. 331.) While the Constitution permits a plaintiff in a condemnation action to take immediate possession upon making a proper deposit, that “exception only serves to emphasize the otherwise general rule that no court in any other action or proceeding than an action in eminent domain has jurisdiction to order the taking or damage of private property for a public use.” (Ibid.)
Like the water district in
Jacobsen,
the City chose not to seek the possession and use of the private property through an action for condemnation. Instead, it attempted to do so through the means of a preliminary injunction in an action for declaratory relief and breach of contract. The difference between those two types of actions cannot be cavalierly disregarded. “The proceeding to condemn land for a public use is special and statutory and the prescribed method in such cases must be strictly pursued”
(Harrington
v.
Superior Court
(1924)
In short, in the absence of a pending condemnation proceeding, the trial court has no power to grant the relief which the City desires.
(Jacobsen,
Disposition
The preliminary injunction is modified by striking paragraph E thereof, which purports to enjoin the appellants “[fjrom interfering with the City’s continued exclusive control over the equipment, or personal property necessary to properly operate the Needles Municipal Golf Course.” As modified, the preliminary injunction is affirmed.
“The taking of private property before the amount of the compensation is ascertained will be enjoined . . . .”
(Felton Water Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1927)
Ramirez, P. J., and Hollenhorst, J., concurred.
Notes
Griswold also contends that the City was guilty of unclean hands and thus barred from obtaining equitable relief, that the City’s refusal to submit the dispute to contractually mandated arbitration constituted a failure to exhaust administrative remedies, and that the trial court failed to properly balance the equities between the parties, and thus abused its discretion in granting a mandatory preliminary injunction. Our decision that the trial court’s transference of Griswold’s property to the City was unconstitutional renders resolution of these other issues unnecessary.
The interpretation that the Constitution required compensation to be paid before the owner’s possession was disturbed was subsequently challenged in
Fox
v.
W.P. Railroad Co.
(1867)
