Thе issue presented in this appeal is whether Missouri recognizes a cause of action for precondemnation damages when the condemning authority is alleged to have caused undue delay and committed untoward acts in implementing condemnation proceedings.
Clay County Realty Company and Edith Investment Company (“Property Owners”) brought suit against the City of Gladstone (“the City”), alleging that the City had unlawfully taken their property without just compensation. Property Owners appeal after the trial court found there were no genuine issues of material fact in dispute and summary judgment was entered against them. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to Missouri Constitution artiсle V, section 10, as the case was taken on transfer after disposition by the court of appeals. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded.
I. Background
Property Owners own a retail building, Gladstone Plaza Shopping Center (“property”). The property was declared blighted by the City in May 2003 under the provisions of chapter 353, RSMo 2000, and where amended RSMo Supp.2007.
1
In May 2004, the City entered a redevelopment agreement with a developer, but by August 2005 it had withdrawn its designation of the developer and cancelled the agreement. Starting in August 2005, the City also began to solicit tax increment financing (“TIF”) proposals for the property pursuant to the provisions оf Missouri’s
Section 99.810.1(3) provides in pertinent part:
[N]o ordinance approving a redevelopment project shall be adopted later than ten years from the adoption of thе ordinance approving the redevelopment plan under which such project is authorized and provided that no property for a redevelopment project shall be acquired by eminent domain later than five years from the adoption of the ordinance approving such redevelopment project. 4
The City has never completed formal condemnation proceedings against the property, but Property Owners admit that, because the City has not approved a TIF project ordinance for the property, the City is not yet under the five-year time limitation for acquiring the property established by section 99.810.1(3).
Although there are no allegations in this case that the City has violated the applicable statutory time provisions, Property Owners contend that the City has engaged in undue delay and untoward activity in implementing condemnation proceedings against the property. They allege that the City has fáiled to timely proceed with redevelopment and failed to find an adequately capitalized developer. They allege that, as a consequence of the City’s actions, numerous retail tenants have not renewed leases at the property. They also argue that the City has harassed them with inspections and code violatiоns and interfered with their ability to attract new tenants.
Property Owners brought suit against the City, alleging a violation of Missouri Constitution article I, section 26, because the City’s actions caused “significant diminution of the value of the [pjroperty, and the City has thereby taken the [pjroperty for public use or purpose.” Their suit also alleges that the City’s actions have caused them consequential damages for increased operating costs and for lost rental and lease income due to their inability to secure new tenants or to renew or extend existing leases. They contend that their consequential damages are ongoing.
II. Standard of Review
Appellate review of summary judgment is
de novo. ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp.,
III. Actions for “takings” and related damages
Property Owners’ claims include that the City’s actions and inactions following its blight declaration for the property resulted in a de facto taking that violates Missouri Constitution article I, section 26, which provides that “private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” “While the mere declaration of blight and other initial steps authorizing condemnation, even if they result in a decline in prоperty values, do not constitute a taking requiring compensation to the property owner ... governmental action short of acquisition or occupancy may constitute a constructive or de facto taking.”
Thomas W. Garland, Inc. v. City of St. Louis,
“When a taking occurs, the owner ‘is entitled to be put in as good a position pecuniarily as if his property had not been taken.’ ”
Akers v. City of Oak Grove,
Traditionally, actions for inverse condemnation provide a landowner a remedy when a condemnor physically accomplishes a taking or damaging of private property without completing the procedural or compensatory requirements of a regular eminent domain action.
State ex rel. Chiavola v. Vill. of Oakwood,
“[I]t is not uncommon for a lengthy period of time to elapse between the time when the area is declared blighted by the legislative body and the time when the property is taken for condemnation pur-posesf, and] [b]etween the time of blighting and the time of taking, the property frequently has substantially deteriorated in value at great loss to the landowner.” State ex rel. Washington Univ. Med. Ctr. Redevelopment Corp. v. Gaertner, 626 5.W.2d 373, 375-76 (Mo. banc 1982). The damages suffered when a “cloud of condemnation” hangs over a property and an actual taking is never effectuated or is long-delayed have been labeled as “condemnation blight.” Dale A. Whitman, Eminent Domain Reform In Missouri: A Legislative Memoir, 71 Mo. L.Rev. 721, 757 (2006). Condemnation blight can be marked by departure of rental tenants, unmarketability, and declines in rentability, capital values, and profits. Id.
The first Missouri case discussing the concept of condemnation blight was
Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City v. Massood,
Several jurisdictions recognize claims for condemnation blight under a theory of inverse condemnation. Whitman at 757. Cases recognizing such actions include:
Reichs Ford Road Joint Venture v. State Roads Commission of the State Highway Administration,
In
State ex rel. Washington University Medical Cеnter Redevelopment Corp. v. Gaertner,
a property owner claimed he suffered an unlawful taking in violation of Missouri Constitution article I, section 26, because the city’s blight designation on his property had put it under a “cloud of condemnation” during the period the property was declared blighted, but was not yet under an order of condemnation.
Further dicta in
Washington University
also suggested that remedies after a blight designation can be sought via a cause of action separate from a condemnation proceeding — such as a personal tort action— in order to seek damages equal to the amount of rent allegedly lost by reason of the pending condemnation proceeding.
Id.
at 377-78 (stating that actions related to loss of rental income are akin to tort actions because the damages at issue are not damages directly to the property itself). But, claims for precondemnation damages, if asserted in the form of a tort action as
Washington University
suggested might be permissible, ultimately would fail to provide property owners an adequate remedy for their damages because municipalities, acting in their governmental capacity, may claim sovereign immunity from such actions.
See Parish v. Novus Equities Co.,
As
Tierney v. Planned Industrial Expansion Authority of Kansas City
noted, however, a claim asserting that condemnation blight constituted a form of inverse condemnation would not be subject to the same concerns about sovereign immunity raised by a tort claim.
IV. Should Property Owners’ precondemnation damages be remedied?
This Court has long-recognized that the common, long delays associated with blight designations and condemnation proceedings can damage property owners’ interests.
See Washington Univ.,
This case involves a problem which has plagued the judiciary of this state for some time without satisfactory resolution. It arises with increasing frequency because of redevelopment of metropolitan areas. To start redevelopment, the area involved is declared blighted by the municipal legislative body and becomes subject to redevelopment.... Because of the blight designation and the general public knowledge that the property will be acquired for redevelopment, an exodus of tenants ensues, sometimes allegedly encouraged by the redevelopment authority, and no equivalent influx of similar tenants occurs. Often times the property depreciates and deteriorates, the neighborhood declines, vandalism and destruction of the property occurs, and the landowner, anticipating the eventual taking of the property, does not expend money to improve his unproductive asset.
Id. at 375.
But, Property Owners’ case illustrates that the problems at issue in Washington University remain a challenge nearly two decades later. And, it places squarely before this Court the issue addressed in dicta in Washington University — whether Missouri law provides a remedy for precon-demnation damages of the type alleged by Property Owners, and what form of action that remedy will take.
In Washington University, this Court recommended that “[t]he ideal solution” to precondemnation damage problems “would be for the legislature to make [a] provision for the allowance of damages in appropriate circumstanсes and upon proper proof of loss or damage, or to provide for a different time of taking in cases where the condemnor has cast a cloud of blight upon the property in advance of the actual taking.” Id. at 378. In 2006, the legislature provided some relief to landowners that suffer damages under the “cloud of condemnation.” The new legislation, however, covers landowners’ damages only if the condemnor abandons the condemnation proceedings. Section 523.259, RSMo Supp.2007, provides:
1. If any condemning authority abandons a condemnation, each owner of interests sought to be condemned shall be entitled to recover:
(1) Their reasonable attorneys’ fees, expert expenses and costs; and
(2) The lesser of:
(a) The owner’s actual damages accruing as a direct and proximate result of the pendency of the condemnation if proven by the owner; or
(b) The damages required to be paid to an owner in the event of an abandonment under the terms of the applicable redevelopment plan or agreement.
In the event that the applicable redevelopment plan or agreement is silent as to damages required to be paid to an owner in the event of an abandonment, a court shall order the condemning authоrity to pay the owner’s actual reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses, and shall award damages accruing as a direct and proximate result of the pen-dency of the condemnation if proven by the landowner.
2. The provisions of this section shall only apply to redevelopment plans or agreements entered into after December 31, 2006.
Section 523.259, RSMo Supp.2007, however, provides no remedy to plaintiffs like Property Owners because there has been no “abandonment” in this case. Also, Property Owners’ case predates the applicability date in the statute. Professor Whitman has noted, though, that “it is not easy to see how adverse precondemnation activities of governments or redevelopers can be effectively remedied by statute[— because] [t]he lines between reasonable and unreasonable delay, between legiti
While statutes may be helpful in outlining remedies available to property owners, they are not determinative. Property owners enjoy constitutional protections that ensure that their property “shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” Mo. Const, art. I, section 26; see also U.S. Const. Amend. V (providing that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation). These constitutional guarantees require that courts recognize that property owners are entitled to a remedy even where statutes do not provide one.
As noted above, several jurisdictions recognize claims for condemnation blight under the theory of inverse condemnation. Although a property owner has never been successful in bringing such a claim in Missouri, Missouri courts have suggested property owners can prevail against condemning authorities for claims relating to condemnation blight where they provide specific evidence demonstrating aggravated delay, bad faith, or untoward activity by the condemning authority.
See Land Clearance for Redevelopment Auth. of the City of St. Louis v. Morrisоn,
Considering the constitutional prohibition against takings without just compensation, this Court holds that actions for condemnation blight are inverse condemnation claims that property owners may advance in order to recover consequential precondemnation damages, such as the claims brought by Property Owners in this case for increased operating costs and for lost rental and lease income. 11
Because some delays relating to condemnation proceedings are natural and unavoidable, before property owners have a viable cause of action for precondemnation damages, they must establish that there has been aggravated delay or untoward activity in instituting or continuing the condеmnation proceedings at issue. Without this standard requiring a showing of “aggravated delay or untoward activity,” every condemnation case would give rise to a separate cause of action based on precondemnation activity, because the condemnation process involves governmental and judicial decisions that are endemic with delays.
Determining whether a con-demnor has acted with undue delay should include consideration of the time limitations for condemnation proceedings established by the legislature. 12 See section 99.810.1(3); section 523.274.2, RSMo Supp. 2007. Where a condemning authority’s delays have not exceeded statutory limitations, the delays should not be labeled as “aggravated” without additional evidence of related “untoward activity.” 13
Additionally, plaintiff property owners must prove that their damages were caused by the condemning authority’s actions or inactions. Proving causation in condemnation blight cases is inherently challenging, as presumably cities usually do not attach blight designations to properties that are not already in decline.
V. Property Owners’ claims survive summary judgment
Property Owners’ claims in this case allege genuine issues of disputed material fact relating to whether the City’s actions constituted “aggravated delay or untoward activity” in instituting or continuing the condemnation proceedings on the property.
They have alleged a de facto taking of their property resulting from the exodus of rental tenants from their property after the City declared it blighted. They contend that the City failed to enforce plan timetables for acquisition and redevelop
In contrast, the City denies the redevelopment plans have been unduly delayed, and it contends that it has not violated the time requirements imposed by section 99.810.1(3). It argues that there are no applicable “plan timetables” at issue and maintains that it has spent five years “consistently moving forward” to redevelop the property. It denies any harassment of Property Owners or their tenants, and it contends that Property Owners’ damages are caused by their inability “to attract and keep tenants for a reasonable rate of return on the property [because of their] own inability to properly manage [the] property.”
The variance between the facts alleged by Property Owners and the City sufficiently demonstrates that there are genuine issues of material fact in disрute about whether the City’s actions show “aggravated delay or untoward activity” that could merit recovery of precondemnation damages. As such, Property Owners’ claims survive summary judgment. 14
VI. Property Owners’ claims are ripe
Property
Owners
need not wait until their property is condemned to seek precondemnation damages, as suits can seek awards of damages for harm that is ongoing.
See Davis v. Laclede Gas
Co.,
VII. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court erred in entering judgment against Property Owners. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Notes
. All statutory references are to RSMo 2000, unless otherwise indicated.
. Section 99.805(13), RSMo Supp.2007, defines a TIF "redevelopment plan” as:
the comprehensive program of a municipality for redevelopment intended by the payment of redevelopment costs to reduce or eliminate those conditions, the existence of which qualified the redevelopment area as a blighted area, conservation area, economic development area, or combination thereof, and to thereby enhance the tax bases of the taxing districts which extend into the redevelopment area.
. Section 99.805(14), RSMo Supp.2007, defines a TIF "redevelopment project” as: "any development project within a redevelopment area in furtherance of the objectives of the redevelopment plan; any such redevelopment project shall include a legal description of the area selected for the redevelopment project.”
.See also section 523.274.2, RSMo Supp. 2007 (providing that in TIF condemnation proceedings "[n]o action to acquire property by eminent domain within a redevelopment area shall be commenced later than five years from the date of the legislative determination ... that the property is blighted_[hjowever, such determination may be renewed for successive five-year periods by the legislative body").
. In Akers, property owners filed an inverse condemnation action against a city after its sewer system overflowed, thereby causing extensive damage to the owners' properties and resulting in them losing rental income.
.
This Court first used the term "condemnation blight" in
Tierney v. Planned Industrial Expansion Authority of Kansas City,
.But see Nat'l By-Products, Inc. v. Little Rock Reg'l Airport Comm’n,
. Similar to Property Owners’ claims in this case, the property owner in
Washington University
alleged damages based on relocation or non-renewal by his lessees, discouraged market activity, vandalism, and his inability to rent the property.
. The holding of the case was limited to a finding that the owner could not seek relief for his damages by way of a counterclaim to the condemnаtion proceedings on his property.
Washington Univ.,
.
Morrison
derived its "aggravated delay or untoward activity” requirement from:
Sayre v. United States,
18 Ohio Mise. 23,
. To the extent that dicta in Washington University suggests that a tort action should be brought rather than an action in inverse condemnation, that dicta is disapproved and should no longer be followed.
. Statutory limitations, however, аre not the only measures for delay, as a condemning authority may adopt its own time limitations or goals for the eminent domain proceedings at issue.
.The existence or nonexistence of "untoward activity” is determined by reviewing the circumstances and facts of each case. These circumstances might include an argument that "untoward activity” is shown where a condemning authority repeatedly renewed its blight designation of a property as permitted by section 523.274.2, RSMo Supp.2007, but did so without just cause.
. This holding is not a pronouncement that Property Owners are necessarily capable of proving "aggravated delay or untoward activity,” or the other elements of their claim, including causation and damages, at trial.
