We granted a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ order dismissing petitioner’s appeal. We affirm as modified.
FACTS
Respondents (Landowners) commenced these actions for inverse condemnation claiming that closure of a public street in the City of Easley damaged their property. Petitioner South Carolina Department of Transportation (DOT) moved to transfer Landowners’ cases to the non-jury docket. Judge New ruled Landowners have a right to a jury trial in the compensation phase of trial; he left decisions regarding “bifurcation” to the trial judge. DOT’S appeal of this order was dismissed.
ISSUE
Is the circuit court’s order immediately appealable?
DISCUSSION
In denying DOT’S motion to transfer Landowners’ cases to the non-jury docket, Judge Few’s order states:
I find that the landowners do have a right to a jury trial in the compensation phase of this inverse condemnation case. Questions related to the mode of trial, such as whether to bifurcate the takings and compensation phases, are left for the trial judge.
The Court of Appeals construed Judge Few’s order as leaving the “mode of trial” decision entirely to the trial judge’s discretion. We do not read this order so narrowly. Judge New clearly ruled that Landowners are entitled to jury trials in the compensation phase of each case. This ruling, which cannot be overturned by the judge who eventually tries these cases, 1 leaves only procedural issues such as “bifurcation.” In light of DOT’s argument at the hearing before Judge Few, “bifurcation” refers to DOT’s request that the taking and compensation issues be separated. DOT contended below, as it does here, that there should be a non-jury bifurcated proceeding allowing it to decide whether to pay compensation or “undo” the taking by restoring Landowners’ property to its previous condition. Bifurcation in this context does not refer to the mode of trial issue involved in determining whether a case is tried in a jury or non-jury proceeding.
Reading Judge Few’s order as allowing a jury trial in the compensation phase, we turn to the issue whether such an order is immediately appealable. If an order deprives a party of a mode of trial to which that party is entitled as a matter of right, the order is immediately appealable and failure to do so forever bars appellate review.
Flagstar Corp. v. Royal Surplus Lines,
Although there are several appellate decisions involving jury trials in inverse condemnation cases,
2
we have never
This constitutional analysis applies with equal force in the analogous context of an inverse condemnation action. In eminent domain proceedings, a governmental entity is the moving party seeking to take property in exchange for compensation. In inverse condemnation cases, the property owner is the moving party claiming an act of the sovereign has damaged his property to the extent of an actual taking entitling him to compensation.
South Carolina State Hwy. Dep’t v. Moody,
Despite the fact there is no constitutional right to a jury in an eminent domain case, such a right is provided by statute. South Carolina Code Ann. § 28-2-310 (1991) provides in an eminent domain action a property owner or the condemnor may elect a jury trial on the issue of compensation. In light of the historical treatment of an inverse condemnation action as equivalent to an eminent domain case, we conclude this statutory right to a jury trial on the issue of compensation applies as well in inverse condemnation actions.
See State v. Bridgers,
CONCLUSION
Landowners are entitled to a jury trial in the compensation phase as provided in Judge Few’s order. DOT therefore has not been deprived of a mode of trial to which it is entitled as a matter of right. Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of DOT’s appeal. DOT’s contention that it is entitled to a bifurcated proceeding in order to allow it to “undo” its actions as an alternative to compensation is an issue that is not before us since there has been no ruling below.
Humbert v. State,
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Notes
.
See Cook
v.
Taylor,
.
E.g., Cutchin v. South Carolina Dep't of Hwys. and Pub. Transp.,
. Article I, § 17, provides that “private property shall not be taken ... for public use without just compensation being first made therefor.”
.
The Court of Appeals recently approved such a bifurcated proceeding in an inverse condemnation action.
Hardin v. South Carolina Dep’t of Transp.,
