This case involves the impact of noise from aircraft overflights, and arises under the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment. 1 In their complaint to the Court of Federal Claims, David and Carolyn Brown alleged that noise from low overflights by United States Air Force planes constituted a taking of their property, and that just compensation was due. The Government moved for summary judgment that, as a matter of law, the Browns could not recover. In addition to opposing the Government’s motion for summary judgment, the Browns argued that undisputed evidence showed that the Government had taken their property and therefore the only issue was how much the property taken was worth. The Browns accordingly moved for partial summary judgment in their favor.
After hearing argument, the Court of Federal Claims granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment and consequently denied the Brown’s motion for partial summary judgment.
Brown v. United States,
BACKGROUND
The Browns own a 6,858 acre ranch near Del Rio, in West Texas, near the Mexican border. They use the ranch, on which they have built a second home, for their own recreation and for cattle ranching. Additionally, the Browns allow guests to hunt on their property, for a fee. According to the Browns, they intend to further improve their land for recreational use and ultimately sell it in a high-priced market for recreational properties.
The Air Force since January 1991 uses a small airfield, Wizard Auxiliary Airfield, near the Browns’ ranch, to train its pilots. Flights out of Laughlin Air Force Base, about 25 miles to the northwest of Wizard, conduct “touch and go” exercises on the Wizard airstrip. In a touch and go exercise, a plane approaches the landing strip as if to land, touches the ground, and takes off again without coming to a stop. Such exercises require planes to fly very low, producing a great deal of noise on the ground. On take off from Wizard’s airstrip, planes fly less than 500 feet above ground level (AGL) over at least 100 acres of the Brown’s property.
Wizard was built on land purchased by the Government from a Mr. and Mrs. Newman. In addition to the fee title for the land on which the airstrip was built, the Air Force purchased from the Newmans an easement over the land immediately surrounding the airfield. The Browns’ property abuts land over which the Air Force owns an easement. *1102 In December of 1989, while Wizard was being built, the Air Force solicited the sale of an easement from the Browns. The offer was refused, but the Air Force never initiated condemnation proceedings.
On February 7, 1992, the Browns filed their complaint in the Court of Federal Claims, alleging a taking and seeking damages of $1,500,000. In due course, the Government moved for summary judgment, arguing that no genuine issue of material fact had been raised, and the Government was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The trial court agreed with the Government’s analysis of the case. The court held that under
United States v. Causby,
Plaintiffs continue to have use of their land for raising cattle and for hunting.... The motion papers do not show circumstances that constitute substantial interference with the use and enjoyment of plaintiffs’ land.... Plaintiffs’ contention that the invasion of airspace results in an anticipated substantial adverse impact on market values is not adequate to show that the overflights in fact had a substantial direct and immediate interference with the subja-cent property.... [I]n the absence of proof that there has been a substantial and direct interference with the actual use of the surface ... the superadjacent airspace may be used with impunity — even when the overflights are at less than 500' AGL.... Land has value not in its mere ownership but in its use. [citations omitted].
Brown v. United States,
The trial court granted the Government’s summary judgment motion and denied the Browns’ motion for partial summary judgment. The Browns have timely appealed to this court.
DISCUSSION
A.
Under established Fifth Amendment jurisprudence, takings claims are analyzed differently depending on whether they involve a physical taking or a regulatory taking.
See Hendler v. United States,
In the
Causby
case, the Court considered three factors significant in determining whether noise and other effects from overflights interfered with the property owner’s rights in such a way as to constitute a taking of an avigation easement and hence require compensation: (i) the planes flew directly over the claimant’s land; (ii) the flights were low and frequent, and (iii) the flights directly and immediately interfered with the claimant’s enjoyment and use of the land.
Causby,
*1103 The Government recognizes that, in the case of the Browns, the first two of the three factors considered in Causby are present. The Government argues, however, that the third factor is missing — the flights do not directly and substantially interfere with the Browns’ enjoyment and use of their land. In Causby, the land was a chicken farm and residence. The overflights made the land uninhabitable for both the farm family and its livestock. In this case, the Browns’ ranch was and is still being used for hunting and raising of cattle. The Browns concede that their receipts from hunting fees are no less than they were before Wizard was built, and that their cattle do not seem upset by the planes, unlike the chickens in Causby. Accordingly, the Government argues that the overflights do not directly and substantially interfere with the Browns’ current use of their property, and thus under Causby no taking can have occurred.
In opposing the Government’s motion, the Browns argue that whether or not Government activity works a taking ultimately depends on the extent of the economic harm suffered by the property owner. They argue that determining the extent of the harm caused by the Government’s intrusion requires a factual inquiry into the change, if any, of the market value of the land. In the proceedings before the trial court, the Browns submitted affidavits from two expert witnesses, both of whom said that thé resale value of the land for recreational purposes had been substantially diminished by the touch and go exercises at Wizard. The Browns maintain that this evidence was sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact, and that as a matter of law the Government’s motion for summary judgment should have been denied.
The Browns further maintain that because the Air Force was concededly conducting these low overflights over the Browns’ land on a permanent basis, 2 the fact of the taking had been established. The only question that is at issue in the case, they say, is how much the property taken by the Government is worth. The Browns therefore contend that they were entitled to partial summary judgment that a taking had occurred.
B.
As a general proposition, if the Government for purposes of public use physically occupies, either by its own agents or by third parties, privately owned land over the owner’s objections, liability is a foregone conclusion.
3
“[N]o matter how minute the intrusion, and no matter how weighty the public purpose behind it, we have required compensation.”
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
At common law, the owner of real property was considered to own from the center of the earth to the top of the sky. 4 *1104 With the advent of human flight, and now world-wide aviation, a high altitude intrusion into an owner’s theoretical airspace that had no impact whatever on the surface property could not be actionable. Thus, unlike a government invasion of the surface land itself, an invasion of airspace above surface land does not per se constitute a taking. However, under Causby and its progeny, once the surface owner proves that low-level overflights result in direct, immediate, and substantial interference with the enjoyment and use of the property, the owner establishes a taking for which the Constitution mandates just compensation. The question in this case is whether the Browns have raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the overflights directly, immediately, and substantially interfere with the Browns’ enjoyment and use of that part of their property over which the flights occur.
The trial court found, and the Government argues on appeal, that because the Browns have conceded that their current use of the affected property for cattle ranching and recreation, and their income from these activities, have not diminished, the Browns cannot have suffered a substantial interference with their enjoyment and use under Causby. According to the Government, Causby does not protect against decrease in market value when that decrease is not accompanied by diminishment of present, actual use of the property.
The Government’s view — that “enjoyment and use” means that interference with present use is the
sine qua non
for a successful takings claim based on noise from overflights — deprives the term “enjoyment” of its classical meaning in property law, and makes the phrase “enjoyment and use” redundant. Enjoyment of property at common law contemplated the entire bundle of rights and privileges that attached to the ownership of land. The legal meaning of “enjoy” is “to have, possess, and use with satisfaction; to occupy or have benefit of.” Black's Law Dictionaey 529 (6th ed. 1990). Owners of fee simple estates, like the Browns, clearly enjoy not only the right to put their land to a particular present use, but also to hold the land for investment and appreciation, and to lease or convey the land to others, gratuitously or for profit. As recognized in
Caus-by:
“[I]t is obvious that if the landowner is to have full enjoyment of the land, he must have exclusive control of the immediate reaches of the enveloping atmosphere. Otherwise buddings could not be erected, trees could not be planted, and even fences could not be run.... The fact that he does not occupy it in a physical sense — by the erection of buddings and the like — is not material.”
The Government’s argument that only present actual use is relevant to the takings analysis conflicts with the avigation easement caselaw, which recognizes that a taking may involve the impairment of future uses of land.
See Causby,
An important element in a property owner’s bundle of rights is the right to economicady exploit his land — the right to sed the land for the best price avadable in the market, based not only on its current use but on potential other uses for which the market is presently prepared to pay.
Cf. Causby,
The trial court viewed the evidence as addressing “anticipated” adverse impact on market values,
Brown v. United States,
Under the Government’s view, the Government would be able to make uncompensated use of private property if that use did not immediately interfere with the landowner’s current use. Thus, overflights could not give rise to compensable takings on land held for investment purposes or for future development. The Government effectively could preclude future, lawful uses of the property — uses which have been recognized and valued by the market before the overflights — without compensation to the owner, simply by making such uses undesirable or unprofitable. The Fifth Amendment does not permit the Government to destroy individual rights in that manner.
The Browns assert that Government overflights have substantially interfered with the enjoyment and use of their overflown property for recreational purposes and have reduced to agricultural use the potential uses of their property. The affidavits submitted by the Browns in opposition to the Government’s summary judgment motion are sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact concerning these issues. Mr. Brown’s affidavit asserts that there is a market for remote, quiet areas such as the property at issue. Mr. Neal’s affidavit sets forth specific facts concerning (1) the existence of a market for open spaces such as the Browns’ ranch; (2) the inclusion of the Brown ranch in that market; (3) the noise created by overflights; and (4) present decrease in market value. The trial court will have to weigh this and any other evidence presented by the Browns in support of their claim against the Government’s evidence, if any, to the contrary. 5
*1106 The trial court expressed the concern, echoed by the Government, that recognizing liability for a decrease in “remoteness” or “tranquility” of land would expose the Government to limitless liability for every activity involving development of previously rural properties. This concern is misplaced. Causby and its progeny require direct, immediate and substantial interference with use and enjoyment. Clearly, minor, indirect, or speculative reductions in the value of property would not be enough. But we are unwilling to carve out an exception from the Caus-by rule for land used as a recreational retreat and valued for its seclusion and quietude, as the Government and trial court’s approach would do. The Court of Federal Claims erred in reading Causby to preclude the Brown’s claim as a matter of law and in granting the Government summary judgment on that basis.
The Browns argue that uncontroverted evidence shows that an easement in their property has been taken by the Government’s overflights. We are not prepared to say, on the limited record before us and as a matter of law, that must be so. That is for the trial court to decide in the first instance, applying the correct standard to the facts of the case.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the judgment for the Government and the dismissal of the complaint. We remand this case for determination of whether the Browns’ property has been taken, and if so, how much compensation is due.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Each party to bear its costs.
Notes
. "[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. CONST, amend. V.
. On the meaning of “permanent" in takings cases, as contrasted with “temporary,” see
Handler,
. Law enforcement activity involving the seizure or incidental occupation of private property, as a consequence of a violation of law or regulation by the property owner, raises different considerations.
See, e.g., Branch v. United States,
."Cujus est solum ejus est usque ad coelum et ad inferos." Black's Law Dictionary 378 (6th ed. 1990); see also 1 Coke, Institutes, 19th Ed. 1832, ch. 1 § l(4a).
. Any taking analysis is of course directed to that part of the property characterized by low and frequent overflights. The trial court found, and the parties do not dispute, that this area comprises roughly 100 acres of the Browns' property.
Brown,
