Fаrmers New World Life Insurance Company (Farmers) brought this action against Bountiful City (the City) and a number of other defendants to recover damages to a commercial mall owned by Farmers. The original complaint included claims against the City for (1) breach of contract, and (2) inverse condemnation under article I, section 22 of the Utah Constitution. The City moved for summary judgment on all claims, and the trial court granted that motion (the first ruling). Farmers then amended its complaint, adding inverse condemnation claims against Bountiful under the fifth amendment of the United States Constitution. The City moved to dismiss the amended complaint, and the trial court again granted the motion (the second ruling), treating the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment pursuant to rule 12(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. Farmers appeals both the first and second rulings.
Farmers is the owner of a commercial mall located in Bountiful. Bordering the south wall of the mall is a natural waterway known as Mill Creek. In 1983, after a pеriod of flooding, mall representatives requested that the City make improvements to the creek channel at the mall site in order to improve the flood capacity of the creek. In 1985, the City obtained from Farmers a deed granting an easement that allowed the City to construct and maintain a concrete culvert. The City contracted for the design, construction, and financing of the culvert and funded the project with county flood control funds as well as state disaster relief funds. Diversion of the creek during the construction of the culvert caused physical damage to the mall due to a loss of lateral support and water seepage.
In reviewing the trial court’s rulings, we must review the facts and inferences in the light most favorable to Farmers. Because summary judgment is granted as a matter of law, we can reappraise the trial court’s legal conclusions.
Atlas Corp. v. Clovis Nat’l Bank,
I. INVERSE CONDEMNATION CLAIM UNDER ARTICLE I, SECTION 22
Article I, section 22 of the Utah Constitution provides, “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” Prior to the construction of a public improvement, property can be taken and the owner compensated under the eminent domain power authorized by Utah Code Ann. §§ 78-34-1 to -20. In the event private property is taken or damaged for public use without a formal exercise of the eminent domain power, the property owner may bring an inverse condemnation action under аrticle I, section 22 to recover the value of the property. 1 For purposes of that constitutional *1244 provision, an inverse condemnation action requires (1) property, (2) a taking or damages, and (3) a public use.
A.Nature of Property
Farmers has alleged damage to a building which it owns. In
Lund v. Salt Lake County,
B.Existence of Taking or Damage
In the usual eminent domain setting, property is completely taken or destroyed for a public use, rendering it valueless to the owner. In addition, however, “severance damages” may be recoverable where property not actually taken is damaged by the construction or use of the improvement.
See
Utah Code Ann. § 78-34-10(3). Generally, all
unavoidable
injuries arising out of the proper construction of a public use which directly affect the market value of the abutting property may be considered in calculating damages.
See Morris v. Oregon Short Line R.R.,
Farmers alleges damages which include (1) loss of income, (2) diminution in value of the mall, and (3) cost of repair to the mail’s roof, floors, walls, plumbing, sewer, and fill. These damages were allegedly caused by a loss of lateral support and the seepage of water through spaces in the wall panels.
In
Board of Education v. Croft,
Recently, in
Rocky Mountain Thrift Stores, Inc. v. Salt Lake City Corp.,
Under the foregoing definitions, damages protectible under article I, section 22 must be physical and permanent, continuous, or recurring. The diminution of value and cost of repairs to the mall which Farmers has alleged constitute damages within the guarantee of article I, section 22.
C.Presence of a “Public Use”
The Utah legislature has authorized the state land board to construct any projects it
*1245
considers necessary for the control or prevention of floods, granting that agency eminent domain power to acquire lands necessary for that purpоse. Utah Code Ann. § 65-1-75. This authorization is based on the concept that a taking of private property in support of a flood control program is for a public use. 2A
Nichols on Eminent Domain,
§ 7.41 (3d ed. 1990). It is universally conceded that the government has the power to take private property in the interest of the public health and safety,
id.
at § 7.36, and flood control falls within this governmental purpose. This court has impliedly recognized flood control as a public use for purposes of article I, section 22.
See Colman v. Utah State Land Bd.,
In the instant case, the City’s construction of the culvert was in support of a flood control program and therefore was a public use within the meaning of article I, section 22. All damages necessarily resulting from the construction of that improvement and not otherwise paid for would be recoverable in an inverse condemnation action as damages incurred for a public use under the terms of the constitutional provision. In Utah, however, under the statutes and case law, damages which are not a direct and necessary consequence of the construction or operation of a public use are not recoverable in an inverse condemnation action.
In 1987, after this cause of action arose, the legislature enacted Utah Code Ann. § 63-30-10.5, authorizing inverse condemnation actions against the government. That statute waives governmental immunity for the taking or damaging of private property without just compensation and provides for the assessment of compensation and damages under title 78, chapter 34 (enacted prior to this action).
See
Utah Code Ann. § 63-30-10.5. Title 78 provides that property taken must be “necessary” to a use authorized by law.
Id.
at § 78-34-4. That title further provides that severance damages are to be assessed in situations where property not actually taken
“will
be damaged by the construction of the proposed improvement.”
Id.
at § 78-34-10(3) (emphasis added). The use of the words “necessary” and “will” in the statute limits its applicability to those damages which are anticipated prior to the condemnation and are an unavoidable consequence of the construction of the improvement. Avoidable injuries not directly resulting from the construction or operation of a public improvement are not within the statute’s protection.
See Thomas E. Jeremy Estate v. Salt Lake City,
Consistent with the policy recently expressed by the legislature, this court has in the past limited damages recoverable under the Utah Constitution’s eminent domain provision to those injuries which are the direct and unavoidable consequence оf the construction or use of the improvement. Other damages, it has been held, are not incurred “for a public use” and are therefore outside the contemplation and meaning of article I, section 22. We briefly review that precedent.
In
Morris v. Oregon Short Line Railroad,
In
Utah Lake Irrigation Co. v. Jensen,
In
Lund v. Salt Lake County,
Finally, in two separate opinions Justice Wade, after arguing that article I, section 22 was self-executing, wrote that inverse condemnation damages are limited to those necessarily arising out of the public use. In
Springville Banking Co. v. Burton,
In this case, reviewing the facts and inferences in the light most favorable to Farmers, we conclude that the trial court properly granted summary judgment as to Farmers’ inverse condemnation claim against the City under article I, section 22. There is no evidence that the injuries incurred by Farmers were unavoidable or necessary to the construction or use of the culvert. It would be inconsistent with the language of the state constitution, the policy expressed in the current eminent domain statute, 2 and Utah case law to allow recovery under eminent domain principles for indirect, avoidable injuries which provide no benefit to the public. Farmers’ recovery, if there is to be one, must be under another theory.
The trial court incorrectly implied that intent is an element of an inverse condemnation action. Intent is not an element of such an action, and any indication to that effect in our prior rulings should be disregarded. Although the government’s lack of intent to cause injuries may be used as persuasive evidence that the injuries were unnecessary to the public use and/or avoidable, the presence or absence of intent is not dispositive on the subject of the nature of the injuries.
In the instant case, the trial court correctly stated that an invеrse condemnation action does not “extend to actions arising out of negligently tortious conduct.” The question of whether injuries are an avoidable or unavoidable consequence of construction is one of fact.
See Utah Lake Irr. Co. v. Jensen,
*1247 II. FIFTH AMENDMENT CLAIMS
In its first amended complaint, Farmers asserts several causes of action against the City under the fifth amendment of the United States Constitution. The takings clause of the fifth amendment provides, “[P]rivate property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation.” This language differs slightly from the corresponding provision in the Utah Constitution, which prohibits the taking and damaging of private property without just compensation. Utah Const, art. I, § 22. Under the facts of this case, however, the result is the same under both constitutional provisions.
Under the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the fifth amendment, a “taking” does not require complete destruction of the value of the property. In
United States v. Cress,
In
Sanguinetti v. United States,
The Court’s holdings in
Sanguinetti
and
Cress
have been applied more recently by other federal courts. In
National By-Products, Inc. v. United States,
In the instаnt case, Farmers alleges a taking by virtue of the City’s diversion of Mill Creek and the resulting seepage. That claim may not be sustained under the foregoing cases, all of which specifically treat the issue of damage to property caused by water. In addition, Farmers seeks fifth amendment compensation for damage caused by the City’s unreasonable removal of lateral support, the City’s intentional and deliberate interference with Farmers’ use of its propеrty and impairment of the value of the property, and the City’s failure to prevent or remedy the tortious acts of the contractor. Although not specifically involving damages caused by water, Farmers’ additional claims can *1248 also be denied under the principles expressed in the foregoing cases.
All of the damages that Farmers has alleged are “in the nature of a tortious invasion” of its rights rather than rising “to the magnitude of an appropriation of some interest in [its] property permanently to the use of the Government.”
National By-Products, Inc. v. United States,
The injuries Farmers seeks to recover are properly characterized as tortious and thus do not have constitutional stature under the fifth amendment. The trial court, therefore, properly granted the City’s motion to dismiss Farmers’ inverse condemnation claims under the United States Constitution. Even reviewing the facts and inferences in the light most favorable to it, Farmers is not entitled to relief under the fifth amendment of the federal constitution.
III. CONTRACT CLAIM
Although flood control is clearly a рublic use, the construction of the culvert in the instant case was not conducted pursuant to the City’s eminent domain power. Rather, Farmers and the City entered into a right-of-way agreement for a creek easement “for the purpose of digging, laying concrete, connecting to and maintaining, cleaning and operation [sic] a creek and drainage facility.” Farmers claims that the agreement was a contract under which the City expressly and impliedly agreеd not to abuse the easement or unreasonably interfere with Farmers’ right to use the premises. We agree with Farmers’ assertion that the City does owe certain obligations to Farmers under the contract and under Utah law.
In denying that it had any obligations to Farmers under the agreement, the City points out that it did not sign the document. It did, however, accept and use the easement, and acceptance makes a written contract containing a grant binding upon the granteе.
Bracklein v. Realty Ins. Co.,
In
Thomas E. Jeremy Estate v. Salt Lake City,
In the instant casе, the agreement expressly reserves to Farmers the right “to fully use” the premises for all purposes except that for which the easement was granted. The agreement does not, however, contain an express covenant by the City to compensate Farmers for damages incurred in the construction or use of the culvert, even though at the time of contracting, certain damages were a foreseeable and necessary result of the granting of the easement. Under Jeremy, the consideration recited in the agreement is therefore presumptive compensation for those damages so long as they were reasonable. Farmers, however, would be entitled to compensation for “unreasonable” injuries. This is consistent with Utah case law.
Utah law provides that the rights of the dominant owner of an easement are impliedly limited by the rights of the servient owner.
Big Cottonwood Tanner Ditch Co. v. Moyle,
The City’s right to use its easement to the detriment of Farmers’ estate did not include unforeseeable, unreasonable damages over and above those necessary to use the easement for the purposes for which it was granted. The City is contractually obligated to compensate Farmers for those damages and cannot invoke governmental immunity because it was waived under Utah Code Ann. § 63-30-5. The determination of the unreasonableness of the City’s actions is a question of fact,
Big Cottonwood,
The trial court’s order of summary judgment on the contract claims is reversed, and this case is remanded for a trial on those claims.
Notes
. Recently, in
Colman v. Utah State Land Board,
. We acknowledge that the statute is inapplicable to this case and cite it only as a reflection of current legislative views on public policy.
. We note that this court has recently held in
Hansen v. Salt Lake County,
