The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The issue raised in this appeal is whether the notice of claim provision in the New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA), N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 12-3, applies to an action for inverse condemnation. The Law Division found that compliance with the TCA was not a prerequisite to pursuing inverse condemnation claims. We agree and affirm.
I.
The relevant facts are undisputed. In March 1997, plaintiffs Greenway Development Co., Inc. and Greenway Corporation (collectively Greenway) contracted with Paramus Investment Venture to purchase approximately 2.2 acres of land located in a residential two-family zone. Consistent with the zoning plan, Greenway intended to construct six two-family homes. Prior to closing title, Greenway searched the public records and found a subdivision map, filed May 3,1984, showing six two-family lots, and a site plan *549 approved by the Planning Board and Borough Engineer on April 19, 1981 with revisions of March 6, 1984, showing subdivided lots for the construction of a two-family house on each lot. The tax assessor confirmed that the lots were listed separately, that a two-family home was to be developed on each lot, and' that the Planning Board had approved a resolution providing for drainage based on that approved use of the property.
The property to be conveyed under the Greenway contract previously had been part of a larger parcel, known as the Atrium Property, that was located partially within a business zone and partially within a residential two-family zone. The Paramus Planning Board passed a resolution on January 29, 1982, granting a zoning variance to permit construction of a four-story office building on that portion of the land located in the business zone. Under the same resolution, the portion of the land that was located in the residential zone, including that which Greenway contracted to purchase, was to be used only as a buffer area. For reasons not revealed in the appellate record, that resolution was not made part of the subdivision approval file. Thus, after Greenway made a diligent search of the property, closed the title to the property and sought construction permits to erect two-family homes on the site, its applications were denied by the Borough of Paramus (Paramus).
Greenway instituted the present litigation in the Law Division by filing a Verified Complaint in Lieu of Prerogative Writs pursuant to Rule 4:69. An Order to Show Cause was issued on December 16, 1997. The complaint contained three counts. Count One sought to compel Paramus to issue building permits for two-family homes on the property. Count Two asserted inverse condemnation, and Count Three alleged interference with prospective economic advantage by Paramus and various municipal officials. On December 22, 1997, the trial court denied plaintiffs’ request to immediately direct the issuance of the permits, and instead remanded the matter to the Paramus Planning Board for clarification of the condition in the 1982 variance resolution requir *550 ing that the “[residential] zone be used as a buffer only.” On remand, the Planning Board determined, by resolution dated April 9, 1998, that it was intended that the residential portion remain undeveloped as a buffer between the office building and the surrounding residential area. Thereafter, Greenway filed an amended complaint adding the Planning Board as a defendant.
On May 5, 1998, Greenway filed a motion for summary judgment to compel Paramus to issue the requested building permits. The trial court found that prior to 1982 it was the Planning Board’s intention to permit the property to be developed with two-family residential dwellings. The court explained that if Paramus and the Planning Board did not intend the site to be developed as described in the approved and filed plans, the information contained in the public record should have been corrected prior to Greenway’s reliance on the public files. Accordingly, Paramus was directed to issue the requested building permits.
On November 4, 1998, Paramus and the Planning Board moved for summary judgment to dismiss the remaining two counts, which alleged inverse condemnation and interference with prospective economic advantage. Defendants argued that the order directing issuance of building permits rendered the claim for inverse condemnation moot, and the TCA’s immunity for administrative actions precluded liability for interference with prospective economic advantage. Alternatively, defendants argued that Greenway had failed to establish the requisite elements of a claim for interference with prospective economic advantage. Greenway cross-moved for summary judgment.
The trial court dismissed the interference with prospective economic advantage count, finding that defendants were entitled to immunity under the TCA because of Greenway’s failure to file a notice of claim, but granted Greenway’s cross-motion for liability under the inverse condemnation claim because Paramus prevented Greenway from developing the property. The issues regarding the nature and extent of damages were reserved for a trial. The court found defendants had “denied plaintiffs economically viable *551 use of their land, and interfered with [their] reasonable investment-backed expectations in that use, resulting in a regulatory taking.” The court held that Greenway was therefore entitled to fair compensation for the temporary taking that occurred between the initial denial of the permits until the court order compelling their issuance. The court found defendants caused delays that were beyond “normal” and “incidental,” and thus, when defendants decided not to issue the building permits despite their previous actions regarding the property, they acted at their own peril. The court held that neither defendants’ subsequent actions nor the 1982 resolution could override the Planning Board’s original approval of the two-family home subdivision.
In denying defendants’ motion for reconsideration of whether the TCA barred the inverse condemnation claim, the trial court considered itself bound by the holding in
Russo Farms, Inc. v. Vineland Bd. Of Educ.,
280
N.J.Super.
320, 325,
Defendants’ motion for leave to appeal to the Appellate Division the issue of whether the TCA applies to inverse condemnation claims was denied. We granted defendants’ motion for leave to appeal, 162
N.J.
658,
II.
Defendants argue that an “injury” under the TCA includes harm to constitutional rights, such as inverse condemnation, and *552 therefore, Greenway’s claim is subject to the TCA’s notice of claim provision. Injury is defined under the TCA as “[djeath, injury to a person, damage to or loss of property or any other injury that a person.may suffer.” N.J.S.A. 59:1-3. Defendants maintain that because the notice of claim provision was not satisfied, all damage claims are barred for want of jurisdiction. Greenway, on the other hand, contends that an inverse condemnation is a taking, and not a tort within the meaning of the TCA. Hence, Greenway maintains it is entitled to damages for an unconstitutional taking that is not subject to the TCA.
A.
The TCA seeks to provide compensation to tort victims without unduly interfering with governmental functions and without imposing an excessive burden on taxpayers.
See N.J.S.A
59:2-1 cmt. The TCA states: “Except as otherwise provided by this act, a public entity is not liable for an injury, whether such injury arises out of an act or omission of the public entity or a public employee or any other person.”
N.J.S.A.
59:2-1a. This means that generally, immunity applies and “liability is the exception.”
Fluehr v. City of Cape May,
159
N.J.
532, 539,
*553
In an inverse condemnation action, a landowner is seeking compensation for a
de facto
taking of his or her property.
Pinkowski v. Township of Montclair,
299
N.J.Super.
557, 575,
As Justice Holmes noted, even “a strong public desire to improve the public condition is not enough to warrant achieving the desire by a shorter cut than the constitutional way of paying for the change.”
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
260
U.S.
393, 416, 43
S.Ct.
158, 160, 67
L.Ed.
322, 326 (1922). If there has been a taking, and defendants do not dispute that claim in this appeal, applicable are the guarantees of both the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, as applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, and Article I, paragraph 20 of the New Jersey Constitution. Those provisions prohibit “ ‘[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.’”
In re Plan for Orderly Withdrawal,
129
N.J.
389, 414,
*554 B.
In support of their assertion that inverse condemnation is an injury within the meaning of the TCA, defendants rely on
Lloyd v. Borough of Stone Harbor,
179
N.J.Super.
496, 512,
The holdings in those two cases, however, were effectively overruled by this Court’s decision in
Fuchilla v. Layman,
109
N.J.
319, 337,
Although the issue in this case involves inverse condemnation rather than employment discrimination, we conclude nonetheless that defendants’ reliance on
Lloyd
and
Healey
for the proposition that the notice of claim provision of the TCA applies to “constitutional torts” is misplaced.
Russo Farms
had been decided by the Appellate Division nearly three years before the complaint in the present case was filed. That court held that the TCA does not
*555
apply to inverse condemnation actions.
Russo Farms, supra,
280
N.J.Super.
at 325,
To the extent that an inverse condemnation is a “constitutional tort,” it is more akin to an action in lieu of prerogative writs seeking “to review the reasonableness of municipal action resulting in the diminution of property values and to recover damages for such action,”
Harisadan v. City of East Orange,
187
N.J.Super.
65, 69,
The primary remedy sought in this case was an order directing the issuance of building permits. The request for damages was ancillary to the primary relief sought but had to be joined in the complaint to avoid the preclusive effect of Rule 4:27-1 and Rule 4:30A. Rule 4:69-6 requires a prerogative writs action to be filed within “45 days after the accrual of the right.” The TCA notice of claim provision requires notice to be filed within ninety days after the accrual of the cause of action. N.J.S.A. 59:8-8. Suit may not be instituted until the expiration of six months from the date notice of claim was received. Ibid. Therefore, when the Rules and statute are viewed together, it becomes apparent that the forty-five day period in which to commence a prerogative writs action conflicts with N.J.S.A 59:8-8, if applicable, because the *556 forty-five day filing period of Rule 4:69-6 would necessarily expire during the six-month waiting period of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.
In any event, if N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 was applicable, by filing the complaint within forty-five days after the denial of the permits, Paramus was promptly notified of the claim for which damages were sought, thereby providing substantial compliance with the purpose of the TCA’s notice provision. We base our decision, however, on the fact that there are compelling reasons why the TCA’s notice provisions are not applicable to this type of case.
“The primary focus of the [TCA] is on negligence and similar tortious conduct impliedly involving fault.”
Fuchilla, supra,
109
N.J.
at 338,
Similarly important is the fact that the TCA was the Legislature’s response to the Court’s abrogation of the State’s sovereign immunity in
Willis v. Department of Conservation and Econ. Dev.,
55
N.J.
534,
Today, we resolve the issue that we did not decide in our Russo Farms opinion. We hold that inverse condemnation is not a tort or an “injury” within the meaning of the TCA, for which the notice of claim provision is applicable. An inverse condemnation action should proceed unencumbered by the TCA.
A majority of jurisdictions that have addressed the issue have come to the same conclusion.
See, e.g., Odello Bros. v. County of Monterey,
63
Cal.App.4th
778, 785-86, 73
Cal.Rptr.2d
903 (Ct.App. 1998) (holding Tort Claims Act inapplicable to action for inverse condemnation because action is not considered to sound in tort);
Young v. Palm Beach County,
III.
We are also persuaded that the notice provision of the TCA does not apply to inverse condemnation claims because they allege, in a state court proceeding, a violation of the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment. That amendment provides
*558
that “private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation.” That constitutional prohibition against unconstitutional takings is self-executing, in the sense that such claims arise independently of the TCA. Additionally, “statutes [cannot] abrogate constitutional rights.”
Lerman v. City of Portland,
675
F.Supp.
11, 15 (D.Me.1987),
aff'd,
We also rely on
Felder v. Casey,
487
U.S.
131, 108
S.Ct.
2302,
Other courts have similarly interpreted
Felder
to render state notice-of-claim laws inapplicable in actions alleging violations of federal as well as state constitutional rights, such as claims of inverse condemnation.
See, e.g., Moore Real Estate, Inc. v. Porter County Drainage Bd.,
578
N.E.
2d 380, 381 (Ind.Ct.App.1991) (citing
Felder,
court held that governmental agency “may not use ... the tort claims act, to trump the constitutional rights of [a land owner]” to compensation for constructive taking);
Wolff v. Secretary of S.D. Game, Fish & Parks Dep’t,
*559 IV.
The judgment of the Law Division is affirmed. The matter is remanded to the Law Division for further proceedings “to provide compensation for the period during which the taking was effective.”
First English Evan. Luth. Church v. County of Los Angeles,
482
U.S.
304, 321, 107
S.Ct.
2378, 2389,
For affirmance and remandment — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices O’HERN, COLEMAN, LONG, VERNIERO and LaVECCHIA — 6.
Opposed — None.
