OPINION
In July, 2000, respondent Housing and Redevelopment Authority for the City of Richfield commenced a quick take condemnation pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 117.042 (2000) to acquire real property owned by appellants Walser Auto Sales, Inc., Motor-werks, Inc., R.J. Walser, Paul Walser, and Andrew Walser. Appellants objected to the condemnatiоn petition and the district court held a trial. In January 2001, the court granted respondent’s petition. This case presents the issue of whether an appeal challenging the public purpose of a quick take condemnation pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 117.042 is moot based either on reciprocal vesting at the time the property was transferred to respondent or on subsequent changes to the property after judgment was entered by the district court on the public purpose challenge to respondent’s use of eminent domain. We also granted review of the court of appeals decision affirming the district court.
In 1993, respondent and the City Council of the City of Richfield (City) passed resolutions approving a Redevelopment Plan for the Richfield Redevelopment Project Area (1993 Redevelopment Plan). This plan grouped the previous redevelopment projects and additional property into one comprehensivе redevelopment plan that included approximately 90 percent of Richfield, but it did not include appellants’ property. In May 1999, respondent recommended that the City adopt a resolution to modify the 1993 Redevelopment Plan to include the Interchange West Area, an area bounded by Penn Avenue on the west, 76th Street on the north, Knox Avenue on the east, and 78th Street on the south. This area included appellants’ property. A public hearing was held on June 14, 1999 and the City passed a resolution authorizing the Modification of the 1993 Redevelopment Plan so that it would include the Interchange West Area.
Around August 1999, Best Buy Co., Inc. (Best Buy), idеntified the Interchange West Area as a possible site for a new corporate headquarters. On March 28, 2000, respondent and Best Buy entered into a contract for private development of the Interchange West Area. This contract required Best Buy to make diligent efforts to negotiate the purchase of the buildings located in the Interchange West Area. Despite Best Buy’s efforts to do so, Best Buy was unable to negotiate a deal to purchase appellants’ property. As a result, sometime between April and July 2000, Best Buy requested that respondent acquire this property through the use of eminent domain.
On July 17, 2000, respondent passed a resolution authorizing the use of eminent domain to acquire property owned by appellants. Respondent then filed a petition in Hennepin County District Court seeking to acquire appellants’ property pursuant to a “quick take” under Minn.Stat. § 117.042. 1 Appellants challenged the quick take and а trial was held. On Janu *888 ary 19, 2001, the district court granted respondent’s petition and entered judgment authorizing a quick take, subject to appellants’ right to remain on the property pursuant to a lease until midnight on June 15, 2001. The court also ordered the transfer of title to respondent subject to it depositing the approved аppraised value of the property with the court and filing the order with the appropriate recording agency-
On February 16, 2001, appellants filed their notice of appeal but did not move for a stay of the January 19, 2001 order or post a supersedeas bond. On March 9, 2001, appellants moved the district cоurt for a stay to prevent respondents from transferring title to Best Buy. The court denied appellants’ request for a stay, concluding that it had no jurisdiction to stay the transfer from respondent to Best Buy because the transfer from appellants to respondent had already occurred. This order also provided that in the event the court of appeals were to conclude that the district court had jurisdiction, appellants would be required to post a supersedeas bond in the amount of $15 million. The court stayed the effect of its order for 48 hours, allowing appellants time to appeal to the court of appeals. Appellants did not appeal and respondent transferred title to the property to Best Buy on March 16, 2001.
On July 3, 2001, the court of appeals affirmed the district court, concluding that appellants’ appeal was not moot and that the district court did not clearly err in granting respondent’s condemnation petition.
Housing and Development Auth. in and for the City of Richfield v. Walser Auto Sales, Inc.,
We must first address the mootness issue for when an event occurs pending appeal that makes a decision on the merits unnecessary or an award of effective relief impossible, the appeal should be dismissed as moot.
See In re Application of Minnegasco,
In State ex rel McFarland, v. Erskine, we held:
In every form of procedure for appropriating land for the public use, there must be a point where the right of the condemner to abandon the proceeding is lost and the right of the landowner to compensation becomes vested. As a general rule the condemner cannot deprive the landowner of a vested right to compensation by abandoning the proceeding. The theory upon which [this] rule is based is that, upon final termination of the proceeding, the right of the condemner to take and hоld the land and the right of the landowner to the money are correlative and coincident and vest simultaneously in the respective parties.
The dispute over respondent’s right to take appellants’ property makes this case fundamentally different from the line of cases relied upon by respondent. Specifically, in those cases there was no issue on appeal as to the condemning authority’s right to take the land at issue; rather, the reciprocal vesting doctrine was invoked to enforce an owner’s right to payment when the condemning authority, without the consent of the landowner, sought to abandon, dismiss, or discontinue the condemnation proceedings.
See City of Maplewood v. Kavanagh,
Respondent argues for a bright line rule that the parties’ rights in this case reciprocally vested the moment title was transferred, thereby rendering appellants’ public purpose challenge moot. Respondent
*890
relies primarily on our decision in
Mikulay
to support its argument. However, the only issue we found moot in
Mikulay
was the ejectment case brought by the landowner, which was moot “by virtue of the surrender of possession by the landowners to the county and the county’s acceptance of such possession” and the fact that “there [was] nothing for [this court] to decide as far as that appeal [was] conсerned.”
Mikulay,
292 Minn, at 205,
As the court of appeals recognized, Minn.Stat. § 117.215 (2000), whiсh provides that a condemning authority takes a fee simple interest without any right of reversion under any circumstances, applies only if property is taken for a public purpose.
Walser,
We havе recognized that equitable relief may remain available even after the condemning authority has acquired title to the property.
See County of Blue Earth v. Stauffenberg,
Respondent further argues that the appeal is moot because physical changes to the Interchange West Area have made it impossible to return appellants’ property in the condition it existed prior to respondent’s acquisition of title. This appeal is not moot if appellants could be afforded effective relief.
See Schmidt,
As to the remaining issues for which we granted review, the court is evenly divided. Therefore, the decision of the court of appeals stands.
Affirmed as to mootness issue.
Notes
. Pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 117.042, a petitioner is allowed to obtain titlе and possession of all or part of an owner’s property prior to filing of an award by court appointed commissioners on payment or deposit with the *888 court of an amount equal to the petitioner’s appraisal of value.
. To hold otherwise would actually insulate and arguably reward condemning authorities who fail to meet the public purpose requirements, but begin improvements prior to the conclusion of the very litigation challenging this authority.
