Opinion
A jury found against appellant City of Mill Valley and for respondent Marin Municipal Water District in an inverse condemnation action. The city appeals, contending that public property cannot be taken for purposes of inverse condemnation and that the district’s franchise is not a compensable property interest. We affirm the judgment.
I. Facts
On December 9, 1983, Hillsidе Avenue in Mill Valley collapsed and slid onto two parcels owned by John T. Swayne. He filed an inverse condemnation action against respondent Marin Municipal Water District, allеging that the landslide was caused by its failure to properly maintain its water pipes. Later, he amended his complaint to add a similar cause of action against appellant City of Mill Valley, alleging that the slide was caused by its failure to maintain the roadway over the district’s pipes. The district and the city settled with Swayne, each paying him $16,566.50, and Swayne dismissed his action. Thе city and the district cross-complained against one another, each seeking indemnification for its half of the settlement payment and seeking damages for its own loss resulting from the lаndslide. The parties stipulated the district suffered a loss of $17,242.89 while the city sustained $75,674 in damages, in addition to the settlement payment.
The city’s motions for judgment on the pleadings 1 and for nonsuit were denied to the extent that they attackеd the district’s inverse condemnation theory. Although its cross-complaint was based on several theories of recovery, the district submitted the case to the jury on only one—inverse condemnation. The jury found for the district, awarding the stipulated amount of damages: $16,566.50 for the Swayne settlement and $17,242.89 for the district’s own losses. The jury found against the city on its cross-complaint and awarded it no damages. Judgment was entered accordingly.
*1164 II. Inverse Condemnation of Public Property
First, the city contends that public property may not be taken for purposes of inverse condemnation. The city argues that inverse condemnation actions are constitutionally based, while the law of eminent domain— direct condemnation—is based on statute. Because it finds no constitutional authorization for the taking of public property in an inverse condemnation context, it reasons that no such cause of action exists for a taking of public property.
In many respeсts, the law of inverse condemnation parallels that of eminent domain. Both the state and federal Constitutions require just compensation for takings of “private property.” (U.S. Const., Amends. V, XIV; Cal. Const., art. I, § 19; see
Webb’s Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc.
v.
Beckwith
(1980)
Under this analysis, if the city was legally authorized to take district property by direct condemnation, the district may state an inverse condemnation cause of action. In California, the law of eminent domain permits a public entity with the power to condemn to take property already in public use for another, more necessary public use. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1240.610.)
4
Statutes specifically authorize the taking of public utility
*1165
franchises. (§ 1240.110.) The California Supreme Court recognizes that the city’s right to use its streets is paramount to a utility’s right to use them.
(Southern Cal. Gas Co.
v.
City of L. A.
(1958)
However, the case before us does not present a city that failed to compensate for an intentional taking, but a public entity that has caused unintentional physical damage to property. In this context, the law of inverse condemnation is not simply the mirror image of the law of eminent domain. Despite the constitutional basis of inverse condemnation, these unintentional damage cases are based primarily on principles оf tort and property law. (See
McMahan’s of Santa Monica
v.
City of Santa Monica, supra,
The city contends that this result runs counter to the purpose of inverse condemnation and eminent domain to socialize the burden of loss—to afford relief to the landownеr in cases in which it is unfair to ask him or her to bear a burden that should be borne by society. (See Mandelker,
Inverse Condemnation: The Constitutional Limits of Public Responsibility
(1966) 1966 Wis. L. Rev. 3, 8.) It argues that if the district can recover under an inverse condemnation theory, the loss distribution will decrease—from countywide to citywide—rather than increase, contrary to the cost-spreading poliсy of condemnation. We see two flaws in this argument. First, if
*1166
adopted, it would make the availability of an inverse condemnation cause of action dependent on the relative sizes of the parties—that is, a smaller entity could bring such an action against a larger one, but not vice versa. Reason suggests that the law have a more uniform approach to thе issue of whether public entities may state a cause of action in inverse condemnation. Second, the city’s analysis overlooks a basic fairness argument. One public entity should not be allowed to take property belonging to another public entity without compensation. Funds collected by one public entity for one purpose should not be thus apрropriated, disrupting that entity’s finances. (See
State
v.
Salt Lake City Public Board of Education
(1962)
III. Franchise Interest
In the alternative, the city contends that the district’s franchise interest cannot suрport this action. The district’s right to lay and maintain pipes under city streets is a franchise.
(State of California
v.
Marin Mun. W. Dist.
(1941)
However, thе city points out that under established law, a municipality-franchisor may compel a public utility-franchisee to relocate its lines without compensation to make way for “a proper governmental use of the streets.”
(Southern Cal. Gas Co.
v.
City of L. A., supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Anderson, P. J., and Poché, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 9, 1988, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 29, 1988.
Notes
The city’s motion for judgment on the pleadings was treаted as a demurrer.
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides: “. . . [N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” Article I, section 19 of the California Constitution provides: “Private property may be taken or damaged for public use only when just compensation . . . has first been paid to . . . the owner. . . .”
“It is ‘inverse’ because the damaging or taking normally precedes the payment of compensation.” (Condemnation Practice in California (Cont.Ed.Bar 1973) Inverse Condemnation, § 13.1, pp. 332-333.)
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
