Nоrco Construction, Inc. (Norco), a real estate developer, appeals from the grant of *1144 summary judgment to King County (the county). The district court found that the statute of limitations barred Norco’s federal claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as well as pendent state causes of action for tort and inverse condemnation. Norco argues that it could not have brought suit before August 1982. We agree, and find the statute of limitations no bar to Norco’s claims. We further reject the county’s contention that the earlier state mandamus proceeding was res judicata to this action.
Norco owns a seventy-five-acre tract of land in southeast King County. In May 1977, it sought preliminary plat approval under Wash.Rev.Code § 58.17.070 to subdivide the tract into one-acre lots. In August 1977, a county hearing examiner recommended approval of Norco’s preliminary plat; the examiner noted, however, that the plat was inconsistent with a proposed modification of the county’s comprehensive plan, known as the Soos Creek Plan. The Soos Creek Plan, ultimately adopted in November 1979, called for minimum five-acre lots on Norco’s land.
Washington law requires thаt within ninety days of filing, a county council approve, disapprove, or return for modification a preliminary plat application. Wash. Rev.Code § 58.17.140. On October 31, 1977, the King County Council (the council) declined to act on Norco’s application, referring it to the Planning and Community Development Committee, which was then considering the Soos Creek Plan. The council took no action on Norco’s application following its October 31,1977 meeting. On Jаnuary 30, 1978, the council passed an ordinance, King County Code § 19.08.250, providing for deferral of preliminary plat approvals if inconsistent with the pending Soos Creek amendments to the comprehensive plan.
In February 1979, Norco filеd a petition for a writ of mandamus in the state superi- or court seeking to force the county to act on its application. The court issued the writ in April 1979. The writ required the county to consider the Norco application on the basis of statutes and ordinances in effect when Norco completed the application, and specifically prohibited judging it against the requirements of the Soos Creek Plan. The county enjoined enforcement of the writ pending appeal, pursuant to Wash. Rev.Code § 4.92.080. The decision to grant the writ was affirmed by the state court of appeal,
Norco Construction, Inc. v. King County,
The supreme court decision was filed July 29, 1982; on August 23, 1982, the council approved Norcо’s application. In February 1983, Norco filed an action in state court for damages resulting from the county’s refusal to act on its application before August 23, 1982. Norco Construction, Inc. v. King County, King County Cause No. 83-2-02563-0. The complaint alleged causes of action for tort and inverse condemnation under state law, as well as a federal cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Under section 1983, Norco alleged- the county’s failure to act on the preliminary plat application within thе statutory period denied it procedural due process and equal protection (given the previous approval of similar proposals submitted by others), and deprived it of property without just compensation. King County removed the case to the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), (b).
The district court held Norco’s claims barred by statutes of limitations. It determined that Wash.Rev.Code § 4.16.080(2) barred the federal claims, held applicable to section 1983 actions brought in Washington by
Rose v. Rinaldi,
The parties agree that state law supplies the statute of limitations for all of Norcо’s claims.
See Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
State law also determines when the statute of limitations begins to run on state claims. Under Washington law, a cause of action aсcrues “when [a] party has a ‘right to apply to a court for relief.’ ”
United States Oil & Refining Co. v. Department of Ecology,
We first consider Norco’s federal claims. The district court found that all three of Norco’s section 1983 claims accrued on or before Octоber 31, 1977. It held that Norco knew then that the county had treated it differently from other applicants (the equal protection claim), that the county would not act within the times provided by statute (the due process claim), and that the county intended an indefinite stay of any decision whether to permit subdivision of the land into one-acre lots (the inverse taking).
The district court’s result is foreclosed by
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
— U.S. -,
We conclude that under federal law the general rule is that claims for inverse taking, and for alleged related injuries from denial of equal protection or denial of due process by unreasonable delаy or failure to act under mandated time periods, are not matured claims until planning authorities and state review entities make a final determination on the status of the property. The duration of the wrongful taking may be relevаnt to determining whether a wrong has occurred, as well as the extent of the damage suffered. We recognize a claim might also arise when it is clear beyond peradventure that excessive delay in such a final determinatiоn has caused the present destruction of the property’s beneficial use. The instant case does not require us to address that question, however.
*1146
The conclusion that a claim is premature for adjudication contrоls as well the determination that the claim has not accrued for purposes of limitations of actions. In suits for wrongful deprivation of property under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the same considerations that render a claim premature prevеnt accrual of a claim for limitations purposes, and the claim does not accrue until the relevant governmental authorities have made a final decision on the fate of the property.
McMillan v. Goleta Water District,
In the instant case, we hold that the cause of action cоuld not have accrued before August 1982, when the county made its final decision. Norco was entitled, indeed required, to await the final decision of the county without commencement of the statute of limitations. To hold that a cаuse of action accrued before that date in effect would bar Norco from relief. Courts have held consistently that a cause of action does not accrue until a party has a right to enforce the claim.
Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corp.,
We reach a similar conclusion with respect to Norco’s state law causes of action. Because Norco did not have the right prior to August 1982 to apply to a court for the relief which it now seeks, these clаims too are not barred by the statute of limitations.
United States Oil & Refining Co. v. Department of Ecology,
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Williamson County, supra,
may have one further impact in this litigation. In
Williamson County,
the Court concluded that the 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, for inverse taking, would not be ripe until the plaintiff could show that no adequate relief from the state was available. The Court noted that Tennessee law provided a property owner with statutory inverse condemnation rights in cases of unreasonably restrictive zoning laws.
The county argued that even if the damage claims were not untimely, they were barred as res judicata by reason of the earlier judgment in the state court. Although on appeal there was no oral argument of res judicata, both parties briefed the issue. We reach it here.
There is no dispute that Washington law determines whether Norco’s state and federal causes of action are barred as rеs judicata.
See, e.g., Migra v. Warren City School District,
Norco’s causes of action for damages are not res judicata, for Norco could not have raised them in the earlier mandamus proceeding. All it could show in that proceeding was a right to hаve
some
action taken
*1147-1149
on its application, and it is unlikely it could have shown any substantial damage caused by the violation of that right alone.
See Hillis Homes,
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
