¶ 1. Landowner Ondovchik Family Limited Partnership appeals from the trial court’s
¶2. The facts of this case are largely undisputed. That said, because this appeal arises out of defendant’s successful motion to dismiss, if there are any facts in dispute, “we must assume as true all factual allegations” pleaded by landowner.
Amiot v. Ames,
¶ 3. This dispute goes back many years. In 2000, defendant filed a necessity petition to condemn land to expand Route 7 in Shelburne — an expansion that landowner opposed. The trial court granted the necessity petition, and we affirmed that decision in 2002.
In re S. Burlington-Shelburne Highway Project,
¶ 4. In the current dispute, the highway expansion has occurred, and landowner now makes additional allegations, which, as noted, we assume to be true.
Amiot,
¶ 5. On appeal, landowner raises three arguments for overturning the trial court’s dismissal of the case. First, landowner argues that the trial court made a procedural error when it failed to notify landowner of the proposed grounds for dismissal, thereby unfairly depriving landowner of an opportunity to respond in
¶ 6. Landowner’s first argument is that the trial court’s decision must be reversed because the court never notified landowner of the proposed legal grounds for dismissal. Landowner is correct that defendant’s motion to dismiss failed to raise the issues that the trial court ultimately found dispositive. Defendant’s motion made only two legal arguments: (1) no other courts have found liability for snowplowing; and (2) defendant has sovereign immunity. The trial court ultimately dismissed the case on different grounds. Nevertheless, we find no error in the trial court’s actions.
¶ 7. Landowner’s argument relies on
Huminski v. Lavoie,
where we stated that “before the trial court may dismiss a complaint for failure to state a cause of action on its own motion, the court must notify the parties of the proposed action, and afford an opportunity to address the asserted grounds for dismissal.”
¶ 8. This claim of procedural error essentially boils down to a complaint that the trial court deprived landowner’s counsel of a fair opportunity to argue the case. Though
Huminski
recognized that plaintiffs are often in a superior position to address factual deficiencies in a complaint,
¶ 9. Landowner next argues that the trial court erred in dismissing the trespass claim. Landowner alleges that defendant (through snow throw and water runoff) is physically invading landowner’s property. Landowner is correct that a trespass does not always require personal entry onto land, since a “tangible invasion of their property” is enough to make out a prima facie case for trespass.
John Larkin, Inc. v. Marceau,
¶ 10. Although the bar for bringing a trespass claim is low, mere entry onto another’s land does not in itself constitute a
trespass because such entry can be privileged: “Trespass involves the
unprivileged
entry on to the land in possession of another. By definition, trespass involves conduct that the trespasser has
no right
to engage in . . . .”
Wild v. Brooks,
¶ 11. Defendant argues on appeal, and the trial court held, that snowplows are engaged in privileged, lawful conduct when they are plowing roads. We agree. Route 7 is a part of the National Highway System. See 23 U.S.C. § 103(b) (describing the National Highway System). Thus, under federal law, defendant has a duty to remove snow and engage in other routine maintenance of this highway. See id. § 116(a). According to § 211 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965):
A duty or authority imposed or created by legislative enactment carries with it the privilege to enter land in the possession of another for the purpose of performing or exercising such duty or authority in so far as the entry is reasonably necessary to such performance or exercise, if, but only if, all the requirements of the enactment are fulfilled.
Although landowner claims that this Court has never specifically adopted §211, “we have recently looked to the Restatement of Torts for guidance on the law of trespass.”
John Larkin,
¶ 12. Applying § 211 to the facts of this case, landowner’s theory of liability fails as a matter of law. Defendant’s conduct is privileged, and there is no merit to landowner’s argument that a trial is needed to determine whether snowplowing is “reasonably necessary” for defendant to fulfill its duty to maintain roads. Although landowner argues that other methods of snowplowing are available, defendant has discretion in exercising its police powers to choose an efficient method of removing snow from Vermont highways, even if the chosen method causes some incursion upon or incidental damage to landowner’s property. Cf., e.g.,
Miller v. Schoene,
¶ 13. Finally, landowner argues that the trial court improperly dismissed its inverse condemnation claim. Because we find that landowner’s complaint contains no facts or circumstances that would entitle landowner to relief under a theory of inverse condemnation, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
¶ 14. Landowner alleges that defendant’s snowplows throw contaminated snow and water onto landowner’s property and building, resulting in past and continuing injuries. Landowner claims that defendant’s conduct has effected a taking of the property for public use. Landowner
¶ 15. Landowner cites this Court’s decision in
Timms
as providing strong support for finding a takings claim here. In
Timms,
the landowner’s well was destroyed by the state’s non-negligent salting of roads, and we held this to be a taking. However, in the nearly three decades since
Timms
was decided, it has become clear that this case is an outlier. See T. Goger, Annotation,
Salting for Snow Removal as Taking or Damaging Abutting Property for Eminent Domain Purposes,
¶ 16. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has noted, “not every ‘invasion’ of private property resulting from government activity amounts to an appropriation.”
Ridge Line, Inc. v. United States,
¶ 17. Here, landowner does not claim that defendant has authorized a permanent occupation, intrusion, or appropriation of landowner’s property such that it permanently ousts landowner from possession. Rather, landowner alleges that legitimate governmental activities
outside
of landowner’s property occasionally intrude upon and damage landowner’s property. Any damages from such activities are purely consequential, and landowner’s complaint therefore lacks any facts or circumstances that would allow for recovery under a claim of inverse condemnation. See, e.g.,
Ridge Line,
¶ 18. Landowner is correct that temporary, repeated incursions can sometimes rise to the level of a taking, but only in instances where the incursions amount to the taking of an easement. See, e.g.,
Ridge Line,
¶ 19. Further, the purpose of the Takings Clause is “to bar 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.”
Armstrong v. United States,
¶ 20. Even if landowner’s building is closer to the road than the buildings of other landowners, we do not base our decision today on the distance between the building and the road; instead, our decision is grounded in the nature and magnitude of the alleged intrusion. The analysis of whether governmental action effects a taking looks only at whether a property interest has been taken and does not take into account the type of property affected. If a taking is found, then the type of property taken is, of course, relevant to determining the proper amount of compensation. But the type of property is irrelevant to the initial step of determining whether a taking has actually occurred. See, e.g.,
Loretto,
¶21. Inverse condemnation claims are reserved for instances in which the state should have entered into eminent domain proceedings initially.
Lingle,
¶ 22. In summary, although landowner presents novel theories of liability — which courts should usually be “especially” hesitant to dismiss,
Endres v. Endres,
Affirmed.
Notes
Timms
was decided before a number of significant United States Supreme Court decisions that provided further guidance on interpreting federal takings jurisprudence. While some of these cases expanded the circumstances in which a taking could be found, these cases also clarified those situations in which governmental action would not effect a taking. See, e.g.,
Loretto,
