Rhode Island, through its Department of Environmental Management, acquired an area of land in the Pascoag Reservoir (“Reservoir” or “Lake”) by adverse possession and obtained a prescriptive easement on behalf of the public to use the Reservoir for recreational activities. In this inverse condemnation suit, 1 Pascoag Reservoir & Dam, LLC (“Pascoag”), the Reservoir’s owner, seeks compensation for that acquisition.
The district court dismissed the case for failure to state a claim.
Pascoag Reservoir & Dam, LLC v. Rhode Island,
The state appeals the first finding, asserting that adverse possession and prescription do not constitute a taking of property under the Constitution. Pascoag appeals the dismissal of its claim, arguing that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the recent judicial determination that the state had acquired property rights in the Reservoir.
We agree with the district court that Pascoag failed to state a viable claim. Because Pascoag failed to timely pursue its state remedies, it forfeited its federal claim. Following the “fundamental rule of judicial restraint,” we do not reach the constitutional question of whether compensation is due when the state acquires land by adverse possession or prescription.
Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan,
I. Facts
Located in the towns of Burrillville and Glocester, Rhode Island, the Reservoir (also known as Echo Lake) is more than two miles long and has more than ten miles of shoreline. Pascoag’s predecessor in title created the Lake in 1860; Pascoag has owned the Reservoir since 1983.' In 1964, the state purchased a lot abutting the Reservoir and constructed a public boat ramp the following year.
Until at least 1997, “members of the public could ... use the ramp as a point of access to the lake for various recreational activities, including boating and fishing.”
Reitsma v. Pascoag Reservoir & Dam, LLC,
In 1998, the state brought suit in state court asserting, among other things, that it had acquired property rights in the Reservoir. Pascoag cross-claimed, alleging that the state’s actions constituted a taking without just compensation, but the state courts did not decide the taking issue because Pascoag later voluntarily dismissed its inverse condemnation claim. In 2001, the Rhode Island Supreme Court held that the state had acquired by adverse possession a small portion of the Lake bottom (occupied by the boat ramp) and had acquired, on the public’s behalf, a prescriptive easement to use the boat ramp to access the entire Lake for recreational purposes.
Id.
at 834. The court held “that the state had begun to use the Reservoir property in 1965 and, under the Rhode Island ten year adverse possession statute, had acquired title to a portion of the Reservoir plus an easement in 1975.”
Pascoag Federal Decision,
Pascoag filed this complaint in federal court in October 2001, alleging that the state violated the Takings Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and asserting related state law claims. The district court, treating the claim as one arising under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, dismissed the suit, and this appeal followed.
II. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
Rockwell v. Cape Cod Hosp.,
III. Discussion
A. Prerequisites to a Takings Claim
In
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank,
the Supreme Court outlined two prerequisites to a federal suit alleging a Fifth Amendment taking of a property interest.
Although
Williamson County
was a regulatory taking case, a modified verison of its timeliness analysis applies to physical taking cases.
Daniel v. County of Santa Barbara,
B. State Action Requirement
Here, if Rhode Island “provides an adequate process for obtaining compensation, and resort to that process holds out some realistic promise of yielding just compensation,” Pascoag may not seek compensation in federal court for an alleged taking without first resorting to the state process.
Gilbert v. City of Cambridge,
Pascoag did not seek compensation through the state court. Pascoag’s burden is to show that one of the narrow exceptions to the state action requirement applies. The Supreme Court in
Williamson County
identified two exceptions — where state remedies were “unavailable” or “inadequate.”
1. Availability of adequate state remedies
First, we consider whether adequate state remedies were available to Pascoag. Courts have made exceptions to
Williamson County’s
state action requirement when state law did not recognize the taking that occurred, or did not permit the relief required to make the plaintiff whole.
See, e.g., Daniels,
Pascoag cannot show that Rhode Island’s remedies were inadequate or unavailable. The Rhode Island Constitution prohibits the taking of private property for public use without just compensation and Rhode Island state courts have long allowed recovery through suits for inverse condemnation.
Annicelli v. Town of South Kingstown,
2. Futility of pursuing state remedies 5
In its decision regarding the property rights of the state and Pascoag, the Rhode Island Supreme Court discussed Pascoag’s potential takings claims in dicta:
[E]ven if the state’s conduct from 1965 to 1975 had been unlawful and amounted to an improper taking of the lake owner’s property without paying just compensation, and even if the lake owner’s property had not been taken in the constitutional sense until the prescriptive period ended in 1975 — issues that we have no need to decide in this case — the corporation and its predecessors failed to assert any takings claim in a timely manner. Thus, they are barred from asserting them now under any statute of limitations that possibly could apply to such claims....
Pascoag State Decision,
Again, Pascoag fails to carry its burden to show that an exception to the state action requirement applies. Pascoag’s futility argument is simply that it is now time-barred from making state law claims. If the futility rule were read this broadly it would swallow the general rule of state remedy exhaustion. Like the other exceptions, the futility exception must consider the landowner’s available state remedies at the time of the taking.
See Williamson County,
C. Consequences of Failure to Bring a Timely State Claim
Pascoag did not satisfy the
Williamson County
prerequisites for a federal claim. We have stated that takings claims are “unripe until the potential state remedy has been more fully pursued.”
7
Gilbert,
We assume for purposes of this appeal that a taking claim may arise when the government acquires property rights by adverse possession or prescription. Reviewing the dates as determined by the Rhode Island Supreme Court, the state and the public began using the land and water in a manner that was open, actual, notorious, hostile, adverse, continuous, and under a claim of right in 1965.
Pascoag State Decision,
Relying on
United States v. Dickinson,
While Pascoag points to facts suggesting that the situation regarding ownership of the Reservoir was not certain as late as *95 1997, the State Supreme Court found that the State’s use satisfied all the adverse possession requirements by 1975. At that time a final account could be struck, and nothing in the State’s use of the Lake changed over time, so piecemeal litigation would not result. There was continuous occupancy by the State for ten years at which point property rights were acquired by operation of law and, if compensable, must be countered by a state court suit within the period allowed by the state statute of limitations.
Pascoag also asserts that its claim was not ripe until the decision of the Rhode Island Supreme Court. We disagree. First, Pascoag’s argument is at odds with the state court’s finding of adverse possession and prescription, which is binding on Pascoag and requires open and notorious possession by the adverse party. That determination means, assuming arguendo that a taking claim could be made for acquisition by adverse possession or prescription, Pascoag should have known that a taking was in progress and brought suit under state law at that time (within the relevant statute of limitations). 8 The statute of limitations for a state taking claim is, at most, 10 years (for “all civil actions not otherwise limited”), and likely 1 year (for “assessment of damages in state condemnation proceedings”). R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-36 (2002). Pascoag’s claim was ripe under state law at least by 1975, when Pascoag, assuming it had any claim at all, could have brought suit for recovery in state proceedings. If it had done so and the state had denied a remedy in violation of the Constitution, then a § 1983 claim would have ripened at the time of the denial. To its detriment, Pascoag did not file suit, but instead waited until the state sought judicial remedies in 1998.
Second, while the
Williamson County
requirements typically reveal a claim to be premature, they may also reveal that a claim is barred from the federal forum.
See Vandor, Inc. v. Militello,
In
Gamble,
the plaintiff filed suit in federal court alleging that she had been denied just compensation by a zoning plan.
Gamble,
Similarly, Pascoag’s failure to bring a timely suit for compensation under state law has led to the forfeiture of its federal taking claim. Even making all reasonable inferences in favor of Pascoag — that a taking claim can stand when the state acquires land by adverse possession, that the claim did not accrue until the state assumed property rights in 1975, and that the Rhode Island statute of limitations for such a claim is 10 years — Pascoag’s state claim was time-barred in 1985. “[A] claimant cannot be permitted to let the time for seeking a state remedy pass without doing anything to obtain it and then proceed in federal court on the basis that no state remedies are open.”
Id.
Pascoag’s failure to assert a timely state claim has foreclosed its federal cause of action. “Litigants who neglect or disdain their state remedies are out of court, period.”
River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland Park,
IV. Conclusion
To sum up, a taking by adverse possession occurred, on Pascoag’s own theory, in 1975 after a ten-year period of government occupancy or use. At that point, Pascoag had an obligation to bring a suit in state court for compensation within the limitations period unless the state remedy was plainly futile (which in this case it was not); and by failing to do so it forfeited any federal claim that state processes were inadequate. Of course, the situation in 1975 may well have been unclear from a legal standpoint, but for that, Pascoag’s remedy was to bring a lawsuit within the statutory period. The question of whether or not the state must pay when it takes land by adverse possession or prescription will have to wait for another day. Because Pascoag failed to bring a timely claim in state court, it forfeited its federal takings claim. The district court’s decision is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Inverse condemnation is " 'a cause of action against a governmental defendant to recover the value of property which has been taken in fact by the governmental defendant, even though no formal exercise of the power of eminent domain has been attempted by the taking agency.' ”
United States v. Clarke,
. This case does not raise the issue of Whether the
Williamson County
requirements apply when a litigant alleges that the state has taken property for a purely private use.
See Daniels v. Area Plan Comm'n,
. Both the fee simple in the Lake bottom and the easement on behalf of the public are permanent physical occupations.
See Nollan v. Cal. Coastal Comm’n,
. The Fifth Amendment provides that "private property [shall
not]
be taken for public use without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. It applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
MacDonald, Sommer & Frates v. County of Yolo,
. We recognized a futility exception to
Williamson County’s
final decision requirement where “the granting authority has dug in its heels and made it transparently clear that the permit, application or no, will not be forthcoming.”
Gilbert,
. Because Pascoag’s federal claim has been forfeited, we need not address the issue of whether Pascoag, who became the owner of the Reservoir in 1983, has a right to compensation.
See Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
. The term "ripe” is confusing because, as explained infra, a plaintiff is
barred
from bringing federal suit in a situation such as Pascoag's, where the state statute of limitations has run. Ripeness terminology suggests that a claim will later be available to the plaintiff; such language has been avoided in some recent cases.
See City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd., 526
U.S. 687, 721,
. What remedies did Pascoag have available to it? From 1965 to 1975, before adverse possession and prescription transferred title, Pascoag could have brought a suit to evict the state from the land or, alternatively, should have demanded that the state agree in writing that occupancy was not intended to be adverse but was by temporary and revocable permission. This may seem harsh but adverse possession law puts this burden on all landowners as to all occupants.
