This is an appeal from the decision of the Circuit Court for Washington County (Moylan, J.) to grant appellee’s motion to dismiss appellants’ counterclaim against appellee on July 25, 1995. The trial court treated appellee’s motion as though it were a motion for summary judgment and considered evidence beyond the four corners of appellants' counterclaim. Appellant presents the following issues for our review:
I. Did the trial court err when it found that Christina Hiett was in jeopardy of contracting rabies, and that the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene was bound and justified in ordering the ferret’s destruction and testing to determine whether she was at such risk?
II. Is theMaryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene required by the United States Constitution and Maryland’s Constitution to pay compensation to the owners of a healthy pet animal for the destruction and testing of their animal pursuant to the Department’s rabies eradication program?
III. Did the trial court’s denial of Heather Sauders’s motion to intervene during the injunction hearing bar her from joining as a counterclaimant in the second amended complaint?
FACTS
On December 22, 1994, Gina Raynor, a twelve-year-old girl, took her pet ferret to a slumber party hosted by another girl’s parents. Thirteen-year-old Christina Hiett attended the sleep-over party. Unknown to her parents, Christina was thinking about
When Christina went home the next day, she did not immediately tell her parents about the ferret bite. Her mother, Victoria Hiett, learned of the incident only after directly confronting her daughter about the bite mark on her hand. After she learned the nature of the bite, Ms. Hiett contacted her doctor who referred her to the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, appellee, and told her to go to a hospital emergency room. An emergency room physician gave Christina a tetanus shot, but did not recommend that Christina be given a rabies vaccination because of the combination of the treatment’s side effects and the doctor’s lack of knowledge concerning the ferret that bit Christina.
Appellee informed Ms. Hiett that in cases where an animal has bitten a person, there are two choices—(1) the individual may receive the rabies prophylaxis, or (2) the animal can be destroyed and its brain tested to determine if it has rabies and if vaccination is necessary. Before deciding upon her daughter’s course of action, Ms. Hiett conducted her own research of rabies and the necessary vaccinations—she consulted the Physicians Desk Reference, called her family doctor, called the hospital, and contacted the maker of the vaccine. Finally, Ms. Hiett decided that, because the animal was not vaccinated against rabies, Christina would have to undergo the rabies treatment if it could not be determined whether the ferret had rabies. Consequently, Ms. Hiett wanted the animal destroyed and its brain tested for rabies before she forced her daughter to undergo what she perceived to be a painful series of injections that could have other harmful side effects.
As a result of Ms. Hiett’s decision, appellee ordered Gina’s father, Steven Raynor, to give the ferret to the local Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) or to a local veterinarian for destruction and testing. 1 Six days later, appellee sought from the Circuit Court for Washington County an order requiring Mr. Raynor to turn over the ferret for testing because he had not yet done so. Pending the resolution of appellee’s petition, Mr. Raynor agreed to give the ferret to the local SPCA for safekeeping.
After hearing testimony presented by both parties on January 20 and 23, 1995, the circuit court granted appellee’s petition for an injunction requiring appellants to submit the ferret for rabies testing. The circuit court stated that appellee and the Washington County Health Department (WCHD) were empowered to compel the destruction and testing of the ferret by Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18-313 and § 18-320 (1984), as well as COMAR 10.06.02. The court explained that it found that the testimony of several doctors indicated that rabies is a deadly disease and that the only method available to determine if an animal has it is to test the animal’s brain after it has been destroyed. It stated that the regulations defined entire species as domesticated or wild and not individual pets. Additionally, the court found that the regulations requiring the testing of a ferret that bites a human were rationally and cogently developed. The circuit court determined that appellee’s regulations implementing Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18-313,
et seq.
(1984) were based upon the recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP) associated with the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, Center for Infectious Diseases, Center for Disease Control (CDC).
As a result, the circuit court ordered that the animal be tested. Additionally, the trial court granted appellant Gina Raynor permission to intervene in the action and allowed appellants to submit a counterclaim against appellee. The circuit court, however, denied Heather Sauders’s attempt to intervene and become a party to the counterclaim. Heather, a friend of Gina’s, claimed to be a part owner of the ferret. When the ferret was born, Gina and Heather shared ownership of her. Each took care of the ferret for periods of up to two months at different times during which the ferret never lived outside and had no exposure to wild animals.
Appellants filed a three-part counterclaim alleging (1) inverse condemnation, (2) damages that were compensable under the Maryland Constitution and Declaration of Rights, and (3) conversion under the Maryland Tort Claims Act. The complaint disputed the necessity of destroying all ferrets that have bitten humans and stated that appellee’s decision to test the ferret in this case was unnecessary. As a result, appellants claim that they are entitled to compensation for the destruction of their property—the ferret.
Appellee filed a motion to dismiss appellants’ claim alleging that no compensation was owed. The trial court treated this motion as if it were a motion for summary judgment and considered much of the evidence presented to the circuit court during the injunction hearing. The trial court found that appellee was justified in its decision to destroy and test the ferret because Christina was in danger of contracting rabies. The court held that appellee was acting within the legitimate boundaries of its police power when it did so. ■ The trial court also dismissed the unlawful conversion count because it held that there was no unlawful taking. Finally, the trial court stated that the circuit court had already denied Heather’s motion to intervene and so it would not consider the petition.
I
Appellants contend that summary judgment is inappropriate in the case
sub judice.
Appellants do not question the trial court’s decision to treat appellee’s motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment. Rather, appellants argue that the evidence before the trial court demonstrated that the rabies test was not necessary because Christina’s health was never in jeopardy and because the ferret did not have rabies. Appellants argue that these two facts make appellee’s decision to seize and destroy the animal an improper use of the State’s police power. Appellants apparently concede that appellee could take the ferret from appellants for testing so long as the taking was justified as a legitimate exercise of the police power,
Andrus v. Allard,
Appellants claim that, contrary to the trial court’s finding, Christina was never in jeopardy of contracting rabies, as shown by the negative test result. Appellants assert that the evidence adduced at the injunction hearing and considered by the trial court on summary judgment indicated that Christina was not at risk to contract rabies from the ferret’s bite because of the animal’s history, species and circumstances of the bite. In other words, appellants argue that appellee’s
As we consider this case, we are, of course, mindful that we are reviewing the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment and that, as a result, we must determine whether the trial court was legally correct. The rationale is that
[w]hen making a determination on summary judgment, a trial court makes no findings of fact. Rather, the court decides whether a genuine issue of material fact exists to prevent the entry of summary judgment. Under this standard, therefore, we review the trial court’s ruling as a matter of law.
IA Constr. Corp. v. Carney,
Appellants direct this Court’s attention to the testimony of several witnesses that they claim establish that appellee was not justified when it tested the ferret. Dr. Hoffman, an expert in pediatrics, testified that Christina was not in any danger of contracting rabies. He stated:
I believe that the circumstances of the bite, uh, the history is, is totally absent of any exposure to rabies. Uh, the fact that the, there is no logical explanation for a, this animal to, to have been exposed.... So in this case I would be telling those parents, both the bite parents, the parents of the child who, who was nipped, as well as the parents who currently own the animal, that there is no risk in this situation and that post-exposure prophylaxis would not be warranted and that quarantine of the animal, uh, you know, would be something to, to be considered only if there was nervous ness. That is what my assessment is, that this is a no risk situation.
(Emphasis added). Additionally, Dr. Badura, a veterinarian who examined the ferret in question after the biting incident, testified that she found the animal to be within the “normal health parameters of a ferret.” This diagnosis was based upon her examination of the ferret at which time she looked at the eyes, ears, and throat of the ferret and performed a skulltation of the heart and lungs, palpation of the abdomen, and a rectal temperature reading. At the conclusion of her visit, Dr. Badura found that there was no indication that the ferret had any health problem. Appellants place additional weight on the testimony of both Dr. Grigor and Dr. Hoffman, who stated that epidemiological evidence shows that no human has ever been reported to have contracted rabies from a ferret and that the number of reported rabid ferrets was statistically non-existent.
Appellants also point to two other sources to dispute the trial court’s finding that Christina’s health was at risk. Appellants state that it was the testimony of those responsible for the care of the ferret that it lived its entire life in a domestic environment—the ferret lived at either Gina Raynor’s or Heather Sauders’s home since birth. Furthermore, it was their testimony that at no time was the ferret lost or did it come in contact with other wild animals. Finally, appellants direct our attention to the test result to prove their point—the test was negative for rabies. This, appellants assert, is proof positive that Christina was never in danger of contracting rabies.
Appellants further argue that the ferret did not need to be tested because the necessity of the prophylaxis treatment could have been determined without performing a rabies test on the animal’s brain. According to appellants’ pediatric expert, Dr. Hoffman, whether vaccination against rabies is required after an individual has been bitten is
based on the clinical evaluation of the circumstances, it is not based on a laboratory examination. The laboratory examinationcan, can [sic] bring comfort to a, to a low level, you know, to a medium level, I won’t say low level, there’s no risk, there’s risk or there is extreme risk, uh, and in the, in the suspected cases where, uh, where you think the animal, and it’s not flagrant, you know, but I think the bottom line is I would not rely on the test by itself. There are situations where tests will be negative ... [and] I would not stop post-exposure prophylaxis if, if it had already been started based on that negative test.
Appellants contend that the doctor’s testimony supports their argument that testing was unnecessary because the need for post-exposure prophylaxis treatment could have been determined merely by studying the animal that bit Christina, in this case a domesticated ferret.
Finally, appellants assert that appellee’s decision to destroy and test the ferret was an act that was outside the State’s police power because appellee’s own regulatory policy wrongly classified ferrets as wild animals that must be destroyed and tested in the event that they bite a human. Md.Code Ann, Health-Gen. § 18-313 (1986) authorizes appellee to establish regulations, inter alia, to control rabies. COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(3) was formulated in compliance with § 18-313 and requires any “wild animal” that bites a human to be destroyed and the head to be submitted to appellee’s laboratory for rabies testing. 2 Md.Code Ann, Health-Gen. § 18-320(d)(1) also authorizes the destruction and testing of a biting animal if it is necessary to preserve human health. 3 Appellee classifies ferrets as wild animals that are subject to the above regulations. Appellants, however, argue that the trial court had evidence before it that dogs, cats, and livestock, all of which they claim are more prone to expose an individual to rabies than ferrets, are not required to be destroyed. Because ferrets are less likely to infect a human, appellants claim that appellee’s classification of ferrets as wild animals is wrong and that ferrets should be treated as domesticated animals that are only quarantined in the event that they bite a human. Additionally, appellants argue that the regulatory scheme allowed appellee merely to quarantine the ferret and compel the bite victim to receive post-exposure treatment.
Each argument put forward by appellants to challenge appellee’s decision to destroy the ferret denies that appellee’s actions were within the police power that the State and its agencies may lawfully exercise. In this case, appellants attack the validity of a statute, Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18-320(d)(l) (1984), and a regulation, COMAE. 10.06.02.06(B)(3), which itself was created to satisfy a statutory mandate set forth in Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18-313 (1986). We must, therefore, determine whether those laws are lawful manifestations of the State’s police power. “A legislative enactment is within the permissible bounds of the police power if it is reasonably and substantially related to the public health, ... safety and welfare of the people.”
Cade v. Montgomery County,
The wisdom or expediency of a law adopted in the exercise of the police power of the state is not subject to judicial review and such a statute will not be held void if there are any considerations relating to the public welfare by which it can be supported.
Id.
at 588-89,
Initially, we note that appellants sought to place before the trial court and this Court the wrong issue. Of the five objections appellants articulate to the handling of the ferret in this case, two are based on the assertion that Christina’s health in this case was never at risk and the destruction of the animal was unnecessary because (1) the ferret was domesticated, having been raised and kept in captivity its entire life; and (2) the animal was examined by a veterinarian after the incident and found to be in good health. Appellants seem to suggest that the question is whether appellee had the authority to seize and destroy this ferret. That is not the question. Rather, appellants must challenge the enabling legislation that allows appellee to destroy and test ferrets in general.
They cannot acknowledge the lawfulness of Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18-320(d)(l) (1984), and COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(3) and challenge appellee’s specific application to this case of the powers granted therein because these sections directly authorize appellee’s conduct in the event any ferret, healthy or otherwise, bites a human. In other words, appellants cannot argue that this individual ferret should not have been destroyed, but rather must argue that appellee’s treatment of all ferrets is in some manner objectionable. This principle was recognized by the circuit court during its consideration of the matter during the injunction hearings on January 20 and 23, 1995, when it stated, “[T]he regulations relate to species of animals, not particular animals.” (Emphasis added.) Because this is the case, appellants must challenge appellee’s authority to destroy and test ferrets.
Among the remaining three arguments that appellee’s seizure, destruction, and testing of the ferret was beyond the State’s police powers, one questions the wisdom of Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18—320(d)(1) (1984), and 'COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(3). Appellants assert that destruction of an animal is never necessary as the need for treatment can be determined by the biting animal’s history and the possibility that it could have contracted rabies. As noted above, Dr. Hoffman testified that in cases where a human is exposed to rabies, one cannot rely on a rabies test to determine whether treatment is necessary because mistakes may be made by a testing laboratory and there can be false negatives wrongly indicating that the victim of an animal bite did not contract rabies. Instead, Dr. Hoffman testified that the proper course of action for the victim is to determine whether the biting animal is at high risk of having rabies regardless of any rabies test. Appellants assert that the course prescribed for the handling of wild animals is irrational because the test need not be performed in order to evaluate the necessity for the victim to undergo prophylaxis treatments.
As previously noted, when the soundness of a law adopted in accord with the State’s police power is questioned, the law will not be held void if there are any considerations relating to the public welfare by which it can be supported.
See Aero Motors, Inc.,
Additionally, even where other experts believe alternative solutions to a problem are more appropriate than that proposed by an agency, courts may defer to the agency’s own expert opinion of the best method for resolution of the problem.
See Mourning v. Family Publications Serv., Inc.,
Appellants also argue that appellee’s policy, which classifies ferrets as wild animals for the purpose of administering its regulations, is wrong. As stated above, appellants presented evidence to the trial court that ferrets were not properly classified as “wild” animals and are, in fact, less likely to transmit rabies to humans than other “domesticated” animals such as dogs and cats that are merely quarantined after a biting episode. Appellee’s regulations separate animals into two categories: domesticated animals and wild animals.
See
COMAR 10.06.02.02. In the event that an animal bites a human, its treatment is determined by its classification. Domesticated animals are not required to be destroyed and tested, but rather are simply quarantined for a period of time.
See
COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(1),(2). Wild animals, on the other hand, are to be destroyed and tested unless an exception is granted by the public health veterinarian.
See
COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(3). Appellee classifies ferrets as wild animals. We give special deference to appellee’s interpretation of its own regulations.
See Dep’t of Health and Mental Hygiene v. Reeders Memorial Home, Inc.,
Exotic pets (includingferrets) and domestic animals crossbred with wild animals are considered wild animals by the National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians and the Conference of State and Territorial Epidemiologists because they may be highly susceptible to rabies and could transmit the disease. Because the period of rabies virus shedding in these animals is unknown, these animals should be killed and tested rather than confined and observed when they bite humans.
Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (1991) (emphasis added).
4
Appellee’s reliance on ACIP’s recommendation is strong evidence that its classification of ferrets as wild animals is proper. Findings of the CDC, of which ACIP is a part, are given great deference by courts.
See John Doe v. UMMS,
Appellants also complain that the trial court erred when it granted summary judgment to appellee because they claim that appellee was not required to destroy the animal as COMAR 10.06.02.06(B)(3) allows for exceptions to the rule of destruction and testing. In response to this assertion, quarantine is a permissible alternative in the event that a valuable wild animal bites a human, not a mandatory alternative. Appellee decided against quarantine as it was permitted to do.
Finally, appellants suggest that the trial court did not independently assess the facts but instead accepted the facts as found by the circuit court during the injunction hearing as the law of the case.
5
Appellants do
In light of the above-stated principles, appellee’s decision to destroy biting ferrets is, as a matter of law, a lawful use of the State’s police powers because it is rationally calculated to protect the public health. As a result, appellee was within the limits of the police power when it destroyed and tested the ferret.
II
Appellants also contend that appellee was not entitled to judgment as a matter of law because appellee’s actions constituted a compensable taking under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, applied to the State through the Fourteenth Amendment, and under the Maryland Constitution, Article III, § 40. Appellants state that these constitutional provisions prohibit the government, and by extension appellee, from taking private property for public use without providing just compensation. Appellants assert that this rule mandates that compensation be paid to a property owner when the State’s exercise of its police power deprives the owner of all uses of his or her property. In this case, appellants complain that appellee completely deprived them of the value of their ferret. Hence, appellants contend that they were entitled to compensation from appellee for its taking of their ferret and that the trial court erred when it found otherwise.
The trial court granted summary judgment to appellee in part because it found that there was no compensable taking. The trial court held, and we affirm, that the taking of the ferret was a legitimate exercise of the State’s police power. Citing
Ungar v. State,
Appellants preliminarily argue that the trial court found that there was no taking in this case because the court, citing
Mugler v. Kansas,
Appellants also object, however, to the trial court’s determination that because appellee exercised the State’s police powers the taking of the ferret is not compensable. Appellants cite
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
In the case
sub judice,
appellee’s seizure, destruction, and testing of appellants’ animal was not a compensable taking. Although appellants argue that appellee’s
Appellee’s decision to destroy and test the ferret resulted in a taking of appellants’ property. The Supreme Court has long recognized that government must affect the property rights of the people in order effectively to govern. Requiring government to pay in each instance where regulation diminishes the value of personal property would handcuff the government and compel it to regulate by purchase.
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
There is no abstract or fixed point at which judicial intervention under the Takings Clause becomes appropriate.... Formulas and factors have been developed in a variety of settings. Resolution of each case, however, ultimately calls as much for the exercise of judgment as for the application of logic.
Andrus v. Allard,
An abstract test has been developed by the Supreme Court and Maryland’s appellate courts, a “government restriction upon the use of property ... constitute^] a taking in the constitutional sense, ... [and] compensation must be paid, [if] the restriction ... [is] such that it essentially deprives the owner of all beneficial uses of his property.”
Maryland v. Exxon Corp.,
If, instead, the uses of private property were subject to unbridled, uncompensated qualification under the police power, “the natural tendency of human nature [would be] to extend the qualification more and more until at last private property disappeared].”
Lucas,
In this case, appellants were deprived of all of the value of the property
We are mindful of this Court’s
dicta
in
Ungar v. State,
A prohibition simply upon the use of property for purposes that are declared, by valid legislation, to be injurious to the health, morals, or safety of the community, cannot, in any just sense, be deemed a taking or an appropriation of property for the public benefit.... The power which the states have of prohibiting ... use by individuals of their property, as will be prejudicial to the health, the morals, or the safety of the public, is not, and, consistently with the existence and safety of organized society, cannot be, burdened with the condition that the state must compensate such individual owners for pecuniary losses they may sustain, by reason of their not being permitted, by noxious use of their property, to inflict injury upon the community.
Bureau of Mines,
The noxious-use test, however, was rejected by the Supreme Court in Lucas. The Supreme Court stated:
When it is understood that “prevention of harmful use” was merely our early formulation of the police power justification necessary to sustain (without compensation) any regulatory diminution in value [including the complete diminution of value]; and that the distinction between regulation that “prevents harmful use” and that which “confers benefits” [which must be compensated] is difficult, if not impossible, to discern on an objective, value free basis; it becomes self-evident that noxious-use logic cannot serve as a touchstone to distinguish regulatory “takings”—which require compensation—from regulatory deprivations that do not require compensation.
Lucas,
At this juncture it appears that our analysis is complete and that appellants are entitled to compensation for the complete taking of their ferret. Such is not the case. As appellants recognize, a taking is not compensable if it is effected as a result of a regulation that does no more than proscribe or abate an activity for which a property owner is not entitled to use his or her property. In Lucas, the Supreme Court stated:
Any limitation so severe [that it deprives a land owner of all economic value of his or her property] cannot be newly legislated or decreed (without compensation), but must inhere in the title itself, in the restrictions that background principles of the State’s law of property and nuisance already place[d] upon land ownership.
Id.
at 1029,
The Supreme Court [in Lucas ] reasoned that under common-law ... no owner of land had any right to use his land in a manner harmful to others. Accordingly, a regulation ... preventing or abating such an unlawful use took nothing at all....
Offen v. Prince George’s County,
We recognize that the above-stated principles address the taking of real property and the occasions when such a taking is not compensable despite the loss to the landowner of 100% of the value of his or her property. Their application to personal property is a natural extension. In cases involving personal property, however, the mere deprivation of 100% of its economic value is not sufficient to invoke this test for compensation. In Lucas, the Supreme Court reiterated the longstanding principle that,
in the case of personal property, by reason of the State’s traditionally high degree of control over commercial dealings, [the owner] ought to be aware of the possibility that new regulation might even render his property economically worthless (at least if the property’s only economically productive use is sale or manufacture for sale).
Lucas,
duplicate the result that could have been achieved in the courts—by adjacent land owners (or other uniquely affected persons) under the State’s law of private nuisance, or by the State under its complementary power to abate nuisances that affect the public generally, or otherwise.
Lucas,
Hence, although the seizure, destruction, and testing of the ferret was a taking, because'that taking merely denied appellants the right to use their property in an already prohibited manner, there was no compensable taking. Appellants cite
Yancey v. United States,
Dep’t of Agrie,
is also inapplicable to this case. In that case, the State of Florida destroyed citrus trees it had tested and found to be disease free in order to stem the tide of an infectious disease. The Supreme Court of Florida held that
the State’s action constituted a compensable taking because the State was aware of the fact that the trees were healthy. It stated, “just compensation [is] a clear requisite ... to the act of destroying
healthy
trees.”
Dep’t of Agrie.,
when the state, in its exercise of the police power, destroys decayed fruit, unwholesome meats or diseased cattle, the constitutional requirement of “just compensation” clearly does not compel the state to reimburse the owner for the property destroyed because such property is valueless, incapable of any lawful use, and a source of public danger.
Id. (emphasis added). In the case sub judice, a biting ferret is a public nuisance that poses a threat to human health. The animal cannot be tested for rabies prior to destruction. In such a case, the principles stated in Dep’t of Agrie, lead to only one possible conclusion—that no compensable taking has occurred.
Because the trial court did not err when it granted summary judgment to appellee, we need not address appellants’ contention that Heather Sauders was improperly kept from joining the lawsuit against appellee.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WASHINGTON COUNTY AFFIRMED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. Both parties agree, that the only method available at present to test an animal for rabies is to test its brain tissue. This cannot be accomplished without destroying the animal.
. COMAR 10.06.02.06:
B. Quarantine of Biting Animals
(3) Wild Animals. Any wild animal that bites or otherwise exposes to rabies a human shall be immediately destroyed and its head submitted to the State Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Central Laboratory for rabies testing. Exceptions to this requirement may be granted by the public health veterinarian.
. Md.Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 18—320(d)(1) states:
The public health veterinarian or local health officer may order the immediate and humane destruction of a biting animal for rabies testing if: it is necessary to preserve human health. '
. "Shedding” refers to the time during which the rabies virus lives in the saliva of an infected animal and is transferable to a bite victim.
. Appellants also assert that the trial court treated the circuit court’s previous decision not to allow Heather Sauders to intervene in the case as though it had precedential effect. Because this will be addressed in section III of this opinion, we need not address it now.
. In this
pre-Lucas
case the Supreme Court considered whether a Pennsylvania law that required coal mine owners to leave 50% of the coal beneath certain structures to be left in place to provide surface support was a taking under the Fifth Amendment. In that case, the Supreme Court cited
Miller v. Schoene,
In upholding the state action, the Court did not consider it necessary to "weigh with nicety the question whether the infected cedars constitute a nuisance according to common law; or whether they may be so declared by statute.” Rather, it was clear that the State's exercise of its police power to prevent the impending danger was justified, and did not require compensation.
Keystone Bituminous Coal Assoc.,
. Appellants attempt at this juncture to reargue the appropriateness of appellee’s classification of ferrets as wild animals, as well as appellee’s" conclusion that ferrets must be destroyed and tested if they bite a human, but as, we addressed these arguments in I above, we shall not do so again here.
. We do not mean to say there exists an investment backed expectations test separate and apart from the viable economic use test. See Offen, supra.
