Robert Milligan, Appellant, v. City of Red Oak, Iowa, Appellee.
No. 99-3778
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: May 11, 2000; Filed: October 16, 2000
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa [PUBLISHED]
Before BOWMAN, FLOYD R. GIBSON, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
Robert Milligan appeals the District Court‘s2 dismissal of his complaint against the city of Red Oak, Iowa, in which Milligan alleged a taking of his property by the city
I. BACKGROUND
Milligan owns a parcel of agricultural land in unincorporated Montgomery County, Iowa, adjacent to the Red Oak Municipal Airport. Milligan acquired his interest in this land in the mid-1980s from his parents who had owned the farm since the early 1960s. The city acquired easеments over portions of Milligan‘s land in 1964 when the airport was initially developed. Although zoned for industrial use, the property had been used agriculturally both before and subsequent to its acquisition by his parents. Milligan currently uses a portion of his farm for hog production and the remainder for grain production.
In an exрansion of his hog operation in the mid-1980‘s, Milligan added to his farm new buildings, a waste treatment facility, and an anaerobic hog manure lagoon. As part of this expansion, Milligan and the city negotiated a wastewater treatment contract. Shortly thereafter, the city determined that the strength of the waste discharged from the farm was in excess of that contemplated by the city in entering the agreement and in excess of the city wastewater treatment plant‘s capacity. Accordingly, the city refused to accept any additional animal waste from the farm. Milligan proposed to meet the farm‘s wastе disposal needs through the construction of an additional, much larger anaerobic hog manure lagoon. He proposed to locate this lagoon on an area of his land contiguous with the airport, part of which extended into the space between two runways. Milligan sought and obtained approval from the Iowa
After Milligan received the permit from DNR, but before substantial construction began, Montgomery County requested that Milligan оbtain a special use permit. Milligan ceased further construction and filed suit in the Iowa district court for Montgomery County requesting a declaratory judgment that his use of his property was exempt from county zoning under
While the declaratory judgment action was pending, the city filed a petition against Milligan in the Iowa district court for Montgomery County seeking temporary and permanent injunctions against construction of the lagoon. The city alleged interference with its easement and violation of city zoning ordinances concerning the airport hazard areas. Milligan answered that the easement obtained by the city in 1964 had been abandoned as a result of airport improvements in 1987. The city put forth two arguments in support of its claims. First, the easement, which was originally taken as a runway clear zone, continued to exist as an airport hazard area. Second, Milligan‘s proposed lagoon threatened airport safety because it would attract birds and waterfowl to the area of the runways and it would obstruct pilots’ view of the other runway. Following a trial on this matter, the Iowa district court granted the injunction prohibiting construction of the lagoon because it would encroach on the city‘s valid easement. Additionally, the court found that the lagoon would not constitute a safety hazard because it would not attract birds оr waterfowl.
Following the Iowa district court‘s second ruling, Milligan reconfigured his proposed lagoon and applied to DNR for a supplemental permit based on his revised plans for the lagoon. While that application was pending and unknown to Milligan, the Red Oak City Council passed a resolution authorizing the city to purchase or condemn
Approximately five months later, the city sent Milligan a letter offering to purchase a negative easement that would restrict use of the 30 acres to row crop farming. The city stipulated that if Milligan did not accept this offer, the city would commence condemnation proceedings to obtain the easement.
Milligan filed this case against the city in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa approximately two weeks after rеceiving the above mentioned letter. He requested temporary and permanent injunctions prohibiting the condemnation, alleging that the proposed condemnation amounted to an unconstitutional taking of his property because it lacked a valid public purpose. Specifically, he argued that the city‘s stated purpose for acquiring the easement, to avoid the airport safety hazard that allegedly would result from bird and waterfowl attraction to the lagoon, was not a proper basis for a condemnation action. Milligan cited the Iowa district court‘s previous ruling that the lagoon would not constitute such a hazard, arguing that the city was precluded from relitigating the same issue. In the alternative, he argued that no public purpose would be served by the taking because the city could not reasonably expect to achieve its goal of improving airport safety by prohibiting construction on the proposed easement area. After a two-day bench trial, at which the District Court received evidence on and considered the issue of whether the lagoon would pose a threat to airport safety by attracting birds, the District Court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law resolving the issue in favor of the city, and entered judgment denying Milligan‘s requested relief and dismissing the complaint.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the District Court‘s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. See Planned Parenthood of Greater Iowa, Inc. v. Atchison, 126 F.3d 1042, 1048 (8th Cir. 1997).
A. Public Purpose
The
While federal constitutional analysis rеquires that condemnation of private property must be rationally related to the public purpose for which it is taken, Iowa law provides that such a taking must be “necessary” to accomplish the public purpose. See
In Milligan‘s brief, he mentions in passing that the city‘s stated public purpose is simply a pretеxt for achieving a private purpose. The District Court rejected this argument, finding that the standard for judging whether the City Council‘s purpose is
B. Issue Preclusion
Milligan argues that the District Court is precluded from retrying the factual issue of whether his proposed lagoon would attract birds and thus create an airport hazard because the Iowa district court, in a prior case between the same parties, tried this issue and found that the lagoon posed no threat to airport safety. We disagree.
Issue preclusion prevents a party to a prior action from relitigating issues that were raised and resolved in the previous action. See, e.g., Hunter v. City of Des Moines, 300 N.W.2d 121, 123 (Iowa 1981). State legislative acts аnd judicial decisions “have the same full faith and credit in every court within the United States . . . as they have by law or usage in the courts of such State . . . from which they are taken.”
The issues of whether birds would be attracted to Milligan‘s proposed lagoon, and whether this would constitute an airport hazard, were raised and resolved in the state court. These same issues were raised in the District Court. The dispositive issues, however, in the two proceedings were not identical because different lagoon configurations were presented to the state and federal courts and because the state court found not a water fowl hazard but a pilot visibility hazard. On the basis of that finding, the state court granted the city‘s motion for an injunction prohibiting Milligan from constructing his lagoon as it was then planned. Therefore, inasmuch as the issues in the two judicial proceedings were not identical, the doctrine of issue preclusion is inapplicable.
More to the point, however, the District Court in any event was not reviewing the state judicial decision. Instead, its review was of a subsequent finding of the Red Oak City Council, a legislative body, that the lagoon would create a water fowl hazard to aviation. We have been shown no authority, and are unaware of any, for the proposition that through collateral estoрpel a finding made in a judicial decision can preclude a legislative body from later making a contrary finding. As stated earlier in this opinion, the city‘s action taken in the interest of airport safety meets both the federal rationally-related standard and the more stringent Iowa reasonably-expect-to-achieve standard, and therefore must be sustained.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, Milligan‘s arguments for reversal lack merit. Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
Notes
It is hereby found that an airport hazard endangers the lives and property of users of the airport and of ocсupants of land and other persons in its vicinity, and also, if of the obstruction type, in effect reduces the size of the area available for the landing, taking off and maneuvering of aircraft, thus tending to destroy or impair the utility of the airport and the public investment therein. Accordingly, it is hereby declared:
- That thе creation or establishment of an airport hazard is a public nuisance and an injury to the community served by the airport in question.
- That it is necessary in the interest of the public health, safety, and general welfare that the creation or establishment of airport hazards be prevented.
- That this should be accomplished, to the extent legally possible, by proper exercise of the police power.
- That the prevention of the creation or establishment of airport hazards, and the elimination, removal, alteration, mitigation, or marking and lighting of existing airport hazards are public purposes for which municipalities may raise and expend public funds, as an incident to the operation of airports, to acquire land or property interests therein.
