The Constitution does not forbid government to take private property for public use; it merely requires that, if it does so, it pay the owner just compensation. Therefore the Constitution is not violated until the government refuses to compensate the owner.
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank,
The plaintiffs started down that path, but before completing their state-cоurt proceeding (which remains pending) filed the present suit, in federal court, seeking just compensation under federal constitutional law. They justify this short-circuiting of the state courts on the ground that state law is so clearly against them that it would be futile to proceed to final judgment in those courts. The district court disagreed and granted the town’s motion to dismiss.
The plaintiffs own a parcel of land that on its west side is adjacent to a railroad right оf way and on its north side to storm-water detention ponds and a waste water treatment facility; the ponds and the treatment facility are owned by Crystal Lake. The plaintiffs’ land drained through a ditch in the railroad right of way until the tоwn installed a pipeline in the ditch at an angle that cut off the plaintiffs’ drainage, resulting in intermittent but recurring flooding of their land from the ponds that transformed it from productive farmland into worthless wetlands. It is the resulting impairment of the value of their land that the plaintiffs claim is a taking entitling them to just compensation.
They argue that under Illinois law, as authoritatively declared in
People ex rel. Pratt v. Rosenfield,
If a state statute or сonstitutional provision provided that inverse condemnation was inapplicable to an impairment of land values that was due to intermittent flooding, recourse to state remedies would indeed be pointless and would therefore
*966
not be required.
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank, supra,
The Illinois cases that hold that intermittent flooding does not create the sort of damage for which compensation is required rest on the common sense view that ordinarily such flooding does not do permanent damage. Illustrative is
Luperini v. County of Du Page,
But the situation has changed with the rise of severe legal restrictions (especially those imposed by the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251
et seq.)
on the use that a property owner may make of land declared to be wetlands. E.g.,
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
*967
We see a glimmering of recognition of this point in
Luperini v. County of Du-Page, supra.
The case involved the same kind of intermittent flooding as this case— flooding due to the county’s having installed a storm sewer on property adjаcent to the plaintiffs’ property that diverted water onto their property. In ruling against the plaintiffs in their inverse condemnation suit on the ground that “where the public improvement [the storm sewer] causes only temporary accumulations of water on the subject property, a taking has not occurred,” the court noted evidence that “the plaintiffs’ property had been subject to occasional flooding prior to the storm sewer being installed and that an undefined portion of the property was previously classified as jurisdictional wetlands.”
The Supreme Court of Illinois has not weighed in on the issue since the Pratt case in 1948, more than half a century ago. It is premature to conclude that if faced with a case such as this it would deny relief on the basis of a mechanical application of the “temporary accumulations” doctrine.
For us to rule otherwise would actually do a disfavor to property owners such as these рlaintiffs, who, in order to bring the case within a “futility” exception, find themselves arguing against themselves, as when they say in their brief: “The matter is not remotely debatable. The Owners have no remedy under Illinois inverse condemnation law.” Thе first sentence is definitely wrong, and the second sentence may well be wrong. But when the plaintiffs, disappointed in this court, resume the litigation in the state court, they will find those sentences quoted against them by their adversaries.
A “futility” еxception broad enough to embrace this case not only would induce owners to shoot themselves in the foot, but would reflect an exaggerated conception of the rigidity of common law doctrines, make the right to sue in federal court depend on uncertain predictions about what state courts would do in a similar case, and curtail the evolution of state common law by keeping cases that challenge the existing doctrine out of state court where they could influence the law.
We did say in the
SGB
case that “in principle one could imagine a precedent with the same effect as the lack of an inverse-condemnаtion law. Suppose, for example, the Supreme Court of Indiana had held that regulatory takings as a class are never compensable under the state’s inverse-condemnation law.”
SGB Financial Services, Inc. v. Consolidated City of Indianapolis, supra,
So the plaintiffs’ federal case was rightly dismissed, and that raises the question of what will happen to their federal claim pressed futilely on us. In state court they were seeking relief under Illinois state law, not, so far as we are aware, under the federal Constitution. Although the
Williamson
line of cases that requires the property owner to seek compensation in the state courts speaks in terms of “exhaustion” of remedies, that is a misnomer. For if, as the present plaintiffs will have to do, the property owner goes through the entire state proceeding, and he loses, he cannot maintain a federal suit. The failure to complain of the taking under federal as well as state law is a case of “splitting” a claim, thus barring by virtue of the doctrinе of res judicata a subsequent suit under federal law. For the general principle, see
Torcasso v. Standard Outdoor Sales, Inc.,
It is unclear whether the plaintiffs have even raised their federal claim in the pending state court proceeding. (They have not pressed it.) If they have not done so but still can, they would be well advised to do so.
Affirmed.
