Lead Opinion
Opinion by
This dispute over interference with an easement juxtaposes the property rights of plaintiff, Upper Platte and Beaver Canal Company (Company), which holds the dominant estate, and the immunity from tort liability under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act, §§ 24-10-101 to ~120, C.R.S. 2009 (CGIA), of defendants, Riverview Commons General Improvement District and the City of Fort Morgan (collectively, City)
I. FACTS
The trial court neither held an evidentiary hearing under Trinity Broadcasting of Denver, Inc. v. City of Westminster,
The Company holds easements to carry water through its ditch and to access the ditch for maintenance. In 2008, defendant Seagull-Fort Morgan, L.L.C. (not a party to this appeal), began a residential development on property through which the ditch runs. The final plat of the development, recorded in 2004, dedicates and conveys all streets and alleys to the City, subject to existing but unspecified easements. Seagull graded Canal Street, which parallels the ditch on its north bank. Later, Seagull paved Canal Street. Whether these actions occurred before or after the City accepted the dedication in the final plat is unclear.
The complaint alleges that these changes to Canal Street lowered and narrowed the ditch's north bank, thereby impairing the Company's ability to access the ditch with maintenance equipment and increasing the risk of overflow. In moving to dismiss, the City did not challenge these allegations, nor does it do so on appeal.
When negotiations to protect its easements rights failed, the Company brought this action against Seagull for trespass and later joined the City. As against the City, the amended complaint seeks declaratory, infunc-tive, and restorative relief:
66. [Bly accepting the dedication of Canal Street and/or the conveyance of Canal Street by other means as constructed by Seagull, the GID and the City have created uncertainty and insecurity with respect to the Company's rights in the Canal right-of-way and the Access and Use Easement.
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68. The Company therefore seeks a declaratory judgment ... determining that the Defendants have no interest, estate, claim, or right that permits them to alter the banks of the Canal or to prevent the proper maintenance of the Canal and forever barring and enjoining the Defendants from interfering with Plaintiff's rights to the Canal right-of-way and Access and Use Easement; permitting and providing for the restoration of the Canal banks to their pre-existing condition; and for such other relief as the Court may deem proper.
IIL LAW
We begin by examining the seope of immunity under the CGIA. In CGIA cases, we defer to the trial court's factual findings if supported by the record, but interpret the statute de novo. Rector v. City and County of Denver,
A. -Application of the CGIA to Bar Declaratory and Equitable Claims
Subject to limited exceptions not relevant here, the CGIA bars claims that "lie[ ] . or could lie in tort." Colorado Department of Transportation v. Brown Group Retail, Inc, 182 P.8d 687, 690 (Colo.2008). "However, the exact seope of governmental immunity under the Act is difficult to define because the meanings of the terms 'tort' and 'could le in tort' are vague." City of Colorado Springs v. Commers,
,
In Conners,
Whether the CGIA bars all claims for declaratory relief and common law injunctive relief has not been resolved. Robinson,
Brown Growp held that the CGIA barred a claim for a declaration that a state agency "[was] responsible for a pro rata share of past, present, and future costs" to remediate groundwater contamination.
In CAMAS Colorado, Inc. v. Board of County Commissioners,
Therefore, we conclude that equitable and declaratory claims may be, but are not necessarily, barred by the CGIA.
B. Equitable and Declaratory Relief Under Property Law
The City does not dispute the Company's easements, which arise from construction of the ditch in the late nineteenth century. See In re Tonko,
Nor does the City dispute that these casements run with the land. See DR/CR Family, LLLP v. Burger,
The Company's "right to inspect, operate, and maintain a ditch easement is a right that cannot be abrogated by alteration or change to the ditch." In re Tonko,
Colorado law recognizes declaratory relief in easement disputes. See, eg., Roaring Fork Club, L.P. v. St. Jude's Co.,
Where the servient owner has interfered with the dominant owner's easement, injunctive relief is available. Seq, eg., Roaring Fork Club, 36 P.8d at 1287-88; Proper v. Greager,
And where an easement has been unilaterally altered, restorative relief is also available. Roaring Fork Club,
Roaring Fork Club notes that damages are inadequate in many easement cases because land is unique and courts must seek to accommodate competing uses. Id. at 1285-836. Similarly, 1 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies 784-85 (2d ed.1993), explains that in an easement alteration case, "damages alone will not provide the plaintiff with the actual use to which he is entitled," and thus:
[Clourts usually grant the easement owner injunctive relief when it is desired and when the defendant's conduct in fact interferes with the easement rights.... Mandatory injunctions, for example an injunction to remove an obstruction on the easement, are not unusual where the facts warrant such relief.
The Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes $ 8.3 (2000) further explains why easement cases often require noncompensa-tory relief:
(1) A servitude may be enforced by any appropriate remedy or combination of remedies, which may include declaratory judgment, ... injunctions, [and] restitution....
(Comment b) Servitudes have traditionally enjoyed the strong protection afforded property interests by specific remedies designed to secure enjoyment of the intended servitude rather than compensation designed to substitute for its loss.... [TTheir value is often difficult to monetize and impossible to replace without a change of location; they are appropriately protected by property rules rather than lability rules....
For obstruction of an easement, damages and injunctions requiring removal of the obstruction, restoration of the easement,*716 and prohibiting future obstruction are normally appropriate.
Therefore, we conclude that under property law, the Company could obtain declaratory, injunctive, and restorative relief concerning its easements.
III. APPLICATION
The City contends that because the Company's claims against it lie in tort under Brown Group, they are barred by the CGIA. We disagree. The claims for declaratory and injunctive relief do not depend on the City's liability for tortious conduct, do not seek compensation for injury caused by breach of such a duty, and do not derive from breach of a tort duty.
A. The Company's Claims Differ from Those in Brown Group
The City's primary reliance on Brown Group to bar the claim for declaratory relief is misplaced because there, the declaratory judgment claim was "premised upon, and could succeed only upon a demonstration of, the [state agency's] liability for tortious conduct" involving groundwater contamination.
Similarly, the Company's claim for injune-tive relief to prevent future interference with the easements does not depend on the City's "liability for tortious conduct." Rather, these claims also lie against the City because as the owner of the servient estate, it has access to the dominant estate. CJ Williom-son v. Downs,
In Brown Group, 182 P.8d at 689, the contribution and unjust enrichment claims "allege[d] that the [state agency] was liable for a portion of the substantial [remediation] costs," and the declaratory judgment claim sought to establish that "the [state agency] was responsible for a pro rata share of past, present, and future costs." See Commers,
The noncompensatory nature of relief is another indicator that the CGIA does not bar the claim. Compare Conners,
Moreover, an easement holder's right to be free from interference with use and enjoyment does not derive from "the breach of a duty recognized in tort law." Robinson,
As against the City, the amended complaint requests "a declaratory judgment ... permitting and providing for the restoration of the Canal banks to their pre-existing condition." However, at oral argument, counsel for the Company explained that "[what we have is a claim for restorative action against the developer who is responsible for the construction of the road in a way that impairs our operations and our easement." Counsel expressly abandoned any claim that would require the City to restore the ditch. Such relief against Seagull, even assuming the City could be ordered to allow Seagull access to perform this work, would not implicate the primary objective of the CGIA-protecting governmental entities from liability for tort damages. Commers,
Therefore, we conclude that Brown Group does not require us to bar the Company's claims for declaratory, injunctive, and-as limited-restorative relief under the CIA.
B. Roaring Fork Club Does Not Require Treating the Company's Claims as Arising in Tort
The City further contends Roaring Fork Club limits remedies based on a timeline: equitable and declaratory relief are available until the easement has been altered; only a trespass claim lies after the alteration. Hence, according to the City, because the alteration of the easement had already occurred when the Company brought suit, Roaring Fork Club leaves the Company with only a tort claim that is barred by the CGIA.
The City cites no language in Roaring Fork Club supporting such a limitation. It would be at odds with the court's admonition that "we do not support the self-help remedy that Club exercised here." Roaring Fork Club,
Instead, Roaring Fork Club merely identifies two possible remedies when an easement has been altered: damages for trespass or an equitable resolution of the competing interests. Roaring Fork Club, 836 P.8d at 1237. It does not limit the property law principle that injunctive relief is available to the holder of an easement that has been unilaterally altered. Proper v. Greager,
Having concluded that the City is not entitled to dismissal under the CGIA, we reject its request for attorney fees.
The order is affirmed.
Notes
. The General Improvement District (GID) was created by the City in 2003 as a quasi-municipal subdivision. The City Council members serve as the ex officio Board of Directors of the GID. The parties do not identify any distinction between the GID and the City for purposes of the CGIA.
. Other jurisdictions are in accord. See, eg., Green v. Mann, 237 AD.2d 566, 655 NY.S.2d 627, 629 (1997) (where servient owner's construction of a bulkhead blocking easement holder's access to unique area of lake, "compensatory damages would be inadequate, [and] the court did not err in ordering removal of the bulkhead and restoration of the area"); Mustang Holdings, LLC v. Zaveta,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (CGIA) protects the City from actions that either "lie in tort or could lie in tort." § 24-10-106(1), C.R.S.2009. In my view, this action sounds in tort; at the very least, it could have been brought as a tort claim.
Plaintiff relies on Roaring Fork Club, L.P. v. St. Jude's Co.,
Plaintiff alleges, and at this procedural stage we must assume, that the City engaged in (or at least was complicit with a private
Thus, as pled, this action appears to be for a "tort of trespass," Hoery v. United States,
At the very least, plaintiff could have pled a trespass claim. Cf. Robinson v. Colorado State Lottery Div.,
The procedural vehicle chosen by plaintiff to assert its claim-a declaratory judgment action-cannot avoid the CGIA bar. The supreme court has made clear that "[the nature of the relief requested is not disposi-tive of coverage by the Act, and the mere fact that a claim for relief seeks a declaration of liability resulting from tortious conduct rather than actual damages for the tortious conduct itself has no impact with regard to coverage." Brown Group,
The City, in my view, is entitled to immunity. This does not condone the City's conduct. To the contrary, we must assume at this stage that the City has contravened Roaring Fork and thereby committed the tort of trespass. But the CGIA embodies a legislative judgment that, with exceptions not relevant here, governmental bodies are immune from tort actions. And the City's possible constitutional liability for an uncompensated taking is not before us.
