MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plаintiff applied to the city of Fort Smith (“City”) for permission to build a convenience store to be associated with a gasoline station that plaintiff is already operating on Phoenix Avenue in the City. City officials responded that under the ordinances of the City they could give no such permission unless plaintiff granted the City an expanded right-of-way along thе relevant property for street purposes. Plaintiff refused to make ' such a grant and brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to еnjoin the application of the relevant ordinances to these circumstances.
I.
It is unnecessary to grope about in the half-light of penumbras or to resort to the idea of implied rights to find and identify the constitutional right plaintiff seeks to assert here. That right, made applicable to the states and its subdivisions by the Fourteenth Amendment, is contаined in the Fifth Amendment’s plain provision that the government cannot take property except for a public use and then only after providing just compensation. It is conceded on all sides that the easement demanded here in return for a building permit is for a public use since it will be used to widen Phoenix Avenue at some future date. It therefоre remains only to inquire whether the easement is property and whether its taking must be compensated.
II.
It would seеm about as obvious as any legal proposition could be that an easement is an interest in property. It is true that the Supreme Court has drawn a distinction between reasonable governmental regulations or rules that merely affect land use, and thus value, on the one hand and ones that involve physical occupations on the other hand, holding that property is not taken in the former case but is in the latter.
1
Compare
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
*914
It is nevertheless true that the condition which the City wishes to impose on the granting of the building permit in this case would be constitutional if the “condition at issue ... is reasonably related to the public need or burden that [the plaintiff’s new construction] creates or to which it contributes.”
Id.
at 838,
III.
At a hearing held by the court to determine thе relevant factual issue, plaintiff produced an expert civil engineer who testified that the additional burden оn Phoenix Avenue created by plaintiffs planned expansion would be de minimis at most. One of the trustees of the plaintiff testified that he certainly hoped that the plaintiffs business would increase as a result of the expansion; but that increase, of course, would not have to translate into an increase of traffic on Phoenix Avenue. Indeed, there was testimony from which a reasonable fact-finder could conclude that the very purpose of cоnvenience stores is to capture business from people who already regularly travel the routes on which such stores are situated, either to or from work or on other routinized business. It is true that increased traffic into and out of plaintiffs property will tend to increase congestion there, thus slowing traffic and perhaps contributing to the risk of accidents. But there was a showing that there were other convenience stores on Phoenix Avenue and near plaintiffs projected one, and so a reasonable fact-finder could conclude that whatever congestion or risk might be created by plaintiffs expansion would not be new but rather represents a redistribution оf those costs from one locus on Phoenix Avenue to another.
For its part, the City produced credible testimony from its planners that convenience stores ordinarily had a certain and specific number of cars assоciated with them over a fixed period of time. The court does not doubt these data. But what the City could not show was what incremental traffic change, if any, could reasonably be expected from plaintiffs change in land use. This is, as the court has said, the critical inquiry.
IV.
Perhaps it would have been open to the City to show that its planned extеnsion of Phoenix Avenue would increase the value of plaintiffs property in order to show that plaintiffs damages are not as great as it claims. The City, however, made no attempt to introduce any such evidence, and it is therefore unnecessary for the court to rule on that issue at this time.
The City having failed to carry its burden, an injunction will issue ordering the City to issue the requested permit unconditionally.
Notes
. That this distinction may be economically unsound does not relieve this court of its duty to apply it.
See Hall v. City of Santa Barbara,
. For a brilliantly sustained and intellectually unrelenting elaboration of the relationship between the Fifth Amendment and taxes, see R. Epstein, Takings (1985).
