Opinion
Plаintiffs Norman and Juanita Yox appeal from the summary judgment in favor of defendant City of Whittier (City). Plaintiffs live on a private street in Whittier named Rideout Place. The private street and the lots upon which the homes of plaintiffs and their two uphill neighbors are located were creatеd by a four-way lot split (LS 60-07) which was
City moved for summary judgment on the ground that it could not be held liable for the circumstances existing on Rideout Place because there is “no public work or improvement upon which to predicate public liability for inverse condemnation.” In support of its motion, City submitted the affidavit of the city engineer and director of public works and the administrative record of all city departmental actions with respect to residential structures located on the properties included within lot split LS 60-07. Plaintiffs did not file any affidavits or exhibits in opposition. This appeal followed the court’s granting of City’s summary judgment motion. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment.
The uncontradicted evidence submitted on the summary judgment motion established the following: On June 8, 1960, upon the recommendation of the planning commission, the city council approved lot split LS 60-07. The approval was subject to conditions, including: “[a] joint agreement shall be executed covering the maintenance of this roadway” and “[t]he drainage from the lots and street shall be carried to an approved storm drаin or natural water course in such a manner as to prevent damage or nuisance to adjoining properties or erosion of any type.”
A grading permit was issued on July 27, 1960. The grading plan submitted with the permit provided for drainage from the finished pad area to the private street. The drainage pattern and the devices to be installed were designed by the subdivider. Surface water flows into the private street by means of gravity or sump pumps located in the private residences. As shown by the final grading plan, the drainage from the lots flows down the street to a catch basin built by the developer, then through a concrete channel also built by the developer, to an existing ditch. Although the condition of lot split map approval would have permitted other methods of disposing of the surface water runoff, the owner-developеr chose to use the street, a common and acceptable practice in grading subdivisions.
In May 1964, the planning commission authorized the planning director to certify final approval of the subdivision map. Building permits were issued in June 1972, December 1975 and June 1976, for single-family residences on 12128, 12122 and 12114 Rideout Place. Plaintiffs purchased 12114 Rideout Place, which was located on the lowermost lot, in March 1978, after their uphill neighbors had purchased and occupied the homes on the two other lots.
Discussion
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding City summary judgment. A summary judgment is proper only if the affidavits of the moving party would be sufficient to support a judgment in his favor, and doubts as to the merits of the motion should be resolved in favor of the party opposing the motion.
(Becker
v.
IRM Corporation
(1985)
The authority for prosecution of an inverse condemnation proсeeding derives from article I, section 19, of the California Constitution.
(Baker
v.
Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport Authority
(1985)
The principle of inverse condemnation, however, will not subject a public entity to general tort liability.
(McMahan’s of Santa Monica
v.
City of Santa Monica, supra,
“Public use” within the meaning of California Constitution, article I, section 19, has been “defined as a use which concerns the whole community or promotes the general interest in its relation to any legitimate object of government.”
(Bauer
v.
County of Ventura
(1955)
Here, however, there was no such public use. The undisputed fаcts show, and plaintiffs themselves admit in their complaint and brief, that the street and pumps which constituted the drainage system were entirely pri
Plaintiffs basically complain of City’s “acts of оmission” in issuing building and plumbing permits and in approving allegedly defectively designed plans violating its lot split approval condition that drainage not damage adjacent properties. Plaintiffs, however, cite no authority, nor has our research uncovered any, for holding a city liаble in inverse condemnation for injury to private property within a subdivision resulting from completely private construction—privately designed, financed and built—on a private street where the city’s sole affirmative action was the issuance of permits and approval оf the subdivision map.
Rather, the existing law is to the contrary. In
Ellison
v.
City of Buenaventura
(1976)
Plaintiffs’ reliance on
Sheffet
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1970)
Our case, however, is crucially different from Sheffet and from all cases finding liability for inverse condemnation. Here, the damage was not even to adjacent property but to property within the particular private subdivision. And most importantly, this is a private street. Neither the drainage system nor the street was ever dedicated to the public or formally or implicitly “accepted” by City.
A storm drainage system constructed and maintained by a public entity is a public improvement.
(Souza
v.
Silver Development Co., supra,
We realize that “[sjuch an approval or ‘acceptance need not be by formal action but may be implied from official acts of dominion or сontrol over the property, . .
(Martin, supra,
at p. 595.) Thus, use of the land for a public purpose over a reasonable period of time constitutes an acceptance without any formal action in relation thereto by governmental authority.
(Id.,
at p. 596.) Moreover, such dominion and control can be shown if the public entity does maintenance and repair work.
(Ackley
v.
City Etc. of San Francisco, supra,
Plaintiffs’ attempt to equate the approval of the subdivision map with the requisite acceptance for imposing liаbility in inverse condemnation is unpersuasive. Approval of a subdivision map does not constitute such an
The fundamental justification for inverse condemnation liability is that the public entity, acting in furtherance of public objectives, is taking a calculated risk that damage to private property may occur.
(McMahan’s of Santa Monica
v.
City of Santa Monica, supra,
The plaintiffs chose to buy on a private street with its requirement of private maintenance and its privilege of restricting public access, usе and enjoyment. In return for obtaining the benefit of excluding the public, they made a calculated decision to rely on themselves, their fellow property owners within the lot split and the subdivider for liability for resulting damage to their property. Their remedy is against the developer and/or their uphill neighbors who share responsibility for the maintenance of this private roadway.
There has been no inverse condemnation here. It would be unfair and contrary to the relevant constitutional provisions to inflict upon the community as a whole liability for a loss resulting from а strictly private improvement. Accordingly, the trial court properly granted summary judgment to City.
The judgment is affirmed.
Lillie, P. J., and Johnson, J., concurred.
Notes
According to plaintiffs’ brief, they prevailed in a jury trial on their second cause of action against their uphill neighbors for nuisance.
Plaintiffs apparently now contend on appeal that there are factual issues as to whether the public at large was intended to benefit from the drainage plan and the drainage plan is under the control of the community. But these issues were not raised below in the complaint or on the summary judgment motion, and the uncontradicted evidence submitted by City shows only private benefit and private control.
The only question here is City’s liability under a theory of inverse condemnation. Plaintiffs have not sought, and cannot at this point seek, damages from City on a tort theory. Even if they could overcome the apparent governmental immunity for negligence in discharging a discretionary governmental function in issuing building permits and approving plans (see, e.g., Gov. Code, §§ 818.4, 818.6;
Slagle Constr. Co.
v.
County of Contra Costa
(1977)
Dedication is a grant and a gift of an interest in land by a private owner for the public use.
(Fisher
v.
Morrison Homes, Inc.
(1980)
None of the cases considering inverse condemnation invоlved private streets or private drainage systems. For example, in
Souza
v.
Silver Development Co., supra,
