Plaintiff school district appeals from the dismissal by summary judgment of a portion of its suit for damages allegedly caused by aircraft noise emanating from the flight operations of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, owned and operated by respondents. The superior court dismissed plaintiff’s inverse condemnation claim with respect to the “old runway” at the airport on the grounds that a 10-year statute of limitations was applicable and that no nеw “takings” occurred with respect to that runway during the 10 years preceding commencement of this action. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s núisance and trespass causes of action on the ground that such theories were inapplicable to damages attributable to aircraft noise. We affirm the order of summary judgment as to the nuisance and trespass claims, but finding a genuine issue of material fact exists with respect to the inverse condemnation thеory, reverse the judgment as to that claim and remand for further proceedings.
' _ The school district maintains 14 schools, attended by approximately 7,500 students, surrounding the airport. Commercial operations at the airport began in 1947 using the “old runway.” In 1970 a “new runway” was opened about
Statistics submitted by the port indicate the number of air carrier operations (which constituted 75 percent of all operations in 1972) more than doubled from 54,752 in 1963 to 114,372 in 1971. Average daily aircraft departures from the port’s facility increased from 79 in 1960 to 159 in 1971. An acoustical engineer’s affidavit submitted on behalf of the school district indicates many changes in quantity and quality of use and noise. From 1960 to 1972, the proportion of propeller aircraft using the airport diminished, while the proportion of turbojet and turbofan engines increased. Many of the four-engine jet transport aircraft have been replaced since 1963 by larger and noisier turbofan jet powered planes. These quantitative and qualitative changes in aircraft use as stated in the affidavit, result in doúbling of the time lost for classroom and instructional purposes because of aircraft noise. Changes in jet operations and engines have resultеd in potentials for substantial increases in the level of noise exposure for the district’s schools which, in turn, ,can result in a substantial increase in the number of classrooms which have marginal or inferior noise environments for speech communication purposes. The trial court held that under the applicable law these circumstances presented no genuine issue of material fact.
I
Appellant assigns error to the ruling that a statute of limitations applies to bar that part of the inverse condemnation claim
1
for damages caused by activities at the air
We have held that an action for constitutional taking is not barred by any statute of limitations and may be brought at any time before title to the property taken is acquired by prescription. The prescriptive period in this state has been held to be ten years. See Aylmore v. Seattle (1918),100 Wash. 515 ,171 Pac. 659 ; Domrese v. Roslyn (1918),101 Wash. 372 ,172 Pac. 243 ; Litka v. Anacortes (1932),167 Wash. 259 ,9 P. (2d) 88
This statement of the rule, however, is not quite precise since acquisition by prescription is the result of the running of the statute of limitations. 7 R. Powell,
The Law of Real Property
¶¶ 1019, 1026 (1974);
see Snohomish v. Joslin,
The period required in this state to establish such a' prescriptive right of way is ten years, by analogy to the provisions of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 156 . . . , which is the statute of limitations relative to actions for the recovery of real property.
The 10-year period in RCW 4.16.020,
4
the successor to Rem. Rev. Stat., § 156, is applicable to actions brought in the name or for the benefit of any municipal corporation, including school districts. RCW 4.16.160;
Edmonds School Dist. 15 v. Mountlake Terrace,
In early inverse condemnation actions alleging damages attributable to noise and vibration from airport operation, as contrasted with direct overflights of aircraft, we applied
Appellant seeks to avoid the consequences of this conclusion by invoking the rule that property of a municipal corporation held in its governmental capacity for public рurposes cannot be acquired by adverse possession.
West Seattle v. West Seattle Land & Improvement Co.,
II
The trial court dismissed with prejudice the appellant’s inversé condemnation clаim insofar as it alleged damages attributable to operations on the “old runway” at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. It reasoned that a cause of action for interference with the use of the school district’s property accrued prior to 1963 when the probable extent of aircraft operations using the “old runway” became known and was therefore barred by the 10-year prescriptive period. The court also determined no new “takings” had occurred with respect to that runway during the 10 years preceding the commencement of this litigation and therefore entered summary judgment on this portion of the district’s action. The district argues that even if the 10-year period is an applicable limitation, reasonable inferences from the facts submitted in opposition to the motion pre sent a genuine issue as to whether a new cause of action accrued after 1963, thus precluding the entry of summary judgment with respect to either runway.
In determining the proper standard with which to ascertain when, in the context of airport noise, a cause of action for inverse condemnation has accrued, both parties and the trial court focused on language from Cheskov v. Port of Seattle, supra at 420, which states:
[A new cause of action accrues when] the disturbances causing the damage have become different in kind or substantially greater in degree, or greater than сould reasonably have been anticipated when the airport was established.
Appellant contends this language should be read as written, in the disjunctive, so that a cause of action accrues when the interference becomes substantially greater in degree. Respondents, with whom the trial court agreed, urge that increases in noise attributable to aircraft operations, even
Whatever its meaning when written, the language of Cheskov, quoted above, has not been followed in this jurisdiction for the past 10 years. In Martin v. Port of Seattle, supra at 318, a unanimous court rejected the argument that interference with property rights must be “substantial” before it can amount to a compensable injury. The term “substantial interference,” the court said, is “not pertinent . . . in the ‘inverse condemnation’ context, where the action is strongly analogous to the eminent domain proceeding.” The court reasoned that the balance of individual and societal interests in such an action is accomplished by requiring only that the plaintiff show a measurable or provable decline in market value traceable to the interference by noise. 5
In a proper case, replacement cost or the cost of necessary modifications may take the place of the diminutiоn of value measure. When one governmental entity, exercising the power of eminent domain, acquires property held for public use by another governmental entity, diminution in property value is not always an appropriate measure of the property rights taken. This is true because such property may well not have a market value or the value may be an unfair representation of the loss since the prop
In a condemnation case of this type the landowner is entitled to compensatory damages based on the necessity and cost of putting the remaining property in shape to meet the changed conditions caused by the highway. . . . The damages assessed should be based on replacement, renovation, construction or alteration costs of the facility.
See Wichita v. Unified School Dist. 259,
A сause of action accrues on the occurrence of the last element essential to the action.
Gazija v. Nicholas Jerns Co.,
Consequently, the landowner may recover the total damage resulting frоm all of those interferences which have not been eliminated as bases for liability by the acquisition of a prescriptive right. In other words, an inverse condemnation action for interference with the use and enjoyment of property accrues when the landowner sustains any measurable loss of market value and the recovery may be had for the total loss of value which is both attributable to the interference and sustained during the 10-year period рreceding the commencement of the action.
In dismissing a portion of the school district’s inverse condemnation claim, the trial court considered matters outside the pleadings, and thus the motion is to be treated as one for summary judgment. CR 12(c). When reviewing an order of summary judgment, this court engages in the same inquiry as the trial court.
Yakima Fruit & Cold Storage Co. v. Central Heating & Plumbing Co.,
The data submitted by the port in this case indicates a
Ill
Appellant’s nuisance and trespass claims were dismissed in their entirety by the trial court. It concluded such theories were not properly applicable to an action seeking damages for interference with use and enjoyment of property by aircraft noise.
In
Ackerman v. Port of Seattle,
[Tjhere is a steady evolution [in judicial decisions], for it is not quite true that there is nothing new under the sun; rarely is a case identical with the ones that went before. Courts have a creative job to do when they find that a rule has lost its touch with reality and should be abandoned or reformulated to meet new conditions and new moral values. And in those cases where there is nostare decisis to cast its light or shadow, the courts must hammer out new rules that will respect whatever values of the past have survived the tests of reason and experience and anticipate what contemporary values will best meet those tests.
In this jurisdiction the evolution of inverse condemnation actions in the airport cases has made reliance on traditional tort theories unnecessary when, as here, the airport is owned and operated by a governmental еntity and the recovery sought is only for loss of property rights, not personal or other injuries. Previous decisions in this and other jurisdictions upholding inverse condemnation actions against public airports have incorporated concepts of nuisance law and produced a doctrine which has been called “condemnation-by-nuisance.”
See
Stoebuck,
Condemnation by Nuisance: The Airport Cases in Retrospect and Prospect,
71 Dick. L. Rev. 207 (1967); Comment,
The Airport Noise Cases: Cоndemnation by Nuisance and Beyond,
7 Wake Forest L. Rev. 271 (1971);
cf. Thornburg v. Port of Portland,
By the absence of authority and argument on the issue, appellant’s briefs make it clear it has abandoned its trespass claim.
Talps v. Arreola,
Rosellini, Hunter, Hamilton, Wright, Brachtenbach, and Horowitz, JJ., and Ryan, J. Pro Tern., concur.
Petition for rehearing denied July 7, 1976.
Notes
Inverse condemnation has been defined as “the popular description of an action brought against a governmental entity having the power of eminent domain to recover the value of property which has been appropriated in fact, but with no formal exercise of the
power. Thornburg v. Port of Portland
(1962),
The parties dispute the source of the school district’s inverse condemnation action. The district predicates its claim on article 1, section 16 of the Washington State Constitution (amendment 9), the due proсess clauses of the state and federal constitutions, and the condemnation statutes applicable to the port, RCW 53.08.010 and 8.12.030. These statutes empower the port to exercise the right of eminent domain to acquire all “property, property rights ... or easements necessary for its purposes ... ”, RCW 53.08.010, and “to condemn land and other property and damage the same for . . . any other public use after just compensation having been first made . . . ”, RCW 8.12.030. Thе port contends that amendment 9 does not protect public property, citing
Moses Lake School Dist. 161 v. Big Bend Community College,
In
Aylmore v. Seattle,
RCW 4.16.020:
“The period prescribed in RCW 4.16.010 for the commencement of actions shall be as follows:
“Within ten years:
“Actions for the recovery of real property, or for the recovery оf the possession thereof; and no action shall be maintained for such recovery unless it appears that the plaintiff, his ancestor, predecessor or grantor was seized or possessed of the premises in question within ten years before the commencement of the action.”
In inverse condemnation actions, as in eminent domain proceedings, the landowner is entitled to full and fair compensation for the loss of his property rights.
See Lange v. State,
For ease of reference the term “loss of market value” is used in this opinion to include alternative measures of damage available in appropriate circumstances. See footnote 5.
Traditional nuisance principles, whether based upon common law or statute (see RCW 7.48.010, 7.48.120), present several obstacles to plaintiffs alleging damages attributable to aircraft noise. The noise must result in a “substantial interference” with the use and enjoyment of the
In a nuisance case, the fundamental inquiry always appears to be whether the use of certain land can be сonsidered as reasonable in relation to all the facts and surrounding circumstances.
Application of the doctrine of nuisance requires a balancing of rights, interests, and convenience.
In this balancing, courts weigh the social utility of the interfering use against the gravity of the harm to the plaintiff. W. Prosser,
supra
at 580-81. An additional factor is the character of the neighborhood in which the defendant’s activity is conducted.
Morin v. Johnson,
