April v. City of Broken Arrow

775 P.2d 1347, 1989 WL 42654
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 12, 1989
Docket66469
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 775 P.2d 1347 (April v. City of Broken Arrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
April v. City of Broken Arrow, 775 P.2d 1347, 1989 WL 42654 (Okla. 1989).

Opinion

DOOLIN, Justice.

The question presented is whether the adoption of two municipal land-use ordinances on their face substantially interfered with landowner’s use and enjoyment of his property so as to constitute a permanent “taking” of property without just compensation in violation of the United States and Oklahoma Constitutions. 1 Put another way, the question is, does a taking result if the limitations on the use of owner’s property do “not substantially advance legitimate state interests, or denies an owner economical, viable use of his land, [citations omitted].” 2

I.

Appellee Paul April, M.D., (“Owner”), purchased 40 acres of undeveloped agricultural land, for investment purposes, in the City of Broken Arrow, Tulsa County, Oklahoma (“City”). City is a suburban residential area south of the city of Tulsa. Owner’s real property, used as pasture land, is located within an existing 100-year flood plain of Haikey Creek and its tributaries (“Haikey”). Haikey is a “natural water drainage system” in and around City.

Property adjacent to Haikey, including Owner’s land which is transversed by three pre-existing wet-weather creeks converging in the flood plain, is naturally subject to flooding following periods of heavy rainfall. Haikey drains over “one square mile” of Owner’s property, because the elevation of Owner's property is lower than the ele *1349 vation of the periodic hundred year flood. City has not made any physical intrusions or entered upon Owner’s property. Nor has City diverted any additional water into Haikey’s drainage system, or erected any facilities upstream from Owner’s property, or granted any building permits altering the natural water flow throughout the topography of the 100-year flood plain.

Owner, intending to sell his land to a developer, requested and was granted R-2 residential single family zoning for his property in 1975, after his previous request for R-6 high density multifamily apartment zoning was denied by City. When R-2 zoning was approved, allowing three family dwellings per acre, (theoretically 120 homes), City’s planning commission and planning commission staff informed Owner:

the majority of (your) property is within the 100-year frequency flood and is also within the adopted Flood Hazard Area ..., (therefore) the developer will be required to build all house pads at least one foot above the 100-year frequency flood elevation....

This was City’s only regulatory requirement for development of land within the flood plain. In October 1977, Owner requested his property be rezoned from 40 acres of R-2, residental single family to 20 acres of R-4, duplex and 20 acres of R-5, apartments. Owner’s request was denied by City’s planning commission and staff.

In January 1978, Owner made another application to the City's planning commission, requesting his property be re-zoned from R-2 single family to R-4, Duplex. City’s planning commission and staff again denied Owner’s petition for re-zoning, 3 and Owner, for the first time, appealed to the City Council. “[I]n anticipation of the ‘floodplain’ ordinance being adopted ..., (Owner) sought relief in the form of a ‘waiver’ or variance from the ... City Council on March 13, 1978 which was, ..., denied_” 4 (Emphasis added.)

On March 20,1978, the city council enacted “The Flood Damage Protection Ordinance, No. 735”, 5 regulating the development of land in Haikey’s flood plain, and “The Earth Change Resolution Ordinance *1350 No. 736”, 6 controlling all excavations and earth modifications throughout the municipality (both hereinafter, “Land-Use Ordinances”). Both land-use ordinances became effective immediately. On May 1, 1978, the city council denied Owner’s appeal for rezoning.

Owner initiated the present inverse condemnation suit in December of 1978, alleging, inter alia, City’s “overt actions;” that is, adoption of its land-use ordinances, limiting his property to “Flood Tolerant Land Uses,” 7 and city’s approval of building permits to other developers in the flood plain has resulted in the appropriation of Owner's property for “general public use” as “a detention pond as part of a municipal stormwater drainage system.” Owner further alleges City's action prohibits construction on Owner’s land by restricting its use to “public or semi-public purposes,” that it effectively limits Owner’s use of his land as a “horse pasture,” and finally that it denies Owner beneficial use of his property by destroying his reasonable “investment-backed expectations.” After various motions and pleadings, Owner dismissed three other causes of action. 8

At trial, Owner asserted his “property lies in the path of (City’s) future plans for a public park, Haikey Creek detention reservoir, levee pump station and channel improvements.” (Emphasis added.) Owner argued City’s land-use ordinance “goes too far," because his property is “economically worthless, as evidenced by the Report of Commissioners,” appointed by the trial court. The commissioners’ report found the value of Owner’s property “taken and damaged,” resulting from City’s enactment of the land-use ordinances, amounted to $240,000.00.

Before and during trial, City insistently argued two propositions to support its contention that there was no basis in either fact or law for the trial court to determine the constitutionality of the ordinances as applied to Owner’s property. One, City’s mere enactment of its ordinance regulating the general use of land within the flood plain does not, as a matter of law, constitute substantial interference with nor amount to an overt action exercising dominion and control over Owner’s property, because Owner’s property floods as a result of a natural phenomenon beyond City’s exercise of its police power. Two, Owner has never applied for or been denied a building permit, or a variance under the land-use ordinances, thus, Owner has an adequate remedy at law to determine the beneficial use of his property.

City urged dismissal of Owner’s action because the trial court lacked a justiciable issue. However, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Owner and against City for $240,000.00. Thereafter, the trial court awarded attorney fees, appraisers fees, city engineering-planning fees, and trial cost against City pursuant to 27 O.S.1981 § 12. Owner retains possession of the land in question.

II.

In resolving this appeal we are confronted, as we were in Mattoon v. City of *1351 Norman, 9 with the following contentions: One, whether a municipality’s adoption of a flood plain ordinance constitutes a taking of property without just compensation for which a landowner may seek damages under an action in inverse condemnation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 P.2d 1347, 1989 WL 42654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/april-v-city-of-broken-arrow-okla-1989.