Beeson v. City of Palmer

370 P.3d 1084, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2016 WL 1168201
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
Docket7092 S-15018
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 370 P.3d 1084 (Beeson v. City of Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beeson v. City of Palmer, 370 P.3d 1084, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2016 WL 1168201 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

John and Xong.Chao Beeson own and live on a property in the Palmer West Subdivision in the City of Palmer. Since they moved to the property in 1985, the Beesons have experienced several flooding incidents on their land. They attribute this flooding to water backing up against Helen Drive, a long-standing two-lane road adjacent tó their property originally built by the Matanuska-Susitna Borough but controlled by the City since 2003. After the City installed a water line under Helen Drive and repaved the road surface in 2005, the flooding became more severe and caused serious damage to the Beesons’ home. The Beesons brought an inverse condemnation claim against the City, arguing that the City was liable for the damage to them property. After a three-day bench trial the superior court found that the City’s road reconstruction project was not a substantial cause of the flooding and therefore the City could not be liable in inverse condemnation. The superior court also granted attorney’s fees to the City. The Bee-sons appeal'both'rulings. We affirm the superior court’s decision with respect to the inverse condemnation claim and remand for further proceedings regarding attorney’s fees.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Factual Background

The Beesons purchased their home in the Palmer West Subdivision in 1985; their property was and remains adjacent to Helen Drive, a pre-existing two-lane gravel road constructed by the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. The Beesons first noticed water pooling in their yard and the Helen Drive right-of-way in the spring of1986. At'the Beesons’ request the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, which was responsible for the road at that time, installed a dry well 1 to try to eliminate the pooling. Witter continued to pool on the Beesons’ property in subsequent years. The characteristics of ■ the pooling depended on snow and rain conditions each spring. In 1998 the Borough paved Helen Drive, raising the road at least five inches. Although John Beeson testified at trial that flooding conditions after the paving remained “[ajbout the same,” the superior court found that Bee-son’s testimony was not credible and concluded that the Beesons had routinely pumped water from their property across Helen Drive to alleviate ponding after the paving.

In 2003 the City of Palmer annexed the area in which the- Beesons’ property is located and assumed ownership of and responsibility for Helen Drive. In 2005 the City undertook the Helen Drive Project, in which it installed a water line to deliver municipal water and reconstructed the road. The following spring a largér than usual pool of water formed on the Beesons’ property, extending over their parking area and into their garage. The Beesons’ property flooded again in 2007 during a warm period when a great deal of rain fell- while there was still snow on the, ground. The City responded by providing a steamer truck to .try to rehabilitate the dry well, delivering material to create dikes and- berms, and pumping water from the Beesons’ property using City and hired equipment. The- property flooded yet again in 2009, damaging the Beesons’ living room, basement, garage, and personal property. -The Beesons hired a‘ professional restoration service to repair the damage.

B. Proceedings

The Beesons filed suit against the City in September 2008, claiming inverse condemnation under article I, section 18 of the Alaska Constitution 2 and the Fifth Amendment to *1087 the United States Constitution, 3 for flooding damage that the Beesons alleged was associated with Helen Drive. In December 2010 the City made an offer of judgment to the Plaintiffs for $10,000. The Beesons did not accept the offer.

In the spring of 2011 the City and the Beesons moved for summary judgment and partial summary judgment, respectively.. After hearing oral argument, the superior court denied both motions, The superior court concluded that there was a genuine issue of fact regarding whether the City's 2005 Helen Drive Project caused the flooding.

At trial in October 2012 the Beesons focused on two issues. First, the Beesons argued that the 2005 Helen Drive Project raised the elevation and changed the drainage of the road, causing flooding in their home. After hearing all the evidence, the superior court rejected this first theory, finding that the road was in fact slightly lower after the Project. The Beesons do not appeal the superior court's findmg regardlng the road elevation.

Second, the Beesons asserted that even if the Project did not raise the elevation of the road, the City was liable in inverse condemnation because it did not install a culvert during the Project to relieve the drainage runoff water that backs up from Helen Drive; the Beesons argued that this failure to install a culvert led to their increased flooding damage after 2005. John Beeson testified that he asked a site engineer for the 2005 Helen Drive Project to install a culvert under the road in front of his property. The City of Palmer's design engineer, David Lundin, testified that he had been asked by the City to investigate a culvert as a fix to the Beesons' flooding and that he had drawn a culvert plan but had no finished design. The superior court noted in its decision that "[the experts agree that if a culvert is built across Helen Drive ..., then water could be diverted across the street and towards a path for natural drainage to occur."

The superior court ultimately found that "Helen Drive, as repaved by the City, was not a substantial cause of the periodic flooding to the [Beesong'] property." Based on the testimony of professional engineer Donald Carlson, it found that "the flooding. was caused by a combination of factors," one of which was "the roadway 'obstructing movement of water." The other factors cited were "significantly higher than average temperature and:rain during winter months" and the location of the Beesons' home on their property, which "sits at the lowest point in a small basin of properties." The superior court concluded that "a takings claim cannot be based on interference with property rights that is 'merely the consequence of negligent government conduct'" and that "government activity itself must be the cause of the damage," citing an Oregon'_Supreme Court case, Vokoun v. City of Lake Oswego. 4 The superior court concluded that "[t]he Bee-sons cannot establish a claim for inverse condemnation based on the alleged negli-genee of the City in failing to construct a culvert with the Helen Drive construction."

The superior court awarded attorney's fees in a February 2013 order. Relying on Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 68(b)(@), 5 the superior court ordered the Beesons to pay "fifty percent of [the City of Palmer's] actual reasonable attorney's fees incurred from December 21, 2010, when it made an offer of judgment to the Beesons, to the [time of the February 4, 2018 order}." .The court awarded the City $81,902.50 in attorney's fees, determining that the City had provided 3

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Bluebook (online)
370 P.3d 1084, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2016 WL 1168201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beeson-v-city-of-palmer-alaska-2016.