City of Kenai v. Burnett

860 P.2d 1233, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 103, 1993 WL 414216
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1993
DocketS-4282
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 860 P.2d 1233 (City of Kenai v. Burnett) 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
City of Kenai v. Burnett, 860 P.2d 1233, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 103, 1993 WL 414216 (Ala. 1993).

Opinions

OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

The Burnetts brought this inverse condemnation action against the City of Kenai seeking compensation for an easement taken to build a public golf course. The superior court granted the Burnetts partial summary judgment, ruling that the City had taken a legally protected property interest and was required to pay the Bur-netts just compensation. A jury later awarded the Burnetts compensation for diminution in their property’s value, lost profits, and incidental damages. The City appeals, challenging both the summary judgment ruling and the damage award. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the case for further proceedings.

I

There are two parcels of land involved in this case: the Burnett property and Candle[1236]*1236light Extension, a segment of road that once provided access to the Burnett property. Helen Stetzer was the original owner of the Burnett property. Her husband filed a homestead application for the land with the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in 1962. Mr. Stetzer died shortly thereafter. Mrs. Stetzer moved onto the property and built the road now known as Candlelight Extension in 1962.1 The BLM granted Mrs. Stetzer a patent to the land in February 1972. The investigations done for the patent grant indicated that the BLM was aware of Candlelight Extension at the time it granted the patent.

Mrs. Stetzer died in 1973. In 1983, Mrs. Stetzer’s heirs sold the Stetzer property to the Burnetts. The Burnetts planned to subdivide and develop the property. Prior to the sale, the Burnetts requested that the City grant them an express easement along Candlelight Extension. The Kenai Planning and Zoning Commission recommended that a public use easement be granted. The Burnetts then purchased the property. In August 1983, the City Council adopted Kenai Municipal Code Ordinance (KCO) 870-83 authorizing the easement, contingent upon the approval of the “appropriate federal agencies.”2

In 1985, the City Council proposed developing an eighteen hole golf course. On June 5, 1985, the City Council approved a plan submitted by developer Richard Morgan to build a golf course on land adjacent to the Burnetts’ property, land which included Candlelight Extension (i.e. Lot 3). Two days later, the City agreed to lease Morgan land to develop the first nine holes of the course. The lease agreement gave Morgan a right of first refusal to lease additional lots, including Lot 3.

When Morgan informed the Burnetts of the agreement, the Burnetts immediately contacted the City regarding access to their property. In January 1987, after being advised by the city attorney of the complex legal issues involved, the City Council voted unanimously to provide the Burnetts access to their property either by preserving Candlelight Extension or by building an alternate route.3

In light of the City’s promises to provide access, the legal status of Candlelight Extension was unclear. However, on May 25, 1987, the City leased Lot 3 to Morgan. Morgan built the second nine holes of the golf course destroying Candlelight Extension and with it access to the Burnett property. On June 17, 1987, the City Council adopted a second ordinance rescinding Ordinance 870-83.4

Because of the problems securing access to their property, the Burnetts could not continue with their development plans. They failed to meet their mortgage payments, and the mortgagees foreclosed. The Burnetts then brought this inverse [1237]*1237condemnation action.5 In September 1989, the Burnetts moved for partial summary judgment seeking a ruling that Kenai inversely condemned their property interest in Candlelight Extension and that the date of condemnation was June 7, 1985. The City opposed the Burnetts’ motion and filed its own motion for summary judgment, arguing that the Burnetts’ claim was barred by the statute of limitations. The City also filed a Civil Rule 56(f) motion for a six-month time extension to oppose the Bur-netts’ motion for summary judgment. The trial court denied the City’s motions and granted the Burnetts’ motion. The trial court ruled that the Burnetts had an easement via Candlelight Extension which was taken as a result of the City’s first lease to Morgan on June 7, 1985.6

A trial was then scheduled to ascertain just compensation for the taking. A few days prior to trial, the City moved for partial summary judgment seeking a legal ruling that the proper measure of damages was the lesser amount of 1) the cost to restore reasonable access to the Burnett property or 2) the diminished value of the property due to the loss of access. With its motion, the City filed an affidavit from Philip Bryson, an engineer, who claimed that the cost of constructing alternative access along the Burnetts’ section line easement was $147,974. The Burnetts opposed this motion and requested that Bry-son’s report on the cost of alternate road construction be excluded from the evidence presented at trial. The trial judge heard argument and ruled that Bryson’s testimony and report was to be stricken. However, at this time, the trial judge did not rule on the proper measure of damages to be used at trial.

When the trial began, both sides presented expert witnesses who appraised the Burnett property (i.e. the property remaining with the Burnetts after Candlelight Extension was destroyed) using a “before and after” fair market valuation approach. Kenneth Gain, the Burnetts’ valuation expert, calculated the fair market value of the property using a comparable sales appraisal method, a prior sales price method, and a subdivision development method.7 He came up with a “before” (i.e. with access) fair market value of $227,500 using comparable sales, $224,400 using the prior sales price, and $240,000 using the subdivision approach. Gain combined these figures using an imprecise formula and arrived at a fair market value of $235,000 for the property with access as of June 7,1985.

Next, Gain calculated the fair market value of the Burnett property without road access as well as the “cost to cure” the land (i.e. replace the lost access road). Gain determined that the cost of providing comparable access was between $300,000 and $360,0008 and noted that it was not economically feasible to build a new road because the cost was greater than the value of the land. Therefore, Gain concluded [1238]*1238that a subdivision could not be feasibly built and that the property’s “highest and best use” had been reduced to that of a “speculative recreational property.” Gain noted the difficulty of finding “comparable sales” to appraise the property without access because the other properties he had considered all had some means of present access or, at least, an economically feasible way of providing access. However, using a per acre price for the raw land, he determined that the “after taking” value of the property, the value of recreational land with no access, was $55,000. He testified that the diminished value of the land resulting from the taking was $180,000 ($285,000 minus $55,000).

Fred Ferrera, the City’s valuation expert, also performed a “with and without access” valuation of the Burnett property using a comparable sales appraisal method and a subdivision development method.9

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Bluebook (online)
860 P.2d 1233, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 103, 1993 WL 414216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-kenai-v-burnett-alaska-1993.