City of Las Vegas v. Bustos

75 P.3d 351, 119 Nev. 360, 119 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2003 Nev. LEXIS 45
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 2003
Docket39252
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 75 P.3d 351 (City of Las Vegas v. Bustos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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 Las Vegas v. Bustos, 75 P.3d 351, 119 Nev. 360, 119 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2003 Nev. LEXIS 45 (Neb. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

This is an appeal by the City of Las Vegas (City) from the district court’s valuation of a house and residential lot (the property) owned by the ACVLB Family Trust. The City condemned the property in an eminent domain proceeding for the purpose of widening Alta Drive. After a bench trial, the district court ordered the City to compensate the ACVLB Family Trust, in the amount of $190,000.

*361 At the time of condemnation, the property was classified under the Las Vegas general plan as R-4, medium to low density residential, and was located in an area north of Alta Drive that was zoned R-l, single family residential. Although the property was located on the edge of a small residential neighborhood, the Las Vegas medical district was located just across the street on the south side of Alta Drive. Also, a number of residences in the medical district had already been converted into professional offices.

After viewing the property and hearing conflicting testimony regarding the likelihood of a zoning change and the value of the property, both as a residence and as a professional office, the district court determined that obtaining a zoning change for use as an office was reasonably possible. Therefore, the district court determined that the property should be valued as if it were zoned for commercial use as a professional office because that would represent the highest and best use of the property. The district court set that value at $190,000, after taking into account the costs of converting the property from a residence to an office.

On appeal, the City argues that the district court erred in its valuation. The City contends that the district court was required to value the property based on the highest and best use that was legally permissible, and that use as a professional office was not legally permissible. The City asserts that the district court’s finding that the City would probably grant a zoning change was erroneous because: (1) this court has held that the local government must defer to the general or master plan in making zoning changes and failure to do so has resulted in reversible error; 1 (2) the district court could not reasonably conclude that the City would grant a zoning change in noncompliance with its master plan; 2 and (3) the City’s planner testified that such a change was extremely unlikely.

The Bustoses respond that the cases cited by the City are inap-posite because they address enforcement of a master plan, not whether the district court may take into account the reasonable probability of rezoning in an eminent domain case. They argue that the very purpose of eminent domain proceedings is to provide the landowner with just compensation, premised on the highest and best use of the property, rather than the actual use, and that refusal to consider potential zoning changes has resulted in reversible error. 3 Further, given the neighborhood’s evolution from a sleepy residential neighborhood to a busy thoroughfare and entrance to the *362 downtown business district, it was proper for the district court to consider the probability of a zoning change. Finally, the Bustoses assert that, at the very least, there was competing evidence as to the probability of a zoning change, and that it was within the district court’s discretion to weigh the evidence and determine the credibility of the witnesses.

The landowner is entitled to just compensation for the government’s taking of private property 4 and has the burden of establishing the value of land so taken. 5 Just compensation is determined by the property’s market value ‘ ‘by reference to the highest and best use for which the land is available and for which it is plainly adaptable.” 6 However, such use must be reasonably probable. 7 In general, the trier of fact may consider zoning restrictions permitting a viable economic use of the property in determining the property’s value. 8 In fact, the district court should give “due consideration ... to those zoning ordinances that would be taken into account by a prudent and willing buyer.” 9

We conclude that the district court properly considered the current zoning of the property, as well as the likelihood of a zoning change. The trier of fact may consider the effect of future rezoning or variances on the highest and best use of the condemned property when determining its value. 10

*363 We note that there was undisputed evidence that most of the land surrounding the property had been converted to commercial use except for the area eight hundred feet from Tonopah Avenue to Deauville Drive, where the Bustoses’ house was located. Augustine Bustos testified that, as of September 1996, Alta Drive was designated as the office-court-core gateway from the west in the downtown urban design master plan. Bustos also testified that the City had allowed commercial uses for other properties on the north side of Alta Drive. Bustos further testified that he bought the property with the intent of converting it to an office, despite the risk of condemnation proceedings. He thought he could convince the City to *364 straighten Alta Drive through vacant land rather than simply widen it, which would have required the City to condemn only seven properties instead of sixteen and would have bypassed his house. Bustos testified that he had experience with obtaining zoning variances in the area and that he thought he could obtain one for the subject property.

Gary Kent, the Bustoses’ appraiser, testified that he appraised the property as an office conversion because he had concluded that that was the highest and best use of the property. He testified that he reached his conclusion because of the property’s access to downtown Las Vegas; the reclassification of properties surrounding it as professional, commercial or high density residential; Alta Drive’s high traffic volume; and Alta Drive’s designated entry into the Union Pacific Development Area. Kent testified that, in his opinion, a buyer “would reasonably assume that he could get professional zoning on the property.” Kent further testified that although the government would not be willing to rezone the property once condemnation proceedings had been initiated, he could not take into account the depreciation in value due to the condemnation proceedings under NRS 37.112(1). 11

On the other hand, Chris Glore, a planning supervisor for the planning and development department, testified that several factors militated against rezoning the property for office use.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P.3d 351, 119 Nev. 360, 119 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2003 Nev. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-las-vegas-v-bustos-nev-2003.