Opinion
COBEY, Acting P. J.
Property owners, Gould, Johnson, Shope, Wheeler and Monahan, appeal from a judgment in condemnation in favor of the City of Los Angeles, decreeing that the city is entitled to acquire for airport purposes a fee simple interest in their various residential properties located near the Los Angeles International Airport.
Appellants contend that in the judgment they should have been awarded
Klopping
damages (see
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier,
8 Cal.3d 39 [104 Cal.Rptr. 1, 500 P.2d 1345]), prejudgment interest from June 23, 1967,
and litigation costs pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1246.3. At oral argument the parties stipulated that for the purpose of disposition upon this appeal the judgment under appeal may be deemed to include a denial of both prejudgment interest and litigation costs.
Proceedings Below
Appellants were 5 of the approximately 100 property owners who brought a proceeding (Munger v. City of Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 931315) in inverse condemnation against the city early in 1968 for damages done to their homes, families and persons by reason of the opening on June 23, 1967, and the operation thereafter of a runway for commercial jet aircraft at the Los Angeles International Airport.
Subsequently on March 19, 1971, the city filed the Monahan proceeding (No. 998954) to condemn a fee interest in 10 of the Munger case properties, including that of the Monahans. Later in July 1971 the four remaining property owners before us stipulated in writing with the city that their cases might be severed for trial from the Munger case and tried separately as in effect a proceeding by the city to condemn a fee interest in their residential properties. This stipulation incorporated a previously agreed upon date of value for the various properties of January 1, 1971. The following month, August 1971, the trial court ordered the stipulation into effect and later that month a first pretrial conference order was filed in the Monahan case fixing the date of value therein as the aforementioned March 19, 1971, in accordance with Code of Civil Procedure section 1249 and providing that the Monahans would dismiss all of the claims they had advanced in Munger. This date of value was thereafter maintained by stipulation
and on January 11, 1973, a stipulation was filed providing that the valuation issues in the other four cases before us might be tried with the Monahan case. This trial started in March 1973 before Judge Kaufman, but the evidence taken therein was limited to the claimed
Klopping
damages as the parties stipulated to the fair market values of the five parcels at issue.
The trial court limited its findings of fact and conclusions of law, aside from the valuation issues, generally to the
Klopping
issues. It found, among other things, that “there were no delays at any time due to the fault of the City of Los Angeles in bringing the parcels to trial” and
concluded that
Klopping
did not apply to the factual situation before it.
It thereafter on September 28, 1973 entered and filed the judgment in condemnation under appeal.
The 1971 Stipulations and Orders Were Binding Upon the Parties to Them
The July 1971 stipulation in the Munger case was negotiated at some length between counsel for the parties. Although appellants constantly emphasize that a primary purpose of this stipulation was to conclude the litigation earlier,
this was merely part of their motivation. In the Munger case initially the city denied that any of the plaintiffs therein, including appellants, had sustained compensable damages. In 1971, however, the city modified this position with respect to the five parcels before us. First, on the aforementioned March 19, 1971, it initiated a proceeding to condemn directly the fee interests of certain property owners, including the Monahans. Next in July 1971 it stipulated in effect that it was taking the entire fee interests of the other four property owners before us in return for their expressly agreeing that there remained no issues in inverse condemnation as to these properties and that they would dismiss with prejudice forever as against the city all their claims for taking or other damages upon the entry of a judgment for the fair market values of the fee interests in their properties. Thus the bargain embodied in this stipulation between the city and appellants (other than the Monahans) was that the city would pay them for a total taking of their properties (rather than for only an avigation easement with respect to them) in return for a waiver by them of all claims of inverse condemnation damages. As previously indicated, this was also apparently the bargain the city struck in effect with the Monahans.
There is no equitable basis in the record to relieve appellants from these bargains. (See Civ. Code, § 1689;
Gonzales
v.
Pacific Greyhound
Lines,
34 Cal.2d 749, 755 [214 P.2d 809].) Aside from an early trial, they obtained exactly that for which they bargained.
Klopping
Damages Are Not Recoverable
The city takes the position that the aforementioned stipulations and orders preclude any award of
Klopping
damages in this case. We do not agree. Our Supreme Court made clear in
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier, supra,
8 Cal.3d 39, 58, that such damages may be recovered either in direct condemnation or in inverse condemnation. It is true that appellants stipulated that the only issue in these cases was the fair market values of their respective properties as of the two dates of value, but these stipulations were made many months before our Supreme Court recognized
Klopping
damages for the first time. Waiver ordinarily is the intentional relinquishment of a known legal right. (See
Blair
v.
Pitchess,
5 Cal.3d 258, 274 [96 Cal.Rptr. 42, 486 P.2d 1242, 45 A.L.R.3d 1206]; cf. Civ. Code, § 1542.) Accordingly, we hold that appellants did not intend to waive in these documents their respective rights to claim
Klopping
damages.
Unfortunately for them, as the trial court in effect concluded, no basis exists here for such damages. In
Klopping
our Supreme Court held that a condemnor is liable in either inverse or direct condemnation for any diminution in the market value of a condemnee’s property resulting from any unreasonable precondemnation conduct on the part of the condemnor.
(Klopping, supra,
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Opinion
COBEY, Acting P. J.
Property owners, Gould, Johnson, Shope, Wheeler and Monahan, appeal from a judgment in condemnation in favor of the City of Los Angeles, decreeing that the city is entitled to acquire for airport purposes a fee simple interest in their various residential properties located near the Los Angeles International Airport.
Appellants contend that in the judgment they should have been awarded
Klopping
damages (see
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier,
8 Cal.3d 39 [104 Cal.Rptr. 1, 500 P.2d 1345]), prejudgment interest from June 23, 1967,
and litigation costs pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1246.3. At oral argument the parties stipulated that for the purpose of disposition upon this appeal the judgment under appeal may be deemed to include a denial of both prejudgment interest and litigation costs.
Proceedings Below
Appellants were 5 of the approximately 100 property owners who brought a proceeding (Munger v. City of Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 931315) in inverse condemnation against the city early in 1968 for damages done to their homes, families and persons by reason of the opening on June 23, 1967, and the operation thereafter of a runway for commercial jet aircraft at the Los Angeles International Airport.
Subsequently on March 19, 1971, the city filed the Monahan proceeding (No. 998954) to condemn a fee interest in 10 of the Munger case properties, including that of the Monahans. Later in July 1971 the four remaining property owners before us stipulated in writing with the city that their cases might be severed for trial from the Munger case and tried separately as in effect a proceeding by the city to condemn a fee interest in their residential properties. This stipulation incorporated a previously agreed upon date of value for the various properties of January 1, 1971. The following month, August 1971, the trial court ordered the stipulation into effect and later that month a first pretrial conference order was filed in the Monahan case fixing the date of value therein as the aforementioned March 19, 1971, in accordance with Code of Civil Procedure section 1249 and providing that the Monahans would dismiss all of the claims they had advanced in Munger. This date of value was thereafter maintained by stipulation
and on January 11, 1973, a stipulation was filed providing that the valuation issues in the other four cases before us might be tried with the Monahan case. This trial started in March 1973 before Judge Kaufman, but the evidence taken therein was limited to the claimed
Klopping
damages as the parties stipulated to the fair market values of the five parcels at issue.
The trial court limited its findings of fact and conclusions of law, aside from the valuation issues, generally to the
Klopping
issues. It found, among other things, that “there were no delays at any time due to the fault of the City of Los Angeles in bringing the parcels to trial” and
concluded that
Klopping
did not apply to the factual situation before it.
It thereafter on September 28, 1973 entered and filed the judgment in condemnation under appeal.
The 1971 Stipulations and Orders Were Binding Upon the Parties to Them
The July 1971 stipulation in the Munger case was negotiated at some length between counsel for the parties. Although appellants constantly emphasize that a primary purpose of this stipulation was to conclude the litigation earlier,
this was merely part of their motivation. In the Munger case initially the city denied that any of the plaintiffs therein, including appellants, had sustained compensable damages. In 1971, however, the city modified this position with respect to the five parcels before us. First, on the aforementioned March 19, 1971, it initiated a proceeding to condemn directly the fee interests of certain property owners, including the Monahans. Next in July 1971 it stipulated in effect that it was taking the entire fee interests of the other four property owners before us in return for their expressly agreeing that there remained no issues in inverse condemnation as to these properties and that they would dismiss with prejudice forever as against the city all their claims for taking or other damages upon the entry of a judgment for the fair market values of the fee interests in their properties. Thus the bargain embodied in this stipulation between the city and appellants (other than the Monahans) was that the city would pay them for a total taking of their properties (rather than for only an avigation easement with respect to them) in return for a waiver by them of all claims of inverse condemnation damages. As previously indicated, this was also apparently the bargain the city struck in effect with the Monahans.
There is no equitable basis in the record to relieve appellants from these bargains. (See Civ. Code, § 1689;
Gonzales
v.
Pacific Greyhound
Lines,
34 Cal.2d 749, 755 [214 P.2d 809].) Aside from an early trial, they obtained exactly that for which they bargained.
Klopping
Damages Are Not Recoverable
The city takes the position that the aforementioned stipulations and orders preclude any award of
Klopping
damages in this case. We do not agree. Our Supreme Court made clear in
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier, supra,
8 Cal.3d 39, 58, that such damages may be recovered either in direct condemnation or in inverse condemnation. It is true that appellants stipulated that the only issue in these cases was the fair market values of their respective properties as of the two dates of value, but these stipulations were made many months before our Supreme Court recognized
Klopping
damages for the first time. Waiver ordinarily is the intentional relinquishment of a known legal right. (See
Blair
v.
Pitchess,
5 Cal.3d 258, 274 [96 Cal.Rptr. 42, 486 P.2d 1242, 45 A.L.R.3d 1206]; cf. Civ. Code, § 1542.) Accordingly, we hold that appellants did not intend to waive in these documents their respective rights to claim
Klopping
damages.
Unfortunately for them, as the trial court in effect concluded, no basis exists here for such damages. In
Klopping
our Supreme Court held that a condemnor is liable in either inverse or direct condemnation for any diminution in the market value of a condemnee’s property resulting from any unreasonable precondemnation conduct on the part of the condemnor.
(Klopping, supra,
8 Cal.3d 39, 52, 58.) In so holding, our Supreme Court carefully differentiated between damages in inverse condemnation arising from a de facto taking of a condemnee’s property and a
Klopping
damages situation.
(Id.,
at pp. 46-47, 52.) In a de facto taking situation, the valuation date becomes the date of the taking and, among other things, prejudgment interest is allowed from that date. (See
Parker
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
44 Cal.App.3d 556, 564-565.) In a
Klopping
situation, on the other hand, the valuation date remains unchanged and the condemnor becomes liable only for the diminution in the market value of the condemnee’s property that is shown to have been caused by its unreasonable precondemnation conduct. Stated otherwise,
Klopping
damages are damages for the condemnee’s loss of use or enjoyment of his adversely affected property occasioned during the precondemnation period by the condemnor’s unreasonable conduct.
The only possibly unreasonable precondemnation conduct on the part of the city that appellants may point to in this case is the city’s delay between 1967 and 1971 in initiating direct condemnation proceedings or their equivalent with respect to the five parcels before us. As we will point out shortly though, this delay was not the cause of the diminution in market value that appellants’ residential properties suffered.
Furthermore, our review of the record indicates that there is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s already quoted express finding “[t]hat there were no delays at any time due to the fault of the City of Los Angeles in bringing the parcels to trial.”
The situation before us is quite unlike that presented in
Stone v. City of Los Angeles, supra,
51 Cal.App.3d 987, 992-993, where the Stones were prevented from making a profitable use of their large income property in the vicinity of the Palmdale Airport between 1969 and 1972 because of its threatened condemnation and were, therefore, allowed
Klopping
loss of use damages. Here the diminution in the market value of appellants’ residential properties was due entirely to the adverse effect of jet operations at the Los Angeles International Airport and such damages in inverse condemnation had been expressly waived by appellants in the aforementioned documents. In other words, appellants experienced no precondemnation damages other than those in inverse condemnation that they expressly waived.
Neither Prejudgment Interest Nor Litigation Costs Are Recoverable
As indicated earlier, the Monahan case from its inception was and remained a direct condemnation proceeding. As also indicated previously, the effect of the 1971 stipulation and order with respect to the other four parcels was to convert an inverse condemnation proceeding with regard to them into a direct condemnation.
In direct condemnation the compensation and damages awarded draw legal interest from the date of the entry of judgment unless possession of the property sought to be condemned has been taken or its taking has
been authorized. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1255b, subd. (a).)
No taking of possession occurred or was authorized in this case. Accordingly, property owners are not entitled to any prejudgment interest.
Similarly, since, as just explained, the proceeding before us either always has been or became a direct condemnation proceeding, litigation costs are not recoverable. Their recovery under the authorizing statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 1246.3) is expressly limited to inverse condemnation proceedings. It is true that the statute authorizing the recovery of these costs became effective after the 1971 stipulations and orders were made (Mar. 4, 1972; Stats. 1971, ch. 1574, § 1, p. 3154); but as we noted in
Parker
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
44 Cal.App.3d 556, 567, the justification for allowing litigation costs in inverse condemnation' and not in direct condemnation is that in the former type of proceeding the right to
any
damages is in issue while in the latter only the amount of the damages is. In other words, there is much more risk for the property owner in inverse condemnation than there is in direct condemnation.
Disposition
The judgment under appeal is affirmed.
Allport, J., and Potter, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 23, 1976, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.