Keeton v. State, Department of Transportation and Public Facilities

441 P.3d 933
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2019
DocketSupreme Court No. S-16803
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 441 P.3d 933 (Keeton v. State, Department of Transportation and Public Facilities) 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
Keeton v. State, Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, 441 P.3d 933 (Ala. 2019).

Opinion

MAASSEN, Justice.

*935I. INTRODUCTION

The Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT or the State) condemned a strip of property along the Parks Highway. DOT filed a declaration of taking, allowing it to take title immediately, and deposited approximately $ 15,000 in court as estimated compensation for the taking. The landowner challenged DOT's estimate and was eventually awarded approximately $ 24,000, as well as attorney's fees and costs. Pursuant to AS 09.55.440, the superior court awarded prejudgment interest to the landowner at the rate of 10.5% on the difference between the amount of DOT's initial deposit and the amount the property was ultimately determined to be worth.

The landowner appeals, arguing that the prejudgment interest should have been calculated on the difference between the deposit and his entire judgment, including significant amounts for attorney's fees and appraisal costs. We conclude, however, that the landowner's argument is not supported by the statutory language, legislative history, or policy. We also reject the landowner's arguments that the superior court applied the wrong postjudgment interest rate and abused its discretion by denying discovery of the State's attorneys' billing records. Finally, we conclude that the superior court must state its reasons for excluding any attorney time from its attorney's fees award, and we therefore vacate the attorney's fees award and remand for reconsideration on this limited issue.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

The property at the center of this case is approximately 6.727 acres near Wasilla, owned by Robert Keeton III. Bounded by Jacobsen Lake on the south, the property rises to the Parks Highway to the north. The area nearest the lake is wetlands. Between the wetlands and the property's upland portion is an area filled with woodchips, where there used to be a mill. The property includes a cabin that has been turned into a duplex, an automobile repair shop, and a used car dealership operating out of a modular building.

In 2014 DOT began a project to widen the Parks Highway from Mileposts 44.5 to 48.3. As part of the project it sought to condemn a portion of Keeton's property, referred to by DOT as "Parcel 77" and described as "a narrow strip along the current Parks Highway [ ], approximately 15 feet wide and 420 feet long, for a total of approximately 6,301 square feet." According to DOT, Parcel 77 was "necessary for this project in order to relocate utilities and to accommodate right-of-way maintenance needs." The condemnation reduced Keeton's property from approximately 6.727 acres to 6.582 acres.

To assist with its right-of-way acquisitions, DOT retained a consulting firm, which in turn subcontracted with an appraisal firm. The appraiser who did the work on Parcel 77 was Steve Carlson. Before starting the appraisal, Carlson estimated that the value of Parcel 77 would be less than $ 25,000, and he thus prepared a waiver valuation, an "abbreviated form" of an appraisal. The waiver valuation valued Parcel 77 at $ 14,800. Carlson also found that the condemnation caused no damage to the remaining property.

*936B. Proceedings

The parties were unable to agree on the amount of compensation due Keeton for the taking. On April 30, 2014, DOT filed a complaint for condemnation and a declaration of taking. DOT offered $ 14,800 in just compensation and deposited $ 14,905.98 with the superior court, including $ 105.98 as estimated pro-rated property taxes. In his answer Keeton disputed DOT's valuation, sought "[a]n award of just compensation for [DOT's] taking of and damage to his private property, including but not limited to, a fair valuation of and payment for the private property taken by [DOT]," and asked that he be awarded his costs and attorney's fees.

The superior court appointed a master to hear the matter. In preparation for the hearing, Carlson did a full narrative appraisal of Keeton's property and determined that the value of Parcel 77 was $ 18,300. In compliance with Carlson's revised estimation, DOT added an additional $ 3,500 to the court deposit.

Keeton also retained a commercial appraiser, Per Bjorn-Roli, to perform an appraisal on his behalf. Bjorn-Roli's estimates of value were significantly higher than those proposed by DOT: $ 35,956 for the value of the property taken and $ 15,580 for damage to the remainder of Keeton's property. Keeton also argued that the taking made it more costly for him to install a septic tank on his property, and he valued his total loss at $ 102,456.

The master's hearing was held in August and September 2016. The master found that the condemned property was worth $ 24,740, and neither party appealed this determination. The amount exceeded DOT's initial deposit by approximately $ 10,000 and its supplemented deposit, following Carlson's second appraisal, by $ 6,440. Keeton moved for entry of final judgment and an award of attorney's fees and costs. In addition to the property's value he sought $ 44,553.12 in attorney's fees, $ 30,444 in appraiser fees, $ 1,823.35 in other costs, and $ 25,825.64 in prejudgment interest. A statute provides for prejudgment interest at the rate of 10.5% "on the amount finally awarded that exceeds the amount paid into court under the declaration of taking";1 Keeton argued that his fees and costs should be added to the property's ascertained value to determine "the amount finally awarded" for purposes of contrast with DOT's deposit.

DOT partially opposed the request, asking to see Keeton's lawyer's billing records to determine their reasonableness and arguing that prejudgment interest could not be applied to an award of attorney's fees and costs. Keeton, in turn, sought the billing records of DOT's attorneys, but DOT successfully moved to quash the request. After inspecting Keeton's attorney's records, DOT decided not to object to his attorney's fees and costs incurred through the May 2017 oral argument on the prejudgment interest issue.

The superior court awarded a final judgment of just compensation for $ 24,740 based on the master's recommendation and calculated prejudgment interest on the amount by which it exceeded DOT's deposits. The court also awarded Keeton $ 47,453.12 in attorney's fees and $ 32,276.50 in costs, with postjudgment interest at the rate of 4.25%.

Keeton appeals from the superior court's refusal to include his attorney's fees and costs in "the amount finally awarded" for purposes of the award of prejudgment interest under AS 09.55.440(a). He also appeals the court's award of postjudgment interest at 4.25%; its decision to quash his subpoena for DOT's attorneys' billing records; and the court's decision to exclude certain activities from the attorney's fees award.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Whether prejudgment interest as defined in AS 09.05.440(a) applies to an award of attorney's fees and costs in a condemnation action presents a legal question, which we review de novo.2 "We apply our independent judgment to questions of 'statutory interpretation requiring the application and analysis of various canons of statutory construction.' "3

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441 P.3d 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeton-v-state-department-of-transportation-and-public-facilities-alaska-2019.