Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Justin T. Moore

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 2018
Docket2017-SC-0555
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Justin T. Moore (Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Justin T. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Justin T. Moore, (Ky. 2018).

Opinion

RENDERED: NOVEMBER 1, 2018 TO BE PUBLISHED

I ; u 2017-SC-000555-DG

LEXINGTON-FAYETTE URBAN COUNTY APPELLANT GOVERNMENT

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NO. 2016-CA-000187-MR FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT NO. 15-CI-03477

JUSTIN T. MOORE APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VENTERS

REVERSING

The Fayette Circuit Court entered an interlocutory judgment pursuant to

KRS 416.610 concluding that Appellant, Lexington-Fayette Urban County

Government (“LFUCG”), properly exercised its power of eminent domain in the

taking of a permanent easement on the land of Appellee Justin Moore for the

public purpose of constructing a storm water culvert and drainage system.

Moore appealed. 1 Moore’s appeal acknowledged LFUCG’s power to condemn,

but he argued that by taking only an easement on the 4,518.6 sq. ft. area,

rather than a fee simple, LFUCG was not acting in good faith.

1 In Ratliff V. Fiscal Court of Caldwell County, 617 S.W.2d 36, 39 (Ky. 1981), we held that a property owner has a right to appeal a circuit court interlocutory order entered under KRS 416.610 determining that the condemning governmental unit has a right to take his property. The Court of Appeals agreed with Moore that under the circumstances

presented here, where the condemned land was left essentially valueless to the

landowner following the taking, LFUCG’s duty as a condemning authority to

act in good faith obligated it to take possession of the land by fee simple rather

than by easement.

We granted discretionary review, and for the reasons set forth below, we

reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the interlocutory judgment of the

Fayette Circuit Court.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case concerns LFUCG’s taking, pursuant to Kentucky’s Eminent

Domain Act (KRS 416.540-416.680), of an interest in a portion of Moore’s 2.68-

acre residential tract located on Deer Haven Lane in Fayette County. Along the

western boundary of Moore’s property runs a section of Polo Club Boulevard

that terminates before it reaches Deer Haven Lane, which runs along the

northern boundary of Moore’s property. LFUCG’s project will extend Polo Club

Boulevard to meet Deer Haven Lane, but it requires the construction of a 16-

foot by 4-foot box culvert and a drainage system extending sixty feet on to

Moore’s property to a pond located on Moore’s tract. The area of the land

needed for the culvert and drainage system is 4,518.6 sq. ft., a little less than

the size of a basketball court, at a corner of Moore’s 2.68 acres.

Before the condemnation action began, an appraisal report prepared for

LFUCG in connection with the project estimated that Moore’s after-taking

utility of the section to be occupied by the 4,518-square foot permanent easement would be 5%. No benefit to the property from the easement was

identified.

Based upon the appraisal, LFUCG made an offer to pay Moore for a

permanent easement on the 4,518.6-sq.ft. section, and the temporary

construction easement on a larger area of 26,504.18 square feet. In response

to the offer, Moore questioned why LFUCG would merely take a permanent

easement instead of fee simple ownership since the taking would reduce the

utility of this section to 5% of its former utility. LFUCG Acquisition Agent, Paul

Willard, responded that the permanent easement was “to provide the

government access to maintain the culvert for maintenance purposes” and that

this was “the same treatment . . . generally on any building project using state

or federal funds.” Willard did not identify any state or federal authorities

requiring that an easement be taken in situations such as this, where the

landowner’s after-taking utility is minimal. Through his attorney, Moore

expressed concern that if he remained the title owner of the area, he could be

liable for injuries or accidents caused in connection with the culvert and

drainage system. LFUCG argued that the policy is reasonable to avoid the

burden of the government owning fee-simple title to hundreds of miniscule

plots of land throughout its boundaries. Negotiations produced no settlement,

and the condemnation action ensued.

LFUCG filed the action seeking a temporary construction easement and

permanent drainage easement on Moore’s property. The appointed

commissioners found that the proposed permanent easement would diminish the fair market value of Moore’s 2.68-acre tract by the sum of $1,287 and that

a fair rental value for the area required for the temporary construction

easement was $8,000. Moore’s answer to the complaint contested LFUCG’s

right to take the property, a position he later abandoned, and further argued

that LFUCG was acting in bad faith or abusing its discretion by seeking to take

a permanent easement rather than a fee simple interest.

LFUCG eventually filed a motion for interlocutory judgment pursuant to

KRS 416.6102 requesting that the government be allowed to take the property.

At the hearing held pursuant to KRS 416.610(4), Moore did not dispute that

the proposed taking was for a public purpose. He continued to assert that

LFUCG should be required to take the property by fee simple since its taking as

an easement left him with no useful purpose for the property.

LFUCG acknowledged that the remaining utility of this section of Moore’s

property, after being subjected to the permanent easement, would be 5% and

that Moore would not be able to use it because of the box culvert located on it.

LFUCG’s witness, Willard, testified that he was not aware of any similar-sized

culvert which LFUCG had taken as an easement rather than a fee simple

interest. Willard testified that LFUCG followed the Kentucky Transportation

Cabinet’s “standard practice,” which required the taking of an easement under

2 In the event the governmental unit’s right to condemn under KRS 416.610 is not challenged, KRS 416.610(2) mandates the entry by the circuit court of an order granting the condemnation and the right to possession in favor of the governmental unit, though the statute also permits the landowner to continue to challenge the amount of compensation to which he is entitled. these circumstances and that LFUCG must comply with federal and state

guidelines because of funding requirements. LFUCG provided no citations to

the federal and state guidelines to support those assertions.

On cross-examination, Willard conceded that he was unaware of any

written Transportation Cabinet policy or guideline requiring the acquisition of a

permanent easement rather than fee simple. When asked specifically if the

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Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Justin T. Moore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lexington-fayette-urban-county-government-v-justin-t-moore-ky-2018.