Lincoln Land Development, LLP v. City of Lincoln

2019 ND 81, 924 N.W.2d 426
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2019
Docket20180117
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2019 ND 81 (Lincoln Land Development, LLP v. City of Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln Land Development, LLP v. City of Lincoln, 2019 ND 81, 924 N.W.2d 426 (N.D. 2019).

Opinion

Crothers, Justice.

*429 [¶1] The City of Lincoln appeals from a district court's amended judgment awarding damages and attorney fees for taking land owned by Lincoln Land Development, LLP. We affirm the taking decision, award of attorney fees, and remand to consider awarding attorney fees on appeal.

I

[¶2] In the mid-1980s the City of Lincoln established a narrow, two-tire-track dirt road over private property to access its wastewater treatment site. In 2005 Lincoln Land Development purchased the property. In 2011 the City improved the dirt road by raising the road profile, widening the road top, constructing ditches, installing culverts and completing gravel resurfacing to standardize the width and height of the road. The City did not obtain permission from Lincoln Land Development before commencing the improvement project and did not initiate eminent domain proceedings.

[¶3] Lincoln Land Development sued the City in February 2015 for inverse condemnation, trespass and nuisance relating to the City's 2011 improvement of the road. Lincoln Land Development moved to amend its complaint to assert claims relating to increased surface water drainage and damages caused by stormwater retention. The City denied a taking occurred and raised affirmative defenses, including claiming a public easement through prescriptive use, the existence of an express or implied easement, an easement by estoppel, or a government mandate required the project.

[¶4] The district court found Lincoln Land Development's claims of nuisance and trespass were time-barred and dismissed them with prejudice in March 2015. In September 2017 a bench trial was held and claims based on increased surface water drainage, wetlands and stormwater retention ponds were dismissed. At the conclusion of the bench trial, the district court found that the City established a prescriptive easement in the pre-2011 road and that a taking occurred when additional property was used in the 2011 road improvement. A jury subsequently determined the value of the taking was $8,924.00 plus interest. The district court subsequently granted Lincoln Land Development's motion for attorney fees of $122,705.50. The City appeals.

II

[¶5] The City argues no taking occurred because a permanent easement by implication, estoppel or an express grant of a right-of-way existed starting in the 1980s, which allowed the 2011 road improvement project to proceed without further action.

[¶6] An easement is an interest in land granting the right to use or control the land for a specific purpose. Wagner v. Crossland Constr. Co., Inc. , 2013 ND 219 , ¶ 6, 840 N.W.2d 81 . An easement may be created by an express grant or reservation contained in a written instrument, or may arise by implication under the facts and circumstances of a particular case. Id . An easement by estoppel exists when the owner of the servient estate permits another to use the land under foreseeable circumstance, *430 the user relied on that belief, and injustice can be avoided only by establishment of the servitude. Hager v. City of Devils Lake , 2009 ND 180 , ¶ 48, 773 N.W.2d 420 . The district court's underlying findings of fact in easement cases are subject to the clearly erroneous standard of review, but whether the underlying facts support the existence of an implied easement is a question of law subject to de novo review. Wagner , 2013 ND 219 , ¶ 17, 840 N.W.2d 81 .

[¶7] Section 47-05-02.1, N.D.C.C., requires an easement is properly described:

"Real property easements, servitudes, or any nonappurtenant restrictions on the use of real property, which become binding after July 1, 1977, shall be subject to the requirements of this section. These requirements are deemed a part of any agreement for such interests in real property whether or not printed in a document of agreement.
1. The area of land covered by the easement, servitude, or nonappurtenant restriction on the use of real property shall be properly described and shall set out the area of land covered by the interest in real property.
2. The duration of the easement, servitude, or nonappurtenant restriction on the use of real property must be specifically set out, and in no case may the duration of any interest in real property regulated by this section exceed ninety-nine years. The duration of an easement for a waterfowl production area acquired by the federal government, and consented to by the governor or the appropriate state agency after July 1, 1985, may not exceed fifty years. A waterfowl production area easement that exceeds fifty years or which purports to be perpetual may be extended by negotiation between the owner of the easement and the owner of the servient tenement. A waterfowl production area easement that exceeds fifty years or which purports to be permanent and is not extended by negotiation is void. The duration of a wetlands reserve program easement acquired by the federal government pursuant to the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 after July 1, 1991, may not exceed thirty years.
3. No increase in the area of real property subject to the easement, servitude, or nonappurtenant restriction shall be made except by negotiation between the owner of the easement, servitude, or nonappurtenant restriction and the owner of the servient tenement."

[¶8] The City argues the district court minimized and discounted several critically important trial exhibits relating to its easement defense. However, in the forty-two-page order for judgment the district court fully explains how the various exhibits interact and why no written easement exists. Because the City did not provide transcripts as required by Rule 10(b), N.D.R.App.P., our review is limited to the evidence in the record and the findings and order for judgment issued by the district court.

[¶9] The findings reflect the managing partner of Lincoln Land Development testified the deed it received when the property was purchased did not contain a grant or reservation of a road. He also testified no easement was recorded with the Burleigh County recorder and no express easement was granted to the City after Lincoln Land Development purchased the property. Title insurance documents did not identify an easement for the road. The only recorded easement was from 1984 where the previous owner granted the city a "perpetual sewer line easement" consisting *431

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Bluebook (online)
2019 ND 81, 924 N.W.2d 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-land-development-llp-v-city-of-lincoln-nd-2019.