Palacios Seafood, Inc. v. Piling, Inc., and Matagorda County Navigation District Number One

888 F.2d 1509, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 18465, 1989 WL 136232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1989
Docket89-2078
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 888 F.2d 1509 (Palacios Seafood, Inc. v. Piling, Inc., and Matagorda County Navigation District Number One) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palacios Seafood, Inc. v. Piling, Inc., and Matagorda County Navigation District Number One, 888 F.2d 1509, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 18465, 1989 WL 136232 (5th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

We are asked to decide whether article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution (“section 17”) requires the state to provide compensation to a privately-owned business for damages suffered incident to a waterfront restoration project. The project was undertaken to abate ground erosion that had destabilized the plaintiff’s waterfront building, in particular, and other property located along a seafront basin, in general.

The instant suit is not a traditional “inverse condemnation” action, as where private property owners are forced to sue a sovereign in order to recover compensation for a government-sponsored “taking” of their property. Rather, this action focuses upon the kinds of damages incident to governmental activity that qualify as compen-sable under the state constitution. This dispute is complicated by the fact that the plaintiff’s damaged building was abnormally fragile because of prior ground erosion, and was threatened with destruction as deterioration of a protective seawall exposed it to the sea. Moreover, the building was constructed upon government property and was likely to suffer some measure of damage in the course of any waterfront restoration project.

Like any lessor in Texas, the state is not free to allow its property to deteriorate and thereby cause damage to a lessee’s property; remedies are available under Texas law making such nonfeasance actionable. We conclude, however, that a state constitutional claim pursuant to section 17 is not among this plaintiff’s available remedies.

To hold for the private property owner here would be to subject Texas and its political subdivisions to constitutional attack for substandard repairs incident to their obligations as lessors. Section 17, as interpreted to date, becomes operative if government-sponsored damage results pursuant to positive action, not inaction. But we doubt that Texas courts would endorse a constitutional rule that effectively penalizes the state for undertaking a necessary restoration project, while holding it harmless if it stood idle and allowed the property owner’s building to tumble into the sea. Hence, because we conclude that the Texas constitution does not afford relief under the facts of this case, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the state constitutional claim.

I.

A privately-owned seafront business suffered extensive property damage after the *1511 government made long-overdue repairs to a protective seawall. Designed and built in the 1950’s, this wooden seawall, or “bulkhead,” had well exceeded its twenty-five-year useful life.

Responsibility for the bulkhead and adjacent waterfront property rested with the Matagorda County Navigation District Number One (the “District”), a political subdivision of the State of Texas. 1 The District owned the waterfront real estate upon which Palacios Seafood, Inc. (“Palac-ios”), conducted shrimp-processing operations for local fishermen. Palacios owned the building but paid rent to the District for use of the land.

Palacios purchased the 5,000-square-foot building in 1983 from the individual who had constructed it during the 1960’s. 2 With no opposition from the District, the original owner selected a site adjacent to the newly-built wooden bulkhead. In fact, the foundation of the building was only a few feet from the bulkhead. This feature later appealed to Palacios because, consistently with its business, it could easily on-load fuel for shrimp boats and offload the fishermen’s catch for processing.

In 1985 the District hired an independent contractor, Piling, Inc. (“Piling”), to replace the dilapidated bulkhead in front of plaintiffs building and the other shorefront property it controlled. The District admits that it could not ignore the problem of deterioration any longer and, given sufficient revenue in its budget, would have replaced the bulkhead five to ten years earlier.

The bulkhead in front of Palacios was particularly decayed, in part a result of prior dumping of fish waste that had caused a destructive growth on the wooden pilings. The earth supporting the building’s foundation had been eroded and undermined, 3 and Palacios’s owners testified that, prior to construction, its building already had experienced some cracks in the foundation. All parties agree that in the absence of timely repair, Palacios’s business actually would have tumbled into the sea. In fact, the owners of Palacios, along with other area merchants, actively lobbied the District to restore the neglected bulkhead.

Prior to construction of the new bulkhead, representatives from the District and Palacios met at least two times. A verbal agreement was reached to proceed with the project, although no written release from liability was executed. There is some uncertainty as to whether the District asked for a written release or whether, as suggested by the District, that issue just “fell through the cracks.” 4

It is nevertheless evident that the District appreciated the risk associated with the replacement of the bulkhead. A District commissioner testified that “we knew that it was a good possibility the structure would collapse because of this construction and the condition it was in.” Reference to potential damage was also noted in the contract with Piling. 5 During installation *1512 of new pilings adjacent to Palacios’s property, the worst predictions proved accurate: Extensive damage resulted to the building, requiring repairs in excess of $40,000. 6

This case was tried before a magistrate as an admiralty action. Palacios settled its claim with Piling but continued its admiralty claim in federal court against the District, alleging that (1) the damage it suffered amounted to a compensable claim under section 17 and (2) the District was negligent in its construction of the bulkhead.

II.

A.

The magistrate concluded that there was no “intentional taking” under section 17 7 and that, if anything, the new bulkhead “enhanced” the value of plaintiffs property. The court also rejected Palacios’s negligence claim, holding that sovereign immunity barred recovery. The magistrate directed a verdict in favor of the District. 8

On appeal, Palacios argues that the Texas Constitution expressly includes damages to private property as recoverable against the state, and it challenges the magistrate’s suggestion that the value of its building was “enhanced” by such damage. It also argues that by entering into a lease agreement, the District waived its defense of sovereign immunity with respect to a “breach of contract” claim which it allegedly litigated. 9

The District responds that the section 17 issue is waived on appeal as not having been adequately litigated before the magistrate.

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Bluebook (online)
888 F.2d 1509, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 18465, 1989 WL 136232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palacios-seafood-inc-v-piling-inc-and-matagorda-county-navigation-ca5-1989.