R & Y, INC. v. Municipality of Anchorage

34 P.3d 289, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 122, 2001 WL 1021108
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 2001
DocketS-9315, S-9435
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 34 P.3d 289 (R & Y, INC. v. Municipality of Anchorage) 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
R & Y, INC. v. Municipality of Anchorage, 34 P.3d 289, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 122, 2001 WL 1021108 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Article I, section 18 of the Alaska Constitution provides that "[plrivate property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation." Did the Municipality of Anchorage (MOA) "take" or "damage" property near Blueberry Lake in protected wetlands when it restricted development in a twenty-foot-wide setback band that began eighty feet from the lake's shoreline, decreasing the value of four of the landowners' lots? When the landowners sued the MOA claiming inverse condemnation, the trial court applied the relevant factors and held that there was no "taking." We affirm because we conclude that the legitimacy of the MOA's interest in restricting development in wetlands outweighs the relatively minor impact its action had on the value of the land.

In its cross-appeal, the MOA claims that because it was the prevailing party, it was entitled to an award of attorney's fees and costs. We conclude that when a landowner does not prevail on an inverse condemnation claim, costs and fees awards are controlled by Alaska Civil Rules 79 and 82, and not Alaska Civil Rule 72(k). We therefore remand for consideration of the MOA's requests for attorney's fees and costs.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In August 1970 Josef Ressel and Edward Young purchased approximately forty acres of undeveloped land in Anchorage for

*291 $110,000. 1 They purchased the land for future development. It contained swampland and a shallow lake called Blueberry Lake. The only regulations then applicable to the land were the Greater Anchorage Area Borough's interim subdivision regulations and zoning ordinances. They zoned this property " 'U'-Unrestricted District." Owners of land zoned "U" could develop swampland and drain water bodies on their property. The "U" classification allowed the land to be put to any use that was not noxious, injurious, or hazardous. Prior to 1970 purchasers of swampland in Anchorage had drained and filled their property without any legal restrictions. When they purchased the property near Blueberry Lake, these landowners expected to be able to develop their land in part by draining and filling Blueberry Lake and surrounding swamplands.

In 1972 Congress passed the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, or Clean Water Act (CWA) 2 Under § 404(a) of the CWA, dredging or filling wetlands requires a permit from the United States Army Corps of Engineers 3 In 1978 the MOA began implementing a coastal management plan; in 1982 it adopted the Anchorage Wetlands Management Plan (AWMP). 4 One objective of the AWMP was to simplify the regulation of wetlands. The AWMP classified wetlands as "developable," "conservation," or "preservation." The MOA could issue dredge and fill permits for wetlands classified as "developa-ble." But the Corps retained exclusive permitting authority with respect to "preservation" wetlands. The AWMP also designated a 100-foot setback around Blueberry Lake.

The disputed land was part of an area known as Conner's Bog, designated under the AWMP as "preservation," with particular sub-areas designated as "developable."

The State of Alaska took about thirteen of the forty acres in 1979 for a highway project in exchange for compensation of about $808,000. The landowners sought to subdi-. vide their remaining twenty-seven acres.

Following enactment of the AWMP in 1982, the landowners revised their subdivision design to avoid disturbing Blueberry Lake or the 100-foot setback area designated in the AWMP. Their final plat map replaced two lots and associated street access with an area of equivalent size known as Tract B. The landowners intended Tract B to encompass all of the "preservation" wetlands surrounding Blueberry Lake. Essentially all of Blueberry Lake and the "preservation" wetlands are located within Tract B. The final subdivision thus consisted of Tract A, Tract B, and Lots 1 through 7. The MOA approved the final subdivision plat in May 1983; that plat was recorded on May 12, 1983. Referring to Blueberry Lake, a note on the plat stated that "[nlo structures or fills shall be placed within 65 of the lake located within Tract B." 5

With the "preservation" designation in ef-feet, the landowners could develop Tract B only if the Corps of Engineers issued them a permit allowing them to do so. In August 1985 the landowners applied to the Corps for a § 404 permit to fill Blueberry Lake. The Corps denied the application after the State of Alaska, the MOA, and federal agencies objected.

*292 During the subdivision process in 1984-85, the landowners cleared a drainage ditch and placed fill on Lots 4 and 7, near Tract B. The landowners thought the fill occurred outside the sixty-five-foot setback line and obtained no § 404 permit. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) determined that the fill activity was unauthorized, issued two compliance orders, and demanded site restoration. Unsatisfied by the landowners' response, the EPA filed a federal enforcement action in 1988 and sought injune-tive relief and civil penalties. In 1991 the United States District Court for the District of Alaska entered a stipulation and consent decree establishing that the appropriate boundary for federal purposes was an ecighty-foot-setback from Blueberry Lake. In drafting the consent decree, the Justice Department reasoned that the Corps' general permit required a fifteen-foot buffer from the "preservation" wetlands. Because the setback for the "preservation" wetlands was sixty-five feet and the buffer zone was fifteen-feet wide, the federal consent decree effectively precluded construction within eighty feet of the lake's shoreline, rather than the subdivision plat's sixty-five-foot setback.

In 1990, under authority of the Corps' general permit, the MOA issued the landowners an MOA permit that allowed them to fill Lots 5 and 6 and precluded placing fill within 100 feet of the Blueberry Lake shoreline. In 1991 the landowners obtained a separate permit from the MOA to fill portions of Tract A. This permit also precluded fill within 100 feet of the shoreline of the lake. These setback requirements exceeded both the sixty-five-foot setback described in the 1983 subdivision plat and the eighty-foot setback required by the 1991 federal consent decree. Because the MOA's 100-foot setback requirement extended twenty feet beyond the federal consent decree's eighty-foot restriction, and thus created an additional no-fill area twenty feet wide, we will sometimes refer to this area as the "twenty-foot-wide setback band." It is this band which is at the heart of this appeal.

MOA and Corps regulations have prevented the development of Tract B. The landowners have also been prohibited from developing lands within the setbacks imposed variously by the MOA's subdivision approval, the EPA consent decree, and the MOA's subsequent permitting under the Corps' general permit.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P.3d 289, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 122, 2001 WL 1021108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-y-inc-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-2001.