Starkville Lodging LLC v. Mississippi Transportation Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 27, 2019
Docket2018-CA-01405-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Starkville Lodging LLC v. Mississippi Transportation Commission (Starkville Lodging LLC v. Mississippi Transportation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starkville Lodging LLC v. Mississippi Transportation Commission, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-01405-COA

STARKVILLE LODGING, LLC APPELLANT

v.

MISSISSIPPI TRANSPORTATION APPELLEE COMMISSION

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/17/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LEE SORRELS COLEMAN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: OKTIBBEHA COUNTY SPECIAL COURT OF EMINENT DOMAIN ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JAMES W. NOBLES JR. TRAVIS T. VANCE JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: MORRIS C. PHILLIPS JR. BILLY HALL NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - EMINENT DOMAIN DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/27/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., McDONALD AND C. WILSON, JJ.

C. WILSON, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The Mississippi Transportation Commission (the Commission) initiated this eminent

domain proceeding in the Special Court of Eminent Domain of Oktibbeha County,

Mississippi, on December 17, 2017. Starkville Lodging subsequently filed a combined

answer and motion to dismiss pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-27-15

(Rev. 2004), which the Special Court of Eminent Domain denied on September 17, 2018.

Starkville Lodging appeals the denial of its motion to dismiss, seeking review of (1) whether

there is a public necessity for taking Starkville Lodging’s property; and (2) whether the Commission’s contemplated use of the condemned property is in law a public use for which

Starkville Lodging’s property may be taken.

¶2. Finding the Special Court of Eminent Domain had a sufficient basis for its decision

to deny Starkville Lodging’s motion to dismiss, we affirm.

FACTS

¶3. Eight years prior to the initiation of this proceeding, the Mississippi Department of

Transportation (MDOT) deeded a parcel of land it no longer needed for drainage or

transportation purposes to Starkville Lodging. A portion of this 2.45-acre parcel comprises

the disputed property in this eminent domain proceeding.

¶4. On December 1, 2015, the City of Starkville (the City) authorized the sale of

approximately 20.34 acres of city-owned property, formerly used by the City as a sewage

lagoon, that was no longer needed or used in the operation of the municipality. The City

determined that the sale of the sewage lagoon property would promote and foster the

development, improvement, and economic welfare of the community. This property is

located to the southwest of Starkville Lodging’s disputed tract.

¶5. On the same day, the City entered into a contract for the sale and purchase of the

abandoned sewage lagoon property with Dr. Bennett York, an oral surgeon and real estate

developer from Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Due to the landlocked nature of the sewage lagoon

property, the contract for the sale and purchase of the sewage lagoon was conditioned on the

“State allowing access to [the] property for [the] intended use [of the] Buyer.” The contract

provided that Dr. York could extend the closing if needed to ensure that access was granted.

2 According to Dr. York, “[a]ccess was always the problem.” In all, approximately six

contract extensions were made for “the purpose of [the eminent domain] proceeding being

decided in favor of MDOT and providing [Dr. York] access to the abandoned sewage

lagoon[.]”1

¶6. On August 12, 2016, the Commission and the City authorized and executed a

memorandum of agreement for the “acquisition of [a] right[-]of[-]way” to provide for “the

construction and maintenance of interconnections between the state[-]designated highway

system and [the] streets of the municipalit[y][.]” The stated purpose of the memorandum of

agreement was to correct an oversight by the Commission in acquiring a portion of an

easement owned by the City during the Commission’s earlier acquisition of right-of-way to

“expand and relocate State Route 12 from the MSU campus to the U.S. Highway 82

bypass[.]” The property to be acquired by the Commission pursuant to the memorandum of

agreement was the parcel owned by Starkville Lodging at issue here.

¶7. The memorandum of agreement provided in relevant part:

1 The City conveyed the sewage lagoon to Dr. York via warranty deed in May 2018, shortly after Dr. York was “forced to gain access [through] another source at great expense[.]” In exchange for the easement obtained from this “source,” Dr. York agreed to several restrictive covenants that would curtail Dr. York’s intended use and/or development of the sewage lagoon. For example, as a part of this easement agreement, Dr. York agreed never to develop certain developments on the sewage lagoon property including grocery stores, pharmacies, dollar stores, gas stations, and/or low-income housing projects. Further, in exchange for the easement and in addition to the restrictions agreed to, Dr. York agreed to bear all costs of constructing a road on the easement. The easement agreement provided that, upon termination of the easement, Dr. York would regain all rights to the future development of the sewage lagoon property. Thus, if Dr. York obtained alternate access to the sewage lagoon, he could terminate the private easement and develop his property restriction-free.

3 [The Commission shall] . . . commence acquisition of right[-]of[-]way to provide for a connection from the current location of Pat Station Road east of State Route 12 outside the state-maintained limits of the intersection to the easement rights which extend from the southerly border of the intersection of State Route 12 and Pat Station Road to the sewage lagoon located to the south thereof.

Upon successful acquisition of the right-of-way, the Commission was to “convey title to the

City by execution of a quitclaim deed provided by MDOT at its cost and expense.” In return,

the City was to accept conveyance of Starkville Lodging’s condemned property and bear

responsibility for any pavement or other improvements. The City, however, had no duty or

obligation under the memorandum of agreement to pave or otherwise improve the deeded

property—any decision to pave or improve the property was left to the City’s sole discretion.2

¶8. On June 27, 2017, the Commission, unable to reach an agreement with Starkville

Lodging for the acquisition of the parcel, ordered Starkville Lodging’s parcel condemned.

The Commission determined it “to be in the best interest of the motorists and taxpayers of

Mississippi to locate, relocate, construct and/or reconstruct a segment of MS Highway 12

Access Road, a part of the Mississippi State Highway System[.]” The Commission

accordingly found it “necessary to acquire for public use certain property belonging to

2 As mentioned, the City did not obligate itself to pave or otherwise improve the condemned parcel of Starkville Lodging’s property. Nor did the City obligate itself to provide a bridge connecting the sewage lagoon to the right-of-way envisioned for the condemned parcel. At the eminent domain hearing, Dr. York testified he planned to privately fund and construct both the road and the bridge connecting the future right-of-way on Starkville Lodging’s property to his future development of the sewage lagoon property. In response to the trial court’s question regarding whether Dr. York would be the owner of the condemned parcel, Starkville Lodging conceded that, although privately funded and constructed by Dr. York, the right-of-way would remain the property of the City as provided in the memorandum of agreement. Thus, once built, the road and related infrastructure would remain public.

4 [Starkville Lodging], or their successor in title[.]” And on December 16, 2017, the

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Bluebook (online)
Starkville Lodging LLC v. Mississippi Transportation Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starkville-lodging-llc-v-mississippi-transportation-commission-missctapp-2019.