Vacation Village Inc. v. Clark County, Nevada

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 2007
Docket05-16173
StatusPublished

This text of Vacation Village Inc. v. Clark County, Nevada (Vacation Village Inc. v. Clark County, Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vacation Village Inc. v. Clark County, Nevada, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

VACATION VILLAGE, INC.,  Plaintiff-Appellee, No. 05-16173 v.  D.C. No. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA, CV-05-00010-RCJ Defendant-Appellant. 

VACATION VILLAGE, INC.,  Plaintiff-Appellant, No. 05-16389 v.  D.C. No. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA, CV-05-00010-RCJ Defendant-Appellee. 

In re: CEH PROPERTIES, LTD.,  Debtor, No. 05-16406 D.C. Nos. VACATION VILLAGE, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee,  CV-05-00010-RCJ ADV. No. 98-2313- v. RCJ CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA, Defendant-Appellant. 

8849 8850 VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA

In re: CEH PROPERTIES, LTD.,  Debtor, No. 05-16554 D.C. Nos. VACATION VILLAGE, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,  CV-05-00010-RCJ ADV. No. 98-2313- v. RCJ CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA, OPINION Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Nevada Robert C. Jones, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted April 16, 2007—San Francisco, California

Filed July 23, 2007

Before: Warren J. Ferguson, Stephen Reinhardt, and Milan D. Smith, Jr., Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Milan D. Smith, Jr. 8854 VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA

COUNSEL

Kirk Lenhard, Las Vegas, Nevada, for the appellant/cross- appellee.

Paul Ray, Las Vegas, Nevada, for the appellee/cross- appellant.

OPINION

MILAN D. SMITH, JR., Circuit Judge:

Appellees, the owners of real property near McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada, brought an inverse condemnation action against Clark County (County) alleging that the County’s Ordinances 1221 and 1198, which impose, respectively, height and use restrictions, constitute takings under the Nevada Constitution. We hold that our review of Ordinance 1221 is limited by the Nevada Supreme Court’s decision in McCarran Int’l Airport v. Sisolak, 137 P.3d 1110 (Nev. 2006) construing Nevada state law, and, accordingly, find that Ordinance 1221, as applied to Appel- lee’s property, amounts to a taking. We remand for a calcula- tion of just compensation in light of Sisolak. We affirm the VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA 8855 district court’s decision that Ordinance 1198 did not effect a taking of Appellee’s property.1

I. BACKGROUND

For more than 50 years, the County has regulated land near McCarran Airport through the adoption of zoning ordinances. As a result of its proximity to the airport, the real property owned by Appellees (collectively, the Landowners)2 has been encumbered by a number of these ordinances.

The Landowners acquired the subject property in 1964, intending to construct a hotel resort and casino. A portion of the property was zoned as Rural Estates Residential (R-E), and in 1971 the Landowners sought to rezone this portion as Limited Resort and Apartment (H-1). The County partially conditioned approval of the Landowners’ rezoning request on the Landowners’ granting of the following avigation ease- ment:

[The County] is to have a perpetual right of flight, ingress to and egress from the airspace over the lands herein above described, in conformity with the air traffic rules governing the flight of aircraft to and from the Clark County Airport . . . . It is further understood and agreed that the grantor himself, his heirs, successors or assignees . . . shall and do hereby release, and agree to save harmless and indemnify, the County of Clark from any claims whatsoever for losses caused by noise or the psychological effects of aircraft. 1 We address the remaining issues raised by both parties on appeal in a concurrently filed memorandum disposition. 2 In ways not relevant to our decision, the ownership of the subject prop- erty has been transferred several times. For convenience, we use the term “Landowners” to refer to the then relevant fee holder(s) throughout this opinion. 8856 VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA (First Easement). By 1974, the Landowners had completed a number of rooms, but not the entire building. The parties did not complete the rezoning and the First Easement was not recorded.

In February 1981, the County enacted Ordinance 728 at Chapter 29.50 of the Clark County Code in order to limit the height of structures adjacent to public use airports. Ordinance 728 set a height limitation demarcated by a plane sloping “twenty (20) feet outward for each foot upward beginning at the end of and at the same elevation as the primary surface” for areas designated as a “Utility Runway Visual Approach Zone.” The parties refer to this height limitation as a “20:1” slope surface. Ordinance 728 set a height limitation of one hundred fifty feet above the airport elevation for areas within a “Horizontal Zone.”

In June 1988, the Landowners filed another rezoning request with the County to have the R-E property reclassified as H-1. The County conditioned its approval of the Landown- ers’ rezoning request on the Landowners’ granting the follow- ing avigation easement:

It is understood and agreed that [the County is] to have perpetual right of flight, for the passage of air- craft in the air space above the surface of said prem- ises, together with the right to cause in said air space such noise as may be inherent in the operation of air- craft, now known or hereafter used for navigation of or flight in the air using said air space or landing at, or taking-off from or operating at, or on the premises known as McCarran International Airport . . . .

It is further understood the GRANTOR does hereby agree for himself to release Clark County, Nevada, and operators and users of the above described air- fields from any claims whatsoever for losses hereaf- VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA 8857 ter caused by noise or the psychological effects of aircraft noise resulting from the overflight of aircraft.

(Second Easement). The Landowners granted the Second Easement to the County on June 21, 1988. The County reclas- sified the property from R-E to H-1 and granted a use permit to the Landowners to construct and maintain a 501-room, two-story hotel, and an 85,000-square-foot casino. According to the Landowners, construction under the proposed design plans began in 1989.

On January 16, 1990, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a “Determination of Hazard to Air Navigation” to the Landowners. The FAA determined that the Landown- ers’ previously proposed 80-foot sign, 47-foot casino and three 76-foot hotel buildings would penetrate the approach slope for proposed Runway 1R and thus “would have a sub- stantial adverse impact to the safe and efficient use of naviga- ble airspace and would be a hazard to air navigation.”

The Landowners redesigned the proposed construction lim- iting the height of the structures on the property to 38 feet above ground level 2,850 feet southwest of the approach end of Runway 1R. On June 27, 1990, the FAA issued a “Deter- mination of No Hazard to Air Navigation” finding that “[a]lthough the structure has been identified as an obstruction, . . . the proposal would not adversely affect the safe and effi- cient use of navigable airspace and would not be a hazard to air navigation.”

On July 18, 1990, the County passed Ordinance 1221 which amended Chapter 29.50 of the Clark County Code. For property in a “Precision Instrument Runway Approach Zone” the applicable height limitation “[s]lopes fifty feet outward for each foot upward beginning at the end of and at the same ele- vation as the primary surface and extending to a horizontal distance of ten thousand feet along the extended runway cen- terline.” The parties refer to this height limitation as a “50:1” 8858 VACATION VILLAGE v. CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA slope surface.

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