Village, LLC v. Delaware Agricultural Lands Foundation

808 A.2d 753, 2002 Del. LEXIS 647, 2002 WL 31355189
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 18, 2002
DocketNo. 433,2001
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 808 A.2d 753 (Village, LLC v. Delaware Agricultural Lands Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village, LLC v. Delaware Agricultural Lands Foundation, 808 A.2d 753, 2002 Del. LEXIS 647, 2002 WL 31355189 (Del. 2002).

Opinion

WALSH, Justice:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Superior Court granting summary judgment in favor of a State agency and against a property owner alleging inverse condemnation. Appellant/plaintiff below, [754]*754The Village, L.L.C. (the ‘"Village”), is the owner of a planned residential development known as The Village at Cannon Mill in the City of Dover. The Delaware Agricultural Lands Preservation Foundation (the “Foundation”), a state agency, approved an application by the owner of an adjacent tract of land creating an agricultural preservation district pursuant to 3 Del. C. § 901, et. seq., thereby establishing a fifty-foot setback on the Village’s property. The Village filed suit against the Foundation and the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture contending that the designation of the agricultural preservation district, with its setback requirement, constituted an unconstitutional taking of its property. The Superior Court, in two opinions, granted summary judgment in favor of the State ruling, in effect, that the Village had no vested right to either compensation or a declaration that it was not subject to the fifty-foot setback requirement.

We conclude that the good faith pursuit by the Village of all steps to secure necessary permits for its development precluded, as a matter of law, it being characterized as a “new subdivision” subject to the fifty-foot setback requirement. Because it is not subject to the setback requirement, the Village suffered no “taking” subject to a claim of inverse condemnation. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Superior Court.

I

The following chronology of events preceding the Superior Court litigation is essentially undisputed. On May 23, 1996, the Village purchased a 65.5 acre parcel of real estate in Kent County with the intention of developing it as a multi-housing style residential neighborhood (the “Project”). In preparation for the Project, the Village hired engineers and consultants and began meeting with the planning staff of the City of Dover to agree on a plan of development. The Village received conditional approval of the Project from the City of Dover Planning Commission at its October 20, 1997 meeting. The Village also received preliminary approval of the Project from the Dover City Council on December 8, 1997. Final approval was contingent on securing the consents of other agencies such as DelDot for street access and utilities hook-up approval.

Meanwhile, Farm Lands, L.L.P., the owner of approximately 244.5 acres of land adjacent to the Project filed an application with the Foundation to create an agriculture preservation district pursuant to 3 Del. C. § 901, et seq. The establishment of an agricultural preservation district requires any adjacent “new subdivision development” to observe a fifty-foot setback requirement, thus precluding the erection of any structure within the setback. 3 Del. C. § 910(a). On November 26, 1997, the Foundation met to consider whether Farm Lands’ property satisfied the criteria for eligibility as a preservation district, and concluded that it did. Representatives of the Village were aware of Farm Lands’ application, and attended the Foundation’s, meeting. In accordance with the mandate of 3 Del. C. § 907(b), the Foundation forwarded Farm Lands’ application to the Farm Land Preservation Advisory Board for Kent County (“Board”) and the Kent County Regional Planning Commission (“Commission”) for their independent consideration. The approval of any two of these three agencies is sufficient to create an agricultural preservation district. 3 Del. C. § 907(c).

Each agency then held a meeting to consider Farm Lands’ application. On January 6, 1998, the Board voted to approve Farm Lands’ application for a preservation district. That same day, the [755]*755Foundation published notice in the Delaware State News and the Wilmington News Journal for a January 13,1998 meeting where final approval of the agricultural preservation district was to be considered. Farm Lands’ apphcation was then partially approved by the Commission at its business meeting of January 8, 1998, with an amendment changing the setback requirement to twenty-five feet. At the Foundation’s January 13 meeting, Farm Lands’ agricultural preservation district was approved and it was duly recorded on February 13, 1998 with the Kent County Recorder of Deeds.

The Village was aware of each stage of Farm Lands’ apphcation process. The Village received actual notice of each of the agency meetings, and its counsel attended all of the meetings, arguing against the preservation district’s fifty-foot setback requirement because of its effect on the proposed development. Apparently, throughout this process, the Village was under the mistaken impression that the City of Dover required a twenty-five foot setback and that approval of the Farm Lands’ preservation district would add an additional twenty-five feet to this requirement. In fact, the City of Dover requires a forty-foot setback, so that Farm Lands’ preservation district affects only ten feet of the Village’s property.

The Village claims that the additional setback requirement renders it unable to build on certain lots and significantly impairs the value of twenty-eight lots. It further claims that the total diminished value of the Project as a result of the additional setback is in excess of $400,000. The Superior Court apparently accepted this estimate for purposes of summary judgment. The Village’s final plan for subdivision was approved on June 25, 1998 and recorded at the Kent County Recorder of Deeds the following day. At the time of trial, the Village had not applied for a building permit to commence construction of its planned subdivision, nor could it do so under the applicable City ordinance. The Village maintains, however, that it expended $312,479.88 on the Project prior to the creation of Farm Lands’ preservation district.

The Village initiated litigation by filing a petition for review and declaratory judgment in the Superior Court naming the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Farm Lands as defendants. The Village sought a declaratory judgment to the effect that the fifty-foot setback does not apply to its property or, alternatively, that it be awarded money damages for the taking and diminution of its property pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. While the litigation was pending the Village received final approval for its development plan on June 25, 1998 and recorded the final plot on June 26,1998.

The Superior Court determined the matter through two separate opinions on cross motions for summary judgment. Initially, the Superior Court concluded that the Village did not have a vested right to a specific land use adjacent to the preservation district since it lacked building permits at the time of the creation of the preservation district. The Village project was thus deemed a “new subdivision” subject to the setback requirement. The trial court also rejected the Village’s section 1983 claim of a taking on the ground that the setback requirement was a permitted interference with property expectations.

In a second decision, the Superior Court rejected the Village’s due process claim based on lack of notice and fairness of the hearing process by the Foundation, concluding that the Village had made no claim of inadequate notice by the Foundation and had, in fact, appeared through counsel [756]*756at the Foundation hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
808 A.2d 753, 2002 Del. LEXIS 647, 2002 WL 31355189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-llc-v-delaware-agricultural-lands-foundation-del-2002.