Zerbetz v. Municipality of Anchorage

856 P.2d 777, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1993 WL 273442
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1993
DocketS-4937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 856 P.2d 777 (Zerbetz 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
Zerbetz v. Municipality of Anchorage, 856 P.2d 777, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1993 WL 273442 (Ala. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

RSB Investment Fund II, Ltd. (“RSB”) alleges inverse condemnation of its property by the Municipality of Anchorage (“Municipality”). The questions presented are whether the Municipality’s designation of RSB’s property as “conservation wetlands” constituted a regulatorylaking, and whether the Municipality’s construction of the North Klatt Road Extension resulted in a physical invasion of RSB’s property. The superior court granted the Municipality’s partial summary judgment motion 1 on the regulatory takings question, holding that the “conservation wetlands” designation did not amount to an inverse condemnation of RSB’s property. A jury determined that no physical taking occurred as a result of the construction of the North Klatt Road Extension. We affirm both the superior court’s grant of partial summary judgment and the jury’s verdict.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

A. Facts relevant to the regulatory takings issue.

In May 1978 RSB purchased a 39.02 acre tract of real property in the Klatt Bog area of South Anchorage for $250,000. The *779 property was, and still is, zoned R-1A. 2

In 1979 the Municipality adopted the Anchorage Coastal Management Plan or “ACMP.” The ACMP states in part:

One of ACMP’s primary goals is complementing and strengthening local and ar-eawide planning and management capabilities, in coordination with State and Federal agency and private sector activities. In so doing, ACMP is intended to furnish coastal area citizens with improved opportunities to constructively influence the land and water management decisions which affect their lives. District coastal management programs are not designed to impose additional impediments to various uses of coastal lands and waters, but rather to more equitably and efficiently apply the diverse array of existing Federal, State and local authorities governing such uses, and to ensure the balanced consideration of a broad range of competing interests.

In 1982 the Municipality implemented the Anchorage Wetlands Management Plan, which classifies property in the Anchorage Bowl as either “Preservation,” “Conservation,” “Developable,” or “Special Study.” The Plan designated RSB’s property as “Conservation/Development,” which means that development could “selectively proceed on portions of this wetland following presentation of data and review of these data by the Municipal Platting Board.” The data required included “representative soil borings,” “hydrologic information specifying the quality, amount and direction of flow of surface and subsurface water,” “vegetative information,” and “habitat information.” 3 AMC 21.15.-030(C)(3)(a-d).

In 1985 the Municipality adopted the Anchorage Park, Greenbelt and Recreational Facility Plan. This Plan provides in part:

In South Anchorage, a linear park should be set aside around Klatt Bog. The linear park should include a trail for recreational purposes and buffer space to protect habitat within the bog.
Recommendations: Campbell Lake, Bayshore, Klatt and Oceanview areas A Klatt Bog greenbelt system should be set aside to provide open space and trails in the new Southport-Klatt area development.

There is no evidence in the record that these proposals were ever adopted. 4

*780 Between August 1982 and December 1988 the Municipality received twenty-eight platting applications for properties designated “conservation wetlands” within the Campbell/Klatt Bog. The Municipal Platting Board and the Planning Commission granted development permission to twenty-six of these applications. To date, RSB has never filed an application for plat approval.

At the summary judgment stage, RSB submitted an affidavit from Robert Ban-non, an Anchorage real estate broker who helped develop several of the subdivisions in the Klatt Bog. Bannon averred that “any time the Municipality or other governmental entity imposes new restrictions or additional procedures, or designates property to be included within a study relative to developability, that action will have an adverse effect on the marketability of the property.” He also stated that Municipality “representatives” had told him that “no development would be permitted [on RSB’s property] without extensive study and special research and engineering.”

RSB also submitted an affidavit from Priscilla Post Wohl, a former senior planner with the Municipality’s Community Planning Department. She stated that RSB’s property was located approximately in the center of the Klatt Bog wetlands complex. She averred that “it was generally agreed by the various resource management agencies that the highest and best use for the central portion of the bog was as an open area/undeveloped wetlands areas.” However, she also opined that development was still possible within the Klatt Bog if “state of the art technology is utilized to protect the resource values of the bog.”

To prove that the “conservation wetlands” designation had affected the value of its property, RSB submitted the Municipality's tax assessments. The property’s assessed valuation in 1985 was $1,489,500, in 1986 it was $1,089,000, in 1987 it was $591,500, in 1988 it was $202,800, and in 1989 it was $100. This precipitous drop resulted from the Municipal Assessor’s policy of valuing all parcels classified as “conservation” or “preservation” wetlands at $100, regardless of the property’s size or location. In his affidavit, the Municipal Assessor stated,

It is inaccurate to conclude that the assessed value of plaintiff’s property is a result of the Municipality’s designation of that property as Conservation wetlands. The low valuation is a result of several factors, including the necessity of the Federal permitting process before the property can be developed and the lack of comparable wetland sales to use in evaluating the property’s value.

B. Facts relevant to the physical takings issue.

To meet the growing traffic demands of South Anchorage, the Municipality built the North Klatt Road Extension in the late 1980’s. This road runs along the southerly side of Klatt Bog and connects “C” Street with the Southport Parkway. RSB’s property lies to the north of this road. Because the road crosses the Klatt Bog wetlands, the Municipality was required to obtain a construction permit from the federal Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”). The Corps saw the road “as the means to establish a permanent dike along the south side of Klatt Bog to prevent further water loss to surrounding development.”

As part of its permit application, the Municipality appended a “Drainage Report” written by the project’s contractor, *781 Century Engineers and Planners, Inc. The report contains the following paragraph:

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Bluebook (online)
856 P.2d 777, 1993 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1993 WL 273442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zerbetz-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-1993.