Coles v. Granville , 448 F.3d 853 ( 2006 )


Menu:
  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 06a0173p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    -
    EDWIN M. COLES; LISA COLES; BUFFALO PRAIRIE,
    -
    LLC; VINCENT OTRUSINA; ROBERT C. BICKLEY;
    -
    WARREN JONES; WIKEL FARMS, LTD.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants, -
    No. 05-3342
    ,
    >
    v.                                          -
    -
    -
    -
    JONATHAN GRANVILLE; ERIE METROPARKS BOARD
    -
    OF PARK COMMISSIONERS; WHEELING AND LAKE
    Defendants-Appellees. -
    ERIE RAILWAY CO.; NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORP.,
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
    No. 03-07595—James G. Carr, Chief District Judge.
    Argued: April 25, 2006
    Decided and Filed: May 22, 2006
    Before: GUY, DAUGHTREY, and CLAY, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Nels J. Ackerson, ACKERSON KAUFFMAN FEX, Washington, D.C., for Appellants.
    John D. Latchney, TOMINO & LATCHNEY, LLC, LPA, Medina, Ohio, for Appellees.
    ON BRIEF: Nels J. Ackerson, ACKERSON KAUFFMAN FEX, PC, Washington, D.C., Thomas
    R. Lucas, D. Jeffery Rengel, RENGEL LAW OFFICE, Sandusky, Ohio, J. Anthony Logan,
    BROOKS & LOGAN CO., LPA, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellants. John D. Latchney, TOMINO
    & LATCHNEY, LLC, LPA, Medina, Ohio, Dennis M. O’Toole, BAUMGARTNER & O’TOOLE,
    Sheffield Village, Ohio, for Appellees.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    CLAY, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff landowners appeal the January 25, 2005 order of the United
    States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, which dismissed Plaintiffs’ 42 U.S.C.
    §§ 1983, 1985(2), 1985(3), and state law claims against Defendant public officials and railroad
    companies for actions taken relative to Plaintiffs’ real property. The district court held that
    1
    No. 05-3342           Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                       Page 2
    Plaintiffs’ action was not ripe in part, barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine in part, and merited
    Younger abstention in part.
    For the reasons which follow, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of this case.
    I.
    BACKGROUND
    A.     Substantive Facts
    Plaintiffs are landowners along the old Milan Canal in Erie County, Ohio. The old Milan
    Canal extended, during its period of use, for 6.5 miles from the town of Milan, Ohio northward to
    the mouth of the Huron river, at which point the Huron river emptied into Lake Erie. Plaintiffs
    Edwin M. Coles, Lisa Coles, Vincent Otrusina, Robert C. Bickley, Warren Jones, and Buffalo
    Prairie, LLC were all parties to a prior state court proceeding in which Erie County Metroparks
    sought a declaratory judgment that Plaintiffs possessed no property interest in a 150 foot wide
    corridor along the old canal. Metroparks claimed to be the valid assignee of an infinite duration
    leasehold interest in that corridor and was interested in transforming the corridor into a recreational
    trail. The state court proceeding ultimately found that Metroparks did possess a valid leasehold
    interest, and further defined the property subject to the leasehold as follows:
    The description of the Leased Property in the Lease unambiguously describes it as
    consisting of all lands then owned by the Milan Canal Company within a 150 foot
    wide corridor from approximately the intersection of Maine and Union Streets in the
    Village of Milan northerly to the north of the mouth of the Huron River. The only
    lands owned by the Milan Canal Company at the time the Lease was executed lay
    within the boundaries of the Kneeland Townsend property and the Ebeneser Merry
    property, neither of which lay north of Lock No. 1. Therefore, the Leased Property
    extends from the southern terminus of the old Milan Canal at or near the southerly
    end of the Milan Canal basin in the Village of Milan to its northerly terminus at the
    Huron River at the former location of Lock No. 1 on premises now owned by Wikel
    Farms, Ltd. immediately north of Mason Road in Section 2, Milan Township, Erie
    County.
    (J.A. at 123 (emphasis added).)
    Plaintiff Wikel Farms was not a party to the prior state court proceeding. Rather, Wikel
    Farms is currently involved in an appropriation action brought by Erie County Metroparks against
    Wikel Farms in state court, which involves portions of Wikel Farms’ property along the old Milan
    Canal. Metroparks initiated that action in 1999 and, pursuant to Ohio law, deposited $20,000 in
    escrow at the onset of litigation, which is Metroparks’ estimated valuation of the disputed property.
    Wikel Farms places a much higher valuation on the property, that of $500,000. That suit is not yet
    resolved.
    B.     Procedural History
    The state court judgment against all Plaintiffs (save Wikel Farms), establishing Metroparks’
    leasehold interest in the Milan Canal corridor, was final in September 2002. Metroparks then
    proceeded to take actions to develop the recreational trail. Plaintiffs brought the instant suit on
    October 7, 2003 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio against
    Defendants Jonathan Granville (Director-Secretary of Erie Metroparks), the Erie Metroparks Board
    of Park Commissioners, Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co., and Norfolk Southern Corp. Plaintiffs
    sought redress under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985(2), and 1985(3) for violations of their rights under
    No. 05-3342           Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                         Page 3
    the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. Plaintiffs alleged
    that in their efforts to develop the recreational trail, Defendants laid claim to property beyond that
    found by Ohio state courts to fall within Metroparks’ valid leasehold interest. Plaintiffs further
    alleged that Defendants wrongfully destroyed Plaintiffs’ personal property. Plaintiffs also
    apparently sought a judgment that Plaintiffs were the rightful owners to all property under dispute
    with Defendants in the federal action. (See J.A. at 30, “Fifth Count, Quiet Title. . . . Plaintiffs are
    the owners of and are in possession of and otherwise have and claim a superior title and interest to
    that of defendants in the real property described [above].”) Plaintiffs also sought damages in tort
    for slander of title.
    After filing their Answer, Defendants filed a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    12(b)(1) with the district court, arguing that the district court either lacked or should decline to
    exercise jurisdiction over the case because 1) the Rooker-Feldman doctrine precluded Plaintiffs’
    collateral attack on the validity of Metroparks’ leasehold interest; 2) those lands allegedly not within
    the leasehold interest represented a new takings claim for which Plaintiffs had not sought redress
    through state courts, and the issue was therefore not yet ripe for federal judicial review; and 3) the
    claims with respect to Wikel Farms (the only Plaintiff not a party to the leasehold litigation) were
    pending in state court proceedings which antedated the instant federal actions, and therefore Younger
    abstention was merited. The district court agreed, dismissing the case without prejudice on January
    24, 2005.
    On appeal, Plaintiffs argue that 1) the district court erred in dismissing Plaintiffs’ claims, in
    part, on the basis of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine because Plaintiffs are seeking only to enforce the
    limitation on the scope of Metroparks’ leasehold interest as decided in the prior litigation; 2) with
    respect to lands allegedly not adjudicated as falling under Metroparks’ lease, Plaintiffs’ takings
    claim is ripe for review; and 3) the district court erred when it chose to dismiss the claims asserted
    by Plaintiff Wikel Farms in lieu of holding them in abeyance under Younger.
    II.
    ANALYSIS
    A.      Plaintiffs’ Do Not Pursue Claims Which Implicate the Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
    The district court dismissed Plaintiffs’ case, in part, because the court found that Rooker-
    Feldman barred federal jurisdiction over some of Plaintiffs’ claims. Because we find that Plaintiffs’
    case as presented to both the district court and this Court does not implicate Rooker-Feldman, we
    hold that Rooker-Feldman is inapplicable to Plaintiffs’ allegations on appeal. To the extent that the
    district court decision may have improperly relied on Rooker-Feldman as a basis to dismiss
    Plaintiffs’ case, we find such error harmless in light of our conclusion that Plaintiffs’ takings claims
    are not yet ripe for review. This Court can affirm the district court on any grounds supported by the
    record. City Mgmt. Corp. v. U.S. Chem. Co., 
    43 F.3d 244
    , 251 (6th Cir. 1994).
    1.      The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine Generally
    Plaintiffs argue to this Court that they are not seeking review of the state court decision that
    adjudicated the validity and extent of Metroparks’ leasehold interests. Rather, Plaintiffs allege on
    appeal that Defendants are misreading the state court decision to give them more property than the
    decision actually held was rightfully possessed by Defendants. In contrast, Defendants argue that
    Plaintiffs’ instant action is an attempted end-run around the state leasehold decision and contend that
    Rooker-Feldman bars their suit.
    Rooker-Feldman is a doctrine with only limited application. The doctrine originates from
    two Supreme Court decisions, which were rendered 60 years apart. See Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
    No. 05-3342           Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                           Page 4
    
    263 U.S. 413
    (1923); D.C. Court of Appeals v. Feldman, 
    460 U.S. 462
    (1983). In both cases the
    plaintiffs challenged the validity of state court decisions by filing suit in federal district court. In
    Rooker, the plaintiff asked the district court to render the state court judgment against him “null and
    void.” See 
    Rooker, 263 U.S. at 414-15
    . In Feldman, the plaintiffs filed suit against the actual state
    court that had rejected the plaintiffs’ applications to practice law. 
    Feldman, 460 U.S. at 478-79
    . In
    both cases the Supreme Court dismissed the suits for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, reasoning
    that pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1257, only the Supreme Court, and not the lower federal courts, enjoys
    appellate jurisdiction over state court decisions. See 
    Rooker, 263 U.S. at 414-15
    ; 
    Feldman, 460 U.S. at 478-79
    . Significantly, the Feldman Court reasoned that the plaintiffs could challenge the state
    rules themselves in federal court on constitutional grounds; such a challenge would not be asking
    the district court to exercise appellate authority over a state court, but normal preclusion rules would
    still apply. 
    Id. at 487-88;
    see also Todd v. Weltman, Weinberg & Reis Co., 
    434 F.3d 432
    , 435-36
    (6th Cir 2006) (discussing the Supreme Court’s analysis in the Rooker and Feldman cases more
    extensively). The source of the plaintiffs’ alleged injury, then, was dispositive in Feldman on the
    issue of jurisdiction, a distinction which the Supreme Court reiterated more than 20 years later in
    Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp., 
    544 U.S. 280
    (2005).
    After the 1983 Feldman decision, the lower federal courts began to invoke the Rooker-
    Feldman doctrine in a variety of circumstances in which the federal and state courts enjoy
    concurrent jurisdiction. Because of inconsistencies between the circuits, the Supreme Court again
    explained the doctrine in Exxon Mobil, stating that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine applied only to:
    cases brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court
    judgments rendered before the district court proceedings commenced and inviting
    district court review and rejection of those judgments. Rooker-Feldman does not
    otherwise override or supplant preclusion doctrine or augment the circumscribed
    doctrines that allow federal courts to stay or dismiss proceedings in deference to
    state-court actions.
    Exxon 
    Mobil, 544 U.S. at 284
    . Exxon Mobil dealt specifically with a case where there were parallel
    state and federal cases on the same issue. The court held that normal preclusion jurisprudence, not
    Rooker-Feldman, would guide the federal court decision if the state court reached a decision first.
    
    Id. In dicta,
    the Supreme Court also addressed the circumstance where the plaintiff initiated a
    federal claim after a state court decision, circumstances such as the case at bar:
    Nor does [Rooker-Feldman] stop a district court from exercising subject matter
    jurisdiction simply because a party attempts to litigate in federal court a matter
    previously litigated in state court. If a federal plaintiff “present[s] some independent
    claim, albeit one that denies a legal conclusion that a state court has reached in a case
    to which he was a party . . . , then there is jurisdiction and state law determines
    whether the defendant prevails under principles of preclusion.”
    
    Id. (quoting GASH
    Assocs. v. Vill. of Rosemont, 
    995 F.2d 726
    , 728 (7th Cir. 1993) (ellipses in
    original)).
    This Circuit and other circuits have taken the Supreme Court’s guidance on the application
    of Rooker-Feldman and applied the doctrine only when a plaintiff complains of injury from the state
    court judgment itself. In 
    Todd, 434 F.3d at 437
    , this Court rejected a defendant’s argument that
    Rooker-Feldman precluded jurisdiction over a plaintiff’s federal suit that complained that the
    defendant had lied in an affidavit submitted as the basis for a prior state court garnishment
    proceeding. We reasoned that the plaintiff was alleging injuries from the defendant’s deception, and
    not from the state court judgment itself, which had found that the defendant’s affidavit was valid.
    No. 05-3342            Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                           Page 5
    
    Id. We further
    noted that the rules of preclusion would guide the district court on remand regarding
    whether the plaintiff could properly litigate the affidavit’s validity in the federal action. 
    Id. Other circuits
    have agreed with this Court’s approach. See Davani v. Va. DOT, 
    434 F.3d 712
    , 713 (4th Cir. 2006) (“Exxon teaches . . . that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine applies only when
    the loser in state court files suit in federal district court seeking redress for an injury allegedly caused
    by the state court’s decision itself. Because Davani’s suit does not challenge the state court’s
    decision, and it instead seeks redress for an injury allegedly caused by Appellees, the
    Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not apply . . . .”); Galibois v. Fisher, No. 05-1576, 2006 U.S. App.
    LEXIS 8246, at *4 (1st Cir. Mar. 31, 2006) (“Exxon requires this court to examine whether the state
    court loser who files suit in federal court seeks redress for an injury caused by a state court decision
    itself or an injury caused by the defendant.”); Hoblock v. Albany County Bd. of Elections, 
    422 F.3d 77
    , 85 (2d Cir. 2005) (finding Rooker-Feldman implicated only when a plaintiff asked the federal
    district court to review the validity of a state court judgment). The Tenth Circuit summarized the
    difference between a suit barred by Rooker-Feldman and normal preclusion principles:
    Appellate review – the type of judicial action barred by Rooker-Feldman – consists
    of a review of the proceedings already conducted by the “lower” tribunal to
    determine whether it reached its result in accordance with law. When, in contrast,
    the second court tries a matter anew and reaches a conclusion contrary to a judgment
    by the first court, without concerning itself with the bona fides of the prior judgment
    (which may or may not have been a lawful judgment under the evidence and
    argument presented to the first court), it is not conducting appellate review,
    regardless of whether compliance with the second judgment would make it
    impossible to comply with the first judgment. In this latter situation the conflict
    between the two judgments is to be resolved under preclusion doctrine, not
    Rooker-Feldman.
    Bolden v. City of Topeka, 
    441 F.3d 1129
    , 1143 (10th Cir. 2006).
    2.      Plaintiffs’ Arguments Below and to This Court
    In response to Defendants’ motion to dismiss, in part, under Rooker-Feldman, Plaintiffs
    argued to the district court – and continue to argue to this Court – that their dispute in federal court
    concerns property outside of the land adjudicated by the state courts to fall within Metroparks’
    leasehold interests. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants are taking property that the state court held was
    not within Metroparks’ leasehold interest. Having constrained their case by their own argument,
    Plaintiffs seek not to throw out a state court judgment, but to enforce the judgment, because
    Defendants are allegedly exceeding the scope of their property interests under the state court
    decision. This is precisely the type of claim which is not barred by Rooker-Feldman because
    Plaintiffs are not asking the lower federal courts to exercise appellate review over a state court
    decision. See Part 
    II.A.1, supra
    . What Plaintiffs are asking this Court to do is to interpret the state
    court decision – i.e., decide between Plaintiffs’ construction and Defendants’ construction of a state
    court judgment as it pertains to the boundaries of Metroparks’ leasehold. Merely requiring a federal
    court to understand what it is that a state court decided does not implicate Rooker-Feldman, but
    rather normal preclusion principles and rules of construction.
    Defendants continue to argue on appeal, however, that Rooker-Feldman precludes
    jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ case. In making this argument, Defendants contend that Plaintiffs’ suit
    is an attempted end-run around the state court decision on the extent of Metroparks’ leasehold
    interest. Whether this is true or not, however, does not make Rooker-Feldman more or less
    applicable. Rooker-Feldman applies only when a plaintiff asserts injury from the state court
    judgment. See Exxon 
    Mobil, 544 U.S. at 284
    . In the instant case, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants
    No. 05-3342               Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                                      Page 6
    are the ones injuring Plaintiffs; Plaintiffs do not allege that their injury arises from the state court
    judgment itself or even as a result of the state court judgment. We acknowledge that whether or not
    Defendants are, in fact, injuring Plaintiffs depends, in part, on the parties’ respective property
    interests. This is an issue which was litigated, at least in part, in the state court leasehold
    proceedings. Should the federal courts need to reach the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims, however,
    normal preclusion principles would apply1 to assist us in deciding what has been settled between the
    parties and what has not been so settled. 
    Id. B. Plaintiffs’
    Takings Claims Are Not Yet Ripe for Federal Judicial Review
    1.       Standard of Review
    Whether this Court has subject-matter jurisdiction is a question of law that this Court reviews
    de novo. See, e.g., Kruse v. Village of Chagrin Falls, 
    74 F.3d 694
    , 697 (6th Cir. 1996).
    2.       The Extent of Metroparks’ Valid Leasehold Interest Is Not Dispositive on Appeal
    Plaintiffs allege that the state court language noting that “[t]he only lands owned by the
    Milan Canal Company at the time the Lease was executed lay within the boundaries of the Kneeland
    Townsend property and the Ebeneser Merry property” limits Metroparks’ leasehold interest to those
    lands along the canal path which formerly lay within the Townsend and Merry property grants. (J.A.
    at 123.) Plaintiffs further argue that the evidence before the Ohio courts was that these grants did
    not create a contiguous tract along the 3 miles of canal to which Defendants now claim a right of
    possession. Defendants counter, however, by noting the language in the Ohio decision that states
    “the Leased Property extends from the southern terminus of the old Milan Canal at or near the
    southerly end of the Milan Canal basin in the Village of Milan to its northerly terminus at the Huron
    River at the former location of Lock No. 1.” (J.A. at 123.) Defendants argue that this language very
    clearly indicates that Defendants have a valid leasehold interest along the entire length of the canal
    between the points noted in the state court’s decision.
    If Defendants are correct, and the property Plaintiffs put at issue in this case was adjudicated
    as within Metroparks’ leasehold interest by the Ohio courts, then res judicata would prevent us from
    reaching a different conclusion than that reached by the Ohio courts on this very same issue, and
    Plaintiffs’ case (with the exception of Wikel Farms) was properly dismissed. If Plaintiffs are
    correct, however, in their belief that the property at issue here was not adjudicated as within
    Metroparks’ leasehold interest, then Plaintiffs claims’ to this Court devolve to new takings
    allegations. That is, Plaintiffs allege Defendants are unconstitutionally taking Plaintiffs’ property
    by invading lands beyond the scope of Metroparks’ leasehold interests. As discussed infra, before
    seeking relief in federal courts, plaintiffs alleging an unconstitutional taking by a local government
    entity must first seek compensation for the taking through state measures. Because Plaintiffs in the
    instant action have not done this, Plaintiffs’ case is not yet ripe for review.
    1
    Defendants’ Rooker-Feldman argument relies on Circuit case law which was handed down prior to the
    Supreme Court’s recent holding in Exxon Mobil, which made the boundaries of Rooker-Feldman more explicit. See Part
    
    II.A.1, supra
    . Much of our pre-Exxon Mobil case law expanded Rooker-Feldman to encompass preclusion and
    abstention law, an expansion which Exxon Mobil makes clear was an incorrect reading of Rooker-Feldman. See, e.g.,
    Peterson Novelties, Inc. v. City of Berkeley, 
    305 F.3d 386
    , 391 (6th Cir. 2002) (incorrectly incorporating preclusion
    principles as a component of its Rooker-Feldman analysis); Catz v. Chalker, 
    142 F.3d 279
    , 294 (6th Cir. 1998) (reflecting
    preclusion analysis in its Rooker-Feldman discussion). It is preclusion law alone, and not Rooker-Feldman, which
    guides the disposition of federal questions already litigated in state court, when the plaintiff does not attack the actual
    judgment. See Exxon 
    Mobil, 544 U.S. at 284
    .
    No. 05-3342              Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                                  Page 7
    3.       Takings Claims in Federal Courts
    a.       The Supreme Court requires claimants to pursue any “reasonable, certain,
    and adequate procedures” in state court prior to seeking federal judicial
    review
    The Takings Clause does not prohibit the government from taking private property; it
    prohibits the government from taking private property without just compensation. Williamson
    County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank, 
    473 U.S. 172
    , 194 (1985). A takings claim is
    not ripe for review unless a property owner is denied just compensation. 
    Id. (“Because the
    Fifth
    Amendment proscribes takings without just compensation, no constitutional violation occurs until
    just compensation has been denied.”); Waste Mgmt., Inc. of Tenn. v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville &
    Davidson County, 
    130 F.3d 731
    , 739 (6th Cir.1997); Hammond v. Baldwin, 
    866 F.2d 172
    , 178-79
    (6th Cir. 1989); Four Seasons Apartment v. City of Mayfield Heights, 
    775 F.2d 150
    , 151-52 (6th Cir.
    1985); see also Eide v. Sarasota County, 
    908 F.2d 716
    , 721 (11th Cir. 1990) (“[A] Fifth Amendment
    just compensation claim is not ripe until the landowner has pursued the available state procedures
    to obtain just compensation.”). Under this reasoning, “if a State provides an adequate procedure for
    seeking just compensation, the property owner cannot claim a violation of the Just Compensation
    Clause until it has used the procedure and been denied just compensation.” 
    Williamson, 473 U.S. at 195
    . In other words, a wronged party satisfies its duty to seek just compensation by pursuing
    “reasonable, certain, and adequate procedures” for obtaining compensation. 
    Id. at 194
    (quoting
    Reg’l Rail Reorganizational Act Cases, 
    419 U.S. 102
    , 124-25 (1974)).
    b.       Ohio now has a “reasonable, certain, and adequate procedure” for takings
    claimants to pursue in Ohio state courts
    Ohio does not have an inverse condemnation or other direct, statutory cause of action for
    plaintiffs seeking just compensation for a taking. Rather, Ohio law provides a statutory mechanism
    by which the government actor seeking to take property is under a duty to bring an appropriation
    proceeding against the landowner. See Ohio Rev. Code §§ 163.01-163.62; Shemo v. City of
    Mayfield Heights, 
    765 N.E.2d 345
    , 350 (Ohio 2002). A property owner who believes that his
    property has been taken in the absence of such an appropriation proceeding may initiate a mandamus
    action in Ohio court to force the government actor into the correct appropriation proceeding.2 
    Id. This Circuit
    has therefore focused on whether Ohio’s writ of mandamus provides a “reasonable,
    certain, and adequate provision for obtaining compensation” pursuant to Supreme Court direction.
    This Circuit first addressed this issue in Silver v. Franklin Township, 
    966 F.2d 1031
    (6th Cir.
    1992). The Silver Court was presented with a regulatory takings claim and found Ohio’s writ of
    mandamus procedure to be an adequate mechanism for pursuing just compensation. 
    Id. at 1035.
    Just four years later, however, this Court appeared to reason differently in Kruse, a physical takings
    case:
    We hold that Ohio affords no “reasonable, certain and adequate provision for
    obtaining compensation” after private property is taken by public authorities without
    following the mandatory pretaking appropriation procedures set out in Ohio Rev.
    Code §§ 163.01-163.62. Ohio’s decisional law in this area is anything but certain.
    2
    Mandamus is defined as “[a] writ issued by a superior court to compel a lower court or a government officer
    to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly.” Black’s Law Dictionary 973 (7th ed. 1999). Ohio further
    defines mandamus in Ohio Revised Code § 2737.01 as “a writ, issued in the name of the state to an inferior tribunal, a
    corporation, a board, or person, commanding the performance of an action which the law specially enjoins as a duty
    resulting from an office, trust, or station.”
    No. 05-3342          Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                        Page 8
    Ohio has no statutory provision for relief under the circumstances of this case. The
    fact that the State’s courts recognize an action in mandamus, where the State has no
    mandated procedures governing inverse condemnation, cannot be equated to a
    “reasonable, certain and adequate provision for obtaining compensation,” after the
    property has been physically taken in violation of the appropriations statutes. An
    action for the extraordinary writ of mandamus is, at best, a procedure which must be
    invoked in the absence of any statutory framework in an attempt to obtain wholly
    equitable relief for an injury already 
    inflicted. 74 F.3d at 700
    .
    Although the Silver and Kruse holdings appear contradictory, subsequent panels of this Court
    have reconciled the cases by limiting each to its facts. This approach applies the rule in Silver to
    regulatory takings claims, but applies the Kruse rule to physical takings claims. See Buckles v.
    Columbus Mun. Airport Auth., 90 Fed. App’x 927, 929-30 (6th Cir. Feb. 23, 2004); Tri Corp Mgmt.
    Co. v. Praznik, 33 Fed. App’x 742, 749 (6th Cir. Mar. 29, 2002). The Buckles decision noted further
    language in the Kruse decision in support of the view that physical takings implicate different
    procedures:
    Kruse did not discuss Silver, but it did distinguish regulatory from physical takings
    in arriving at its holding, and this distinction reconciles the two cases:
    In regulatory cases, where the government has fulfilled its obligation
    to provide notice to the property owner, it may be fair to place the
    burden of making the next move on the landowner. It may make
    sense to require landowners to pursue relief through administrative
    appeals and the mandatory injunction process when the landowners
    know in advance that the government is planning action that threatens
    their ownership of their property . . . since there are generally
    numerous opportunities available to landowners to be heard and to
    attempt to prevent a proposed zoning ordinance from taking effect,
    or to reach a compromise with the authorities that permits some
    alternative use of the land.
    
    [Kruse, 74 F.3d at 700
    .] In contrast, where the landowner simply one day finds his
    land physically invaded and his title transferred against his will, and yet the
    government refuses to pay up despite explicit requests, he need not go through
    Dickensian formalities to confirm the government’s obvious intentions.
    Buckles, 90 Fed. App’x at 929-30.
    Additional language in the Kruse decision sheds further light on why the Kruse panel found
    the Ohio mandamus action to be an inadequate remedy for physical takings at the time:
    The Ohio Supreme Court has very recently stated that a landowner who has been
    deprived of his property may bring an action in mandamus to require the government
    to institute appropriation proceedings pursuant to Ohio’s Appropriation of Property
    statute. See Levin v. City of Sheffield Lake. . . 
    637 N.E.2d 319
    , 323-24 (Ohio 1994).
    There, the court reviewed some of its prior decisions, which indicated that
    appropriation proceedings may be compelled through mandamus, but also reiterated
    the stringent requirements for issuance of the extraordinary writ and explained that
    prior to issuance of the writ to compel the commencement of appropriation
    proceedings, the issue of whether the petitioner’s property had been appropriated had
    first to be determined by the court in which the writ was requested. 
    Id. No. 05-3342
                   Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                                     Page 9
    Levin, however, was not decided until 1994, well after the Kruses had begun their
    heretofore fruitless attempt to obtain compensation from the Village for its taking of
    their property. And Levin’s cited cases which have held that mandamus is the
    vehicle for compelling appropriation proceedings by public authorities, are all cases
    in which the court addressed a taking by the state, through the action of the Director
    of Highways.
    ....
    The Levin court did not address at all its decision in City of Worthington v.
    Carskadon, . . . 
    249 N.E.2d 38
    (Ohio 1969), a case which post-dates all of the
    decisions Levin relied upon, in which the City of Worthington took possession of
    property pursuant to a “quick take ordinance,” prior to determination of value by a
    jury. There, the court held that “the proper remedies for illegal entry upon one’s
    property are criminal trespass and civil damages against the individuals entering, and
    injunction against the city and its 
    agents.” 249 N.E.2d at 39
    .
    None of these cases even mentions the remedy of inverse condemnation. The claim
    by the Village that Solly v. City of Toledo, . . . 
    218 N.E.2d 463
    (Ohio 1966) holds that
    Ohio has such a remedy is simply incorrect.
    
    Kruse, 74 F.3d at 698-99
    .
    The Kruse panel, therefore, placed considerable emphasis on the apparent uncertainty in the
    Ohio case law on the appropriateness of a mandamus action when a physical taking by a local
    government entity is alleged. Today, ten years after the Kruse decision, this uncertainty has all but
    disappeared, as the Ohio courts have accepted a mandamus action as the appropriate approach for
    a plaintiff alleging a taking without just compensation. The use of the writ of mandamus in such
    circumstances has been affirmed by the Ohio Supreme Court at least six times since 1996.
    Moreover, the Ohio intermediate appellate courts routinely accept mandamus actions   from plaintiffs
    alleging a local government actor has unconstitutionally taken their property.3
    In BSW Development Group v. City of Dayton, 
    699 N.E.2d 1271
    (Ohio 1998), the Ohio
    Supreme Court stated that “[m]andamus is the appropriate vehicle for compelling appropriation
    proceedings by public authorities where an involuntary taking of private property is alleged.” 
    Id. at 1274.
    While a regulatory taking was alleged in BSW, three years later the Ohio Supreme Court
    reaffirmed the correctness of the mandamus action for an alleged physical taking in Sekermestrovich
    v. City of Akron, 
    740 N.E.2d 252
    , 254-55 (Ohio 2001). Later that same year, the Ohio Supreme
    Court overturned an Ohio court of appeals’ decision and granted a writ of mandamus to force
    appropriation proceedings in a case where the plaintiffs alleged a physical taking of their property.
    3
    A prior panel of this Court has already noted the changed circumstances in Ohio. The Tri Corp panel noted:
    Complicating matters further, we note that a recent Ohio Supreme Court decision may shed additional
    light on whether the writ of mandamus in Ohio is a “reasonable, certain, and adequate provision for
    obtaining compensation” for an unconstitutional taking. In State ex rel. Elsass v. Shelby County Board
    of Commissioners, the Ohio Supreme Court explained that “mandamus is the appropriate action to
    compel public authorities to institute appropriation proceedings where an involuntary taking of private
    property is alleged.” . . . 
    751 N.E.2d 1032
    , 1037 (Ohio 2001). Although that decision suggests that
    Ohio now recognizes the writ of mandamus as a “reasonable, certain, and adequate provision for
    obtaining compensation” after an unconstitutional taking has occurred, we do not go so far as to reach
    that result.
    Tri Corp Mgmt. Co., 33 Fed. App’x at 749-50.
    No. 05-3342            Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                         Page 10
    See Elsass v. Shelby County Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    751 N.E.2d 1032
    , 1039 (Ohio 2001). The Ohio
    Supreme Court has since addressed a physical and at least two regulatory takings cases, and in all
    these cases the court affirmed the use of the writ of mandamus by plaintiffs seeking compensation
    for local government takings. See Duncan v. City of Mentor City Council, 
    826 N.E.2d 832
    (Ohio
    2005) (regulatory taking); Preschool Dev. Ltd. v. City of Springboro, 
    792 N.E.2d 721
    (Ohio 2003)
    (physical taking); 
    Shemo, 765 N.E.2d at 345
    (regulatory taking).
    At a minimum, since the BSW Development case in 1998, Ohio intermediate appellate courts
    have consistently recognized the writ of mandamus as the appropriate vehicle with which to
    challenge an involuntary taking by a local or state government agent. See, e.g., Howland Twp. Bd.
    of Trs. v. Casale, No. 98-T-0179, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 4669 (Ohio Ct. App. Sept. 30, 1999)
    (regulatory taking); Hardale Inv. Co. v. Ohio Dep’t of Natural Res., No. 98-BA-40, 2000 Ohio App.
    LEXIS 1769 (Ohio Ct. App. Apr. 14, 2000) (enforcing trial court’s issuance of writ of mandamus
    for physical taking); Cincinnati Entm’t Assoc. v. Bd. of Comm’rs of Hamilton County, 
    753 N.E.2d 884
    (Ohio Ct. Ap. 2001) (enforcing trial court’s issuance of writ of mandamus for physical taking);
    Hunt v. Washington Twp., 
    2001 Ohio 1734
    (Ohio Ct. App. 2001) (refusing to hear takings claim
    when plaintiffs had failed to request mandamus); Proctor v. Huck, 
    2004 Ohio 7281
    (Ohio Ct. App.
    2004) (refusing to address takings claims when plaintiffs had failed to request mandamus); Craig
    v. Luebbe, 
    2004 Ohio 6933
    (Ohio Ct. App. 2004) (requiring trial court to address plaintiffs’ takings
    claims when plaintiffs had properly requested mandamus).
    We further note that Ohio’s mandamus action is not entirely a creature of the common law.
    Ohio has a statutory provision that requires public officials to bring an appropriation action prior to
    taking any private property. Ohio Rev. Code §§ 163.01-163.62. This statute creates obligations for
    public officials and not a direct cause of action for citizens. However, mandamus allows property
    owners to usurp section 163 for their own benefit, and this ability to compel an official into an
    appropriation action is buttressed by Ohio’s incorporation of the mandamus action into its statutory
    structure. Ohio Revised Code § 2737.01 defines “mandamus” as “a writ, issued in the name of the
    state to an inferior tribunal, a corporation, a board, or person, commanding the performance of an
    action which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station.” The code
    further provides that “[a]pplication for the writ of mandamus must be by petition, in the name of the
    state on the relation of the person applying, and verified by affidavit.” Ohio Rev. Code § 2737.04.
    Because Ohio government officials are required by statute to bring appropriation proceedings
    whenever a taking occurs, this is such a “duty” which can be compelled by mandamus. The
    mandamus action and its relationship to appropriations proceedings is therefore reflected in Ohio’s
    statutory scheme, albeit in a more general fashion than as a direct, statutory cause of action for
    private parties.
    The very frequency of mandamus actions as a means to force appropriation proceedings in
    Ohio today, as opposed to the mid-1990s, significantly distinguishes the instant case from the 1996
    Kruse case. The Court also notes that the Kruse panel emphasized that the 1994 Levin decision
    from the Ohio Supreme Court, which was the genesis of the modern recognition of the mandamus
    action to force appropriation proceedings, had not yet been handed down when the Kruse plaintiffs
    began their efforts to achieve 
    compensation. 74 F.3d at 700
    (“Levin, however, was not decided until
    1994, well after the Kruses had begun their heretofore fruitless attempt to obtain compensation from
    the Village for its taking of their property.”) In the instant case, Plaintiffs began their action in 2003,
    well after the Ohio Supreme Court and lower courts had issued numerous opinions emphasizing
    mandamus as the proper action to force appropriations proceedings against local government
    officials. Finally, the Kruse panel was concerned that “Levin’s cited cases which have held that
    mandamus is the vehicle for compelling appropriation proceedings by public authorities, are all
    cases in which the court addressed a taking by the state, through the action of the Director of
    Highways.” 
    Id. Intervening case
    law has made it clear and “certain” that mandamus is appropriate
    when the taking is done by local, as opposed to state, entities.
    No. 05-3342            Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                        Page 11
    Today, Ohio has “reasonable, certain, and adequate procedures” for plaintiffs to pursue
    compensation for an involuntary taking. Significant factors distinguish the certainty of Ohio
    measures as analyzed today from those assessed by the Kruse panel in 1996. Over the last ten years
    Ohio courts, including the Ohio Supreme Court, have consistently recognized mandamus as the
    vehicle with which to contest an involuntary taking, no matter whether that taking is a regulatory
    or a physical one, and no matter whether the public actor is a state or local entity. Because the
    Supreme Court’s direction in Williamson requires us to assess the adequacy of state measures, these
    differences in the state of Ohio decisional law require this Court to reach a different conclusion
    today than that reached by the Kruse panel ten years ago.
    4.      Plaintiffs Have Failed to Request Mandamus, and Therefore the Case Is Not Ripe
    In the instant case, there is no dispute that Plaintiffs have failed to request mandamus from
    the state. Their case is therefore not yet ripe for review; the district court was correct in finding that
    the federal courts lack jurisdiction to hear Plaintiffs’ takings claims at this time.
    C.      The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Dismissing Wikel Farms’ Claim
    Without Prejudice in Lieu of Holding the Claim in Abeyance After Deciding to Abstain
    Under the Younger Doctrine
    1.      Standard of Review
    This Court reviews a district court’s decision to dismiss a case without prejudice after a
    decision to abstain under Younger for an abuse of discretion. See Carroll v. Mt. Clemens, 
    139 F.3d 1072
    , 1075 (6th Cir. 1998).
    2.      Younger Abstention Generally
    Plaintiff Wikel Farms does not dispute that Younger abstention properly applies in this case.
    Younger abstention applies when the state proceeding 1) is currently pending, 2) involves an
    important state interest, and 3) affords the plaintiff an adequate opportunity to raise constitutional
    claims. Middlesex County Ethics Comm. v. Garden State Bar Ass’n, 
    457 U.S. 423
    , 432 (1982).
    Although Younger arose in the context of a state criminal proceeding, the Supreme Court has
    extended its principles to civil enforcement actions, such as the state proceeding here. Trainor v.
    Hernandez, 
    431 U.S. 434
    , 444 (1977).
    Younger abstention is built upon common sense in the administration of a dual state-federal
    system of justice. When a person is the target of an ongoing state action involving important state
    interests, a party cannot interfere with the pending state action by maintaining a parallel federal
    action involving claims that could have been raised in the state case. If the state party files such a
    case, Younger abstention requires the federal court to defer to the state proceeding. Watts v.
    Burkhart, 
    854 F.2d 839
    , 844-48 (6th Cir. 1988); see also Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc., 
    481 U.S. 1
    ,
    15 (1987) (“[W]hen a litigant has not attempted to present his federal claims in related state-court
    proceedings, a federal court should assume that state procedures will afford an adequate remedy.”).
    Wikel Farms argues that the district court improperly dismissed his case without prejudice
    instead of properly holding the case in abeyance pending the conclusion of the state court
    proceedings. A district court deciding to abstain under Younger has the option of either dismissing
    the case without prejudice or holding the case in abeyance. See 
    Carroll, 139 F.3d at 1075
    . In
    exercising this discretion, a district court should look to the nature of the state proceedings and
    consider whether a litigant will be able to address his federal claim on the merits in the state court
    proceeding. 
    Id. The court
    should also consider whether there are any statute of limitations issues
    should the case be dismissed and the limitations clock continue to run. 
    Id. No. 05-3342
              Coles, et al. v. Granville, et al.                                       Page 12
    3.      Wikel Farms’ Case Is Not Yet Ripe
    Pursuant to the analysis, Part 
    II.A, supra
    , Wikel Farms’ allegation of an unconstitutional
    taking without just compensation is not yet ripe for federal review. Wikel Farms is currently
    involved in appropriation proceedings with Defendants in state court. Wikel Farms has not yet been
    denied compensation and therefore has no injury necessary to make his case ripe for federal review.
    On this basis alone, the district court’s dismissal without prejudice, in lieu of abstention, was not an
    abuse of discretion.
    4.      The Statute of Limitations Has Not Yet Begun to Run
    Wikel Farms cites to Carroll and Brindley v. McCullen, 
    61 F.3d 507
    , 509 (6th Cir. 1995) for
    the proposition that the “the appropriate procedure, when abstaining under Younger, is to stay
    proceedings rather than to dismiss the case without prejudice,” 
    id. Yet both
    these cases were
    primarily concerned with a running of the statute of limitations. In the instant case, Wikel Farms’
    alleged injury has not yet occurred; the company has not yet been denied compensation. A statute
    of limitations does not begin to run until a cause of action has accrued, and Wikel Farms’ cause of
    action has not yet accrued. A dismissal bears no risk relative to the statute of limitations running
    during the state court proceedings. Therefore, it was not an abuse of discretion for the district court
    to dismiss Wikel Farms’ claims without prejudice once it made the decision to abstain.
    III.
    CONCLUSION
    Plaintiffs’ causes of action for unconstitutional takings are not yet ripe for federal review.
    In addition, the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing without prejudice the case as
    brought by Plaintiff Wikel Farms in lieu of holding the case in abeyance. For the foregoing reasons,
    we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of the case.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 05-3342

Citation Numbers: 448 F.3d 853

Filed Date: 5/22/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (25)

Bolden v. City of Topeka , 441 F.3d 1129 ( 2006 )

Elling O. Eide v. Sarasota County, a Political Subdivision ... , 908 F.2d 716 ( 1990 )

Four Seasons Apartment, Norman Milstein Leonard Fuchs v. ... , 775 F.2d 150 ( 1985 )

Bobby Watts, M.D. v. John H. Burkhart, M.D. , 854 F.2d 839 ( 1988 )

Mozafar H. Davani v. Virginia Department of Transportation ... , 434 F.3d 712 ( 2006 )

william-m-hoblock-candidate-for-albany-county-legislator-for-the-26th , 422 F.3d 77 ( 2005 )

robert-s-catz-96-31145776-shawn-d-catz-and-jason-a-catz-96-5776-v , 142 F.3d 279 ( 1998 )

Miriam G. Carroll v. City of Mount Clemens, John Beeding, ... , 139 F.3d 1072 ( 1998 )

Robert Todd v. Weltman, Weinberg & Reis Co., L.P.A., Mark N.... , 434 F.3d 432 ( 2006 )

Peterson Novelties, Inc. And Harold Barman v. City of ... , 305 F.3d 386 ( 2002 )

steven-d-brindley-and-kellie-sue-brindley-v-michael-mccullen-mark , 61 F.3d 507 ( 1995 )

jerry-hammond-jane-allen-offutt-and-william-n-offutt-iv-md , 866 F.2d 172 ( 1989 )

Ronald W. Kruse and Sylvia A. Kruse v. Village of Chagrin ... , 74 F.3d 694 ( 1996 )

Richard Silver Silver Construction Company v. Franklin ... , 966 F.2d 1031 ( 1992 )

Trainor v. Hernandez , 97 S. Ct. 1911 ( 1977 )

Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco Inc. , 107 S. Ct. 1519 ( 1987 )

Gash Associates v. Village of Rosemont, Illinois , 995 F.2d 726 ( 1993 )

city-management-corporation-v-us-chemical-company-incorporated-general , 43 F.3d 244 ( 1994 )

Cincinnati Entertainment v. Board of Comm. , 141 Ohio App. 3d 803 ( 2001 )

waste-management-inc-of-tennessee-plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee-v , 130 F.3d 731 ( 1997 )

View All Authorities »