Kopplow Development, Inc. v. the City of San Antonio , 399 S.W.3d 532 ( 2013 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    444444444444
    NO . 11-0104
    444444444444
    KOPPLOW DEVELOPMENT, INC., PETITIONER,
    v.
    THE CITY OF SAN ANTONIO, RESPONDENT
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
    COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    Argued September 13, 2012
    JUSTICE GUZMAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In this case we determine whether an inverse condemnation claim is premature when
    premised on the owner’s inability to develop its property as the city previously approved. The
    landowner purchased the property for the purpose of developing the land, obtained permits, and
    filled the portion of the property at issue in this proceeding to the 100-year flood level. The
    municipality then constructed a facility partly on the property that would detain storm water on the
    property in a significant flood, thus causing the property to again be below the 100-year flood level
    and undevelopable without additional fill. The landowner sought damages under statutory and
    inverse condemnation theories. The jury awarded damages of $694,600 and the trial court entered
    judgment on the verdict. The court of appeals reversed as to the inverse condemnation claim,
    holding the claim was premature because the property had not yet flooded. Because we conclude
    that the landowner’s claim is for the present inability to develop the property as previously approved
    unless the property is filled, we hold the claim is not premature. Accordingly, we reverse the
    judgment of the court of appeals and remand to the court of appeals for further proceedings.
    I. Background
    Kopplow Development, Inc. (Kopplow) purchased 18.451 acres of land adjoining Loop 410
    in San Antonio in 1996 or early 1997.1 After retaining an engineering firm, Kopplow filed a plat
    application on November 27, 1996 and obtained utility and construction easements on the adjoining
    tract south of its property to connect sewer service. Because Kopplow’s property was below the 100-
    year floodplain elevation of 741 feet above mean sea level, as defined by the Federal Emergency
    Management Agency (FEMA), Kopplow obtained a floodplain permit from the City of San Antonio
    (City) and filled most of the property to 741 feet in 2000. About one fourth of the property still fell
    within the 100-year floodplain, and Kopplow dedicated a drainage easement over this area. In 2004,
    the City granted Kopplow a vested rights permit, allowing it to develop the property under the rules
    in effect in November 1996 when Kopplow filed its plat application. A vested rights permit
    insulates pending development from most future ordinance changes. But certain floodplain
    regulation changes apply retroactively even against vested rights holders. See TEX . LOC. GOV ’T
    CODE §§ 245.002, 245.004(9).
    1
    The record does not reflect when Kopplow acquired the property. Company president Edward Kopplow
    testified that Kopplow acquired the property “in 1996. It might have been early ‘97.” Kopplow’s plat application of
    November 27, 1996 lists it as the owner. Kopplow originally purchased a larger tract and sold two portions to develop
    as restaurants in early 1997.
    2
    San Antonio experienced 100-year floods in 1998 and 2002. The City then planned a
    regional storm water detention facility for the Leon Creek watershed south of Kopplow’s property
    to mitigate downstream flooding. It determined in 2002 that the project would inundate portions of
    Kopplow’s property and the tract south of Kopplow’s property. The City asked Kopplow in late
    2003 to donate an easement that the City planned to inundate as part of the project. Kopplow
    refused. The City obtained a 207-acre drainage easement from the owner of the property south of
    the Kopplow tract in January 2004 and then built a concrete in-flow wall on the portion of the
    adjoining tract that includes Kopplow’s easements (where Kopplow’s easements and the City’s
    drainage easement overlap on the property south of the Kopplow tract). The City also built a large
    berm or dam south of the Kopplow property. The dam’s peak elevation is 748 feet. Once Leon
    Creek reaches the height of the in-flow wall in a 10-year flood, the wall will guide storm water to
    be detained by the berm until storm water in Leon Creek subsides, allowing drainage pipes in the
    berm to open and slowly return the detained water into Leon Creek.
    The parties agree the facility will cause increased inundation on Kopplow’s property and that
    the FEMA 100-year floodplain is two feet higher on Kopplow’s property because of the facility. But
    the City asserts that the in-flow wall does not cause the increased inundation because it is under
    water in a 100-year flood and instead that the berm causes the increased inundation.
    The City also changed its regulatory 100-year floodplain to account for future, upstream
    development.2 A City representative testified that, although Kopplow must file for a floodplain
    2
    By contrast, FEMA’s 100-year floodplain accounts for only existing conditions.
    3
    development permit to further develop its property, the City will permit Kopplow to develop its
    property if it fills the property to the new level of the 100-year floodplain. Ultimately, Kopplow
    must fill the portion of its property to be developed from the existing 741-foot level to 745.16 feet:
    two feet due to the detention facility and two feet due to the City’s ordinance change.
    Kopplow sued the City for a taking in May 2004 while it was constructing the facility. The
    City counterclaimed for condemnation of Kopplow’s easement. Before trial, the trial court granted
    the City’s motion that Kopplow’s vested rights permit was not effective against subsequent
    floodplain ordinances and excluded Kopplow’s evidence pertaining to two of the four feet of
    additional fill needed to develop the property.3 The jury found that: (1) the value of the part taken
    was $4,600; (2) the City’s use of the part taken proximately caused damages to the remainder; and
    (3) Kopplow’s remainder damages were $690,000.
    The City and Kopplow both appealed. The court of appeals affirmed the $4,600 damage
    award for the part taken under the statutory takings claim. 
    335 S.W.3d 288
    , 296. It reversed the
    award of remainder damages under the statutory takings theory, holding that the inflow wall would
    not inundate Kopplow’s property, even during a 100-year flood. 
    Id. at 294–95.
    The court also held
    the remainder damages unrecoverable under Kopplow’s inverse condemnation theory because the
    property had not yet flooded and the inverse condemnation claim was therefore premature. 
    Id. at 3
               See T EX . L O C . G O V ’T C O D E § 245.004(9) (vested rights do not apply against “regulations to prevent imminent
    destruction of property or injury to persons from flooding that are effective only within a flood plain established by a
    federal flood control program and enacted to prevent the flooding of buildings intended for public occupancy”).
    4
    296. In light of its holding, the court of appeals did not reach the City’s factual sufficiency challenge
    or Kopplow’s two cross-appeal points.4 
    Id. at 296–97.
    II. Discussion
    We have described the right to own private property as “fundamental, natural, inherent,
    inalienable, not derived from the legislature and as preexisting even constitutions.” Eggemeyer v.
    Eggemeyer, 
    554 S.W.2d 137
    , 140 (Tex. 1977). One of the most important purposes of our
    government is to protect private property rights. 
    Id. The Texas
    Constitution resolves the tension
    between private property rights and the government’s ability to take private property by requiring
    takings to be for public use, with the government paying the landowner just compensation. TEX .
    CONST . art. I, § 17 (“No person’s property shall be taken, damaged, or destroyed for or applied to
    public use without adequate compensation being made . . . .”). The United States Supreme Court
    has stated that the rationale for compensating landowners for takings for public use is “to bar
    Government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice,
    should be borne by the public as a whole.” Armstrong v. United States, 
    364 U.S. 40
    , 49 (1960).
    When only part of a tract is taken, Texas law assures just compensation by entitling the landowner
    to the value of the part taken as well as the damage to the owner’s remaining property. TEX . PROP .
    CODE § 21.042(c).
    Takings may be categorized as either statutory (if the government compensates the owner for
    the taking) or inverse (if the owner must file suit because the government took, damaged, or
    4
    Kopplow asserted that: (1) Kopplow’s vested right to develop the property meant that the trial court erred in
    excluding evidence of the value of the entire property; and (2) the trial court erred by including a proximate cause
    question. 335 S.W .3d at 296.
    5
    destroyed the property without paying compensation). Westgate, Ltd. v. State, 
    843 S.W.2d 448
    , 452
    (Tex. 1992). This proceeding has involved statutory and inverse claims. Initially, Kopplow sued
    because the City did not admit to damaging the property, which sounds in inverse 
    condemnation. 335 S.W.3d at 291
    . The City later counterclaimed for a statutory taking, admitting it had taken
    Kopplow’s easement. 
    Id. A. Waiver
    The City contends, and the court of appeals held, that Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim
    is not yet ripe. We disagree. As an initial matter, the City asserts that Kopplow did not plead or try
    an inverse condemnation claim. But Texas is a notice pleading jurisdiction, and a “petition is
    sufficient if it gives fair and adequate notice of the facts upon which the pleader bases his claim. The
    purpose of this rule is to give the opposing party information sufficient to enable him to prepare a
    defense.” Roark v. Allen, 
    633 S.W.2d 804
    , 810 (Tex. 1982). The City responded to Kopplow’s
    pleading by asserting that Kopplow’s claim was not yet ripe (a response to an inverse condemnation
    claim) and the inverse condemnation claim failed because there was no intentional taking. The City
    moved for summary judgment on Kopplow’s claim, stating that Kopplow alleges that “the City has
    inversely condemned a portion of its . . . property” but that “there is no evidence to support
    Plaintiff’s claim for inverse condemnation.” The City’s subsequent motion for summary judgment
    stated: “[t]his is an inverse condemnation case wherein Plaintiff’s damages are based on the increase
    in the flood plain elevation on its property . . . .” The City also specially excepted to the inverse
    condemnation claim, TEX . R. CIV . P. 90, but it failed to obtain a ruling before the case was submitted
    to the jury. In sum, the City understood Kopplow was pleading an inverse condemnation claim and
    6
    prepared the defense that the claim was not yet ripe but failed to obtain a ruling on its special
    exception. See 
    Roark, 633 S.W.2d at 810
    (party waived pleading defect issue by failing to specially
    except).
    Kopplow also pursued the claim at trial and on appeal. The City asserted at the pre-trial
    conference that Kopplow must decide whether to proceed on the statutory or inverse claim but failed
    to obtain a specific ruling from the trial court that Kopplow could not proceed on the inverse claim.
    In the court of appeals, Kopplow noted that, “[t]o the extent that Kopplow’s damage claim could be
    correctly characterized as an inverse condemnation claim, the [trial] Court found as a matter of law
    that the claim was compensable.” Kopplow maintained the position in this Court that its claim was
    both statutory and inverse in nature. We conclude Kopplow preserved its inverse condemnation
    claim.
    B. Ripeness
    Substantively, the court of appeals held that, to the extent Kopplow’s claim was for inverse
    condemnation, it was 
    premature. 335 S.W.3d at 296
    . The court of appeals relied primarily on
    Tarrant Regional Water District v. Gragg, 
    151 S.W.3d 546
    , 555 (Tex. 2004). Gragg involved a
    water supply reservoir that the Tarrant Regional Water District built. 
    Id. at 550.
    Heavy rains caused
    the District to open the reservoir floodgates in 1990, extensively flooding the Gragg Ranch. 
    Id. at 550.
    Gragg sued for inverse condemnation, and by the time the case was tried in 1998, the ranch had
    experienced a large number of floods. 
    Id. The District
    argued that the reservoir did not add more
    downstream water than would naturally pass through, and if it did, it was mere negligence and there
    was not sufficient intent to support an inverse condemnation claim. 
    Id. at 554.
    7
    We observed that mere negligence that eventually contributes to property damage will not
    qualify as a taking, primarily because the public would bear the burden of paying for damage for
    which it receives no benefit. 
    Id. at 554–55.
    We also noted that, “[i]n the case of flood-water
    impacts, recurrence is a probative factor in determining the extent of the taking and whether it is
    necessarily incident to authorized government activity, and therefore substantially certain to occur.”
    
    Id. at 555.
    We held that, “[w]hile nonrecurrent flooding may cause damage, a single flood event
    does not generally rise to the level of a taking” because “its benefit to the public, [is] too temporal
    or speculative to warrant compensation.” 
    Id. In a
    companion case, we clarified that “the requisite intent is present when a governmental
    entity knows that a specific act is causing identifiable harm or knows that the harm is substantially
    certain to result.” 
    Id. (citing City
    of Dallas v. Jennings, 
    142 S.W.3d 310
    , 314 (Tex. 2004)). With
    flood water impacts, recurrence is a probative factor in assessing intent and the extent of the taking.
    
    Id. We rejected
    the District’s argument that it was, at most, only negligent and found some evidence
    to support the taking because the reservoir changed the character of the flooding on the Gragg Ranch
    to make the flood waters arrive sooner, flow faster and more forcefully, and last longer. 
    Id. We observed
    this could be attributable to the reservoir’s ability to hold only eight percent excess storage,
    compared to twenty-five to one hundred percent for other reservoirs. 
    Id. at 556.
    In Gragg, we reaffirmed a statement we made over 50 years ago:
    [g]overnmental agencies and authorities are necessities. They are capable of
    rendering great and beneficent public services. But any appeal to the tradition of our
    laws which omits a decent regard for private property rights is both inaccurate and
    distorted. It is because of this regard that our governmental agencies and authorities
    in acquiring properties for their public purposes are generally required to proceed
    8
    under the power of eminent domain rather than under the police power. Such a
    policy has not resulted in a destruction of flood control and improvement agencies
    in the past and there is no reason to apprehend that the continuation of such policy
    will prove overly costly or inimical to the American way of life in the future.
    
    Id. at 556
    (quoting Brazos River Auth. v. City of Graham, 
    354 S.W.2d 99
    , 107 (Tex. 1961)).
    Our holding in Gragg does not, as the court of appeals concluded, compel a holding here that
    Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim is premature. The focus of Gragg is that the government’s
    negligent acts that result in an occasional flood do not benefit the public and cannot qualify as a
    taking. 
    Id. at 555.
    The governmental entity in Gragg intentionally constructed a reservoir with
    minimal overflow capacity, and the frequent flooding at the ranch indicated this was not mere
    negligence. 
    Id. at 556.
    Here, we need not look to evidence of the frequency of flooding to deduce
    the government’s intent: the City knew the project would inundate part of Kopplow’s property before
    it ever began construction, prompting the City to seek a drainage easement from Kopplow. The
    project would only result in one tract other than Kopplow’s being below the 100-year flood level,
    and the City obtained a drainage easement for the applicable portion of that tract. Based on these
    facts, there is little dispute that the City intended to take Kopplow’s property for the project, and
    Gragg does not bar the inverse condemnation claim. 
    Id. at 555;
    Jennings, 142 S.W.3d at 314
    .
    The court of appeals also relied on Howard v. City of Kerrville, 
    75 S.W.3d 112
    (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio 2002, pet. denied), to support its holding that Kopplow’s inverse condemnation
    claim is not yet 
    ripe. 335 S.W.3d at 296
    . In Howard, a flood destroyed a dam, which the city rebuilt
    with the same 
    specifications. 75 S.W.3d at 115
    . But the earlier FEMA floodplain maps did not
    account for the impact of the dam or increased flow in the Guadalupe River. 
    Id. The new
    flood level
    9
    was above the level to which Howard had previously filled his property. 
    Id. At various
    times during
    city regulation changes, Howard filed and withdrew applications to develop the property and later
    sued, in part, for a regulatory taking. 
    Id. at 116.
    The court of appeals held that Howard’s regulatory
    takings claim was not ripe because he had no application on file and the court could not determine
    what use he sought and what uses the city would or would not allow. 
    Id. at 118.
    In contrast, here,
    there was undisputed testimony that Kopplow sought to develop its property pursuant to the
    previously approved plat and that the City would require Kopplow to fill its property to 745.16 feet
    to so develop it. Unlike the record in Howard, on this record, we are able to determine whether the
    municipality will approve the use the landowner seeks.
    The City further contends that Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim is not yet ripe under
    
    Westgate, 843 S.W.2d at 453
    . There, Westgate, Ltd. (Westgate) completed construction of
    commercial buildings shortly before the government announced plans to build a highway at a route
    directly through one of the new buildings. 
    Id. at 450.
    Westgate was having difficulty leasing the
    space in light of the proposed roadway. 
    Id. at 450–51.
    When the government brought statutory
    takings proceedings, Westgate counterclaimed for inverse condemnation to recover its lost profits
    accrued before the government acquired the property. 
    Id. at 451.
    The trial court awarded Westgate
    $2,734,000 for the statutory takings claim as the difference in value of Westgate’s entire tract before
    and after the taking. 
    Id. It also
    awarded Westgate $633,000 in lost profits for its inverse
    condemnation claim. 
    Id. We affirmed
    the reversal of the award of lost profits under the inverse
    condemnation claim because the government’s proposed taking was not a direct restriction on
    Westgate’s property before it actually acquired the property. 
    Id. at 452–53.
    10
    We cited approvingly in Westgate two court of appeals cases where a future loss of property
    did not give rise to a present takings claim. 
    Id. at 452–53.
    Both Allen v. City of Texas City5 and
    Hubler v. City of Corpus Christi6 involved city drainage systems that rendered the owners’ properties
    more susceptible to flooding. 
    Westgate, 843 S.W.2d at 453
    . In Allen, a class of plaintiffs affected
    by a levee pleaded an inverse condemnation claim, alleging the levee diminished the value of their
    land and made it more susceptible to flooding. 
    775 S.W.2d 863
    , 864 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 1989, writ denied). The Allen court disallowed the claim because no flooding had occurred
    and the government had not otherwise appropriated the property. 
    Id. at 865.
    In Hubler, the plaintiff
    asserted that the combined effect of a current drainage project and several proposed others would
    increase the surface waters on his land and that the city should have taken a drainage easement. 
    564 S.W.2d 816
    , 821 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1978, writ ref’d n.r.e.). The Hubler court disallowed
    the claim because no flooding had occurred as a result of the completed projects. 
    Id. Reliance on
    Allen and Hubler is misplaced because they address when an inverse
    condemnation claim for flooding is premature. Kopplow’s claim is about development, not flooding.
    Kopplow purchased the property to develop it, obtained development permits (including a vested
    rights permit), and filled the property to the 100-year flood level to develop it before the City
    constructed the project that rendered the land undevelopable unless filled again. Even if the
    Kopplow property never actually floods, the property is nonetheless undevelopable unless filled
    because of the project. The direct, immediate restriction on Kopplow’s property is that it can no
    5
    775 S.W .2d 863 (Tex. App.— Houston [1st Dist.] 1989, writ denied).
    6
    564 S.W .2d 816 (Tex. App.— Corpus Christi 1978, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    11
    longer develop the property as previously approved, and, on these facts, a lack of ripeness does not
    bar Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim.
    We next address two remaining questions: (1) whether proximate cause affects the inverse
    condemnation claim, and (2) whether the damages awarded by the jury are recoverable under the
    inverse condemnation claim. Here, the charge asked the jury whether the use of the part taken
    proximately caused damage to the remainder. The jury answered in the affirmative. The City
    challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting that answer on appeal, arguing that the use of
    the part taken was for the in-flow wall only and would not impound flood waters on Kopplow’s
    
    remainder. 335 S.W.3d at 292
    . A proximate cause question is properly submitted in a partial
    statutory takings case where the parties dispute whether the use of the part taken damaged the
    remainder. State v. Petropoulos, 
    346 S.W.3d 525
    , 531 (Tex. 2011). Moreover, causation is still
    relevant in an inverse condemnation claim: owners of inversely condemned property cannot recover
    damages the government did not cause. See 
    Gragg, 151 S.W.3d at 555
    (holding that the government
    need not pay even for negligent takings because they do not benefit the public). But while causation
    in a partial statutory taking focuses on whether the use of the part taken damaged the remainder,
    causation in an inverse condemnation focuses on the extent of the government’s restriction on the
    property. See Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc. v. State, 
    381 S.W.3d 468
    , 477 (Tex. 2012).
    Even if the City’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence also applies to Kopplow’s
    inverse condemnation claim, it would be legally insignificant as the parties agree that the berm will
    impound flood waters on Kopplow’s property in a 100-year flood, causing the property to again be
    below the 100-year flood level. Likewise, the parties agree that Kopplow must fill its property to
    12
    the new 100-year flood level in order to develop it as previously approved. Thus, there is no dispute
    as to causation for Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim.
    Moreover, the damages the jury awarded are proper for Kopplow’s inverse condemnation
    claim. The damages the jury found for the easement ($4,600)7 and the remainder of Kopplow’s
    property ($690,000) are recoverable under the inverse condemnation claim, and Kopplow submitted
    a single question that would have resulted in this amount. See 
    Westgate, 843 S.W.2d at 457
    (holding
    broad form condemnation charges should ask the difference in value of the property before and after
    the taking). Instead, the City requested, and the trial court approved, a separate question for damages
    for the easement and the remainder of the property. It was not harmful error under our Rules and
    precedent to charge the jury here separately as to the damages for the easement under the statutory
    takings claim and the remainder of the property under the inverse condemnation claim because the
    ultimate result was the same. See 
    id. at 451
    (damages to property and lost profits pled under separate
    theories), 457 (level of recovery for condemnation is the difference in value of the property before
    and after the taking). Accordingly, because Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim is ripe and was
    not waived, it supports the $690,000 damage award.
    III. Conclusion
    Kopplow purchased the property to develop it, obtained floodplain and vested rights permits,
    and filled the property to the 100-year flood level before the City built a flood control project partly
    on its property to detain storm water on the property. That project prevents Kopplow from
    7
    The trial court entered judgment on this award, and the court of appeals affirmed. 335 S.W .3d at 297. Neither
    party challenges that ruling here.
    13
    developing the property as planned unless it fills it to the new 100-year flood level. Kopplow’s
    inverse condemnation claim sought damages for the fill. The fact that flooding has not yet occurred
    does not render the claim premature because the claim is based on the thwarting of approved
    development, not flooding. We thus conclude the award of remainder damages is recoverable under
    Kopplow’s inverse condemnation claim. In light of the court of appeals’ ruling, it failed to reach
    Kopplow’s cross-appeal point that the trial court erred in excluding some of the evidence of the cost
    of the fill. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand to the court of
    appeals for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ___________________________
    Eva M. Guzman
    Justice
    OPINION DELIVERED: March 8, 2013
    14