| ARTICLES
Buyer
Beware: Improper Sale Documentation Results In Waiver
of Inverse Condemnation Claim
Authored by: Bradford B. Kuhn, Rick E. Rayl
If a party purchases property impacted by a governmental
taking, and the purchase price already reflects the
damages suffered by the taking, can the purchasing party
still pursue the government for damages? The California
Court of Appeal chimed in on the issue last week in
Ridgewater Associates LLC v. Dublin San Ramon Services
District 2010 DJDAR 6841. The court held that a property
owner cannot recover for inverse condemnation where
it knowingly purchases property impacted by a government
taking, and the purchase price reflects the property's
condition in light of the government impacts.
The case is important not simply because the property
owner was thrown out of court despite what amounted
to an admitted taking of private property without payment
of just compensation. What really matters here is that
it should have been relatively simple to avoid the problems
the property owner faced in Ridgewater.
The
simplest solution would have entailed the prior owner
filing an inverse condemnation action. However, even
if the prior owner simply wanted "out," it
could have easily assigned its inverse claim to the
buyer. Since both the seller and the buyer inadequately
documented the transaction, neither had a remedy for
what amounts to an ongoing taking of the property. And
the government essentially got a "free pass"
for its taking.
Ridgewater
purchased a warehouse on a one-acre property immediately
adjacent to a sewage treatment facility operated by
the Dublin San Ramon Services District. Prior to purchasing
the property, Ridgewater's inspections revealed water
intrusion that Ridgewater believed caused damage to
the property. As a result, the seller reduced the purchase
price from $2.65 million to $2.5 million. Critically,
in agreeing to a reduced purchase price, the parties
did not take any specific steps to preserve the prior
owner's inverse condemnation action against the District
and, in particular, the seller did not assign - at least
not clearly - its claims against the District to Ridgewater.
(While the Court of Appeal noted that the purchase agreement
states that Ridgewater acquired "all rights of
the previous owner," the trial court found that
the undisputed material facts demonstrated there was
"no evidence that the purchase agreements transferred
to Ridgewater the former owners' rights to pursue an
inverse condemnation action.")
Shortly after the close of escrow, Ridgewater sued the
District for inverse condemnation, claiming that the
warehouse had been damaged by water intrusion from the
District's water treatment plant. The complaint alleged
that the District's plant had caused cracks in the slab
foundation, concrete erosion, cracking and bulging in
and outside the warehouse, water seepage, and soil erosion.
The District moved for summary judgment, arguing that
Ridgewater lacked standing because any injury to the
property occurred before Ridgewater purchased it, and
therefore Ridgewater was not harmed by any taking. The
trial court granted the motion, finding that Ridgewater
did not have standing to pursue the inverse condemnation
claim because it was aware of the conditions and it
could not demonstrate any injury that occurred during
its ownership of the property.
On appeal, the court first provided the necessary backdrop
for an inverse condemnation claim, explaining that the
property owner must demonstrate: the agency substantially
participated in the planning, approval, construction,
or operation of a public project or improvement that
proximately caused injury to plaintiff's property and
the taking results in property damage, other depreciation
in market value, or unlawful dispossession of the owner.
As to the standing issue, Ridgewater argued that it
was only seeking compensation for damages that accrued
after it purchased the property. (Ridgewater apparently
did not argue that it could recover for earlier damages
under an assignment of rights from the seller.) In particular,
Ridgewater claimed that the District's operation of
the sewage treatment plant caused "continuous and
repeated" damage to its property because the District
periodically adds additional water to its treatment
plant, and each time this water is added, a taking occurs.
The District, in response, relied on case law holding
that a claim for inverse condemnation "remains
in the person who owned the property at the time of
the taking or damaging, regardless of whether the property
is subsequently transferred to another."
The court sided with the property owner on the standing
issue, holding that Ridgewater's claims for damages
accruing after the purchase provided Ridgewater with
sufficient standing to assert an inverse condemnation
claim. But the property owner's good news ended there.
While the court noted that the evidence proved it was
"highly likely that the property was damaged for
public use," Ridgewater nonetheless had no viable
claim. Ridgewater was aware of the water intrusion conditions
prior to purchasing the property - and, more importantly,
the price it paid was reduced to take those conditions
into account. The court held that this price reduction
eliminated any claim for diminution in value, as Ridgewater
was already "compensated" for any such diminution
through a reduced purchase price.
From a property owner's perspective, the Ridgewater
case provides important guidance for any buyer or seller
of property that involves a potential inverse condemnation
claim. First, the parties should understand that for
damages arising prior to the sale, the claim rests with
the seller; it does not automatically transfer to the
buyer. This is crucial, because it means that either
the seller must proceed with the inverse condemnation
action after the sale, or the seller must assign its
rights to the buyer, allowing the buyer to pursue the
seller's claim.
Second, for ongoing situations such as the water intrusions
in Ridgewater, the parties should take care to document
any adjustments to the purchase price so as to avoid,
if possible, the holding in Ridgewater that the buyer
has already been "compensated" for the damage.
From an agency perspective, there is also an important
lesson in Ridgewater. Government agencies should pay
particular attention to the title history of any property
when getting sued for inverse condemnation. Any time
a property has transferred recently, the agency should
take steps to determine whether the parties were aware
of the potential claim and, more particularly, whether
the buyer received any discount on the purchase price
as a result of any such issues. This can easily be determined
through the course of routine discovery, as long as
the agency's attorneys understand the issue - and ask
the right questions.

|