People ex rel. Department of Public Works v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.
People ex rel. Department of Public Works v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion
Plaintiff (condemner) appeals from a judgment in an eminent domain proceeding awarding respondent (condemnee) the sum of
Zoning
The property which is the subject of the case at bench is located in the San Fernando Valley in the City of Los Angeles. It was acquired by condemnee’s predecessor in interest in 1912 and beginning in that year it was used as a railroad right-of-way. The general area through which the right-of-way ran was agricultural in character. A street subsequently to become the southbound lane of Sepulveda Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley was constructed on the west side of the right-of-way sometime prior to 1935. The northbound lanes of Sepulveda were constructed to the east of the property in 1940, at which time the roadway to the west of the property became a through street for the first time.
The property was unzoned until March 7, 1946. On that date pursuant to a master plan by which railroad rights-of-way were zoned to accord with adjoining land, the property was zoned A2-1, a zoning which permits single family residences, offices of some types in conjunction with a residence, agriculture, miniature golf courses, and public parking if necessary findings are made. From 1946 until June 29, 1970, the date of valuation in this eminent domain proceeding, the character of the area around the property changed from agricultural to urban. Sepulveda Boulevard as it adjoined the property became essentially a commercial street with no agricultural use along it. By 1970 Sepulveda was a major highway traveled by approximately 20,000 cars per day. In 1963 condemnee’s predecessor in interest terminated the use of the property as a railroad right-of-way.
Although for different reasons, both related to their respective theories at trial, condemner and condemnee agree that there was at no time a reasonable probability of a zoning change of the former right-of-way strip to C2 & P, commercial and parking, which condemnee contends was necessary to the development of the land to its highest and best use.
An appraiser, whose qualifications to testify to the value of real property were stipulated, testified for condemnee without objection, that where dis
In 1971 the City of Los Angeles in rezoning an unrelated abandoned right-of-way owned by condemnee to a more restrictive (residential) use, reported: “In initiating the change of zone, the Council indicated that it would be desirable to eliminate all possibility of extensive use of the railroad right-of-way which along a good portion of its length occupies the center portion of a secondary highway.”
Condemner produced evidence that it was the policy of the City of Los Angeles to restrict zoning of discontinued railroad rights-of-way only to the extent of elimination of traffic hazards and “in the interest of the public health, safety and welfare.” The parties agreed at trial that there was no cooperation or agreement between the City of Los Angeles and the condemner, State of California, to limit the use of the subject strip of property so as to allow condemner to acquire it for less than its market value.
The trial court found, “there appears a city policy to prohibit or frustrate the use of abandoned railroad rights-of-way other than for street purposes” and concluded, “the City’s refusal to rezone subject property to commercial amounts to a taking without just compensation, which
Condemnee having offered and the court having received evidence that the property should be valued at its highest and best use as commercial property, condemner on this appeal attacks the finding of improper purpose for the A2-1 zone as being unsupported by the evidence and the ruling excluding consideration of the zoning as being contrary to law.
Substantial evidence supports the finding of the trial court that the zoning applied by the City of Los Angeles to the subject property was the implementation of a city policy to frustrate by discriminatory spot zoning development of discontinued railroad rights-of-way for other than street purposes. The trial court was entitled to accept the actual recitals in the 1956 through 1966 ordinances and in the “roll back” zoning matter as controlling over the protestations to the contrary of the city officials who testified for condemner.
The existence of evidentiary support for the trial court’s finding is not the end of the matter. Its legal conclusion barring evidence of actual zoning, must be tested. Although in most situations a collateral attack upon zoning is not permitted in an eminent domain proceeding (see Note 9 A.L.R.3d 291, 303 and cases there cited), that principle is inapplicable to the situation where the condemner purporting to exercise its police power by enacting a zoning ordinance has in reality discriminated against a particular parcel or parcels of land in order to depress their value with a view to future takings in eminent domain. (4 Nichols on Eminent Domain (3d ed.) § 12.322; Note 9 A.L.R.3d 291, 304 and cases there cited; see also Klopping v. City of Whittier, 8 Cal.3d 39, 46 [104 Cal.Rptr. 1, 500 P.2d 1345].) In such a situation the condemnee may attack the validity of the invalid zoning ordinance in the eminent domain action and if successful require that his property be valued free of its restrictions. (See Klopping v. City of Whittier, supra, 8 Cal.3d 39.)
Thus, if the eminent domain action which is the case at bench had been commenced or prosecuted by the City of Los Angeles, the ruling of the trial court excluding evidence of existing zoning would have been correct. (Peacock v. County of Sacramento, 271 Cal.App.2d 845, 856 [77 Cal.Rptr.
The distinction between the governmental entity imposing the improper restriction in the guise of zoning and the governmental unit taking property for which the constitution demands it pay just compensation creates the critical problem in the case at bench. A zoning restriction imposed to depress value with a view to future eminent domain proceedings itself creates a cause of action in inverse condemnation against the governmental unit enacting the zoning ordinance. (Peacock v. County of Sacramento, supra, 271 Cal.App.2d 845; Sneed v. County of Riverside, supra, 218 Cal.App.2d 205.) The zoning restriction may be invalidated by a direct attack. (Kissinger v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 161 Cal.App.2d 454.)
It is practical and logical to require that such invalid zoning be disregarded where the zoning authority is also the condemner. Permitting recovery in eminent domain disregarding the zoning restriction combines in one action the right to recover compensation for both the inverse condemnation resulting from the disguised taking in the form of zoning and for the actual taking of the property. The process avoids separating the matter into two causes involving the same subject matter and the same parties. Moreover, the condemning authority is also the zoning government so that much of the vice of a collateral attack on zoning in the usual eminent domain proceeding is not present.
In contrast, logic dictates that the combination of causes of action is improper in the case at bench. To require that the city’s zoning which was an inverse condemnation by that body be disregarded here shifts the financial burden of the disguised taking from the city to the state. It permits a condemnee which failed to pursue its remedies for inverse condemnation against the city to recover compensation from an entity not directly responsible for the damage compensated. It is damage to the condemnee and not benefit to the condemner that is recoverable. (1 Orgel on Valuation Under Eminent Domain (2d ed.) § 94.) Since the condemnee has its rights of recovery against the city, there is no compelling need that the same damage be compensated in the eminent domain proceeding brought by the state.
Although the parties in the case at bench have excluded the issue of reasonable probability of change in zoning as affecting market value, Graziadio is highly persuasive. In an eminent domain proceeding prosecuted by the State of California, that decision permits consideration of a zoning restriction imposed by the City of Fullerton which would have been barred from evidence had the condemnation been brought by the city. The trial court’s ruling in the case at bench excluded that precise form of evidence. We thus conclude that the ruling was erroneous. Since the ruling materially impaired the condemner in its presentation of evidence of a lower value of the subject property it was prejudicial, and the case at bench must be reversed.
During the course of negotiations for the purchase of the subject property by condemner from condemnee, a right-of-way agent, noting disagreement as to value and the prospect of filing an action, offered to purchase the property for $51,452. The offer not having been accepted the eminent domain proceeding was filed. At trial condemnee offered the letter in evidence. It was received over the objection of condemner that it was an offer of compromise barred by Evidence Code section 1152. The trial court instructed the jury, however, “. . . This letter was received not as evidence of value or for any suggestion arising from a mere offer to compromise because an offer to compromise is not material and may not be considered by you except as an admission on the part of the Division of Highways that, at the time the offer was made, it had an opinion as to the market value of the property. It should not be regarded as being an expression of the present opinion of the Division of Highways as to the market value of subject property as of the date óf evaluation. The law favors compromises and settlements, and the offer to pay a c^laim made to defendant by an agent of the state may not be considered oy you to be an admission by the state of liability to pay that amount, or any other sum for the subject property. ...”
Condemner asserted at trial that the value of the property was $500 while condemnee contended for a valuation of $106,000. The jury found the value to be $52,750, some $1,300 more than the offer of compromise and a figure midway between the contentions of value made by the parties.
Evidence Code section 813 provides that in an eminent domain proceeding value of property may be shown only by opinion testimony. Sections 814 through 821 state factors upon which the opinion may be based. Evidence Code section 822 states: “Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 814 to 821, the following matter is inadmissible as evidence and is not a proper basis for an opinion as to the value of property: . . . (b) The price at which an offer or option to purchase or lease the property . . . being valued . . . was made . . . except that an option, offer, or listing may be introduced by a party as an admission of another party to the proceeding; but nothing in this subdivision permits an admission to be used as direct evidence upon any matter that may be shown only by opinion evidence under Section 813.”
Evidence Code section 1152 states: “(a) Evidence that a person has, in compromise . . . offered ... to furnish money or any other thing
There is an inherent conflict between Evidence Code sections 822 and 1152 if each is construed to its broadest scope. An offer to purchase property which is about to become the subject of an eminent domain proceeding could be an offer by a party within the meaning of section 821 and admissible as a limited admission although made in the course of settlement negotiations. Section 1152 would bar such evidence.
The two sections are reconcilable only if offers in the course of efforts to settle eminent domain proceedings are treated as any other settlement offers and barred from evidence by section 1152. (Carlson, Statutory Rules of Evidence for Eminent Domain Proceedings, 18 Hastings L.J. 143, 156; A Study Relating to Evidence in Eminent Domain Proceedings, 3 Cal. Law Revision Com., Rep. (1961) pp. A-ll, A-44.) Policy considerations compel the same result. Where evidence is generally inadmissible based upon strong public policy, it is admissible pursuant to an exception to the generality only if its probative value outweighs the policy considerations for its exclusion. (Jefferson, Cal. Evidence Benchbook, § 21.1.) Offers of compromise and statements made in the course of settlement negotiations are barred from evidence to promote the high public policy of encouraging settlement of lawsuits including those in eminent domain. (A Study Relating to Evidence in Eminent Domain Proceedings, supra, p. A-44.) Conversely, the evidentiary effect of an offer to purchase property made by a party to an eminent domain proceeding is so circumscribed by the statutory restrictions of Evidence Code section 813 as to give it little probative value.
We thus conclude that the trial court erred in receiving evidence of condemner’s offer in compromise to purchase the subject property. Since we reverse on another ground, we need not determine whether the trial court’s instruction prevented the error from being prejudicial.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.
■ Wood, P. J., and Lillie, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 7, 1973, and respondent's petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 31, 1973.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE ex rel. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS, and v. SOUTHERN PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, and
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- 9 cases
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- Published