Jensen v. City of New Albany

OPINION

VAIDIK, Judge.

Case Summary

Donald Jensen, Edyth Jensen, Keith Jensen, and Sharon Jensen (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of the City of New Albany, Indiana, the New Albany Plan Commission, the New Albany Board of Zoning Appeals, and the Community Housing Development Organization, Inc. on Appellants’ Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and Injunction. Specifically, Appellants contend that the trial court erred in refusing to enforce the reversionary clause in a deed. Because the deed transferred the subject real estate to the State, an entity with the power of eminent domain, the reversionary clause is not enforceable. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History

On August 17, 1935, Catherine R. Faw-cett (“Fawcett”) executed a warranty deed (“1935 Deed”) conveying 5.82 acres of real estate (“Fawcett Property”) to the City of New Albany, Indiana (“the City”), “to have and to hold so long as said real estate shall be used as a Municipal Park and Golf course and with the provision that no picnic parties are to be allowed on said real estate.” Appellants’ App. p. 296. The 1935 Deed further states: “Upon said real estate ceasing to be used for the purposes above mentioned then the title to said real estate shall revert to and become vested in said Grantor, her heirs and assign[s][2].” Id. Beginning in 1935, the Fawcett Property was used as a small part of the Valley View Golf Course. Fawcett died in 1939.

Around 1960, the State began preparing for the construction of part of Interstate 64 (“1-64”) through New Albany. As part of the project, the State determined that it needed Valley View Golf Course and surrounding land, including the Fawcett Property. The State agreed to purchase the necessary land from the City for $284,525.00. Because Fawcett had deeded the Fawcett Property to the City for use as a municipal park and golf course and subject to a reversionary interest, the Indiana Attorney General’s Office prepared a quitclaim deed (“I960 Deed”) by which Fawcett’s daughter and sole heir, Edyth Fawcett Peters (“Peters”), conveyed certain real estate, including the Fawcett Property, to the Indiana Highway Commission (“Highway Commission”), and the City paid Peters the sum of $1600.00. During a Parks Board meeting on November 3, 1960, an attorney for the Parks Board stated, “The grounds with rever-sionary interest I have deeds prepared and held by the Attorney General of the State of Indiana and there will be a further reduction of $4200.00 from the gross amount we will have to pay for this title.” Id. at 373 (Minutes of November 3, 1960, Parks Board Meeting).

The 1960 Deed purported to convey three parcels to the Highway Commission. *527The provision conveying the Fawcett Property largely mirrors the 1935 Deed:

[T]o have and to hold so long as said real estate shall be used as a municipal park and golf course and with the provision that no picnic parties are to be allowed on said real estate. Upon said real estate ceasing to be used for the purposes above mentioned then the title to said real estate shall revert to and become vested in said Grantor, her heirs and assigns.

Id. The 1960 Deed also states “that Catherine R. Fawcett died in Floyd County, Indiana, in 1939, leaving as her sole and only heir at law, her daughter, Edyth Faw-cett Peters, the Grantor herein, and that said Grantor is now the owner of all right of reversion in the above described real estate.” Id. at 452-53. On December 8, 1960, the Floyd Circuit Court ordered the payment of the $1600.00.3 On August 26, 1961, the City executed a deed conveying certain real estate, including the Fawcett Property, to “the State of Indiana on behalf of the Indiana Highway Department.” Id. at 297. Construction of 1-64 lasted from 1961 through 1968 and only affected a small part of the Fawcett Property, leaving 5.531 of the original 5.82 acres intact. The remaining Fawcett Property was used for recreational purposes from 1969 through approximately 2004. In 1983, a baseball field was dedicated on the Faw-cett Property, and the area became known as McLean Park.

In 2004, Floyd Memorial Hospital in New Albany sought to expand its medical facilities to an adjacent residential area. The hospital purchased several houses in the area and donated them to the Community Housing Development Organization, Inc. (“CHDO”), which planned to move the houses away from the site of the hospital expansion. CHDO eventually sought to move the houses to McLean Park. On November 29, 2004, the State executed a quitclaim . deed (“2004 Deed”) returning certain real estate that it had acquired for the 1-64 project but not used, including the Fawcett Property, to the City. The 2004 Deed stated that “the above described real estate will not be needed for highway purposes or purposes incidental thereto within a reasonable time in the future” and that “the Excess Land will be used by the City of New Albany for the improvement and development of City programs[.]” Id. at 311. Sometime during the fall of 2004, CHDO bulldozed approximately 200 trees at McLean Park and began moving in houses from the hospital expansion site.

In the midst of the hospital expansion project and CHDO’s acquisition of McLean Park, Appellants filed a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and Injunction (“Complaint”) against the City, the New Albany Plan Commission, the New Albany Board of Zoning Appeals, and CHDO. According to the Complaint, “The Plaintiffs are citizens of New Albany who are persons interested under [the 1935 Deed] in that they are beneficiaries and users of the municipal park and recreational area created by the deed.” Id. at 13. One of the plaintiffs/Appellants, Edyth Jensen, is Faw-cett’s great granddaughter, and another, Keith Jensen, is Fawcett’s great-great grandson. The Appellants sought, in part, “an order of the court declaring that the City does not have any right to allow the use of the [Fawcett Property] for any purpose other than that stated in the deed without causing the property to revert *528back to the rightful heirs and assigns of [Fawcett].” Id. at 15.

Less than a month before trial, the City, the New Albany Plan Commission, and the New Albany Board of Zoning Appeals filed a motion for summary judgment. On November 22, 2005, the trial court held both a hearing on the motion for summary judgment and a bench trial. The 1960 Deed was not submitted into evidence. After the hearing and the trial, the parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

On December 15, 2005, the day after it filed its proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, the City filed a Motion to Re-Open Evidence and Designation of Evidence. The City sought to submit the 1960 Deed as “newly discovered evidence.” Id. at 444. The trial court allowed the 1960 Deed to be submitted as evidence and gave the parties time to submit additional findings of fact and conclusions of law. On January 13, 2006, the trial court entered an order denying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment but also denying Appellants’ request for declaratory judgment and an injunction. The order included the following relevant findings:

4. The City of New Albany owned the Fawcett [PJroperty as of August 17, 1935 subject to certain conditions. The City did convey this property and others to the State of Indiana in lieu of an eminent domain case so that the State of Indiana could build Interstate 1-64. There was no dispute that the taking of the Fawcett [PJroperty, as well as other adjacent property was for a public purpose. |
5. When this property was transferred to the State of Indiana for the building of 1-64, the reversionary clause of the deed of 1935 was extinguished.
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5[4]. While there is a difference between a negative restrictive covenant on a deed of real property and a reversion-ary clause in a deed conve[y]ing real property, neither is “enforceable against an entity with the power of eminent domain.” Dible v. City of Lafayette, [713 N.E.2d 269 (Ind.1999) ].
6. If the entities with the power of eminent domain violate the right of a property owner, that is the right to have land revert to the Fawcett heirs, then there may be a taking which entitles potential property owners, that is the Fawcett heirs, to seek compensation.
7. The newly discovered stipulated evidence established that a Fawcett heir did quitclaim in October of 1960 any reversionary interest in the Fawcett [Property and that said heir was compensated for the taking of any remaining real estate rights.

Id. at 475-76. Appellants then filed a Motion to Correct Error, which the trial court denied. This appeal ensued.

Discussion and Decision

On appeal, Appellants raise several issues, including issues regarding the interpretation of the 1960 Deed. However, we find one issue to be dispositive: whether the trial court correctly determined that this case is controlled by the Indiana Supreme Court’s opinion in Dible v. City of Lafayette, 713 N.E.2d 269 (Ind.1999). The facts relevant to this issue are not in dispute. As such, we are presented with a pure question of law, which we review de novo. State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs v. Ispat *529Inland, Inc., 784 N.E.2d 477, 480 (Ind. 2008). We agree with the trial court that Dible controls the outcome of this dispute.

At first glance, this may seem like a very straightforward case. Around 1960, the State determined that it needed the Fawcett Property for the construction of 1-64. The State prepared a deed — the 1960 Deed — by which it would receive the Faw-cett Property and Peters would receive $1600.00 from the City, ostensibly to extinguish her reversionary interest in the property, which was the only interest she held at the time. But this is where the story takes a confusing turn. In preparing the 1960 Deed, the State included the following provision regarding the Fawcett Property:

[T]o have and to hold so long as said real estate shall be used as a municipal park and golf course and with the provision that no picnic parties are to be allowed on said real estate. Upon said real estate ceasing to be used for the purposes above mentioned then the title to said real estate shall revert to and become vested in said Grantor, her heirs and assigns.

Appellants’ App. p. 452. Strikingly, the deed by which the State acquired the Faw-cett Property for the construction of 1-64 also contains a reversionary clause requiring that the Fawcett Property be used as a municipal park and golf course. On appeal, Appellants seize upon this reversion-ary language.

The trial court, without even mentioning the reversionary clause in the 1960 Deed, determined that this case is controlled by our Supreme Court’s opinion in Dible. We must agree.

In Dible, the plaintiffs owned property that was subject to a restrictive covenant reserving a utility easement. The City of Lafayette accepted responsibility for the utility easement then undertook a construction project that allegedly exceeded the easement and violated the restrictive covenant. The plaintiffs sought to enforce the restrictive covenant against the City of Lafayette, asking for an injunction requiring the City to remove the portions of the construction project that exceeded the utility easement. Our Supreme Court held:

Such a covenant is not enforceable against an entity with the power of eminent domain-at least to the extent that the entity’s use is for a public purpose. But if that entity’s use violates the restrictions of the covenant, there is a taking that entitles the owners to compensation.

Id. at 273. In so holding, the Court noted parenthetically that enforcing a restrictive covenant against a condemning authority would defeat the purpose of eminent domain. Id. (citing Carolina Mills v. Catawba County Bd. of Educ., 27 N.C.App. 524, 219 S.E.2d 509, 511 (1975)). The lesson of Dible is that when a condemning authority acquires land encumbered by a restriction on its use, that restriction cannot be enforced against the condemning authority as long as that entity’s use is for a public purpose; the only remedy for a violation of that restriction is monetary compensation. Appellants contend that Dible is inapplicable to the instant case for three reasons.

Appellants note that neither the State nor the City has ever exercised its power of eminent domain with regard to the Faw-cett Property. Appellants apparently believe that the rule in Dible is limited to those situations in which a condemning authority has actually exercised its power of eminent domain. This is not the case. The question is not whether an entity condemned property, but whether the entity had the power to do so, the rationale being that if the property owner refused to sell *530the property, the condemning authority would simply exercise its power of eminent domain. See Carolina Mills, 219 S.E.2d at 511 (“The Board’s power to purchase property ... is tantamount to the power of eminent domain.”). This explains the Dible Court’s reference to entities “with the power of eminent domain.” 713 N.E.2d at 273. (emphasis added). Here, as the trial court noted, the State purchased the land it needed for 1-64, including the Fawcett Property, “in lieu of an eminent domain case[J” Appellants’ App. p. 475. Because the State would have exercised its power of eminent domain even if Peters had not sold her reversionary interest, the fact that the State negotiated the purchase of the land it needed does not make the reversionary clause enforceable.

Appellants also maintain that Dible does not control the resolution of this dispute because it concerned a restrictive covenant, while our concern here is a possibility of reverter. This distinction is immaterial in the context of this ease. In Dible, our Supreme Court noted that enforcing a restrictive covenant against a condemning authority would defeat the purpose of eminent domain. 713 N.E.2d at 273 (citing Carolina Mills, 219 S.E.2d at 511). It is axiomatic that enforcing a reversionary clause against a condemning authority would have the same effect. If the rever-sionary clause would have been enforced against the State, it would have been unable to build 1-64 as planned. Indeed, it is apparent that the State purchased the Fawcett Property with the specific intent of extinguishing the reversionary clause. During a Parks Board meeting on November 3, 1960, an attorney for the Parks Board noted that some of the land that the State needed for 1-64 was subject to re-versionary interests, that the Attorney General’s Office had prepared deeds with regard to this land, and that some of the money paid by the State to the City would be used “to pay for this title,” i.e., to extinguish the reversionary interests. Appellants’ App. p. 373 (Minutes of November 3,1960, Parks Board Meeting).

Furthermore, Appellants’ own argument reveals the similarity between restrictive covenants and possibilities of re-verter in this specific context. Appellants direct us to Black’s Law Dictionary, which defines a restrictive covenant as “[a] private agreement, usually in a deed or a lease, that restricts the use or occupancy of real property, especially by specifying lot sizes, building lines, architectural styles, and the uses to which the property may be put.” Black’s Law Dictionary 393 (8th ed.2004). The reversionary clause in this case is exactly that: a private agreement in a deed that restricts the use or occupancy of real property by specifying the uses to which the property may be put. Appellants themselves state, in a different section of their brief, “Real covenants are agreements relating to real property that obligate a party to do or not do a particular act. The Reverter Clauses are, therefore, covenants.” Appellants’ Br. p. 24 (citation and footnote omitted) (emphasis added). We do not deny that there are significant distinctions between restrictive covenants and possibilities of reverter in other contexts. But in the context before us, those distinctions are irrelevant. A possibility of reverter is just as unenforceable against a condemning authority as a restrictive covenant.

Next, Appellants assert that Dible is inapposite because, whereas our Supreme Court held that a restrictive covenant is not enforceable against an entity with the power of eminent domain as long as the entity’s use is for a public purpose, id., “CHDO desires to take the Fawcett Property for a private use, not a public purpose,” Appellant’s Br. p. 18. However, we *531need not reach the issue of whether the CHDO’s acquisition of the Fawcett Property in 2004 and 2005 was for a “private use” or a “public purpose.” Rather, our focus is on whether the State’s acquisition of the Fawcett Property in 1960 and 1961 was for a public purpose. Appellants do not dispute that the State’s acquisition of the Fawcett Property for the construction of part of 1-64 was for a public purpose. Because the State’s acquisition of the Faw-cett Property extinguished Appellants’ re-versionary interest, Appellants had no stake in CHDO’s acquisition of the property in 2004 and 2005.5

Because we base our decision on Bible and the principle that a reversionary clause cannot be enforced against an entity with the power of eminent domain, we need not address any of Appellants’ arguments concerning deed interpretation. No matter how we interpret the 1960 Deed, the reversionary clause cannot be enforced against the State. Nonetheless, we note that to enforce the clause would be to defeat the purpose of the State’s acquisition of the Fawcett Property. In other words, if we were to enforce the reversion-ary clause in the 1960 Deed, we would have to conclude that the State violated the clause the instant it initiated construction of 1-64 on part of the Fawcett Property, the very purpose for which it acquired the property. Likewise, to give force to the reversionary clause would be to render the $1600.00 payment to Peters completely meaningless. The only interest Peters held in the Fawcett Property was the possibility of reverter, and if she was not surrendering that interest, then why was she paid $1600.00?6 “[T]he law looks through form to substance and will give effect to the real and dominant intention of the parties when definitely ascertained.” Kerfoot v. Kessener, 227 Ind. 58, 84 N.E.2d 190, 199 (1949); see also Brademas v. Hartwig, 175 Ind.App. 4, 369 N.E.2d 954, 957 (1977).

The reversionary clause in the 1960 Deed is unenforceable. As such, Appellants had no stake in CHDO’s acquisition of the Fawcett Property in 2004 and 2005. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Affirmed.

*532BARNES, J., concurs. BAILEY, J., concurs with separate opinion.

. The 1935 Deed actually included the word "assigned.” Appellants' App. p. 296. The parties agree that the drafter intended to use the word "assigns.” "Heirs and assigns” is an identifier commonly used in real estate transactions. See Black’s Law Dictionary 741 (8th ed.2004).

. The trial court directed that the payment be made to Fawcett. See Ex. p. 125. However, as we know, Fawcett died in' 1939.

. The trial court mistakenly included two sets of Findings of Law 3, 4, and 5. That is, Findings of Law 3, 4, and 5 were followed by Findings of Law 3, 4, and 5. See Appellants' App. p. 475-76.

. Appellants assert that their reversionary interest in the 5.531 acres of the Fawcett Property that the State did not use for the construction of 1-64 was revived five years after the State acquired the property because the State did not use it “for the public purpose for which it was taken.’’ Appellants’ Br. p. 20. In support of this argument, Appellants direct us to Indiana Code § 32 — 24—1—15(a)(4) (2004), which provides:

If the person seeking to take property under this article fails to take possession of the property and adapt the property for the purpose for which it was acquired not later than five (5) years after the payment of the award or judgment for damages, except where a fee simple interest in the property is authorized to be acquired and is acquired, the person seeking to acquire the property forfeits all rights in the property as fully and completely as if the procedure to take the property had not begun. (Formatting altered). But the State did "adapt the [Fawcett Property] for the purpose for which it was acquired” within five years. It is true that not all of the Fawcett Property is, as Appellants put it, “under 164 pavement or part of 1-64 right-of-way.” Appellants’ Br. p. 19-20. However, Appellants fail to cite any principle that says that any portion of land acquired by a condemning authority for a public project but not ultimately "used” for that project automatically reverts to the con-demnee.

. In their brief, Appellants argue at length about the adequacy of the consideration paid by the State for the Fawcett Property. See Appellants' Br. p. 29-32. However, Appellants’ arguments ignore the fact that Peters was only giving up a possibility of reverter in the property, not a fee simple interest.