Hart v. City of Detroit

Cynar, J.

This appeal involves an inverse condemnation class action suit. The original complaint in this action was filed May 9, 1974. The class was certified pursuant to GCR 1963, 208, on April 7, 1977. After all eligible classs members were notified, owners of 42 parcels of land joined the class. Defendant moved for accelerated judgment, and on August 18, 1978, the trial court granted the same, on the ground that the claims of all but seven of the plaintiffs were barred by the statute of limitations pertaining to damages for *700injuries to person or property.1 Those seven plaintiffs are not parties to this appeal, which is taken as of right.

I. Facts

This appeal is submitted on a stipulated statement of facts. The statement indicates that the parcels of realty in question are located within the boundaries of defendant’s Elmwood Park Urban Rehabilitation Project No. 3 (Elmwood 3). A part of Elmwood Park,2 the affected area contains approximately 1,400 separate parcels of land. Elm-wood 3 was originally conceived by city planners in the mid-to-late 1950’s. As part of its urban renewal efforts, defendant City of Detroit has acquired and demolished the structures upon virtually every parcel within Elmwood Park in order to facilitate redevelopment.

All parties have stipulated that the actions of defendant in the Elmwood 3 project resulted in a de facto taking of plaintiffs’ property without just compensation therefor. However, in each instance the subject properties were either directly or indirectly acquired by defendant as a result of nonpayment of taxes.3 This occurred after the de facto takings but well prior to the commencement of any formal condemnation proceedings by defendant. The plaintiffs now appealing were not joined as parties to any of 12 formal condemnation pro*701ceedings filed by defendant from August 3, 1971, to November 27, 1972.4

On May 9, 1974, the within action was instituted, well after all the parcels involved in this controversy were conveyed for nonpayment of taxes, and more than three years after the right of equity of redemption had expired with respect to every parcel.

Because this right had expired with respect to the parcels formerly owned by the plaintiffs on appeal, the lower court concluded that each plaintiff’s cause of action accrued, at the latest, on the date of expiration of their right to redeem. Applying (as noted hereinbefore) the three-year statute of limitations found in MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7), the trial court held that the claims of the plaintiffs now appealing were barred thereby because their claims accrued, at the latest, more than three years prior to the institution of the class action suit, and were thus without the statute of limitations.

II. The Appropriate Statute of Limitations

The first question for consideration is whether the three-year statute of limitations found in MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7)5 is applicable to inverse condemnation actions.

Plaintiffs argue that no statute of limitations should apply, as none can bar inverse condemnation actions. According to plaintiffs, due process *702rights guaranteed by both the Federal and State Constitutions are being invoked, and no statute of limitations can cut off those rights.

Defendant contends that the three-year limitations statute was properly applied by the trial court. As defendant views it, a "taking” has been held to include serious injury or damage to private property, thus a taking of real property should fall under the ambit of a statute of limitations provision barring actions pertaining to injury to property.

We initially reject plaintiffs’ claim that, since due process rights are involved in the instant litigation, no statute of limitations can be imposed to vitiate those rights. In a different context, but one nonetheless concerned with a deprivation of due process rights, this Court concluded that somp statute of limitations must apply. Citizens for Pre-Trial Justice v Goldfarb, 88 Mich App 519, 529-531; 278 NW2d 653 (1979). With this conclusion we agree.

We are likewise unable to accept plaintiffs’ argument that MCL 600.5813; MSA 27A.5813, which establishes a six-year statute of limitations for "all other personal actions”, is applicable to inverse condemnation proceedings. We do not find personal claims to include claims predicated upon real property rights. Cf., Stringer v Board of Trustees of Edward W Sparrow Hospital, 62 Mich App 696, 700-701; 233 NW2d 698 (1975), lv den 395 Mich 768 (1975). These are not "rights to which one is entitled by reason of being a person in the eyes of the law”. Id. They instead accrue by virtue of an interest in real property.

We are further unpersuaded by plaintiffs’ assertion that the adverse possession period in this state is the proper limitation of actions provision *703to employ in this case.6 In support of this position, plaintiffs cite Brazos River Authority v City of Graham, 163 Tex 167; 354 SW2d 99 (1961), and Frustuck v City of Fairfax, 212 Cal App 2d 345; 28 Cal Rptr 357 (1963). We perceive insuperable obstacles to an even-handed application of such a provision in inverse condemnation actions.

First, with adverse possession the point at which the statute begins to run is clear-cut and easy to define: the open and hostile possession of land under claim of right to the exclusion of the true owner placed on notice of the claim. Wood v Denton, 53 Mich App 435, 440-441; 219 NW2d 798 (1974).

Contrarily, the point at which a "taking” commences is not as easily pinpointed since in most cases the true owner will not suffer a privation of seisin. Moreover, a distinction between when a "taking” occurs and when a plaintiff’s cause of action arises has evolved under both Michigan and Federal case law.

United States v Dickinson, 331 US 745; 67 S Ct 1382; 91 L Ed 1789 (1947), clearly illustrates the above point. In that case the Federal government, without condemning Dickinson’s land, dammed a river and raised the water level in stages until the land was flooded. More than six years after water began to flood Dickinson’s land, but less than six years after that water reached its ultimate level, Dickinson brought an inverse condemnation action. The applicable statute of limitations under the Tucker Act was six years.

The Court noted that, although perhaps the taking occurred at the time the water began to pour onto Dickinson’s land, it would be unfair to *704hold that his cause of action accrued prior to the water reaching a stabilized level. Only then could Dickinson know the extent of the damage.

If this concept of a "continuous wrong”, which is applied in inverse condemnation actions, is coupled with the 15-year adverse possession statute of limitations, there will be two untoward results: (1) the statute would not be applied in inverse condemnation actions in the manner it was intended under the theory of adverse possession, i.e., that it would run from the time of taking; and (2) the period of time in which a plaintiff could bring suit would be abnormally long.

Furthermore, although applying the adverse possession limitation period is at least arguably sensible in an inverse condemnation case where a plaintiff retains ownership of the affected property and is still the owner at the time suit is brought, it is questionable whether that statute should apply in a case such as this one where plaintiffs had no ownership rights (legal or equitable) for more than three years prior to the date the suit was filed. In such case, plaintiffs would retain the right to bring suit for a "taking” of the property for 15 years or more after that taking, no matter what third party was presently the true owner.

Accordingly, we decline to apply the adverse possession statute of limitations to this inverse condemnation action.

We now examine whether MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7) is the proper statute of limitations to apply to the instant factual situation.

Const 1963, art 10, § 2 provides:

"Private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation therefor being first made or secured in a manner prescribed by law.”

*705The term "taking” has historically been interpreted in this jurisdiction to include not only instances of an absolute conversion of property but also cases involving a marked diminution in property value resulting from government action and cases where serious injury is inflicted upon the property itself. Buckeye Union Fire Ins Co v Michigan, 383 Mich 630, 641-642; 178 NW2d 476 (1970), inter alia. Since Michigan appellate courts have consistently interpreted the term "taking” to include injury to, and diminution in the value of, real property, we are persuaded that the statute of limitations covering injury to property was the appropriate one to apply to the "taking” conceded to have occurred here, and therefore we so hold.

III. Application of MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7)

Having concluded that the trial court utilized the proper statute of limitations in ruling upon defendant’s motion for accelerated judgment, we now turn to the trial court’s application of the same to the facts of the case at bar. In analyzing this issue, the paramount question is when the claims of the plaintiffs accrued, thereby triggering the running of the statute as against those claims.

As touched upon in the discussion in II, supra, the notion of a "taking” does not necessarily fixate upon any precise moment in time or any single event, but can instead be fluid or continuous. It has thus been said that a cause of action arising from a taking does not accrue, nor does the statute of limitations begin to run, until the consequences of the governmental action "have so manifested themselves that a final account may be struck”. United States v Dickinson, supra, 749. Or to phrase it differently, the action accrues when the *706situation becomes "stabilized”. Silverstein v Detroit, 335 F Supp 1306, 1309 (ED Mich, 1971).

The lower court in the case sub judice concluded that plaintiffs’ causes of action accrued, at the latest, on the date that their rights of equity of redemption expired. In essence, the court held that the situation "stabilized” as to each plaintiff on that date.

We concur with the conclusion of the trial court on this point. The day the right of equity of redemption expired was the last date plaintiffs held any interest in the realty which is the subject of this controversy. It is the logical point at which to conclude that the situation "stabilized”, or that a final account could be struck; it is the first date where a fixed value could reliably be determined with respect to the plaintiff’s properties.

Since, as to all the plaintiffs on appeal, this date was more than three years prior to the commencement of this class action, we are compelled to hold that the action was not timely brought by them under MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7), as then in effect. Therefore, as to those plaintiffs, the action was barred by the above-cited provision.

IV. Conclusion

In summary, we affirm the decision of the lower court with respect to the proper statute of limitations to employ and as to the correct application of that statute to the facts of this case.

Affirmed. No costs, a public question being involved.

M. F. Cavanagh, J., concurred.

The trial court relied upon MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7) as in effect on the date accelerated judgment was granted. This period of limitations, three years, is now found in MCL 600.5805(8); MSA 27A.5805(8).

Elmwood Park, an area on the lower east side of Detroit, not far removed from downtown, also includes Elmwood 1 and 2, Urban Renewal Areas as well, which abut Elmwood 3.

The parcels were conveyed via tax deeds. Those acquired indirectly were purchased by defendant from the State of Michigan for a nominal consideration of $1 per parcel.

The named plaintiff, Sylvia Hart, is not a party to this appeal, the lower court having ruled that her inverse condemnation suit was filed within the applicable limitations period. The other six plaintiffs who are not parties to this appeal were included in the formal condemnation proceedings instituted by defendant. The remaining class members are parties to this appeal.

This subsection reads as follows:

"(7) The period of limitations is 3 years for all other actions to recover damages for injuries to persons and property.”

The relevant statute is MCL 600.5801(4); MSA 27A.5801(4), which has a period of limitations of 15 years.