Check out this now-under-consideration Petition for Review, which asks the California Supreme Court to take up a case involving Murderers Creek, in Pleasant Hill, California. (Now there's a jarring juxtaposition for you.)
The case started off as a "routine inverse condemnation case." Pet. at 2. When Murderers Creek flooded, it damaged the plaintiffs' land. The County, the plaintiffs allege, didn't maintain a 40-year old concrete spillway which is part of a drainage system the County required a private developer to install in the 1970s as a condition of subdivision. The County never actually took over the drainage system, but it did accept the dedication "for recording only."
The plaintiffs said this should have been enough to establish a claim for inverse against the County: it has been a longstanding rule in California that drainage infrastructure that diverts surface waters onto private property triggers inverse liability even if privately constructed, when the infrastructure was approved or accepted by the government. Relying on a 1963 inverse condemnation case that has been a pillar of California inverse doctrine, the plaintiffs argued that public entities are liable for inverse when public drainage improvements collect and divert surface water out of its natural drainage channels onto private property. And the government can't avoid liability by using the subdivision approval power to force private property owners to construct the public drainage improvements that cause the diversion.
But in this opinion, the Court of Appeal concluded that this leading case - and presumably about a dozen other case that had followed it over the years had been "implicitly overruled" 30 years ago in another case. Which means that unless the County had unequivocally and unconditionally accepted the dedication of the infrastructure back in the 1970s, flooding it caused wasn't the County's problem.
Hang on. You mean the County could require a developer build and dedicate the flood control infrastructure to serve public drainage needs as a condition of securing subdivision approval, but the County also has the choice of ambiguously accepting the dedication and thereby avoids any obligation for inverse? That sounds a lot like that old law maxim against having your cake and eating it too, doesn't it?
Well, that's what the plaintiffs thought too. So they submitted the petition asking the California Supreme Court to take a look. Here are the Issues Presented:
1. Did this Court, in Locklin v. City of Lafayette (1994) 7 Cal.4th 327 (Locklin), “implicitly overrule” Frustuck v. City of Fairfax (1963) 212 Cal.App.2d 345 (Frustuck), one of California’s leading inverse condemnation cases, without citing Frustuck and without addressing either of the two legal issues that Frustuck decided?2. Does Locklin and/or the Subdivision Map Act (Gov. Code, § 66410 et seq.) establish a procedure whereby respondent County of Contra Costa (the “County”) could compel a private property owner/developer to install drainage improvements on his property to receive surface water diverted from its natural drainage channels and convey that water across his property to Murderer’s Creek (a “natural watercourse”), and also compel him to dedicate irrevocable public drainage easements over those improvements “to the County for public use,” but then allow the County to avoid any obligation to maintain either the improvements or the public drainage easements by accepting the easement dedications “for recording only”?
3. Did the Court of Appeal improperly adjudicate that the County did not enter into a contract to maintain the storm drainage improvements that it required a developer to install on private property to serve two of the County’s off-subdivision storm drainage needs, despite Petitioners’ evidence that the County did enter into such a contract?
4. Did the Court of Appeal misapply the Locklin/Van Alstyne “reasonableness analysis” by adjudicating, as matters of law, that Respondents’ joint management of the Murderer’s Creek watershed (a) did not incorporate the Creek into the public drainage system, and (b) is not placing an “unreasonable” (disproportionate) burden on the downstream riparian property owners?
Pet. at 1-2.
If left unreviewed, the court of appeal decision seems like a pretty dramatic expansion of government power and reduction of private property rights. It alone is review-worthy in our thinking for its rationale that a case can be "implicitly overruled" merely by silence (the 1994 decision which the court of appeal points to never mentions the case it is overruling, and doesn't even address the same issues). Overrule a rule, sure. But overrule it by silence? Come on.
Stay tuned. The California Supreme Court's docket shows that there's been no response from the County, which means it is now in the court's hands. Look for a decision in the next month or two.
Petition for Review, Shenson v. County of Contra Costa, No. S279857 (Cal. May 5, 2023)