                                                                       FILED BY CLERK
                             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS                      APR 20 2010
                                 STATE OF ARIZONA
                                                                           COURT OF APPEALS
                                   DIVISION TWO                              DIVISION TWO


PIMA COUNTY, a political subdivision of         )
the State of Arizona,                           )
                                                )
                                    Petitioner, )
                                                )
                    v.                          )     2 CA-SA 2010-0008
                                                )     DEPARTMENT A
HON. STEPHEN F. McCARVILLE, Judge               )
of the Superior Court of the State of Arizona, )      OPINION
in and for the County of Pinal,                 )
                                                )
                                 Respondent, )
                                                )
                    and                         )
                                                )
DOS PICOS LAND LIMITED                          )
PARTNERSHIP, an Arizona Limited                 )
Partnership; HARRY W. SHEPARD and               )
PATRICIA P. SHEPARD, husband and wife, )
                                                )
                      Real Parties in Interest. )
                                                )

                          SPECIAL ACTION PROCEEDING

                               Cause No. CV-2005-00478

                  JURISDICTION ACCEPTED; RELIEF GRANTED



Barbara LaWall, Pima County Attorney
 By Thomas Weaver, Jr. and Andrew L. Flagg                                       Tucson
                                                                 Attorneys for Petitioner

Ayers & Brown, P.C.
 By Charles K. Ayers and Melinda A. Bird                                         Phoenix
                                                    Attorneys for Real Parties in Interest
K E L L Y, Judge.


¶1           This petition for special action follows the respondent judge’s entry of final

judgment in an inverse-condemnation action. An appeal from portions of that judgment

is presently pending in this court. See Dos Picos Land Ltd. P’ship v. Pima County, No. 2

CA-CV 2009-0186. Petitioner Pima County seeks relief from the respondent judge’s

order of January 27, 2010, directing it to pay to the real parties in interest the entire

unpaid balance of the judgment, notwithstanding the pendency of the County’s appeal

and the provision of Rule 62(g), Ariz. R. Civ. P., that “[m]oney judgments against the

state or agency or political subdivision thereof, are automatically stayed when an appeal

is filed.”

¶2           The real parties in interest, Dos Picos Land Limited Partnership and Harry

and Patricia Shepard (collectively, “Dos Picos”),1 owned parcels of real property affected

by a Pima County ordinance that restricts access to and development of the property.2

Dos Picos brought an inverse condemnation against the County, and the respondent judge


        1
        Dos Picos Land Limited Partnership is an Arizona limited partnership. Harry
Shepard is its general partner, and Harry and Patricia Shepard are two of five limited
partners. Dos Picos owns 165 acres of the property at issue, and the Shepards
individually own a contiguous, twenty-acre parcel. For ease of reference, we use “Dos
Picos” to include the Shepards individually as well as the Dos Picos limited partnership.
        2
         The two affected parcels are the southwesternmost portion of a larger parcel
owned by Dos Picos. The two smaller parcels are surrounded on three sides—east, west,
and south—by the County-owned Tucson Mountain Park. On the north, the County’s
hillside-development ordinance protects a prominent ridgeline that runs from east to west
across the northern end of the two parcels. The ridge forms part of a “critical wildlife
corridor” on property the County deems “an ecologically sensitive area.”

                                            2
ruled as a matter of law that the County’s actions constituted a taking of the southern

portion of the Dos Picos property. A jury then determined the fair market value of the

property taken to be $1,466,455.

¶3              On October 23, 2009, the respondent judge entered judgment against the

County and in favor of Dos Picos for that principal amount plus the following additional

sums: $104,786 for appraisal and engineering fees, $10,495.87 for nontaxable costs, and

$366,439 for attorney fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 11-972(B);3 $6,162.70 for taxable costs

pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-341; and interest on all amounts at the rate of ten percent per

annum.

¶4              Pima County filed a notice of appeal on November 12, 2009, challenging

only the awards pursuant to § 11-972(B) totaling $481,721 for Dos Picos’s appraisal,

engineering, and attorney fees and nontaxable costs and the award of interest at the ten

percent rate on all sums included in the judgment. The County has not challenged the


      3
          Entitled “Litigation expenses,” § 11-972 provides in part:

                        B. If an inverse condemnation proceeding is initiated
                by the owner of any right, title or interest in real property
                because of the alleged physical taking of the owner’s property
                for any public purpose, the court that renders judgment for the
                plaintiff in the proceeding and that awards compensation for
                the physical taking of property, or the acquiring agency that
                effects a settlement of any such proceedings, shall determine
                and award or allow to the plaintiff as a part of the judgment or
                settlement an amount that, in the opinion of the court or the
                acquiring agency, will reimburse the plaintiff for the
                plaintiff’s reasonable costs, disbursements and expenses,
                including reasonable attorney, appraisal and engineering fees,
                actually incurred because of the proceeding.

                                               3
fact of the taking or the amount the jury determined to be the fair market value of the

property. In October 2009, the County tendered payment to Dos Picos of $1,554,231.34,

representing the principal amount of the judgment together with interest through October

7, 2009, followed on October 9 by the tender of an additional $1,245.51 in interest. In

November 2009, the County also paid Dos Picos $6,162.70 for taxable costs. Thus, the

only amounts that remain unpaid are the litigation expenses and accruing interest the

County is challenging on appeal.

¶5           On November 2, 2009, before the County filed its notice of appeal, Dos

Picos had filed a “motion to enforce payment of judgment,” seeking immediate payment

of the full amount remaining due under the judgment. In support of its request, Dos Picos

cited A.R.S. § 12-1127(B); City of Phoenix v. Johnson, 220 Ariz. 189, 204 P.3d 447

(App. 2009), and State ex rel. Herman v. Jacobs, 7 Ariz. App. 396, 440 P.2d 32 (1968).

The County opposed the motion, arguing that § 12-1127(B) is inapplicable in inverse-

condemnation actions, that the County’s notice of appeal deprived the respondent judge

of jurisdiction to rule on Dos Picos’s motion, and that Rule 62(g) automatically stayed

enforcement of the judgment pending the outcome of the appeal.

¶6           The respondent judge granted Dos Picos’s motion in a written ruling filed

on January 27, 2010. Declaring the holding in Johnson to be dispositive of the issue, the

respondent ordered the County to pay Dos Picos the remaining amounts due under the

judgment, despite the pending appeal. Because we conclude the respondent judge erred

as a matter of law, see Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 3(c); Althaus v. Cornelio, 203 Ariz. 597,

¶ 4, 58 P.3d 973, 974 (App. 2002) (court abuses discretion by committing error of law);

                                            4
because the issue presented is a purely legal and potentially recurring question, see Uhlig

v. Lindberg, 189 Ariz. 480, 481, 943 P.2d 840, 841 (App. 1997) (appropriate to accept

special action jurisdiction of recurring legal issues); and because the County has no

comparable remedy by appeal, see Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 1(a) (special action not

available when “equally plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal” exists), we

accept jurisdiction of the special action and grant relief.

¶7              Unlike the present inverse-condemnation case, Johnson was an appeal from

a direct-condemnation action governed by A.R.S. §§ 12-1111 through 12-1130. There,

the City of Phoenix had sued seeking immediate possession of Johnson’s property for a

“light rail public transit project.” Johnson, 220 Ariz. 189, ¶ 2, 204 P.3d at 448; see § 12-

1116(E) (after filing eminent-domain complaint, plaintiff may seek court order

authorizing possession). After a jury determined the amount of compensation to which

Johnson was entitled, the city deposited with the court the remaining sum due under the

judgment pursuant to §§ 12-1124 and 12-1127.4 Johnson, 220 Ariz. 189, ¶ 3, 204 P.3d at


       4
           Section 12-1127(A) provides:

                       At any time after judgment is entered, or pending an
                appeal from the judgment to the supreme court, when plaintiff
                has paid into court for defendant or defendants the full
                amount of the judgment, and such other amounts as required
                by the court as a fund to pay further damages and costs which
                may be recovered in the proceedings, as well as all damages
                that may be sustained by defendant or defendants if for any
                cause the property is not finally taken for public use, the
                superior court in which the action was tried may, upon notice
                of not less than ten days, authorize plaintiff, if already in
                possession, to continue therein, or if not, then to take
                possession of and use the property until final conclusion of
                                               5
448.   Johnson then applied for the disbursement of those funds pursuant to § 12-

1127(B).5 The city opposed the disbursement, pending appeal, based on Rule 62(g).

Johnson, 220 Ariz. 189, ¶¶ 3-4, 204 P.3d at 448.

¶8              On appeal, this court found the provisions of § 12-1127(B) and Rule 62(g)

were in direct conflict and could not be harmonized. Id. ¶ 10. We concluded that a

condemnee’s right under § 12-1127(B) to receive the monies paid into court by a public

entity pursuant to § 12-1127(A) is a substantive right created by the legislature that a

court-created rule may not restrict. Id. ¶ 18. Thus, we held in Johnson, “Rule 62(g) is

not enforceable when it impinges on the right to immediate payment under A.R.S. § 12-

1127.” Id.

¶9              Here, in contrast to Johnson, no similar conflict exists with Rule 62(g)

because this was an inverse-condemnation action and therefore not expressly subject to

the statutes governing eminent domain. Calmat of Ariz. v. State ex rel. Miller, 176 Ariz.


                the litigation, and may, if necessary, stay all actions and
                proceedings against plaintiff on account thereof.
       5
           Section 12-1127(B) provides:

                        The defendant or defendants who are entitled to the
                money paid into court upon any judgment may demand and
                receive the money at any time thereafter upon an order of the
                court. The court shall, upon application, order the money so
                paid into court delivered to the party entitled thereto upon his
                filing either a satisfaction of the judgment or a receipt for the
                money, and an abandonment of all defenses to the action or
                proceeding except as to the amount of damages to which he
                may be entitled if a new trial is granted. Such payment shall
                be deemed an abandonment of all defenses, except the party’s
                claim for greater compensation.
                                               6
190, 192, 859 P.2d 1323, 1325 (1993) (state constitution requires compensation to

owners of property injured by inverse condemnation “even though no specific statutory

procedure governs this recovery”). Our courts on occasion have applied a specific direct-

condemnation statute in an inverse-condemnation action when “the similarities between

direct and inverse condemnation actions” made the application “logical[].” Id. at 193,

859 P.2d at 1326; see, e.g., State v. Hollis, 93 Ariz. 200, 203, 379 P.2d 750, 751 (1963)

(venue provision applied).   But our supreme court has held the legislature did not

“intend[] the wholesale application of direct condemnation statutes to inverse

condemnation actions,” Calmat, 176 Ariz. at 193, 859 P.2d at 1326, and thus declined to

apply the statutorily prescribed date of valuation in an inverse condemnation action. Id.

at 195, 859 P.2d at 1328.

¶10          Because § 12-1127 applies to direct-condemnation actions and has no

statutory counterpart governing inverse-condemnation proceedings, no statute here

directly conflicts with Rule 62(g) as in Johnson. Moreover, because this case involves

only unpaid litigation expenses recoverable under § 11-972(B), we do not find it

necessary to incorporate § 12-1127 into this inverse-condemnation action in order to

effectuate “the spirit and purpose behind the law of eminent domain.” Calmat, 176 Ariz.

at 195, 859 P.2d at 1328. Additionally, in mandating that the plaintiff in an inverse-

condemnation action recover the “reasonable costs, disbursements and expenses . . .

incurred because of the proceeding,” § 11-972(B) requires only that those amounts be

included in any judgment or settlement, not that they be paid upon demand or before an

appeal. See Calmat, 176 Ariz. at 192-93, 859 P.2d at 1325-26 (legislature may specify

                                           7
“some convenient time” for assessing value), citing Desert Waters, Inc. v. Superior

Court, 91 Ariz. 163, 173, 370 P.2d 652, 659 (1962). And, in the event of a successful

appeal, the possible difficulty of recovering public funds used to pay litigation expenses

also militates in favor of applying Rule 62(g) when no conflicting statute prevents its

application.

¶11            Because no inverse-condemnation statute conflicts with Rule 62(g),

Johnson is not dispositive in this case. Thus, the respondent judge erred as a matter of

law, and thereby abused his discretion, in granting Dos Picos’s motion based on Johnson.

We conclude Rule 62(g) applies by its terms to stay the enforcement of the money

judgment for litigation expenses from which the County has appealed. Accordingly, we

accept jurisdiction of this special action, grant the relief requested, and vacate the

respondent judge’s ruling of January 27, 2010.




                                             /s/ Virginia C. Kelly
                                             VIRGINIA C. KELLY, Judge


CONCURRING:


/s/ Joseph W. Howard
JOSEPH W. HOWARD, Chief Judge


/s/ Philip G. Espinosa
PHILIP G. ESPINOSA, Presiding Judge


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