DONOVAN W. FRANK, United States District Judge.
This dispute arises from a city enforcing its zoning ordinances to thwart a church's attempts to purchase a movie theater for religious worship. The Court held a bench trial from October 18, 2016 to November 8, 2016, to determine whether the city violated the church's constitutional rights by preventing the purchase and whether the city defamed the church in a subsequent statement about the failed purchase.
Based upon the presentations of counsel, including all pre- and post-trial submissions, and the Court having carefully reviewed the evidence in the case, including all testimony and exhibits entered by the parties, and the Court being otherwise duly advised in the premises, the Court concludes that the city violated the church's constitutional rights and that the city did not defame the church. As a result, the Court awards the church damages in the amount of $1,354,595.
1. Plaintiff Riverside Church ("Riverside" or the "Church") is a Christian Missionary & Alliance church that currently meets for collective worship at a church building in Big Lake, Minnesota (the "Big Lake Church").
2. Defendant City of St. Michael ("St. Michael" or the "City") is a city and municipal corporation in Wright County, Minnesota.
3. Riverside's congregation assembles weekly each Sunday for collective worship, which includes singing and preaching.
4. Riverside's services are contemporary evangelical Christian worship. The Church incorporates into its services video and lighting, including projecting pre-produced videos and slideshows onto movie screens. (Trial Exhibit ("Ex.") P001.)
5. In 2004, Riverside's average weekly attendance at its Big Lake Church was approximately 675. But, by the end of 2015, attendance had grown to approximately 1,600.
6. Over the years, Riverside expanded and renovated its Big Lake Church and also added additional service times. These efforts, however, were insufficient to meet
7. Riverside currently has maximum seating for 670 at its Big Lake Church divided between a primary auditorium and a video café where congregants watch a video simulcast of the live service in the main auditorium. (Tr. 152:16-17 (Machmer).)
8. Riverside first opened its video-café venue in 2005. The Church uses this second worship venue like a movie theater. Much like a movie theater, the video café provides elevated seating, which allows the congregants to clearly see the services being projected on movie screens. (Exs. P001; P007; Tr. 46:24-47:5; 39:11-40:4 (Lundeen).)
9. As Riverside grew, it began to consider adding a second worship location. Riverside studied the geographic areas from which it drew congregants. The Mississippi River and Interstate 94 ("I-94") form natural barriers for attendees driving from areas south and east of the Big Lake Church. To reach new members and to provide a convenient site for the significant number of congregants from St. Michael, Albertville, Buffalo, Otsego, and surrounding communities, Riverside focused on locations along I-94 from Rogers to Monticello. (P002; Tr. 53:23-55:3 (Lundeen).)
10. In early 2014, Riverside identified the former Cinemagic Theater at 4300 O'Day Avenue N.E. in St. Michael (the "Property" or "Theater Property") as a potential location for a satellite to replay services by video from the Church's location in Big Lake. (D225.)
11. The Theater Property is bordered to the east by I-94, to the north by Trunck Highway 241 ("TH 241"), to the west by O'Day Avenue ("O'Day") and the BNSF railroad tracks, and to the south by the Crow River and wetland/flood plain area. The Theater Property sits in the southeast corner of the intersection of TH 241 and O'Day (the "Intersection"). The Intersection is located southwest of the I-94/TH 241 interchange. The current access to the Property's parking area includes a right-in/right-out access along O'Day south of TH 241 and a full access further south of TH 241. The Intersection of O'Day and TH 241 has no traffic signals.
12. In 2006, St. Michael approved construction of a 15-screen movie theater with nearly 2,800 seats on the Theater Property. The capacity of the theater building is over 3,600 people and its interior area is more than 91,000 square feet. (Complaint ¶ 43; Answer ¶ 26; Exs. P003, P015.)
13. A movie theater operated at the Theater Property from late 2006 until September 2010, when the property fell into foreclosure. (Complaint ¶¶ 52-53; Answer ¶ 34; Tr. 405:2-6 (Bot).)
14. Riverside first heard that the Theater Property might be for sale at a discount price in 2011.
15. In January 2014, Riverside learned that the Theater Property was officially for sale. According to Pastor Thomas Lundeen, the Theater Property was an ideal property for Riverside. Some of the perceived benefits of the Theater Property included its access to the interstate, its visibility, its large parking area, and the fact that it was ready for assembly use. In January 2014, the Theater Property was listed for $2,695,000.
16. St. Michael's Zoning Ordinance provided for different zoning districts and regulated the types of approved land uses as either "permitted" or "conditional" use. Until April 2015, the Zoning Ordinance did
17. In the B-1 zoning district, the following uses were allowed:
2014 Zoning Ordinance § 155.105.
18. In January 2014, Riverside Executive Pastor Skipp Machmer called Mark Weigle, the St. Michael's Community Development Director, to inquire about whether Riverside could use the Theater Property for what Machmer called worship.
19. The testimony and record before this Court established that Weigle was the most knowledgeable City employee regarding zoning issues. He reviewed, interpreted, and enforced the City's Zoning Ordinance and other land-use regulations. He also was responsible for communicating with parties like Riverside about what the City's Zoning Ordinance means. In this case, he was closely involved in the City's decision-making process regarding Riverside's efforts to purchase the Theater Property.
20. Weigle informed Machmer in January 2014, during their phone call, that St. Michael's Zoning Ordinance did not permit Riverside to use the Theater Property for collective religious worship. At the time of the January 2014 phone call, Weigle was not aware of how Riverside intended to use the Theater Property; all Weigle knew was that Riverside was a church.
21. The seller accepted an offer from Cinemasota, Inc. for $1.75 million even though Riverside's offer was higher. Despite initially losing out on the Theater Property, Riverside continued to monitor the pending sale. In April 2014, Cinemasota offered to sell the Theater Property to Riverside for $1.75 million plus closing costs.
22. With the new offer in hand, Riverside renewed contact with St. Michael regarding the Zoning Ordinance. But Riverside had a narrow window to work with the City as the sale had to happen before the closing on April 23, 2014. Riverside scheduled a meeting with the City for April 14, 2014. Prior to the April 14 meeting — and without inquiring further about Riverside's proposed use of the Theater Property — St. Michael's City Administrator Steve Bot stated in an internal e-mail, "I am a bit confused to the purpose of this meeting being we've told numerous local churches already that the old theater site is not zoned for a church." (P039.) Bot was described as the most senior staff member at the City.
23. Weigle met with Riverside on April 14, 2014. At the meeting, Riverside explained that it intended to use the Theater Property as a satellite location where it would project a video simulcast of its services and sermons from the Big Lake Church. Weigle then understood that Riverside's proposed use was similar to the operations of a movie theater. But Weigle
24. On April 24, 2014, Weigle sent an e-mail to Riverside stating that the City would "enforce the Zoning Ordinance as it is written," but that Riverside could consider asking "the City to amend the Ordinance to allow churches in the B-1 District." (P042.) Weigle also invited Riverside to attend an upcoming Planning Commission meeting. Cinemasota, however, had completed its purchase of the Theater Property a day earlier, on April 23. Riverside stated that it therefore did not attend the upcoming Planning Commission meetings.
25. After again failing to purchase the Theater Property, Riverside continued its discussions with Weigle and St. Michael City Attorney David Lenhardt. As a result of these conversations, in mid-July 2014, Riverside submitted an application for a text amendment to the City Zoning Code requesting that the Zoning Ordinance be changed to allow Riverside to use the Theater Property. Specifically, Riverside asked St. Michael to allow "assemblies, religious institutions, and places of worship" as permitted uses in the B-1 zoning district.
26. On August 19, 2014, Cinemasota and Riverside entered into a purchase-and-sale agreement for the Theater Property. Under the August 2014 purchase agreement, Riverside would pay $2,273,000 for the Theater Property. The August 2014 purchase agreement also contained a buyer contingency for government approval by the closing in December 2014.
27. Riverside arranged to finance the Theater Property through Alliance Development Fund ("ADF"). ADF required Riverside to obtain City approval to use the Theater Property before it would finance the purchase.
28. On September 22, 2014, Riverside received a loan-approval letter from ADF approving a $3.2 million loan. The loan-approval letter contained a zoning contingency. In November 2014, the zoning contingency was replaced with a requirement of a signed agreement between Riverside and the City for occupancy.
29. St. Michael's staff, the Planning Commission, and the City Council considered Riverside's application from approximately July 2014 through November 2014.
30. Riverside informed the City that it had a three-phase plan for its worship areas at the Theater Property. Riverside would immediately use one auditorium to seat 370 ("Phase 1") and also add a second video café in another auditorium with 100-150 seats ("Phase 2"). Then, as soon as it was needed, Riverside planned to combine two theaters which would provide a combined seating total of 750 ("Phase 3"). (P054 at 7; Tr. 190:11-193:20 (Machmer).)
31. Riverside informed the City that during its three phases, the church intended to use another four of the fifteen auditoriums for children's programming on Sunday morning.
32. In evaluating St. Michael's application, the City identified, in particular, issues of public safety and traffic impacts. Bot testified that his concerns arose immediately: "I started thinking about what, as I would with any proposed use there, ... traffic implications would it have at this
33. The only traffic study reviewed by the City when it considered Riverside's application was a traffic study dated October 30, 2014 (the "2014 Traffic Study"). The study was conducted by SRF Consulting ("SRF") and Marie Cote, a traffic consultant. The 2014 Traffic Study considered only Riverside's proposed use. According to Cote, the "purpose of the traffic impact study is to determine the total impacts from the proposed development on the roadway and intersections for all users." (Tr. 938:18-21.)
34. Bot and Cote discussed the 2014 Traffic Study before it was conducted, and Bot requested that SRF review Riverside's peak use. The results of the 2014 Traffic Study concluded that once attendance levels reached 1,200 (the upper limit of Riverside's Phase 3 Plan), the Intersection would not function properly and begin to experience operational, queuing, and safety issues. This was the case, according to the study, even if the City were to put in a traffic signal. The parties argue over whether the 2014 Traffic Study was predicated on a sufficient foundation and methodology, and therefore valid. But more fundamentally, Cote and St. Michael acknowledged that the study's potential concerns may never become a reality at the attendance levels cited in the 2014 study. That is, Cote and St. Michael acknowledged that there was a possibility that there might never be any traffic safety issues with Riverside's proposed use of the Theater Property even if attendance reached 1,200 attendees. Cote testified:
35. This Court finds that the 2014 Traffic Study did not establish that Riverside's proposed use would present traffic and public safety concerns. In fact, as noted above, Cote herself suggested that if the Theater Property reached 1,200 attendees, then a new study would have to be done.
36. On November 5, 2014, St. Michael's Planning Commission approved a document entitled "Findings of Fact and Recommendation." (D262.) The Planning Commission's Recommendation identified issues with Riverside's proposed use.
37. On November 10, 2014, the Planning Commission's Recommendation was forwarded to the St. Michael City Council. Rather than adopt the Recommendation or permit Riverside's proposed use, the City Council adopted a moratorium of new assembly uses.
38. Ordinance 1405 (the "Moratorium Ordinance"), Section 1, provided, in part:
The Moratorium Ordinance also stated that for up to one year, "the City shall not accept, issue or process any applications, permits, or otherwise allow the use of any land for new or expanded assembly, theater or church purposes."
39. In the Moratorium Ordinance, St. Michael acknowledged that it had not studied assembly uses including collective religious worship. Specifically, the Moratorium Ordinance stated in part:
40. At the same time, St. Michael adopted Ordinance 1406, which amended the Zoning Ordinance by removing "Theaters (not outdoor drive-ins)" as a permitted use from the B-1 and B-2 zoning districts. This Ordinance defined "Multi-Plex Theater" and allowed such theaters as a conditional use in the B-1 zoning district.
41. Weigle, in a memorandum dated November 5, 2014, informed City officials:
Weigle's November 5, 2014 memorandum also included a detailed list of "suggested conditions" in the event that St. Michael decided to allow Riverside on the Theater Property.
42. On November 25, 2014, St. Michael denied Riverside's application and, in so
43. At the same November 25, 2014 meeting, Weigle discussed the traffic concern raised by the 2014 Traffic Study regarding Riverside's proposed use of the Theater Property. But Weigle also suggested to the City Council that it could impose a 1,200-attendee limit to ensure public safety. Specifically, Weigle stated:
44. The Court finds that on November 25, 2014, when the St. Michael City Council denied Riverside's Application, the Council was aware that there was a more narrowly tailored alternative available to address the City's traffic concerns. Specifically, the City could have allowed Riverside to use the Theater Property with conditions. Alternatively, the City could have allowed religious worship and other assembly uses in the B-1 zoning district as conditional uses with conditions that would allow the City to address its traffic concerns. Weigle admitted this at trial:
45. Riverside's August 2014 purchase agreement was scheduled to expire on December 2, 2014, and Cinemasota was unwilling to extend the agreement. Without St. Michael's approval, Riverside could not obtain financing. As a result, Riverside exercised its contingency and canceled the August 2014 purchase agreement with Cinemasota.
46. Pursuant to the August 2014 purchase agreement, Riverside paid Cinemasota $675 per day from September 1, 2014, to the end of November 2014, for a total of $61,425. Riverside also paid a professional planner, Bill Webber, and traffic engineers SHE/Tom Sohrweide $7,595 to assist Riverside with the City's application process.
47. In 2015, Riverside again negotiated with Cinemasota and obtained an option to purchase the Theater Property. The option agreement was signed on March 20, 2015. The purchase price had increased to $3,558,575 plus the cost of the expenditures that Cinemasota had made preparing to open the Theater Property as a movie theater. The March 2015 option agreement would expire on April 24, 2015, to allow Cinemasota the time necessary to prepare the Theater Property if the sale to Riverside fell through.
48. Riverside filed this lawsuit on March 23, 2015.
50. Ordinance 1502 added assemblies, including religious assemblies, as a conditional use in the B-1 zoning district. Specifically, Ordinance 1502 added the following definition to the Ordinance:
51. Pursuant to this amendment, Riverside applied for a Conditional Use Permit ("CUP") to operate its church at the Theater Property.
52. The Planning and Zoning Commission held a public hearing on Riverside's Application on April 21, 2015, and recommended approval.
53. On April 21, 2015, St. Michael issued a CUP to Riverside that allowed Riverside to use the Theater Property. The City approved seating for 1,600; abandoning its earlier demand for a 1,200 attendance-limit. The City also seemingly abandoned all of its earlier issues (big or small) that were identified as reasons to deny Riverside's 2014 application. That is, the CUP did not impose any conditions relating to: (a) engaging in commerce or commercial activity; (b) affecting surrounding property values; (c) being exempt from property taxes; (d) insisting on operating a school; (e) overburdening the City's law enforcement service capacity; (f) being unique and dissimilar in design and layout to other buildings in the B-1 zoning district; (g) TIF or a TIF district; or (h) releasing current or future rights under RLUIPA, the U.S. Constitution, the Minnesota Constitution, or any other law or statute. (Id.)
54. At trial, the parties argued over whether either side had pursued the correct mechanisms in seeking resolution. But Weigle acknowledged that St. Michael could have passed an ordinance amendment in 2014 that was identical to its April 2015 amendment, Ordinance 1502. (Tr. 664:22-665:4 (Weigle).)
55. On April 24, 2015, Riverside met with Cinemasota to agree on a final purchase price pursuant to the March 2015 option agreement. Cinemasota informed Riverside that the price would be at least $5,031,054.95, which included approximately $1.5 million of labor and equipment purchases.
56. Due to the new price, Riverside could no longer afford to purchase the Theater Property, and therefore Riverside did not exercise the option. Cinemasota then began operating a movie theater at the Theater Property. At the time of trial, Cinemasota was operating 11 of the Theater Property's 15 theater auditoriums.
57. In 2015, St. Michael conducted a study related to "Assemblies, Theaters &
The 2015 Study was the first time that St. Michael attempted to undertake a comprehensive study relating to zoning of assembly uses. The City ordered the study as part of its November 10, 2014 Moratorium Ordinance, Ordinance 1405.
58. The 2015 Study contained the "recommended definition" of assembly uses:
59. As relevant here, the 2015 Study also recommended that St. Michael's Zoning Ordinance regulate "movie theaters" and "places of worship" identically in the B-1 zoning district.
60. Contrary to St. Michael's 2014 Findings and Decision, the 2015 Study concluded that the B-1 zoning district was compatible with large assembly uses, including places of worship. Specifically, the 2015 Study noted that:
Moreover, in concluding that places of worship were compatible with the B-1 zoning district, the 2015 Study did not cite any concerns or regulatory impediments related to places of worship that had been cited in the 2014 Findings and Decision. (P105 at 18; Tr. 910:6-12 (Weigle).)
61. The 2015 Study also recommended conditions that related to larger assembly uses (capacity for greater than 250 persons in the assembly areas). Specifically, the study recommended that large assembly uses be required to: (a) conduct a traffic study; (b) operate consistent with an operations plan approved by the City related to traffic issues identified by the traffic study related to the use and any accessory uses; and (c) modify this plan (and potentially conduct a new study) if the use intensifies.
62. St. Michael passed Ordinance 1506 which essentially codified the 2015 Study's recommendations. Now, under St. Michael's current zoning ordinance, the City allows the following uses in the B-1 zoning district as conditional or permitted uses:
63. In the lead up to the December 2, 2014 deadline for the August 2014 purchase agreement, the City and Riverside tried to negotiate a settlement based in part on Weigle's November 5, 2014 memorandum of suggested conditions for Riverside's purchase of the Theater Property.
64. On Wednesday, November 19, 2014, the City sent a proposed settlement agreement that included an attendance limit of 1,200. On November 22, 2014, Riverside sent a counteroffer, which also included the 1,200 limit.
65. The City responded with another counteroffer on November 24, 2014. In that offer, the City included a paragraph that granted the City the power to seek an injunction if necessary to enforce the settlement agreement. Specifically, the added paragraph (paragraph 6) stated:
66. In response to the City's offer, on November 25, 2014, Lundeen wrote a letter to the City, its Mayor, and its Council Members, stating that Riverside was withdrawing from negotiations and specified why:
67. After the August 2014 purchase agreement fell through, St. Michael published a "Statement Regarding Decision on Riverside Church Zoning Application" (the
68. A City Council Member, Chris Schumm, repeated aspects of the Web Statement on behalf of the City Council on Facebook.com. Schumm's post stated, in relevant part:
69. Contrary to Schumm's statement and the Web Statement, the Court finds that Riverside had made a settlement offer with an attendee limit. Specifically, on November 22, 2014, during the course of settlement negotiations, Riverside sent the City a draft of a settlement proposal, including a provision requiring Riverside to: (1) keep track of its weekly Sunday worship service attendance; (2) notify the City and participate in a traffic study if more than 1,200 people attended the Sunday worship service for a consecutive four-week period; and (3) implement restrictions reasonably necessary for the adjacent roadway to operate at generally overall acceptable levels of service after the traffic study.
70. The Court finds that Riverside was willing to agree to limits on attendance at its worship services and that the City was aware of that fact when it published the Web Statement referenced above. Additionally, the Court finds that Riverside withdrew because of the contents of paragraph 6 of the proposed Site Plan that related to the City's remedies in the event of default.
72. That any conclusion of law which is deemed a finding of fact is incorporated herein as such.
Based upon the above findings of fact, the Court now makes its:
1. Based on the evidence before this Court, the Court finds and concludes, as it did at the summary judgment stage, in light of Cornerstone Bible Church v. City of Hastings, 948 F.2d 464 (8th Cir. 1991) and City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres Inc., 475 U.S. 41, 106 S.Ct. 925, 89 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986), that the City's Zoning Ordinance served to regulate secondary effects of religious land use. The Zoning Ordinance's stated purpose included "public health and safety" and the "general welfare of the inhabitants of the City." Zoning Ordinance § 155.002. The stated purpose of the B-1 zoning district — where "assembly, religious institution, house of worship" uses were prohibited — included providing lands for business, office, and retail uses; strengthening the City's economic base; and providing employment opportunities. Id. § 155.205.
Consequently, the Court finds and concludes, as it did at the summary-judgment stage, that, based on the record before it, the Zoning Ordinance addressed significant government interests related to protecting the community's economic well-being and safety — particularly, safety related to traffic control.
2. Nonetheless, the Zoning Ordinance must also be narrowly tailored. The Court finds and concludes that St. Michael's Ordinance prohibiting collective religious worship in the City's B-1 zoning district until 2015 was not narrowly tailored. This conclusion is buttressed by the City's own 2015 Study, which recommended treating assemblies for religious worship exactly the same as theaters. The City's 2015 study represented an about-face from the City's Findings in November 2014. Consequently, the Court finds and concludes that the time, place, and manner of regulations were not narrowly tailored toward the City's governmental interest. The Ordinance burdened more substantially Riverside's speech than was necessary to further St. Michael's legitimate interests. The Court therefore concludes, based upon the record before it, consistent with its conclusions stated above, that St. Michael has failed to demonstrate that either of its challenged regulations — the 2014 Zoning Ordinance and the Moratorium Ordinance — was narrowly tailored to serve their governmental interests. Consequently, the Court concludes that St. Michael's Zoning Ordinance prior to 2015, prohibiting collective religious worship in the City's B-1 zoning district, does not survive the intermediate scrutiny standard. See Cornerstone, 948 F.2d at 469.
3. The Court therefore finds and concludes that by enforcing the Zoning Ordinance, the City violated Riversides' First Amendment constitutional right to freedom of speech and assembly. As a result, Riverside lost the opportunity to purchase the Theater Property in November 2014 for $2,273,000. Related to this lost opportunity, the Court also concludes that Riverside was required to pay holding costs to Cinemasota totaling $61,425 and costs related to its application to amend the Zoning Ordinance totaling $7,595.
5. Here, Riverside's claim is similar to a claim for tortious interference with a prospective contract.
6. "Liability under § 1983 requires a causal link to, and direct responsibility for, the deprivation of rights." E.g., Madewell v. Roberts, 909 F.2d 1203, 1208 (8th Cir. 1990). "Causation issues under § 1983 are analyzed under the common law." Hackenmueller v. Fadden, 196 F.Supp.3d 992, 999 (D. Minn. 2016). Under Minnesota law for tortious interference with a prospective contract, the plaintiff must show that but for the defendant's interference, the plaintiff would have executed the contract. St. Croix Printing Equip., Inc. v. Sexton, Civ. No. 06-4273, 2008 WL 3412090, at *3 (D. Minn. Aug. 8, 2008)
7. The Court finds and concludes that the Defendants' wrongful conduct prevented Riverside from purchasing the Theater Property for $2,273,000, pursuant to its August 2014 purchase agreement. Instead, once the City had finally approved Riverside's use of the Theater Property, the purchase price was $5,031,054.95. The new price represented the new contract price of $3,558,575 plus the additional costs that Cinemasota had incurred improving the property. The new price proved to be too much for Riverside. And as a result, Riverside lost the opportunity to own the Theater Property.
8. The measure of damages for the tortious interference with a prospective contract is the pecuniary harm caused by the interference. See Gieseke, 844 N.W.2d at 221 (noting that a defendant is liable "only for the expectation that the relationship eventually will yield the desired benefit, rather than the more speculative expectation that a potentially beneficial relationship will arise" (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also Ventas, Inc. v. HCP, Inc., 647 F.3d 291, 314-17 (6th Cir. 2011) (affirming jury verdict that awarded the increase in share price that the plaintiff had to pay to purchase a real estate investment trust as a result of the defendant's tortious interference).
10. In addition, Riverside is entitled to recover the holding costs it paid pursuant to the August 2014 purchase agreement ($61,425) plus $7,595 for costs related to Riverside's application to amend the Zoning Ordinance.
11. Riverside argues that its damages are closer to $9.5 million. Riverside comes to that calculation because it argues that the only substitute for losing out on the Theater Property is a new church priced at approximately $12.5 million. Riverside theorizes that if it had been able to purchase the Theater Property for $1.75 million (the amount discussed in April 2014) and paid the $1.2 million to repair the Theater Property, then it would have had a functioning church for just under $2.9 million. Riverside argues that Riverside therefore lost out on a repaired Theater Property because of the City's wrongful conduct. Riverside's claim for damages then is the cost of the new church ($12.5 million) less the $2.9 million it would have originally paid for the church, or roughly $9.5 million.
12. Riverside's damage calculation, however, is flawed. First, Riverside relies on the price of the $1.75 million, but the City did not interfere with that agreement, if there was one. In April 2014, Cinemasota offered to sell the Theater Property to Riverside for $1.75 million plus closing costs, but the parties never signed a formal agreement. Riverside hurriedly met with the City on April 14, 2014, regarding Riverside's possible purchase of the Property. On April 24, 2014, Weigle e-mailed Riverside explaining that it did not believe that a church could be opened in the B-1 zone, but encouraged Riverside to petition the City to amend the ordinance at its next meeting. Riverside did not follow through because Cinemasota completed its purchase of the Theater Property one day earlier, on April 23, 2014. Riverside argues that the City caused Riverside to lose the chance to purchase the Theater Property for $1.75 million. The April 24, 2014 e-mail, however, was not a final determination by the City, which is a predicate to Riverside bringing its claim. See Riverside Church v. City of St. Michael, 205 F.Supp.3d 1014, 1029 (D. Minn. 2016) ("In land use disputes — including those involving First Amendment and RLUIPA claims — ripeness requires a plaintiff to `obtain a final, definitive position as to how it could use the property from the entity charged with implementing the zoning regulations.'" (quoting Murphy v. New Milford Zoning Comm'n, 402 F.3d 342, 348 (2d Cir. 2005)).
13. And second, Riverside argues that its damages are the costs to create a new church, even though Riverside lost out on a dilapidated theater that needed many repairs. For damages for tortious interference, a defendant is generally liable for only the lost benefit from the contract and not the more speculative possible benefits. See Gieseke, 844 N.W.2d at 222 (noting that a defendant is not liable to a plaintiff for lost profits for unidentified, hypothetical customers). Here, if the City had not interfered, Riverside would have been able to purchase the Theater Property for $2.27 million. Instead, Riverside had the opportunity to buy the Theater Property for $3.5 million. The repairs needed to make the Theater Property functional and therefore arguably on par with new construction are too speculative to award. Thus, Riverside is not entitled to the amount necessary to build a new church because the proper measure of damages is the amount necessary to put Riverside in the same economic position it would have been had Riverside purchased the Theater Property in August 2014. That is, the difference in price between the August 2014 purchase agreement and the March 2015 option agreement.
14. The Court finds, consistent with its findings of fact, that while the Web Statement was false, there is no evidence before this Court that the Web Statement lowered in any way the reputation or image of Riverside in the estimation of the community. Therefore, the Court declines to award any damages to Riverside for this Web Statement.
15. Even if the Court had found that the Web Statement was false and defamatory, it was protected by qualified privilege.
16. A statement is protected as qualified privilege when the statement is "made in good faith and must be made upon a proper occasion, from a proper motive, and must be based upon reasonable or probable cause." McClure v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 223 F.3d 845, 854 (8th Cir. 2000) (quoting Bol v. Cole, 561 N.W.2d 143, 149 (Minn. 1997).)
17. "Reasonable grounds can exist if a person has valid reasons for believing a statement, even though the statement later proves to be false." Elstrom v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 270, 533 N.W.2d 51, 55 (Minn. Ct. App. 1995).
18. Here, the evidence bore out at trial that the City had reason to believe that its statement was true. The City concluded that to enforce the agreed-upon audience limit, the City needed an enforcement mechanism. Accordingly, the City added a provision to provide for injunctive relief. Included in that provision was a waiver by Riverside that the City did not violate any of Riverside's rights by seeking an injunction. When Riverside refused the injunction provision, the City equated that decision with refusing the audience limit. While that conclusion may not have been correct, the City certainly had reason to
19. Qualified privilege bars liability unless the privilege is abused. E.g., Ewald v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 139 F.3d 619, 623 (8th Cir. 1998). A speaker abuses its qualified privilege when it makes a statement with actual malice. E.g., id. Actual malice exists when the speaker makes a statement with "ill will and improper motives, or causelessly and wantonly for the purpose of injuring the plaintiff." E.g., id. Here, Riverside does not argue that the City made its statement with actual malice, nor does the record reflect that the City had any ill will toward Riverside in making the statement. Accordingly, the Court finds that the City's statement is protected by qualified privilege.
20. Additionally, even if the Court were to find that the City's statement was false and defamatory and not privileged, the Court concludes that Riverside has failed to prove it was damaged by the statement.
21. That any finding of fact which is deemed a conclusion of law is incorporated herein as such.
Based upon the above findings of fact and conclusions of law, the Court hereby enters the following:
In light of the foregoing and all of the files, records, and proceedings herein,
1. Consistent with this Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law, Riverside Church is entitled to judgment in the total amount of $1,354,595.
2.
Gieseke, 844 N.W.2d at 219.