Atlantis at Perdido Ass'n, Inc. v. Warner

932 So. 2d 1206, 2006 WL 1835321
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 6, 2006
Docket1D05-4069
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 932 So. 2d 1206 (Atlantis at Perdido Ass'n, Inc. v. Warner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantis at Perdido Ass'n, Inc. v. Warner, 932 So. 2d 1206, 2006 WL 1835321 (Fla. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

932 So.2d 1206 (2006)

ATLANTIS AT PERDIDO ASSOCIATION, INC. and Spanish Key Condominium Owners' Association, Inc., Appellants,
v.
Bobby L. WARNER, Joseph W. and Helen M. Belanger, Donald Ray Stephens and State of Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Appellees.

No. 1D05-4069.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

July 6, 2006.

*1207 Jesse W. Rigby, Esquire and Jeremy C. Branning, Esquire of Clark, Partington, Hart, Larry, Bond & Stackhouse, Pensacola, for Appellants.

Sally Bussel Fox, Esquire of Emmanuel, Sheppard & Condon, P.A., Pensacola and Thomas G. Tomasello, Esquire of Thomas G. Tomasello, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellees, Bobby L. Warner, Joseph W. and Helen M. Belanger and Donald Ray Stephens.

Mark S. Miller, Senior Assistant General Counsel and Teresa L. Mussetto, Senior Assistant General Counsel, Tallahassee, for Appellee, State of Florida Department of Environmental Protection.

BENTON, J.

Atlantis at Perdido Association, Inc. and Spanish Key Condominium Owners' Association, Inc. (the homeowners' associations) appeal a final Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) order approving the permit application Bobby L. Warner, Donald Ray Stephens and Joseph W. and Helen M. Belanger (the applicants) filed. The order directs issuance of Coastal Construction *1208 Control Line Permit ES-540 (the permit), and authorizes construction of a nine-story condominium complex on Perdido Key in Escambia County. The proposal was to locate the condominium complex 193 feet seaward of the coastal construction control line, and 45 feet seaward of a reasonably continuous and uniform line of buildings[1] (constructed on both sides of the proposed site, along a superseded control line), a line that is nearly 150 feet closer to the Gulf of Mexico than the current coastal construction control line. We reverse.

Without a DEP permit, "no person, firm, corporation, or governmental agency shall construct any structure whatsoever seaward" of a coastal construction control line.[2] § 161.053(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2004). Coastal construction control lines are established by rulemaking, county by county,[3] only after comprehensive engineering *1209 studies involving models of 100-year return storms (and concomitant storm surges) take local tides and topographic surveys into account. Such studies allow DEP to predict the effect major storms will have on particular shorelines and indicate where the coastal construction control line should be placed to allow adequate regulation for the protection of upland properties and the control of beach and dune erosion. See generally St. Joe Paper Co. v. Fla. Dep't of Nat. Res., 536 So.2d 1119, 1120 (Fla. 1st DCA 1988). Rules establishing (or amended rules relocating) coastal construction control lines are published in the Florida Administrative Weekly and the Florida Administrative Code, and recorded in the public records of the county involved.

In the present case, the applicants proposed building the new condominium development, dubbed "BellaVista," seaward of the coastal construction control line on two adjacent parcels aggregating 1.19 acres with a total of approximately 100 feet fronting on the Gulf. Now occupying the site proposed for BellaVista are two one-story structures on piling, a duplex with floor dimensions of 44.1 feet by 31 feet (some 1,367 square feet not including decks or stairs) and, east of the duplex, a quadriplex with floor dimensions of 51.2 feet by 54.4 feet (some 2,785 square feet not including decks or stairs).

BellaVista was to consist of fifteen units, a swimming pool, a boardwalk originally planned as a dune walkover, and a driveway and parking area built with concrete pavers. The new building was to have been nine stories high — eight habitable floors above a parking level — and the structure was to have had a footprint of 70 feet in the shore normal direction and 80 feet in the direction parallel to the shore, some 5,600 square feet, abutting an additional 38.1 feet by 33.3 feet (some 1,268 square feet) of swimming pool and decking on the seaward side of the condominium tower.

The proposal was to demolish both the duplex and the quadriplex, and replace them with a condominium tower and swimming pool complex at a location slightly (18 feet) landward of the existing structures' location, albeit 45 feet seaward of the line of continuous construction and 193 feet seaward of the coastal construction control line. The appellant homeowners' associations' members are owners of condominiums in the Spanish Key and Atlantis complexes, structures adjacent to the applicants' site on either side, condominiums that are built landward of the line of continuous construction. The homeowners' associations participated as objectors in administrative proceedings on the permit application below.

While the application for a permit to construct the "BellaVista" condominiums was pending, Hurricane Ivan came ashore on Perdido Key, damaging the structures now on the proposed site and dramatically transforming the "beach dune system."[4]*1210 Less than a month after Ivan hit, DEP issued notice of its intent to grant a coastal construction control line permit authorizing the applicants to construct the new BellaVista complex, including the proposed parking garage, pool, deck, dune walkover, concrete driveway, and storm drainage facilities.[5]

DEP took the position that it had the authority to grant the permit pursuant to section 161.053(13)(a), Florida Statutes, asserting that the proposed project would constitute a "rebuilding" of the two one-story buildings currently on the property, which were damaged in the storm. The statute provides:

Notwithstanding the coastal construction control requirements defined in subsection (1) or the erosion projection determined pursuant to subsection (6), the department may, at its discretion, issue a permit for the repair or rebuilding within the confines of the original foundation of a major structure pursuant to the provisions of subsection (5). Alternatively, the department may also, at its discretion, issue a permit for a more landward relocation or rebuilding of a damaged or existing structure if such relocation or rebuilding would not cause further harm to the beach-dune system, and if, in the case of rebuilding, such rebuilding complies with the provisions of subsection (5), and otherwise complies with the provisions of this subsection.

§ 161.053(13)(a), Fla. Stat. (2004) (emphasis supplied). Below the issue became whether the BellaVista proposal contemplated "rebuilding" structures seaward of the coastal construction control line or whether the proposal called for new construction seaward of the coastal construction control line.

The parties and the administrative law judge proceeded on the agreed assumption that, while all projects (new construction and "rebuilding" alike) must comport with *1211 every other section 161.053(5) factor, "rebuilding" projects, unlike new construction, do not require DEP to take into account the "reasonably continuous and uniform construction line" factor set out in section 161.053(5)(b) and the administrative rule which implements the statute.[6] The "reasonably continuous and uniform construction line" the administrative law judge found in the present case lay along what had been the 1975 coastal construction setback line.

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Bluebook (online)
932 So. 2d 1206, 2006 WL 1835321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantis-at-perdido-assn-inc-v-warner-fladistctapp-2006.