BD., CTY. COM'RS, SARASOTA v. Webber
This text of 658 So. 2d 1069 (BD., CTY. COM'RS, SARASOTA v. Webber) 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.
Opinion
The BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF SARASOTA COUNTY, Florida, and Sarasota County, a political subdivision of the State of Florida, Petitioners,
v.
Ronald E. WEBBER, Respondent.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*1070 Jorge L. Fernandez, County Atty., and Alan W. Roddy, Asst. County Atty., Sarasota, for petitioners.
William W. Merrill, III, of Icard, Merrill, Cullis, Timm, Furen & Ginsburg, P.A., Sarasota, for respondent.
LAZZARA, Judge.
The petitioners, the Board of County Commissioners of Sarasota County (the Board) and Sarasota County (the County), seek certiorari review of a final order of the circuit court acting in its review capacity quashing the Board's denial of a variance to the respondent. We have jurisdiction. Fla. R.App.P. 9.030(b)(2)(B). We quash the order because the circuit court deviated from the essential requirements of the law in determining that the Board's denial was of no force and effect and in applying an incorrect standard of review.
In October of 1993, the respondent sought a variance from the Board to construct a home on a parcel of land governed by the County's Coastal Setback Ordinance. Sarasota County, Fla., Ordinance 79-03 (as amended by Ordinance 86-24) (1986). Under the ordinance, all construction and excavation seaward of a fixed line along the Gulf of Mexico is prohibited. The objective of the ordinance is to protect the County's unincorporated coastal areas directly exposed to the Gulf of Mexico from erosion and flooding by establishing a "Gulf Beach Setback Line" beyond which construction and excavation may not occur. Id. at § 1.2. The Board, however, has the discretion to grant a variance and permit construction within this protected area if, after a duly noticed public hearing, it determines that:
the strict enforcement of the provisions of this ordinance would impose an unreasonable hardship and such variance will not adversely affect vegetation, sand dunes or other beach stabilizing features, nor be in substantial conflict with the attainment of the purposes of this ordinance.
Id. at § 4.1.
If the Board approves a variance, it can only grant "the minimum variance necessary to permit reasonable use of the property." Id. Furthermore, such a variance "shall not be modified or terminated without notice and an opportunity to be heard on the part of the person to whom the variance has been issued." Id.
The Board considered the respondent's request for a variance at two properly noticed public hearings, with the County's Natural Resources Department (the Department) recommending denial of the variance. The Department's reasons for denial were presented by its manager, who was accepted as an expert without objection. He testified that the area in question, because of its lowlying nature, was subject to frequent inundation and overwash associated with storm activity and that such had occurred on seven different occasions since September of 1992. Because of this fact, he stated there was a reasonable expectation that a home constructed on the property would be damaged by storm-wave activity. He also testified that the property exhibits a trend of shoreline erosion and that the shoreline in this vicinity is eroding at the rate of three to four feet a year and had in fact retreated landward as much as fifty-eight feet between June of 1987 and August of 1993. He also related that construction on this land would impede the stabilizing function of existing sand dunes and associated vegetation. Thus, he concluded that the criteria for obtaining a variance had not been met and the granting of a variance would conflict with the objectives of the ordinance.[1]
Although the respondent generally disputed the findings of the Department, his main focus, through his attorney, was that a denial would result in a deprivation of all economic *1071 use of the property. He also questioned the propriety of denying a variance when property to the immediate south, as well as other parcels in the vicinity, had been granted variances.
At the conclusion of the second public hearing, the Board voted three to two to approve the variance. It then recessed for five minutes. Upon the Board's return to consider an unrelated matter in which respondent's attorney was also involved, one of the Board's members, who had voted in favor of the variance, announced that he had had a "lapse of consciousness" in casting his vote, indicating that he thought he was voting to deny the variance. As a consequence, he made a motion to reopen the hearing, which the Board unanimously passed. After receiving further presentations from the Department and the respondent, the Board voted three to two to deny the variance.
Quite naturally, respondent's attorney objected to this procedure and questioned whether over the recess the Board members had privately discussed substantive issues involving his client's request for a variance, as well as reopening the hearing, thus suggesting a possible violation of Florida's "Government in the Sunshine Law." See § 286.011, Fla. Stat. (1993). The Board member who changed his vote replied by recounting that all he did was ask another member to clarify procedurally what transpired in terms of whose motion was on the floor to be voted on. He further related that after he determined he had misunderstood what he was voting on, he immediately notified respondent's attorney of this fact and advised him of his intent to have the Board reconsider the matter. Respondent's attorney accepted these representations.
The respondent later filed a five-count complaint in circuit court. Count I sought certiorari review of the Board's denial of his variance. Counts II-V sought a declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and compensation based on a "takings" theory.
After a hearing on count I, the circuit court granted certiorari and entered a partial final judgment quashing the Board's denial of the respondent's variance.[2] It determined that the Board "departed from the essential requirements of law and violated [respondent's] procedural due process rights by opening another public hearing on the previously approved variance, requesting and hearing new evidence, and then voting to deny the previously approved variance, all without providing notice as required by law." The circuit court thus concluded that the denial was "improper, invalid, null and of no force and effect." It also ruled that strict enforcement of the ordinance imposed an unreasonable hardship on the respondent because without the variance he had no reasonable, beneficial, or economically viable use of the property, "which would constitute a compensable taking." Significantly, however, the circuit court never undertook an analytical review of whether the Board's denial of the variance was supported by substantial, competent evidence.
In reviewing the circuit court's order under rule 9.030(b)(2)(B), our standard is to determine "whether the circuit court afforded procedural due process and applied the correct law." Education Dev. Ctr., Inc. v. City of West Palm Beach Zoning Bd. of Appeals, 541 So.2d 106, 108 (Fla. 1989) (quoting City of Deerfield Beach v. Vaillant, 419 So.2d 624, 626 (Fla. 1982)). Although we reject the contention that the circuit court failed to afford procedural due process, we do agree that it applied the incorrect law in overturning the Board's ultimate denial of the variance.
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658 So. 2d 1069, 1995 WL 385684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bd-cty-comrs-sarasota-v-webber-fladistctapp-1995.