Beekwilder v. United States

55 Fed. Cl. 54, 2002 U.S. Claims LEXIS 357, 2002 WL 31958795
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 26, 2002
DocketNo. 96-183L
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Fed. Cl. 54 (Beekwilder v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beekwilder v. United States, 55 Fed. Cl. 54, 2002 U.S. Claims LEXIS 357, 2002 WL 31958795 (uscfc 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

SMITH, Senior Judge.

This matter is before the court on defendant’s Motion to Dismiss plaintiffs claim for just compensation under the Fifth Amendment for the regulatory taking of real property. Defendant contends that plaintiffs claims should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction pursuant to Rules of the Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”) 12(b)(1), or in the alternative, summary judgment should be granted for the defendant pursuant to RCFC 56(c). After reviewing the briefs and hearing oral argument, the court hereby GRANTS defendant’s motion.

FACTS

Plaintiff, Henricus P. Beekwilder, entered into a partnership in December of 1987, that, doing business as Vista Homes, purchased sixty-three (63) lots of residential real estate property in the City of Auburn, Placer Coun[55]*55ty, California, collectively known as “Vista del Valle Unit No. 4.” The land was zoned for low-density residential housing, and the partners planned to develop the property in three phases.

In April of 1988, a project manager with the Sacramento District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) began investigating a suspected Clean Water Act (“CWA”) Section 4041 violation at the Vista del Valle subdivision development. Following the Corps’ initial inspection, a cease and desist letter was issued to one of plaintiffs partners, Mr. John Rizzo, on June 10, 1988 informing him that a Section 404 permit was required prior to the commencement of such construction. On September 27, 1988, the Corps notified Mr. Rizzo that an individual permit application was needed for the Vista del Valle project due to the Corps’ determination that nationwide permit2 authorization was not appropriate. The Corps received an individual permit application signed by Mr. Rizzo on November 15, 1988, that sought approval to discharge approximately 20,000 cubic yards of fill material for residential construction.

A consultant hired by plaintiff and his partners transmitted by letter dated March 3, 1989, a final delineation of the wetlands on the property. The consultant also informed the Corps that Phase II of the development would proceed because that portion of the development could be completed without causing any impact to wetlands. The Corps confirmed the accuracy of the wetland delineation submitted by the consultant and further acknowledged that Phase II construction could proceed without a Section 404 permit. Plaintiffs consultants subsequently submitted additional data and analysis indicating that the wetland impact associated with Phase I construction was limited to one acre rather than 4.2 acres, as previously believed. The Corps concurred and determined that it was appropriate under the circumstances to issue an after-the-fact nationwide permit to authorize the fill of wetlands during Phase I construction. This action thereby resolved the existing violation of the CWA and Section 404 that had resulted from the fill of wetlands without a permit.

During the aforementioned dealings between the Corps and plaintiffs partnership, the twenty-one (21) lots that constituted the Phase I portion of the development were improved and sold by September of 1989. Phase II also proceeded and by February of 1990, all eighteen (18) lots were improved and sold for a price ranging from $70,000 to $75,950 per lot. Despite the completion of Phases I and II, the Section 404 individual permit application submitted in November of 1988, remained pending before the Corps until October 24, 1989, when plaintiff telephoned the Corps and requested that the application be held in abeyance. The Corps agreed to hold the permit application in abeyance for one month, however it reiterated that an individual permit would be required to place additional fill in the wetlands. When no further action was taken by plaintiffs partnership with respect to the individual permit application, the application was withdrawn by the Corps.

In August of 1991, plaintiff purchased the interests of his partners and became the sole owner of the remaining twenty-four (24) lots slated for development during Phase III. This was done by assuming the partnership liabilities in exchange for its assets, thus dissolving the partnership and leaving Mr. Beekwilder as the owner of the remaining unsold lots in the Vista del Valle subdivision. The Corps received no further inquiries regarding development at Vista del Valle until August of 1993, when the City of Auburn issued a letter stating that it was in the process of reviewing a pre-development application for additional development at the site. The proposed development plan had been submitted to the City of Auburn by the plaintiff in July of 1993. The submission contained a new design seeking development approval for only ten (10) lots. In response to the inquiry, the Corps notified the City of [56]*56Auburn that a permit would be required to develop the ten (10) lots. On September 6, 1993, plaintiff submitted a pre-discharge notice to the Corps indicating his plans to construct a road through the wetland area of the remaining undeveloped Vista del Valle property in order to develop ten (10) housing lots on the uplands area of the property. This new site plan differed from the original plan for Phase III, which had called for the development of all twenty-four (24) lots.

Mr. Beekwilder’s pre-discharge notice to the Corps was accompanied by a preliminary layout illustrating the location of the ten (10) housing lots, a wetland boundary, and a wetland area that would be filled for the road crossing and for one of the proposed housing lots. The preliminary layout also showed a remaining “wetland area” in addition to a 7000 square foot area in the southeast corner adjacent to the wetland that was to be graded and used for wetlands. Subsequent information received from plaintiff’s consultants revealed that the proposed development was projected to impact 0.32 acre of wetland and that plaintiff would create 0.10 acre of wetland to mitigate for this impact. In a letter dated November 8, 1993, the Corps authorized Mr. Beekwilder’s proposed road crossing project and additional fill of a residential lot under a nationwide permit. The authorization was conditioned upon plaintiff’s mitigation in the form of excavating 0.10 acre so as to grade it level with the existing wetlands on the site. Subsequently, the City of Auburn approved plaintiffs proposed development plan for a ten (10) lot project and zoning of open space for the remainder. Thus, Phases I and II received permits, and Phase III as modified by the plaintiff received permission to develop. However, the modified Phase III was never acted upon by the plaintiff.

The Auburn City Council, on December 12, 1994, passed an ordinance that rezoned the fourteen (14) lot area, Lot B, portion of the Vista del Valle subdivision property from Single Family Residential to Open Space Conservation. This local governmental restriction reserves the fourteen (14) lot wetland area as an Open Space Conservation area. This local ordinance was enacted and signed by the mayor approximately sixteen (16) months prior to the filing of plaintiffs complaint in the present action.

On September 5, 1995, nearly two years following the Corps authorization letter, the Corps received a telephone call from plaintiff inquiring whether he could obtain a statement, for tax purposes, from the Corps that his remaining property could not be developed because it is wetland.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Fed. Cl. 54, 2002 U.S. Claims LEXIS 357, 2002 WL 31958795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beekwilder-v-united-states-uscfc-2002.