Bowles v. United States

31 Fed. Cl. 37, 38 ERC (BNA) 1607, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 63, 1994 WL 102117
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 24, 1994
DocketNo. 303-88L
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 31 Fed. Cl. 37 (Bowles 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
Bowles v. United States, 31 Fed. Cl. 37, 38 ERC (BNA) 1607, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 63, 1994 WL 102117 (uscfc 1994).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Judge.

OPINION

This case presents in sharp relief the difficulty that current takings law forces upon both the federal government and the private citizen. The government here had little guidance from the law as to whether its action was a taking in advance of a long and expensive course of litigation. The citizen [40]*40likewise had little more precedential guidance than faith in the justice of his cause to sustain a long and costly suit in several courts. There must be a better way to balance legitimate public goals with fundamental individual rights. Courts, however, cannot produce comprehensive solutions. They can only interpret the rather precise language of the fifth amendment to our Constitution in very specific factual circumstances. To the extent that the constitutional protections of the fifth amendment are a bulwark of liberty, they should also be understood to be a social mechanism of last, not first resort. Judicial decisions are far less sensitive to societal problems than the law and policy made by the political branches of our great constitutional system. At best courts sketch the outlines of individual rights, they cannot hope to fill in the portrait of wise and just social and economic policy.

Plaintiff, Harry L. Bowles, filed this case pro se seeking just compensation under the 5th Amendment for one home building lot in a Texas subdivision.1 The basis of his complaint is that the Army Corps of Engineers’ (Corps) denied plaintiff a 404 permit to fill his lot so that he might install a septic system as required by his subdivision to build his home. Plaintiffs property is considered a wetland by the Corps and a permit from the Corps is thus required to place fill, such as clean sand, on it. The Corps’ action was taken pursuant to its jurisdiction under §§ 301 and 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1311, 1344 (1988).2 Mr. Bowles alleges that without the ability to place fill over substantially all his lot, it has no value. Put another way, all economically viable use of his property was destroyed because without fill he could not build his home. And a site for a single family residence was the only real use of this relatively small piece of land. Plaintiff argued that all his neighbors in the subdivision were allowed to place fill on their property for the purpose of installing septic systems. Trial on plaintiffs complaint was held in Houston, Texas. Earlier in the litigation the court denied the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. Bowles v. United States, 23 Cl.Ct. 443 (1991).3 The court earlier denied defendant’s ripeness challenge by order dated July 24,1990. For the reasons set forth in this opinion the court finds that plaintiffs property was taken since the denial of the 404 permit made the property worthless. The court awards plaintiff $55,000.00 as just compensation plus interest compounded annually from October 26, 1984.

Facts

In 1970, Harry L. Bowles purchased a home on Follet’s Island in Brazoria County, Texas, in a subdivision known as Treasure Island. The home was located at Lot 18 on Schooner Drive in section II of Treasure Island. Section II of Treasure Island is essentially a series of parallel streets running east-west.

[41]*41[[Image here]]

See Plaintiffs Exhibit 7, p. 3; Plaintiffs Exhibit 27A-D; Defendant’s Exhibit 1, p. 2; Defendant’s Exhibit 88.

The streets are separated by canals that connect to a westwardly body of water known as Cold Pass which leads to the Gulf of Mexico. Besidential lots are located on both the north and south sides of each street so that the back of each lot has footage on one of the several canals. However, some of the western most lots on each street have a more desirable waterfront view because of footage directly on Cold Pass.

In 1980, Bowles took what he believed to be an opportunity to improve his view of Cold Pass by acquiring an undeveloped lot on the south side of the southern most street in section II of Treasure Island, Lot 29 on China Clipper Drive.4 Although a question arose late in the trial as to whether Lot 29 was in the subdivision, the court concludes that the only supportable factual finding after considering all the evidence is that Lot 29 is within the Treasure Island subdivision.

In defendant’s post-trial brief it asked the court to’ take judicial notice of a certified copy of a 1967 re-plat of section II of the Treasure Island subdivision that excludes Lot 29 from the subdivision. The court denied the motion and the admission of any post-trial evidence. Notwithstanding, according to the government’s theory of the case, if Lot 29 was re-platted out of the subdivision Bowles could sue to get the deed restrictions lifted, thereby making its alter[42]*42native proposal economically viable.5

However, in the court’s view the government misunderstands the “reasonable investment-backed expectations” analysis that may apply in this case. Whether or not Lot 29 is within the subdivision today is not a question that can be answered with physical evidence. It was clearly originally in the platted area. It is on a subdivision street. It is separated from any other subdivision by a considerable distance. Plaintiff submitted a certified plat map showing it within the subdivision at trial. The defendant submitted no contrary evidence at trial after a long period of pretrial discovery. And, perhaps, most significantly the evidence showed that a reasonable investor would have considered it part of the subdivision.

All the relevant documents pertaining to Lot 29 indicate that it is in the subdivision. The 1964 plat map, certified by the county as true and accurate in 1991, indicates Lot 29 is in the subdivision. The actions of all the local regulatory entities indicate Lot 29 is in the subdivision. Therefore, in the court’s view a reasonable investor in 1980 would have certainly concluded that Lot 29 was in the Treasure Island subdivision.

Lot 29 is essentially a waterfront lot with an unobstructed view of Cold Pass. There is a more westwardly lot — Lot 28 — that appears on the plat map of Treasure Island. However, over the years Cold Pass has substantially eroded Lot 28 effectively rendering it useless except possibly for the construction of a pier. It is not large enough for a residence.

Bowles planned to build a single family home on Lot 29 as his permanent retirement residence. Bowles believed he could build on Lot 29 as long as he received approval from various local regulatory entities. In fact, building a single family residence in conformity with the neighborhood seems to be the only way Bowles could comply the restrictive covenants in his deed. In addition, Lot 29 is directly across the street from similar single family homes.

Bowles testified that in order to build on his lot he would need approval from at least two local regulatory entities: (1) the Treasure Island Municipal Utility District (TI-MUD), and (2) the San Luis Pass Architectural Control Commission (Architectural Commission).6

TIMUD is a local government organization that supervises the water and sewage operations of the subdivision. TIMUD’s approval must be obtained for any proposed sewage disposal system within the subdivision before any lot receives a water hook-up.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Fed. Cl. 37, 38 ERC (BNA) 1607, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 63, 1994 WL 102117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-united-states-uscfc-1994.