C&M Enterprises of Georgia, LLC v. Williams.

816 S.E.2d 44, 346 Ga. App. 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 1, 2018
DocketA18A0240
StatusPublished

This text of 816 S.E.2d 44 (C&M Enterprises of Georgia, LLC v. Williams.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C&M Enterprises of Georgia, LLC v. Williams., 816 S.E.2d 44, 346 Ga. App. 79 (Ga. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Ellington, Presiding Judge.

*79 In March 2016, Mark Williams, acting as the Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and the Chairman of the Coastal Marshlands Protection Committee, determined that a portion of a bulkhead on riverfront property in Bryan County owned by C&M Enterprises of Georgia, LLC, was illegally located in a protected estuarine area of marshlands within the Department's jurisdiction. Based on this determination, Williams issued an order directing C&M to remove the structure. C&M filed an appeal from the order to the Office of State Administrative Hearings, and both parties *47 *80 filed motions for summary determination. 1 An administrative law judge granted Williams' motion for summary determination and denied C&M's motion. C&M appealed to the superior court, which also affirmed. 2 We granted C&M's application for discretionary appeal, and it contends that Williams arbitrarily and capriciously failed to apply the agency's standard policy to determine the boundary between C&M's property and protected marshlands within the Department's jurisdiction. 3 For the reasons explained below, we affirm.

Delineating a Jurisdictional Line. By way of background, we note that the Coastal Marshlands Protection Act of 1970, OCGA §§ 12-5-280 through 12-5-297, was enacted to regulate structures and activities in Georgia's coastal marshlands "to ensure that the value and functions of the coastal marshlands are not impaired and to fulfill the responsibilities of each generation as public trustees of the coastal marshlands for succeeding generations." OCGA § 12-5-281. Marshlands include "any marshland intertidal area, mud flat, tidal water bottom, or salt marsh in the State of Georgia within the estuarine area of the state," whether tidewaters reach the area "through natural or artificial watercourses." OCGA § 12-5-282 (3). The Act provides:

No person shall remove, fill, dredge, drain, or otherwise alter any marshlands or construct or locate any structure on or over marshlands in this state within the estuarine area thereof without first obtaining a permit from the committee or, in the case of minor alteration of marshlands, the commissioner.

OCGA § 12-5-286 (a) (1). See Coastal Marshlands Protection Committee v. Altamaha Riverkeeper, Inc. , 315 Ga. App. 510 , 510-511, 726 S.E.2d 539 (2012)

*81 ("[A] party seeking to build a structure over any marshland in Georgia must first obtain a permit from the Committee.") (citation omitted).

The Act provides that the Department of Natural Resources has the authority, inter alia, "to determine jurisdiction under [the Act]." OCGA § 12-5-284 (a) (1). See Center for a Sustainable Coast v. Coastal Marshlands Protection Comm. , 284 Ga. 736 , 741 (2), 670 S.E.2d 429 (2008). The Department tasks its Coastal Resources Division ("CRD") with marking the boundary lines of marshlands within the jurisdiction of the Department for permitting and enforcement under the Act. A CRD staff member marks a jurisdictional boundary line, known as a "JD line," onsite with flagging tape and/or numbered flags staked into the ground to delineate the boundary between marshlands within the estuarine area (subject to regulation under the Act) and uplands (not regulated under the Act). 4 Drawing a JD line is not an exact science, and these lines often are not straight because they track the contours of the marshlands-uplands interface.

A marked JD line allows a property owner to see whether any proposed construction will encroach on marshlands, that is, whether the activity will alter the marshlands or place a structure on the area seaward of the JD line. If the proposed activity is occurring entirely landward of the JD line, no permit will be required. Conversely, if the proposed *48 activity will encroach on jurisdictional marshlands, a permit from CRD will be required.

If the landowner seeks a permit from CRD for activity that will encroach on jurisdictional marshlands, the landowner is required to submit a survey prepared by a registered surveyor that shows the JD line delineated by CRD staff. Once CRD approves a survey containing a delineated JD line, the line becomes the "JD line of record" and remains in effect for one year or throughout a permit approval process, unless CRD delineates a revised JD line based on new information that the previously flagged JD line of record is no longer correct.

If CRD learns that a landowner who did not first obtain a permit is possibly violating the Act by filling, dredging, or otherwise altering any marshlands or building a structure over any marshlands, CRD first checks whether there is a JD line of record for the property. If there is a JD line of record, it will be used in any enforcement action. If there is not a JD line of record for the property, CRD will delineate a JD line as it would in the permitting context, that is, the JD line should be established according to the conditions that existed before the unauthorized activity. Depending on the nature and extent of *82 construction occurring before a CRD enforcement site visit, it may not be possible based on the usual indicators for CRD to determine the JD line precisely as it would have been before the landowner disturbed the land. In such a case, CRD will rely on other field-based evidence to determine the JD line at the time of the unauthorized activity.

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Bluebook (online)
816 S.E.2d 44, 346 Ga. App. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cm-enterprises-of-georgia-llc-v-williams-gactapp-2018.