FLORIDA GAME & FISH COM'N v. Flotilla
This text of 636 So. 2d 761 (FLORIDA GAME & FISH COM'N v. Flotilla) 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
FLORIDA GAME AND FRESH WATER FISH COMMISSION, Appellant,
v.
FLOTILLA, INC., a Florida corporation, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*762 Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Denis Dean, Chief, Sp. Projects, Tallahassee, for appellant.
James V. Antista, Gen. Counsel, Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Tallahassee, for appellant.
Kenneth B. Wright, Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, Tallahassee, for Sierra Club, Friends of the Bald Eagle, Inc., Nat. Wildlife Federation, FL Wildlife Federation, Environmental Defense Fund, and Nat. Audubon Soc., amicus curiae, for appellant.
*763 Patrick Kennedy, Legal Asst., FL Audubon Soc., for FL Audubon Soc., amicus curiae, for appellant.
Thomas W. Reese, St. Petersburg, for ManaSota-88, Inc., amicus curiae, for appellant.
Caleb J. Grimes, Grimes, Grimes, Goebel, Grimes & Hawkins, P.A., Bradenton, for appellee.
FRANK, Chief Judge.
This appeal originated in a nonfinal order imposing liability upon the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission based upon an inverse condemnation claim asserted by Flotilla, Inc. pursuant to Article X, Section 6(a) of the Florida Constitution.[1] We reverse.
In September 1984, Flotilla, Inc. purchased 173 acres of undeveloped land for $3,000,000 to develop a residential subdivision in six phases. Prior to closing, Flotilla conducted environmental impact studies to determine the feasibility of its proposal. At that point, Flotilla had received from the City of Bradenton approval of its preliminary development plan and subdivision plat. Construction began in May 1987 and progressed unimpeded until November 1987, when a bald eagle's nest was discovered in a tree situated within the project's fourth phase. Within a month, in response to an anonymous report that the nest had either fallen or been knocked from its tree, officials from the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission arrived to investigate possible criminal violations of state and federal statutes that render unlawful the molestation or harassment of the bald eagle or its habitat.[2] Everyone was ordered off the property and the area around the tree was cordoned off with crime scene tape. Flotilla, however, "whether out of ignorance, negligence, criminal intent or simply forlorn hope that the noise would discourage the [eagles from] rebuilding," continued to develop its property. When, despite this activity, the eagles reestablished their nest, Flotilla, under threat of criminal prosecution, ceased further development within 750 feet of the nesting tree until the eagle activity abated. The magnitude of this so-called "zone of preservation" derives from the Habitat Management Guidelines for the Bald Eagle in the Southeast Region, a federal government publication that endorses buffer zones measuring up to 1500 feet around active eagle nesting sites.
Shortly after the discovery of the first nest, another, partially constructed eagle's nest was found on the project near phases five and six; accordingly, a second preservation zone of comparable dimension was established. Subsequently, Centex Homes, a residential contractor that had already purchased the project's first and second phases, expressed an interest in purchasing phases five and six. Centex contacted the Commission to inquire whether the wildlife management guidelines would affect its plans to build homes in that area. In March 1990, the Commission notified Centex that since no eagle activity on that site had been confirmed, a protective zone was no longer required. Centex bought the property. With regard to the nesting site affecting phase four, the restrictions continued until January 1993, when inspectors from the Commission concluded that the eagles had abandoned their nest. Significantly, each phase of the project, except for the 24 acre preserve on phase four, was eventually sold to private contractors, although some at prices less than what Flotilla had hoped for.
On July 2, 1990, seeking relief for having been "ousted from possession and control" of its property, Flotilla filed an inverse condemnation action against the Commission, the *764 State of Florida,[3] and the City of Bradenton. A bench trial was held and the court found the Commission, but not the City, liable for "taking" approximately 48 acres comprising the two habitat preserves and for causing construction delays that had virtually eviscerated the market value of the entire project. Although the trial court declared the confiscation "an actual physical taking," its analysis reflects that a regulatory taking occurred:
The taking in this case is not a regulatory taking. The best description is perhaps an "environmental taking." The combination of the State's criminal penalties and the Guidelines[] amounted to two of the three prongs of the State activity necessary for this taking. However, these laws and procedures pre-existed the Plaintiff's purchase of land, plan approvals, commencement of construction, borrowing of money, and the rest of the development activity before November 1987. The last prong, the element that is usually supplied by a governmental body in a regulatory taking, namely the passage of some legislative action which destroys the owners use of the property, was, in this instance, supplied by the birds, not the legislature. That was the selection of the land on which to nest. By Administrative Regulation and Criminal Statute, together with the Guidelines, the State effectively created a habitat for the eagles, and empowered the eagles to decide which land would be taken.
There was no physical taking in this case. That type of taking, generally deemed "per se," occurs only when the government "requires the landowner to submit to the physical occupation of his land." Yee v. City of Escondido, Cal., ___ U.S. ___, ___, 112 S.Ct. 1522, 1528, 118 L.Ed.2d 153 (1992). The government physically occupies property when it permanently deprives the owner of his "bundle" of private property rights, including the right to possess and dispose, as well as the right to prevent the government from using the occupied area. Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp., 458 U.S. 419, 435, 102 S.Ct. 3164, 3175, 73 L.Ed.2d 868 (1982). As a factual matter, Flotilla lost neither the right to possess nor convey the affected areas, and further retained the right to use the property in any way that would not disturb the eagles' natural habitat. Certainly the government was not possessed of the property. This case is more truly characterized by the fact-intensive inquiry the law associates with regulatory takings rather than physical takings. Cf., Moerman v. State, 17 Cal. App.4th 452, 21 Cal. Rptr.2d 329 (1st Dist. 1993) ("Courts faced with claims that a taking has occurred as a result of an invasion by wild animals have typically employed a regulatory taking analysis").
Regulation is analyzed in terms of the exercise of the government's police power, and although regulation prompted by that police power will always interfere to some extent with private property rights, compensation must be paid only when the interference deprives the landowner of substantial economic use of his property. Joint Ventures, Inc. v. Dept. of Transp., 563 So.2d 622 (Fla. 1990).
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636 So. 2d 761, 1994 WL 84110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-game-fish-comn-v-flotilla-fladistctapp-1994.