Friends of Nassau County, Inc. v. Nassau County

752 So. 2d 42, 2000 WL 121787
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 2, 2000
Docket1D97-4285
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 752 So. 2d 42 (Friends of Nassau County, Inc. v. Nassau County) 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.

Bluebook
Friends of Nassau County, Inc. v. Nassau County, 752 So. 2d 42, 2000 WL 121787 (Fla. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

752 So.2d 42 (2000)

FRIENDS OF NASSAU COUNTY, INC., Sherry Bevis, Charles E. Commander, and David A, Theriaque, Appellants,
v.
NASSAU COUNTY, Florida, St. Johns River Water Management District, and Fisher Development Company, Appellees.

No. 1D97-4285.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

February 2, 2000.
Rehearing Denied March 7, 2000.

*43 Paul H. Amundsen and Rodolfo Nunez of Amundsen & Moore, Tallahassee, and David A. Theriaque, Esquire, of David A. Theriaque, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellants.

Marcia Parker Tjoflat and Emily G. Pierce of Rogers, Towers, Bailey, Jones, & Gay, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellee Fisher Development Company.

BENTON, J.

Friends of Nassau County, Inc., (Friends) and Sherry Bevis, Friends' president and sole director, along with Charles Commander and David Theriaque, lawyers who represented Friends, appeal a final order imposing sanctions under section 120.57(1)(b)5., Florida Statutes (1995) (now codified at section 120.569(2)(c), Florida Statutes (1999)). Nassau County and Fisher Development Company (Fisher), the permit applicants who sought sanctions, did not show that petitions Friends filed in opposition to environmental permits they sought from St. Johns River Water Management District (SJRWMD) were "objectively unreasonable." We therefore reverse the order imposing sanctions. We do find Friends and Ms. Bevis sanctionable, however, because she did not read the petitions before signing them on behalf of Friends. Accordingly, we remand for reconsideration of appropriate sanctions as to them.

I.

We have jurisdiction. An administrative law judge's order imposing sanctions *44 under section 120.57(1)(b)5., Florida Statutes (1995), is a final order subject to judicial review.[1]See Department of Health and Rehabilitative Servs. v. S.G., 613 So.2d 1380, 1384-85 (Fla. 1st DCA 1993). As was pointed out in Procacci Commercial Realty, Inc. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 690 So.2d 603, 605 n. 5 (Fla. 1st DCA 1997), the agency, itself a litigant subject to sanctions under section 120.57(1)(b)5., Florida Statutes (1995), has no authority to review such an order.

II.

In March and April of 1996, after deciding to build the Amelia Outlet Mall in Nassau County on a site that included wetlands, Fisher filed applications with SJRWMD for permits to dredge and fill and to construct a stormwater management system. Contemporaneously, Nassau County filed an application with SJRWMD for an environmental resources permit as part of a related plan to realign a road and construct a stormwater management system to handle drainage from the new mall parking lots and other anticipated development.

III.

On June 7, 1996, Mr. Theriaque made a written request to SJRWMD that it keep him informed regarding the status of these permit applications.[2] In late June or early July, his firm sent SJRWMD two public record requests pertaining to Fisher's and Nassau County's application files. Christine Wentzel, a SJRWMD employee, telephoned Rebecca O'Hara, a lawyer in Mr. Theriaque's office, and informed her that the permit files would be available for inspection at "the front desk." Ms. Wentzel was not present when Ms. O'Hara reviewed the files, but Ms. O'Hara did come by, examine the permit files, and copy documents. The record does not reveal whether Ms. O'Hara's visit to SJRWMD's *45 offices took place before, on, or after July 1, 1996.

In the file at the time Ms. O'Hara reviewed it were copies of SJRWMD's third and final written request addressed to Sims Design Consultants, Inc. (Sims) for additional information as to permit application # X-XXX-XXXXAG-ERP,[3] dated June 17, 1996, and the response Sims, the engineer of record for both Fisher and Nassau *46 County, filed on June 24, 1996. No party contended otherwise. Neither this detailed request nor the response, which was at least equally detailed, made any mention of a clay liner for the stormwater management pond, or gave any indication that a clay liner was under consideration.

On July 17, 1996, SJRWMD notified interested parties, including Mr. Theriaque, that SJRWMD intended to approve Fisher's and Nassau County's permit applications on August 13, 1996. The notice set August 5, 1996, as the deadline for filing petitions in opposition for formal administrative proceedings. Mr. Theriaque contacted John Gerard Cordy, a senior environmental scientist with Dial, Cordy and Associates, whom Charles Commander had spoken to six to eight months earlier about the site proposed for the Amelia Outlet Mall.

Thereafter, Ms. O'Hara delivered the documents she had copied from SJRWMD's files to Mr. Cordy by Federal Express. After perusing these documents, Mr. Cordy concluded the design of the stormwater management system might be problematic and recommended that Mr. Theriaque arrange for an engineer to review the design. With Mr. Theriaque's approval, Mr. Cordy retained an engineer, Robert Alderman, to perform the review. On August 2, 1996, Mr. Alderman discussed his findings with Mr. Cordy, who relayed the findings to Mr. Theriaque.[4]

IV.

Mr. Theriaque prepared three verified petitions for Friends contesting issuance of the permits, based in large part on Mr. Alderman's conclusions. The petitions, which alleged, among other things that the stormwater management system would have a deleterious effect on water quality in the surrounding wetlands, left a blank for the signature of an unnamed representative of Friends. Many, but by no means all, of the allegations in the petitions related to the elevation of the stormwater management pond.[5]*47 *48

*49 On August 5, 1996, Mr. Commander contacted Sherry Bevis, a bookkeeper employed by the law firm of Pajcic and Pajcic. The parties stipulated that Pajcic and Pajcic's pension plan had a financial interest in First Coast Center. At Mr. Commander's request, Ms. Bevis signed the necessary incorporation papers to create "Friends of Nassau County, Inc." She thereby became the president, sole director, and sole member of Friends. On the same day, also at Mr. Commander's request, she signed the verified petitions Mr. Theriaque had prepared, but did so without reading them beforehand.[6] As co-counsel for Friends, both Mr. Theriaque and Mr. Commander signed the petitions, as well.[7]

At all pertinent times, Foley and Lardner, Mr. Commander's law firm, represented First Coast Center, which planned to build a similar mall some ten miles from the site of the Amelia Outlet Mall. The proposed malls' proximity and similarity in concept made them competitors for the same tenants. The administrative law judge found that First Coast Center gained a competitive advantage over Fisher because of the delay Friends' challenge to the environmental permits occasioned.

V.

On August 5, 1996, Friends filed the petitions with SJRWMD, which referred them to the Division of Administrative Hearings for further proceedings. The administrative law judge to whom they were assigned consolidated the cases on October 1, 1996. After Ms. Bevis testified at a discovery deposition, Fisher and Nassau County moved to dismiss the petitions and sought sanctions against Friends, Ms. Bevis, and Foley and Lardner, Mr. Commander's law firm.

On October 4, 1996, Friends filed a notice of voluntary dismissal as to all three petitions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
752 So. 2d 42, 2000 WL 121787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-nassau-county-inc-v-nassau-county-fladistctapp-2000.