Kanter Real Estate, LLC v. Department of Environmental Protection, City of Miramar, and Broward County, Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 5, 2019
Docket17-5096
StatusPublished

This text of Kanter Real Estate, LLC v. Department of Environmental Protection, City of Miramar, and Broward County, Florida (Kanter Real Estate, LLC v. Department of Environmental Protection, City of Miramar, and Broward County, Florida) 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
Kanter Real Estate, LLC v. Department of Environmental Protection, City of Miramar, and Broward County, Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D17-5096 _____________________________

KANTER REAL ESTATE, LLC,

Appellant,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, CITY OF MIRAMAR, and BROWARD COUNTY, FLORIDA,

Appellees. _____________________________

On appeal from the State of Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Noah Valenstein, Secretary.

February 5, 2019

B.L. THOMAS, C.J.

Appellant, Kanter Real Estate, LLC, challenges a Final Order of the Department of Environmental Protection denying a permit to drill an exploratory oil well, which complied with all environmental-protection requirements, in an “environmentally degraded” property located in the Florida Everglades. This Court has jurisdiction. Fla. R. App. P. 9.030(b)(1)(C). For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the Final Order and remand for entry of an order consistent with the Administrative Law Judge’s Recommended Order, and we direct the Department to issue the requested oil and gas permit.

Appellant owns in fee simple the surface rights and subsurface mineral rights of a 20,000-acre parcel of land located in Broward County. The property, which is located in Water Conservation Area 3 of the Florida Everglades, is encumbered by a flowage easement held by the South Florida Water Management District. The easement reserved rights of ingress and egress to the grantor, including access “for the exploration or drilling for, or the developing, producing, storing or removing of oil . . . in accordance with sound engineering principles.”

In 2015, Appellant applied to construct and drill an exploratory oil well on five acres of the property. The Department granted Appellant an Environmental Resource Permit that defined and approved the design of a stormwater management system at the site to protect offsite lands from any stormwater discharges. Appellant also committed to a number of pollution prevention measures, including spill prevention and cleaning plans, a hydrogen sulfide plan, a construction pollution prevention plan, proposals for wildlife management, and a safety manual.

The Department sent Appellant three requests for information about issues such as the aquifer, the project site design, and protections for the surrounding area. After responding, Appellant demanded that the Department process the oil and gas permit application. The Department issued a Notice of Denial, stating that Appellant failed to provide information showing a balance of considerations in favor of issuance under section 377.241, Florida Statutes. Section 377.241 sets forth the following relevant criteria for the Department to consider when deciding whether to issue an oil and gas permit:

(1) The nature, character and location of the lands involved; whether rural, such as farms, groves, or ranches, or urban property vacant or presently developed for residential or business purposes or are in such a location or of such a nature as to make such improvements and developments a probability in the near future. 2 (2) The nature, type and extent of ownership of the applicant, including such matters as the length of time the applicant has owned the rights claimed without having performed any of the exploratory operations so granted or authorized.

(3) The proven or indicated likelihood of the presence of oil, gas or related minerals in such quantities as to warrant the exploration and extraction of such products on a commercially profitable basis.

§ 377.241, Fla. Stat. (2018).

To challenge the Department’s decision, Appellant filed a petition for an administrative hearing, which was referred to the Division of Administrative Hearings. The parties stipulated that Appellant’s application met the minimum design standards for a permit and did not violate statutory setback requirements. Thus, the only issue for the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) to determine was whether the statutory criteria of section 377.241 weighed in favor of or against issuance of an oil and gas permit.

Appellant presented evidence that the project site lies in an area called “the pocket,” notable for its degraded natural habitat and lessened environmental values. Appellant also presented the environmental resource permit that was granted by the Department in acknowledgment of Appellant satisfying all necessary environmental precautions. Appellant also introduced evidence that the Department had allowed other oil wells in the Everglades, including one approximately twenty-four miles west of Appellant’s project site that began operation in the late 1970s.

Appellant’s expert testified that there was a 23% chance of discovering oil at the project site, and that in the oil exploration industry, a 23% chance of discovering oil constitutes a very good prospect. The expert further testified that Appellant’s well would be commercially self-supporting at $50 per barrel of oil if only 100,000 barrels were discovered, and opined that the proposed well would generate between 180,000 to 10,000,000 barrels of oil if oil were discovered.

3 The ALJ concluded that the first statutory factor, the nature of the lands involved, did not weigh against issuance, as the factor was intended to address and balance the interests of subsurface mineral rights owners against any competing interests of surface owners, and that “[g]iven the unified title to the Well Site in Kanter, balancing of the interests of the fee simple owner against the interests of the mineral rights lessee is neither necessary nor appropriate.” The ALJ cited a series of Whereas clauses to illustrate the legislature’s concern over divided ownership interests. In addition, the ALJ found that even if the first factor was relevant in the absence of divided ownership interests, “[t]he property upon which the Well Site is to be located has no special characteristics that would make it susceptible to pollution.”

The ALJ then concluded that the second statutory factor, the nature of ownership, including the length of time in which Appellant delayed exercising oil rights, did not weigh against issuance in this case, as Appellant owned both surface and mineral rights. As to the third factor, the likelihood of discovering oil on a profitable basis, the ALJ found there was a strong chance (17%) of Appellant discovering oil, meaning the third factor weighed in favor of issuance. Balancing the three factors, the ALJ recommended granting Appellant’s permit request.

The Department filed twelve exceptions to the ALJ’s Recommended Order, stating that there was no competent, substantial evidence to support the likelihood of discovering oil in sufficient quantities to be profitable, and that Appellant’s delay in applying for a permit should have been considered. ∗ The Secretary entered a Final Order denying Appellant’s request for an oil and gas permit.

As to the nature of the land, the Final Order states that section 377.241, Florida Statutes, requires an evaluation of the

∗ Broward County also filed exceptions to the Recommended Order, but the county’s exceptions were untimely filed and the merits of the exceptions were not considered by the Department.

4 lands themselves, rather than a risk analysis of possible discharge, concluding:

The lands proposed for the Well Site are located in the endangered Everglades ecosystem, which is world renowned for its unique environmental characteristics. In accordance with the Everglades Forever Act, the Florida Legislature has dedicated the Everglades to long term restoration.

As to the second statutory factor, the Secretary reversed the ALJ’s conclusions, declaring that Appellant’s delay in seeking a permit was relevant to the balancing test and weighed against issuance.

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Kanter Real Estate, LLC v. Department of Environmental Protection, City of Miramar, and Broward County, Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanter-real-estate-llc-v-department-of-environmental-protection-city-of-fladistctapp-2019.