Kiawah Development v. SCDHEC

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 10, 2014
Docket27065
StatusPublished

This text of Kiawah Development v. SCDHEC (Kiawah Development v. SCDHEC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiawah Development v. SCDHEC, (S.C. 2014).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA

In The Supreme Court

Kiawah Development Partners, II, Respondent,

v.

South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental

Control, Appellant,

and

South Carolina Coastal Conservation League, Appellant,

South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control and Kiawah Development Partners, II, of whom South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control is Appellant, and Kiawah Development Partners, II is Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2010-155629

Appeal from the Administrative Law Court

Ralph K. Anderson, III, Administrative Law Judge

Opinion No. 27065

Heard June 5, 2013 – Refiled December 10, 2014

REVERSED AND REMANDED

Jacquelyn Sue Dickman, of Columbia, Bradley D. Churdar, of Charleston, Amy E. Armstrong, of the South Carolina Environmental Law Project, of Pawleys Island, Robert T. Bockman, of Columbia, and Davis A. Whitfield-Cargile, of Brevard, NC, for Appellants.

G. Trenholm Walker, of Pratt-Thomas Walker, PA, and Gedney M. Howe, III, of Gedney M. Howe III, PA, both of Charleston, for Respondent.

Attorney General Alan M. Wilson, Chief Deputy Attorney General John W. McIntosh, Solicitor General Robert D. Cook, and Assistant Attorney General T. Parkin Hunter, and C. Mitchell Brown and A. Mattison Bogan, both of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP, all of Columbia, for Amicus Curiae, Savannah River Maritime Commission.

Frank S. Holleman, of the Southern Environmental Law Center, of Chapel Hill, NC, and J. Wesley Earnhardt, Michael P. Addis, and Margaret B. Hoppin, all of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, LLP, of New York, for Amicus Curiae, The South Carolina Nature-Based Tourism Association.

Jordan R. Israel, of Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae, Inlet Cove Homeowners Association, Kayak Charleston, LLC, South Carolina Paddlesports Industry Association, and Friends of the Kiawah River.

James B. Richardson, Jr., of Columbia, for Amicus Curiae, South Carolina Manufacturer's Alliance.

Michael Robert Hitchcock, of Columbia, for Intervenors.

JUSTICE HEARN: Our State's tidelands are a precious public resource held in trust for the people of South Carolina. While the tidelands are a finite resource, a bevy of competing environmental, economic, and social uses seek to lay claim to them. The legislative branch has made the policy decisions as to how those uses should be balanced in order to maximize the benefit to the people of South Carolina and enacted statutes and delegated to executive agencies the power to promulgate regulations to fulfill those policy decisions. The task falls to the courts to ensure that those statutes and regulations are correctly applied in carrying out that policy.

At issue here is the correct application of those statutes and regulations to an invaluable—in environmental, economic, and social terms—stretch of tidelands located on the edge of a spit of land along the South Carolina coast. A landowner and real estate developer seeks a permit to construct a bulkhead and revetment stretching 2,783 feet in length and 40 feet in width over the State's tidelands, thereby permanently altering 111,320 square feet or over 2.5 acres of pristine tidelands. The landowner seeks to halt ongoing erosion along that stretch of tidelands in order to facilitate a residential development on the adjacent highland area. DHEC denied the majority of the requested permit and granted a small portion to protect an existing county park. An administrative law court (ALC) disagreed and found a permit should be granted for the entire structure, and this appeal followed. We conclude the ALC committed several errors of law and therefore, we reverse and remand.

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Kiawah Island is a barrier island approximately one mile wide and stretching approximately ten miles along South Carolina's coast. At the island's eastern end it is separated from Folly Beach by Stono Inlet where the Stono River empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The Island is separated from John's Island and the mainland to the north by the Kiawah River. At the island's western end, the Kiawah River turns to the south and travels along the Island's western edge. From the western tip of the Island, Captain Sam's Spit extends along the coast in a southwesterly direction towards Seabrook Island. The Spit consists of a narrow "neck" where it extends away from the Island and then grows into a large, bulbous end. At the point at which the Kiawah River meets the Spit where it extends from the end of the Island, the Kiawah River turns to the west, wraps around the bulb of the Spit, and then turns to the south. There the River passes through Captain Sam's Inlet between the Spit and Seabrook Island and empties into the Atlantic Ocean. Fig. 1: Captain Sam's Spit

At the present time, where the Spit meets the larger island and Kiawah River turns to travel along the Spit—the neck—the Spit is approximately 450 feet wide measured from the critical line on the River side to the mean high water line on the Atlantic Ocean side. At its widest part the Spit has a high ground width of more than 1,600 feet. The Spit has a number of high dune ridges running its entire length, and, on the river side of the bulbous end, a young and growing maritime forest. When the tide recedes in the River, a soft, sandy beach is exposed on the Spit along the area where the River bends. The portion of the Island at the western end immediately upriver of the Spit's neck is occupied by a Charleston County park which the County leases from Kiawah Development Partners, II, Inc. (Kiawah). The Spit's neck and the adjacent area where the county park is located are eroding. At points along the bend in the river, a vertical escarpment as high as ten to twelve feet exists. While a portion of the river side of the Spit is eroding, on the ocean side the Spit has steadily accreted over the past several decades. While the River side of the Spit is experiencing erosion, the Spit as a whole is growing. The ocean side of the Spit has steadily accreted sand for the past sixty years and at present the accretion is occurring at a faster rate than the rate of erosion on the River side. Over the past three hundred years, however, at least twice a version of the Spit has formed, followed by the breach of the Spit's neck, and the disappearance of the Spit. The present Spit began to reform around 1949.

In 1988, Kiawah purchased the Island including the Spit; the same year the Town of Kiawah Island was incorporated. Prior to 1999, there was no building setback line on the Spit and therefore the Spit could not be developed.1 Accordingly, in 1994, the Town and Kiawah entered into a development agreement which limited the uses of the Spit to green space and parkland and thereby prohibited development of the Spit. In 1999, due to continued accretion on the ocean side of the Spit and the Spit's resulting growth, the State established a setback line on the Spit thereby permitting development on the Spit landward of the setback line. In 2005, the Town and Kiawah entered into a new development agreement which permits development of up to fifty home sites and two community docks on the Spit.

In order to facilitate development of the Spit, Kiawah hired an engineering firm to design an erosion control structure to stop the erosion occurring along the bend in the Kiawah River. The firm recommended the combination of an articulated concrete block mat2 and a bulkhead and prepared a permit application on Kiawah's behalf.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Moore
95 U.S. 760 (Supreme Court, 1878)
Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co.
325 U.S. 410 (Supreme Court, 1945)
Hobonny Club, Inc. v. McEachern
252 S.E.2d 133 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1979)
Faile v. South Carolina Employment Security Commission
230 S.E.2d 219 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1976)
Lark v. Bi-Lo, Inc.
276 S.E.2d 304 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1981)
Brown v. South Carolina Department of Health & Environmental Control
560 S.E.2d 410 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2002)
B & a Development, Inc. v. Georgetown County
641 S.E.2d 888 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2007)
Barton v. Higgs
641 S.E.2d 39 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2007)
Hodges v. Rainey
533 S.E.2d 578 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2000)
Koenig v. South Carolina Department of Public Safety
480 S.E.2d 98 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1996)
Brown v. Bi-Lo, Inc.
581 S.E.2d 836 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2003)
GLOVER BY CAUTHEN v. Suitt Const. Co.
458 S.E.2d 535 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1995)
Captain's Quarters Motor Inn, Inc. v. South Carolina Coastal Council
413 S.E.2d 13 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1991)
Lexington County School District One Board of Trustees v. Bost
316 S.E.2d 677 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1984)
Stone Mfg. Co. v. South Carolina Employment Security Commission
64 S.E.2d 644 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1951)
Spectre, LLC v. South Carolina Department of Health
688 S.E.2d 844 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2010)
Paschal v. State Election Commission
454 S.E.2d 890 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kiawah Development v. SCDHEC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiawah-development-v-scdhec-sc-2014.