Lee County v. Morales
This text of 557 So. 2d 652 (Lee County v. Morales) 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
LEE COUNTY, a Political Subdivision of the State of Florida, Appellant,
v.
Orlando MORALES and Elba E. Morales, Husband and Wife and Roberto Morales and Ofelia Morales, Husband and Wife, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
James G. Yaeger, County Atty. and John J. Renner, Asst. County Atty., Fort Myers, for appellant.
Thomas M. Brondstetter, P.A., Fort Myers, for appellees.
RYDER, Acting Chief Judge.
Lee County appeals an amended final judgment in which the trial court invalidated a Lee County Board of County Commissioners' rezoning decision. We reverse.
*653 In 1978, appellees purchased four undeveloped lots in La Costa Isles subdivision for $43,000.00. The subdivision is located on the barrier island of Cayo Costa. At that time, the land was zoned C-2 (commercial) under the county zoning regulations. Under this classification a permitted use was light industrial. Appellees purchased the property as an investment and intended to construct a restaurant and a marina upon it. However, before they proceeded with these plans, the County levied a moratorium on development.
In 1979, the County adopted a Comprehensive Plan to guide development and land use. In 1981, the state of Florida adopted the Charlotte Harbor Management Plan. That same year, the County commissioned an expert to study Lee County's coastal and island ecosystems, development, and land use. The expert's study concluded that Cayo Costa should be preserved and development should be prohibited. The reasoning for this recommendation was to preserve the island's historical, archaeological and recreational resources, to protect the environment, to protect the adjoining aquatic preserve, and to guard against the danger posed to development from hurricane storm damage and flooding. Based upon this study, the Lee County Board of County Commissioners requested its planning staff to conduct a comprehensive planning assessment of Cayo Costa.
In 1982, the planning staff presented its comprehensive planning assessment, which described Cayo Costa as one of the last undeveloped and unprotected barrier islands of large size in the United States. The island is seven miles long, between 1 1/2 to 0.1 miles wide, totals 2,236 acres, and contains nine miles of beaches. The island is not accessible by road, does not have any public utilities or emergency services, and potable water is scarce. There are no plans for extending utilities or other public services to Cayo Costa. The island is in a constant state of change, and is subject to severe storm damage and shifting patterns of erosion and accretion. It was divided into two sections during the no name storm in June of 1982. Cayo Costa is adjacent to the Pine Island Aquatic Preserve and is classified as requiring the highest environmental protection for water under state regulations. The island contains 309 species of plant life, of which four are threatened or endangered. It also contains 100 species of bird and animal life, of which five are threatened or endangered animal species, and seven are threatened or endangered bird species. Additionally, the island contains two Calusa Indian mounds and a cemetery from the Cuban settlement period.
Presently, land use on the island consists of a 651-acre passive recreation facility operated by the County, a 715-acre state preserve and 813 acres of privately owned wild land containing twenty scattered homes and cabins, only of which three to five are permanently occupied. From 1963 until 1971, there were nine rezonings to permit various commercial and multifamily uses, however, actual land use on the island has remained the same since 1963.
The planning staff concluded that development would endanger the unique environmental, archaeological, historical, and recreational resources on the island and also endanger the natural resources of the adjoining estuary. The assessment recommended that development on Cayo Costa be limited due to the fact that the island is undeveloped, lacks public services, and there is danger to life and property because of hurricanes. Out of twenty-seven specific recommendations contained within the assessment, one was that land presently zoned commercial be rezoned. Effectively, this recommendation would require approximately 100 acres to be rezoned, which included appellees' property.
The Board of County Commissioners considered the planning staff's assessment and recommendations and concluded that the existing zoning classifications on the island were totally inappropriate. The Commissioners directed its zoning staff to conduct a comprehensive rezoning requiring all land not zoned residential to be rezoned back to agricultural/rural residential, under which agricultural uses and single family homes on one-acre lots would be permitted. Where a lot was less than *654 one acre, lot size variances were to be made available to construct a single family home.
Appellees and other property owners opposed the rezoning at a hearing before the Lee County Zoning Board. Nevertheless, the Board found that the rezoning request was valid and voted five-to-one to grant the request. The Zoning Board recommended that property owners seek the available variances from the mandated lot sizes.
In March of 1983, the Board of County Commissioners, sitting as the Zoning Appeals Board, considered the appeal by appellees and other property owners of this decision and upheld the findings of by a vote of five-to-zero. The Board of County Commissioners accepted and adopted the factual presentations made by the county planning staff, accepted the findings made by the Zoning Board, and adopted a rezoning resolution which had the effect of rezoning the property from commercial to agricultural. The County subsequently adopted a comprehensive land use plan which provided for a single family residence provision to permit land owners to develop a single family home on each recorded lot within a subdivision.
Appellees' complaint against Lee County alleged that the rezoning decision was arbitrary, capricious, confiscatory, not fairly debatable, denied appellees of any reasonable use of their property, was a taking of property without just compensation, inversely condemned the property, and denied them equal protection of the law. Appellees also alleged that they were entitled to damages under Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
At the close of appellees' case during the nonjury trial, Lee County filed a motion for involuntary dismissal on the ground that appellees failed to apply for a variance or other available administrative relief, therefore, the action was premature. The court denied the motion.
At the close of the trial, the court entered an amended final judgment holding that the Board of County Commissioners' rezoning decision was arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable and invalid. The court ordered the county commission to either reinstate commercial zoning or to rezone the property to residential. The court also ruled that the zoning decision inversely condemned appellees' property and violated their rights to substantive due process and equal protection. The court then ordered Lee County to pay appellees $66,590.00 in temporary taking damages plus attorney's fees and costs.
On appeal the County argues that before bringing suit, appellees were required to have exhausted their administrative remedies by applying for a variance, which they admittedly failed to do.
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557 So. 2d 652, 1990 WL 18463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-county-v-morales-fladistctapp-1990.