Olney v. Cooch

425 A.2d 610, 1981 Del. LEXIS 276
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 19, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by251 cases

This text of 425 A.2d 610 (Olney v. Cooch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olney v. Cooch, 425 A.2d 610, 1981 Del. LEXIS 276 (Del. 1981).

Opinion

HORSEY, Justice:

The question determinative of this appeal is whether Superior Court properly can-celled a siting permit granted by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (the Department) for the erection of a residential structure on private oceanfront land east or seaward of the Department’s building line under Department Regulations 1 adopted under Delaware’s Beach Preservation Act, 7 Del.C., Chapter 68.

Phillip Poms, equitable owner under a purchase contract from Herbert Block, of lot 18 in North Indian Beach, a substantially developed oceanfront subdivision located in Sussex County, appeals Superior Court’s revocation of the Department’s permit. The permit had authorized Poms to site his proposed house 12 feet or more seaward of the building line and within the immediate vicinity of the crest of the primary coastal dune on the oceanfront. There was an ex *612 isting house on the oceanfront lot immediately to the south of and in line with Poms’ site; and Poms’ lot was one of the few remaining vacant lots in North Indian Beach.

Application for the permit had been made under Department Regulation 4.02 2 because the building line intersected lot 18 so as to place 75% of its lot area seaward of the line and to leave inadequate remaining area landward of the line for construction. Poms’ lot thereby qualified for a permit application under subparagraph 2 of § 4.02.

A siting permit was issued Poms after he had entered into an agreement with the Department, referred to as a dune maintenance agreement. However, the agreement pertained not only to maintenance of the dune during and after construction but also to the design and construction of the house. 3

An administrative appeal was taken by certain nearby property owners to the Secretary of the Department who held a public hearing pursuant to Department regulations. At the hearing, experts called by protestants testified that Poms’ proposed structure would necessarily disturb the coastal dune; that in time the proposed house would be left seaward of the dune which was gradually moving landward along with the beach front itself (due to a gradually rising sea level and continued beach erosion); and in several decades the lot would be under water. Thus, it was argued that any new construction in the vicinity of the present line of the coastal dune would expose existing neighboring structures landward thereof to damage from storm-driven debris, thereby violating one of the Act’s stated purposes, the “protection of property owners behind [the] protective dunes.” 4

Upholding grant of the permit, the Secretary noted that under Regulation 4.02, issuance of a siting permit was “conditional upon existence or construction of adequate protection against the design storm.” 5 The Secretary found the plans for the construction of the house to meet such conditions. As to protestants’ testimony concerning the adverse long-term geological forces at work on the coastal shoreline, the Secretary concluded: that the primary dune would continue its western migration whether or not the dwelling was constructed; and that the conditions of the dune maintenance agreement reasonably assured both the dune’s restoration and future maintenance and the ability of the structure to withstand the most severe storms. Thus, the Secretary affirmed issuance of the permit as both in accord with § 4.02 of the Regulations and consistent with the Regulations’ underlying policy.

On protestants’ appeal, Superior Court reversed. The basis for the Court’s reversal was that the Secretary had abused his discretion in granting a permit that was not only against the “overwhelming” weight of the evidence but also violative of the Regulations’ primary objectives.

I

The standard for judicial review of a decision of an administrative body is well *613 established. “Reversal is warranted if the administrative agency exercised its power arbitrarily or committed an error of law, or made findings of fact unsupportable by substantial evidence.” Kreshtool v. Delmarva Power and Light Co., Del.Super., 310 A.2d 649 (1973). Finding the Secretary’s decision to be supported by substantial evidence and the law, we must reverse. 6

A.

The issue as to the law is narrow and muted in light of our ruling in Atlantis I Condominium Assoc. v. Bryson, Del.Supr., 403 A.2d 711 (1979). There, we upheld the Department’s regulatory authority over the siting of residential structures on privately-owned beachland in Delaware. Protestants acknowledge the Department’s authority to grant a siting permit to Poms; they defer to the Department’s expertise over such matters; and they concede the presumption of regularity and validity of the Department’s decisions. Protestants’ argument is simply that the Secretary’s findings in support of issuance of the permit were insufficient as a matter of law—for failure to reflect concern for the neighboring property owners and to provide assurances that they will be protected. Protestants refer to the policy statement within the Regulations and that portion thereof providing:

These Regulations are promulgated primarily for the protection of property owners behind such protective dunes and for the prevention of destruction to property of persons intending to build on such dunes.

Protestants construe that statement to mean that the Department’s “first duty” in a siting permit proceeding is to protect the property owners behind the coastal dunes and as entitling existing landward property owners to assurance of protection of their properties against loss or damage from the Secretary’s actions. We cannot agree either with protestants’ construction of the record or of the Regulations’ objectives.

The record includes an agreement between the Department and the lot owner setting forth design requirements as to elevation of the structure on pilings to withstand storm damage. The record also includes testimony and findings by the Secretary that the construction plans provide for “adequate protection against the design storm.” In our view, such findings satisfied Regulation 4.02 and thereby complied with the policy statement’s concern for nearby property owners. The Regulations do not require more.

As we stated in Atlantis, supra, “the primary purpose of Section 4.02 is to insure that all new construction on the beach is capable of withstanding the inevitably damaging storms of the future [in the] requirement that the construction provide ‘adequate protection against the design storm’ .... ” 403 A.2d at 716. Compliance with § 4.02 provides neighboring properties the protection called for under the policy statement. The Secretary committed no error of law.

B.

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425 A.2d 610, 1981 Del. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olney-v-cooch-del-1981.