Reynolds v. County of Volusia
This text of 659 So. 2d 1186 (Reynolds v. County of Volusia) 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
Shirley A. REYNOLDS, Robert J. Reynolds, Margaret D. Painter, George L. Painter, Robert Lee Walters, Patricia J. Rosinko and John J. Rosinko, Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
v.
COUNTY OF VOLUSIA, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
J. Christy Wilson, III and Lisa M. Connell, Wilson, Leavitt & Small, P.A., Orlando, for appellants/cross-appellees.
Daniel D. Eckert, County Atty., and Jamie E. Seaman, Asst. County Atty., Deland, Jonathan D. Kaney, Jr., Cobb, Cole & Bell, Daytona Beach, for appellee/cross-appellant.
W. SHARP, Judge.
Appellants contest the trial court's amended final judgment which denied their counterclaim for inverse condemnation, and Volusia County, appellee, cross-appeals the judgment on the ground that the trial court improperly determined ownership of the fee to the disputed beach area. The trial court held a non-jury trial and took extensive testimony. We affirm the result of the trial court's judgment for the reasons stated herein.
This lawsuit originated in a dispute between Volusia County and various owners of *1187 lots in the Coronado Beach Subdivision (Shirley and Robert Reynolds, Margaret and George Painter, Patricia and John Rosinko, and Robert Lee Walters), which is located in the City of New Smyrna Beach, in Volusia County. These lot owners own lots in Blocks 1 and 2 which face the beach, and they regard themselves as having acquired the fee to the beach, and all appurtenant littoral or riparian rights, after streets fronting the beach were vacated by the City. They asserted these rights by writing a letter to Volusia County, asking that it cease using their beach-shore property for concession parking and recreational use.
The County filed a declaratory judgment suit, naming the lot owners as defendants. It sought clarification of its powers to regulate and control the public use of the sandy-beach area seaward of the permanent vegetation line, extending to the mean high tide water mark, pursuant to the Volusia County Home Rule Charter[1] and the Unified Beach Code.[2] The lot owners responded by filing a counterclaim requesting an injunction to restrict public use of the sandy beach in front of their lots, or, in the alternative, a claim for the inverse condemnation of their property. The area in dispute in this lawsuit is the sandy beach seaward of the respective lot owners' properties, west of the mean high water tide line of the Atlantic Ocean, and east of the permanent vegetation line, which runs along the dunes.[3]
The County asserted that there was no taking, either by powers of eminent domain *1188 or inverse condemnation, because the lot owners in this case acquired no fee interest in the sandy beach area since they had record title only to their specific lots. The County also argued the public had acquired customary rights to use the sandy beach area for driving, parking and recreation stemming from "ancient" and constant usage by the general public.
The lot owners conceded that by virtue of custom and usage, the public had a right to use the sandy beach area for recreation, but they claimed driving and parking private vehicles and concession stands were not part of those ancient customary rights. Their claim to the fee beneath the sandy-beach area, with appurtenant littoral rights, is based on C.F. Austin's title to the property, which apparently ran to the high water mark of the Atlantic Ocean.
Austin recorded the following plat of Coronado Beach in 1889, a part of which is reproduced below.
The plat purports to run seaward to the low tide mark. But all parties acknowledge that the State of Florida owns the beach area below the mean high tide line.
The plat shows three rows of blocks, divided into lots. The most westerly tier of lots is separated from the interior blocks by a relatively wide street labeled "Rail Road Street." It runs north and south. There are several short cross streets intersecting the blocks, labeled 1st Street, 2d Street, etc., which run east to west. Blocks One and Two, where the lots owned by the owners in this lawsuit are located, are in the most easterly tier of blocks. To the east of these lots, and immediately seaward, the plat shows a narrow alley-way, labeled Wagon Road, which runs north and south. The lines in front of the lots establishing Wagon Road are solid.
Seaward of the lots involved in this lawsuit, and beyond Wagon Road, the plat shows a space which is boarded on the west by Wagon Road and on the east, by double wavy lines, indicating the tide line. The short cross streets south of 3d Street open into this space on their east ends. Within this space lies the sandy beach area in dispute in this lawsuit. Written on the plat in this space appears the following language:
*1189 BEACH STREET
300 to 400 feet wide
All of the Beach from the East foot of the sand dunes to the low water mark is hereby dedicated to the public for a highway.
The lot owners established that in 1980, the City abandoned Wagon Road. In 1983, the City passed an ordinance which purported to abandon Beach Street. The published notice read: "An ordinance vacating a street known as Beach Street." The City Commission found that it was in the City's best interest to "vacate said street." Thus, the lot owners reasoned, when the two streets fronting on their lots were vacated, they obtained the underlying fee running to the high tide line, with all appurtenant littoral rights.[4]
In a lengthy opinion, the trial court held that the lot owners obtained the fee simple title underlying Wagon Road and Beach Street. However, the court denied the lot owners any remedy in this case for two reasons. First, it determined the City did not properly abandon Beach Street because it failed to give notice to the State of Florida, an abutting landowner, citing Bhoola v. City of St. Augustine Beach, 588 So.2d 666 (Fla. 5th DCA 1991). All parties recognized and agreed the State owns the wet sandy beach area east of the mean high tide line, which was the east line of the area shown on the plat as Beach Street. The ordinance procedure required that notice be sent to all abutting landowners, and, because the State was apparently not sent notice, the court concluded that no public rights to use the Beach Street area had been vacated. Second, the court determined that the general public had acquired customary rights of usage over the sandy beach area, and that the County's regulation of such public use, pursuant to the Unified Beach Code, was reasonable.
We do not reach the question of whether the ordinance vacating Beach Street was void for lack of notice to the State, and thus whether Bhoola v. St. Augustine Beach and Daytona Leisure Corp. v. The City of Daytona Beach, 539 So.2d 597 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989) should be applied in this case, because we do not think the lot owners ever obtained a fee interest in the beach area. If they have neither a fee interest nor littoral rights[5] in the area marked Beach Street, no taking under the law of eminent domain occurred. That should end their inverse condemnation counterclaim. Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d 798 (1992).
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
659 So. 2d 1186, 1995 WL 490554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-county-of-volusia-fladistctapp-1995.