South Lake Worth Inlet Dist. v. Ocean Ridge

633 So. 2d 79
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
Docket90-3253, 90-3261 and 90-3265
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 633 So. 2d 79 (South Lake Worth Inlet Dist. v. Ocean Ridge) 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
South Lake Worth Inlet Dist. v. Ocean Ridge, 633 So. 2d 79 (Fla. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

633 So.2d 79 (1994)

SOUTH LAKE WORTH INLET DISTRICT, Appellant,
v.
TOWN OF OCEAN RIDGE; Inlet Plaza Condominium, Inc.; McCormick Mile Beach Club, Inc.; and State of Florida Department of Natural Resources, Appellees.
TOWN OF MANALAPAN; Thomas J. Kelly; Dirk Brady as Trustee; Peter Blum and Maureen Blum, his wife; and L.C. Paslay and Aileen H. Paslay, Appellants,
v.
TOWN OF OCEAN RIDGE; Inlet Plaza Condominium, Inc.; McCormick Mile Beach Club, Inc.; and State of Florida Department of Natural Resources, Appellees.
PALM BEACH COUNTY, Appellant,
v.
TOWN OF OCEAN RIDGE; Inlet Plaza Condominium, Inc.; McCormick Mile Beach Club, Inc.; and State of Florida Department of Natural Resources, Appellees.

Nos. 90-3253, 90-3261 and 90-3265.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

February 23, 1994.
Clarification/Modification Denied March 18, 1994.

*80 John Beranek of Aurell, Radey, Hinkle, & Thomas, Tallahassee, and James McC. Wearn of James McCartney Wearn, P.A., West Palm Beach, for South Lake Worth Inlet Dist.

Jane Kreusler-Walsh and Randy D. Ellsion of Jane Kreusler-Walsh, P.A., H. Laurence Cooper, Jr., of Brackett, Cook, Sned, Welch, Hewitt, D'Angio & Tucker, and John C. Randolph of Jones, Foster, Johnston & Stubbs, P.A., West Palm Beach, for Town of Manalapan, Thomas J. Kelly, Dirk Brady, Peter Blum, Maureen Blum, L.C. Paslay and Aileen H. Paslay.

*81 Christopher D. Mauriello, Sharron M. Pitts and Jacqueline S. Miller, Asst. County Attys., West Palm Beach, for Palm Beach County.

David P. Ackerman, Scott J. Link and Roy E. Fitzgerald of Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart, P.A., and Paul J. Nicoletti and Phyllis S. Block of Paul J. Nicoletti, P.A., West Palm Beach, for Town of Ocean Ridge, Inlet Plaza Condominium Inc., and McCormick Mile Beach Club Inc.

Kenneth J. Plante, Gen. Counsel, and Eugene E. McClellan, Jr., Deputy Gen. Counsel, Tallahassee, for State of Florida Dept. of Natural Resources.

Clifton A. McClelland of Potter, McClelland, Marks & Healy, P.A., Melbourne, for amicus curiae Sebastian Inlet Tax Dist.

FARMER, Judge.

We have at hand three separate appeals from the same judgment, all of which emanate from the same trial before the same circuit judge. Because his judgment as to each appellant is founded wholly on the same core of operative facts, we consolidate these appeals and decide them together. Moreover, as our opinion will make clear, there is a single legal error which we conclude requires a reversal as to all parties.

The subject of the case is sand. Or, more precisely, it is the erosion of sand from the beaches around the Boynton Inlet.[1] The Town of Ocean Ridge [Ocean Ridge], a small coastal municipality just south of the Inlet, complained essentially that institutional decisions have resulted in undue erosion of its beaches. It alleged that the design and operation of a sand transfer plant at the Inlet have caused its beaches to lose more sand than nature would have otherwise contrived. Initially, Ocean Ridge sued the South Lake Worth Inlet District [District] and Palm Beach County [County]. District operates the sand transfer plant at the Inlet under an agreement with County.

Later, Ocean Ridge added the State Department of Natural Resources [DNR], the administrative agency that had given a permit to the District to operate a sand transfer plant at the Inlet, and sought to enjoin DNR to order District and County to effect the cure. The Town of Manalapan [Manalapan], a small coastal municipality just north of the Inlet concerned that any cure might adversely affect its own beaches, was allowed to intervene. Eventually, the court also permitted several nearby residents to join the litigation as intervenors on one side or the other.

In the final judgment we review today, the court denied the petition by Ocean Ridge and the others, as interested persons, to compel or enforce agency action under section 120.69(1)(b). On the other hand, however, the court agreed with Ocean Ridge and its allies that its beaches were not receiving contemplated protection from the effects of erosion resulting from the presence of the Inlet. The court fashioned a comprehensive order for relief, including restoration of the beaches, modifications to a sand transfer plant operating at the Inlet, changes in one of the jetties, and monitoring of the maintenance of area beaches.

District, County and Manalapan appeal these rulings. District argues that DNR has primary jurisdiction over this dispute, such that the court's assertion of jurisdiction violates the separation of powers doctrine; that the court improperly applied the 1987 amendment to section 161.142; that the operation of the state regulated and permitted sand transfer facility cannot possibly be a nuisance as a matter of law; and that the relief imposed is impossible to perform. County argues that it owed no duty to any plaintiff that could be a subject of injunctive relief, and that the court's decision is an impermissible entanglement with an executive branch discretionary function. Manalapan appeals the court's denial of relief on the claim filed by the Town and several of its citizens contending that the operation of the sand transfer plant by the District and County had taken an undue amount of sand from its shores. It joins in all of the issues raised *82 by District and County, and adds for itself that the evidence was insufficient to show that the downdrift shoreline has been changed, and that the claims are barred by the statute of limitations or laches. Ocean Ridge crossappeals the court's finding that no permit violation occurred.

Having sifted through the issues and argument, we find one contention that proves in our judgment to be dispositive. It concerns the companion concepts of primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of administrative remedies, which are in turn bound up with constitutional limitations on the separation of powers. To be sure, appellate application in this case of these well recognized concepts is clouded by the course of events below, the most disturbing of which is the position taken by the very agency whose primary jurisdiction was willingly avoided.

In 1915 Lake Worth was a landlocked, fresh water lake polluted by the regular deposit of waste from adjoining communities established along its shores. It was thus to address the problem of this pollution that the legislature in that year created the District. It was empowered "to construct and thereafter to maintain an inlet or waterway connecting the waters of Lake Worth with the Atlantic Ocean, at a convenient and proper place." Ch. 7080, § 5, Laws of Fla. (1915).[2]

On the eastern coast (Atlantic) of Florida, sand drifts along the shoreline in alternating directions. Averaged over a typical year, however, there is a net littoral drift southward. That is to say, although the direction of the drift of sand shifts from north to south with the changing of the winds and seasons, the southward drift predominates. The north edge of the Inlet was thus constructed to extend a jetty into the ocean for a distance much greater than the south jetty.

Hence, the north jetty interrupts this natural littoral southward drift, the effect of which is to cause sand to build up along the length of the north jetty. Correspondingly it tends also to accelerate the process of erosion on the beaches to the immediate south.

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Bluebook (online)
633 So. 2d 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-lake-worth-inlet-dist-v-ocean-ridge-fladistctapp-1994.