Surf Works, LLC and Nadime Karan Kowkabany v. City Of Jacksonville Beach

230 So. 3d 925
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 8, 2017
DocketCASE NO. 1D16-3312
StatusPublished

This text of 230 So. 3d 925 (Surf Works, LLC and Nadime Karan Kowkabany v. City Of Jacksonville Beach) 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
Surf Works, LLC and Nadime Karan Kowkabany v. City Of Jacksonville Beach, 230 So. 3d 925 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

B.L. THOMAS, C.J.

Petitioners Surf Works, L.L.C. and Na-dime Karan Kowkabany petition this court for a writ of certiorari to quash the circuit court’s decision upholding Respondent Jacksonville Beach’s denial of Petitioners’ application for rezoning. Because the circuit court applied the incorrect law, which departed from the essential requirements of the law, we grant the petition.

Background

In 2014, Petitioners filed a rezoning application seeking to rezone the classification of property in Jacksonville Beach from Central Business District to Redevelopment District (“RD”). The property was the site of Mango’s Beach Bar and Grille, which Petitioners intended to redevelop into a mixed-use. facility of office and retail space, with the majority of the proposed development devoted to a two-story bar named “Surfer—the Bar.” Petitioners envisioned their proposed bar as becoming a destination for surfers and surf enthusiasts.

Petitioners’ application for rezoning specifically stated their intention to locate the proposed bar within 500 feet of two other alcoholic beverage establishments, contrary to Respondent’s Land Development Code (“Code”). (Mango’s Bar had been grandfathered into the location.) Petitioners acknowledged that their proposed bar was inconsistent with the provisions of section 34-407 of the Code, which imposed additional requirements for outdoor bars and restaurants, but noted their proposed deviations were permissible under the flexible RD zoning process. Under the Code, the expressed purpose of this RD zoning district is to

achieve a diversity of uses in a desirable environment through the application of jflexible land development standards and to foster creative design and planning practices in the Jacksonville Beach Downtown Redevelopment Area in order to encourage economic vitality and redevelopment, pursuant to the objectives of the Jacksonville Beach Community Redevelopment Plan.

Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-347(a) (2015) (emphasis added).

This section of the Code outlines the procedure that must be followed to receive an RD zoning district classification. Specifically, it requires land to “receive approval of a preliminary development plan pursuant to the procedures and standards” of section 34-347(e). Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-347(c)(l). To obtain this approval, an applicant must submit a proposed preliminary development plan to Respondent’s Planning and Development Director. Once the application is determined to be sufficient, it is further reviewed by Respondent’s Redevelopment Agency and Planning Commission, which recommends either approval, approval with conditions, or denial. The application and recommendations are then forwarded to the city council for a public hearing for final action on the preliminary development plan “pursuant to the standards in section ' 3$Si7(c)(3)(i).” Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-347(e)(3)(h.)(2.) (emphasis added).

If the city council votes to approve the preliminary development plan, “[ijssuance of a development order for [the] preliminary development plan for'an RD zoning district classification shall constitute an amendment to the official zoning map to RD zoning district.” Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-347(c)(3)(k.) (emphasis added),-

Petitioners’ application was reviewed once by Respondent’s Planning Commission arid twice by Respondent’s ’Community Redevelopment Agency under section 34-347(c) of the Code, and both' bodies recommended approval of the application.1 There was no indication that any additional provisions of the Code were factored into the review. Also significant here, Respondent’s Senior Planner noted that while Petitioners’ proposed development departed from the conventional zoning, criteria of sections 34-393 and 34-407(b), those “characteristics [wejre allowed to be addressed and modified from the normal standards as part of the RD zoning process, .which was created to allow flexibility from traditional standards in .an effort to. encourage redevelopment-activity in the Downtown Redevelopment Area.” Memoranda from Bill Mann, Senior Planner, Dep’t of Planning & Dev., to George D. Forbes, City Manager (July 7,2014; Sept. 9,2014).

Petitioners first presented their rezoning application to the city council on July 21, 2014. The mayor announced that Petitioners’ application would be considered pursuant to the standards of section 34-211 of the Code, which governed zoning atlas and code amendments. One of the standards contained 'in section 34-211(c) required ' the city council to ' consider whether the proposed rezoning conflicted with any other portion of the Code. Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-211(c)(2) (2016). During the hearing, concerns were raised by citizens, the mayor, and city council members about Petitioners’ application and its inconsistencies with the Code. Petitioners were given a chance to work on the comments received from the city council, and another hearing was scheduled.

■ - At-the second hearing, the mayor again announced that Petitioners’ application would be considered pursuant to the standards contained in section 34-211. Petitioners asserted that significant efforts had been made to improve the application. Following substantial public comment, the city council ultimately voted to deny Pétition-ers’ rezoning application, citing concerns that the location was unsuitable. The city council stated that Petitioners' application was denied for four reasons, including: 1) its conflict with section 34-393, which requires a 500-foot separation between alcoholic beverage establishments; and 2) its conflict with section 34-407(b), which limits the amount of outdoor seating allowable for outdoor restaurants and bars. Both .of these grounds were acknowledged in Petitioners’ application, which, as noted above, sought approval under section 34-347(c)(3)(i.). '

Petitioners then filed a petition in the circuit court seeking certiorari review of the city council’s decision. Petitioners alleged that the city council’s decision was not supported by competent, substantial evidence and that the city council applied the wrong provisions of the Code in denying the application, and as such, departed from the essential requirements of law. Petitioners argued that their application was subject to the requirements of section 34-347 of the Code, which governs the RD zoning district.

Section 34—347(c) (3) (h.) (2.) provides: “After the public hearing, the city council shall approve, approve with conditions, or deny the application pursuant to the standards in section 8i-S47(c)(3)(i).” Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Code § 34-347(c)(3)(h.)(2.) (emphasis added). Petitioners argue here, as below, that this provision restricted the city council’s consideration solely to the criteria of section 34-347(c)(3)(i.), and because sections 34-393 and 34-407 were not expressly included in that criteria, the city council applied the incorrect law in relying on Petitioners’ noncompliance with those sections as a basis for denying their application.

In denying the petition below, the circuit court ruled that Petitioners’ RD zoning district application was governed by sections 34-201 through 34-211, As. stated above, one of the-factors listed in section 34-2U(c) requires the city .council to consider whether a . proposed zoning amendment conflicts with any portion of the Code.

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Bluebook (online)
230 So. 3d 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surf-works-llc-and-nadime-karan-kowkabany-v-city-of-jacksonville-beach-fladistctapp-2017.