Zabel v. PINELLAS CTY. WATER & NAV. CONTROL AUTH.

154 So. 2d 181
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 17, 1963
Docket2935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 154 So. 2d 181 (Zabel v. PINELLAS CTY. WATER & NAV. CONTROL AUTH.) 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
Zabel v. PINELLAS CTY. WATER & NAV. CONTROL AUTH., 154 So. 2d 181 (Fla. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

154 So.2d 181 (1963)

Alfred G. ZABEL and David H. Russell In re Bulkhead, Dredge and Fill Application No. 80, Appellants,
v.
PINELLAS COUNTY WATER AND NAVIGATION CONTROL AUTHORITY, Appellee.

No. 2935.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

May 17, 1963.
Rehearing Denied June 14, 1963.

*182 Ed W. Harris, St. Petersburg, for appellants.

Page S. Jackson, Clearwater, for appellee Pinellas County Water and Navigation Control Authority.

Byron T. Sauls of Fisher, Sauls, Fisher, Anderson & Adcock, St. Petersburg, amicus curiae.

KANNER, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants, Alfred G. Zabel and David H. Russell, petitioned the Pinellas County Water and Navigation Control Authority, defendant-appellee, pursuant to section 253.122, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., and chapter 31,182, Special Acts, 1955, Laws of Florida, requesting that it fix a bulkhead line and grant them a dredge and fill permit for approximately 11.5 acres of bottom land in Boca Ciega Bay. An examiner appointed by the Authority recommended denial of appellants' application. Appellants filed exceptions; and, upon their appeal to the Authority, the examiner's findings of fact and recommendations were confirmed.

After subsequent petition for rehearing had been denied, recourse was had to the Circuit Court of Pinellas County, Florida. First, the cause was heard on the merits, with a view of the site being had by the judge in the presence of the respective counsel; then there was a hearing upon the subject of whether or not appellants were precluded from attacking the constitutionality of the laws mentioned. By final decree, the court held the Authority to have been correct in its confirmance and found additionally that appellants had elected their remedy and had estopped themselves from urging unconstitutionality of the acts under which they were at the same time *183 seeking relief. In view of the latter holding, no hearing was had by the trial judge nor ruling made upon the subject of constitutionality. The appeal from the final decree deals both with the adjudication on the merits and with the constitutional aspects as these were treated by the court below.

We consider at the outset that portion of the circuit court's decretal determination dealing with the merits of the cause.

Appellants are owners and operators of a large trailer park situated on upland property comprising approximately 15.8 acres of land along the shore of Boca Ciega Bay. The proposed fill originally was for approximately 15.8 acres. During the course of the hearings, appellants amended their plan so that there would be a fill of around 11.5 acres and so that there would be an opening of some seventy feet and a bridge connecting the fill with the upland. Purpose of the proposed fill was for extension of the trailer park to create additional water front lots for trailers and to provide sufficient depth surrounding the area for access of the trailer park occupants by boat to the deep water channel of the west coast intra-coastal waterway in Boca Ciega Bay. The bottom land to be filled and the land from which the fill was to be taken are owned by appellants. Considerable filling and dredging had previously been accomplished along neighboring portions of Boca Ciega Bay; and before the enactment of the law as to dredging and filling, appellants had already made one fill and established a sea wall along it.

The examiner, appointed by the Authority personally surveyed on several occasions the proposed development site, both by automobile and by boat. He also spent several days conducting hearings and taking testimony. During the course of the proceedings, certain expert witnesses testified on behalf of appellants, while 200 objectors represented by 15 witnesses resisted issuance of the permit.

Evidence presented by appellants had as its primary objective justification of their project through showing that it conformed to the eight requisites specified by section 8(e) of chapter 31,182.[1] Thus, they sought to demonstrate both that no material adverse effects would accrue through execution of their plan and that there would be certain positive benefits. Motion pictures taken personally by appellants depicted the unsightly condition of their own bottom land as compared to adjoining portions of the water front, which were shown to be in use for fishing and other recreational pursuits.

The gist of the expert testimony, that of a marine biologist and two professional engineers, was that, because of sparse bottom vegetation and resultant dearth of marine life in the area, the proposed dredging and filling would not be detrimental in this regard; that the plan would not result in stagnant pockets, silting or shoaling of channels, erosion, or obstruction of tidal flow and that the project would *184 aid water transportation, boating, use of waterways and navigable waters and would protect upland owners from storm damage. There were admissions that a more abundant amount of water ebbing and flowing over the bottom is healthful for fish, that diminution of it might have helped reduce vegetation, that more filling could result in more damage to marine life, that previous fills had reduced the tidal prism, which could also be reduced further by the proposed plan, with a consequent lessening of the amount of water ebbing and flowing, and that navigation would be detoured about 2,300 feet by the purported changes. Additionally, there was the acknowledgment by one of the engineering experts that, since the extensive filling has eventuated in the area, the shoaling in Blind Pass has been more pronounced and that the water from the fill area proposed would go out Blind Pass. Two of the expert witnesses voiced the opinion that so much damage had been done by previous fills that little more could ensue.

In opposition, the witnesses for the objectors interposed vigorous and uniform protests against the permit, based upon the premise that its execution would complete the existing damage which had already been done to fishing, bathing, beach, and scenic qualities of the subject area of Boca Ciega Bay as these affect the livability, enjoyment, and freedom from various asserted adverse effects. The general tenor of their statements was that these once beautiful and pleasant surroundings for living and recreational pursuits had steadily deteriorated as various portions along the bay front had been filled and dredged, with attendant disappearance of marine life, fouling of the beaches, water, and air, restriction of navigation, obstruction of the passage of free water, slowing of the tidal flow, and depreciation in value of residential properties.

At the close of all hearings, receipt of evidence and other data, the examiner submitted his findings and recommendations. From the testimony and his personal inspections, he found the applicants had failed to establish that the proposed plan would have no adverse effect on use of the waters of Pinellas County for transportation, recreational or other public purposes, flow of water or tidal currents, erosion and shoaling of channels in the area affected and had further failed to establish there would be no adverse monetary or other effect upon the uplands surrounding or necessarily affected by the plan.

Principally, the appellants urge that the Authority acted upon the report of the examiner based upon a finding of insufficient evidence to establish the statutory conditions necessary for issuance of a permit. Chapter 31,182, they assert, provides for refusal of the permit only where it is shown the proposed fill will have a material adverse effect.

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154 So. 2d 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zabel-v-pinellas-cty-water-nav-control-auth-fladistctapp-1963.