Alachua Land Investors, LLC (ALI), appeals a final judgment entered in favor of City of Gainesville (City) on ALI’s action for inverse condemnation. ALI contends that the trial court’s ruling on ripeness constitutes error as a matter of law because ALI filed a meaningful application and obtained a final decision from the City. Given ALI’s failure to satisfy the ripeness requirement, we affirm.
I. Facts and Procedural History
ALI does not seek review of the trial court’s findings of fact. This action arose from the City’s denial of plat approval for the final development phase of the 300-acre Blues Creek residential subdivision owned by Larry and Bonnie Ross, through ALI. ALI and its predecessor developed this property over the years in a series of units and phases. The specific property involved in this litigation comprises 127 acres, thirty-seven of which ALI intended for residential development of Unit Five, Phases Two and Three. These two phases represent the last remaining stages of the
The Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD) permitted the ninety-acre conservation area for retention of surface water from the surrounding land. A third-party environmental group brought an administrative challenge to the conservation area permit, which resulted in a June 1988 negotiated settlement agreement between the landowner (ALI’s owner) and the environmental group. The SRWMD accepted the terms of the settlement agreement as an amendment to the permit. The settlement agreement includes the following land-use restrictions:
There shall be no construction or disturbance of the conservation area pre-or post-development, nor any developed recreation built in the conservation area, except for nature trails, walkover structures and gazebos which retain the land predominantly in its natural, scenic and wooded condition; or minor works necessary to control erosion or assure dispersion (sheetflow) of runoff entering the conservation area provided they are out of or at the boundary of the conservation area.
(emphasis added). This language appears in the Master Plan in substantially the same form. Additionally, under general notes, the Master Plan mandates that a fifty-foot construction buffer be provided on both sides of the Blues Creek center-line.
The Master Plan is a part of the existing zoning regulations governing ALI’s property. A city ordinance requires a plat application to conform with existing zoning requirements. Under the City’s ordinances, the City Commission is the only Gainesville governmental body that can grant final approval to a subdivision plat application. In its prior applications for proposed Phases Two and Three of Unit Five, ALI never proceeded through the full administrative process. Petition 76SUB was the first and only plat application that ALI submitted to the City Commission for a review and a vote on the request for design approval of these two phases. The petition indicated that a sanitary sewer line was projected to go through the ninety-acre conservation area for approximately 300 feet and across Blues Creek itself. Given the fact that ALI’s owner was directly involved in the negotiations that led to the settlement agreement, ALI knew of the land-use restrictions governing “construction or disturbance of the conservation area.”
In May 2008, the City Commission voted 5-2 to deny the petition. ALI filed an inverse condemnation action alleging a partial regulatory taking by the City in the denial of plat approval. The trial court found that the nature and location of the proposed sewer line violates the settlement agreement and is inconsistent with existing zoning regulations. The court determined that some evidence adduced at trial had addressed alternatives to the proposed sewer line across the conservation area. One alternative was a lift station, albeit at greater expense. Another option was to convert the eight lots (constituting Phase Three of Unit Five) into an “estate lot” served by a septic tank, subject to approval of a variance. Because ALI neither
II. Law
The Fifth Amendment prevents the taking of private property for public use without just compensation and applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. See U.S. Const. amend. V. & XIV; Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
ALI presented an as-applied challenge. “Any analysis in an as-applied regulatory taking claim must start with the threshold question of ripeness.... ” Riviera Beach v. Shillingburg,
Another component of ripeness is finality. In the seminal decision in Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
[ A] claim that the application of government regulations effects a taking of a property interest is not ripe until the government entity charged with implementing the regulations has reached a final decision regarding the applicationof the regulations to the property at issue.
Id. at 186. This requirement of finality “applies to decisions about how a takings plaintiffs own land may be used,” and it reflects “the high degree of discretion characteristically possessed by land-use boards in softening the strictures of the general regulations they administer.” Suitum v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency,
No bright-line test exists for determining how far the landowner must go in challenging the limits of allowable development under the regulations. See Williamson Cnty.,
It is a fair summary of the law that in “takings” eases involving permit denials and other land use restrictions, the landowner must meet the difficult burden of establishing that: (1) the regulation denies substantially all economically beneficial or productive use of the land; (2) alternative uses were applied for and conclusively denied by the regulatory body; and (3) at least one meaningful application has been filed under the existing regulations.
To satisfy the threshold ripeness test, ALI must demonstrate that Petition 76SUB was a meaningful application, that the City reached a final decision, and that the submission of an additional application for plat design approval would be meaningless and futile. With these legal principles in mind, we review de novo the trial court’s application of the law to the factual findings in determining that ALI’s claim is not yet legally ripe for consideration on the merits. See Lost Tree Vill. Corp. v. Vero Beach,
III. Analysis
ALI argues that the claim is ripe because a landowner is not required to submit more than one meaningful application. ALI contends that Petition 76SUB was a meaningful application, that the City made a final decision in denying the petition, and that any additional plat design application or revision would not change the City’s determination that a sanitary sewer line crossing the conservation area violates existing zoning regulations. Therefore, further applications would have been futile.
Given the existing zoning regulations, ALI’s request to construct a sewer pipe through the conservation area and across the creek was bound to fail. The petition was not a meaningful application, for it denied the City an opportunity to exercise its full discretion in determining how ALI can implement the development plans for Phases Two and Three. See Palazzolo,
ALI took an inflexible, all-or-nothing approach in seeking approval of Petition 76SUB. The plat application presented no alternative design plan, nor did ALI seek to revise the application after the City’s vote. “Land use planning is not an all-or-nothing proposition.” MacDonald, Sommer & Frates,
The posture of this case is similar to the circumstances in Tinnerman v. Palm Beach County,
Affirming the trial court’s conclusion that the claim was not yet ripe, the Fourth District Court recognized that the landowners had sought neither a modification nor a variance, even though the applicable
Similarly, the City Commission’s vote denying Petition 76SUB lacked the requisite finality to render this case ripe for review on the merits. As in Tinnerman, the question of what the City Commission would have done if ALI had proposed any alternatives remains open. At the City Commission hearing, a representative of the City (Ms. Massey) opined that what ALI was proposing in its plat design application is inconsistent with the land uses allowed in the Master Plan. To change it, ALI would have to submit a plan development amendment. Commissioner Lowe voiced similar concerns about whether the application is consistent with the Master Plan. Commissioner Donovan opined that ALI seemed to have developmental rights if it “would only develop a plan” acknowledging certain requirements. Donovan agreed with other commissioners to “give [ALI] a second chance.” Commissioner Henry expressed discomfort with completely voting down the plat application, suggesting instead that ALI consult with the City to determine what was needed “to make this work” and allow ALI to come back with a feasible plan. Commissioner Bryant urged ALI to continue working with the City in seeking to resolve the land-use issues. Mayor Hanrahan addressed possible redesign options upon the City’s disapproval of Petition 76SUB, so that ALI could return to the City for reconsideration without the usual, prolonged delays.
The clear message of a majority of the City’s ultimate land-use decision-makers was that they wanted to reach a mutually agreeable resolution of ALI’s ultimate development plans. It is also noteworthy that the developers of the Blues Creek subdivision have enjoyed a successful, long-term working relationship with the City. See Lost Tree Vill. Corp.,
ALI relies in part on Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
On certiorari, the United States Supreme Court noted that nothing in the record indicated that the state would have accepted the permit application had the proposed beach club occupied a smaller surface area, given the state’s interpretation of the governing regulations as barring Palazzolo from engaging in any filling or development activity whatsoever on the property. Id. at 620-21. As no additional application was needed to clarify the extent of development permitted by the wetlands regulations, Palazzolo had no further obligation to pursue his claim before the agency, and the issue was ripe for judicial review. Id. at 621-22; cf. Lucas,
This is not the situation in the case before us. ALI wanted to develop the final residential stages of the Blues Creek subdivision on thirty-seven acres. The landowner acknowledged that the ninety-acre conservation parcel is the most environmentally sensitive area of the property. During the extended time period when ALI was working with the City to develop this final phase, the parties discussed viable alternatives to running a sanitary sewer pipe through the conservation area. In Palazzolo, however, the owners’ property was almost entirely salt marshland. No alternatives were available because Palaz-zolo’s multiple proposals would have required substantial fill on the protected land, a use that the state absolutely prohibited. In contrast, ALI’s ultimate goal is to build residences on acreage outside the environmentally protected conservation area. Because ALI pursued only one course and failed to address any other previously discussed options, the record supports the trial court’s determination
Like the landowners in Tinnerman v. Palm Beach County, ALI has not given the City a meaningful opportunity to fully exercise its discretion. See MacDonald, Sommer & Frates,
The parties agree that ALI had to submit at least one meaningful plat application and receive a clear, definitive final decision from the City before this claim would be ripe for judicial review. See Shillingburg,
Because the facts and law support the trial court’s conclusion on ripeness, we AFFIRM the final judgment. Given our holding on this threshold jurisdictional issue, we do not address the trial court’s discussion of the merits of this case.
