This is an appeal from the Dubois Circuit Court and the determination there that certain provisions of Indiana's version of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act ("SMCRA"), I.C. 13-4.1-1-1, et seq., and regulations promulgated thereunder, 310 I.A.C. 12-2-1, et seq., as applied by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources to land owned by Huntingburg Machinery & Equipment Rental, Inc. ("HUMER") amounted to an unconstitutional taking under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Under Appellate Rule 4(A)(8), this Court has exclusive jurisdiction to hear cases in which a statute has been declared unconstitutional, and because of the important constitutional issues involved, transfer is granted.
The land at issue, owned by HUMER, is currently being farmed but sits atop three seams containing approximately 1.587 mil-Hon tons of mineable coal. In a small, 6.57 acre portion of the land, sitting on top of approximately 55,200 tons of coal, lies what has become known as the Bechunter Site, an archaeologically significant area, rich in cultural deposits with substantial historic and scientific value. The Beehunter Site's importance stems from the fact that below the plow zone it contains a substantially intact "midden," with artifacts from four distinct cultural periods of occupation, which would allow anthropologists to make cross-cultural comparisons of different adaptations to the same environmental *1002 niche. The site was nominated and found eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. 51 Fed.Reg. 6677 (1986).
The Wabash Valley Archaeological Society, Inc. ("Wabash Valley") petitioned the Department of Natural Resources ("DNR") to have the site designated as an area unsuitable for surface coal mining under I.C. 13-4.1-14-2. The director of DNR may declare an area unsuitable for surface coal mining if the coal mining operation will "affect fragile and historic lands in which the operation could result in significant damage to important historic, cultural, scientific, and esthetic values and natural systems." I.C. 13-4.1-14-4. A public hearing was held and on November 19, 1985, pursuant to this provision and Wabash Valley's petition, the director made an initial determination that Beehunter was an area unsuitable for surface coal mining. By this time the Indiana Coal Council ("Coal Council") and the Council for the Conservation of Indiana Archaeology ("CCIA") had entered the proceedings. The Coal Council and HUMER filed timely objections and a bearing was held on December 19, 1985, pursuant to I.C. 4-22-1-12 (repealed 1986). A final order was issued by the director of the DNR on January 3, 1986 designating the Beehunter Site unsuitable for surface coal mining.
As part of his final order, the director included a mitigation plan which provided a means by which the designation of "area unsuitable" could be removed. It calls for a program of site testing and data recovery conducted by an archaeological contractor approved by DNR. The plan does not require HUMER to carry out the plan, to expend any money, or to convey any property or property right to the State. It affects no existing contractual rights. In fact, the designation does not prevent HUMER from continuing to farm the land, nor from mining virtually all of the coal under its farmland, so long as the coal that lies underneath the 6.57 acre Beehunter Site is extracted by means other than strip mining, a process which would destroy the archaeological information contained in the site. For these reasons, and those delineated below, we hold that the director's order, designating the Bechunter Site as an area unsuitable for surface coal mining and providing a mitigation plan by which the designation may be removed, does not amount to an unconstitutional taking of property.
The Fifth Amendment provides that "Ino] private pzoperty [shall] be taken for public use, without just compensation," and, of course, applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. This seemingly simple mandate has become increasingly difficult to apply as the complexities of modern life have necessitated a wide variety of land use regulations. More than sixty years ago, Justice Holmes recognized that "[glovernment hardly could go on if to some extent values incident to property could not be diminished without paying for every such change in the general law," Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
However, we are not without guidance in this area. Recent United States Supreme Court cases have provided a two-prong test as an aid in making the determination. Under this rule, when applied to a particular piece of property, a land use regulation will not effect a taking if it substantially advances a legitimate state interest and does not deprive an owner of economically viable use of his property. Nollan v. California Coastal Comm'n,
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The essence of the first prong of the test is whether government had the right to exercise its police power in the manner it did, regardless of the burden to the property. Or, in other words, it asks the question: has government regulated where it should not have done so? If the regulation does not bear a substantial relation to the legitimate ends sought to be achieved, either through a failure of the statute as a whole to serve those ends or as applied to a particular piece of property, then the exercise of the police power is deemed to be unreasonable. A variation of this type of challenge would exist where the ends themselves were not legitimate. The state could not, for example, regulate property simply because it does not agree with the religious or political views of the land owner. See Williamson Co. Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank,
The economic inquiry of the second prong of the test has its roots in Justice Holmes's decision in Pennsylvania Coal,
All of the economic inquiries deal with the degree to which a property has been encumbered by a regulation. In that sense, the essence of the second prong of the test is whether government has regulated to a greater extent than it should have so that a land owner has been effectively deprived of productive use of his property.
We turn now to the claims of HUMER and the Coal Council that the director's order here declaring the Bechunter Site as an area unsuitable for surface mining of coal is an unconstitutional taking. We note at the outset that HUMER and the Coal Council have challenged the director's order as invalid under the Fifth Amendment and that the burden on a party attempting to show that a regulatory taking has occurred is a heavy one. See Keystone, 480
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U.S. at 499,
More importantly, the overall effect on the value of the land is minute here. The Bechunter Site represents approximately 6.57 acres of a 305 acre farm, or just slightly over two percent of the whole. In terms of mineable coal, the designation affects only 6.5 percent of the total coal resources on the land and, if alternative methods of mining were used, such as auguring, that figure could be reduced to less than three percent. This Court has previously upheld much more "intrusive" restrictions upon land in the context of zoning. In Young v. City of Franklin (1986), Ind.,
Thus, because HUMER's investment backed expectations and present use of the land have not been interfered with and because there has been no significant diminution of the land's value, it is clear that from an economic standpoint, the extent of government's intrusion into HUMER's property is comparatively small and, in and of itself, does not rise to the level of a taking of property. However, HUMER and the Coal Council rely, for the most part, on the first prong of the takings inquiry in their attack on the constitutionality of the designation, arguing the director's order and accompanying mitigation plan do not substantially advance legitimate state interests. In so doing, they challenge the constitutionality of the statute and regulation not as a whole, but as applied to HUMER's property.
There is no set rule to apply in making the determination of what constitutes a legitimate state interest but it is generally accepted that government has the power to enact laws and regulations to promote order, safety, health, morals and the general welfare of society. The decisions of this Court and the Courts of Appeals have not dwelled on this aspect of the takings inquiry. However those decisions implicitly make clear that a broad range of government interests satisfy the legitimacy requirement. Young,
Protecting our national and state heritage through the preservation of archaeological sites must be included in this broad spectrum of legitimate interests of government. The information in these sites expands our knowledge of human history and prehistory and thus enriches us as a state, nation and as human beings. The general welfare of the public is greatly enhanced by such knowledge. We note that our Court of Appeals implicitly recognized this in State Highway Comm'n v. Ziliak (1981), Ind.App.,
In examining the nexus between the land use regulation and the state interest, we have relied on the phrasing of earlier Supreme Court cases, and have required that there be a "substantial relationship" between the two. Young,
Here the legitimate ends of protecting cultural resources from the threat of strip mining are served by both the designation of the Beehunter Site as an area unsuitable for surface mining of coal and by the mitigation plan which allows a means for removal of the designation once the information in the site is scientifically recovered. The order is completely consistent with legitimate state ends. j
Be that as it may, HUMER and the Coal Council direct this Court's attention to Nollan v. California Coastal Commission,
The Nollan Court relied on the rule from Agins that the regulation "substantially advance" a legitimate state interest and did hold that a condition to removal of a land use restriction must similarly advance that end. Id.,
We are inclined to be particularly careful about the adjective ["substantial"] where the actual conveyance of property is made a condition of the lifting of a land use restriction, since in that context there is a heightened risk that the purpose is avoidance of the compensation requirement rather than the stated police power objective.
Id.,
In their reliance on Nollan, HUMER and the Coal Council attempt to cast the director's inclusion of a mitigation plan with his order as amounting to a condition requiring an intrusion tantamount to an actual conveyance of property. The order and mitigation plan require nothing of the sort. HUMER is required to do nothing and it is free to continue the present use of farming the land in question. The extent of the intrusion here does not rise to the level of that in Ziliak where the State made an outright demand for access to the owner's land to conduct an archaeological dig by state-employed archaeologists. Ziliak,
Furthermore, such conditions to the removal of land use restrictions are wholly within the perimeters of Nollan:
[The Commission's assumed power to forbid construction of the house in order to protect the public's view of the beach must surely include the power to condition construction upon some concession by the owner, even a concession of property rights, that serves the same end. If a prohibition designed to accomplish that purpose would be a legitimate exercise of the police power rather than a taking, it would be strange to conclude that providing the owner an alternative to that prohibition which accomplishes the same purpose is not.
Nollan,
HUMER and the Coal Council argue that the director's order and mitigation plan do not substantially advance the legitimate state interest of preservation of our cultural heritage because they protect Bee-hunter only against destruction from surface coal mining. They suggest that because the site could be destroyed by any number of other means that have not been protected against by the State, including malicious destruction by the owner, the government's legitimate interest is not substantially advanced by the designation alone. However, we do not read the cases delineating takings jurisprudence to re
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quire that a regulation be successful in accomplishing substantially all possible ends that further the legitimate state interest, only that it substantially achieve those ends the legislature, in furtherance of legit imate state interests, deems necessary to address. The nature of the political process dictates that "[lJegislatures may implement their program step by step ... in such economic areas, adopting regulations that only partially ameliorate a perceived evil and deferring complete elimination of the evil to future regulations." City of New Orleans v. Dukes,
Here the state interest sought to be protected is our cultural heritage by prohibiting the destruction of cultural data from strip mining. That the legislature has not, as yet, chosen to address other threats to these archaeologically significant areas does not automatically transpose their action into a taking or an unconstitutional exercise of the State's police power. The regulations as applied to HUMER's property through the director's order and mitigation plan bear a substantial relation to the legitimate state interest of preserving our cultural heritage by protecting culturally significant data from strip mining. They are, thus, a legitimate exercise of the State's police power and since the economic impact of the regulations is slight, they do not amount to an unconstitutional taking of HUMER's property.
Finally, HUMER and the Coal Council argue that the director's order was arbitrary and capricious and an abuse of discretion. The rule as to administrative actions has been well stated by our Court of Appeals, and we adopt it here, that an administrative act is arbitrary and capricious only where it is willful and unreasonable, without consideration and in disregard of the facts or circumstances in the case, or without some basis which would lead a reasonable and honest person to the same eonclusion. Metropolitan School District (1983), Ind.App.,
In short, the director's order is entirely reasonable and there is a sufficient basis in the record which would lead a reasonable and honest man to the same conclusion. The director fulfilled his statutory obligation to prepare a detailed statement on the potential coal resources of the area, the demand for coal, and the impact of the designation on the economy, the environment and the coal supply. I.C. 13-4.1-14-3. The record shows that Wabash Valley and CCIA introduced expert witnesses whose testimony tended to support the director's decision and HUMER and the Coal Council produced no experts whatsoever. The order is neither arbitrary, capricious nor an abuse of discretion.
*1008 The request for oral argument is denied. The decision of the Dubois Cireuit Court setting aside the order of the director of the Department of Natural Resources is vacated and the cause is remanded to that court to enter a decree denying relief from that order.
