The issue in this case is whether a landowner’s contentions that Sarasota County violated his equal protection and substantive due process rights are ripe for decision. 1 We find that the plaintiff’s claims are not ripe.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Florida’s land use planning statutes provide for the adoption of comprehensive plans “to control and direct the use and development of property within a county or municipality.”
Machado v. Musgrove,
On June 30, 1981, Sarasota County (the “County”) adopted a statutorily mandated comprehensive plan (“Apoxsee”) to map out the future development of land in the County. This comprehensive plan identified various areas as “village activity centers,” “community centers,” and “town centers.” Village activity centers are permitted to have approximately 75 acres of commercially zoned land while community centers may have 125 acres in commercial use. 2 Town centers are permitted to have variable commercial acreage with no upper limit on the amount of commercially zoned land. Centers where less than 50% of the acreage is commercial are authorized to adopt sector plans “to determine future commercial land-use allocations to suрport future population growth in the area.” R9-110. In order for property included in a sector plan to be rezoned, the proposed rezoning and development plans have to be consistent with both Apoxsee and the sector plan. Adoption of a sector plan does not change the zoning of any of the proрerties involved.
Elling Eide, the appellee, owns two parcels of land — one of approximately fourteen acres (the “14-acre parcel”) and the other of approximately nineteen acres (the “19-acre parcel”) — which are situated west of U.S. 41 about five miles south of the city limits of the City of Sarasota in Sarasоta County. Eide also owns a parcel east of U.S. 41 which he leases to developers who *1328 have transformed it into a Kmart shopping center. Apoxsee designates this area as a village activity center around a regional center (the Sarasota Square Mall). Prior to the development of a sector plan for this аrea, the 19-acre parcel was zoned RSF-2 (residential, single family, 3.5 units/acre), and the 14-acre parcel was zoned RMF-2 (residential, multi-family, 9 units/acre).
In 1984 another property owner in the area requested permission from Sarasota County to prepare a proposed sector plan. Eide discovered that the sector рlan included his 14-acre parcel but not his 19-acre parcel. After a County official informed Eide that inclusion in the sector plan was the only way that his properties would be considered for commercial zoning in the future, he asked that the sector plan boundary be amended to include his larger property as well. The County amendеd the sector plan boundary as per his request.
In 1986, because Eide wanted to take advantage of the favorable capital gains tax law, he complained that the landowners who were preparing the sector plan were taking too long; at his request, the County’s professional planning staff undertook the completion оf the plan. The completed sector plan identified three possible alternatives for future zoning; two of these alternatives recommended some of Eide’s property for commercial development, while the third would have zoned all of Eide's property residential (with the exception of the Kmart parcel). The seсtor plan’s final recommendation adopted a hybrid of two of the alternatives; however, it recommended that Eide’s parcels continue to be zoned residential. The sector plan also indicated that an amendment to Apox-see designating the area as a community or town center would be appropriate in thе future; however, the plan suggests that future commercial development should be located east of U.S. 41, and Eide’s parcels are located to the west of 41. Sector Plan 84-2, pp. 47-48, 64, 93. On September 16, 1986, the County adopted the sector plan.
Before the completion of the sector plan, Eide filed a petition for the rezoning of his 14-acre parcel. However, a traffic study was required to accompany all rezoning petitions. The County’s planning staff returned the petition to Eide for a required traffic impact analysis; Eide then voluntarily withdrew his petition. Eide never requested that the 19-acre parcel be considered for rezoning.
Challenging that the sector plan was unconstitutional as applied to his property, 3 Eide then filed a suit for damages and declaratory and injunctive relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Sarasota County raised several defenses to Eide’s claims, including a challenge to Eide’s assertion that the County had made a final decision concerning his land parcels. The district court rejected this ripeness defense. After a jury trial, Eide was awarded $850,000. In addition, the court ordered the County to grant Eide commercial zoning.
We disagree with the district court’s determination that the case was ripe for adjudication. Therefore, we reverse the district court’s judgment and оrder that the Section 1983 claims be dismissed as not ripe.
See Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
II. ANALYSIS
The question of ripeness affects our subject matter jurisdiction in this action.
See Greenbriar, Ltd. v. City of Alabaster,
Several reasons persuade us that Eide’s claim is not riрe. First, Eide has neither submitted a development plan to the County nor presented the County with a petition for rezoning, and, therefore, the County has not had the opportunity to consider the arguments for commercial zoning of Eide’s land concretely and independently. Second, the County has not made a determination of the extent of development that would be permitted on Eide’s land; thus, we cannot determine if a taking has occurred. In addition, commercial zoning of Eide’s parcels may be consistent with the sector plan. Finally, Eide may petition for an amendment to the comprehensive plan to upgrade the area to either a community or town center. This оption would enable the County to grant Eide commercial zoning with the additional acreage available.
Eide has not submitted even a single plan for the commercial development of his properties. He has not submitted a petition to rezone his properties from their present residential zoning to either higher density zoning or commercial zoning. As a general rule, the challenging of the application of a zoning plan or ordinance to a particular property is not ripe until the landowner has submitted a plan for development of his or her property.
Agins v. Tiburon,
Eide argues that his reasons for wanting his land rezoned commercial were presented to the Plаnning Commission and to the County during the proceedings which culminated in the adoption of the sector plan. He argues that his reasons were fully considered and rejected by the appropriate decision-making bodies, and thus the decision is final and the instant action is ripe. We reject Eide’s argument. We are not satisfied that the considerаtion of his argu *1330 ments, as merely a few of the many matters considered as part of the overall plan, would afford either the concreteness or finality required of a final decision.
Again relying on his perception that the County has fully heard, considered and rejected all of his reasons, Eide argues that any further action before the County would be futile, and, therefore, his action is ripe for review. The so-called “futility exception” to the final decision requirement does excuse the repeated submission of development plans where the submission would be futile.
See Shelter Creek Dev. Corp. v. City of Oxnard,
There are important reasons supporting the Seventh and Ninth Circuits’ requirement of a final decision involving a specific development plan before suit may be filed. Zoning is a delicate area where a county’s power should not be usurped without giving the county an opportunity to consider concrete facts on the merits prior to a court suit. Moreover, for a meritorious substantive due process claim, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the zoning regulation has gone “too far,” and the Supreme Court has clearly stated that a casе is not ripe until the nature and extent of the permitted development is known.
MacDonald, Sommer & Frates v. Yolo County,
Eide argues, however, that the sector plan conclusively precludes any possible commercial zoning for his properties, and that this decision has such an adverse effect on the value of his property and his investment-backed profit expectations as to constitute a taking. Assuming that commercial zoning is foreclosed, Eide argues that additional attempts to obtain commercial zoning would be futile. We need not in this case decide whether a final decision denying Eide commercial zoning wоuld render the case ripe, 5 because we are not satisfied that there has been a final decision denying commercial use of his property; in other words, we are not satisfied that further efforts to obtain commercial zoning would be futile. Eide argues that it is obvious that commercial zoning would be inconsistent with the sector plan since thе sector plan designates his property as residential. However, Eide’s determination of *1331 what is inconsistent is not controlling here; the County and the Florida courts are arbiters of what is consistent.
There is a split in Florida state courts over what is meant by the requirement of consistency. In
Southwest Ranches Homeowners Ass’n v. Broward County,
In any event, there is another reason why further attempts to obtain commercial zoning would not be futile. Eide could petition the County for an amendment to the comprehensive plan. The sector plan itself provides for the possibility of upgrading the area to a community or town center; such an amendment of the comprehеnsive plan would increase the acreage available for commercial use and could pave the way for a designation of Eide’s land as commercial.
Eide argues that it would be futile for him to pursue a comprehensive plan amendment because the County adopted a Planning Commission recommendation that the аrea not be considered for a comprehensive plan amendment to upgrade it to a community or town center. However, the County had not been presented with such a comprehensive plan amendment, and, therefore, the County has not been given the opportunity to consider such an amendment independently on its own merits.
Eide cites
Hoehne v. County of San Benito,
Decisions on ripeness issues are fact-sensitive. On the particular circumstances of this case and for the foregoing reasons, we conclude that thе instant Section 1983 claims are not ripe. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Sarasota County has raised a number of other grounds on appeal. However, because we dispose of this case on ripeness grounds, we need not considеr the County’s other arguments.
. At trial, there was testimony that the 75 acres permitted for a village activity center was simply a guideline, not a cap on the amount of commercial acreage permissible. R5-65. However, the possibility of a flexible amount of commercial acreage is not vital to our holding, and we assume that the 75 acres allotted for village activity centers and the 125 acres allotted for community centers are caps.
. In the district court, Eide abandoned any claim of facial unconstitutionality.
.
Williamson County
held that, in the context of the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the plaintiff must also show that no state remedy exists to redress the injuries alleged. A showing thаt no state remedy exists is not required to sustain a claim of deprivation of substantive due process.
Greenbriar, Ltd..,
On the facts of this case, Eide’s equal protection claim is simply another label for his substantive due process claim; thus, we apply the same ripeness standard to both claims.
See Anthony v. Franklin County,
. For example, even if commercial zoning were foreclosed, high density residential (e.g., high rise condominiums) might be permitted.
