The appellant challenges a summary final judgment which was entered for the appellee Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission in a declaratory judgment action by which the appellant challenged an administrative rule. We conclude that the appealed order was properly entered upon a determination that the appellant could not obtain declaratory relief without exhausting his administrative remedies.
In his declaratory judgment complaint the appellant challenged the Lee County Manatee Protection Rule, as promulgated by the Commission at Florida Administrative Code Rule 68C-22.005. The appellant indicated that he was cited for violating this rule, which he described as establishing zones within Lee County where the use of the waterways is restricted or prohibited so as to protect manatees from collisions with motorboats. The appellant noted that he was charged with a criminal violation which was amended to a civil violation, and he attached copies of the citation and the criminal information charging a misdemeanor. The action was originally filed with the Commission and Lee County being named as defendants. However, the action was dismissed as to Lee County by court order, and after the appeal in Fish and Wildlife Conservation Com’n v. Wilkinson,
Although the Commission was established as a constitutional entity by the 1998 revision of the Florida Constitution at article IV, section 9, and article XII, section 23, the Commission’s constitutional authority does not encompass regulatory control of threatened and endangered species, as explained in Caribbean Conservation Corp. v. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Comm’n,
The trial court further determined that the appellant failed to show any basis for bypassing the administrative process under the exceptions recognized in cases such as Communities Financial Corp. v. Florida Dept. of Environmental Regulation,
The appellant also suggests that the challenged rule impacts his constitutional rights, for which declaratory relief might have been given without the appellant having otherwise proceeded through the administrative process as to his nonconsti-tutional claims. But as the trial court expressly found, the constitutional assertions presented below do not provide a basis for relief. The appellant relies on a constitutional right to travel, but this does not appear to be implicated under the Florida Constitution, and such right under the United States Constitution pertains to interstate travel, which is not involved here. See Wilkinson. And the appellant’s due process claim relates to the police power for regulatory action, with such claims being routinely adjudicated through the administrative process. E.g. Marine Industries Ass’n of South Florida v. Florida Dept. of Environmental Protection,
Because the appellant did not present a basis for bypassing the administrative remedy available through a section 120.56 rule challenge, the court properly entered summary judgment for the Commission. The appealed order is therefore affirmed.
