NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
OF FLORIDA
SECOND DISTRICT
PINELLAS COUNTY, FLORIDA, an )
Independent and Chartered Florida )
County, )
Appellant, )
)
v. ) Case No. 2D16-3279
)
THE RICHMAN GROUP OF FLORIDA, )
INC., a Florida corporation, )
)
Appellee. )
)
Opinion filed November 29, 2017.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for
Pinellas County; Walter L. Schafer, Jr.,
Judge.
Sylvia H. Walbolt, Chris W. Altenbernd,
and Nicholas A. Brown of Carlton Fields
Jorden Burt, P.A., Tampa; and James
Bennett, Pinellas County Attorney's Office,
Clearwater, for Appellant.
Landis V. Curry, III, Scott A. McLaren,
E.D. Armstrong, III, and Fred C. Marshall, II
of Hill, Ward & Henderson, P.A., Tampa, for
Appellee.
CRENSHAW, Judge.
Pinellas County appeals the final judgment awarding the Richman Group
of Florida, Inc., over $16.5 million in damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2012), based on
the trial court's conclusion that the County violated Richman's substantive due process
and equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution by denying Richman's proposed amendment to the County's land use plan.
Because the trial court erred in concluding that the County had no rational basis to deny
the proposed amendment, we reverse the final judgment. In light of this disposition, we
do not reach the County's remaining arguments.
I. BACKGROUND
In 2012, Richman executed a contract to purchase 34.55 acres of land in
the City of Safety Harbor subject to Richman obtaining certain government approvals to
develop the land. At issue in this appeal is Richman's attempt to obtain approval of an
amendment to the Countywide Future Land Use Plan that would have changed the land
use designation of roughly sixteen acres of land from Industrial Limited (IL) to
Residential Medium (RM) so that Richman could develop the property in a way that is
not permitted on land with the IL designation.
A. The Legislative Framework
Under the Special Act governing the County's land use plan, only a local
government with jurisdiction over the subject property may submit a proposal to amend
the plan to the Pinellas Planning Council. Ch. 90-396, § 10(4)(a), at 40, Laws of Fla.
The Council reviews the proposal and makes a recommendation to approve, deny,
continue, or alter it. Id. § 10(4)(a), (b), at 40. If the Council recommends approval, it
forwards the proposal along with its recommendation to the Board of County
Commissioners for a public hearing and vote in the Board's capacity as the County
Planning Authority (CPA). Id. § 10(4)(d), at 40. If the CPA votes to deny the proposal,
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any substantially affected person may seek a hearing before an Administrative Law
Judge (ALJ) pursuant to Chapter 120, Florida Statutes; this hearing "is limited to a
review of the facts pertaining to the subject property, the countywide future land use
plan, and those rules, standards, policies, and procedures applicable thereto." Id. §
10(4)(d), (f), at 40-41. The hearing "is not the appropriate forum for a constitutional
challenge." Id. § 10(4)(f), at 41. After the hearing, the ALJ's "recommended order shall
be forwarded to and considered by the [CPA] in a final hearing. The basis for the
[CPA's] final decision approving or denying the proposed amendment is limited to the
findings of fact of the [ALJ]." Id. § 10(4)(d), at 40-41. The CPA's decisions under the
act "are legislative in nature" and are subject to judicial review. Id. § 10(4)(g), at 41.
Importantly, nothing in the Special Act mandates that proposed amendments that are
consistent with the amendment review criteria must be granted by the CPA.
In line with this legislative framework, Richman applied to the City of
Safety Harbor to initiate the process of amending the County's land use plan. After the
Safety Harbor Commission approved Richman's proposal by a vote of 3-2, despite
significant neighborhood opposition to it, the city submitted the proposal to the Council,
which recommended approval by a vote of 8-5. The Council forwarded the proposal to
the CPA along with its recommendation to approve the amendment.
In May 2013, the CPA considered Richman's proposal at a public hearing
where hundreds of residents from the area surrounding the subject property expressed
opposition to the amendment. The residents articulated specific, rational concerns that
amending the land use designation to allow Richman's planned development of the
property would cause traffic, transportation, safety, and economic problems. Members
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of the CPA, as well as some of the residents, highlighted the scarcity of IL-designated
land in the area and explained that removing the IL designation would harm the local
economy because it would result in even less land available to support "target
employers" that bring high-paying jobs to the County's residents. Citing Resolution 06-
3, which set forth "the need to reserve industrial parcels for target employers" in Pinellas
County, the CPA unanimously voted to deny the amendment.
B. The Administrative Proceedings
As a person substantially affected by the CPA's denial, Richman obtained
a hearing before an ALJ. The parties stipulated that the issue to be decided at that
hearing was "[t]he manner in, and extent to, which the amendment is consistent" with
the criteria in the rules governing amendments to the County's land use plan. The rules,
promulgated pursuant to the Special Act, provide that "[i]n the consideration of a regular
Countywide Plan Map amendment, it is the objective of these Countywide Rules to
evaluate the amendment so as to make a balanced legislative determination based on"
certain relevant considerations. The crux of the parties' dispute at this hearing was
whether Resolution 06-3 was part of these relevant considerations. Agreeing with
Richman, the ALJ resolved this dispute by finding that "Resolution 06-3 . . . is not a
source of criteria applicable to the [a]mendment" because that resolution had not been
"repeated, paraphrased, or adopted by reference in the Countywide Rules." Thus, to
the extent that the CPA denied the amendment because it was inconsistent with the
relevant considerations in the rules—namely, Resolution 06-3—the ALJ concluded that
the amendment was indeed consistent with the relevant criteria. However, the ALJ did
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not find, or otherwise conclude, that the CPA had to approve the amendment because it
was consistent.
The ALJ did find that other sections of the rules were relevant to the
dispute. Among those other sections, the ALJ highlighted section 2.3.3.6.1, which
provides the following purpose behind the IL designation:
It is the purpose of this category to depict those areas of the
county that are now developed, or appropriate to be
developed, in a limited industrial manner; and so as to
encourage the reservation and use of consolidated areas for
industrial and industrial/mixed use in a manner and location
consistent with surrounding use, transportation facilities, and
natural resource characteristics.
Regarding the consistency between the current use of the land and the
purpose laid out in section 2.3.3.6.1, the ALJ found that the property currently has
"numerous industrial buildings and structures associated with a citrus processing facility
that is no longer in operation." The property is otherwise undeveloped. Commercial
areas run along the southern and western borders of the property, whereas a residential
area runs along its eastern border. To the north is a large, undeveloped area that
separates the property from another residential area. According to the ALJ, "[t]he area
is not part of a larger consolidated industrial area, but the Richman parcel, together with
the IL parcel across 10th Street South, could function as a small industrial park." The
ALJ found that the property "can accommodate certain 'target employers,' " but it noted
that the IL designation also broadly authorizes "other uses that would be incompatible
with surrounding uses." In other words, only a limited array of target employers could
utilize the subject property in a manner consistent with the surrounding properties.
Although the ALJ ultimately recommended that the amendment be
approved, noting that it "creates more points of consistency and fewer points of
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inconsistency than the existing" designation, the ALJ expressly recognized that the final
decision was left to the CPA, which had to make a "balanced legislative determination"
whether to amend the plan or maintain the status quo. In making that legislative
determination, the ALJ explained, "the CPA [was] not bound by the balance struck by
the [ALJ], based on his perception of the differential importance of various findings."
Nowhere in the ALJ's order did it find that the CPA had no rational basis to deny the
amendment or that the preservation of IL land for target employers did not constitute a
rational basis. Nor did the ALJ find that the existing designation was improper or that
the current use of the property was inconsistent with its IL designation.
Pursuant to the Special Act, the proposed amendment, along with the
ALJ's order, came before the CPA for a final public hearing in January 2014. Again,
numerous residents voiced their opposition, highlighting the problems that would be
caused if the amendment was approved. The CPA expressed its disappointment with
the ALJ's finding that Resolution 06-3 was not an official criterion applicable to the
proposal, explaining that it had always intended for the resolution to be a part of the
criteria and it relied on "staff and others telling [the CPA], yes, everything is in sync."
Recognizing that it was bound only by the ALJ's findings of fact and that it still had to
make the ultimate legislative decision, the CPA voted unanimously to deny the
proposed amendment.
C. The § 1983 Proceedings
Instead of seeking judicial review of the CPA's denial as expressly
authorized under the Special Act, Richman chose to sue the County for monetary
damages under § 1983, alleging violations of its equal protection and substantive due
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process rights as secured by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution. In its equal protection claim, Richman asserted that the CPA treated it
differently from similarly-situated applicants by denying its application "without any
conceivable basis to support its actions, or any rational relationship between its denial
and any legitimate government interests." On the substantive due process claim,
Richman asserted that the denial "was an irrational, arbitrary, and capricious decision
without any rational basis in fact or law." In support of both theories, Richman alleged
that "the CPA was legally required to approve" the amendment at the final hearing once
the ALJ found that the amendment was consistent with all relevant criteria and that,
instead of applying the existing criteria, the CPA denied the amendment based on
"significant political pressure." (Emphasis added).
After a bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment in favor of
Richman on both counts. The court explained that the equal protection claim required a
ruling "as to whether the County had a rational basis for denying" Richman's
amendment and that the same " 'rational basis' question [was] the principal issue
involved in the arbitrary and capricious due process claim." See, e.g., Coniston Corp. v.
Vill. of Hoffman Estates, 844 F.2d 461, 467-68 (7th Cir. 1988) (noting that the same
rational basis test applies to equal protection and substantive due process challenges).
On the question of whether the County had a rational basis to deny the
application, the trial court found that the ALJ "ruled that 'industrial land preservation' was
not a legitimate reason/rational basis for denying the [a]mendment." The court also
determined that the ALJ found the existing IL designation on the property was "not
consistent" with the relevant criteria in the rules. The trial court characterized both of
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these as findings of fact that were binding on the CPA under the Special Act and that
were simply "ignor[ed]" by the CPA in denying the amendment. Expanding this
perceived violation of the Special Act to the Constitutional dimension, the trial court
concluded that "[b]ecause the CPA applied a non-existent criterion to deny Richman's
Amendment, the County acted arbitrarily and capriciously in violation of Richman's
Constitutional right to due process protections." But the trial court seemingly
contradicted that conclusion by also finding that "[t]he evidence establishes that the
CPA's final decision was based on a desire to appease the Safety Harbor residents,
whose forceful opposition was brought to bear throughout the Countywide amendment
process." Thus, the trial court apparently determined that both the constituents' rational
objections and the economic impact of losing even more scarce industrial land suitable
for target employers were not rational bases because those factors were not explicitly
contained in the relevant criteria in the rules.
Based on its ruling that the County had no rational basis to deny the
amendment, the trial court concluded that Richman was also entitled to relief on its
equal protection claim because, "given that the relevant characteristics of the Richman
Amendment and its comparators were the same, there is no rational basis for
distinguishing between these amendments." The court noted that the "only meaningful
difference" between Richman's amendment and its comparators was the "overwhelming
neighborhood opposition," but it determined that such opposition was not a rational
basis to deny the amendment.
The trial court rejected the County's argument that the CPA had the
discretion to make a legislative decision to maintain the status quo based on the court's
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determination that the CPA's discretion was not "unbridled" in light of the limitations
placed on it by the Special Act and the CPA's own review criteria. Quoting only a
portion of this court's holding in Island, Inc. v. City of Bradenton Beach, 884 So. 2d 107,
108 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004), the trial court acknowledged that the CPA's legislative decision
was subject to the deferential "fairly debatable" standard of review, but it concluded that
the CPA's decision to deny the amendment was not fairly debatable because the ALJ
found both that the amendment satisfied the review criteria and that the current IL
designation was not consistent with that same criteria.
The County now argues that the trial court erred in concluding that the
ALJ's order established that the CPA could not rationally deny the amendment because,
first, the ALJ made no such finding and, second, even under the limitations placed on it
by the Special Act, the CPA still had the discretion to make the legislative, policy
decision to maintain the status quo and its decision to do so was fairly debatable. Even
if the trial court was correct that the Special Act mandated approval of the amendment,
the trial court erred in equating this ostensible violation of state law to a violation of the
Constitution because, under the exacting Constitutional standard, the CPA's decision
was still rationally grounded in the public interest. The County maintains that the trial
court similarly erred in granting relief on the equal protection claim because the court
based its equal protection ruling on the same defective rational basis analysis it
conducted on the substantive due process claim.
Richman responds that, in light of the limitations placed on it by the
Special Act, the County had no discretion to deny the amendment once the ALJ issued
its order. In fact, at oral argument, Richman's counsel emphasized that its position is
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that the CPA had absolutely no discretion to do anything other than approve the
amendment at that point. Richman contends that the County's decision to intentionally
violate the Special Act in order to appease the residents, without more, amounts to
arbitrary and capricious action in violation of the Constitution.
II. ANALYSIS
Turning first to the due process claim, to support its claim for damages
under § 1983 based on a violation of its substantive due process rights, Richman had to
show that it had been deprived of a constitutionally recognizable interest and that the
deprivation was the result of arbitrary and capricious action on the part of the County.
See Gardens Country Club, Inc. v. Palm Beach County, 712 So. 2d 398, 403 (Fla. 4th
DCA 1998) (citing Exec. 100, Inc. v. Martin County, 922 F.2d 1536, 1541 (11th Cir.
1991)). The County raises no challenge to the trial court's finding that Richman had a
constitutionally recognizable interest in the proposed amendment. As such, our review
is limited to the question of whether the County's denial of the amendment was arbitrary
and capricious.
"Substantive due process challenges are analyzed under the rational
basis test; that is, a legislative act of the government will not be considered arbitrary and
capricious if it has 'a rational relationship with a legitimate general welfare concern.' "
Id. at 404 (quoting Restigouche, Inc. v. Town of Jupiter, 59 F.3d 1208, 1214 (11th Cir.
1995)). "In other words, the Plaintiff must show the government's infringement was
'arbitrary, conscience shocking, or oppressive in the constitutional sense, not merely
incorrect or ill-advised.' " 545 Halsey Lane Props., LLC v. Town of Southampton, 45 F.
Supp. 3d 257, 266 (E.D.N.Y. 2014) (quoting Ferran v. Town of Nassau, 471 F.3d 363,
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369-70 (2d Cir. 2006)). "In the zoning context, the issue is whether the [government's]
action bore any substantial relation to the public welfare." Exec. 100, 922 F.2d at 1541.
If the government's legislative decision is "at least debatable" there is no denial of
substantive due process. Shelton v. City of College Station, 780 F.2d 475, 483 (5th Cir.
1986) (en banc). "Arbitrary conduct that might violate zoning regulations as a matter of
state law is not sufficient to demonstrate conduct so outrageously arbitrary as to
constitute a gross abuse of governmental authority that will offend the substantive
component of the Due Process Clause." Natale v. Town of Ridgefield, 170 F.3d 258,
262 (2d Cir. 1999).
[T]he conventional planning dispute—at least when not
tainted with fundamental procedural irregularity, racial
animus, or the like—which takes place within the framework
of an admittedly valid state subdivision scheme is a matter
primarily of concern to the state and does not implicate the
Constitution. This would be true even were planning officials
to clearly violate, much less "distort" the state scheme under
which they operate.
Creative Env'ts Inc. v. Estabrook, 680 F.2d 822, 833 (1st Cir. 1982) (emphasis added).
A. The Fairly Debatable Standard
In resolving Richman's substantive due process claim, the trial court was
required to apply the fairly debatable standard of review to the CPA's final decision.
See Martin County v. Section 28 P'ship, Ltd., 772 So. 2d 616, 619 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000)
(explaining that there is a "close relationship between the fairly debatable standard and
the review of substantive due process claims" (citing Martin County v. Section 28 P'ship,
Ltd., 676 So. 2d 532, 537 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996))). "The fairly debatable standard of
review is a highly deferential standard requiring approval of a planning action if
reasonable persons could differ as to its propriety." Martin County v. Yusem, 690 So.
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2d 1288, 1295 (Fla. 1997). "This court reviews the trial court's application of the fairly
debatable standard de novo." Island, 884 So. 2d at 108.
Because reasonable persons could differ as to the propriety of the CPA's
decision, we conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that the CPA's decision to
maintain the status quo was not fairly debatable. First, despite Richman's insistence
below and before this court, nothing in the Special Act mandated the CPA's approval of
the amendment once the ALJ found that the amendment was consistent with the review
criteria in the rules. On the contrary, as explained by the ALJ, even amendments that
are consistent with the relevant considerations in the rules are still subject to the CPA's
final legislative decision under the Special Act.
Although the trial court recognized that the CPA was required to make the
final legislative decision, the court concluded that the CPA's discretion in making that
decision was limited by the Special Act and that the CPA violated those limitations by
ignoring the ALJ's findings. But, in arriving at this conclusion, the trial court
mischaracterized the ALJ's findings. For instance, in reviewing the ALJ's order, the trial
court concluded that "the specific issue presented to [the ALJ] was whether the County
had any rational basis for denying the Amendment" under the rules. However, the
parties stipulated that the issue presented to the ALJ was the manner in, and extent to,
which the amendment was consistent with the rules, not whether the County had any
rational basis for denying the amendment. Even if the ALJ did conclude that the CPA
had no rational basis to deny the amendment, that conclusion would not be binding on
the CPA because the CPA was limited only by the ALJ's findings of fact, whereas the
question of whether a decision has a rational basis for the purposes of a § 1983 claim is
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a question of law. See Greenbriar, Ltd. v. City of Alabaster, 881 F.2d 1570, 1578 (11th
Cir. 1989). Moreover, the hearing before the ALJ was "limited to a review of the facts
pertaining to the subject property, the countywide future land use plan, and those rules,
standards, policies, and procedures applicable thereto." Ch. 90-396, § 10(4)(f), at 41.
Thus, under the plain language of the Special Act, the ALJ could not have ruled on the
question of whether the CPA had a rational basis on which to deny the amendment, and
the trial court erred in so concluding.
The trial court also erred in ruling that the ALJ's findings established that
the existing classification was inconsistent with the criteria in the rules and relying on
that inconsistency to conclude that, because no reasonable person could agree that an
inconsistent designation should remain, the CPA's decision was not fairly debatable. To
be sure, the ALJ did find that "[t]he IL category, with all potential uses allowed, is 'in the
broadest sense' inconsistent with single-family uses to the north and east" and that
"[t]he IL designation within the [Scenic Non-Commercial Corridor designation] is
inconsistent with the goal of the corridor and is a factor (not a requirement) in favor of
changing [the] current IL designation." (Emphasis added). When it conducted its own
balancing of the relevant considerations, the ALJ recommended approving the
amendment because "the amendment creates more points of consistency and fewer
points of inconsistency than the existing IL land use classification."
However, the ALJ never found that the IL designation was not suitable for
the property, and at least some of the ALJ's findings support the CPA's decision to allow
the IL designation to remain on the land. The ALJ found, for example, that the property
is currently developed in an industrial manner and that it was still feasible for the
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property to be part of a small consolidated industrial park. These findings comport with
the purpose behind the IL designation as stated in section 2.3.3.6.1 of the rules. And,
while the ALJ did find that there were many uses allowed under the IL designation that
would be inconsistent with surrounding uses, it did not find that all of the potential uses
under the IL designation—including use for target employers—would be inconsistent.
Indeed, it found that the subject property could nevertheless support certain target
employers despite the surrounding limitations. Furthermore, pursuant to the Special
Act, the ALJ's finding that the property could currently support target employers under
the existing designation was a finding of fact that the CPA had to consider in making its
final decision. Ch. 90-396, § 10(4)(d), at 40. In other words, although the ALJ found
that Resolution 06-3 was not a criterion on which the CPA could conclude that the
amendment was inconsistent with the rules, the ALJ did not find that the CPA was
prohibited from otherwise considering the land's current suitability for target employers
when making its final legislative determination. Accordingly, in the proper context of the
ALJ's findings, the CPA's decision to deny the amendment and keep the land available
for target employers was fairly debatable.
i. The Trial Court's Application of Island
Applying its determination that the ALJ's order established that the existing
designation was inconsistent with the criteria in the rules to this court's opinion in Island,
884 So. 2d 107, the trial court concluded that the CPA's decision was not fairly
debatable. This, too, was error.
In Island, this court reviewed the trial court's finding that the City of
Bradenton Beach's denial of two small-scale development amendments to the City's
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future land use plan was fairly debatable. 884 So. 2d at 107-08. The developers in
Island sought amendments that would have changed the designation of their property
"from preservation, a classification which permits no development, to medium/high
residential/tourist in order to construct a duplex on each of their two lots." Id. at 108.
The evidence presented at trial showed that "the designation of the [developers']
property as preservation was erroneous because the property did not meet the
definition of preservation [under the City's plan]." Id. The developers also presented
evidence showing that the property had been taxed as residential property and that "the
mayor's son had been issued a license to operate a sailboat rental business on the
property, which activity is not allowed on preservation property." Id. According to the
majority, no evidence rebutted the developers' evidence "that the property did not meet
the definition of preservation." Id.
Holding that the trial court erred in finding that the City's denial was fairly
debatable, this court explained that "[r]easonable persons could not differ in concluding
that the [developers] were entitled to a small-scale amendment to the comprehensive
plan because their property was improperly designated preservation." Id. (emphasis
added). "[R]ecognizing the stringent requirements of the fairly debatable rule," Judge
Villanti specified that he concurred with the majority because "[a]bsolutely all of the
expert opinion and supporting data was unrefuted; i.e., that the preservation
classification was imposed in error." Id. at 109 (Villanti, J., concurring). Thus, this
court's application of the fairly debatable standard in Island is limited to situations in
which unrefuted evidence establishes that an existing land use designation is improper
under the terms of the land use plan itself.
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Here, although the ALJ found that the amendment would make the
property more consistent with the relevant criteria for approving an amendment to the
plan, the ALJ did not conclude that the current designation was imposed in error or that
the property was being used in a way inconsistent with its current designation. As
explained above, the ALJ's findings show otherwise. Unlike Island, the amendment at
issue here sought to change the property's valid, existing designation so that Richman
could develop it in a way it had never been used before. Because there was no
unrefuted evidence showing that the subject property did not meet the definition of IL
land under the County's land use plan or that the property was being used in a way that
was not permitted under its existing designation, the trial court erred in concluding that
Island established that the CPA's denial was not fairly debatable.
B. The Rational Basis Question
Rejecting the County's argument that the CPA's decision was fairly
debatable, the trial court determined that the CPA violated Richman's substantive due
process rights both by denying the amendment based on the preference to preserve IL
land, which the ALJ determined was not part of the relevant criteria for approving an
amendment under the rules, and by making its decision simply to appease local
residents. We address each alternative basis in turn.
To the extent that the trial court based its substantive due process ruling
on its finding that the CPA was motivated by significant political pressure, the CPA's
consideration of its constituents' concerns did not amount to a violation of the
Constitution in this case. Without citing to any legal authority, the trial court determined
that "neighborhood opposition is not a legitimate basis for denying a land use
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application," even though it agreed that such opposition was a "meaningful difference"
between Richman's amendment and its purported comparators. However, resident
opposition, provided it is motivated by legitimate concerns, can provide a rational basis
for a government's land use decision. See, e.g., Griffin Indus., Inc. v. Irvin, 496 F.3d
1189, 1208 (11th Cir. 2007) ("In sum, the suggestion that the defendants violated the
Equal Protection Clause by responding to the concerns of local citizens is, under these
circumstances, without merit."); Corn v. City of Lauderdale Lakes, 997 F.2d 1369, 1387
(11th Cir. 1993) ("Merely because citizen input may not be a sufficient basis for a
rational government land use decision in every instance does not mean it can never be
a sufficient basis for such a decision. In most cases it will be. Where, as here, citizens
consistently come before their city council in public meetings on a number of occasions
and present their individual, fact-based concerns that are rationally related to legitimate
general welfare concerns, it is not arbitrary and capricious for a city council to decide
without a more formal investigation that those concerns are valid and that the proposed
development should not be permitted." (citation omitted)); Greenbriar, 881 F.2d at 1579
("[A] planning commission or a City Council is not a judicial forum; it is a legislative body
held democratically accountable through precisely the forms of political suasion to which
Greenbriar objects. . . . Here, there is no indication that Council members' attention to
citizens' concerns in assessing Greenbriar's zoning plan deprived their decision of a
rational basis." (citations omitted)); Estabrook, 680 F.2d at 832 ("Here it is merely
indicated that town officials are motivated by parochial views of local interests which
work against plaintiffs' plan and which may contravene state subdivision laws."). In fact,
the Special Act mandates notice to all affected residents and a public hearing before the
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adoption of any amendment to the land use plan. Ch. 90-396, § 10(5), at 41. As such,
even the Special Act itself contemplates the CPA's consideration of concerns from local
residents.
Richman argues that the CPA could not consider the residents' objections
because that consideration was not part of the relevant criteria in the rules, criteria
which limited the CPA's discretion under the Special Act. While Richman's argument
may support a determination that the CPA violated state law, Richman fails to
appreciate that it chose to bring this dispute into the Constitutional arena where "[i]t has
long been established that zoning regulations will not be declared unconstitutional as
violative of substantive due process unless they 'are clearly arbitrary and unreasonable,
having no substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare.' "
Greenbriar, 881 F.2d at 1577 (quoting Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S.
365, 394 (1926)). This rigorous Constitutional standard requires more than a violation
of state law. See, e.g., Coniston Corp., 844 F.2d at 467 ("Something more is necessary
than dissatisfaction with the rejection of a site plan to turn a zoning case into a federal
case; and it should go without saying that the something more cannot be merely a
violation of state (or local) law."); Estabrook, 680 F.2d at 833 ("It is not enough simply to
give these state law claims constitutional labels such as 'due process' or 'equal
protection' in order to raise a substantial federal question under section 1983."). That
"something more" was simply not present in this case. Here, hundreds of local
residents articulated specific, rational concerns regarding the proposed amendment's
effect on the general welfare. Accordingly, even if the CPA violated the Special Act, it
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did not violate the Constitution of the United States in considering legitimate input from
affected residents.
In alternatively concluding that the CPA's application of the IL preference
was arbitrary and capricious, the trial court relied on Everett v. City of Tallahassee, 840
F. Supp. 1528 (N.D. Fla. 1992), explaining that "[t]he same logic applies in this case,
where Richman was subject to the application of an uncodified policy that never had
been adopted as part of the applicable criteria." We cannot agree.
Everett involved a § 1983 action brought by the owner of a 3.52-acre
undeveloped property against the City of Tallahassee alleging, among other things, a
violation of the owner's substantive due process rights. 840 F. Supp. at 1530. The
litigation arose after the City denied the owner's request to change the zoning of the
property from residential to nonresidential use, citing an uncodified, standardless policy
as the only reason for the denial. Id. at 1537. The owner also presented evidence
showing that the City itself violated this same uncodified policy, as well as other zoning
restrictions, in order to build City facilities on property adjacent to the owner's land. Id.
at 1541. In analyzing the owner's claim, the court applied the principle that "[a] violation
of state law, without more, is not a denial of due process of law." Id. at 1543 (citing
Coniston Corp., 844 F.2d 461). Nevertheless, the court ruled that the uncodified policy
was "unconstitutionally vague" and held that "[b]ecause no standards [were] set forth in
the [policy], the City's arbitrary and capricious use of the policy violate[d] [the owner's]
substantive due process rights." Id. at 1546.
The same logic does not apply to this case. Here, Richman made no
argument, and the trial court made no ruling, that the policy to preserve IL land was
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unconstitutionally vague. There is also no indication that the uncodified policy in Everett
was related to a legitimate welfare concern, whereas here, the policy to preserve IL land
for target employers who bring high-paying jobs to the County is related to a legitimate
fiscal concern. Moreover, the City violated its own uncodified policy to suit its own
purposes in Everett; Richman alleged no such conduct on the part of the County in this
case. Thus, unlike this case, Everett clearly concerned something more than a simple
violation of state law.
Finally, we reject Richman's assertion that in reversing the final judgment
at issue here we would need to overrule our decision in City National Bank of Florida v.
City of Tampa, 67 So. 3d 293 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011). The relevant portion of that decision
simply discusses the cognizability of claims under § 1983 and contains no rational basis
analysis. City Nat'l Bank of Fla., 67 So. 3d at 297.
III. RESOLUTION
As the trial court noted, the dispositions of both of Richman's
Constitutional claims hinge on the question of whether the CPA had a rational basis to
deny the amendment. Having concluded that the trial court erred in ruling that the
CPA's decision lacked a rational basis, we reverse the final judgment in its entirety.
Reversed.
LaROSE, C.J., and MORRIS, J., Concur.
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