Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

The Attorney General of Texas hne 21, 1985 JIM MATTOX Attorney General Suprm Cewl BulldIng Bomrable CarlosVaLdcz OpinionNo. JM-328 P. 0. Box 12542 Nueces County Attorwy Austin. TX. rnlll- 2545 Courthowe, Room 2015 Be: Wtether regulationsenacted 512/47S?so1 Corpw Chrioti, Tasks 78401 pursuant to article 1581e-1. Telex Olw87C1287 T4l~copler 512/47502(16 V.T.C.S.. and 6WtiOUS 16.311, et seq.. of the Tcus Water Code couetitute e taking of land 714 Jack6m. Suit. 700 Dd*r. TX. 7520245m 2W742-8044 Deer Hr. Valder: The legislatureenacted article 1581e-1. V.T.C.S., because it 4824 Albwu Ave.. SUIW 16a recopslzed El Paso. TX. 7WOH792 OlW the permbal bardahips end economic distress cawd by flood disasters eiace~it haa become 1001Texas. suite 700 uneconomiml for the private insurance industry NolJston, TX. 77m2-3111 alone to make flood Insuranceavailableto those 71- in need o:!euch protectionon reanonableterma and conditiom,., 50s Broadway, suite 312 Lubbock. TX. 794062472 Sec. 1. The purpcm of article 1581~1 wan to enable Gulf Coast 8o8n47-522.3 cottlttlc~ to participateIn the National Flood InsuranceAct of 1968, 42, U.S.C. ,14001.- et ma... Id.: mee alw Tex. Water Code 116.311.et General Opin~.~983); MU-171 (1980);E-1Oz 4209 N. Tmth. Suit. B McAllm. TX. 78501.162s federal lct make& flood insurance avaflable throueh 512lea2.4547 i&d&&d --effortI, of ,~, t< ~.federal,..govekt ind -the prlvaie innrr-•.induIItV :.-but only vhca ~stath and local gOV~l%WtltEcomply with certaimfedera:, standards. 42 U.S.C.*114022, 4012(c) (1982); see 2m Malt! Plru, suite 400 Texas Laudowners IUghtst Ase’n v. Earris, 453 1; Supp. ~1025, 1027-28 San Antonlo. TX. 782052727 5t~lsl ?DiD.C:1978), m!,. 598 P.2d 3rl (D.C. Cir. 1979). cert. denied,444 U.S. 927.. Addftimmllv: eeveral other tvues of federal financial awi6teuce, including % and PgA insured*~*mrtgages, m ctkmunity A” Equal OPPWtunltYf development block lpattts, and disaster resistance. may not be Affl”“.th~ Actlon EmployW available In flood hazard ereas 'of non-complyingc-cities. 42 U.S.C. i4012a; we 42 U.S.C. )4003(a)(4); oee &o T~AE Landowners Rlghts.Aes’n o. ~~~, E,. at 1028. Pureuent to tha Ilationel Flood IneureeceAct of 1968. ee amended by the Flood Dieeetw ProtectionAct of 1973. 42 U.S.C. 14001 et seq., the Pederel Rmergea~cyManagement Agency holds authority to adopt regulationswhich ctmdition a loulity'e perticipatlonin the Nationel Flood InsurancePro$;ram.-See 42 U.S.C. 14012(c); 44 C.F.R. 160.1(a). RonorsbleCarlo6Vsldea - Page!2 (JM-328) The regulationabout which y,u inquireprovides that a participating communityshall,smong other thinga, [plrohibitencroschs~snts, Includingfill, new con- stmction. aubstsntLs1 improvemants. and other developnwntwithin t'headoptedregulatoryfloodvay that would result jlrsny increase in flood levels within the communityduring the occurrenceof the beae flood dischsrge. (Emphsaiaadded). 44 C.P.R. l60.3(d)(3). Your offfce contend6thirtthe wording of this provisionmust be taken as s blsnket prohibitionof any developmentin flood hazard areas. Accordingly,you aak whether the passage and enforcementby the county~oflsnd use regulotionawith this prohibition,pursuantto srtlcle 1581c1. V.T.C.S..owi~aections16.311 through 16.319 of the Texas Water Code. constitutes taking of lsnd without compensationin violationof the Fifth and FourteenthAmwdmsnts of the United States Constitution. You also aak whether applicationof this flood hsrsrd regulationto only portionsof the total ntier of flood hazard sreea violate6 the Equsl ProtectionClause of the Fourteenthtindxnent. A number of prior opinionsof ,&is office considered, various aspects of counties' participationIn t'w Nations1Flood InsuranceProgrsm. See Attomay General Opinion6 JW-123 (1983); MU-171 (1980); H-1102 E-1024, E-1011. E-978 (1977). Several of these opinions deslt specificallywith article l!ieile-1.but none addressed the constitu- tionsl issua raised by your request. -See Attorney General Opinions a-123; MU-171;R-1024. AA a prelimlnsrymsttor. It la not entirely clear that the federsl regulationia queatfon requires the county to prohibit “all" developamt in.federsllydec;f,gnsted floodwaya. The Suprcmc Court of North Xarolins recently conrlideredthe vslidity of a local land use ordinsncefor flood,luaardares6 which wea enected in order to comply with the Rations1 Flood Inno!snceProgrsm. See ReaponaibleCitizen6 in Oppositionto the Flood Qain Ordinancevxity of Asheville,302 S.E.Zd 204 (N.C. 1983). Tha:ordinance,in lsngusge slooat identical to that in isauc here, prahLbited sll fill, new conatmction. snd aubatsntislirprov-ts except those that "ahsll not result in 9 incresac of the regulstoryf:lood[level]during occurrenceof the base flood discharge." Id. et 210. n. 4 (emphasis edded). The court construedthis,lsnpr- to authorize nav conatmction or aubataatisl imprwamwta in e menner th;atprevent8 or ~nimiaea any potentlal iacresse in flood d.msge. 302 S.E.2d at 210. You do not indicate thst s perticulerlendowner'haspresented evidence from an engineer thst no developmentat all ia physically poaalble vhich vi11 not result in soy incraese in !Floodlevels. You indicate that prior federalreatricthns snd pra:ticegenerallypermittednew construction if the structurewsa llsvstad on pilings. We also note that the federsl regulationsprovide for the adoptionof limitedvariancesand p. 1501 EonorsbleCsrloaValder - Page 3 (JM-328) See 44 C.F.R. 160.6. Uoreover, exceptionsin extreme clrcum~~tsncea. evsn if new constmctlon is not feasible.the provisionin question does not necessarilypr0hibi.tall uses of property in flood hazard arses. See generallyTurner v. CounTof Del Norte. 24 Cal. App. 3d 311, 101 Cal. Rptr. 93mj (upheldlimit on use under flood plsin ordlnsnceto recreationsnd sgriculture). Under the Fifth and FourteenthAmendmentsof the United Ststes Constitution. privatepropertymsy not be "t&en" in the uercise of s governmsnt'seminent domain pavers without "just compensation.” You do not oak about the Texsa Conatltution.Set Tex. Coast. srt. I. 117; City of College Ststion v. Turtle Rock Corporation.680 S.W.Zd 802 (Tax. 1984);City of Austin v. Tesgue.570 S.W.Zd 389 (Tex. 1978). We note. hovever.that the Texas spproschis in line with cases resolving "taking"claim6under the Federsl Constitution. See City of Austin v. Tesgw, 570 S.W.Zd at 393 (balancingof public ati~rivate intareata). Under certain circumatancea.,property uy be eppropristedby govem- ment action without sny corpenastionas an exercise of the stste’s police paver - the power to protect the public health. safety, snd welfare. u.s. 621 ,S;;o;n Diego Go6 b,Electric Co. v. C::',~sS~l~~;;~ Agin v. City of Tlburon. 447 U.S. 255 (1980) Central TrsnaportationCo. *;. NW York City, . . ; Texss LandownersRights Asa'~~v. Esrria. *. The factors uauslly consideredin determiningwhe:ther or not a takinghsa occurredinclude whether there hss been a #yalcal invasion or sppropristion,the degree of diminutionIn the value of the clsiment'alsnd, the distinc- tion between forcingbaneflt~; snd preventinghsrma, snd a balersing of public benefits againstprivjxe losses. Aa the United States Supreme Court stated in Agina v. C:lJ:p of Tiburon. m. %o precise rule determinesvhsn propertyhe6 b,eentoken . . . the questionnece66arily requires a weighing of prfirsteend public interests." Thus. vh‘t constitutesa "taking" rfth regard to the actusl applicationof a local flood ordinsncedepend!, upon the fscts in each particularcase. Accordingly,we con only set forth whst the general state of the lsw is in the arae. It has slresdy been estsblished in a- jurisdictionsthat similarloco1 land use regulmtions eaaociatedwith the Notions1Flood Insurance Progrsn ore a va1j.dexarcise of the police power and that. thereforethey do not. on their face, effect s “taking.” See Texas Landowners Rights Aaa’n v. 'llsrris, m ResponsibleCitizens in Opposftionto the Flood Pl& Ordinsncev. City of Asheville,m Flood hszsrd zone regulstion;serve a vitsl purpose in protectingthe people who occupy the regul.a,ted land and in protectingneighboring lsndovnersfrom increasedflood dsmsge and in protectingthe general public. See Turnpike Reslt:rCo. v. Tow of Dedham. 284 N.E.2d 891 (Ness. 19m cert. denied, 609 U.S. 1108 (1973). For these ressona, they have been upheld se vr.lidexercises of the police paver. See Texhs Landowners-Rights Ass’n. v. Hsrrls, supra; ResponsibleCitia~ in Opposition to the Flood-Plsin Ordinance v. City of Aahsville. s. Moreover,SE shown agove. the provision in questiondoes not p. 1502 RonorablcCarlosValdez - Page 4 (JM-328) prohibitall uses of propertywithin a flood risk area. Clearly some intensiveu*es, such as extensiveuev construction.mey be ruled out as * practicalmatter. As lnilicated,however.decisionsof the United States Supreme Court establishthat uses of land which are Injurious to the public may be prohib:tted entirely without compensation. In borderlinec.ssesthe courts hsve found the existenceof authorization for some remaininguses to te a significantfactor in the "taking" ISSUL. See, e.g., Aglus v. CJ.tyof Tiburon.supra; Turner v. CouutY of Del Norte, supra. The ultimatequestionIs whether a landowneris denied all economicallyviab'leuse of his land, Agins, 447 U.S. at 260, not whetherhe mst be a1,l.eto show au immediateprofit. The fact that the authorizeduses are not the "highestand best" uses or that the cost of complying with flood control land-use regulationslay be financially"prohibitive"is not controll! r-1051. 1066 (:5thCir.-i i-F.2d 1184 (Ct. 198i);-; Decisionsof the United States SF upheld prohibitions of similar injurious uses and activities, to preventharm to the public, even when the financialimpact on the land in question is substantial. See, e.g., Agins v. City of Tiburon, w For example,the Supreme Court in the Penn Central cnse noted that It previously upheld, without requiring compensation,a 75 percent diminutionin value Ln Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S. 365 (1926).snd uuheld an 87% nercentdiminutionIn value In Radscheck v. Sebsst&n. 236 U.S. 394 (1;315).438 U.S. at 131; see als;ne LandownersRights Aesn’n v. Barris. 453 F. Supp. at 1032. cases the landownerswhose jamis restrictedalso receive certain reciprocalbenefitswhich incr,case the value of their property. Such benefitsmay arise both from the fact that restrictions applicableto their neighborsprotect the liwdovnersthemselvesfrom increasedflood hazards and from the ivailabllityto the landownerof flood insurance end federally-related financing. See ResponsibleCitizens in Opposi- tion to the Flood Plain OrdinanceCity V. of Asheville.302 S.R.2d st 213. That the costs of dev&pment necessary to comply with flood hazard restrictionsare "prdn:Lbitive" or that. the lover value of a less intensiveuse of land is not immediatelyprofitablepay merely indicatethat .sparticularlctndowner has paid too much for land in a flood hazard area. The Fifth and FourteenthAmendmentsdo not require that the government guarantcw that a landowner be favored to the detrimentof the public merely becausehe has paid a speculativeprice for land. As the Supreme Cou,rtstated in Penn CentrslTransportation Co. v. New York City: [T]he submissionthw [landowners]may establisha 'taking’ simply by shoving that they have been p. 1503 . EonornbleCnrlosValder - Pago 5 (Jh-328) denied the nbility to exploit n property interest that they heretofolre had believed vns availsble for developmet is quite simplyuntenable. 438 U.S. at 130; see also -- And:nm v. Allard,444 U.S. 51. 65-66 (1979). ~For these reasons,ve concludethat adoptionby the county of the federnlstandardfor flood haxerd laud-useregulationin question.see 44 C.P.R. 960.3(d)(3) (quoted previously),would not on its face effect n taking. The validity of the appllcatiouof a flood plain ordinance to a particular piece of..propertydepends upou fnctual determinations.Numerous courts in other stntes have upheld similar flood zone prohibitions..8ee Turner vr County of Del Norte, 24 Cal. App. 3d 311. 101 Cal. 'Rptr.93 (1972):Pope v. City of Atlant :“, 249 S.E.Zd 16 (Ga. 1978). cert. denied. 1C40 U.S. 936 (1979); Plumbing6 Bent1ng ~I&.~v.za Nnturai ReaourccrCouncil.276 N%% . . 377 (Iown 1979); I N.E.2d 891 (l4aml..1972). qLe~L~;j;.2;~;f m D=dham-Subnru 284 of New England v. Board of Apue . . (Haas. App. Ct. 1979); Usdin v.,State Departmentof EnvlronmentrlPIyeaction. 414 A.2d 280 ,(N.J;8uner. Ct. LAW Div. 19fa). aff'd. 430 A.2d 94!9 (N.J. Super. Ct. ,&p. Old. 1981); Ma le Leaf Iuvex~. Inc. v. State Departmentof Ecology, 565 P.Zdwi. 1977) 8ce also Graham v.~Bstuary Properties.Inc.. 399 80. 2d 1374 (Fl;. i-t. denied,454 U.S. 1083 (1981). You also indicqte thnt tireproposed regulation would apply only to flood hasard areas on the FiuecesBiver which are designatedby the Federal Bmergency PlarugementAgency and that the Agency plans to designate only a portion of IBS total mumher of flood hazard atess nt a the. Becuuse this may rewlt in differingtreatment of landoeners who nre similarly. situated.you ask whether such partial regulation violatesthe Equal Protection(Clause of the FourteenthAmendment. We note *s a prefatorywetter that Gulf Coast countiesare not limitedin their enactmentand enforcementof flood hsrard regulations to nrens which have been designeted as flood hasnrd areas by the Federal RmergencyDnnagementAgency. Countieshold only those pouers nnd duties that nre specificnllyor by necessaryimplicationconferred on them. Canales v. Lau8n:Lin.214 S.W.Zd 451 (Ten. 1948). As initiallyenacted. the Flood-Controland InsuranceAct granted only limitedpowers to counties. See Ten. Water Code S16.311et seq. This office previously concludei~>hat this act nuthoriree political subdivisionsto enact land use regulstionswhich have as their purpose and effect eomplinncewith the requir-ts of the National Flood Iosurnnce Program, but that, such regulations have no application outside of federally designsted flood hasnrd areas. See Attorney General OpinionsWI-171 (1983'); R-978 (1977). NeverthelG. srticle 1581e-1 grnnts ldditionsl flood damage control powers to counties bordering the Gulf of Mexicc~ or ita tidewater limits. These pavers sre not restrictedto or conditionedon the actions of any federnl p. 1504 EonorableCarlosValdez - Page 6 (JM-328) ageucy in dcsiguatingnn aren ,asn flood hasard. See Attorney General OpinionsHW-171 (1980);N-1024 (1977). As ve inKsted in Attorney General Opinion JM-123 (1983). article 1581e-1 must be construedin conformitywith its purpose of enabling certain counties to quelify for pnrtlcipatiouin the National Flood Insurance Program. Con- sequently,Attorney CaneralOpinion JM-I23 concludedthat a particular county lackad powers broad enough to deny utility sewice to individualsand autities vhlch were not in compllaucavlth county flood regulations. Navcrth~aless.federal regulations encourage comprehensiveflood mwagemrut by local c-nitleo sad expressly allow more stringentregulat:tcms than we federallyrequired. See 44 C.F.X. 1160.1,60.3(b). Thw,, Gulf Coast countiesare not limi?Z in their article 1581c-1flood z,cgulatiou pavers to areas which have been designatedas flood hasard as’eae by the fedaralgovernmant. They are, howwer. limlted to enactin only land use regulationsand only in flood-proneareas. -See Attonmy GaneralOpinionE-1024 (1977). If tha county decides, houever, that it is feasibleto enact nnd anforce flood regulationsonly in the areas which have been federally designatedas flood haanrd areas, such action vould not result in a danialof equal protectionea a matter of law. It is well established that governmanta entitianamp implamenttheir programs a step at n time., See City of NW Orleans v. Uukas, 427 U.S. 297 (1976); Kataenba~v. Xorgan. 384 U2. ace also Beckandorffv. Rarris-CalvcstonCoastal Subl3:Ldence District,558 S.W.2d 75, 81 (Tax. Civ. App. - Houston [14th D&t.] 1977). aff'd 563 S.W.Zd 239 (Tex. 1978). So long as the Gulf Coast county ha~ational reason for not enactingand enforcingflood regulationsin all flood hazard areas at one tkc. no aqua1 protectionclaim anista ls a matter of lnv. The validity of the actual applicationof this langunge to a parficular piece of propertydepandsupon the fscts involvedin each cnse. 1. This is not to sn:rthat. in a particularcase. a landowner could not show that a county's flood plain boundary draving Is dis- cridnetory as applied. See enerall Visa v. State, 92 Cal. App. 3d 15. 154 Cal. Rptr. 580 v9'79 -s+ Nor do ve nddress the question of whether a partlculnr landouner may have other claims against the enforcementof a flood p1c:d.n rcgulstion. See Hcrnandcz v. City of Lnfaycttc.649 F.2d 336 (5~11Cir. 1981). (cnnteral cstoppel)e denied. 102 s.ct. 1251 (19A2); Town of Large v. Imperial Aomes Corporatfon.309 So.2d 571 (Pin. 1975) (equitablecstoppel). p. 1505 . NonornbleCarloaValder - Page 7 (JR-3281 Language in loaLL land-use regulationsvhich tracks the criter:ia of the Natioual Flood InsuranceProgram set forth in 44 C.F.R. section 60.3(d)(3),does not 00 its face effect a "taking" in violation of the Fifth and FourteauthAmeud- meets of the United States Constitution. The countymay adopt flood haaard regulationsoue step at n the, such that they apply 0019 In federally designatedflood hazard areas, vithout coustitu- tlag a violationof the Bqual ProtectionClause of the FourteeuthAmeuhseutas a matter of lav. The validity of the ectual application of this languageto a partiwlar piece of propertydepends upou the facts invo:tved in each use. JIM MATTOX Attorney Geueralof Texas TonGxEEN First AssistantAttorney Gaaeml DAVID X. BICEARDS ExecutiveAaaiatant Attorney General ROBERT GRAT SpecialAssistant Attorney General RICR GILPIN Chairman.OpinionComittae Preparedby JeuuiferRiggs AssistantAttorney General APPROVEI: OPINION CGXRITlEE Rick Gilpin.Chairman Jon Bible Tony Guillory Jim noellinger JenniferRiggs Nancy Sutton Snrah Uoelk p. 1506