In a landmark decision for land use and development, the United States Supreme Court has ruled under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution that regulatory agencies cannot make "extortionate demands" on land-use permit applicants. In Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District, 517 U.S. __ (2013), the Court allowed a landowner to bring a claim for a Fifth Amendment takings, where the agency attempted to coerce him into providing what was considered excess or disproportionate mitigation as the "price" of getting land use approval.
Why Does This Decision Matter?
This decision is important because it signals that all government agencies—federal, state and local—will need to take greater care that the exactions and conditions they impose on permit applicants are fair and related to the purpose of the permit program. It also clarifies that an agency cannot deny a permit application because the applicant refuses to accept the agency's unreasonable mitigation demands. Applicants can rely on the constitutional protections recognized by this decision as they negotiate their permit mitigation terms.
Additional Information
The facts of the case are telling. Koontz sought a permit from a
Florida state agency to develop a parcel of land along a major
Orlando thoroughfare. The owner planned to develop only 3.7 acres
of the 14.9 acre site. As mitigation for impacts to wetlands on the
site, the owner proposed to grant the state a conservation easement
for the remainder of the property.
The agency rejected the proposal. If the property owner wanted a
permit, he would have to meet either one of two conditions
"suggested" by the agency. The first option was to limit
his project to 1 acre and grant the state a conservation easement
to the remaining 13.9 acres of the property. Alternatively, he
could complete his project as proposed, but in addition to giving
the agency a conservation easement to the remainder of the site, he
would have to pay for an offsite mitigation project approved by the
agency. The land owner refused to agree to either of these
conditions and the agency denied the permit.
The Court found that the agency's "extortionate
demands" were an unconstitutional attempt to coerce the
property owner to forgo his Fifth Amendment right to receive just
compensation for property taken by the government. Writing for a
slim 5-4 majority, Justice Alito explained that there are two
competing realities for typical land use permits. On the one hand,
it is fair to make permit applicants provide compensation for
impacts to public resources such as wetlands. On the other hand,
however, permit applicants are highly susceptible to coercion by
permitting authorities who demand unfair exactions in exchange for
the sought-after permit.
The way to reconcile these competing realities, according to the
Court, is to mandate that mitigation conditions imposed for land
use permits have a "nexus" to the impacts of the proposed
project and be in "rough proportionality" to its impacts.
In other words, permitting authorities cannot place unreasonable
mitigation demands on applicants seeking land-use permits; the
conditions on the permit must fairly compensate for the project
impacts, but no more.
The principles outlined by the Court have been established in two
prior cases—Nollan v. California Coastal Commission,
483 U.S. 825 (1987), and Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U.S.
374 (1994). But the Koontz decision significantly expands
their application. First, this case clarifies that a constitutional
violation occurs when a permitting authority denies a permit
application because a land owner refuses accept unjustifiable
conditions. Permit applicants may therefore reject unreasonable
permit conditions and still challenge the agency's action in
court. Second, some prior cases had suggested that a constitutional
violation would occur only if an applicant were forced to
relinquish rights to land or other tangible property in order to
obtain the permit. Koontz establishes that a permitting
authority cannot demand "extortionate" monetary
payments in exchange for a permit either.
Conclusion
Koontz decision is likely to have far-reaching implications for
persons seeking land-use permits. An applicant who believes that
the mitigation restrictions and financial conditions attached to a
denied or offered land-use permit are disproportionate to the
impacts of the project will have a potential legal remedy. This
constitutional right should function as a significant check on the
power of permitting authorities to propose take-it-or-leave-it
permits with unreasonable mitigation conditions. While the
practical effects of this decision will become apparent with time,
it is likely to facilitate more collaborative mitigation
discussions between applicants and agencies who can negotiate on a
less uneven basis.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.