Environmental Protection

TV (FOX News Channel): Florida property rights showdown lands at the Supreme Court

By Shannon Bream

 

A land battle that has been raging for nearly two decades landed Tuesday at the Supreme Court, which will decide whether the government went too far in regulating a development in Florida.

 

Coy Koontz in the 1970s bought a parcel of land, the majority of which later was classified a wetland. When he sought a permit to develop a portion of it in the 1990s, the Florida agency in charge of the area said Koontz would need to take steps to remediate the damage he would cause.

 

Koontz offered to give the agency 11 of the 15 acres, in exchange for a permit to develop the remaining land. In addition, the state government said he would need to undertake other improvements. Options ranged from numerous changes to the original plot to paying for enhancement of 50 government-owned acres miles away from the Koontz plot.

 

Though Koontz continued to offer the 11 acres, he refused to go along with the government’s other requirements and decided to sue.

On Tuesday, the justices at the Supreme Court considered whether the land dispute amounts to a “taking” — whether by denying Koontz the opportunity to further develop his land unless he spent thousands to meet government demands, it deprived him of its potential value.

 

His attorneys called the offer a “government shakedown,” but the government’s lawyers say Koontz simply walked away and refused to negotiate. Koontz has since died, and his son — Coy Koontz Jr. — has continued the case.

 

Though Koontz Jr. and his legal team felt confident following the arguments Tuesday, they had to acknowledge the tough questions from Justice Antonin Scalia. Arguably one of the court’s most conservative justices, he seemed unconvinced that the government’s actions violated the Fifth Amendment.

 

“I can’t see where there’s a taking here,” Scalia said, adding, “Nothing’s been taken.”

 

But his colleague, Justice Anthony Kennedy, seemed to think the Koontz case is the classic example of an unlawful, unconstitutional taking, asking why the government can “force you, as a condition to using your property to its highest and best use, to pay them money?”

 

Koontz Jr. says he never considered dropping the fight.

 

“It is important for anyone to understand that the government can at times be a creeping blob, absorbing your rights, and hopefully this will at least put a halt to that,” Koontz Jr. said as he stood on the plaza in front of the Supreme Court.

 

Supporters of the government’s position say it has a vested interest in protecting threatened habitats, and that development comes with a price tag. “The government has to have the ability to make developers pay for the genuine costs development poses,” Doug Kendall, president of the Constitutional Accountability Center, said.

 

Faced with the inability to develop the land, along with a continuing property tax obligation, the Koontz family sold the parcel. The Supreme Court’s opinion is expected by June.

More from Environmental Protection

Environmental Protection
December 10, 2024

RELEASE: Some Justices Seem Skeptical of Most Extreme Arguments Seeking to Limit the Scope of the National Environmental Policy Act

WASHINGTON, DC – Following oral argument at the Supreme Court this morning in Seven County...
Environmental Protection
October 28, 2024

States, Members of Congress, Former Agency & CEQ Officials, Legal Experts, Local Communities File Amicus Briefs in Defense of NEPA in Supreme Court Oil Train Case

Earthjustice
Amici from broad and varied interests will help Supreme Court understand the legal and practical...
Environmental Protection
U.S. Supreme Court

Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County

In Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County, the Supreme Court is considering whether the National Environmental Policy Act requires federal agencies to study all the reasonably foreseeable environmental effects of proposed projects before approving...
Environmental Protection
May 25, 2023

RELEASE: Court Rewrites Clean Water Act to Protect Private Land Development at the Expense of…Clean Water

WASHINGTON, DC – Following the Supreme Court’s announcement of its decision in Sackett v. EPA,...
By: Miriam Becker-Cohen
Environmental Protection
January 19, 2023

BLOG: Defending the Environment with Constitutional and Statutory Text and History

This Term, the Supreme Court is considering Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency, an important environmental...
By: Joie Mills
Environmental Protection
June 30, 2022

U.S. Supreme Court just gave federal agencies a big reason to worry

Reuters
(Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision on Thursday to block the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gas...
By: Brian R. Frazelle, By Alison Frankel