Right-click here and click
"Save Target As" to download this document.
PALAZZOLO v. RHODE ISLAND
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided June 28,
2001.
Landowner brought inverse condemnation action against the Rhode Island Coastal
Resources Management Council (CRMC), alleging that the CRMC's denial of his
application to fill 18 acres of coastal wetlands and construct beach club
constituted a taking for which he was entitled to compensation. After bench
trial, the Rhode Island Superior Court, Washington County, entered judgment for
CRMC. The Rhode Island Supreme Court, 746 A.2d 707, affirmed, and landowner
petitioned for certiorari. The United States Supreme Court, Justice Kennedy,
held that: (1) claims were ripe for adjudication; (2) acquisition of title
after the effective date of the regulations did not bar regulatory takings
claims; and (3) Lucas claim for deprivation of all economic use was precluded
by undisputed value of portion of tract for construction of residence.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
Justices O'Connor and Scalia filed concurring opinions.
Justice Stevens filed opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Justice Ginsburg filed dissenting opinion, in which Justices Souter and Breyer
joined.
Justice Breyer filed dissenting opinion.
Syllabus [FN*]
FN* The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U.S. 321, 337, 26 S.Ct. 282, 50 L.Ed. 499.
*1 In order to acquire the
waterfront parcel of Rhode Island land that is here at issue, petitioner and
associates formed Shore Gardens, Inc. (SGI), in 1959. After SGI purchased the
property petitioner bought out his associates and became the sole shareholder.
Most of the property was then, and is now, salt marsh subject to tidal
flooding. The wet ground and permeable soil would require considerable fill
before significant structures could be built. Over the years, SGI's
intermittent applications to develop the property were rejected by various
government agencies. After 1966, no further applications were made for over a
decade. Two intervening events, however, become important to the issues
presented. First, in 1971, the State created respondent Rhode Island Coastal
Resources Management Council (Council) and charged it with protecting the
State's coastal properties. The Council's regulations, known as the Rhode
Island Coastal Resources Management Program (CRMP), designated salt marshes
like those on SGI's property as protected "coastal wetlands" on which
development is greatly limited. Second, in 1978 SGI's corporate charter was
revoked, and title to the property passed to petitioner as the corporation's
sole shareholder. In 1983 petitioner applied to the Council for permission to
construct a wooden bulkhead and fill his entire marsh land area. The Council
rejected the application, concluding, inter alia, that it would conflict with
the CRMP. In 1985 petitioner filed a new application with the Council, seeking
permission to fill 11 of the property's 18 wetland acres in order to build a
private beach club. The Council rejected this application as well, ruling that
the proposal did not satisfy the standards for obtaining a "special
exception" to fill salt marsh, whereby the proposed activity must serve a
compelling public purpose. Subsequently, petitioner filed an inverse
condemnation action in Rhode Island Superior Court, asserting that the State's
wetlands regulations, as applied by the Council to his parcel, had taken the
property without compensation in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments. The suit alleged the Council's action deprived him of "all
economically beneficial use" of his property, resulting in a total taking
requiring compensation under Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S.
1003, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d 798, and sought $3,150,000 in damages, a
figure derived from an appraiser's estimate as to the value of a 74-lot
residential subdivision on the property. The court ruled against petitioner,
and the State Supreme Court affirmed, holding that (1) petitioner's takings
claim was not ripe; (2) he had no right to challenge regulations predating
1978, when he succeeded to legal ownership of the property; (3) he could not
assert a takings claim based on the denial of all economic use of his property
in light of undisputed evidence that he had $200,000 in development value
remaining on an upland parcel of the property; and (4) because the regulation
at issue predated his acquisition of title, he could have had no reasonable
investment-backed expectation that he could develop his property, and,
therefore, he could not recover under Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York
City, 438 U.S. 104, 124, 98 S.Ct. 2646, 57 L.Ed.2d 631
Held:
*2 1. This case is ripe for
review. Pp. 8-16.
(a) A takings claim challenging application of land-use regulations is not ripe
unless the agency charged with implementing the regulations has reached a final
decision regarding their application to the property at issue. Williamson
County Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172,
186, 105 S.Ct. 3108, 87 L.Ed.2d 126. A final decision does not occur until the
responsible agency determines the extent of permitted development on the land. MacDonald,
Sommer & Frates v. Yolo County, 477 U.S. 340, 351, 106 S.Ct. 2561, 91
L.Ed.2d 285. Petitioner obtained such a final decision when the Council denied
his 1983 and 1985 applications. The State Supreme Court erred in ruling that,
notwithstanding those denials, doubt remained as to the extent of development
the Council would allow on petitioner's parcel due to his failure to explore
other uses for the property that would involve filling substantially less
wetlands. This is belied by the unequivocal nature of the wetland regulations
at issue and by the Council's application of the regulations to the subject
property. The CRMP permits the Council to grant a special exception to engage
in a prohibited use only where a "compelling public purpose" is served.
The proposal to fill the entire property was not accepted under Council
regulations and did not qualify for the special exception. The Council
determined the use proposed in the second application (the beach club) did not
satisfy the "compelling public purpose" standard. There is no
indication the Council would have accepted the application had the proposed
club occupied a smaller surface area. To the contrary, it ruled that the
proposed activity was not a "compelling public purpose." Although a
landowner may not establish a taking before the land-use authority has the
opportunity, using its own reasonable procedures, to decide and explain the
reach of a challenged regulation, e.g., MacDonald, supra, at 342, once it
becomes clear that the permissible uses of the property are known to a
reasonable degree of certainty, a takings claim is likely to have ripened.
Here, the Council's decisions make plain that it interpreted its regulations to
bar petitioner from engaging in any filling or development on the wetlands.
Further permit applications were not necessary to establish this point. Pp. 8-
12.
(b) Contrary to the State Supreme Court's ruling, petitioner's claim is not
unripe by virtue of his failure to seek permission for a use of the property
that would involve development only of its upland portion. It is true that
there was uncontested testimony that an upland site would have an estimated
value of $200,000 if developed. And, while the CRMP requires Council approval
to develop upland property lying within 200 feet of protected waters, the
strict "compelling public purpose" test does not govern proposed land
uses on property in this classification. Council officials testified at trial,
moreover, that they would have allowed petitioner to build a residence on the
upland parcel. Nevertheless, this Court's ripeness jurisprudence requires
petitioner to explore development opportunities on his upland parcel only if
there is uncertainty as to the land's permitted use. The State's assertion that
the uplands' value is in doubt comes too late for the litigation before this
Court. It was stated in the certiorari petition that the uplands were worth an
estimated $200,000. The figure not only was uncontested but also was cited as
fact in the State's brief in opposition. In this circumstance ripeness cannot
be contested by saying that the value of the nonwetland parcels is unknown. See
Lucas, supra, at 1020, and n. 9. Nor is there genuine ambiguity in the record
as to the extent of permitted development on petitioner's property, either on
the wetlands or the uplands. Pp. 12-14.
(c) Nor is petitioner's takings claim rendered unripe, as the State Supreme
Court held, by his failure to apply for permission to develop the 74-lot
subdivision that was the basis for the damages sought in his inverse
condemnation suit. It is difficult to see how this concern is relevant to the
inquiry at issue here. The Council informed petitioner that he could not fill
the wetlands; it follows of necessity that he could not fill and then build 74
single-family dwellings there. Petitioner's submission of this proposal would
not have clarified the extent of development permitted by the wetlands
regulations, which is the inquiry required under the Court's ripeness
decisions. Pp. 14-16.
*3 2. Petitioner's acquisition
of title after the regulations' effective date did not bar his takings claims.
This Court rejects the State Supreme Court's sweeping rule that a purchaser or
a successive title holder like petitioner is deemed to have notice of an
earlier-enacted restriction and is barred from claiming that it effects a
taking. Were the Court to accept that rule, the postenactment transfer of title
would absolve the State of its obligation to defend any action restricting land
use, no matter how extreme or unreasonable. A State would be allowed, in
effect, to put an expiration date on the Takings Clause. This ought not to be
the rule. Future generations, too, have a right to challenge unreasonable
limitations on the use and value of land. The State's notice justification does
not take into account the effect on owners at the time of enactment, who are
prejudiced as well. Should an owner attempt to challenge a new regulation, but
not survive the process of ripening his or her claim (which, as this case
demonstrates, will often take years), under the State's rule the right to
compensation may not by asserted by an heir or successor, and so may not be
asserted at all. The State's rule also would work a critical alteration to the
nature of property, as the newly regulated landowner is stripped of the ability
to transfer the interest which was possessed prior to the regulation. The State
may not by this means secure a windfall for itself. See, e.g., Webb's Fabulous
Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith, 449 U.S. 155, 164, 101 S.Ct. 446, 66 L.Ed.2d 358.
The rule is, furthermore, capricious in effect. The young owner contrasted with
the older owner, the owner with the resources to hold contrasted with the owner
with the need to sell, would be in different positions. The Takings Clause is
not so quixotic. A blanket rule that purchasers with notice have no
compensation right when a claim becomes ripe is too blunt an instrument to
accord with the duty to compensate for what is taken. Nollan v. California
Coastal Comm'n, 483 U.S. 825, 834, n. 2, 107 S.Ct. 3141, 97 L.Ed.2d 677, is
controlling precedent for the Court's conclusion. Lucas, supra, at 1029, did
not overrule Nollan, which is based on essential Takings Clause principles. On
remand the state court must address the merits of petitioner's Penn Central
claim, which is not barred by the mere fact that his title was acquired after
the effective date of the state-imposed restriction. Pp. 16-21.
3. The State Supreme Court did not err in finding that petitioner failed to
establish a deprivation of all economic use, for it is undisputed that his
parcel retains significant development value. Petitioner is correct that,
assuming a taking is otherwise established, a State may not evade the duty to
compensate on the premise that the landowner is left with a token interest.
This is not the situation in this case, however. A regulation permitting a
landowner to build a substantial residence on an 18-acre parcel does not leave
the property "economically idle." Lucas, supra, at 1019. Petitioner
attempts to revive this part of his claim by arguing, for the first time, that
the upland parcel is distinct from the wetlands portions, so he should be
permitted to assert a deprivation limited to the latter. The Court will not
explore the point here. Petitioner did not press the argument in the state
courts, and the issue was not presented in his certiorari petition. The case
comes to the Court on the premise that petitioner's entire parcel serves as the
basis for his takings claim, and, so framed, the total deprivation argument
fails. Pp. 21-23.
*4 4. Because petitioner's
claims under the Penn Central analysis were not examined below, the case is
remanded. Pp. 7, 22.
746 A.2d 707, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Kennedy, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Rehnquist, C.J., and
O'Connor, Scalia, and Thomas, JJ., joined, and in which Stevens, J., joined as
to Part II-A. O'Connor, J., and Scalia, J., filed concurring opinions. Stevens,
J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part. Ginsburg, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion, in which Souter and Breyer, JJ., joined. Breyer,
J., filed a dissenting opinion.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF RHODE ISLAND
James S. Burling, Sacramento, CA, for petitioner.
Justice KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner Anthony Palazzolo owns a waterfront parcel of land in the town of
Westerly, Rhode Island. Almost all of the property is designated as coastal
wetlands under Rhode Island law. After petitioner's development proposals were
rejected by respondent Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council
(Council), he sued in state court, asserting the Council's application of its
wetlands regulations took the property without compensation in violation of the
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, binding upon the State through the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Petitioner sought review in this
Court, contending the Supreme Court of Rhode Island erred in rejecting his
takings claim. We granted certiorari. 531 U.S. 923 (2000).
I
The town of Westerly is on an edge of
the Rhode Island coastline. The town's western border is the Pawcatuck River,
which at that point is the boundary between Rhode Island and Connecticut.
Situated on land purchased from the Narragansett Indian Tribe, the town was
incorporated in 1669 and had a precarious, though colorful, early history. Both
Connecticut and Massachusetts contested the boundaries--and indeed the
validity--of Rhode Island's royal charter; and Westerly's proximity to
Connecticut invited encroachments during these jurisdictional squabbles. See M.
Best, The Town that Saved a State-- Westerly 60-83 (1943); see also W.
McLaughlin, Rhode Island: A Bicentennial History 39-57 (1978). When the borders
of the Rhode Island Colony were settled by compact in 1728, the town's
development was more orderly, and with some historical distinction. For
instance, Watch Hill Point, the peninsula at the southwestern tip of the town,
was of strategic importance in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. See
Best, supra, at 190; F. Denison, Westerly and its Witnesses 118-119 (1878).
In later times Westerly's coastal location had a new significance: It became a
popular vacation and seaside destination. One of the town's historians gave
this happy account:
*5 "After the Civil War
the rapid growth of manufacture and expansion of trade had created a spending
class on pleasure bent, and Westerly had superior attractions to offer, surf
bathing on ocean beaches, quieter bathing in salt and fresh water ponds,
fishing, annual sail and later motor boat races. The broad beaches of clean
white sand dip gently toward the sea; there are no odorous marshes at low tide,
no railroad belches smoke, and the climate is unrivalled on the coast, that of
Newport only excepted. In the phenomenal heat wave of 1881 ocean resorts from
northern New England to southern New Jersey sweltered as the thermometer
climbed to 95 and 104 degrees, while Watch Hill enjoyed a comfortable 80. When
Providence to the north runs a temperature of 90, the mercury in this favored
spot remains at 77." Best, supra, at 192.
Westerly today has about 20,000 year-round residents, and thousands of summer
visitors come to enjoy its beaches and coastal advantages.
One of the more popular attractions is Misquamicut State Beach, a lengthy
expanse of coastline facing Block Island Sound and beyond to the Atlantic
Ocean. The primary point of access to the beach is Atlantic Avenue, a well-
traveled 3-mile stretch of road running along the coastline within the town's
limits. At its western end, Atlantic Avenue is something of a commercial strip,
with restaurants, hotels, arcades, and other typical seashore businesses. The
pattern of development becomes more residential as the road winds eastward onto
a narrow spine of land bordered to the south by the beach and the ocean, and to
the north by Winnapaug Pond, an intertidal inlet often used by residents for
boating, fishing, and shellfishing.
In 1959 petitioner, a lifelong Westerly resident, decided to invest in three
undeveloped, adjoining parcels along this eastern stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
To the north, the property faces, and borders upon, Winnapaug Pond; the south
of the property faces Atlantic Avenue and the beachfront homes abutting it on
the other side, and beyond that the dunes and the beach. To purchase and hold
the property, petitioner and associates formed Shore Gardens, Inc. (SGI). After
SGI purchased the property petitioner bought out his associates and became the
sole shareholder. In the first decade of SGI's ownership of the property the
corporation submitted a plat to the town subdividing the property into 80 lots;
and it engaged in various transactions that left it with 74 lots, which
together encompassed about 20 acres. During the same period SGI also made
initial attempts to develop the property and submitted intermittent
applications to state agencies to fill substantial portions of the parcel. Most
of the property was then, as it is now, salt marsh subject to tidal flooding.
The wet ground and permeable soil would require considerable fill--as much as
six feet in some places--before significant structures could be built. SGI's
proposal, submitted in 1962 to the Rhode Island Division of Harbors and Rivers
(DHR), sought to dredge from Winnapaug Pond and fill the entire property. The
application was denied for lack of essential information. A second, similar
proposal followed a year later. A third application, submitted in 1966 while
the second application was pending, proposed more limited filling of the land
for use as a private beach club. These latter two applications were referred to
the Rhode Island Department of Natural Resources, which indicated initial
assent. The agency later withdrew approval, however, citing adverse environmental
impacts. SGI did not contest the ruling.
No further attempts to develop the property were made for over a decade. Two
intervening events, however, become important to the issues presented. First,
in 1971, Rhode Island enacted legislation creating the Council, an agency
charged with the duty of protecting the State's coastal properties. 1971 R.I.
Pub. Laws ch. 279, § 1 et seq. Regulations promulgated by the Council
designated salt marshes like those on SGI's property as protected "coastal
wetlands," Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Program (CRMP) §
210.3 (as amended, June 28, 1983) (lodged with the Clerk of this Court), on
which development is limited to a great extent. Second, in 1978 SGI's corporate
charter was revoked for failure to pay corporate income taxes; and title to the
property passed, by operation of state law, to petitioner as the corporation's
sole shareholder.
*6 In 1983 petitioner, now the
owner, renewed the efforts to develop the property. An application to the
Council, resembling the 1962 submission, requested permission to construct a
wooden bulkhead along the shore of Winnapaug Pond and to fill the entire marsh
land area. The Council rejected the application, noting it was "vague and
inadequate for a project of this size and nature." App. 16. The agency
also found that "the proposed activities will have significant impacts
upon the waters and wetlands of Winnapaug Pond," and concluded that
"the proposed alteration ... will conflict with the Coastal Resources
Management Plan presently in effect." Id., at 17. Petitioner did not
appeal the agency's determination.
Petitioner went back to the drawing board, this time hiring counsel and
preparing a more specific and limited proposal for use of the property. The new
application, submitted to the Council in 1985, echoed the 1966 request to build
a private beach club. The details do not tend to inspire the reader with an
idyllic coastal image, for the proposal was to fill 11 acres of the property
with gravel to accommodate "50 cars with boat trailers, a dumpster,
port-a- johns, picnic tables, barbecue pits of concrete, and other trash
receptacles." Id., at 25.
The application fared no better with the Council than previous ones. Under the
agency's regulations, a landowner wishing to fill salt marsh on Winnapaug Pond
needed a "special exception" from the Council. CRMP § 130. In a short
opinion the Council said the beach club proposal conflicted with the regulatory
standard for a special exception. See App. 27. To secure a special exception
the proposed activity must serve "a compelling public purpose which
provides benefits to the public as a whole as opposed to individual or private
interests." CRMP § 130A(1). This time petitioner appealed the decision to
the Rhode Island courts, challenging the Council's conclusion as contrary to
principles of state administrative law. The Council's decision was affirmed.
See App. 31-42.
Petitioner filed an inverse condemnation action in Rhode Island Superior Court,
asserting that the State's wetlands regulations, as applied by the Council to
his parcel, had taken the property without compensation in violation of the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. See App. 45. The suit alleged the Council's
action deprived him of "all economically beneficial use" of his
property, ibid., resulting in a total taking requiring compensation under Lucas
v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d
798 (1992). He sought damages in the amount of $3,150,000, a figure derived
from an appraiser's estimate as to the value of a 74-lot residential
subdivision. The State countered with a host of defenses. After a bench trial,
a justice of the Superior Court ruled against petitioner, accepting some of the
State's theories. App. to Pet. for Cert. B-1 to B-13.
*7 The Rhode Island Supreme
Court affirmed. 746 A.2d 707 (2000). Like the Superior Court, the State Supreme
Court recited multiple grounds for rejecting petitioner's suit. The court held,
first, that petitioner's takings claim was not ripe, id., at 712-715; second,
that petitioner had no right to challenge regulations predating 1978, when he
succeeded to legal ownership of the property from SGI, id., at 716; and third,
that the claim of deprivation of all economically beneficial use was
contradicted by undisputed evidence that he had $200,000 in development value
remaining on an upland parcel of the property, id., at 715. In addition to
holding petitioner could not assert a takings claim based on the denial of all
economic use the court concluded he could not recover under the more general
test of Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104, 98 S.Ct. 2646,
57 L.Ed.2d 631 (1978). On this claim, too, the date of acquisition of the
parcel was found determinative, and the court held he could have had "no
reasonable investment-backed expectations that were affected by this
regulation" because it predated his ownership, 746 A.2d, at 717; see also
Penn Central, supra, at 124.
We disagree with the Supreme Court of Rhode Island as to the first two of these
conclusions; and, we hold, the court was correct to conclude that the owner is
not deprived of all economic use of his property because the value of upland
portions is substantial. We remand for further consideration of the claim under
the principles set forth in Penn Central.
II
[1][2][3] The Takings Clause of the
Fifth Amendment, applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment,
Chicago, B. & Q.R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U.S. 226, 17 S.Ct. 581, 41 L.Ed. 979
(1897), prohibits the government from taking private property for public use
without just compensation. The clearest sort of taking occurs when the
government encroaches upon or occupies private land for its own proposed use.
Our cases establish that even a minimal "permanent physical occupation of
real property" requires compensation under the Clause. Loretto v.
Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp., 458 U.S. 419, 427, 102 S.Ct. 3164, 73
L.Ed.2d 868 (1982). In Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 43 S.Ct.
158, 67 L.Ed. 322 (1922), the Court recognized that there will be instances
when government actions do not encroach upon or occupy the property yet still
affect and limit its use to such an extent that a taking occurs. In Justice
Holmes' well-known, if less than self- defining, formulation, "while
property may be regulated to a certain extent, if a regulation goes too far it
will be recognized as a taking." Id., at 415.
[4][5][6] Since Mahon, we have given some, but not too specific, guidance to
courts confronted with deciding whether a particular government action goes too
far and effects a regulatory taking. First, we have observed, with certain
qualifications, see infra at 19-21, that a regulation which "denies all
economically beneficial or productive use of land" will require compensation
under the Takings Clause. Lucas, 505 U.S., at 1015; see also id., at 1035
(KENNEDY, J., concurring); Agins v. City of Tiburon, 447 U.S. 255, 261, 100
S.Ct. 2138, 65 L.Ed.2d 106 (1980). Where a regulation places limitations on
land that fall short of eliminating all economically beneficial use, a taking
nonetheless may have occurred, depending on a complex of factors including the
regulation's economic effect on the landowner, the extent to which the
regulation interferes with reasonable investment-backed expectations, and the
character of the government action. Penn Central, supra, at 124. These
inquiries are informed by the purpose of the Takings Clause, which is to
prevent the government from "forcing some people alone to bear public
burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a
whole." Armstrong v. United States, 364 U.S. 40, 49, 80 S.Ct. 1563, 4
L.Ed.2d 1554 (1960).
*8 Petitioner seeks
compensation under these principles. At the outset, however, we face the two
threshold considerations invoked by the state court to bar the claim: ripeness,
and acquisition which postdates the regulation.
A
In Williamson County Regional Planning
Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172, 105 S.Ct. 3108, 87
L.Ed.2d 126 (1985), the Court explained the requirement that a takings claim
must be ripe. The Court held that a takings claim challenging the application
of land-use regulations is not ripe unless "the government entity charged
with implementing the regulations has reached a final decision regarding the
application of the regulations to the property at issue." Id., at 186. A
final decision by the responsible state agency informs the constitutional
determination whether a regulation has deprived a landowner of "all economically
beneficial use" of the property, see Lucas, supra, at 1015, or defeated
the reasonable investment-backed expectations of the landowner to the extent
that a taking has occurred, see Penn Central, supra, at 124. These matters
cannot be resolved in definitive terms until a court knows "the extent of
permitted development" on the land in question. MacDonald, Sommer &
Frates v. Yolo County, 477 U.S. 340, 351, 106 S.Ct. 2561, 91 L.Ed.2d 285
(1986). Drawing on these principles, the Rhode Island Supreme Court held that petitioner
had not taken the necessary steps to ripen his takings claim.
The central question in resolving the ripeness issue, under Williamson County
and other relevant decisions, is whether petitioner obtained a final decision
from the Council determining the permitted use for the land. As we have noted,
SGI's early applications to fill had been granted at one point, though that
assent was later revoked. Petitioner then submitted two proposals: the 1983
proposal to fill the entire parcel, and the 1985 proposal to fill 11 of the
property's 18 wetland acres for construction of the beach club. The court
reasoned that, notwithstanding the Council's denials of the applications, doubt
remained as to the extent of development the Council would allow on petitioner's
parcel. We cannot agree.
*9 [7] The court based its
holding in part upon petitioner's failure to explore "any other use for
the property that would involve filling substantially less wetlands." 746
A.2d, at 714. It relied upon this Court's observations that the final decision
requirement is not satisfied when a developer submits, and a land use authority
denies, a grandiose development proposal, leaving open the possibility that
lesser uses of the property might be permitted. See MacDonald, supra, at 353,
n. 9. The suggestion is that while the Council rejected petitioner's effort to
fill all of the wetlands, and then rejected his proposal to fill 11 of the
wetland acres, perhaps an application to fill (for instance) 5 acres would have
been approved. Thus, the reasoning goes, we cannot know for sure the extent of
permitted development on petitioner's wetlands.
This is belied by the unequivocal nature of the wetland regulations at issue
and by the Council's application of the regulations to the subject property.
Winnapaug Pond is classified under the CRMP as a Type 2 body of water. See CRMP
§ 200.2. A landowner, as a general rule, is prohibited from filling or building
residential structures on wetlands adjacent to Type 2 waters, see id., Table 1,
p. 22, and § 210.3(C)(4), but may seek a special exception from the Council to
engage in a prohibited use, see id., § 130. The Council is permitted to allow
the exception, however, only where a "compelling public purpose" is
served. Id., § 130A(2). The proposal to fill the entire property was not
accepted under Council regulations and did not qualify for the special
exception. The Council determined the use proposed in the second application
(the beach club) did not satisfy the "compelling public purpose" standard.
There is no indication the Council would have accepted the application had
petitioner's proposed beach club occupied a smaller surface area. To the
contrary, it ruled that the proposed activity was not a "compelling public
purpose." App. 27; cf. id., at 17 (1983 application to fill wetlands
proposed an "activity" conflicting with the CRMP).
[8] Williamson County 's final decision requirement "responds to the high
degree of discretion characteristically possessed by land-use boards in
softening the strictures of the general regulations they administer." Suitum
v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 520 U.S. 725, 738, 117 S.Ct. 1659, 137
L.Ed.2d 980 (1997). While a landowner must give a land-use authority an
opportunity to exercise its discretion, once it becomes clear that the agency
lacks the discretion to permit any development, or the permissible uses of the
property are known to a reasonable degree of certainty, a takings claim is
likely to have ripened. The case is quite unlike those upon which respondents
place principal reliance, which arose when an owner challenged a land-use
authority's denial of a substantial project, leaving doubt whether a more
modest submission or an application for a variance would be accepted. See
MacDonald, supra, at 342 (denial of 159-home residential subdivision);
Williamson County, 473 U.S., at 182 (476-unit subdivision); cf. Agins v. City
of Tiburon, 447 U.S. 255, 100 S.Ct. 2138, 65 L.Ed.2d 106 (1980) (case not ripe
because no plan to develop was submitted).
*10 [9][10][11] These cases
stand for the important principle that a landowner may not establish a taking
before a land-use authority has the opportunity, using its own reasonable
procedures, to decide and explain the reach of a challenged regulation. Under
our ripeness rules a takings claim based on a law or regulation which is
alleged to go too far in burdening property depends upon the landowner's first
having followed reasonable and necessary steps to allow regulatory agencies to
exercise their full discretion in considering development plans for the
property, including the opportunity to grant any variances or waivers allowed
by law. As a general rule, until these ordinary processes have been followed
the extent of the restriction on property is not known and a regulatory taking
has not yet been established. See Suitum, supra, at 736, and n. 10 (noting
difficulty of demonstrating that "mere enactment" of regulations
restricting land use effects a taking). Government authorities, of course, may
not burden property by imposition of repetitive or unfair land-use procedures
in order to avoid a final decision. Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey,
Ltd., 526 U.S. 687, 698, 119 S.Ct. 1624, 143 L.Ed.2d 882 (1999).
[12] With respect to the wetlands on petitioner's property, the Council's
decisions make plain that the agency interpreted its regulations to bar
petitioner from engaging in any filling or development activity on the
wetlands, a fact reinforced by the Attorney General's forthright responses to
our questioning during oral argument in this case. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 26, 31.
The rulings of the Council interpreting the regulations at issue, and the
briefs, arguments, and candid statements by counsel for both sides, leave no
doubt on this point: On the wetlands there can be no fill for any ordinary land
use. There can be no fill for its own sake; no fill for a beach club, either
rustic or upscale; no fill for a subdivision; no fill for any likely or
foreseeable use. And with no fill there can be no structures and no development
on the wetlands. Further permit applications were not necessary to establish
this point.
As noted above, however, not all of petitioner's parcel constitutes protected
wetlands. The trial court accepted uncontested testimony that an upland site
located at the eastern end of the property would have an estimated value of
$200,000 if developed. App. to Pet. for Cert. B-5. While Council approval is
required to develop upland property which lies within 200 feet of protected
waters, see CRMP § 100.1(A), the strict "compelling public purpose"
test does not govern proposed land uses on property in this classification, see
id., § 110, Table 1A, § 120. Council officials testified at trial, moreover,
that they would have allowed petitioner to build a residence on the upland
parcel. App. to Pet. for Cert. B-5. The State Supreme Court found petitioner's
claim unripe for the further reason that he "has not sought permission for
any ... use of the property that would involve ... development only of the
upland portion of the parcel." 746 A.2d, at 714.
*11 [13] In assessing the
significance of petitioner's failure to submit applications to develop the
upland area it is important to bear in mind the purpose that the final decision
requirement serves. Our ripeness jurisprudence imposes obligations on
landowners because "[a] court cannot determine whether a regulation goes
'too far' unless it knows how far the regulation goes." MacDonald, 477
U.S., at 348. Ripeness doctrine does not require a landowner to submit
applications for their own sake. Petitioner is required to explore development
opportunities on his upland parcel only if there is uncertainty as to the
land's permitted use.
The State asserts the value of the uplands is in doubt. It relies in part on a
comment in the opinion of the Rhode Island Supreme Court that "it would be
possible to build at least one single-family home on the upland portion of the
parcel." 746 A.2d, at 714. It argues that the qualification "at
least" indicates that additional development beyond the single dwelling
was possible. The attempt to interject ambiguity as to the value or use of the
uplands, however, comes too late in the day for purposes of litigation before
this Court. It was stated in the petition for certiorari that the uplands on
petitioner's property had an estimated worth of $200,000. See Pet. for Cert.
21. The figure not only was uncontested but also was cited as fact in the
State's brief in opposition. See Brief in Opposition 4, 19. In this
circumstance ripeness cannot be contested by saying that the value of the
nonwetland parcels is unknown. See Lucas, 505 U.S., at 1020, and n. 9.
The State's prior willingness to accept the $200,000 figure, furthermore, is
well founded. The only reference to upland property in the trial court's
opinion is to a single parcel worth an estimated $200,000. See App. to Pet. for
Cert B-5. There was, it must be acknowledged, testimony at trial suggesting the
existence of an additional upland parcel elsewhere on the property. See Tr.
190-191, 199-120 (testimony of Dr. Grover Fugate, Council Executive Director);
see also id. at 610 (testimony of Mr. Steven Clarke). The testimony indicated,
however, that the potential, second upland parcel was on an "island"
which required construction of a road across wetlands, id., at 610, 623-624
(testimony of Mr. Clarke)--and, as discussed above, the filling of wetlands for
such a purpose would not justify a special exception under Council regulations.
See supra, at 10-11; see also Brief for Respondents 10 ("Residential construction
is not the basis of such a 'special exception' "). Perhaps for this
reason, the State did not maintain in the trial court that additional uplands
could have been developed. To the contrary, its post-trial memorandum
identified only the single parcel that petitioner concedes retains a
development value of $200,000. See State's Post-Trial Memorandum in No. 88-
0297 (Super.Ct. R. I.), 25, 81. The trial court accepted the figure. So there
is no genuine ambiguity in the record as to the extent of permitted development
on petitioner's property, either on the wetlands or the uplands.
Nonetheless, there is some suggestion that the use permitted on the uplands is
not known, because the State accepted the $200,000 value for the upland parcel
on the premise that only a Lucas claim was raised in the pleadings in the state
trial court. See Brief of Respondents 29-30. Since a Penn Central argument was
not pressed at trial, it is argued, the State had no reason to assert with
vigor that more than a single-family residence might be placed on the uplands.
We disagree; the State was aware of the applicability of Penn Central. The
issue whether the Council's decisions amounted to a taking under Penn Central
was discussed in the trial court, App. to Pet. for Cert. B-7, the State Supreme
Court, 746 A.2d, at 717, and the State's own post-trial submissions, see
State's Post-Trial Supplemental Memorandum 7-10. The state court opinions
cannot be read as indicating that a Penn Central claim was not properly
presented from the outset of this litigation.
*12 A final ripeness issue
remains. In concluding that Williamson County 's final decision requirement was
not satisfied the State Supreme Court placed emphasis on petitioner's failure
to "appl[y] for permission to develop [the] seventy-four-lot
subdivision" that was the basis for the damages sought in his inverse
condemnation suit. 746 A.2d, at 714. The court did not explain why it thought
this fact significant, but respondents and amici defend the ruling. The
Council's practice, they assert, is to consider a proposal only if the
applicant has satisfied all other regulatory preconditions for the use
envisioned in the application. The subdivision proposal that was the basis for
petitioner's takings claim, they add, could not have proceeded before the
Council without, at minimum, zoning approval from the town of Westerly and a
permit from the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management allowing
the installation of individual sewage disposal systems on the property.
Petitioner is accused of employing a hide the ball strategy of submitting
applications for more modest uses to the Council, only to assert later a
takings action predicated on the purported inability to build a much larger
project. Brief for the National Wildlife Federation et al. as Amici Curiae 9.
[14] It is difficult to see how this concern is relevant to the inquiry at
issue here. Petitioner was informed by the Council that he could not fill the
wetlands; it follows of necessity that he could not fill and then build 74
single-family dwellings upon it. Petitioner's submission of this proposal would
not have clarified the extent of development permitted by the wetlands
regulations, which is the inquiry required under our ripeness decisions. The
State's concern may be that landowners could demand damages for a taking based
on a project that could not have been constructed under other, valid zoning
restrictions quite apart from the regulation being challenged. This, of course,
is a valid concern in inverse condemnation cases alleging injury from wrongful
refusal to permit development. The instant case does not require us to pass
upon the authority of a state to insist in such cases that landowners follow
normal planning procedures or to enact rules to control damage awards based on
hypothetical uses that should have been reviewed in the normal course, and we
do not intend to cast doubt upon such rules here. The mere allegation of
entitlement to the value of an intensive use will not avail the landowner if
the project would not have been allowed under other existing, legitimate land
use limitations. When a taking has occurred, under accepted condemnation
principles the owner's damages will be based upon the property's fair market
value, see, e.g., Olson v. United States, 292 U.S. 246, 255, 54 S.Ct. 704, 78
L.Ed. 1236 (1934); 4 J. Sackman, Nichols on Eminent Domain § 12.01 (rev.3d
ed.2000)--an inquiry which will turn, in part, on restrictions on use imposed
by legitimate zoning or other regulatory limitations, see id., at § 12C.03[1].
[15] The state court, however, did not rely upon state law ripeness or
exhaustion principles in holding that petitioner's takings claim was barred by
virtue of his failure to apply for a 74-lot subdivision; it relied on
Williamson County. As we have explained, Williamson County and our other
ripeness decisions do not impose further obligations on petitioner, for the
limitations the wetland regulations imposed were clear from the Council's
denial of his applications, and there is no indication that any use involving
any substantial structures or improvements would have been allowed. Where the
state agency charged with enforcing a challenged land use regulation entertains
an application from an owner and its denial of the application makes clear the
extent of development permitted, and neither the agency nor a reviewing state
court has cited non-compliance with reasonable state law exhaustion or pre-
permit processes, see Felder v. Casey, 487 U.S. 131, 150-151, 108 S.Ct. 2302,
101 L.Ed.2d 123 (1988), federal ripeness rules do not require the submission of
further and futile applications with other agencies.
B
*13
[16] We turn to the second asserted basis for declining to address petitioner's
takings claim on the merits. When the Council promulgated its wetlands
regulations, the disputed parcel was owned not by petitioner but by the
corporation of which he was sole shareholder. When title was transferred to
petitioner by operation of law, the wetlands regulations were in force. The
state court held the postregulation acquisition of title was fatal to the claim
for deprivation of all economic use, 746 A.2d, at 716, and to the Penn Central
claim, id., at 717. While the first holding was couched in terms of background
principles of state property law, see Lucas, 505 U.S., at 1015, and the second
in terms of petitioner's reasonable investment-backed expectations, see Penn
Central, 438 U.S., at 124, the two holdings together amount to a single,
sweeping, rule: A purchaser or a successive title holder like petitioner is
deemed to have notice of an earlier-enacted restriction and is barred from
claiming that it effects a taking.
The theory underlying the argument that post-enactment purchasers cannot
challenge a regulation under the Takings Clause seems to run on these lines:
Property rights are created by the State. See, e.g., Phillips v. Washington
Legal Foundation, 524 U.S. 156, 163, 118 S.Ct. 1925, 141 L.Ed.2d 174 (1998).
So, the argument goes, by prospective legislation the State can shape and
define property rights and reasonable investment-backed expectations, and
subsequent owners cannot claim any injury from lost value. After all, they
purchased or took title with notice of the limitation.
[17] The State may not put so potent a Hobbesian stick into the Lockean bundle.
The right to improve property, of course, is subject to the reasonable exercise
of state authority, including the enforcement of valid zoning and land-use
restrictions. See Pennsylvania Coal Co., 260 U.S., at 413 ("Government
hardly could go on if to some extent values incident to property could not be
diminished without paying for every such change in the general law"). The
Takings Clause, however, in certain circumstances allows a landowner to assert
that a particular exercise of the State's regulatory power is so unreasonable
or onerous as to compel compensation. Just as a prospective enactment, such as
a new zoning ordinance, can limit the value of land without effecting a taking
because it can be understood as reasonable by all concerned, other enactments
are unreasonable and do not become less so through passage of time or title.
Were we to accept the State's rule, the postenactment transfer of title would
absolve the State of its obligation to defend any action restricting land use,
no matter how extreme or unreasonable. A State would be allowed, in effect, to
put an expiration date on the Takings Clause. This ought not to be the rule.
Future generations, too, have a right to challenge unreasonable limitations on
the use and value of land.
*14 Nor does the justification
of notice take into account the effect on owners at the time of enactment, who
are prejudiced as well. Should an owner attempt to challenge a new regulation,
but not survive the process of ripening his or her claim (which, as this case
demonstrates, will often take years), under the proposed rule the right to
compensation may not by asserted by an heir or successor, and so may not be
asserted at all. The State's rule would work a critical alteration to the
nature of property, as the newly regulated landowner is stripped of the ability
to transfer the interest which was possessed prior to the regulation. The State
may not by this means secure a windfall for itself. See Webb's Fabulous
Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith, 449 U.S. 155, 164, 101 S.Ct. 446, 66 L.Ed.2d 358
(1980) ("[A] State, by ipse dixit, may not transform private property into
public property without compensation"); cf. Ellickson, Property in Land,
102 Yale L.J. 1315, 1368-1369 (1993) (right to transfer interest in land is a defining
characteristic of the fee simple estate). The proposed rule is, furthermore,
capricious in effect. The young owner contrasted with the older owner, the
owner with the resources to hold contrasted with the owner with the need to
sell, would be in different positions. The Takings Clause is not so quixotic. A
blanket rule that purchasers with notice have no compensation right when a
claim becomes ripe is too blunt an instrument to accord with the duty to
compensate for what is taken.
[18] Direct condemnation, by invocation of the State's power of eminent domain,
presents different considerations than cases alleging a taking based on a
burdensome regulation. In a direct condemnation action, or when a State has
physically invaded the property without filing suit, the fact and extent of the
taking are known. In such an instance, it is a general rule of the law of
eminent domain that any award goes to the owner at the time of the taking, and
that the right to compensation is not passed to a subsequent purchaser. See
Danforth v. United States, 308 U.S. 271, 284, 60 S.Ct. 231, 84 L.Ed. 240
(1939); 2 Sackman, Eminent Domain, at § 5.01[5][d][i] ("It is well settled
that when there is a taking of property by eminent domain in compliance with
the law, it is the owner of the property at the time of the taking who is
entitled to compensation"). A challenge to the application of a land-use
regulation, by contrast, does not mature until ripeness requirements have been
satisfied, under principles we have discussed; until this point an inverse
condemnation claim alleging a regulatory taking cannot be maintained. It would
be illogical, and unfair, to bar a regulatory takings claim because of the
post-enactment transfer of ownership where the steps necessary to make the claim
ripe were not taken, or could not have been taken, by a previous owner.
There is controlling precedent for our conclusion. Nollan v. California Coastal
Comm'n, 483 U.S. 825, 107 S.Ct. 3141, 97 L.Ed.2d 677 (1987), presented the
question whether it was consistent with the Takings Clause for a state
regulatory agency to require oceanfront landowners to provide lateral beach
access to the public as the condition for a development permit. The principal
dissenting opinion observed it was a policy of the California Coastal
Commission to require the condition, and that the Nollans, who purchased their
home after the policy went into effect, were "on notice that new
developments would be approved only if provisions were made for lateral beach
access." Id., at 860 (Brennan, J., dissenting). A majority of the Court
rejected the proposition. "So long as the Commission could not have
deprived the prior owners of the easement without compensating them," the
Court reasoned, "the prior owners must be understood to have transferred
their full property rights in conveying the lot." Id., at 834, n. 2.
*15 It is argued that Nollan 's
holding was limited by the later decision in Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal
Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d 798 (1992). In Lucas the
Court observed that a landowner's ability to recover for a government
deprivation of all economically beneficial use of property is not absolute but
instead is confined by limitations on the use of land which "inhere in the
title itself." Id., at 1029. This is so, the Court reasoned, because the
landowner is constrained by those "restrictions that background principles
of the State's law of property and nuisance already place upon land
ownership." Id., at 1029. It is asserted here that Lucas stands for the
proposition that any new regulation, once enacted, becomes a background
principle of property law which cannot be challenged by those who acquire title
after the enactment.
[19] We have no occasion to consider the precise circumstances when a legislative
enactment can be deemed a background principle of state law or whether those
circumstances are present here. It suffices to say that a regulation that
otherwise would be unconstitutional absent compensation is not transformed into
a background principle of the State's law by mere virtue of the passage of
title. This relative standard would be incompatible with our description of the
concept in Lucas, which is explained in terms of those common, shared
understandings of permissible limitations derived from a State's legal
tradition, see Lucas, supra, at 1029-1030. A regulation or common-law rule
cannot be a background principle for some owners but not for others. The
determination whether an existing, general law can limit all economic use of
property must turn on objective factors, such as the nature of the land use
proscribed. See Lucas, supra, at 1030 ("The 'total taking' inquiry we
require today will ordinarily entail ... analysis of, among other things, the
degree of harm to public lands and resources, or adjacent private property,
posed by the claimant's proposed activities"). A law does not become a
background principle for subsequent owners by enactment itself. Lucas did not
overrule our holding in Nollan, which, as we have noted, is based on essential
Takings Clause principles.
For reasons we discuss next, the state court will not find it necessary to
explore these matters on remand in connection with the claim that all economic
use was deprived; it must address, however, the merits of petitioner's claim
under Penn Central. That claim is not barred by the mere fact that title was
acquired after the effective date of the state-imposed restriction.
III
*16
As the case is ripe, and as the date of transfer of title does not bar
petitioner's takings claim, we have before us the alternative ground relied
upon by the Rhode Island Supreme Court in ruling upon the merits of the takings
claims. It held that all economically beneficial use was not deprived because
the uplands portion of the property can still be improved. On this point, we
agree with the court's decision. Petitioner accepts the Council's contention
and the state trial court's finding that his parcel retains $200,000 in
development value under the State's wetlands regulations. He asserts, nonetheless,
that he has suffered a total taking and contends the Council cannot sidestep
the holding in Lucas "by the simple expedient of leaving a landowner a few
crumbs of value." Brief for Petitioner 37.
[20][21] Assuming a taking is otherwise established, a State may not evade the
duty to compensate on the premise that the landowner is left with a token
interest. This is not the situation of the landowner in this case, however. A
regulation permitting a landowner to build a substantial residence on an 18-acre
parcel does not leave the property "economically idle." Lucas, supra,
at 1019.
[22] In his brief submitted to us petitioner attempts to revive this part of
his claim by reframing it. He argues, for the first time, that the upland
parcel is distinct from the wetlands portions, so he should be permitted to
assert a deprivation limited to the latter. This contention asks us to examine
the difficult, persisting question of what is the proper denominator in the
takings fraction. See Michelman, Property, Utility, and Fairness: Comments on
the Ethical Foundations of "Just Compensation Law," 80 Harv. L.Rev.
1165, 1192 (1967). Some of our cases indicate that the extent of deprivation
effected by a regulatory action is measured against the value of the parcel as
a whole, see, e.g., Keystone Bituminous Coal Assn. v. DeBenedictis, 480 U.S.
470, 497, 107 S.Ct. 1232, 94 L.Ed.2d 472 (1987); but we have at times expressed
discomfort with the logic of this rule, see Lucas, supra, at 1016-1017, n. 7, a
sentiment echoed by some commentators, see, e.g., Epstein, Takings: Descent and
Resurrection, 1987 Sup.Ct. Rev. 1, 16-17 (1987); Fee, Unearthing the
Denominator in Regulatory Takings Claims, 61 U. Chi. L.Rev. 1535 (1994).
Whatever the merits of these criticisms, we will not explore the point here.
Petitioner did not press the argument in the state courts, and the issue was
not presented in the petition for certiorari. The case comes to us on the
premise that petitioner's entire parcel serves as the basis for his takings
claim, and, so framed, the total deprivation argument fails.
* * *
*17 For the
reasons we have discussed, the State Supreme Court erred in finding
petitioner's claims were unripe and in ruling that acquisition of title after
the effective date of the regulations barred the takings claims. The court did
not err in finding that petitioner failed to establish a deprivation of all
economic value, for it is undisputed that the parcel retains significant worth
for construction of a residence. The claims under the Penn Central analysis
were not examined, and for this purpose the case should be remanded.
The judgment of the Rhode Island Supreme Court is affirmed in part and reversed
in part, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Justice O'CONNOR, concurring.
I join the opinion of the Court but with my understanding of how the issues
discussed in Part II-B of the opinion must be considered on remand.
Part II-B of the Court's opinion addresses the circumstance, present in this
case, where a takings claimant has acquired title to the regulated property
after the enactment of the regulation at issue. As the Court holds, the Rhode
Island Supreme Court erred in effectively adopting the sweeping rule that the
preacquisition enactment of the use restriction ipso facto defeats any takings
claim based on that use restriction. Accordingly, the Court holds that
petitioner's claim under Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S.
104, 98 S.Ct. 2646, 57 L.Ed.2d 631 (1978), "is not barred by the mere fact
that title was acquired after the effective date of the state-imposed
restriction." Ante, at ----21.
The more difficult question is what role the temporal relationship between
regulatory enactment and title acquisition plays in a proper Penn Central
analysis. Today's holding does not mean that the timing of the regulation's
enactment relative to the acquisition of title is immaterial to the Penn
Central analysis. Indeed, it would be just as much error to expunge this consideration
from the takings inquiry as it would be to accord it exclusive significance.
Our polestar instead remains the principles set forth in Penn Central itself
and our other cases that govern partial regulatory takings. Under these cases,
interference with investment-backed expectations is one of a number of factors
that a court must examine. Further, the regulatory regime in place at the time
the claimant acquires the property at issue helps to shape the reasonableness
of those expectations.
The Fifth Amendment forbids the taking of private property for public use
without just compensation. We have recognized that this constitutional
guarantee is " 'designed to bar Government from forcing some people alone
to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by
the public as a whole.' " Penn Central, supra, at 123-124 (quoting
Armstrong v. United States, 364 U.S. 40, 49, 80 S.Ct. 1563, 4 L.Ed.2d 1554
(1960)). The concepts of "fairness and justice" that underlie the
Takings Clause, of course, are less than fully determinate. Accordingly, we
have eschewed "any 'set formula' for determining when 'justice and
fairness' require that economic injuries caused by public action be compensated
by the government, rather than remain disproportionately concentrated on a few
persons." Penn Central, supra, at 124 (quoting Goldblatt v. Hempstead, 369
U.S. 590, 594, 82 S.Ct. 987, 8 L.Ed.2d 130 (1962)). The outcome instead
"depends largely 'upon the particular circumstances [in that] case.'
" Penn Central, supra, at 124 (quoting United States v. Central Eureka
Mining Co., 357 U.S. 155, 168, 78 S.Ct. 1097, 2 L.Ed.2d 1228 (1958)).
We have "identified several factors that have particular
significance" in these "essentially ad hoc, factual inquiries."
Penn Central, 438 U.S., at 124. Two such factors are "[t]he economic
impact of the regulation on the claimant and, particularly, the extent to which
the regulation has interfered with distinct investment-backed
expectations." Ibid. Another is "the character of the governmental
action." Ibid. The purposes served, as well as the effects produced, by a
particular regulation inform the takings analysis. Id., at 127 ("[A] use
restriction on real property may constitute a 'taking' if not reasonably necessary
to the effectuation of a substantial public purpose, [citations omitted], or
perhaps if it has an unduly harsh impact upon the owner's use of the
property"); see also Yee v. Escondido, 503 U.S. 519, 523, 112 S.Ct. 1522,
118 L.Ed.2d 153 (1992) (Regulatory takings cases "necessarily entai[l]
complex factual assessments of the purposes and economic effects of government
actions"). Penn Central does not supply mathematically precise variables,
but instead provides important guideposts that lead to the ultimate determination
whether just compensation is required.
*18 The Rhode Island Supreme
Court concluded that, because the wetlands regulations predated petitioner's
acquisition of the property at issue, petitioner lacked reasonable
investment-backed expectations and hence lacked a viable takings claim. 746
A.2d 707, 717 (2000). The court erred in elevating what it believed to be
"[petitioner's] lack of reasonable investment-backed expectations" to
"dispositive" status. Ibid. Investment-backed expectations, though
important, are not talismanic under Penn Central. Evaluation of the degree of
interference with investment-backed expectations instead is one factor that
points toward the answer to the question whether the application of a
particular regulation to particular property "goes too far."
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415, 43 S.Ct. 158, 67 L.Ed. 322
(1922).
Further, the state of regulatory affairs at the time of acquisition is not the
only factor that may determine the extent of investment-backed expectations.
For example, the nature and extent of permitted development under the
regulatory regime vis- & agrave;-vis the development sought by the claimant
may also shape legitimate expectations without vesting any kind of development
right in the property owner. We also have never held that a takings claim is
defeated simply on account of the lack of a personal financial investment by a
postenactment acquirer of property, such as a donee, heir, or devisee. Cf.
Hodel v. Irving, 481 U.S. 704, 714-718, 107 S.Ct. 2076, 95 L.Ed.2d 668 (1987).
Courts instead must attend to those circumstances which are probative of what
fairness requires in a given case.
If investment-backed expectations are given exclusive significance in the Penn
Central analysis and existing regulations dictate the reasonableness of those
expectations in every instance, then the State wields far too much power to
redefine property rights upon passage of title. On the other hand, if existing
regulations do nothing to inform the analysis, then some property owners may
reap windfalls and an important indicium of fairness is lost. [FN*] As I
understand it, our decision today does not remove the regulatory backdrop
against which an owner takes title to property from the purview of the Penn
Central inquiry. It simply restores balance to that inquiry. Courts properly
consider the effect of existing regulations under the rubric of
investment-backed expectations in determining whether a compensable taking has
occurred. As before, the salience of these facts cannot be reduced to any
"set formula." Penn Central, 438 U.S., at 124 (internal quotation
marks omitted). The temptation to adopt what amount to per se rules in either
direction must be resisted. The Takings Clause requires careful examination and
weighing of all the relevant circumstances in this context. The court below
therefore must consider on remand the array of relevant factors under Penn
Central before deciding whether any compensation is due.
FN* JUSTICE SCALIA's inapt "government-as-thief" simile is symptomatic of the larger failing of his opinion, which is that he appears to conflate two questions. The first question is whether the enactment or application of a regulation constitutes a valid exercise of the police power. The second question is whether the State must compensate a property owner for a diminution in value effected by the State's exercise of its police power. We have held that "[t]he 'public use' requirement [of the Takings Clause] is ... coterminous with the scope of a sovereign's police powers." Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229, 240, 104 S.Ct. 2321, 81 L.Ed.2d 186 (1984). The relative timing of regulatory enactment and title acquisition, of course, does not affect the analysis of whether a State has acted within the scope of these powers in the first
place. That issue appears to be the
one on which JUSTICE SCALIA focuses, but it is not the matter at hand. The
relevant question instead is the second question described above. It is to this
inquiry that "investment- backed expectations" and the state of
regulatory affairs upon acquisition of title are relevant under Penn Central.
JUSTICE SCALIA's approach therefore would seem to require a revision of the
Penn Central analysis that this Court has not undertaken.
Justice SCALIA, concurring.
*19 I write separately to make
clear that my understanding of how the issues discussed in Part II-B of the
Court's opinion must be considered on remand is not Justice O'CONNOR's.
The principle that underlies her separate concurrence is that it may in some
(unspecified) circumstances be "[un]fai[r]," and produce unacceptable
"windfalls," to allow a subsequent purchaser to nullify an
unconstitutional partial taking (though, inexplicably, not an unconstitutional
total taking) by the government. Ante, at 4. The polar horrible, presumably, is
the situation in which a sharp real estate developer, realizing (or indeed,
simply gambling on) the unconstitutional excessiveness of a development
restriction that a na & iuml;ve landowner assumes to be valid, purchases
property at what it would be worth subject to the restriction, and then
develops it to its full value (or resells it at its full value) after getting
the unconstitutional restriction invalidated.
This can, I suppose, be called a windfall--though it is not much different from
the windfalls that occur every day at stock exchanges or antique auctions,
where the knowledgeable (or the venturesome) profit at the expense of the
ignorant (or the risk averse). There is something to be said (though in my view
not much) for pursuing abstract "fairness" by requiring part or all
of that windfall to be returned to the naïve original owner, who presumably is
the "rightful" owner of it. But there is nothing to be said for
giving it instead to the government--which not only did not lose something it
owned, but is both the cause of the miscarriage of "fairness" and the
only one of the three parties involved in the miscarriage (government, naïve
original owner, and sharp real estate developer) which acted unlawfully--indeed
unconstitutionally. JUSTICE O'CONNOR would eliminate the windfall by giving the
malefactor the benefit of its malefaction. It is rather like eliminating the
windfall that accrued to a purchaser who bought property at a bargain rate from
a thief clothed with the indicia of title, by making him turn over the
"unjust" profit to the thief. [FN1]
In my view, the fact that a restriction existed at the time the purchaser took
title (other than a restriction forming part of the "background principles
of the State's law of property and nuisance," Lucas v. South Carolina
Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 1029, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d 798 (1992))
should have no bearing upon the determination of whether the restriction is so
substantial as to constitute a taking. The "investment-backed
expectations" that the law will take into account do not include the
assumed validity of a restriction that in fact deprives property of so much of
its value as to be unconstitutional. Which is to say that a Penn Central
taking, see Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104, 98 S.Ct.
2646, 57 L.Ed.2d 631 (1978), no less than a total taking, is not absolved by
the transfer of title.
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
*20 In an admirable effort to
frame its inquiries in broadly significant terms, the majority offers six pages
of commentary on the issue of whether an owner of property can challenge
regulations adopted prior to her acquisition of that property without ever
discussing the particular facts or legal claims at issue in this case. See
ante, at 16-21. While I agree with some of what the Court has to say on this
issue, an examination of the issue in the context of the facts of this case
convinces me that the Court has over-simplified a complex calculus and
conflated two separate questions. Therefore, while I join Part II-A of the
opinion, I dissent from the judgment and, in particular, from Part II-B.
I
Though States and local governments
have broad power to adopt regulations limiting land usage, those powers are
constrained by the Constitution and by other provisions of state law. In
adopting land-use restrictions, local authorities must follow legally valid and
constitutionally sufficient procedures and must adhere to whatever substantive
requirements are imposed by the Constitution and supervening law. If a
regulating body fails to adhere to its procedural or substantive obligations in
developing landuse restrictions, anyone adversely impacted by the restrictions
may challenge their validity in an injunctive action. If the application of
such restriction to a property owner would cause her a "direct and
substantial injury," e.g., Chicago v. Atchison, T. & S.F.R. Co., 357
U.S. 77, 83, 78 S.Ct. 1063, 2 L.Ed.2d 1174 (1958), I have no doubt that she has
standing to challenge the restriction's validity whether she acquired title to
the property before or after the regulation was adopted. For, as the Court
correctly observes, even future generations "have a right to challenge unreasonable
limitations on the use and value of land." Ante, at 18.
It by no means follows, however, that, as the Court assumes, a succeeding owner
may obtain compensation for a taking of property from her predecessor in
interest. A taking is a discrete event, a governmental acquisition of private
property for which the state is required to provide just compensation. Like
other transfers of property, it occurs at a particular time, that time being
the moment when the relevant property interest is alienated from its owner.
[FN1]
Precise specification of the moment a taking occurred and of the nature of the
property interest taken is necessary in order to determine an appropriately
compensatory remedy. For example, the amount of the award is measured by the
value of the property at the time of taking, not the value at some later date.
Similarly, interest on the award runs from that date. Most importantly for our
purposes today, it is the person who owned the property at the time of the
taking that is entitled to the recovery. See, e.g., Danforth v. United States,
308 U.S. 271, 284, 60 S.Ct. 231, 84 L.Ed. 240 (1939) ("For the reason that
compensation is due at the time of taking, the owner at that time, not the
owner at an earlier or later date, receives the payment"). The rationale
behind that rule is true whether the transfer of ownership is the result of an
arm's- length negotiation, an inheritance, or the dissolution of a bankrupt
debtor. Cf. United States v. Dow, 357 U.S. 17, 20-21, 78 S.Ct. 1039, 2 L.Ed.2d
1109 (1958). [FN2]
II
*21
Much of the difficulty of this case stems from genuine confusion as to when the
taking Palazzolo alleges actually occurred. According to Palazzolo's theory of
the case, the owners of his Westerly, Rhode Island, property possessed the right
to fill the wetland portion of the property at some point in the
not-too-distant past. [FN3] In 1971, the State of Rhode Island passed a statute
creating the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (Council) and
delegating the Council the authority to promulgate regulations restricting the
usage of coastal land. See 1971 R.I. Pub. Laws, ch. 279, § 1 et seq. The
Council promptly adopted regulations that, inter alia, effectively foreclosed
petitioner from filling his wetlands. See ante, at 4; cf. App. to Brief for
Respondents 11-22 (current version of regulations). As the regulations
nonetheless provided for a process through which petitioner might seek
permission to fill the wetlands, he filed two applications for such permission
during the 1980s, both of which were denied. See ante, at 4-5.
The most natural reading of petitioner's complaint is that the regulations in
and of themselves precluded him from filling the wetlands, and that their
adoption therefore constituted the alleged taking. This reading is consistent
with the Court's analysis in Part II-A of its opinion (which I join) in which
the Court explains that petitioner's takings claims are ripe for decision
because respondents' wetlands regulations unequivocally provide that there can
be "no fill for any likely or foreseeable use." Ante, at 11. [FN4] If
it is the regulations themselves of which petitioner complains, and if they
did, in fact, diminish the value of his property, they did so when they were
adopted.
To the extent that the adoption of the regulations constitute the challenged
taking, petitioner is simply the wrong party to be bringing this action. If the
regulations imposed a compensable injury on anyone, it was on the owner of the
property at the moment the regulations were adopted. Given the trial court's
finding that petitioner did not own the property at that time, [FN5] in my
judgment it is pellucidly clear that he has no standing to claim that the
promulgation of the regulations constituted a taking of any part of the property
that he subsequently acquired.
His lack of standing does not depend, as the Court seems to assume, on whether
or not petitioner "is deemed to have notice of an earlier-enacted
restriction," ante, at 17. If those early regulations changed the
character of the owner's title to the property, thereby diminishing its value,
petitioner acquired only the net value that remained after that diminishment
occurred. Of course, if, as respondent contends, see n. 3, supra, even the
prior owner never had any right to fill wetlands, there never was a basis for
the alleged takings claim in the first place. But accepting petitioner's theory
of the case, he has no standing to complain that preacquisition events may have
reduced the value of the property that he acquired. If the regulations are
invalid, either because improper procedures were followed when they were
adopted, or because they have somehow gone "too far," Pennsylvania
Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415, 43 S.Ct. 158, 67 L.Ed. 322 (1922),
petitioner may seek to enjoin their enforcement, but he has no right to recover
compensation for the value of property taken from someone else. A new owner may
maintain an ejectment action against a trespasser who has lodged himself in the
owner's orchard but surely could not recover damages for fruit a trespasser
spirited from the orchard before he acquired the property.
*22 The Court's holding in
Nollan v. California Coastal Comm'n, 483 U.S. 825, 107 S.Ct. 3141, 97 L.Ed.2d
677 (1987) is fully consistent with this analysis. In that case the taking
occurred when the state agency compelled the petitioners to provide an easement
of public access to the beach as a condition for a development permit. That
event--a compelled transfer of an interest in property--occurred after the petitioners
had become the owner of the property and unquestionably diminished the value of
petitioners' property. Even though they had notice when they bought the
property that such a taking might occur, they never contended that any action
taken by the State before their purchase gave rise to any right to
compensation. The matter of standing to assert a claim for just compensation is
determined by the impact of the event that is alleged to have amounted to a
taking rather than the sort of notice that a purchaser may or may not have
received when the property was transferred. Petitioners in Nollan owned the
property at the time of the triggering event. Therefore, they and they alone
could claim a right to compensation for the injury. [FN6] Their successors in interest,
like petitioner in this case, have no standing to bring such a claim.
III
At oral argument, petitioner contended
that the taking in question occurred in 1986, when the Council denied his final
application to fill the land. Tr. of Oral Arg. 16. Though this theory, to the
extent that it was embraced within petitioner's actual complaint, complicates
the issue, it does not alter my conclusion that the prohibition on filling the
wetlands does not take from Palazzolo any property right he ever possessed.
The title Palazzolo took by operation of law in 1978 was limited by the
regulations then in place to the extent that such regulations represented a
valid exercise of the police power. For the reasons expressed above, I think
the regulations barred petitioner from filling the wetlands on his property. At
the very least, however, they established a rule that such lands could not be
filled unless the Council exercised its authority to make exceptions to that
rule under certain circumstances. Cf.App. to Brief for Respondents A-13 (laying
out narrow circumstances under which the Council retains the discretion to
grant a "special exception"). Under the reading of the regulations
most favorable to Palazzolo, he acquired no more than the right to a discretionary
determination by the Council as to whether to permit him to fill the wetlands.
As his two hearings before that body attest, he was given the opportunity to
make a presentation and receive such a determination. Thus, the Council
properly respected whatever limited rights he may have retained with regard to
filling the wetlands. Cf. Lujan v. G & G Fire Sprinklers, Inc., 532 U.S.
---- (2001) (holding, in a different context, that, if a party's only relevant
property interest is a claim of entitlement to bring an action, the provision
of a forum for hearing that action is all that is required to vindicate that
property interest); Lopez v. Davis, 531 U.S. 230, 121 S.Ct. 714, 148 L.Ed.2d
635 (2001) (involving a federal statute that created an entitlement to a discretionary
hearing without creating any entitlement to relief). [FN7]
*23 Though the majority leaves
open the possibility that the scope of today's holding may prove limited, see
ante, at 20-21 (discussing limitations implicit in "background
principles" exception); see also ante, at 1-4 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring)
(discussing importance of the timing of regulations for the evaluation of the
merits of a takings claim); ante, at 1-2 (BREYER, J., dissenting) (same), the
extension of the right to compensation to individuals other than the direct
victim of an illegal taking admits of no obvious limiting principle. If the
existence of valid land-use regulations does not limit the title that the first
postenactment purchaser of the property inherits, then there is no reason why
such regulations should limit the rights of the second, the third, or the
thirtieth purchaser. Perhaps my concern is unwarranted, but today's decision
does raise the spectre of a tremendous--and tremendously capricious--one-time
transfer of wealth from society at large to those individuals who happen to
hold title to large tracts of land at the moment this legal question is
permanently resolved.
IV
In the final analysis, the property
interest at stake in this litigation is the right to fill the wetlands on the
tract that petitioner owns. Whether either he or his predecessors in title ever
owned such an interest, and if so, when it was acquired by the State, are
questions of state law. If it is clear-- as I think it is and as I think the
Court's disposition of the ripeness issue assumes--that any such taking
occurred before he became the owner of the property, he has no standing to seek
compensation for that taking. On the other hand, if the only viable takings
claim has a different predicate that arose later, that claim is not ripe and
the discussion in Part II-B of the Court's opinion is superfluous dictum. In
either event, the judgment of the Rhode Island Supreme Court should be affirmed
in its entirety.
JUSTICE GINSBURG, with whom JUSTICE SOUTER and JUSTICE BREYER join, dissenting.
*24 A regulatory takings claim
is not ripe for adjudication, this Court has held, until the agency
administering the regulations at issue, proceeding in good faith, "has
arrived at a final, definitive position regarding how it will apply [those
regulations] to the particular land in question." Williamson County
Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172, 191,
105 S.Ct. 3108, 87 L.Ed.2d 126 (1985). Absent such a final decision, a court cannot
"kno[w] the nature and extent of permitted development" under the
regulations, and therefore cannot say "how far the regulation[s]
g[o]," as regulatory takings law requires. MacDonald, Sommer & Frates
v. Yolo County, 477 U.S. 340, 348, 351, 106 S.Ct. 2561, 91 L.Ed.2d 285 (1986).
Therefore, even when a landowner seeks and is denied permission to develop
property, if the denial does not demonstrate the effective impact of the
regulations on the land, the denial does not represent the "final decision"
requisite to generate a ripe dispute. Williamson County, 473 U.S., at 190.
MacDonald illustrates how a highly ambitious application may not ripen a
takings claim. The landowner in that case proposed a 159-home subdivision. 477
U.S., at 342. When that large proposal was denied, the owner complained that
the State had appropriated "all beneficial use of its property." Id.,
at 352, n. 8; see also id., at 344. This Court concluded, however, that the
landowner's claim was not ripe, for the denial of the massive development left
"open the possibility that some development [would] be permitted."
Id., at 352. "Rejection of exceedingly grandiose development plans,"
the Court observed, "does not logically imply that less ambitious plans
will receive similarly unfavorable reviews." Id., at 353, n. 9.
As presented to the Rhode Island Supreme Court, Anthony Palazzolo's case was a
close analogue to MacDonald. Palazzolo's land has two components. Approximately
18 acres are wetlands that sustain a rich but delicate ecosystem. See 746 A.2d
707, 710, and n. 1 (R.I.2000). Additional acres are less environmentally
sensitive "uplands." (The number of upland acres remains in doubt,
see ibid., because Palazzolo has never submitted "an accurate or detailed
survey" of his property, see Tr. 190 (June 18-19, 1997).) Rhode Island's
administrative agency with ultimate permitting authority over the wetlands, the
Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC), bars residential development of
the wetlands, but not the uplands.
Although Palazzolo submitted several applications to develop his property,
those applications uniformly sought permission to fill most or all of the
wetlands portion of the property. None aimed to develop only the uplands. [FN1]
Upon denial of the last of Palazzolo's applications, Palazzolo filed suit
claiming that Rhode Island had taken his property by refusing "to allow
any development." App. 45 (Complaint ¶ 17).
*25 As the Rhode Island Supreme
Court saw the case, Palazzolo's claim was not ripe for several reasons, among
them, that Palazzolo had not sought permission for "development only of
the upland portion of the parcel." 746 A.2d, at 714. The Rhode Island
court emphasized the "undisputed evidence in the record that it would be
possible to build at least one single-family home on the existing upland area,
with no need for additional fill." Ibid.
Today, the Court rejects the Rhode Island court's determination that the case
is unripe, finding no "uncertainty as to the [uplands'] permitted
use." Ante, at 12. The Court's conclusion is, in my view, both inaccurate
and inequitable. It is inaccurate because the record is ambiguous. And it is
inequitable because, given the claim asserted by Palazzolo in the Rhode Island
courts, the State had no cause to pursue further inquiry into potential upland
development. But Palazzolo presses other claims here, and at his behest, the
Court not only entertains them, but also turns the State's legitimate defense
against the claim Palazzolo originally stated into a weapon against the State.
I would reject Palazzolo's bait-and-switch ploy and affirm the judgment of the
Rhode Island Supreme Court.
* * *
Where physical occupation of land is
not at issue, the Court's cases identify two basic forms of regulatory taking.
Ante, at 7-8. In Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 112
S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d 798 (1992), the Court held that, subject to
"certain qualifications," ante, at 7, 20, denial of "all
economically beneficial or productive use of land" constitutes a taking.
505 U.S., at 1015 (emphasis added). However, if a regulation does not leave the
property "economically idle," id., at 1019, to establish the alleged
taking the landowner may pursue the multifactor inquiry set out in Penn Central
Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104, 123-125, 98 S.Ct. 2646, 57 L.Ed.2d
631 (1978).
Like the landowner in MacDonald, Palazzolo sought federal constitutional relief
only under a straightforward application of Lucas. See ante, at 6; App. 45
(Complaint ¶ 17) ("As a direct and proximate result of the Defendants'
refusal to allow any development of the property, there has been a taking"
(emphasis added)); Plaintiff's Post Trial Memorandum in No. 88-0297 (Super.Ct.,
R.I.), p. 6 ("[T]his Court need not look beyond the Lucas case as its very
lucid and precise standards will determine whether a taking has
occurred."); id., at 9-10 ("[T]here is NO USE for the property
whatsoever .... Not one scintilla of evidence was proffered by the State to
prove, intimate or even suggest a theoretical possibility of any use for this
property--never mind a beneficial use. Not once did the State claim that there
is, in fact, some use available for the Palazzolo parcel."); Brief of
Appellant in No. 98-0333, pp. 5, 7, 9-10 (hereinafter Brief of Appellant)
(restating, verbatim, assertions of Post Trial Memorandum quoted above).
Responding to Palazzolo's Lucas claim, the State urged as a sufficient defense
this now uncontested point: CRMC "would [have been] happy to have
[Palazzolo] situate a home" on the uplands, "thus allowing [him] to
realize 200,000 dollars." State's Post-Trial Memorandum in No. 88-0297
(Super.Ct., R. I.), p. 81; see also Brief of Appellees in No. 98-0333A, p. 25
(hereinafter Brief of Appellees) (Palazzolo "never even applied for the
realistic alternative of using the entire parcel as a single unitary
home-site"). The State did present some evidence at trial that more than
one lot could be developed. See infra, at 8-9. And, in a supplemental
post-trial memorandum addressing a then-new Rhode Island Supreme Court
decision, the State briefly urged that Palazzolo's claims would fail even under
Penn Central. See ante, at 14. The evidence of additional uses and the
post-trial argument directed to Penn Central, however, were underdeveloped and
unnecessary, for Palazzolo himself, in his pleadings and at trial, pressed only
a Lucas-based claim that he had been denied all economically viable use of his
property. Once the State demonstrated that an "economically
beneficial" development was genuinely plausible, Lucas, 505 U.S., at 1015,
the State had established the analogy to MacDonald: The record now showed
"valuable use might still be made of the land." 477 U.S., at 352, n.
8; see Brief of Appellees 24-25 (relying on MacDonald ). The prospect of real
development shown by the State warranted a ripeness dismissal of Palazzolo's
complaint.
*26 Addressing the State's
Lucas defense in Lucas terms, Palazzolo insisted that his land had "no use
... as a result of CRMC's application of its regulations." Brief of
Appellant 11. The Rhode Island Supreme Court rejected Palazzolo's argument,
identifying in the record evidence that Palazzolo could build at least one home
on the uplands. 746 A.2d, at 714. The court therefore concluded that
Palazzolo's failure to seek permission for "development only of the upland
portion of the parcel" meant that Palazzolo could not "maintain a
claim that the CRMC ha[d] deprived him of all beneficial use of the
property." Ibid.
It is true that the Rhode Island courts, in the course of ruling for the State,
briefly touched base with Penn Central. Cf. ante, at 14. The critical point,
however, underplayed by the Court, is that Palazzolo never raised or argued the
Penn Central issue in the state system: not in his complaint; not in his trial
court submissions; not--even after the trial court touched on the Penn Central
issue--in his briefing on appeal. The state high court decision, raising and
quickly disposing of the matter, unquestionably permits us to consider the Penn
Central issue. See Raley v. Ohio, 360 U.S. 423, 436-437, 79 S.Ct. 1257, 3
L.Ed.2d 1344 (1959). But the ruling below does not change the reality essential
here: Palazzolo litigated his takings claim, and it was incumbent on the State
to defend against that claim, only under Lucas.
If Palazzolo's arguments in this Court had tracked his arguments in the state
courts, his petition for certiorari would have argued simply that the Rhode
Island courts got it wrong in failing to see that his land had "no
use" at all because of CRMC's rules. Brief of Appellant 11. This Court
likely would not have granted certiorari to review the application of MacDonald
and Lucas to the facts of Palazzolo's case. However, aided by new counsel,
Palazzolo sought--and in the exercise of this Court's discretion obtained--review
of two contentions he did not advance below. The first assertion is that the
state regulations take the property under Penn Central. See Pet. for Cert. 20;
Brief for Petitioner 47-50. The second argument is that the regulations amount
to a taking under an expanded rendition of Lucas covering cases in which a
landowner is left with property retaining only a "few crumbs of
value." Ante, at 21 (quoting Brief for Petitioner 37); Pet. for Cert.
20-22. Again, it bears repetition, Palazzolo never claimed in the courts below
that, if the State were correct that his land could be used for a residence, a
taking nonetheless occurred. [FN2]
*27 In support of his new
claims, Palazzolo has conceded the very point on which the State properly
relied to resist the simple Lucas claim presented below: that Palazzolo can
obtain approval for one house of substantial economic value. Palazzolo does not
merely accept the argument that the State advanced below. He now contends that
the evidence proffered by the State in the Rhode Island courts supports the
claims he presents here, by demonstrating that only one house would be
approved. See Brief for Petitioner 13 ("[T]he uncontradicted evidence was
that CRMC ... would not deny [Palazzolo] permission to build one single-family
home on the small upland portion of his property." (emphasis deleted));
Pet. for Cert. 15 (the extent of development permitted on the land is
"perfectly clear: one single-family home and nothing more").
As a logical matter, Palazzolo's argument does not stand up. The State's
submissions in the Rhode Island courts hardly establish that Palazzolo could
obtain approval for only one house of value. By showing that Palazzolo could
have obtained approval for a $200,000 house (rather than, say, two houses worth
$400,000), the State's submissions established only a floor, not a ceiling, on
the value of permissible development. For a floor value was all the State
needed to defeat Palazzolo's simple Lucas claim.
Furthermore, Palazzolo's argument is unfair: The argument transforms the
State's legitimate defense to the only claim Palazzolo stated below into
offensive support for other claims he states for the first time here. Casting
away fairness (and fairness to a State, no less), the Court indulges
Palazzolo's bait-and-switch maneuver. The Court concludes that "there is
no genuine ambiguity in the record as to the extent of permitted development on
... the uplands." Ante, at 13-14. Two theories are offered to support this
conclusion.
First, the Court asserts, it is "too late in the day" for the State
to contend the uplands give the property more than $200,000 in value; Palazzolo
"stated" in his petition for certiorari that the property has
"an estimated worth of $200,000," and the State cited that contention
"as fact" in its Brief in Opposition. Ante, as 13. But in the cited
pages of its Brief in Opposition, the State simply said it "would"
approve a "single home" worth $200,000. Brief in Opposition 4, 19.
That statement does not foreclose the possibility that the State would also
approve another home, adding further value to the property.
*28 To be sure, the Brief in
Opposition did overlook Palazzolo's change in his theory of the case, a change
that, had it been asserted earlier, could have rendered insufficient the
evidence the State intelligently emphasized below. But the State's failure to
appreciate that Palazzolo had moved the pea to a different shell hardly merits
the Court's waiver finding. The only precedent cited for the waiver, a footnote
in Lucas, is not remotely on point. Ante, at 13. The landowner in Lucas had
invoked a "finding" of fact by the state court, and this Court deemed
the State's challenge to that finding waived because the challenge was not
timely raised. Lucas, 505 U.S., at 1020-1022, n. 9. There is nothing
extraordinary about this Court's deciding a case on the findings made by a
state court. Here, however, the "fact" this Court has stopped the
State from contesting--that the property has value of only $200,000--was never
found by any court. That valuation was simply asserted, inaccurately, see
infra, at 9, in Palazzolo's petition for certiorari. This Court's waiver ruling
thus amounts to an unsavory invitation to unscrupulous litigants: Change your
theory and misrepresent the record in your petition for certiorari; if the
respondent fails to note your machinations, you have created a different record
on which this Court will review the case.
The Court bolsters its waiver finding by asserting that the $200,000 figure is
"well founded" in the record. Ante, at 13. But, as earlier observed,
an absence of multiple valuation possibilities in the record cannot be held
against the State, for proof of more than the $200,000 development was
unnecessary to defend against the Lucas claim singularly pleaded below. And in
any event, the record does not warrant the Court's conclusion.
The Court acknowledges "testimony at trial suggesting the existence of an
additional upland parcel elsewhere on the property" on which a second
house might be built. Ante, at 13. The Court discounts that prospect, however,
on the ground that development of the additional parcel would require a new
road forbidden under CRMC's regulations. Ibid. Yet the one witness on whose
testimony the Court relies, Steven M. Clarke, himself concluded that it would
be "realistic to apply for" development at more than one location.
Tr. 612 (June 25-26, 1997). Clarke added that a state official, Russell
Chateauneuf, "gave [Clarke] supporting information saying that [multiple
applications] made sense." Ibid. The conclusions of Clarke and Chateauneuf
are confirmed by the testimony of CRMC's executive director, Grover Fugate, who
agreed with Palazzolo's counsel during cross-examination that Palazzolo might
be able to build "on two, perhaps three, perhaps four of the lots."
Id., at 211 (June 20-23, 1997); see also Tr. of Oral Arg. 27 ("[T]here is
... uncertainty as to what additional upland there is and how many other houses
can be built.").
The ambiguities in the record thus are substantial. They persist in part because
their resolution was not required to address the claim Palazzolo presented
below, and in part because Palazzolo failed ever to submit an accurate survey
of his property. Under the circumstances, I would not step into the role of
supreme topographical factfinder to resolve ambiguities in Palazzolo's favor.
Instead, I would look to, and rely on, the opinion of the state court whose
decision we now review. That opinion states: "There was undisputed
evidence in the record that it would be possible to build at least one
single-family home on the existing upland area." 746 A.2d, at 714
(emphasis added). This Court cites nothing to warrant amendment of that
finding. [FN3]
* * *
*29 In sum,
as I see this case, we still do not know "the nature and extent of permitted
development" under the regulation in question, MacDonald, 477 U.S., at
351. I would therefore affirm the Rhode Island Supreme Court's judgment.
JUSTICE BREYER, dissenting.
I agree with JUSTICE GINSBURG that Palazzolo's takings claim is not ripe for adjudication,
and I join her opinion in full. Ordinarily I would go no further. But because
the Court holds the takings claim to be ripe and goes on to address some
important issues of substantive takings law, I add that, given this Court's
precedents, I would agree with JUSTICE O'CONNOR that the simple fact that a
piece of property has changed hands (for example, by inheritance) does not
always and automatically bar a takings claim. Here, for example, without in any
way suggesting that Palazzolo has any valid takings claim, I believe his
postregulatory acquisition of the property (through automatic operation of law)
by itself should not prove dispositive.
As JUSTICE O'CONNOR explains, under Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City,
438 U.S. 104, 98 S.Ct. 2646, 57 L.Ed.2d 631 (1978), much depends upon whether,
or how, the timing and circumstances of a change of ownership affect whatever
reasonable investment-backed expectations might otherwise exist. Ordinarily,
such expectations will diminish in force and significance--rapidly and
dramatically--as property continues to change hands over time. I believe that
such factors can adequately be taken into account within the Penn Central
framework.
Several amici have warned that to allow complete regulatory takings claims, see
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120
L.Ed.2d 798 (1992), to survive changes in land ownership could allow property
owners to manufacture such claims by strategically transferring property until
only a nonusable portion remains. See, e.g., Brief for Daniel W. Bromley et al.
as Amici Curiae 7-8. But I do not see how a constitutional provision concerned
with " 'fairness and justice,' " Penn Central, supra, at 123-124
(quoting Armstrong v. United States, 364 U.S. 40, 49, 80 S.Ct. 1563, 4 L.Ed.2d
1554 (1960)), could reward any such strategic behavior.
FN* Contrary to JUSTICE O'CONNOR's assertion, post, at 4, n., my contention of governmental wrongdoing does not assume that the government exceeded its police powers by ignoring the "public use" requirement of the Takings Clause, see Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229, 240, 104 S.Ct. 2321, 81 L.Ed.2d 186 (1984). It is wrong for the government to take property, even for public use, without tendering just compensation.
FN1. A regulation that goes so "far" that it violates the Takings Clause may give rise to an award of compensation or it may simply be invalidated as it would be if it violated any other constitutional principle (with the consequence that the State must choose between adopting
a new regulatory scheme that provides compensation or forgoing regulation). While some recent Court opinions have focused on the former remedy, Justice Holmes appears to have had a regime focusing on the latter in mind in the opinion that began the modern preoccupation with "regulatory takings." See Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 414, 43 S.Ct. 158, 67 L.Ed. 322 (1922) (because the statute in question takes private property without just compensation "the act cannot be sustained").
FN2. The Court argues, ante, at 18-19, that a regulatory taking is different from a direct state appropriation of property and that the rules this Court has developed for identifying the time of the latter do not apply to the former. This is something of an odd conclusion, in that the entire rationale for allowing compensation for regulations in the first place is the somewhat dubious proposition that some regulations go so "far" as to become the functional equivalent of a direct taking. Ultimately, the Court's regulations-are-different principle rests on the confusion of two dates: the time an injury occurs and the time a claim for compensation for that injury becomes cognizable in a judicial proceeding. That we require plaintiffs making the claim that a regulation is the equivalent of a taking to go through certain prelitigation procedures to clarify the scope of the
allegedly infringing regulation does not mean that the injury did not occur before those procedures were completed. To the contrary, whenever the relevant local bodies construe their regulations, their construction is assumed to reflect "what the [regulation] meant before as well as after the decision giving rise to that construction." Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc., 511 U.S. 298, 312-313, 114 S.Ct. 1510, 128 L.Ed.2d 274 (1994).
FN3. This point is the subject of significant dispute, as the State of Rhode Island has presented substantial evidence that limitations on coastal development have always precluded or limited schemes such as Palazzolo's. See Brief for Respondents 11-12, 41-46. Nonetheless, we must assume that it is true for the purposes of deciding this question.
Likewise, we must assume for the purposes of deciding the discrete threshold questions before us that petitioner's complaint states a potentially valid regulatory takings claim. Nonetheless, for the sake of clarity it is worth emphasizing that, on my view, even a newly adopted regulation that diminishes the value of property does not produce a significant Takings Clause issue if it (1) is generally applicable and (2) is directed at preventing a substantial public harm. Cf. Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003, 1029, 112 S.Ct. 2886, 120 L.Ed.2d
798 (1992) (owner of a powerplant astride an earthquake fault does not state a valid takings claim for regulation requiring closure of plant); id., at 1035 (KENNEDY, J., concurring in judgment) (explaining that the government's power to regulate against harmful uses of property without paying compensation is not limited by the common law of nuisance because that doctrine is "too narrow a confine for the exercise of regulatory power in a complex and interdependent society"). It is quite likely that a regulation prohibiting the filling of wetlands meets those criteria.
FN4. At oral argument, petitioner's counsel stated: "I think the key here is understanding that no filling of any wetland would be allowed for any reason that was lawful under the local zoning code. No structures of any kind would be permitted by Mr. Palazzolo to construct. So we know that he cannot use his wetland." Tr. of Oral Arg. 14.
FN5. See App. to Pet. for Cert. A-13 ("[T]he trial justice found that Palazzolo could not have become the owner of the property before 1978, at which time the regulations limiting his ability to fill the wetlands were already in place. The trial justice thus determined that the right to fill the wetlands was not part of Palazzolo's estate to begin with, and that he
was therefore not owed any compensation for the deprivation of that right").
FN6. In cases such as Nollan--in which landowners have notice of a regulation when they purchase a piece of property but the regulatory event constituting the taking does not occur until after they take title to the property--I would treat the owners' notice as relevant to the evaluation of whether the regulation goes "too far," but not necessarily dispositive. See ante, at 1-4 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring).
FN7. This is not to suggest that a regulatory body can insulate all of its land-use decisions from the Takings Clause simply by referencing long-standing statutory provisions. If the determination by the regulators to reject the project involves such an unforseeable interpretation or extension of the regulation as to amount to a change in the law, then it is appropriate to consider the decision of that body, rather than the adoption of the regulation, as the discrete event that deprived the owner of a pre- existing interest in property. But, if that is petitioner's theory, his claim is not ripe for the reasons stated by JUSTICE GINSBURG in her dissenting opinion, post, p. ---. As I read petitioner's complaint and the
Court's disposition of the ripeness issue, it is the regulations themselves that allegedly deprived the owner of the parcel of the right to fill the wetlands.
FN1. Moreover, none proposed the 74-lot subdivision Palazzolo advances as the basis for the compensation he seeks. Palazzolo's first application sought to fill all 18 acres of wetlands for no stated purpose whatever. See App. 11 (Palazzolo's sworn 1983 answer to the question why he sought to fill uplands) ("Because it's my right to do if I want to to look at it it is my business."). Palazzolo's second application proposed a most disagreeable "beach club." See ante, at 5 ("trash bins" and "port-a- johns" sought); Tr. 650 (June 25-26, 1997) (testimony of engineer Steven M. Clarke) (to get to the club's water, i.e., Winnapaug Pond rather than the nearby Atlantic Ocean, "you'd have to walk across the gravel fill, but then work your way through approximately 70, 75 feet of marsh land or conservation grasses"). Neither of the CRMC applications supplied a clear map of the proposed development. See App. 7, 16 (1983 application); Tr. 190 (June 18-19, 1997) (1985 application). The Rhode Island Supreme Court ultimately concluded that the 74-lot development would have been barred by zoning requirements, apart from CRMC regulations, requirements Palazzolo
never explored. See 746 A.2d 707, 715, n. 7 (2000).
FN2. After this Court granted certiorari, in his briefing on the merits, Palazzolo presented still another takings theory. That theory, in tension with numerous holdings of this Court, see, e.g., Concrete Pipe & Products of Cal., Inc. v. Construction Laborers Pension Trust for Southern Cal., 508 U.S. 602, 643-644, 113 S.Ct. 2264, 124 L.Ed.2d 539 (1993), was predicated on treatment of his wetlands as a property separate from the uplands. The Court properly declines to reach this claim. Ante, at 22.
FN3. If Palazzolo's claim were ripe and the merits properly presented, I would, at a minimum, agree with JUSTICE O'CONNOR, ante, at 1-5 (concurring opinion), JUSTICE STEVENS, ante, at 6-7 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part), and JUSTICE BREYER, ante, at 1-2 (dissenting opinion), that transfer of title can impair a takings claim.
2001552273
2001552273
U.S.R.I.,2001.
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island