Palazzolo v. Rhode Island
(99-2047)
Opinion given by Justice Kennedy
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports.
Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court
of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical
or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the
preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 99—2047
ANTHONY PALAZZOLO, PETITIONER
v.
RHODE ISLAND et al.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF RHODE ISLAND
[June 28, 2001]
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:
“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.
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 (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.
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 (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
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 (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 (1982). In Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
260
U.S. 393 (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.
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 (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 (1960).
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 (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 (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.
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).
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 (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 (1980) (case not ripe because no plan to develop was
submitted).
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 (1999).
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.
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.
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.
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 (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].
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 (1988), federal ripeness rules do not require the
submission of further and futile applications with other agencies.
B
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 (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.
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.
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 (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.
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 (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 (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.
It is argued that Nollan’s holding was
limited by the later decision in Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal
Council, 505
U.S. 1003 (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.
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
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.
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.
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 (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.
*
*
*
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.
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