We wrote here previously about the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the “takings” case of Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District in 2013, which was an appeal by a property owner from an adverse ruling of the Florida Supreme Court with respect to permit conditions requiring off-site mitigation work. The U.S. Supreme Court’s opinion in Koontz expanded and clarified the unconstitutional conditions doctrine. House Bill 383, which was signed into law by Governor Scott on June 11, 2015, creates a statutory cause of action for injunctive relief and damages for extortionate exactions by local and state governmental bodies, codifying the decision in Koontz and eliminating any uncertainty under Florida law on the availability of monetary damages. The new statute defines a “prohibited exaction” to include “any condition imposed by a governmental entity on a property owner’s proposed use of real property that lacks an essential nexus to a legitimate public purpose and is not roughly proportionate to the impacts of the proposed use that the governmental entity seeks to avoid, minimize, or mitigate.” The governmental entity must prove that the exaction is not prohibited and the property owner must prove its damages resulted from the exaction. Pre-suit written notice to the governmental body is required, providing the government with the opportunity to cure or explain the alleged exaction before litigation commences. The prevailing party is entitled to recovery of reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs.
Continue Reading New Florida Statute Codifies U.S. Supreme Court Ruling in Koontz and Provides Relief Against ‘Extortionate’ Exactions
Exactions
Koontz-Inspired State Legislation Would Expand Supreme Court’s Ruling in Permitting Context
By Kerri Barsh on
Companion bills (H.B. 1077 and S.B. 1310) have been filed in the Florida Senate and House that would prohibit local governments from imposing permit conditions or “development exactions” on a…
Continue Reading Koontz-Inspired State Legislation Would Expand Supreme Court’s Ruling in Permitting Context