A Flock of Seagirls LLC v. Walton County Florida ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •        USCA11 Case: 20-12584   Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 1 of 14
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 20-12584
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 3:17-cv-00335-MCR-HTC
    A FLOCK OF SEAGIRLS LLC,                           3:17-cv-00335-MCR-HTC
    formerly known as SWEAT EQUITY LLC,
    VALENTINES HEIGHTS LLC,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    versus
    WALTON COUNTY FLORIDA,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    __________________________________________________________________
    VALENTINES HEIGHTS LLC,                            3:17-cv-00371-MCR-MJF
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    versus
    WALTON COUNTY FLORIDA,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 2 of 14
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (August 5, 2021)
    Before NEWSOM, BRANCH, and LAGOA, Circuit Judges.
    NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:
    This case requires us to interpret the terms of a recorded easement that runs
    with two beachfront lots in Walton County, Florida. For nearly two decades,
    Walton County has held an easement across a 75-foot strip of dry-sand beach that
    runs parallel to the Gulf of Mexico’s shoreline. The easement specifies that it shall
    be for the purpose of “a way of passage, on or by foot only.” Importantly for our
    purposes, the easement also contains an abandonment clause, which provides in
    relevant part that the County will be deemed to have abandoned the easement if it
    “attempt[s] to use” the easement “for a purpose not specified [t]herein.” In 2017,
    the County enacted an ordinance purporting to establish the public’s right to use
    the dry-sand area of all beaches for “recreational” purposes—including, among
    others, “sunbathing,” “picnicking,” “fishing,” “swimming or surfing off the
    beach,” and “building sand creations.” Two beachfront property owners sued the
    County, alleging that the ordinance triggered the easement’s abandonment clause.
    2
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 3 of 14
    The district court granted summary judgment for the County, and the property
    owners now appeal.
    We reverse. In particular, we hold (1) that the ordinance triggered the
    abandonment clause and (2) that no other source of law—Florida common law,
    separate provisions in the easement, a Walton County resolution, or a consent
    judgment—forestalls or limits the abandonment clause’s operation.
    I
    In the 1990s, the State of Florida initiated eminent domain proceedings
    against St. Joe Paper Company to take certain properties in Walton County. The
    suit resulted in a 1996 consent judgment in which the state agreed to exclude from
    the taking certain parcels of land in exchange for St. Joe’s acceptance of land-use
    and development restrictions. The consent judgment included a specific
    requirement that the parties record a “permanent public access easement allowing
    public pedestrian access laterally along the beach” on 75 feet of the beach sand
    landward of the Gulf of Mexico’s mean high water line. The consent judgment
    bound not only the parties to the eminent domain case—the state of Florida and St.
    Joe—but also their successors and assigns. In 1997, the County entered into a
    separate agreement with St. Joe, providing for a 20-foot easement between a public
    parking lot and the beach.
    3
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021    Page: 4 of 14
    In 2000, St. Joe established the WaterColor Community Association, a
    homeowner’s association. WaterColor’s governing declarations affirmed that the
    consent judgment was binding on the association and all owners. Shortly
    thereafter, St. Joe recorded the specific plat that this appeal concerns and on which
    the 75-foot and 20-foot easements lie. In 2002, St. Joe recorded the 75-foot and
    20-foot easements in a single agreement, which, for simplicity’s sake, we’ll just
    call “the easement,” except where emphasis is necessary. The easement’s stated
    purpose is to “provid[e] to the County, its citizens, employees, guests, invitees, and
    licensees, a way of passage, on or by foot only, over and upon the Easement
    Parcels.” Critically here, the easement also includes an abandonment clause,
    which provides as follows:
    Abandonment. These easements shall continue in effect for so long as
    the County or its successor or assign shall use the easements for their
    intended purpose as expressed herein . . . . Should the County abandon
    the use of an easement granted herein for a continuous period of two
    (2) years or if the County should use or attempt to use an easement
    granted herein for a purpose not specified herein, all rights hereby
    grated shall cease and terminate and all of the County’s interest in this
    Easement shall revert to St. Joe. Upon the happening of said
    abandonment or change in use, St. Joe shall obtain the County’s
    consent that such abandonment has occurred or St. Joe may pursue
    appropriate legal action to address the abandonment or unauthorized
    use of the easement and request in such legal action that the easement
    be terminated. In the event St. Joe successfully proves in such legal
    action that the County has abandoned the easement for the period of
    two (2) years or used the easement for a purpose not specified herein,
    St. Joe shall be entitled to terminate the easement.
    4
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584        Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 5 of 14
    The easement further states that it “fully meets the requirements of Resolution 99-
    79,” a Walton County development order that incorporated the terms of the 1996
    consent judgment.
    In 2017, the County enacted an ordinance purporting to “recognize[] and
    protect[]” the “public’s long-standing customary use of the dry sand areas of all of
    the beaches in the County for recreational purposes.” The ordinance goes on, more
    specifically, to “permit[]” members of the public to make the following “uses” of
    “the dry sand areas that are owned by private entities”: “traversing the beach;
    sitting on the sand, in a beach chair, or on a beach towel or blanket; using a beach
    umbrella that is seven (7) feet or less in diameter; sunbathing; picnicking; fishing;
    swimming or surfing off the beach; placement of surfing or fishing equipment; and
    building sand creations.”
    A Flock of Seagirls LLC and Valentines Heights LLC own separate
    beachfront lots in the WaterColor community, each of which contains the 75-foot
    easement recorded in the 2002 agreement. The following graphic depicts the lots,
    the beach and shoreline, and the easement:
    5
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584    Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 6 of 14
    A Flock of Seagirls’ Property
    Valentines’ Property
    The 75-Foot Easement
    A Flock of Seagirls filed a two-count complaint against the County in
    federal court, alleging that the ordinance (1) constituted an unconstitutional taking
    of their property rights and (2) triggered the easement’s abandonment clause
    because it “attempt[ed] to use” the encumbered property for purposes other than a
    “way of passage, on or by foot only.” Valentines filed a similar lawsuit, and the
    district court consolidated the two cases. While the consolidated case was
    6
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021    Page: 7 of 14
    pending, the Florida legislature passed a bill that mooted the constitutional
    challenge by voiding the existing customary-use ordinances and imposing a new
    procedural scheme for passing such ordinances. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    . Because,
    despite the statute, by enacting the ordinances the County had arguably
    “attempt[ed] to use” the easement “for a purpose not specified [t]herein,” litigation
    over the abandonment count continued.
    The plaintiffs and the County both moved for summary judgment on the
    abandonment count. The district court granted summary judgment for the County.
    The court acknowledged that by enacting the ordinance, the County had attempted
    to use the easement for an “expanded purpose.” It emphasized, though, that
    Florida law required that Flock of Seagirls and Valentines show evidence of an
    intent to abandon, and reasoned that uses that expand on, or are more
    comprehensive than, but are consistent with, the purpose of an easement, do not
    evince such an intent. Because, the district court reasoned, the ordinance
    contemplated uses that were consistent with (even if broader than) the easement’s
    purpose, the plaintiffs hadn’t shown an intent to abandon and thus hadn’t
    demonstrated that the County had abandoned the easement. In support of its
    holding, the district court also looked to other sources referenced in the easement,
    including the resolution and its incorporated consent judgment, which the court
    7
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584           Date Filed: 08/05/2021      Page: 8 of 14
    said narrowed the scope of, and to a degree even invalidated, the abandonment
    clause. A Flock of Seagirls and Valentines now appeal. 1
    II
    To determine whether the County has abandoned the easement, we must
    consider two separate questions. First, we must determine whether the ordinance
    triggered the terms of the easement’s abandonment clause. Second, we must look
    to sources outside the abandonment clause—to Florida common law, other
    provisions of the easement, the resolution, and the consent judgment—to
    determine whether any of them forestalls or limits the abandonment clause’s
    operation.
    A
    First, did the enactment of the ordinance trigger the terms of the
    abandonment clause? In interpreting easements, we apply ordinary contract-
    construction principles. Am. Quick Sign, Inc. v. Reinhardt, 
    899 So. 2d 461
    , 465
    (Fla. 5th DCA 2005). Accordingly, we give easement terms their “common and
    ordinary” meaning to “arrive at a reasonable interpretation of the text of the entire
    [easement] to accomplish its stated meaning and purpose.” Murley v. Wiedamann,
    
    25 So. 3d 27
    , 29 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009) (quotation omitted).
    1
    We review the district court’s order granting summary judgment de novo, applying the same
    standards as the district court. Chapman v. AI Transp., 
    229 F.3d 1012
    , 1023 (11th Cir. 2000).
    8
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 9 of 14
    Here, the easement’s plain language provides that the County will be
    deemed to have abandoned the easement if it “should use or attempt to use an
    easement granted herein for a purpose not specified [t]herein.” The County’s
    customary-use ordinance undoubtedly covers land that includes the easement. The
    ordinance also sets forth the ways that the public may use that land. Accordingly,
    we have no trouble concluding that the County’s enactment of the ordinance
    constituted an “attempt to use” the easement—whether or not the County ever
    actually used the easement.
    The real question, therefore, is whether the County’s attempted use was “for
    a purpose not specified” in the easement. Webster’s Third defines “specify” to
    mean “to mention or name in a[n]. . . explicit manner.” Specify, Webster’s Third
    International Dictionary at 2187 (1961). The easement here names its purpose
    explicitly—to “provid[e] to the County, its citizens, employees, guests, invitees,
    and licensees, a way of passage, on or by foot only, over and upon the Easement
    Parcels.” Certain uses contemplated by the ordinance—sunbathing, picnicking,
    fishing, swimming and surfing off the beach, placing surfing or fishing equipment,
    and building sandcastles—plainly entail purposes other than “a way of passage.”
    And to the extent that there is any doubt about that, other language in the ordinance
    removes it. The ordinance purports to safeguard “[t]he public’s long-standing
    customary use of the dry sand areas of all of the beaches in the County for
    9
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584           Date Filed: 08/05/2021        Page: 10 of 14
    recreational purposes.” “[A] way of passage” refers to a locomotive purpose, not
    a “recreational” purpose. We conclude, therefore, that the ordinance constitutes an
    “attempt to use” the easement for “a purpose not specified [t]herein.”
    We recognize, of course, that under Florida law “an easement carries with it
    by implication the right to do what is reasonably necessary for the full enjoyment
    of the easement.” 20 Fla. Jur. 2d Easements § 41 (2021); see also Fla. Power
    Corp. v. Silver Lake Homeowners Ass’n, 
    727 So. 2d 1149
    , 1150 (Fla. 5th DCA
    1999). As a practical matter, pedestrian use of the County’s easement for the
    purpose of “passage” may well entail incidental stopping. Some of the uses set
    forth in the ordinance—“sitting on the sand,” for instance—may fall into this
    category. But others—e.g., sunbathing, picnicking, fishing, swimming and surfing
    off the beach, and building sandcastles—go so far beyond incidental stopping that
    they can’t fairly be deemed “reasonably necessary for the full enjoyment of the
    easement itself.”
    Accordingly, we hold that the customary-use ordinance triggered the terms
    of the easement’s abandonment clause. 2
    2
    The County argues for the first time on appeal that the abandonment clause applies only to the
    20-foot easement, not the 75-foot easement. Because the County didn’t fairly present that issue
    in the district court, we needn’t consider it, see Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co., 
    385 F.3d 1324
    , 1331 (11th Cir. 2004), but we find it meritless, in any event. The agreement defines the
    75-foot and 20-foot easements separately, but the abandonment clause speaks of the “easements”
    generally, not specifically: “These easements shall continue in effect for so long as the County or
    its successor or assign shall use the easements for their intended purpose as expressed herein.”
    The abandonment clause further makes clear that “should the County abandon the use of an
    10
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584           Date Filed: 08/05/2021       Page: 11 of 14
    B
    The County identifies three separate sources of law that it says limits the
    easement’s abandonment clause: (1) Florida common law, (2) separate provisions
    in the easement, and (3) the resolution and the consent judgment. We disagree as
    to all three.
    1
    The County argues that Florida common law enshrines the public’s right to
    use the dry-sand areas of beaches for recreational purposes—whether or not the
    dry-sand area lies on an easement. In particular, it relies on the following passage
    of the Florida Supreme Court’s opinion in City of Daytona Beach v. Tona–Rama,
    Inc.:
    The beaches of Florida are of such a character as to use and potential
    development as to require separate consideration from other lands
    with respect to the elements and consequences of title. The sandy
    portion of the beaches . . . has served as a thoroughfare and haven for
    fishermen and bathers, as well as a place of recreation for the public.
    The interest and rights of the public to the full use of the beaches
    should be protected.
    
    294 So.2d 73
    , 77 (Fla. 1974).
    easement granted herein… or if the County should use or attempt to use an easement granted
    herein for a purpose not specified herein, all rights hereby granted shall cease and terminate….”
    Nothing in the agreement’s language suggests that the abandonment clause pertains only to the
    20-foot easement.
    11
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584        Date Filed: 08/05/2021    Page: 12 of 14
    The public’s right to “full use of the beaches,” however, is not absolute or
    boundless, as Tona-Rama itself recognized and later decisions have reiterated.
    See, e.g., 
    id. at 78
     (holding that the right of customary use applies “[i]f the
    recreational use of the sandy area . . . has been ancient, reasonable, without
    interruption and free from dispute” and, in any event, “is subject to appropriate
    governmental regulation and may be abandoned by the public”); Trepanier v. Cnty.
    of Volusia, 
    965 So. 2d 276
    , 290 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007) (“[S]ome or all of the
    customary uses by the public may be shown to have been abandoned.”). If
    Florida’s customary-use doctrine ensured the public’s unlimited right to use the
    dry-sand beach area at issue here, neither the easement nor the ordinance—both of
    which aim (even if inconsistently) to confer usage rights on members of the
    public—would serve any meaningful purpose. We decline to adopt so unnatural a
    reading of Florida common law.
    2
    The County separately relies on two provisions in the easement that refer to
    it as “perpetual.” Paragraph 2 refers to the County’s “perpetual easements and
    rights-of-way,” and Paragraph 3(c) to the “perpetual rights herein granted to the
    County.” But a “perpetual” easement is merely one that doesn’t expire of its own
    force—not one that can’t be abandoned. Black’s Law Dictionary defines
    “perpetual easement” and “permanent easement” in the same manner:
    12
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584       Date Filed: 08/05/2021   Page: 13 of 14
    An easement of potentially unlimited duration. A permanent
    easement is often named using the form permanent x easement, where
    x is a descriptor that identifies the easement’s purpose[.] A document
    creating an easement described as ‘permanent’ might, in fact, specify
    a condition under which the easement will end, such as nonuse for a
    specified period.
    Perpetual Easement, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Accordingly, an
    easement may be “perpetual” or set forth “perpetual rights” and yet also specify “a
    condition under which the easement will end.” The easement at issue here
    contains just such a condition—as relevant here, an “attempt to use” the easement
    for a purpose not “specified.” The County’s reliance on Paragraphs 2 and 3(c) to
    undermine the abandonment clause’s operation is therefore misplaced.
    3
    Finally, the County relies on the resolution and the consent judgment, which,
    respectively, employ the phrases “permanent public pedestrian access” and
    “permanent public access.” The County asserts that we should consider the
    resolution and the consent judgment both (1) as parol evidence to interpret the
    easement’s terms, which it says are “incomplete or facially ambiguous,” RX Sols.,
    Inc. v. Express Pharmacy Servs., Inc., 
    746 So. 2d 475
    , 476 (Fla. 2d DCA 1999),
    and (2) because, it says, the easement incorporates those separate documents in the
    following provision:
    The County, by acceptance of this Easement, hereby agrees that this
    Easement fully meets the requirements of Resolution 99-79, issued by
    the Walton County Board of Commissioners on December 14, 1999,
    13
    USCA11 Case: 20-12584      Date Filed: 08/05/2021    Page: 14 of 14
    regarding the 75 foot . . . beach access easement[.] The County, in
    cooperation with St. Joe, shall fully comply with all existing or future
    governmental orders or authorizations related to the Easement
    Parcels[.]
    Even if the easement incorporated the resolution and the consent judgment
    or an ambiguity in the easement permitted their use as parol evidence, neither the
    resolution nor the consent judgment forestalls or limits the abandonment clause’s
    operation. The passing references to “permanent . . . access” in the resolution and
    the consent judgment carry the same meaning as “permanent easement.” And as
    already explained, in the context of easements, “perpetual” and “permanent”
    specify easements of only potentially unlimited duration; they often contain “a
    condition under which the easement will end.” See Permanent Easement, Black’s,
    supra. Again, the abandonment clause sets forth such a condition in this easement.
    Therefore, even if we consider the resolution and the consent judgment, neither
    narrows the abandonment clause’s scope.
    III
    In summary, we hold (1) that the County’s ordinance triggered the terms of
    the easement’s abandonment clause and (2) that neither Florida common law,
    separate provisions in the easement itself, nor the resolution or consent judgment
    forestalls or limits the abandonment clause’s operation.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    14