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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 11–1447
_________________
COY A. KOONTZ, Jr., PETITIONER v. ST. JOHNS
RIVER WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of
florida
[June 25, 2013]
Justice Alito
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Our decisions in Nollan
v. California Coastal Comm’n, 483 U. S. 825 (1987) , and
Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U. S. 374 (1994) , provide
important protection against the misuse of the power of land-use
regulation. In those cases, we held that a unit of government may
not condition the approval of a land-use permit on the
owner’s relinquishment of a portion of his property unless
there is a “nexus” and “rough
proportionality” between the government’s demand and
the effects of the proposed land use. In this case, the St. Johns
River Water Management District (District) believes that it
circumvented Nollan and Dolan because of the way in which it
structured its handling of a permit application submitted by Coy
Koontz, Sr., whose estate is represented in this Court by Coy
Koontz, Jr. [
1 ] The District
did not approve his application on the condition that he surrender
an interest in his land. Instead, the District, after suggesting
that he could obtain approval by signing over such an interest,
denied his application because he refused to yield. The Florida
Supreme Court blessed this maneuver and thus effectively interred
those important decisions. Because we conclude that Nollan and
Dolan cannot be evaded in this way, the Florida Supreme
Court’s decision must be reversed.
I
A
In 1972, petitioner
purchased an undeveloped 14.9-acre tract of land on the south side
of Florida State Road 50, a divided four-lane highway east of
Orlando. The property is located less than 1,000 feet from that
road’s intersection with Florida State Road 408, a tolled
expressway that is one of Orlando’s major thoroughfares.
A drainage ditch runs
along the property’s western edge, and high-voltage power
lines bisect it into northern and southern sections. The combined
effect of the ditch, a 100foot wide area kept clear for the power
lines, the highways, and other construction on nearby parcels is to
isolate the northern section of petitioner’s property from
any other undeveloped land. Although largely classified as wetlands
by the State, the northern section drains well; the most
significant standing water forms in ruts in an unpaved road used to
access the power lines. The natural topography of the
property’s southern section is somewhat more diverse, with a
small creek, forested uplands, and wetlands that sometimes have
water as much as a foot deep. A wildlife survey found evidence of
animals that often frequent developed areas: raccoons, rabbits,
several species of bird, and a turtle. The record also indicates
that the land may be a suitable habitat for opossums.
The same year that
petitioner purchased his property, Florida enacted the Water
Resources Act, which divided the State into five water management
districts and authorized each district to regulate
“construction that connects to, draws water from, drains
water into, or is placed in or across the waters in the
state.” 1972 Fla. Laws ch. 72–299, pt. IV, §1(5),
pp. 1115, 1116 (codified as amended at Fla. Stat. §373.403(5)
(2010)). Under the Act, a landowner wishing to undertake such
construction must obtain from the relevant district a Management
and Storage of Surface Water (MSSW) permit, which may impose
“such reasonable conditions” on the permit as are
“necessary to assure” that construction will “not
be harmful to the water resources of the district.” 1972 Fla.
Laws §4(1), at 1118 (codified as amended at Fla. Stat.
§373.413(1)).
In 1984, in an effort
to protect the State’s rapidly diminishing wetlands, the
Florida Legislature passed the Warren S. Henderson Wetlands
Protection Act, which made it illegal for anyone to “dredge
or fill in, on, or over sur- face waters” without a Wetlands
Resource Management (WRM) permit. 1984 Fla. Laws ch. 84–79,
pt. VIII, §403.905(1), pp. 204–205. Under the Henderson
Act, permit applicants are required to provide “reasonable
assurance” that proposed construction on wetlands is
“not contrary to the public interest,” as defined by an
enumerated list of criteria. See Fla. Stat. §373.414(1).
Consistent with the Henderson Act, the St. Johns River Water
Management District, the district with jurisdiction over
petitioner’s land, requires that permit applicants wishing to
build on wetlands offset the resulting environmental damage by
creating, enhancing, or preserving wetlands elsewhere.
Petitioner decided to
develop the 3.7-acre northern section of his property, and in 1994
he applied to the District for MSSW and WRM permits. Under his
proposal, petitioner would have raised the elevation of the
northernmost section of his land to make it suitable for a
building, graded the land from the southern edge of the building
site down to the elevation of the high-voltage electrical lines,
and installed a dry-bed pond for retaining and gradually releasing
stormwater runoff from the building and its parking lot. To
mitigate the environmental effects of his proposal, petitioner
offered to foreclose any possible future development of the
approximately 11acre southern section of his land by deeding to the
District a conservation easement on that portion of his
property.
The District considered
the 11acre conservation easement to be inadequate, and it informed
petitioner that it would approve construction only if he agreed to
one of two concessions. First, the District proposed that
petitioner reduce the size of his development to 1 acre and deed to
the District a conservation easement on the remaining 13.9 acres.
To reduce the development area, the District suggested that
petitioner could eliminate the dry-bed pond from his proposal and
instead install a more costly subsurface stormwater management
system beneath the building site. The District also suggested that
petitioner install retaining walls rather than gradually sloping
the land from the building site down to the elevation of the rest
of his property to the south.
In the alternative, the
District told petitioner that he could proceed with the development
as proposed, build- ing on 3.7 acres and deeding a conservation
easement to the government on the remainder of the property, if he
also agreed to hire contractors to make improvements to
District-owned land several miles away. Specifically, peti- tioner
could pay to replace culverts on one parcel or fill in ditches on
another. Either of those projects would have enhanced approximately
50 acres of District-owned wetlands. When the District asks permit
applicants to fund offsite mitigation work, its policy is never to
require any particular offsite project, and it did not do so here.
Instead, the District said that it “would also favorably
consider” alternatives to its suggested offsite mitigation
projects if petitioner proposed something “equivalent.”
App. 75.
Believing the
District’s demands for mitigation to be excessive in light of
the environmental effects that his building proposal would have
caused, petitioner filed suit in state court. Among other claims,
he argued that he was entitled to relief under Fla. Stat.
§373.617(2), which allows owners to recover “monetary
damages” if a state agency’s action is “an
unreasonable exercise of the state’s police power
constituting a taking without just compensation.”
B
The Florida Circuit
Court granted the District’s mo- tion to dismiss on the
ground that petitioner had not ade- quately exhausted his
state-administrative remedies, but the Florida District Court of
Appeal for the Fifth Circuit re- versed. On remand, the State
Circuit Court held a 2-day bench trial. After considering testimony
from several ex- perts who examined petitioner’s property,
the trial court found that the property’s northern section
had already been “seriously degraded” by extensive
construction on the surrounding parcels. App. to Pet. for Cert.
D–3. In light of this finding and petitioner’s offer to
dedicate nearly three-quarters of his land to the District, the
trial court concluded that any further mitigation in the form of
payment for offsite improvements to District property lacked both a
nexus and rough proportionality to the environmental impact of the
proposed construction. Id., at D–11. It accordingly held the
District’s actions unlawful under our decisions in Nollan and
Dolan.
The Florida District
Court affirmed, 5 So. 3d 8 (2009), but the State Supreme Court
reversed, 77 So. 3d 1220 (2011). A majority of that court
distinguished Nollan and Dolan on two grounds. First, the majority
thought it significant that in this case, unlike Nollan or Dolan,
the District did not approve petitioner’s application on the
condition that he accede to the District’s demands; in-
stead, the District denied his application because he refused to
make concessions. 77 So. 3d, at 1230. Second, the majority
drew a distinction between a demand for an interest in real
property (what happened in Nollan and Dolan) and a demand for
money. 77 So. 3d, at 1229– 1230. The majority
acknowledged a division of authority over whether a demand for
money can give rise to a claim under Nollan and Dolan, and sided
with those courts that have said it cannot. 77 So. 3d, at
1229–1230. Compare, e.g., McClung v. Sumner, 548 F. 3d
1219, 1228 (CA9 2008), with Ehrlich v. Culver City, 12 Cal. 4th
854, 876, 911 P. 2d 429, 444 (1996); Flower Mound v. Stafford
Estates Ltd. Partnership, 135 S. W. 3d 620, 640–641
(Tex. 2004). Two justices concurred in the result, arguing that
petitioner had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as re-
quired by state law before bringing an inverse condem- nation suit
that challenges the propriety of an agency action. 77 So. 3d,
at 1231–1232; see Key Haven Associated Enterprises, Inc. v.
Board of Trustees of Internal Improvement Trust Fund, 427
So. 2d 153, 159 (Fla. 1982).
Recognizing that the
majority opinion rested on a question of federal constitutional law
on which the lower courts are divided, we granted the petition for
a writ of certiorari, 568 U. S. ___ (2012), and now
reverse.
II
A
We have said in a
variety of contexts that “the government may not deny a
benefit to a person because he ex- ercises a constitutional
right.” Regan v. Taxation With Representation of Wash., 461
U. S. 540, 545 (1983) . See also, e.g., Rumsfeld v. Forum for
Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc., 547 U. S. 47 –60
(2006); Rutan v. Republican Party of Ill., 497 U. S. 62, 78
(1990) . In Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U. S. 593 (1972) , for
example, we held that a public college would violate a
professor’s freedom of speech if it declined to renew his
contract because he was an outspoken critic of the college’s
administration. And in Memorial Hospital v. Maricopa County, 415
U. S. 250 (1974) , we concluded that a county impermissibly
burdened the right to travel by extending healthcare benefits only
to those indigent sick who had been residents of the county for at
least one year. Those cases reflect an overarching principle, known
as the unconstitutional condi- tions doctrine, that vindicates the
Constitution’s enumerated rights by preventing the government
from coercing people into giving them up.
Nollan and Dolan
“involve a special application” of this doctrine that
protects the Fifth Amendment right to just compensation for
property the government takes when owners apply for land-use
permits. Lingle v. Chevron U. S. A. Inc., 544 U. S.
528, 547 (2005) ; Dolan, 512 U. S., at 385 (invoking
“the well-settled doctrine of ‘unconstitutional
conditions’ ”). Our decisions in those cases
reflect two realities of the permitting process. The first is that
land-use permit applicants are especially vulnerable to the type of
coercion that the unconstitutional conditions doctrine prohibits
because the government often has broad discretion to deny a permit
that is worth far more than property it would like to take. By
conditioning a building permit on the owner’s deeding over a
public right-of- way, for example, the government can pressure an
owner into voluntarily giving up property for which the Fifth
Amendment would otherwise require just compensation. See id., at
384; Nollan, 483 U. S., at 831. So long as the building permit
is more valuable than any just compensation the owner could hope to
receive for the right-of-way, the owner is likely to accede to the
government’s demand, no matter how unreasonable. Extortionate
demands of this sort frustrate the Fifth Amendment right to just
compensation, and the unconstitutional conditions doctrine
prohibits them.
A second reality of the
permitting process is that many proposed land uses threaten to
impose costs on the public that dedications of property can offset.
Where a building proposal would substantially increase traffic
congestion, for example, officials might condition permit approval
on the owner’s agreement to deed over the land needed to
widen a public road. Respondent argues that a similar rationale
justifies the exaction at issue here: petitioner’s proposed
construction project, it submits, would destroy wetlands on his
property, and in order to compensate for this loss, respondent
demands that he enhance wet- lands elsewhere. Insisting that
landowners internalize the negative externalities of their conduct
is a hallmark of responsible land-use policy, and we have long
sustained such regulations against constitutional attack. See
Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U. S. 365 (1926)
.
Nollan and Dolan
accommodate both realities by allowing the government to condition
approval of a permit on the dedication of property to the public so
long as there is a “nexus” and “rough
proportionality” between the prop- erty that the government
demands and the social costs of the applicant’s proposal.
Dolan, supra, at 391; Nollan, 483 U. S., at 837. Our
precedents thus enable permitting authorities to insist that
applicants bear the full costs of their proposals while still
forbidding the government from engaging in “out-and-out
. . . extortion” that would thwart the Fifth
Amendment right to just compensation. Ibid. (internal quotation
marks omitted). Under Nollan and Dolan the government may choose
whether and how a per- mit applicant is required to mitigate the
impacts of a proposed development, but it may not leverage its
legitimate interest in mitigation to pursue governmental ends that
lack an essential nexus and rough proportionality to those
impacts.
B
The principles that
undergird our decisions in Nollan and Dolan do not change depending
on whether the government approves a permit on the condition that
the applicant turn over property or denies a permit because the
applicant refuses to do so. We have often concluded that denials of
governmental benefits were impermissible under the unconstitutional
conditions doctrine. See, e.g., Perry, 408 U. S., at 597
(explaining that the government “may not deny a benefit to a
person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected
interests” (emphasis added)); Memorial Hospital, 415
U. S. 250 (finding unconstitutional condition where government
denied healthcare benefits). In so holding, we have recognized that
regardless of whether the government ultimately succeeds in
pressuring someone into forfeiting a constitutional right, the
unconstitutional conditions doctrine forbids burdening the
Constitution’s enumerated rights by coercively withholding
benefits from those who exercise them.
A contrary rule would
be especially untenable in this case because it would enable the
government to evade the limitations of Nollan and Dolan simply by
phrasing its demands for property as conditions precedent to permit
approval. Under the Florida Supreme Court’s approach, a
government order stating that a permit is “approved if”
the owner turns over property would be subject to Nollan and Dolan,
but an identical order that uses the words “denied
until” would not. Our unconstitutional condi- tions cases
have long refused to attach significance to the distinction between
conditions precedent and conditions subsequent. See Frost &
Frost Trucking Co. v. Railroad Comm’n of Cal., 271 U. S.
583 –593 (1926) (invalidating regulation that required the
petitioner to give up a constitutional right “as a condition
precedent to the enjoyment of a privilege”); Southern Pacific
Co. v. Denton, 146 U. S. 202, 207 (1892) (invalidating statute
“requiring the corporation, as a condition precedent to
obtaining a per- mit to do business within the State, to surrender
a right and privilege secured to it by the Constitution”).
See also Flower Mound, 135 S. W. 3d, at 639 (“The
government cannot sidestep constitutional protections merely by
rephrasing its decision from ‘only if’ to ‘not
unless’ ”). To do so here would effectively render
Nollan and Dolan a dead letter.
The Florida Supreme
Court puzzled over how the government’s demand for property
can violate the Takings Clause even though “ ‘no
property of any kind was ever taken,’ ” 77
So. 3d, at 1225 (quoting 5 So. 3d, at 20 (Griffin, J.,
dissenting)); see also 77 So. 3d, at 1229–1230, but the
unconstitutional conditions doctrine provides a ready answer.
Extortionate demands for property in the land-use permitting
context run afoul of the Takings Clause not because they take
property but because they impermis- sibly burden the right not to
have property taken without just compensation. As in other
unconstitutional condi- tions cases in which someone refuses to
cede a constitutional right in the face of coercive pressure, the
impermissible denial of a governmental benefit is a
constitutionally cog- nizable injury.
Nor does it make a
difference, as respondent suggests, that the government might have
been able to deny petitioner’s application outright without
giving him the option of securing a permit by agreeing to spend
money to improve public lands. See Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New
York City, 438 U. S. 104 (1978) . Virtually all of our
unconstitutional conditions cases involve a gratuitous governmental
benefit of some kind. See, e.g., Regan, 461 U. S. 540 (tax
benefits); Memorial Hospital, 415 U. S. 250 (healthcare);
Perry, 408 U. S. 593 (public employment); United States v.
Butler, 297 U. S. 1, 71 (1936) (crop payments); Frost, supra
(business license). Yet we have repeatedly rejected the argument
that if the government need not confer a benefit at all, it can
withhold the benefit because someone refuses to give up
constitutional rights. E.g., United States v. American Library
Assn., Inc., 539 U. S. 194, 210 (2003) (“[T]he
government may not deny a benefit to a person on a basis that
infringes his constitutionally protected . . . freedom of
speech even if he has no entitlement to that benefit”
(emphasis added and inter- nal quotation marks omitted)); Wieman v.
Updegraff, 344 U. S. 183, 191 (1952) (explaining in
unconstitutional conditions case that to focus on “the facile
generalization that there is no constitutionally protected right to
public employment is to obscure the issue”). Even if
respondent would have been entirely within its rights in denying
the permit for some other reason, that greater authority does not
imply a lesser power to condition permit approval on
petitioner’s forfeiture of his constitutional rights. See
Nollan, 483 U. S., at 836–837 (explaining that
“[t]he evident constitutional propriety” of prohibiting
a land use “disappears . . . if the condition
substituted for the prohibition utterly fails to further the end
advanced as the justification for the prohibition”).
That is not to say,
however, that there is no relevant difference between a consummated
taking and the denial of a permit based on an unconstitutionally
extortionate demand. Where the permit is denied and the condition
is never imposed, nothing has been taken. While the un-
constitutional conditions doctrine recognizes that this burdens a
constitutional right, the Fifth Amendment man- dates a particular
remedy—just compensation—only for takings. In cases
where there is an excessive demand but no taking, whether money
damages are available is not a question of federal constitutional
law but of the cause of action—whether state or
federal—on which the landowner relies. Because petitioner
brought his claim pursuant to a state law cause of action, the
Court has no occasion to discuss what remedies might be available
for a Nollan/Dolan unconstitutional conditions violation either
here or in other cases.
C
At oral argument,
respondent conceded that the denial of a permit could give rise to
a valid claim under Nollan and Dolan, Tr. of Oral Arg. 33–34,
but it urged that we should not review the particular denial at
issue here because petitioner sued in the wrong court, for the
wrong remedy, and at the wrong time. Most of respondent’s
objections to the posture of this case raise questions of Florida
procedure that are not ours to decide. See Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421
U. S. 684, 691 (1975) ; Murdock v. Memphis, 20 Wall. 590, 626
(1875). But to the extent that respondent suggests that the posture
of this case creates some federal obstacle to adjudicating
petitioner’s unconstitutional conditions claim, we remand for
the Florida courts to consider that argument in the first
instance.
Respondent argues that
we should affirm because, rather than suing for damages in the
Florida trial court as authorized by Fla. Stat. §373.617,
petitioner should have first sought judicial review of the denial
of his permit in the Florida appellate court under the
State’s Administrative Procedure Act, see
§§120.68(1), (2) (2010). The Flor-ida Supreme Court has
said that the appellate court is the “proper forum to
resolve” a “claim that an agency has applied a
. . . statute or rule in such a way that the aggrieved
party’s constitutional rights have been violated,” Key
Haven Associated Enterprises, 427 So. 2d, at 158, and
respondent has argued throughout this litigation that petitioner
brought his unconstitutional conditions claim in the wrong forum.
Two members of the Florida Supreme Court credited
respondent’s argument, 77 So. 3d, at 1231–1232,
but four others refused to address it. We decline
respondent’s invitation to second-guess a State Supreme
Court’s treatment of its own procedural law.
Respondent also
contends that we should affirm because petitioner sued for damages
but is at most entitled to an injunction ordering that his permit
issue without any conditions. But we need not decide whether
federal law authorizes plaintiffs to recover damages for
unconstitutional conditions claims predicated on the Takings Clause
because petitioner brought his claim under state law. Florida law
allows property owners to sue for “damages” whenever a
state agency’s action is “an unreasonable ex- ercise of
the state’s police power constituting a taking without just
compensation.” Fla. Stat. Ann. §373.617. Whether that
provision covers an unconstitutional conditions claim like the one
at issue here is a question of state law that the Florida Supreme
Court did not address and on which we will not opine.
For similar reasons, we
decline to reach respondent’s argument that its demands for
property were too indefinite to give rise to liability under Nollan
and Dolan. The Florida Supreme Court did not reach the question
whether respondent issued a demand of sufficient concreteness to
trigger the special protections of Nollan and Dolan. It relied
instead on the Florida District Court of Appeals’
characterization of respondent’s behavior as a demand for
Nollan/Dolan purposes. See 77 So. 3d, at 1224 (quoting 5 So. 3d, at
10). Whether that characterization is correct is beyond the scope
of the questions the Court agreed to take up for review. If
preserved, the issue remains open on remand for the Florida Supreme
Court to address. This Court therefore has no occasion to consider
how concrete and specific a demand must be to give rise to
liability un- der Nollan and Dolan.
Finally, respondent
argues that we need not decide whether its demand for offsite
improvements satisfied Nollan and Dolan because it gave petitioner
another avenue for obtaining permit approval. Specifically,
respondent said that it would have approved a revised permit
application that reduced the footprint of petitioner’s
proposed construction site from 3.7 acres to 1 acre and placed a
conservation easement on the remaining 13.9 acres of
petitioner’s land. Respondent argues that regardless of
whether its demands for offsite mitigation satisfied Nollan and
Dolan, we must separately consider each of petitioner’s
options, one of which did not require any of the offsite work the
trial court found objectionable.
Respondent’s
argument is flawed because the option to which it
points—developing only 1 acre of the site and granting a
conservation easement on the rest—involves the same issue as
the option to build on 3.7 acres and perform offsite mitigation. We
agree with respondent that, so long as a permitting authority
offers the landowner at least one alternative that would satisfy
Nollan and Dolan, the landowner has not been subjected to an
unconstitutional condition. But respondent’s suggestion that
we should treat its offer to let petitioner build on 1 acre as an
alternative to offsite mitigation misapprehends the gov- ernmental
benefit that petitioner was denied. Petitioner sought to develop
3.7 acres, but respondent in effect told petitioner that it would
not allow him to build on 2.7 of those acres unless he agreed to
spend money improving public lands. Petitioner claims that he was
wrongfully denied a permit to build on those 2.7 acres. For that
reason, respondent’s offer to approve a less ambitious
building project does not obviate the need to determine whether the
demand for offsite mitigation satisfied Nollan and Dolan.
III
We turn to the
Florida Supreme Court’s alternative holding that
petitioner’s claim fails because respondent asked him to
spend money rather than give up an easement on his land. A
predicate for any unconstitutional conditions claim is that the
government could not have constitutionally ordered the person
asserting the claim to do what it attempted to pressure that person
into doing. See Rumsfeld, 547 U. S., at 59–60. For that
reason, we began our analysis in both Nollan and Dolan by observing
that if the government had directly seized the easements it sought
to obtain through the permitting process, it would have committed a
per se taking. See Dolan, 512 U. S., at 384; Nollan, 483
U. S., at 831. The Florida Su- preme Court held that
petitioner’s claim fails at this first step because the
subject of the exaction at issue here was money rather than a more
tangible interest in real prop- erty. 77 So. 3d, at 1230.
Respondent and the dissent take the same position, citing the
concurring and dissenting opinions in Eastern Enterprises v. Apfel,
524 U. S. 498 (1998) , for the proposition that an obligation
to spend money can never provide the basis for a takings claim. See
post, at 5–8 (opinion of Kagan, J.).
We note as an initial
matter that if we accepted this argument it would be very easy for
land-use permitting officials to evade the limitations of Nollan
and Dolan. Because the government need only provide a permit
applicant with one alternative that satisfies the nexus and rough
proportionality standards, a permitting authority wishing to exact
an easement could simply give the owner a choice of either
surrendering an easement or making a payment equal to the
easement’s value. Such so-called “in lieu of”
fees are utterly commonplace, Rosenberg, The Changing Culture of
American Land Use Regulation: Paying for Growth with Impact Fees,
59 S. M. U. L. Rev. 177, 202–203 (2006), and
they are functionally equivalent to other types of land use
exactions. For that reason and those that follow, we reject
respondent’s argument and hold that so-called “monetary
exactions” must satisfy the nexus and rough proportionality
requirements of Nollan and Dolan.
A
In Eastern
Enterprises, supra, the United States retroactively imposed on a
former mining company an obligation to pay for the medical benefits
of retired miners and their families. A four-Justice plurality
concluded that the statute’s imposition of retroactive
financial liability was so arbitrary that it violated the Takings
Clause. Id., at 529–537. Although Justice Kennedy concurred
in the result on due process grounds, he joined four other Justices
in dissent in arguing that the Takings Clause does not apply to
government-imposed financial obligations that “d[o] not
operate upon or alter an identified property interest.” Id.,
at 540 (opinion concurring in judgment and dissenting in part); see
id., at 554–556 (Breyer, J., dissenting) (“The
‘private property’ upon which the [Takings] Clause
traditionally has focused is a specific interest in physical or
intellectual property”). Relying on the concurrence and
dissent in Eastern Enterprises, respondent argues that a
requirement that petitioner spend money improving public lands
could not give rise to a taking.
Respondent’s
argument rests on a mistaken premise. Unlike the financial
obligation in Eastern Enterprises, the demand for money at issue
here did “operate upon . . . an identified property
interest” by directing the owner of a particular piece of
property to make a monetary payment. Id., at 540 (opinion of
Kennedy, J.). In this case, unlike Eastern Enterprises, the
monetary obligation burdened petitioner’s ownership of a
specific parcel of land. In that sense, this case bears resemblance
to our cases holding that the government must pay just compensation
when it takes a lien—a right to receive money that is secured
by a particular piece of property. See Armstrong v. United States,
364 U. S. 40 –49 (1960); Louisville Joint Stock Land
Bank v. Radford, 295 U. S. 555 –602 (1935); United
States v. Security Industrial Bank, 459 U. S. 70 –78
(1982); see also Palm Beach Cty. v. Cove Club Investors Ltd., 734
So. 2d 379, 383–384 (1999) (the right to receive income
from land is an interest in real property under Florida law). The
fulcrum this case turns on is the direct link between the
government’s demand and a spe- cific parcel of real property.
[
2 ] Because of that direct
link, this case implicates the central concern of Nollan and Dolan:
the risk that the government may use its substantial power and
discretion in land-use permitting to pursue governmental ends that
lack an essential nexus and rough proportionality to the effects of
the proposed new use of the specific property at issue, thereby
diminishing without justification the value of the property.
In this case, moreover,
petitioner does not ask us to hold that the government can commit a
regulatory taking by directing someone to spend money. As a result,
we need not apply Penn Central’s “essentially
ad hoc, factual inquir[y],” 438 U. S., at 124, at
all, much less extend that “already difficult and uncertain
rule” to the “vast category of cases” in which
someone believes that a regulation is too costly. Eastern
Enterprises, 524 U. S., at 542 (opinion of Kennedy, J.).
Instead, petitioner’s claim rests on the more limited
proposition that when the government commands the relinquishment of
funds linked to a specific, identifiable property interest such as
a bank account or parcel of real property, a “per se
[takings] approach” is the proper mode of analysis under the
Court’s precedent. Brown v. Legal Foundation of Wash., 538
U. S. 216, 235 (2003) .
Finally, it bears
emphasis that petitioner’s claim does not implicate
“normative considerations about the wisdom of government
decisions.” Eastern Enterprises, 524 U. S., at 545
(opinion of Kennedy, J.). We are not here concerned with whether it
would be “arbitrary or unfair” for respondent to order
a landowner to make improvements to public lands that are nearby.
Id., at 554 (Breyer, J., dissenting). Whatever the wisdom of such a
policy, it would transfer an interest in property from the
landowner to the government. For that reason, any such demand would
amount to a per se taking similar to the taking of an easement
or a lien. Cf. Dolan, 512 U. S., at 384; Nollan, 483
U. S., at 831.
B
Respondent and the
dissent argue that if monetary exactions are made subject to
scrutiny under Nollan and Dolan, then there will be no principled
way of distinguishing impermissible land-use exactions from
property taxes. See post, at 9–10. We think they exaggerate
both the extent to which that problem is unique to the land-use
permitting context and the practical difficulty of distinguishing
between the power to tax and the power to take by eminent
domain.
It is beyond dispute
that “[t]axes and user fees . . . are not
‘takings.’ ” Brown, supra, at 243, n. 2
(Scalia, J., dissenting). We said as much in County of Mobile v.
Kimball, 102 U. S. 691, 703 (1881) , and our cases have been
clear on that point ever since. United States v. Sperry Corp., 493
U. S. 52 , n. 9 (1989); see A. Magnano Co. v. Hamilton,
292 U. S. 40, 44 (1934) ; Dane v. Jackson, 256 U. S. 589,
599 (1921) ; Henderson Bridge Co. v. Henderson City, 173 U. S.
592 –615 (1899). This case therefore does not affect the
ability of governments to impose property taxes, user fees, and
similar laws and regulations that may impose financial burdens on
property owners.
At the same time, we
have repeatedly found takings where the government, by confiscating
financial obligations, achieved a result that could have been
obtained by imposing a tax. Most recently, in Brown, supra, at 232,
we were unanimous in concluding that a State Supreme Court’s
seizure of the interest on client funds held in escrow was a taking
despite the unquestionable constitutional propriety of a tax that
would have raised exactly the same revenue. Our holding in Brown
followed from Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation, 524
U. S. 156 (1998) , and Webb’s Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc.
v. Beckwith, 449 U. S. 155 (1980) , two earlier cases in which
we treated confiscations of money as takings despite their
functional similarity to a tax. Perhaps most closely analogous to
the present case, we have repeatedly held that the government takes
property when it seizes liens, and in so ruling we have never
considered whether the government could have achieved an
economically equivalent result through taxation. Armstrong, 364
U. S. 40 ; Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank, 295 U. S.
555 .
Two facts emerge from
those cases. The first is that the need to distinguish taxes from
takings is not a creature of our holding today that monetary
exactions are subject to scrutiny under Nollan and Dolan. Rather,
the problem is inherent in this Court’s long-settled view
that property the government could constitutionally demand through
its taxing power can also be taken by eminent domain.
Second, our cases show
that teasing out the difference between taxes and takings is more
difficult in theory than in practice. Brown is illustrative.
Similar to respondent in this case, the respondents in Brown argued
that extending the protections of the Takings Clause to a bank
account would open a Pandora’s Box of constitutional chal-
lenges to taxes. Brief for Respondents Washington Legal Foundation
et al. 32 and Brief for Respondent Justices of the Washington
Supreme Court 22, in Brown v. Legal Foundation of Wash., O. T.
2002, No. 01–1325. But also like respondent here, the Brown
respondents never claimed that they were exercising their power to
levy taxes when they took the petitioners’ property. Any such
argument would have been implausible under state law; in
Washington, taxes are levied by the legislature, not the courts.
See 538 U. S., at 242, n. 2 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
The same dynamic is at
work in this case because Flor- ida law greatly circumscribes
respondent’s power to tax. See Fla. Stat. Ann. §373.503
(authorizing respondent to impose ad valorem tax on properties
within its jurisdiction); §373.109 (authorizing respondent to
charge permit application fees but providing that such fees
“shall not exceed the cost . . . for processing,
monitoring, and inspecting for compliance with the permit”).
If respondent had argued that its demand for money was a tax, it
would have effectively conceded that its denial of
petitioner’s permit was improper under Florida law. Far from
making that concession, respondent has maintained throughout this
litigation that it considered petitioner’s money to be a
substitute for his deeding to the public a conservation easement on
a larger parcel of undeveloped land. [
3 ]
This case does not
require us to say more. We need not decide at precisely what point
a land-use permitting charge denominated by the government as a
“tax” becomes “so arbitrary . . . that
it was not the exertion of taxation but a confiscation of
property.” Brushaber v. Union Pacific R. Co., 240
U. S. 1 –25 (1916). For present purposes, it suffices to
say that despite having long recognized that “the power of
taxation should not be confused with the power of eminent
domain,” Houck v. Little River Drainage Dist., 239 U. S.
254, 264 (1915) , we have had little trouble distinguishing between
the two.
C
Finally, we disagree
with the dissent’s forecast that our decision will work a
revolution in land use law by depriving local governments of the
ability to charge reasonable permitting fees. Post, at 8. Numerous
courts—including courts in many of our Nation’s most
populous States—have confronted constitutional challenges to
monetary exactions over the last two decades and applied the
standard from Nollan and Dolan or something like it. See, e.g.,
Northern Ill. Home Builders Assn. v. County of Du Page, 165 Ill.
2d. 25, 31–32, 649 N. E. 2d 384, 388–389 (1995);
Home Builders Assn. v. Beavercreek, 89 Ohio St. 3d 121, 128, 729
N. E. 2d 349, 356 (2000); Flower Mound, 135 S. W. 3d, at
640–641. Yet the “significant practical harm” the
dissent predicts has not come to pass. Post, at 8. That is hardly
surprising, for the dissent is correct that state law normally
provides an independent check on excessive land use permitting
fees. Post, at 11.
The dissent criticizes
the notion that the Federal Constitution places any meaningful
limits on “whether one town is overcharging for sewage, or
another is setting the price to sell liquor too high.” Post,
at 9. But only two pages later, it identifies three constraints on
land use permitting fees that it says the Federal Constitution
imposes and suggests that the additional protections of Nollan and
Dolan are not needed. Post, at 11. In any event, the
dissent’s argument that land use permit applicants need no
further protection when the government demands money is really an
argument for overruling Nollan and Dolan. After all, the Due
Process Clause protected the Nollans from an unfair allocation of
public burdens, and they too could have argued that the
government’s demand for property amounted to a taking under
the Penn Central framework. See Nollan, 483 U. S., at 838. We
have repeatedly rejected the dissent’s contention that other
constitutional doctrines leave no room for the nexus and rough
proportionality requirements of Nollan and Dolan. Mindful of the
special vulnerability of land use permit applicants to extortionate
demands for money, we do so again today.
* * *
We hold that the
government’s demand for property from a land-use permit
applicant must satisfy the requirements of Nollan and Dolan even
when the government denies the permit and even when its demand is
for money. The Court expresses no view on the merits of
petitioner’s claim that respondent’s actions here
failed to comply with the principles set forth in this opinion and
those two cases. The Florida Supreme Court’s judgment is
reversed, and this case is remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.