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David Lucas v South Carolina Coastal Council

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As South Carolina was having a lot of coastal development, the availability of ... South Carolina must identify background principles of nuisance and property law ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: David Lucas v South Carolina Coastal Council


1
David Lucas v South Carolina Coastal Council
  • Blown Away by the Court

2

Hurricane Activity in South Carolina
  • 1
  • 0
  • 1974 0
  • 1975 1
  • 1976 2
  • 1977 1
  • 1978 0
  • 1979 1
  • 1980 0
  • 1981 1
  • 1982 0
  • 1983 0
  • 1984 1
  • 1985 1
  • 1986 2
  • 1987 0
  • 1988 0
  • 1989 Hugo

3
Federal Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972
Among other provisions . . . .
Required States to adopt coastal management
polices as a condition for availability of
Federal (coastal) flood insurance
As South Carolina was having a lot of coastal
development, the availability of federal flood
insurance was important
4
Unless the state of South Carolina adopted a
coastal management plan, no (coastal) flood
insurance would be available. As time was
running out . . . . . . Beach Front
Management Act appears
5
(No Transcript)
6
They seemed to sense what was coming Hurricane
Hugo!
. . . . .
7
The Lucas Property
Lucas Lot 1
Lucas Lot 2
8
(No Transcript)
9
SC Supreme Court
  • The Lucas construction would be a nuisance, and
    since there is no right to create a nuisance,
    there is no compensation for loss of that right.
  • Citing Muggler v Kansas

10
US Supreme Court
  • SC stipulated that Lucas did
  • not have any beneficial use
  • of the property
  • When the owner of real property has been
    called upon to sacrifice all economically
    beneficial uses in the name of the common good,
    that is, to leave his property economically idle,
    he has suffered a taking.

11
Beachfront Management Act
  • "The General Assembly finds that
  •  
  • "(4) . . . Development unwisely has been sited
    too close to the beach/dune system. This type
    of development has jeopardized the stability of
    the beach/dune system, accelerated erosion, and
    endangered adjacent property. It is in both the
    public and private interests to protect the
    system from this unwise development.

12
Scalia . . .
  • To win its case, respondent cannot simply
    proffer the legislature's declaration that the
    uses Lucas desires are inconsistent with the
    public interest, or the conclusory assertion that
    they violate a common-law maxim.
  • South Carolina must identify background
    principles of nuisance and property law that
    prohibit the uses Lucas now intends in the
    property's present circumstances.
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