Petition
Petition
Petition
CASE NO.
__________________________________
Petitioners,
v.
Respondent.
__________________________________
On Certiorari Review from Annexation Ordinance 20-2023
City of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida
__________________________________________________________________
PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI
__________________________________________________________________
annexed into the City of Palm Beach Gardens. This is not hyperbole;
unanimous.
within the City’s boundaries. Its roads and entrance are owned and
1
District, its water is provided by the Seacoast Utility Authority, and
and the City wants to tax their value. What is more, Hidden Key offers
Key’s east, north, and south. These areas are not contiguous to Palm
2
As this map illustrates, the City has proposed annexing
properties in five separate “zones.” Four of the five zones are small,
32 times the size of any of the other “zones,” and in fact, 12 times
larger than the other four zones combined. According to the City’s
3
own feasibility study, A.17,1 Zone 1 is comprised of over 70 distinct
that Hidden Key will bear the burden of 25 percent of the “anticipated
net benefit” to the City’s finances—that is, they will pay 25% of the
taxes.
1Citations in this format (“A.#”) refer to the Appendix filed and served
by Petitioners pursuant to Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.220.
4
With this statutory background, the City’s scheme is clear. It seeks
Zone 1 meets none of these criteria. And more to the point, the
on the Ordinance, to try and justify the design of Zone 1 and how it
Attorney responded that “I’m not going to debate the people from the
demonstrating that the Ordinance does not comply with the Florida
Statutes.
relief unless the local government (a) comported with the essential
process. City of Deerfield Beach v. Vaillant, 419 So. 2d 624, 626 (Fla.
1982).
law. The Ordinance’s alleged compliance with the law was not
legality. Nor did the City afford Petitioners basic due process in
6
enacting the Ordinance. For these reasons, demonstrated in further
detail below, this Court should grant this Petition, issue a writ of
trigger for the filing of the petition is the passage of the annexation
not—and, indeed, must not, id. at 130—wait for the March 2024
equitable powers to enjoin the City from taking any further action in
171.081(1).
context or completeness.
public’s view. Despite the first hearing on the Ordinance being held
aware of the City’s plans until media reports in September and early
October. A.303.
wrote letters to the Mayor and members of the City Council; the
annexation. A.72.
The City’s planning manager, Martin Fitts, was the lone witness
offered by the City. Mr. Fitts presented the City’s case for annexation.
11
He noted that the annexation of Zone 1, like the other annexations,
districts and land use categories. By contrast, Mr. Fitts testified that
did not point to any portion of the study that defended compactness
or contiguity, and was not asked any questions. A.67. The Mayor
card. A.67. The very first comment was by a resident of the Pleasant
you,” A.69, and spoke on his view that the City’s process was not in
the record that “we were advised by the City Attorney that we would
of several dozen “areas” like Hidden Key which are the same size, or
even larger, than the other annexation zones. A.74.3 Counsel further
read into the record the other ways in which Zone 1 contravened the
“Thank you, sir,” nobody on behalf of the City addressed these facts.
A.75.
After the Mayor closed the comments, she adjourned the public
A.102. The motion was seconded, and the Vice Mayor offered his view
that Palm Beach Gardens was a great city that people should be
15
happy to join. A.103. He also stated that those objecting to the
annexation did not need attorneys, since “we’re going to accept what
the voter wants and that’s how it goes. If you guys want to be in the
City, great. If you don’t want to be in the City, that’s fine, too.” A.104.
couple of questions about – and I don’t know who can answer them
annexation, since “whoever votes for it votes for it. Whoever doesn’t,
Between the City’s first hearing and the second hearing, the
annexation of Hidden Key will be held on March 19, 2024, the same
day, and on the same ballot—as the Palm Beach Gardens annexation
referendum. A.304.
of their own. A.42. The City ignored this request, even though the
Mayor opened the hearing with a declaration that the City was
does that mean?”, A.148, Mr. Fitts did not answer his own question.
comment. A.177. The City Attorney demanded that counsel “list [by]
represent him or her. A.177. Counsel explained that if the City had
road called “Landing Place.” A.273. The gate to Hidden Key is located
annexed by the City via Zone 1 (or any other zone). Ms. Shafmaster
Hidden Key, folded into Zone 1 by the City. A.304. Ms. Colliton also
testified that North Palm Beach had voted to annex Hidden Key in
A.304. As such, Hidden Key faces the possibility (and, in reality, the
same day.4
larger than the next largest zone, and 12 times larger than Zones 2,
4 Nobody at the City has any answer for what happens in this
scenario. The City Attorney’s observation was that it is a question for
“the Supervisor of Elections” to deal with. A.236. There is little doubt
that if allowed to take place, the simultaneous dual-annexations (one
favored, and one unanimously opposed, by Hidden Key’s residents)
will surely end up back before this Court in a very complicated,
expensive, and seemingly unprecedented lawsuit.
20
Florida municipalities, twice the size of Juno Beach, and if annexed,
resident of Hidden Key for 43 years. Mr. Paraizo testified that different
residents on the east and west side of the zone. A.312. Since public
safety responses are different for different residents within the same
increase in his taxes that would accompany annexation into the City.
He noted that the City itself conceded that up to 30% of the homes
increase, and that despite this increase in taxes paid, he and other
22
Expert Affidavit of Robert V. Schwerer, Esq. A.315. Mr.
Schwerer was the City Attorney for the City of Fort Pierce for several
and agreed with their conclusions in full. Mr. Schwerer testified that
Mr. Schwerer further testified that in his opinion, the City had not
23
gateway entrance becoming a pocket in violation of Chapter
171.031(2).5 A.316.
The City reckoned with none of this. The Council did not allow
any questioning of Mr. Fitts, any other staff member, or the drafters
objectors could have their say at the ballot box during the March
24
fingers. And you cannot annex to create them, and it does not. This
ARGUMENT
A. Standard of Review
“must review the record” and determine, for itself, whether the quasi-
25
Dusseau v. Metropolitan Dade County Bd. of County Comm’rs, 794 So.
2d 1270, 1274 (Fla. 2001). The Florida Supreme Court has defined
sufficient evidence,” id., and the Fourth DCA has noted that
establish a substantial basis of fact from which the fact at issue can
(Fla. 4th DCA 2011) (quoting DeGroot v. Sheffield, 95 So. 2d 912, 916
(Fla. 1957)).
County, 694 So. 2d 856, 861 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997); Raghunandan v.
and substantial” within the definitions set forth above. But in this
case, no such effort is needed, because the City never made any
reasonably compact.”
area similar to Zone 1 has ever been attempted, let alone upheld,
they were met, the City never made an attempt to show its work and
Dep't of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles, 209 So. 3d 1165, 1173 (Fla.
in fact or law, and so the City did not so much as try. Instead, its
tactic is to point to the ballot box and then, surely, to ask this Court
to defer to its feasibility study as conclusive. But this Court owes the
1. The City Did Not, and Cannot, Support Its Claim that Zone
1 is “Compact” Within the Meaning of Chapter 171, as
Applied by Florida’s Courts
Fourth DCA’s analysis. In contrast with the other four zones, there
setting aside (for a moment) its massive size, the fact that Zone 1 is
the City’s concession that, if annexed, Hidden Key and the rest of
taxation.
31
The sheer size of Zone 1, however, ultimately must be
situated within its boundaries. The disparity between the size of Zone
1 and the sizes of the other City zones only accentuates this fact.
in light of the City’s cynical, and repeated, call for opponents of the
annexation to just vote their way out of it—it is the size of Zone 1 that
This Court must not allow such a scheme to stand, and it need
32
Another such authority opined on the question of “contiguity.”
In County of Volusia v. City of Deltona, 925 So. 2d 340 (Fla. 5th DCA
municipality,” the Fifth DCA held that the proposed annexation did
not comply with the statute, since less than 2% of the annexed
344.
33
Palm Beach Gardens. Rather they are contiguous with other
view of the City’s Annexation Map reveals that many of the areas in
contiguous with the Village of Juno Beach to the north. To the east
7Available at
https://pbgfl.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=
de6f3f7e40924a3e9661e735fdb74a97
34
Intracoastal Waterway. To the east of the Intracoastal is Maheu
Palm Beach County. Only when you get to the West side of Maheu
since the City never made any effort to explain its conclusion with
35
multiple unincorporated areas, none of which, on its own, is
comports with neither the spirit nor the letter of Chapter 171; it
violates the law, and this Court should quash the City’s attempt to
Yet, Zone 1’s lack of statutory compliance gets even worse. The
part of Zone 1:
36
That means that Hidden Key cannot be considered a part of Zone 1.
the area sought to be annexed, must not “prevent the territory sought
violation of this provision than the fact that the geographical division
37
at issue consists of the Intracoastal Waterway, which runs directly
through the middle of Zone 1 and would divide Hidden Key from the
above.
contiguity and the City has provided no evidence to the contrary. The
a matter of objective, record fact that the gate entrance to Hidden Key
reference below:
38
For this reason, among others set forth in the declarations,
of Center Hill v. McBryde, 952 So. 2d 599, 603 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007)
39
compactness requirement, due to formation of “pocket” of
unincorporated property).
Ordinance. For these reasons, this Court should grant the Petition
Between the City’s first hearing and the second hearing, the
reading was held on December 14, 2023, where it also passed. The
held on March 19, 2024, the same day, and on the same ballot—as
of North Palm Beach. Thus, it is not only possible, but probable, that
40
electors of Hidden Key vote “no” on the question of annexation with
electors in Palm Beach Gardens’ Zone 1 who will see their taxes
decrease.
directly contiguous with Juno Beach. But for the illegal actions of
41
It remains only to note that the City’s conduct of its two quasi-
did not afford the petitioners procedural due process. City of Deerfield
696 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001). This baseline includes “the opportunity to
The City did not meet this due process baseline, and it did not
come close. Most importantly, the City did not afford Petitioners or
their counsel any opportunity to question Mr. Fitts about the City’s
witnesses who testify tonight.” A.135. She was right, and the City’s
park, the addition of a new traffic pattern, the location of a food truck,
occur during every Council meeting all over the State when issues
be that citizens’ property rights and taxation levels are afforded the
43
Here the process must be more proscribed and interactive. At a
decision.
a hearing has been opened. The facts are clear from the public
declarative testimony that was never even read into the record, much
any attempt to interject, clarify the record, or ask a question was met
with an admonition from the Mayor to follow rules that only applied
to one side. The clearest example, as stated above, was when the City
responded that he "wasn’t going to debate the public.” A.106. So, the
45
question was never answered and moments later the Council voted
Court that they are owed deference as the fact finders of first
instance, despite the reality that no fact finding took place. What is
clear here is that competent testimony was proffered and never heard
46
Hernandez-Canton v. Miami City Com’n, 971 So. 2d 829, 832 (Fla. 3d
DCA 2007).
CONCLUSION
Neither did the hearings the City held to rubber-stamp this illegal
should grant this Petition and issue a writ of certiorari quashing the
Ordinance.
s/ Nicholas M. Gieseler_______
NICHOLAS M. GIESELER | FBN. 0043979
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NicholasG@BLHTLaw.com
MariaC@BLHTLaw.com
CYNTHIA G. ANGELOS| FBN. 539058
CynthiaA@BLHTLaw.com
HeatherW@BLHTLaw.com
STEVEN GIESELER | FBN. 0880981
StevenG@BLHTLaw.com
LoisF@BLHTLaw.com
BARTLETT, LOEB, HINDS, THOMPSON
& ANGELOS
819 S. Federal Hwy, Suite 300
Stuart, Florida 34994
Telephone: (772) 252-3000
48
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
foregoing was filed with the Clerk of the Court, and served on the
following, via the Florida Courts eFiling Portal, on this 5th Day of
January, 2024:
adminappeals@pbcgov.org
s/ Nicholas M. Gieseler
NICHOLAS M. GIESELER | FBN. 0043979
NicholasG@BLHTLaw.com
49
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing document complies with (a) the
and (b) the word count requirements set forth in Florida Rule of
s/ Nicholas M. Gieseler
NICHOLAS M. GIESELER | FBN. 0043979
NicholasG@BLHTLaw.com
50