Shawn Buending v. Town of Redington Beach ( 2021 )


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  •        USCA11 Case: 20-11354   Date Filed: 08/20/2021     Page: 1 of 24
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 20-11354
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 8:19-cv-01473-JSM-SPF
    SHAWN BUENDING,
    ROBERT DOHMEN,
    THOMAS BROWN,
    HARRY S. FIELDS,
    WENDY FIELDS,
    SHAWN MOORE,
    DAGMAR MOORE,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    versus
    TOWN OF REDINGTON BEACH, a Florida municipal corporation,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (August 20, 2021)
    USCA11 Case: 20-11354       Date Filed: 08/20/2021   Page: 2 of 24
    Before MARTIN, GRANT, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges.
    MARTIN, Circuit Judge:
    Florida is famous for its beaches. The Town of Redington Beach, located on
    a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico, is no exception. Shawn Buending, Robert
    Dohmen, Thomas Brown, Harry S. Fields, Wendy Fields, Shawn Moore, and
    Dagmar Moore (the “Property Owners”) own beachfront property in Redington
    Beach. They sued the Town after it passed an ordinance that granted the public
    certain access to the dry sand beaches.
    This appeal requires us to decide whether the District Court properly granted
    summary judgment to the Property Owners on their claims that the ordinance
    violated Florida law and constituted an unlawful taking. It also requires us to
    decide whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment to Ms.
    Fields, who argued the Town violated her First Amendment rights by removing her
    from the Town’s Board of Adjustment after she filed this lawsuit.
    After careful consideration, and with the benefit of oral argument, we vacate
    and remand the District Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Property
    Owners on their claims that the ordinance violated Florida law and constituted an
    unlawful taking. We also vacate and remand the District Court’s grant of summary
    judgment to Ms. Fields on the First Amendment retaliation claim.
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    I.   BACKGROUND
    A. Factual Background
    The Town of Redington Beach is primarily a single-family residential
    community. With a population of about 1,500 people, the Town has a total area of
    1.3 square miles, 0.4 square miles of which is land and 0.9 square miles is water.
    See U.S. Census Bureau, Redington Beach Town, Florida,
    https://www.census.gov; Redington Beach Map and Weather,
    http://www.redingtonbeachflorida.org/Redington_Beach_Map_Weather.html (last
    visited Aug. 20, 2021). Though the Town does not have tourist facilities or
    promote itself as a tourist destination, tourists do come, and stay at the Royal
    Orleans (a timeshare hotel) or in vacation rental units. The Town maintains over
    20 parking spaces for visitors.
    The Property Owners own beachfront property within the Town.
    Specifically, Shawn Buending and Robert Dohmen, through real estate agent (and
    fellow Plaintiff) Wendy Fields, bought their home in 2018 for $8.35 million Mr.
    Buending and Mr. Dohmen divide their time between their homes in Florida and
    Wisconsin. Thomas Brown, who also maintains a home in Michigan, purchased
    his property in the Town in 2017, with the house still being constructed at the time
    of the suit. Wendy and Harry Fields purchased their property in 2004 for $1.7
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    million. Shawn and Dagmar Moore purchased their property in 2017 for $5.2
    million and have listed it for sale for $6.5 million.
    The Property Owners, of course, made these purchases against the backdrop
    of state property law principles. The Florida Constitution gives the public a right
    of access along the beaches and shorelines of the state, below the “mean high water
    line[]”—the area otherwise known as the wet sand beach. 1 Fla. Const. art. X, § 11.
    Thus, using the Florida Constitution as a starting point, the Property Owners’
    properties would extend at most to the mean high tide line and encompass the dry
    sand beach landward of that line.
    In addition to Floridians’ constitutional right to public access, Florida law
    also recognizes customary use. Customary use finds its origins in English common
    law. William Blackstone described the “unwritten laws of England,” including the
    “particular customs, or laws which affect only the inhabitants of particular
    districts.” 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England *74.
    This was reflected in court decisions recognizing that, for instance, the inhabitants
    of a parish could place a maypole on another’s property and dance around it, see
    1
    The mean high water line is defined under Florida law as “the intersection of the tidal
    plane of mean high water with the shore.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 177.27
    (15). “Mean high water” is in turn
    defined as “the average height of the high waters over a 19-year period. 
    Fla. Stat. § 177.27
    (14)
    For shorter periods of observation, ‘mean high water’ means the average height of the high
    waters after corrections are applied to eliminate known variations and to reduce the result to the
    equivalent of a mean 19-year value.” 
    Id.
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    Hall v. Nottingham, 1 Ex. D. 1 (Eng. 1875), and that parish inhabitants could play
    games and sports on another’s property because of established custom, see Fitch v.
    Rawling, 2 H. Bl. 393, 126 Eng. Rep. 614 (C.P. 1795). English common law has
    long recognized use of another’s property based on longstanding customs.
    The customary use at issue here is the public’s access to the Town’s dry
    sand beaches. Florida law allows for localities to recognize the public’s customary
    use of their beaches, with Florida courts invoking the English common law
    tradition of the doctrine. As the Florida Supreme Court has summarized:
    In England, persons of a certain locality or of a certain
    class may have, by immemorial custom, a right to make
    use of land belonging to an individual. Thus, there may
    be a custom for the inhabitants of a certain town to dance
    or play games on a particular piece of land belonging to an
    individual, or to go thereon in order to get water. So there
    may be a custom for fishermen to dry nets on certain land,
    or for persons in a certain trade (victualers) to erect booths
    upon certain private land during a fair. The custom, to be
    valid, must have continued from time immemorial,
    without interruption, and as of right; it must be certain as
    to the place, and as to the persons; and it must be certain
    and reasonable as to the subject matter or rights created.
    City of Daytona Beach v. Tona-Rama, Inc., 
    294 So. 2d 73
    , 78 (Fla. 1974)
    (quotation marks omitted).
    Florida courts have for decades recognized the customary use doctrine. But
    in 2018, the Florida state legislature enacted new requirements that localities must
    meet to assert the customary use of their beaches. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    .
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    Specifically, when it comes to customary use rules that are adopted after a certain
    date, § 163.035 requires that government entities seek a judicial declaration
    affirming customary recreational use of a beach. 
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    (2). Section
    163.035 also contains other provisions regulating the recognition of customary use.
    The statute went into effect on July 1, 2018. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    . On
    June 6, 2018, just under a month before the statute’s effective date, the Town
    enacted the ordinance at issue in this appeal, Ordinance No. 2018-03 (the
    “Ordinance”). The Ordinance created a new section of the Redington Beach Town
    Code to “recognize[] and protect[]” the public’s “long-standing customary use of
    the dry sand areas of all the beaches in the [T]own for recreational purposes.” Ord.
    No. 2018-03 § 1. Under the Ordinance, the public could use the dry sand beach in
    the Town—including such portions of the Property Owners’ properties—for
    recreational use limited to: 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 feet or
    fewer in diameter; sunbathing; picnicking; fishing; swimming or surfing off the
    beach; placement of surfing or fishing equipment for personal use; and building
    certain sand creations (as long as those sand creations did not interfere with sea
    turtles). Ord. No. 2018-03 § (1)(d). The Ordinance sets a 15-foot “buffer zone”
    around private property that spans “seaward from the toe of the dune or from any
    privately-owned permanent habitable structure that is located on, or adjacent to, the
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    dry sand areas of the beach.” Ord. No. 2018-03 § (1)(c). The Ordinance also
    prohibits the use of tobacco, tents, and the possession of animals on the beach.
    Ord. No. 2018-03 § (1)(e). It further states that existing rules governing beach use
    remained in effect and violations are punishable as set forth in the Town’s code.
    Ord. No. 2018-03 § (1)(f).
    B. Procedural History
    In 2019, the Property Owners sued the Town, alleging the Ordinance
    violated § 163.035, and that the enactment and enforcement of the Ordinance
    amounted to a taking under the U.S. and Florida Constitutions.
    After the lawsuit was filed, Ms. Fields, one of the Property Owners, was
    asked during a Town Commission meeting to resign from her position on the
    Board of Adjustment (which reviews requests for variances from the Town’s
    zoning code), because she had filed this suit against the Town. Ms. Fields offered
    her resignation orally but was instructed by the mayor to provide her resignation in
    writing. After consulting with her lawyer, Ms. Fields refused to submit her
    resignation in writing. At the Commission’s next meeting, the Commissioners
    voted unanimously to remove Ms. Fields from the Board of Adjustment. The
    Property Owners then amended the complaint to include Ms. Fields’s claim for
    First Amendment retaliation.
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    The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. The District Court
    granted judgment in favor of the Property Owners on all claims. The court held
    that the Ordinance was void under § 163.035. It also granted summary judgment
    to the Property Owners on the Town’s customary use defense. And in light of its
    determination that the public did not have customary use rights over the dry beach
    area, the District Court found that the Ordinance constituted both a facial and an
    as-applied taking. Finally, the District Court found that the Town’s decision to
    remove Ms. Fields from the Board of Adjustment violated the First Amendment.
    The Town timely appealed.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo a grant of summary judgment and review findings of
    fact for clear error. Smith v. Haynes & Haynes P.C., 
    940 F.3d 635
    , 642 (11th Cir.
    2019). A court assessing motions for summary judgment must “resolve all
    ambiguities and draw reasonable factual inferences from the evidence in the non-
    movant’s favor.” Layton v. DHL Express (USA), Inc., 
    686 F.3d 1172
    , 1175 (11th
    Cir. 2012). A court “may not weigh conflicting evidence or make credibility
    determinations of [its] own. If the record presents disputed issues of fact, the court
    may not decide them; rather, [it] must deny the motion and proceed to trial.” Jones
    v. UPS Ground Freight, 
    683 F.3d 1283
    , 1292 (11th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks
    omitted).
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    III.     DISCUSSION
    A. The District Court erred in declaring the Ordinance void under Florida
    Statute § 163.035.
    We first address whether the Ordinance violates § 163.035. When, as here,
    the statute is unambiguous, we look to the plain language of the text. Daniels v.
    Fla. Dep’t of Health, 
    898 So. 2d 61
    , 64 (Fla. 2005); see also Robbins v. Garrison
    Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    809 F.3d 583
    , 586 (11th Cir. 2015).
    In finding that the Ordinance violated § 163.035, the District Court looked to
    subsection 2, which states:
    (2) Ordinances and rules relating to customary use.--A
    governmental entity may not adopt or keep in effect an
    ordinance or rule that finds, determines, relies on, or is
    based upon customary use of any portion of a beach above
    the mean high-water line, as defined in s. 177.27, unless
    such ordinance or rule is based on a judicial declaration
    affirming recreational customary use on such beach.
    
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    (2) (emphases added).
    The District Court found that the Ordinance violated § 163.035 because it
    reasoned that the Town violated the “kept in effect” portion of the statute. The
    court found that the Town kept the Ordinance in effect after July 1, 2018, when
    § 163.035 went into effect, and did so without seeking a judicial declaration
    affirming customary use. The Town rejects this reading of § 163.035, arguing that
    the Property Owners’ interpretation of the statute conflicts with § 163.035(4),
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    which allows for ordinances adopted before July 1, 2018 to be kept in effect and
    defended in court. Section 163.035(4) reads:
    (4) Applicability.--This section does not apply to a
    governmental entity with an ordinance or rule that was
    adopted and in effect on or before January 1, 2016, and
    does not deprive a governmental entity from raising
    customary use as an affirmative defense in any proceeding
    challenging an ordinance or rule adopted before July 1,
    2018.
    
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    (4) (emphasis added).
    The Property Owners in turn respond that § 163.035(4) cannot serve as a
    valid basis for the Town to keep the Ordinance in effect because, they say, the
    Florida legislature intended for § 163.035(4) to apply only to localities’ defense of
    takings suits. Upon our review, we conclude that this argument fails. For one, the
    Property Owners provide mere assertions of legislative intent and have not
    provided any evidence in support of its claims. But more to the point, the Property
    Owners’ view that § 163.035(4) is limited to suits against government takings
    contravenes a plain reading of the statutory text. Section 163.035(4) states that a
    locality may raise an affirmative defense of customary use “in any proceeding.”
    
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    (4) (emphasis added). We understand “any proceeding” to
    mean any proceeding, including this one brought by the Property Owners here.
    We therefore decline to adopt the Property Owners’ reading. See Daniels, 
    898 So. 2d at 64
    .
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    Instead, we conclude that the Town was entitled to invoke customary use as
    an affirmative defense under § 163.035(4). Again, § 163.035(4) states that the
    statute “does not deprive a governmental entity from raising customary use as an
    affirmative defense in any proceeding challenging an ordinance or rule adopted
    before July 1, 2018.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 163.035
    (4). The Ordinance was passed on June
    6, 2018. See Ord. No. 2018-03. Thus, a plain reading of § 163.035(4) supports the
    conclusion that the Town was permitted to keep the Ordinance in effect after July
    1, 2018 and raise an affirmative defense of customary use in defending against the
    Property Owners’ lawsuit. Daniels, 
    898 So. 2d at 64
    .
    We therefore vacate the District Court’s ruling that the Ordinance is void
    under § 163.035 because it was kept in effect after July 1, 2018. We next turn to
    the District Court’s finding that the Town failed to provide sufficient evidence to
    establish the asserted customary use.
    B. The District Court erred granting summary judgment to the Property
    Owners on the Town’s customary use defense.
    The District Court found that the Town failed to prove its affirmative
    defense of customary use as a matter of law, granting summary judgment to the
    Property Owners on this issue. But because we conclude the District Court
    impermissibly weighed the evidence at the summary judgment stage, see Jones,
    683 F.3d at 1292, we vacate this ruling.
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    To resolve whether the Town has shown customary use over the dry sand
    beach in dispute, we look to Florida law. See Shapiro v. Associated Int’l Ins. Co.,
    
    899 F.2d 1116
    , 1118 (11th Cir. 1990) (federal courts are bound to follow the
    decisions of the Florida Supreme Court on issues of Florida state law).
    In addressing property disputes, Florida courts have long recognized the
    unique nature of its beaches. In White v. Hughes, 
    190 So. 446
     (Fla. 1939), the
    Florida Supreme Court wrote:
    There is probably no custom more universal, more natural
    or more ancient, on the sea-coasts, not only of the United
    States, but of the world, than that of bathing in the salt
    waters of the ocean and the enjoyment of the wholesome
    recreation incident thereto. The lure of the ocean is
    universal; to battle with its refreshing breakers a delight.
    Many are they who have felt the lifegiving touch of its
    healing waters and its clear dust-free air. Appearing
    constantly to change, it remains ever essentially the same.
    This primeval quality appeals to us. ‘Changeless save to
    the wild waves play, time writes no wrinkles on thine
    azure brow; such as creation’s dawn beheld, thou rollest
    now.’ The attraction of the ocean for mankind is as
    enduring as its own changelessness. The people of
    Florida––a State blessed with probably the finest bathing
    beaches in the world––are no exception to the rule. Skill
    in the art of swimming is common amongst us. We love
    the oceans which surround our State. We, and our visitors
    too, enjoy bathing in their refreshing waters. The constant
    enjoyment of this privilege of thus using the ocean and its
    fore-shore for ages without dispute should prove sufficient
    to establish it as an American common law right.
    
    Id.
     at 448–49.
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    The Florida Supreme Court first articulated the customary use doctrine in
    1974. See Tona-Rama, 
    294 So. 2d at 78
    . In Tona-Rama, the Florida Supreme
    Court explained that the public could continue using the dry sand area adjoining a
    tourist attraction if such recreational use were “ancient, reasonable, without
    interruption and free from dispute.” 
    Id.
     In describing the rationale underlying
    customary use, the Florida Supreme Court wrote that
    [n]o part of Florida is more exclusively hers, nor more
    properly utilized by her people than her beaches. And the
    right of the public of access to, and enjoyment of, Florida's
    oceans and beaches has long been recognized by this
    Court. . . . 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 are of no use for farming, grazing, timber
    production, or residency—the traditional uses of land—
    but 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.
    
    Id. at 75, 77
    .
    The Florida courts of appeals have also written on the doctrine. See
    Blanchard v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    903 F.2d 1398
    , 1399 (11th Cir. 1990)
    (in the absence of a ruling by the Florida Supreme Court, decisions of the Florida
    District Courts of Appeal are controlling). In Reynolds v. County of Volusia, 
    659 So. 2d 1186
     (Fla. 5th DCA 1995), the Fifth District Court of Appeal noted that
    “the doctrine of customary usage of the sandy beach areas of this state offer[ed] a
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    potential . . . ground” to affirm the ruling that there was no taking in the case. 
    Id.
    at 1190–91. The Fifth District Court of Appeal reiterated the requirements of the
    customary use doctrine, explaining that it “requires the courts to ascertain in each
    case the degree of customary and ancient use the beach has been subjected to and,
    in addition, to balance whether the proposed use of the land by the fee owners will
    interfere with such use enjoyed by the public in the past.” 
    Id. at 1190
    . But
    because it determined the title at issue did not include the dry sand beach, the court
    did not have to reach the issue of whether customary use existed in the case. 
    Id.
     at
    1190–91; see also 
    id.
     at 1187–88.
    The Fifth District Court of Appeal again discussed customary use in
    Trepanier v. County of Volusia, 
    965 So. 2d 276
     (Fla. 5th DCA 2007). In this case,
    the Fifth District Court of Appeal instructed that to establish a customary right the
    local government need not prove customary use of the property owners’ specific
    parcels of property. 
    Id. at 290
    . Instead, the court read the Florida Supreme Court’s
    decision in Tona-Rama to “require proof that the general area of the beach where
    [the private] property is located has customarily been put to such use.” 
    Id.
    (emphasis added). The court then found that issues of fact precluded a
    determination on customary use and required remand. 
    Id.
     at 290–91.
    Finally, we note that the Florida legislature has also recognized the public’s
    reasonable access to beaches. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 187.201
    (8)(b)(2) (stating as part of
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    the State Comprehensive Plan that it is a state goal to “[e]nsure the public’s right to
    reasonable access to beaches”). In sum, Florida state law confirms that the
    public’s right to access to the dry sand beaches can be acquired by custom, which
    is “a source of law that emanates from long-term, open, obvious and widely-
    accepted and widely-exercised practice.” Trepanier, 
    965 So. 2d at 289
    .
    With these principles in mind, we consider whether, on this record, the
    District Court properly granted summary judgment to the Property Owners on the
    issue of customary use. We don’t believe it did. Based on our review of the
    evidence, we conclude that genuine disputes of material fact preclude summary
    judgment.
    Recall that the Town has a total area of only 1.3 square miles, 0.4 square
    miles of which is land and 0.9 square miles is water.2 The question of customary
    use is a localized inquiry, in this case implicating fairly limited stretches of
    beachfront. The Town may establish customary use by showing that the “general
    area” of the beaches has been subject to customary use that is “‘ancient,
    reasonable, without interruption and free from dispute.’” Trepanier, 
    965 So. 2d at
    290–91 (quoting Tona-Rama, 
    294 So. 2d at 78
    ).
    2
    See Redington Beach Map and Weather,
    http://www.redingtonbeachflorida.org/Redington_Beach_Map_Weather.html (last visited Aug.
    20, 2021).
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    The Town provided a range of evidence supporting its customary use
    defense. Charles Redington, who founded the Town in 1935, see Ord. No. 2018-
    03, donated beach access points, which have existed since the Town’s inception.
    These access points, in the form of boardwalks, are repaired and maintained by the
    Town. The Town code, in turn, defines a “beach access point” as “[a]ny access
    used by the general public or private property owners for the purpose of gaining
    access to the beach.” Town Code § 4-9(b) (emphasis added).
    Of course, the beach access points could be consistent with merely the use of
    the wet sand, but additional evidence supports the Town’s assertion of customary
    use of the dry sand beach as well. For one, the Town has traditionally expended
    public funds to rake the beach. And the Town holds events every year on the dry
    sand beach that are not at the Town park. These include a “hotdog cookout” held
    on the Fourth of July and one or two beach cleanups a year sponsored by the
    Redington Beach Property Owners’ Association.
    As further indication that the Town was designed to accommodate visitors,
    who may not want to come if they could not access the beaches, we note that
    visitors may stay at vacation rental units or a hotel in the Town. The record
    includes one example of a mansion with eight bedrooms, rented out at a rate of
    $25,000 a week, which saw as many as “40 to 50” visitors a week. The Town
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    maintains over 20 parking spaces for visitors. All of this evidence suggests there
    are customs, housing, and parking supporting visitors’ use of the beaches.
    Beyond that, the Town provided testimonial and photographic evidence
    supporting the longstanding perception that the Town’s beaches are available for
    public use. As one longtime resident attested, “It’s always been a public beach.”
    The mayor, who moved to the Town as a child in 1955, testified that people “just
    felt like the beach was there for us to enjoy and use.” A Town Commissioner
    attested to raising his children in the Town and, throughout those years, accessing
    the dry sand beach through the public access points. He testified that at no point
    was he told that he and his family could not be on the dry sand beach. The Town’s
    corporate representative also testified that she would run on the dry sand. The
    representative testified that she saw others on the dry sand areas outside of the
    bounds of the city park. As one example, she said she saw fisherman waiting on
    the dry sand beach while their poles were mounted in the wet sand. Another Town
    commissioner also testified that his family would routinely use the dry sand areas
    behind the homes and that he had “been doing this for years.” Several
    commissioners identified some of the pictures of people gathering on the dry sandy
    areas of the beach behind a resident’s home.
    Even some of the testimony by the plaintiffs supports customary use. Two
    plaintiffs attested to observing people using the dry sandy areas behind their own
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    houses, including at the time they purchased their homes. Thomas Brown said that
    in 2017 when he toured the house that he bought, “the residents were out [on the
    dry beach] for sure” “picknick[ing] or . . . on beach chairs” or the like. He also
    testified that, over the next year, “[o]n occasion there were people on the beach”
    behind his house and that he “assumed they were residents” of the town. He
    admits he had “seen people out there,” referring to the dry sand beach behind his
    house, before the Ordinance was enacted. Wendy Fields testified that her real
    estate agent told her before she and her husband bought the house that they “could
    not stop people from walking across[]” the dry sand beach behind the house.
    As such, the Town provided evidence suggesting that residents and
    nonresidents alike use the dry sand beaches, including residents who do not own
    beachfront property. This overview of the evidence is not exhaustive.
    Nevertheless, it reflects competent evidence put forward by the Town in support of
    its customary use defense.
    We think the District Court made two errors in granting summary judgment
    to the Property Owners. First, it discounted the evidence supporting customary
    use. The District Court dismissed the Town’s evidence as “anecdot[al],” “too
    weak,” “not limited to Property Owners’ properties,” and “too imprecise to
    establish recreational customary use of the particular area of the beach at issue.” In
    so doing, however, the District Court impermissibly weighed a conflicting record,
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    see Jones, 683 F.3d at 1292, and disregarded the Florida courts’ rulings on the
    topic of customary use. Those rulings say that customary use “require[s] proof that
    the general area of the beach where [the private] property is located has
    customarily been put to such use,” and that Florida courts do not “suggest that the
    [local government] must prove [customary use of property owners’] specific
    parcels of property.” Trepanier, 
    965 So. 2d at 290
     (emphasis added).
    Second, the District Court appeared to discount the uses of the beach that
    were not adverse to the owner’s use. But the Florida doctrine of customary use
    does not impose an adversity requirement, and the doctrine applies even where the
    owner has given actual or implicit permission. See Tona-Rama, Inc., 
    294 So. 2d at 76, 78
     (contrasting prescriptive easement, which has an adversity requirement,
    with customary use, which does not); see also 1 Blackstone, supra, at *77
    (explaining that customary use is “peaceable, and acquiesced in”). For instance,
    the District Court dismissed evidence showing public use simply because the
    beachgoers could have been “invitees of the property owners.” But pictures of
    large town gatherings on the dry sandy areas of the beach are not irrelevant to
    determining customary use just because a property owner may have attended the
    gathering or because the attendees might have had permission to be there.
    On this record, we conclude that issues of material fact remain as to whether
    the public’s use of the Town’s dry sand beaches is “ancient, reasonable, without
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    USCA11 Case: 20-11354       Date Filed: 08/20/2021   Page: 20 of 24
    interruption and free from dispute.” Tona-Rama, 
    294 So. 2d at 78
    . We stress that
    the Town of Redington Beach is a planned community that appeared to intend to
    provide beach access to its residents and covers a very limited stretch of
    beachfront. This appeal concerns a limited amount of beachfront property in a
    small town. Given this context, we conclude the evidence here was sufficient to
    create genuine disputes of material fact on customary use.
    We decline to decide whether the Town has established customary use.
    Instead, we vacate the District Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Property
    Owners on the Town’s customary use defense and remand for further
    determination of the issue.
    C. The District Court erred in finding a facial and an as-applied taking.
    Next is the Property Owner’s claim that the Ordinance constituted an
    unlawful taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and
    Article X of the Florida Constitution. U.S. Const. amend. V; Fla. Const. Article X,
    § 6(a); see also St. Johns River Water Mgmt. Dist. v. Koontz, 
    77 So. 3d 1220
    , 1226
    (Fla. 2011) (the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment and the takings clause of
    the Florida Constitution are interpreted coextensively), rev’d on other grounds, 
    570 U.S. 595
    , 
    133 S. Ct. 2586
     (2013).
    The District Court found that because the Town’s customary use defense
    failed, the Town had necessarily effected an unlawful taking of property. We
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    USCA11 Case: 20-11354      Date Filed: 08/20/2021      Page: 21 of 24
    vacate the District Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Property Owners on
    the federal and state takings claims, because the Town may establish its customary
    use defense on remand.
    D. The District Court erred in finding that the Town violated Ms. Fields’s
    First Amendment rights.
    Finally, we address Ms. Fields’s First Amendment retaliation claim. The
    District Court granted summary judgment to Ms. Fields, but we conclude genuine
    disputes of material fact remain about whether Fields resigned, and thus whether
    she suffered an adverse employment action in the first place.
    In evaluating claims that a public employee suffered an adverse employment
    action based on expressive conduct or speech, courts must “balance . . . the
    interests of the [employee], as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public
    concern and the interest of the [government], as an employer, in promoting the
    efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.” Pickering v.
    Bd. of Educ. of Twp. High Sch. Dist. 205, 
    391 U.S. 563
    , 568, 
    88 S. Ct. 1731
    ,
    1734–35 (1968); see Moss v. City of Pembroke Pines, 
    782 F.3d 613
    , 617–18 (11th
    Cir. 2015) (setting forth the Pickering balancing test). But whether an employee
    suffered an “adverse employment action” is a “preliminary matter” that must be
    resolved first. Cook v. Gwinnett Cnty. Sch. Dist., 
    414 F.3d 1313
    , 1318 (11th Cir.
    2005).
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    USCA11 Case: 20-11354       Date Filed: 08/20/2021   Page: 22 of 24
    Here, the District Court granted summary judgment to Ms. Fields after
    finding that she had not resigned, but rather was terminated from the Board of
    Adjustment. The court noted that the Town took a “conflicting position on this
    issue,” appearing to argue in one set of summary judgment briefing that Ms. Fields
    “voluntarily resigned,” but in its response to Fields’s summary judgment motion
    failed to dispute her characterization that she was “removed from the Board [of
    Adjustment].” The court then found that it was “undisputed that Fields refused to
    offer her resignation in writing and the Commission then unanimously voted to
    remove Fields from the Board.” From this, the District Court decided that the
    record “does not support the Town’s argument . . . that Fields voluntarily resigned
    from the Board.”
    However, the District Court did not address whether Ms. Fields may have
    resigned orally during the Town Commission meeting. The Town argues she
    resigned orally at the meeting because she said she would be “more than happy to”
    resign if asked. The Commissioners stated they did want Ms. Fields to resign, and
    she responded that she “accepted.” The mayor then requested that the resignation
    be submitted “in writing,” which, of course, it was not. The record contains further
    conflicting evidence on whether Ms. Fields resigned. For her part, Ms. Fields
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    USCA11 Case: 20-11354            Date Filed: 08/20/2021       Page: 23 of 24
    testified that she did not believe she resigned at the meeting. 3 Although the
    committee meeting minutes state Ms. Fields volunteered to resign and the
    Commissioners accepted her resignation, Fields disputed the accuracy of these
    notes, testifying she “saw what the meeting notes said” and believed it was “very
    different than what [her] memory was.” Given this conflicting evidence on
    whether Ms. Fields actually resigned at the Town Commission meeting, summary
    judgment on this claim was improper.
    Because a resolution of whether Ms. Fields resigned is a precursor to
    evaluating her claim of First Amendment retaliation, we must vacate the grant of
    summary judgment to Fields and remand the claim for further proceedings.
    3
    At her deposition, Ms. Fields testified as follows:
    Q: So you said that you would resign. They asked for formal
    resignation in writing, but your recollection is you did not resign at
    that meeting?
    A: I said “I would resign” is the exact words.
    Q: Okay.
    A: But after thinking there were complaints against me. If there
    were complaints against me and I was doing a poor job, I would
    resign. But there were no complaints against me. They had no
    documentation. If they had, I would have forwarded my resignation.
    . . . So I chose not to resign because I liked what I was doing.
    R. Doc. 51-1 at 41–42.
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    IV
    We vacate the judgment of the District Court and remand the case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    VACATED and REMANDED.
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