Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Nassau County, Florida, Riverstone Properties, LLC, and Citizens Against Runaway Development, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 10, 2026
Docket5D2025-1050
StatusPublished

This text of Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Nassau County, Florida, Riverstone Properties, LLC, and Citizens Against Runaway Development, Inc. (Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Nassau County, Florida, Riverstone Properties, LLC, and Citizens Against Runaway Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Nassau County, Florida, Riverstone Properties, LLC, and Citizens Against Runaway Development, Inc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

Case No. 5D2025-1050 LT Case No. 2023-CA-000384 _____________________________

AMELIA ISLAND SANCTUARY PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,

Appellant,

v.

NASSAU COUNTY, FLORIDA; RIVERSTONE PROPERTIES, LLC; and CITIZENS AGAINST RUNAWAY DEVELOPMENT, INC.,

Appellees. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Nassau County. Marianne Lloyd Aho, Judge.

Arthur I. Jacobs and Douglas A. Wyler, of Jacobs Scholz & Wyler, LLC, Fernandina Beach, for Appellant.

Jeffrey L. Hinds and Jay J. Barlett, of Bartlett Loeb Hinds & Thompson, PLLC, Tampa, for Appellee, Nassau County, Florida.

Fred D. Franklin, Jr., T.R. Hainline, Jr., and Cristine M. Russel, of Rogers Towers, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellee, Riverstone Properties, LLC.

No Appearance for Remaining Appellee. July 10, 2026

MAKAR, J.

At issue is a settlement agreement between Nassau County, Florida, and Riverstone Properties, LLC, the latter owning fifty- one pristine oceanfront acres on the southern tip of Amelia Island. The property, which is zoned residential, is sandwiched between Amelia Island State Park on its southern border and a private residential development, The Sanctuary, on its northern border. The Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association sued the County and Riverstone on the theory that the settlement agreement is a “development order” that is in violation of section 163.3215, Florida Statutes, which requires development orders to be consistent with the Nassau County 2030 Comprehensive Plan.

On appeal, the Association challenges the trial court’s conclusion that the settlement agreement is not a “development order,” thereby denying relief on the only claim the Association asserted. The trial court was correct. The settlement agreement does not constitute a “development order,” which is defined to mean “any order granting, denying, or granting with conditions an application for a development permit.” § 163.3164(15), Fla. Stat. (2026). A “development permit,” in turn, “includes any building permit, zoning permit, subdivision approval, rezoning, certification, special exception, variance, or any other official action of local government having the effect of permitting the development of land.” Id. § 163.3164(16).

The settlement agreement is not the result of an “application” for a “development permit” but, instead, is only the result of a negotiated settlement between the County and Riverstone, who sued the County under the Bert Harris, Jr., Private Property Rights Protection Act, Chapter 70, Laws of Florida. The settlement agreement is simply the resolution of Riverstone’s claims, in part, that the County’s reduction of the allowable height for structures from 85 feet to 45 feet amounted to a compensable “inordinate burden” under the Bert Harris Act. Indeed, as the County acknowledges, the settlement agreement does not permit any

2 development whatsoever at this time; in fact, development of the property may never occur. As the County represented at oral argument:

Most of the provisions [in the settlement agreement] have to do with if development occurs in the future . . . if and when this property develops is an unknown; . . . it’s in its natural state right now. The County is unaware of any plans to develop it; the County is aware that there has been interest by preservation groups, both public and private, to keep the land exactly as it is. So, most of the agreement dealing with what happens if development ever comes, and when there is an application for development to the County, most of the agreement deals with those issues to maintain a certain standard of development for the beach park, beach access that won’t hurt Riverstone’s property.

Fla. Fifth Dist. Ct. of Appeal, OA 21-1050, at 21:02-22:02 (YouTube, May 6, 2026), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0y- DrBRq5XE&t=1708s (emphases added).

As the highlighted portions make evident, the settlement agreement resolves a dispute between the County and Riverstone, but it does not authorize development of a specific project at this juncture. Riverstone has choices to make. It may decide to pursue development of the property in the future by submitting applications for permits that would be subject to scrutiny and the parameters of the settlement agreement, some of which benefit Riverstone (e.g., a higher height restriction) and some of which benefit the County (increased buffers and beach access). It may choose to sell the property to public or private entities who want to preserve the property in its pristine state. Other scenarios are possible, but the point is that the settlement agreement itself does not fit within the meaning of a “development order.”

As such, judgment in the County and Riverstone’s favor was appropriate on the only theory that the Association presented in the trial court, i.e., that the settlement agreement was a “development order” that was not consistent with the County’s comprehensive plan under Chapter 163.

3 It bears noting that a Chapter 163 challenge to a settlement under the Bert Harris Act, as a general matter, would undercut the statutory framework the Act established for review of settlement agreements, as this Court held in Rainbow River Conservation, Inc. v. Rainbow River Ranch, LLC. See 189 So. 3d 312, 315 (Fla. 5th DCA 2016) (rejecting argument that a “Bert Harris Act settlement agreement can never authorize development inconsistent with the local government’s existing comprehensive plan because this would violate the Growth Management Act”). This Court observed that Bert Harris settlement agreements may contravene the application of a statute, such as those under Chapter 163, but the infringement is “wisely balanced with a requirement that the agreement be approved by the circuit court only after it ensures that the public interests served by the affected statute are protected.” Id. at 316.

Notably, this Court in Rainbow River did not say “anything goes” when it comes to a Bert Harris Act settlement agreement that potentially violates Chapter 163. Instead, it noted that there “may be a case where the public interests protected by the Growth Management Act can only be protected with a circuit court order that requires the local government to process a comprehensive plan amendment through the ordinary process, before implementation of a settlement agreement.” Id. In other words, the “extraordinary” scope of a settlement agreement under the Bert Harris Act might warrant a judicial order requiring adjustment of a comprehensive plan through ordinary means. The default that the “Legislature clearly contemplated,” however, is that the “public interests served by the Growth Management Act could be satisfied by other means at the circuit court’s disposal.” Id.

The takeaway from Rainbow River is that a Bert Harris Act settlement agreement arising from an amendment to a comprehensive plan that imposes an inordinate burden is subject to mandatory judicial review and approval under section 70.001(4)(d)2., Florida Statutes, which states:

When a governmental entity enters into a settlement agreement under this section which would have the effect of contravening the application of a statute as it would otherwise apply to the subject real property, the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Amelia Island Sanctuary Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Nassau County, Florida, Riverstone Properties, LLC, and Citizens Against Runaway Development, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amelia-island-sanctuary-property-owners-association-inc-v-nassau-county-fladistctapp-2026.