Keith Howard, The Howard Company etc. v. Roger Murray and K&H Development etc.

184 So. 3d 1155
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 8, 2015
Docket1D14-1841, 1D14-1984, 1D14-1996
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 184 So. 3d 1155 (Keith Howard, The Howard Company etc. v. Roger Murray and K&H Development etc.) 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
Keith Howard, The Howard Company etc. v. Roger Murray and K&H Development etc., 184 So. 3d 1155 (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BENTON, J.

The final judgment before us 1 was entered in cases consolidated below, in which *1158 the trial court ruled that. development rights within the Sandestin Development of Regional Impact (DRI) run with the land: The trial court decided that “the issuance of a deed or other instrument of conveyance carries with it the ownership of a reasonable portion of intensity rights” and that “the amount of intensity allowed for a parcel must be determined based upon the individual circumstances of the development.” We conclude this approach is unworkable and reverse the . final judgment in part, on this basis..

The focus of the parties’ dispute is 1.453 acres located within the Sandestin DRI in South Walton County (Tract 3) which has been a subject of contention between Keith Howard, The Howard Company of the Southeast, Inc., and Howard Rock Fee, LLC (Howard/Howard parties), on the one hand, and Roger Murray, K & H Development Group, Inc., and Bla-Lock Destín Development Group, Inc. (Murray/Murray parties), 2 on the other, over a period of some years.

The final judgment decided that Bla-Lock “has vésted commercial development intensity rights in its 1.453 acre parcel of real property,” quieted title to the real property “along with associated commercial intensity development rights” in Bla-Lock against Howard, and decreed that Sandestin Investments, LLC (a non-party) “is authorized to confirm to the appropriate Walton County officials that development intensity rights are available to Bla-Lock,” whereupon Walton County could issue a permit to Murray for building on the lot. An earlier summary judgment, also renewable now that final judgment has been entered, had disposed of other claims.

We affirm the summary judgment in favor of Howard on Murray’s claims of tortious interference with a business relationship, fraudulent misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, and civil theft. We also affirm the trial court’s dismissal of Murray’s causes of action for inverse condemnation as not ripe for decision. We reverse both the summary judgment in favor of Murray on Howard’s claim of tortious interference with an option Howard had on Tract 3 (and the underlying business relationship the option represented) and the final judgment determining Bla-Lock Destín Development Group, Inc. holds vested (albeit unspecified) development rights in Tract 3 that entitle it to a development order at this time. 3 We cannot agree with the learned *1159 trial judge that development rights created by an order authorizing a development of regional impact but never allocated — by the development order or otherwise — to a specific subparcel are automatically conveyed when the subpareel is deeded.

Aggregate Development Rights Created and Assigned

By the time Walton County entered a development order authorizing the ■ San-destin DRI on some 2300 acres, Evans & Mitcheil Industries, Inc., the original applicant, had gone bankrupt. Property subject to the development order was subdivided among various mortgage holders. After 1976, ownership of the DRI property fragmented further, 4 before all. owners of undeveloped property subject to the original DRI agreed to the Sandestin Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CCR), recorded in the Walton County land records in 1980.

After it had acquired all the assets of Lakeland B.V., including its development rights under the DRI order, 5 Sandestin Corporation submitted its 1984 Master Plan Update, notifying Walton County that “the Sandestin Corporation and its affiliates [had] succeeded in reestablishing uni-fled development control” and requesting modifications to the DRI order. Accordingly, by Resolution 1984-24, Walton County amended'the initial DRI development order, so that Parcel 208/308 consisting of 48.1 acres, including Tract 3, was allotted 550,000 square feet of commercial development rights.

Legal Title to Tract 3 Changes Hands

On December 1, 1984, Sandestin Corporation agreed to sell approximately 16 acres lying within Parcel 208/308, including Tract 3, to Great Southwest Commercial, Inc. 6 The sales contract, which was explicitly subject to the DRI order and the CCR,- provided that the parties would agree on necessary amendments to the CCR and, on July 1, 1985, a Supplemental Declaration to the CCR was in fact executed. This Supplement to the CCR did not, however, purport to allocate development rights among lots or parcels lying within the 16-acre parcel Sandestin Corporation agreed to sell (or elsewhere within Parcel 208/308’s 48.1 acres). 7

By 1992, Centaworld Corporation had obtained title to the 16-aere parcel, includ- *1160 tag Tract 3. 8 On February 1, 1996, Centa-world Corporation conveyed Tract 3 to Centaworld Holding Corporation (Centa-world Holding). After Centaworld Holding executed a first mortgage in favor of Peoples First Community Bank (Peoples First), encumbering Tract 3, to secure a loan of approximately $227,000.00, Howard obtained an option to purchase Tract 3 (among other parcels) from Centaworld Holding. 9

Under the terms of the option, Howard paid $150,000 for the right to purchase various subparcels in Parcel 208 at prices calculated to equal (roughly) the debts encumbering the respective, optioned parcels. 10 After the option was executed (but before Howard recorded a “Memorandum of Option”), Murray lent several hundred thousand dollars to Centaworld Holding, securing the loan with a second mortgage encumbering some of the property described in the option contract, including Tract 3.

Peoples First initiated proceedings to foreclose the first mortgage on Tract 3 on February 25, 1999, 11 and, on May 27, 1999, *1161 Centaworld Holding filed for Chapter 11 protection in bankruptcy court. On September 1, 1999, Peoples First assigned its Tract 3 mortgage to Murray. After the bankruptcy case was dismissed, Centa-world Holding conveyed its interest in Tract 3 to K & H Development Group, Inc. by quitclaim deed on May 9,2000.

As holder of the first and second mortgages on Tract 3, Murray initiated a foreclosure action against K & H in 2004. At the foreclosure sale, both Murray and Howard bid repeatedly on Tract 3. Murray made the winning bid of $2,625,000.00, then assigned purchase rights to Bla-Lock, and the Walton County Clerk of Court issued a certificate of title to Bla-Lock on May 27, 2008.

Development Rights Dealt with Separately

On October 28, 1999, Intrawest Sandes-tin filed a Notice of Proposed Change (NOPC) to the DRI order.

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184 So. 3d 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-howard-the-howard-company-etc-v-roger-murray-and-kh-development-fladistctapp-2015.