Save Calusa Trust v. St. Andrews Holdings, Ltd.

193 So. 3d 910, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 426, 2016 WL 145997
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 13, 2016
Docket14-2690 & 14-2682
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 So. 3d 910 (Save Calusa Trust v. St. Andrews Holdings, Ltd.) 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
Save Calusa Trust v. St. Andrews Holdings, Ltd., 193 So. 3d 910, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 426, 2016 WL 145997 (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SCALES, J.

■In these consolidated appeals, Appellants Save Calusa Trust (“Homeowners”) and Miami-Dade County (the “County”), appeal a final summary judgment, entered in favor of St. Andrews Holding, Ltd. and Northeastérn Golf LLC (together, “Owner”), declaring void a restrictive covenant under Florida’s Marketable Record Title Act (“MRTA”). 1 Because the County imposed the subject restrictive covenant' as part of its development approval of Owner’s property, the covenant is not an estate or interest in, or a claim or charge to, title to real property subject to MRTA. We reverse.

I. Facts

A. Preliminary, Stages of Golf Course ■■ Development ' ■

In 1967, Owner’s predecessor-in-interest, North Kendall Investments, Ltd. (“Developer”), sought to create a new golf course development in the Kendall area of unincorporated Miami-Dade County.

*912 The property at the time was zoned General Use or “GU.” Developer sought two zoning changes for the property. In order to build a ring of single family homes around the proposed golf course, Developer needed to change the zoning for the “ring” area 2 from GU to EU-M (Estate Use Modified). As to the golf course portion of the property, Developer needed an “unusual use” approval to establish the open space for a golf course, a club house and a driving range.

In April 1967, Developer filed zoning applications with the County to accomplish these changes. The purpose of these applications was to create an integrated development where residential property would surround a golf course.

B.ZAB and County Commission Approvals

On August 16,1967, the County’s Zoning Appeals Board (“ZAB”) adopted a resolution approving Developer’s “unusual use” application, with a condition “[tjhat restrictive covenants running with the land in proper covenant form, meeting with the approval of the Zoning Director, be recorded to ensure that the golf course be perpetually maintained as such....” 3 ZAB’s resolution of approval constituted final administrative agency action regarding Developer’s “unusual use” application.

In its resolution of approval, ZAB also recommended to the County Commission that the County Commission, which had authority over zoning district changes, approve the proposed zoning change from GIJ to EU-M. The County Commission authorized this zoning change for the “ring” lots on September 7,1967.

C. Recordation of the Restrictive Covenant

Shortly after the County Commission vote, Developer sold the property to a successor developer, Most Available, Inc. Then, consistent with ZAB’s resolution approving the “unusual use,” Most Available, Inc. recorded the restrictive covenant in the official records of Miami-Dade County on or about March 28, 1968. The relevant provisions of the restrictive zoning covenant are reproduced as follows:

The aforedescribed property may only be used for the following purposes:
A golf course and for the operation of a country club which may include a clubhouse, pro shop, locker rooms, swimming pools, cabanas, liquor, beer and wine facilities, dining room facilities, parking, tennis courts, putting greens, golf driving ranges and all other uses incidental thereto.
These restrictions shall continue for a period of ninety-nine years unless released or revised by the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Dade, State of Florida, or its successors with the consent of 75% of the members of the corporation owning the aforede-scribed property and those owners within 150 feet of the exterior boundaries of the aforedescribed property.
D. Development of Residences in the “Ring”

After the recordation of the covenant, more than 140 single-family homes were *913 developed within the “ring.” No reference to the golf course property’s restrictive zoning covenant appears in the deeds to any of the homes in the “ring” property. Homeowners have played no role in developing or maintaining, nor have they had any reciprocal responsibilities toward, the golf course property; they have had only the open, green view and errant golf balls associated with the golf course property. Under this arrangement, the golf course and Homeowners co-existed for years; 4 however, the horizon began to change when the golf course property stopped functioning as an active golf course in March of 2011.

E. Owner's Desire to Redevelop the Golf Course

In 2003, St. Andrews Holdings acquired the golf course property and then, in 2006, conveyed a majority interest in the golf course property to Northeastern Golf LLO. Unable to make a financial success of the golf course, Owner sought to redevelop the property and approached the County with a re-zoning application.

The County rebuffed Owner and refused to process Owner’s application. Perhaps predictably, Owner’s application did not include confirmation of a seventy-five percent consent by Homeowners, per the terms of the restrictive covenant that had been recorded in 1968, pursuant to ZAB’s approval of Developer’s “unusual use” application.

F. The Instant Lawsuit and its Adjudication

Owner did not file an administrative challenge to the County’s decision not to process Owner’s application. Rather, Owner, in 2012, filed the instant lawsuit asking the circuit court to declare the restrictive zoning covenant void, having been extinguished by MRTA. 5 The Owner named each of the Homeowners as defendants in the action, 6 and named the County as a defendant as well.

On March 17, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on Counts I and II only. Owner argued that the restrictive zoning covenant was extinguished by MRTA. The County and Homeowners argued that MRTA was inapplicable to a government-imposed restrictive covenant, and that Owner failed to exhaust administrative remedies by not seeking quasi-judicial review of the County’s refusal to process Owner’s re-zoning application.

The trial court issued a detailed order granting summary judgment to the Owner and denying Homeowners’ and County’s cross-motions for summary judgment. On September 6, 2014, the trial court entered the “Final Judgment Invalidating the 1968 Restriction, and Quieting Title,” determin *914 ing that (i) the applicable provisions of MRTA extinguish the restrictive zoning covenant and its Homeowners’ consent provision; and (ii) title is quieted as' to Owner’s golf course property. Homeowners and County each filed separate appeals of the trial court’s grant-of summary judgment, which we have consolidated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 So. 3d 910, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 426, 2016 WL 145997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-calusa-trust-v-st-andrews-holdings-ltd-fladistctapp-2016.