Angora Enterprises, Inc., and Joseph Kosow v. Condominium Association of Lakeside Village, Inc.

796 F.2d 384, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 28068
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1986
Docket85-5525
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 796 F.2d 384 (Angora Enterprises, Inc., and Joseph Kosow v. Condominium Association of Lakeside Village, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angora Enterprises, Inc., and Joseph Kosow v. Condominium Association of Lakeside Village, Inc., 796 F.2d 384, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 28068 (11th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal from the district court’s dismissal of an action for a declaratory judgment brought by Angora Enterprises and Joseph Kosow against Condominium Association of Lakeside Village, Inc. We vacate and remand.

BACKGROUND

The origins of this case lie in a state court suit filed by the Condominium Association against the condominium’s developer, Joseph Kosow and, later, his assignee, Angora Enterprises. That suit was an attack on a condominium recreation lease which provided for periodic escalation of the rent based on a cost of living index. The lease also contained a clause which agreed to incorporate the Florida Condominium Act “as amended from time to time.” The Condominium Association contends that this language, combined with the 1977 enactment of an amendment to the Florida Condominium Act which prohibited inclusion or enforcement of escalation clauses in recreation leases, meant that the 1977 anti-escalation clause statute was adopted by the lease and thus prohibited enforcement of the lease’s cost-of-living clause. Before the state case moved beyond the initial pleading stage, certain questions were certified to the Florida Supreme Court, which held that the parties to the lease intended to be bound by future amendments to the Florida Condominium Act, including the amendment which declares escalation clauses in recreation or land leases void and unenforceable.

*386 After this ruling from the Florida Supreme Court, 1 and prior to filing its answer in the state court case, the developer and his assignee sought a declaratory judgment in federal court that the lease’s incorporation of Florida law “as the same may be amended from time to time” did not constitute a knowing and voluntary waiver of their federal constitutional rights as guaranteed by article I, section 10’s prohibition against impairment of contracts.

It is the position of the developer and his assignee that their federal complaint for declaratory relief is properly brought on the following constitutional claim:

“Whether the inclusion of the. ‘incorporation clause’ in the subject agreement constituted a relinquishment or waiver of the federal plaintiffs’ Article I, § 10, Constitutional guarantee against legislative impairment of the obligation of contracts.”

Record at 289.

The Condominium Association, and the individual unit owners, oppose treatment of this issue on its merits by the federal court, asserting that the issue presented is one that has already been raised and determined by the Florida appellate courts, that is:

“Whether the developer drafted and unilaterally executed the declaration of condominium and agreed therein to be bound by future changes in the Florida Condominium Act.”

Id. They maintain that the Florida Supreme Court’s ruling on this issue establishes that the developer thereby expressly agreed to waive his constitutional protection against future amendments to the Florida Condominium Act which, absent such an agreement, might arguably impair a party’s contract obligation. They then argue that the Florida Supreme Court’s decision must be considered the law of the case in the state litigation and controlling on all future proceedings between the parties in the Florida courts. They further argue that defensive collateral estoppel bars the federal plaintiff from relitigating in the federal court an issue identical to that involved in prior state litigation.

The developer counters by arguing that the Florida Supreme Court’s review was limited to motions to dismiss and orders thereon and that motions to dismiss, under Florida law, are confined in scope to an attack on the pleadings. The constitutional issue which they seek to present here is an affirmative defense which could neither be included nor addressed at the procedural point at which the state litigation stood when the Florida Supreme Court issued its opinion. 2

The district court held as follows:

This Court must agree with the federal plaintiff that the Florida appellate courts dealt with a contractual issue, and not with the constitutional issue here presented. Therefore, this court is not collaterally estopped from treating the issue. However, this does not mean that this court is persuaded that it should now deal with the issue on its merits.
In the instant case, by asking this Court to resolve the constitutional issue *387 they have framed, the federal plaintiffs are, in reality, asking this Court to declare whether or not they have a viable affirmative defense to present in the state court litigation currently pending; an affirmative defense, this Court notes, which they chose not to assert in the answer they filed after the issuance of the Florida Supreme Court’s mandate and after the filing of this federal action. Moreover, even if it were to be asserted, it will only be considered by the state trial court if and when the condominium association and unit owners, as plaintiffs in that litigation, prove their claims against the developer and its lessee. These considerations, viewed in light of the foregoing, convince this court that there is no true “case or controversy” presented to satisfy the prerequisite to the exercise of this court’s delaratory [sic] judgment power. In such posture, the Court must decline addressing the merits of the claim.

Record at 290-92.

DISCUSSION

The district court quite properly observed that “by asking this Court to resolve the constitutional issue they have framed, the federal plaintiffs are, in reality, asking this Court to declare whether or not they have a viable affirmative defense to present in the state court litigation currently pending.” Id. at 291. It erred, however, in its opinion that the declaratory judgment complaint presented no cognizable case or controversy. An anticipated defense in the pending state action may under certain circumstances provide a case or controversy. As the leading commentators in the field have written:

There is little difficulty in finding an actual controversy if all of the acts that are alleged to create liability already have occurred. The court is then merely asked, as in any litigation, to determine the legal consequences of past events and it is immaterial that it may be the one allegedly liable, rather than the person to whom [he or she] would be liable, who asks for the judicial determination. The problem is when a declaration is sought on the legal consequences of some act that may or may not occur.

10A C. Wright, A. Miller & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil 2d, § 2757 at 585-86 (1983) (footnote omitted). 3

Despite the flaw in its jurisdictional analysis, the district court could properly have refused to address the merits of the claim by resort to its inherent discretion to decline to entertain a declaratory action. This method is clearly supported by precedent in this circuit:

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Bluebook (online)
796 F.2d 384, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 28068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angora-enterprises-inc-and-joseph-kosow-v-condominium-association-of-ca11-1986.