Appalachian, Inc. v. Ackmann
This text of 507 So. 2d 150 (Appalachian, Inc. v. Ackmann) 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.
Opinion
APPALACHIAN, INC., Carrie Mountain, Inc., and Appalachian Joint Venture, and Commander Legler, Werber, Dawes & Sadler, P.A., and Lawyers Professional Liability Insurance Company, Appellants,
v.
E. Wayne ACKMANN, Roland V. Askins, Robert D. Britigan and Dorothy R. Britigin, Husband and Wife, Charles Desenberg, Trustee, Alberto Esguerra, Aaron Fleck and Barbara Fleck, Husband and Wife, Barry W. Karas, Nicholas Litchin, Judson D. Moulton, J. Brian Murphy, M.D., Horace Norrell, M.D., Rose Orbits, John B. Ross and Ann T. Ross, Husband and Wife, Arthur N. Ryan and Elizabeth K. Ryan, Husband and Wife, Jack B. Sewell, M.D., Ralph A. Vitale, Daniel Weber and Shirley Weber, Husband and Wife, Miriam O. Weiss, and Larry Byrd, et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*151 Alan H. Fein of Stearns, Weaver, Miller, Weissler, Alhadeff & Sitterson, Miami, for appellants Appalachian, Inc., Carrie Mountain, Inc., and Appalachian Joint Venture.
Charles P. Schropp and Mark P. Buell of Shackleford, Farrior, Stallings and Evans, Tampa, for appellants Commander, Legler, Werber, Dawes & Sadler, P.A., and Lawyers Professional Liability Ins. Co.
Julian Clarkson of Holland & Knight, Tallahassee, and Johnson S. Savary of Kirk, Pinkerton, Savary, Carr & Strode, Sarasota, for appellees Ackmann, et al.
Robert C. Widman of Nelson, Hesse, Cyril, Smith, Widman & Herb, Sarasota, for appellee Byrd.
FRANK, Judge.
The appellants, collectively referred to as "Appalachian," were the developers of a condominium project in Sarasota County. The appellees contracted to buy individual units, and are identified below as the "purchasers."
In the course of vending the condominium units, Appalachian failed to comply with the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1701, et seq. (ILSA). Section 1703(a)(1)(B) of that statute permits a buyer or lessee to revoke a contract to purchase or to lease property in the circumstance where the vendor or lessor is deficient in providing such customer with a written report meeting the requirements contained within that section. A developer's noncompliance with section 1703(a)(1)(B) permits the revocation of a purchase or lease contract within two years from the date of its execution. The purchasers unsuccessfully invoked section 1703(a)(1)(B) and in 1982, an action was initiated in a multi-count complaint. Title 15 U.S.C. § 1719 creates concurrent jurisdiction to enforce rights conferred by section 1703. Count I, alone, was predicated on ILSA. The remaining six counts were grounded upon Florida law, found in chapter 718, Florida Statutes (1981), regulating the condominium industry. The trial court dismissed several of the state law based counts but ultimately granted the purchasers a summary judgment on count I. Appalachian appealed from the summary judgment and we affirmed. Appalachian, Inc. v. Olson, 468 So.2d 266 (Fla. 2d DCA 1985) (Appalachian I).[1] The purchasers' contentions urged in a cross-appeal were found meritless. Id. The events which followed generated the current dispute.
In May and August of 1985, the trial court conducted proceedings involving the purchasers' claims of entitlement to an attorney's fee permitted by ILSA to be assessed against Appalachian. See 15 U.S.C. § 1709. In November of 1985, the trial court entered a final judgment awarding $520,400 in attorney's fees to the purchasers' attorneys who undertook their representation *152 pursuant to contingent fee agreements. Appalachian has appealed from that judgment challenging its correctness on four grounds, i.e., the fee award encompassed matters beyond the ILSA claim, the evidence was inadequate to permit a determination of actual hours expended in pursuing the ILSA count, the hours found compensable by the trial court are not supported by evidence that such time expenditure was reasonable, and the court erred in its enhancement of the fee.
Our supreme court has decreed that this case, as well as all others of its kind, is to be governed by Florida Patient's Compensation Fund v. Rowe, 472 So.2d 1145 (Fla. 1985).[2]Rowe formulated and announced criteria or principles which are to be followed when a prevailing party is either a statutory or contractual beneficiary of entitlement to an attorney's fee. Thus, in reaching a reasonable fee to be paid by the unsuccessful party, our trial courts have been instructed to determine a reasonable hourly rate to be multiplied by the hours reasonably expended in the representation of the prevailing party. Once those determinations are accomplished, the resultant product is denominated the "lodestar." In the context of a contingent fee arrangement, the lodestar may be enlarged by a multiplier ranging from a factor of 1.5 to 3. The degree of enhancement of the lodestar is measured by one of three considerations:
1) if success was more likely than not at the outset of the litigation, the lodestar may be enlarged by 1.5;
2) if the likelihood of success was counterbalanced by the likelihood of failure, the multiplier should be at 2;
3) if success was unlikely at the moment the litigation was initiated, the lodestar may be enhanced by a multiplier of 2.5 to 3.
We are constrained to comment at the outset that we cannot ignore the fact that Appalachian's liability under ILSA was determined on a motion for summary judgment. Although we are not purporting to assess the fee question in the manner of a trial court, and though it may seem an unnecessary statement of the obvious, we are mindful that the successful litigation of an issue through the award of a summary judgment normally requires vastly less time than does a full-blown trial. Hence, we are initially impressed with the question of whether the expended hours found reasonable by the trial court are justified. On the other hand, we are sensitive to the reality that the ILSA claim was not surrounded by an abundance of reported decisions passing upon its applicability to a setting such as the one presented by the purchasers. It is apparent from our opinion in Appalachian I that at the outset of the litigation there existed a paucity of decisional authority bearing upon whether the word "lot" as it is used in ILSA was intended to encompass a condominium. The authority which was available, however, expressed divergent judicial perceptions of ILSA's applicability to the sale or lease of condominiums. 468 So.2d at 268. Thus, it cannot be said that the purchasers and their attorneys entered the battle with a high degree of certitude as to the outcome. We note these views because of their essential effect upon two aspects of Rowe, i.e., the hours expended and enhancement of the lodestar.
Within the confines of the foregoing observations and the principles enunciated in Rowe, we have canvassed the record and have analyzed the evidence tendered to the trial court. We find no reversible error in the trial court's ultimate judgment.
The purchasers claimed the expenditure of 2,380.8 hours. The hourly rate ranged from $30 per hour for law clerks to $165 per hour for lead counsel. In seeking to sustain the validity of the expended hours and the hourly rate, the purchasers *153
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507 So. 2d 150, 12 Fla. L. Weekly 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appalachian-inc-v-ackmann-fladistctapp-1987.