Arvida/JMB Partners v. Council of Villages, Inc.
This text of 733 So. 2d 1026 (Arvida/JMB Partners v. Council of Villages, 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.
Opinion
ARVIDA/JMB PARTNERS, Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., Arvida/JMB Partners, Ltd., Broken Sound Club, Inc., Country Club Maintenance Association, Inc., Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
v.
COUNCIL OF VILLAGES, INC., Thomas Domagala, Jules Pearlstine, Barry Blum, William Lehrburger, Mori Aaron Schweitzer, and Chaman-coral Ltd. Partnership, etc., Essex Place Ltd. Partnership, etc., Appellees/Cross-Appellants.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*1028 Jane Kreusler-Walsh of Jane Kreusler-Walsh, P.A., West Palm Beach, and Terry S. Bienstock and Jaime A. Bianchi of Bienstock & Clark, Miami, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
Andrew D. Rafkin of Broad and Castel, West Palm Beach, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees-Chaman-Coral, Ltd. Partnership and Essex Place, Ltd. Partnership.
Richard A. Goetz, P.A. and Larry Corman, P.A. of Hodgson, Russ, Andrews, Woods and Goodyear, LLP, Boca Raton, for Appellees/Cross-Appellants-Council of Villages, Inc., Thomas Domagala, Jules Pearlstine, Barry Blum, William Lehrburger and Mori Aaron Schweitzer.
PER CURIAM.
Council of Villages, Inc. (Council), the Country Club Maintenance Association, Inc. (CCMA), the area's master homeowners' association, and six Broken Sound PUD single family home owners/residents filed suit against Arvida/JMB Partners, Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., Arvida/JMB Partners, Ltd., (referred to hereafter collectively as Arvida), the Broken Sound Club (the Club), a private country club, and sought certification for a class action. Council is an organization formed by some of the homeowners in the Broken Sound PUD for the purpose of seeking turnover of the Club to the property owners.
This is a consolidation of appeals from a trial court order granting class certification on count I of plaintiffs' multi-count complaint, and denying certification as to count III, count sounding in constructive trust, while omitting to state a determination respecting two other countscount II, civil theft, and count IV, unjust enrichment. Count I, the count for which the court certified the class, is a claim that Arvida violated Boca Raton city ordinances by (1) not turning over ownership of certain open spaces to an organization of property owners, (2) arranging that members be charged for use of this open space, and (3) obtaining park credit for facilities that became the property of a private club, when, according to ordinance, they should *1029 have been the property of an organization of the property owners.
Here, the defendants and some of the plaintiffs appeal aspects of the court's order. The plaintiffs' appeal is being treated as a cross-appeal. There are also non-defendant joinder appellantsowners of apartment complexes whose apartments have been rentals, but which may be converted into condominiums.
The defendants find fault with the trial court's ruling for several reasons. They contend first that the named plaintiffs do not fairly and adequately represent the class. They urge the class is inadequate because the interests of the named plaintiffs are adverse to those of other class members and because the class fails to include all affected parties. Defendants contend further that the court did not consider whether class action is superior to other available means of adjudication; and that certification on issues of alleged violation of zoning ordinance provisions is inappropriate because the action sounds in fraud based on separate contracts.
Plaintiffs/cross-appellants urge that the trial court erred in failing to certify three additional counts in their complaint, and in greatly expanding the size of the class to include commercial and other property owner groups whose interests are distinctly different from those of the homeowners to whom plaintiffs sought to have the class confined.
The intervenors/appellants urge that on the one hand, all residents and other property owners including themselves, owners of apartment complexes within the PUD, as well as renters residing in the PUD, have an interest in count I, regarding violation of certain zoning ordinances by defendants, and on the other hand that the proposed class representatives have interests antagonistic to those, including themselves, who should be included in the class but are not single family home owners.
In granting class certification as to count I only, the trial court added to the proposed class, which plaintiffs wished to be limited to single family home owners in the PUD, all other property owners within the PUD. The court concluded the issue was essentially whether there was violation of an ordinance requirement that all of the open space reserved for common use be owned in fee simple by an organization of property owners within the PUD. Some of the open areas had been deeded in fee simple to the private equity country club, Broken Sound Club, Inc. (the Club). Those who wish to use these areas have been required either to become equity members of the club or to hold membership of some other type.
The trial court reasoned that some of the antagonistic interests should not be recognized. If creation of a private club owning lands that are properly common areas belonging to all of the property owners was contrary to city ordinances, the desires of persons who would like to maintain the status quo with respect to the Club and not press for enforcement of the ordinances were in conflict with what the law required.
Plaintiffs/appellees/cross-appellants were seeking certification of two classes: Class A, consisting of all resident single family home owners, to assert the objective of turnover of ownership of the Club, and Class B, consisting of equity owners in the Club, to seek rescission of past Club membership purchases and refund of amounts paid as membership fees. What was certified was a single class, consisting not merely of the single family home owners/residents but of all property owners in the PUD. This class may pursue only the first count stated in the plaintiffs' complaint.
We conclude that those who are defendants in this suit and are also property owners within the PUDspecifically Arvida/JMB Partners, Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., and Arvida/JMB Partners, Ltd.have interests adverse to those of the other members of the class certified by the trial court, and should therefore not be *1030 included in the class. The same is true of the Broken Sound Club, Inc., which ostensibly holds in fee simple lands which plaintiffs contend are or should properly be owned by an association of members of the class. To the extent that, as property owners, the Arvida parties have interests in common with the other property owners, those interests will be secure if the plaintiffs prevail. As to the Club, if the class prevails, it will be found to have no property interest within the PUD. Removal of these persons or parties from the class will also eliminate conflict between the interests of the named plaintiffs and those of other members of the class. Any purported conflicts resulting from some members' preference for the status quo, if the status quo occurred as the result of illegal conduct, should be ignored, since they areassuming the allegations of the complaint to be correctthe fruit of illegal conduct of Arvida. We see no reason why the other parties added by the court to those whom plaintiffs nominated for the class do not belong there, and, as the trial court suggested, none of their legitimate interests conflict with those of the other class members.
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733 So. 2d 1026, 1998 WL 422293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arvidajmb-partners-v-council-of-villages-inc-fladistctapp-1999.