Bird Lakes Dev. v. Meruelo

626 So. 2d 234, 1993 WL 217043
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 22, 1993
Docket91-534
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 626 So. 2d 234 (Bird Lakes Dev. v. Meruelo) 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
Bird Lakes Dev. v. Meruelo, 626 So. 2d 234, 1993 WL 217043 (Fla. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

626 So.2d 234 (1993)

BIRD LAKES DEVELOPMENT CORP., Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
v.
Homero MERUELO, Appellee/Cross-Appellant, and
Gesyl Development Corp., and Tony Campo, Appellees.

No. 91-534.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.

June 22, 1993.
Rehearing Denied October 5, 1993.

*235 Holland & Knight and Daniel S. Pearson and Amy D. Ronner, Miami, for appellant/cross-appellee.

Fitzgerald, Portela & Portuondo and Joseph Portuondo, Fine Jacobson Schwartz Nash Block & England and Arthur J. England, Jr. and Charles M. Auslander and Mark S. Shapiro, Miami, for appellee/cross-appellant Meruelo.

Warren Jacobs, James C. Blecke, Miami, for appellee Gesyl Development Corp.

Jorge L. Fors and Gonzalo Perez, Jr., Coral Gables, for appellee Campo.

Before HUBBART, FERGUSON and LEVY,[*] JJ.

FERGUSON, Judge.

These appeals are brought from judgments entered on a jury verdict against a seller in favor of two buyers of real estate, awarding compensatory and punitive damages and attorney's fees in an action for fraud, breach of an oral agreement, and breach of warranty. We affirm both judgments.

Bird Lakes, the appellant-seller, contends, among other things, that (1) the court should have granted its motion for directed verdict on a statute of frauds defense, (2) Meruelo's claim for lost profits should not have gone to the jury because it was not specially pleaded, (3) the court should have granted its motion for directed verdict on Gesyl's liability claim or at least on Gesyl's claim for punitive damages, (4) a second order discharging a lis pendens and expert testimony regarding the order were improperly excluded, and (5) the commission earned by a broker should have been the responsibility of Meruelo as buyer.

Two interrelated issues raised in the appeal from the judgment on the merits deserve a close examination: (1) whether Florida's statute of frauds bars the enforcement of an oral promise to provide sewers in connection with a land-sale contract, and (2) whether the parol evidence rule bars evidence of an alleged oral promise to provide sewers to site where the land-sale contract is silent on the subject.

Facts

Bird Lakes Development Corp., through a broker named Tony Campo, sold thirty-five acres of an undeveloped parcel of land to Meruelo. According to Meruelo, Bird Lakes' vice-president, Labrada, orally represented prior to, and contemporaneously with, the execution of a written land-sale contract, that the property had sewer lines to the site. Campo, the broker, testified that Labrada also informed him that the price for each tract within the parcel included a sewer line. Consistent with what he was told by Bird Lakes, Campo advised Meruelo that the property already had "fill to grade," "water and sewer to site" and that it was "ready to build." Campo also showed a brochure to *236 Meruelo which showed sewer to each tract within the parcel.

Based on the verbal representations and the sales materials, Meruelo signed a standard form contract to purchase the property. The contract, prepared by Campo, stated that the sale was conditional on obtaining rezoning, but was silent of the issue of sewers to site. Also written into the contract was a merger clause which provided that "no prior or present agreements or representations shall be binding upon any of the parties hereto unless incorporated in the contract." On learning that the property had no sewer to site, Meruelo sued Bird Lakes for specific performance and damages.

I

This part of the discussion assumes, without deciding, that the evidence of a collateral oral agreement regarding sewers to the site is not barred by the parole evidence rule. Otherwise, the statute of frauds issue would be moot.

Florida's statute of frauds, chapter 725, entitled unenforceable contracts, provides in pertinent part:

No action shall be brought ... upon any contract for the sale of lands, ... or of any uncertain interest in or concerning them, ... unless the agreement or promise upon which such action shall be brought or some note or memorandum thereof shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged.

§ 725.01, Fla. Stat. (1991).

Bird Lakes asserts that Meruelo's claim is based on an alleged oral promise (to provide sewers) in connection with a contract for the sale of land, which is unenforceable as a matter of law, citing Canell v. Arcola Housing Corp., 65 So.2d 849 (Fla. 1953), as authority. Canell involved an oral promise made to buyers in conjunction with the sale of residential lots. The seller made an oral promise, in an attempt to induce the buyers to pay a higher price for the lots, that he would construct a bathing beach on a lake adjacent to or near the purchasers' properties, which would enhance the value of those properties. After the properties were sold, the seller refused to perform and the buyers filed an action, grounded in fraud, for money damages. The supreme court affirmed the trial court's dismissal of the buyers' complaint on the basis that the promise made by the seller was an oral promise to create an easement — an interest in land — therefore, enforcement of the oral promise was precluded by Florida's statute of frauds.

Meruelo contends that the instant case is not governed by Canell because a promise to provide sewers does not constitute an agreement to create an easement. His argument is supported by a body of law including numerous cases from jurisdictions outside Florida which hold that a developer's oral promise to land purchasers to build roads is not a conveyance of an interest in land which the statute of frauds renders unenforceable.

In Becker v. Lagerquist Bros., 55 Wash.2d 425, 348 P.2d 423 (1960), the court held that a promise to lot purchasers by a vendor, to pave streets, is not an agreement for the sale of an interest in land and, therefore, may be oral. The buyers in Lagerquist had received written earnest-money receipts which did not mention the paving of roads, but specifically provided that there were no agreements not contained in the receipt. Concluding that the buyers were entitled to specific performance of the oral agreement, the court wrote that "where a contract required to be in writing is in writing, an independent collateral agreement with reference to the same subject matter may be parol where the statute does not require it to be in writing." 348 P.2d at 426. Because the agreement to pave a street was found to be not one for the sale of an interest in land, it was held not within the statute of frauds. 348 P.2d at 430 (quoting 37 C.J.S. Statute of Frauds § 74, at 580 "a verbal agreement to make or pay for improvements on land is one for labor and materials or for payment therefore and is not within the operation of the statute.") Lagerquist also quotes Drew v. Wiswall, 67 N.E. 666 (Mass. 1903), which specifically held that an "agreement by which the defendants undertook to build certain of these streets if the plaintiff would buy the lots and build a house did not relate to or concern the sale of the *237 interest of either in the land, whether treated as house lots or streets."

The distinction between the Canell promise to build and maintain a bathing beach and the multitude of cases dealing with a developer's promise to construct a road is illuminated by a discussion in Atkins v. Pore, 321 Pa.Super.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
626 So. 2d 234, 1993 WL 217043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-lakes-dev-v-meruelo-fladistctapp-1993.