Cat Cay Yacht Club, Inc. v. Diaz

264 So. 3d 1071
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 30, 2019
DocketNo. 3D18-2368
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 264 So. 3d 1071 (Cat Cay Yacht Club, Inc. v. Diaz) 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
Cat Cay Yacht Club, Inc. v. Diaz, 264 So. 3d 1071 (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

SALTER, J.

*1073Cat Cay Yacht Club, Inc. ("CCYC"), and fourteen current and former members of CCYC's board of directors1 (collectively, the "Director Defendants"), petition the Court to issue a writ of certiorari quashing a circuit court order granting a motion by Manuel C. Diaz ("Diaz") for leave to file a fifth amended complaint adding claims for punitive damages to his lawsuit. The underlying lawsuit, commenced in 2012, involves allegedly improper actions taken to oust Mr. Diaz from a private social and recreational club in the Bahamas.

Concluding that the order authorizing amendment to add claims for punitive damages (a) departs from the essential requirements of the applicable Florida statute2 and controlling precedent and (b) is not a matter adequately remediable in a subsequent, plenary appeal, we grant the petition and quash the order.

Background and Pertinent Facts

Diaz, his wife, and his family have visited the island of Cat Cay in the Bahamas, and fished in the surrounding waters, for some forty years. As their interest in the island and CCYC grew, Diaz joined CCYC (initially as a summer member), and purchased an oceanfront home, vacant lots, and a dock at the Cat Cay Marina. Later he built several oceanfront homes or villas on the island.

CCYC is a Florida corporation organized under the Florida Not For Profit Corporation Act, section 617.01011, et seq., Florida Statutes (2018). CCYC's bylaws "may contain any provision for the regulation and management of the affairs of the corporation not inconsistent with law or the articles of incorporation." § 617.0206, Fla. Stat. (2018).

Diaz's fifth amended complaint alleges that he contributed funds and services to CCYC over a course of years, including charitable fundraising to restore island facilities after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and later storms. He served as president of CCYC for several years. Following the election of one of the defendants to the office of president in 2009, however, Diaz alleges that various disputes arose. These issues percolated by 2011 into a "scheme to justify the firing of [CCYC's then manager] and the expulsion of Diaz from CCYC," according to Diaz.

Diaz alleges that this scheme was then executed in the form of a faulty audit of accounts (by a CPA from an independent accounting firm), defamatory comments by the Director Defendants, and the CCYC board's unanimous vote to expel Diaz as a member of CCYC in February 2012. Diaz's expulsion occurred pursuant to a board resolution reciting that Diaz had engaged in "actions prejudicial to the Club" and rendering him "undesirable as a Member," grounds for expulsion under Section 2.20 of the CCYC bylaws.

In May 2012, an appellate committee of the board denied Diaz's appeal from the expulsion resolution. All of these actions, Diaz maintains, were undertaken by CCYC and the Director Defendants "in bad faith and with malicious purpose, in a manner exhibiting a willful disregard of Diaz's rights and property rights." In January 2014, Diaz filed his initial "Verified Complaint for Damages and Equitable Relief" seeking money damages (including treble damages for certain claims), a mandatory *1074injunction restoring his membership in CCYC, an accounting, punitive damages "upon a proper showing under Florida law," and other relief.

The complaint was dismissed and the injunctive claim was dismissed with prejudice by a predecessor judge. Amendments and additional dismissals followed, with Diaz ultimately moving to amend his fourth amended complaint to add the claims for punitive damages.

During the trial court hearing on the proposed amendment and the alleged basis for punitive damages, the trial court stated that CCYC and the Director Defendants had not "challenged the evidence," and the court entered no written findings identifying any evidence considered to constitute a "reasonable basis" ( section 768.72(1) ) for the recovery of punitive damages. The order granted the motion to amend without elaboration, and without any differentiation among CCYC and any of the fourteen Director Defendants. The petition for certiorari followed.

Analysis

To obtain relief in this case, the petitioners must establish that the trial court departed from the essential requirements of law, causing material injury to the petitioners for which there is no adequate remedy on appeal. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Langston, 655 So. 2d 91, 95 (Fla. 1995). Review of an order granting a motion to amend to add a punitive damages claim requires us to consider "whether a trial judge has conformed with the procedural requirements of section 768.72...", but the scope of review is "not so broad as to encompass review of the sufficiency of the evidence considered in that inquiry." Globe Newspaper Co. v. King, 658 So.2d 518, 519 (Fla. 1995).

We consider in turn: (1) the conduct of the trial court's hearing inquiring into the "reasonable basis for recovery of such damages"; and (2) the legal impediments to claims for punitive damages in the case at hand.

(1) Conduct of the Hearing; Ruling

A review of the transcript of the hearing on Diaz's motion to amend discloses that counsel for the parties provided the trial court with a "whole box" of documents relating to Diaz's motion to amend. The crux of the fourth amended complaint and the seven counts within it is the expulsion of Diaz from the social club, CCYC, based on his disagreement with the board's decision to fire a general manager and on "credits" claimed by Diaz for landscaping and other contributions of services in lieu of cash contributions or payments. The Director Defendants, like Diaz himself, were highly-successful and financially prosperous individuals with, the pretrial discovery makes clear, strong opinions they were not reluctant to express.

In the language of the motion to amend and much of the hearing, this is styled a "witch-hunt" against Diaz based on a motto to "expel first and ask questions later." A board member/defendant is said to have wanted to control the island of Cat Cay and to have called other members "spoiled brats and little wimps." It is also argued that documents mysteriously disappeared.

Following the board's decision to expel Diaz from membership in CCYC, the appeal board constituted pursuant to the club by-laws "rubber stamped" the board action. Allegedly the board also moved the location for burning the island's trash to a location next to Diaz's property, causing the property to become unsaleable and Diaz to incur substantial financial losses.3

*1075Although the trial court asked several questions, it made no findings identifying the evidence it considered sufficient to provide a statutory "reasonable basis" for granting the motion to amend. The court did not do so during the course of the hearing or in the pre-printed form order with the handwritten, one-word notation, "Granted" after identifying the motion to amend.

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Bluebook (online)
264 So. 3d 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cat-cay-yacht-club-inc-v-diaz-fladistctapp-2019.