D.R. Horton, Inc. v. Heron's Landing Condo. Ass'n of Jacksonville, Inc.

266 So. 3d 1201
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 27, 2018
DocketNo. 1D17-1941
StatusPublished

This text of 266 So. 3d 1201 (D.R. Horton, Inc. v. Heron's Landing Condo. Ass'n of Jacksonville, 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.

Bluebook
D.R. Horton, Inc. v. Heron's Landing Condo. Ass'n of Jacksonville, Inc., 266 So. 3d 1201 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Lewis, J.

Appellant, D.R. Horton, Inc. - Jacksonville, appeals a final judgment entered in favor of Appellee, Heron's Landing Condominium Association of Jacksonville, Inc., and raises six issues, only two of which merit discussion. Appellant contends that the trial court erroneously admitted extrapolation evidence and erred in failing to grant its motion for a directed verdict because Appellee sustained no actual damages as a result of alleged building code violations, failed to present evidence that Appellant knew or should have known of building code violations, and failed to establish a breach of the implied warranty of habitability. For the following reasons, we reject Appellant's arguments and affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In June 2013, Appellee filed a Complaint against Appellant, the developer and general contractor of Heron's Landing, the condominium project at issue. The project consisted of 240 residential units in twenty buildings. In its Amended Complaint, Appellee alleged that Appellant violated the Florida Building Code, breached warranties, and was negligent in its construction of the project.

Thereafter, Appellant filed a motion in limine wherein it sought to preclude the *1204testimony of Appellee's experts W. Ron Woods and Bryan Busse related to defect allegations or repair recommendations on the grounds that the testimony was inherently unreliable and based on improper extrapolation. Appellant filed a second motion in limine relating to testimony presented by Woods and Busse wherein it requested that the trial court preclude both witnesses from testifying as to "opinions, observations, conclusions, damages, or otherwise related to alleged defects related to windows and sliding glass doors, stucco, or asphalt on the grounds that such opinions are without proper foundation, based upon extrapolation, and on the grounds that the testimony does not pass the threshold for admissibility required by Florida Statute Section 90.702."

During the hearing on the motions in limine, Mr. Woods testified that he had been involved in engineering consulting for almost forty years and had done "hundreds of building condition assessments and building condition surveys over the years." Woods, who was a member of certain committees in ASTM, the American Society for Testing and Materials, testified that ASTM E2018 is the standard for a property condition assessment and is used as a guideline "for the phase one of our forensic investigations or of the initial part of our forensic investigation because this is a nonintrusive, nondestructive approach to making observations on a building." All the ASTM standards were peer reviewed by professional engineers, architects, and building design professionals. According to Woods, who was the "principal author" of a textbook used in fifty colleges and universities across the United States and Canada, the standards published by ASTM represented a consensus of the relevant scientific community. After testifying in detail about the problems he found at Heron's Landing, Woods was asked whether it was just his opinion that one should employ a qualitative sampling method, as opposed to a quantitative sampling method, or whether there had been any peer-reviewed publications to support his position. He replied, "Well, E2128 is a peer-reviewed publication. There is a peer-reviewed ASTM journal article that has to do with using these protocols for qualitative assessment." Woods testified that he had Tom Miller, a professional engineer, peer review his report.1

When later asked by the trial court what he was recommending with respect to all of the windows at the project, Woods replied, "In our remediation plan, all of the windows would be removed and the contractor's option, they can reuse those same windows provided they remediate them back to the manufacturer's requirements and they can put them back." The primary reason for removing the windows was to "flash properly around the windows." When asked by the trial court whether he *1205was saying that all 220,000 square feet of stucco needed to be replaced based upon "200 something feet of testing," Woods replied, "That is accurate...." When asked what criteria, other than testing, led him to that conclusion, Woods replied, "A lot of visual observation, a lot of indications of problematic conditions with the stucco that we have seen many times on other projects that have led to a need to remove those and the unpredictability of where water actually comes in." Mr. Busse similarly testified about the defects he found at the project and his method of testing and observation.

After hearing the parties' arguments, the trial court, in analyzing the issue pursuant to section 90.702, Florida Statutes (2013), and Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), found that the methodology used by Appellee's experts was scientifically reliable, had been peer-reviewed, had been developed by people in the industry, and was generally accepted in the scientific community. The trial court also referenced a Haughton and Murphy article stating that the "protocol" used by the experts had been "peer reviewed extensively and developed by people in ... this area ...." In its written order, the trial court again found that both experts' testimony and opinions were based upon a recognized, peer-reviewed, and generally accepted methodology. The trial court also found that the "literature" rejected Appellant's argument that quantitative or statistically valid sampling was necessary to appropriately analyze the cause of moisture intrusion into a building envelope, what might prevent it, and the potential for moisture-related damage.

During trial, Appellee called several condominium unit owners, who testified about various issues they had experienced with their units, including, but not limited to, wet carpets and drywall, mold, wall cracking, roof leaks, and increasing noise coming through the walls from nearby units. Mr. Woods provided testimony similar to that provided during the hearing on Appellant's motions in limine, as well as additional testimony concerning the issues he found at the project. He also testified that the "defects in the buildings were the result of construction activities, and those construction activities happened when the construction happened." Woods found the biggest issue to be the "stucco walls." He explained in detail how the stucco at issue did not meet the pertinent standards and the Florida Building Code. Woods opined that the issues he found would have been observable during construction. He testified that Appellant had one superintendent "on the job" throughout the course of construction.

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266 So. 3d 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-horton-inc-v-herons-landing-condo-assn-of-jacksonville-inc-fladistctapp-2018.