Gary Dear v. Q Club Hotel, LLC

933 F.3d 1286
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 2019
Docket17-13127; 17-14285
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 933 F.3d 1286 (Gary Dear v. Q Club Hotel, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary Dear v. Q Club Hotel, LLC, 933 F.3d 1286 (11th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:

*1290 This case concerns a contract dispute between Q Club-the entity that operates the condominium-hotel at the Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort-and a class of condo owners over the meaning of the "Declaration" that governs the parties' relationship. We're focused here on the Declaration's cost-sharing arrangement for the maintenance of certain amenities that aren't tied to any particular condo unit-expenses that the Declaration aptly calls "Shared Costs."

Litigation commenced soon after Q Club announced that it would change the methodology that it uses to calculate these Shared Costs. The new methodology, Q Club explained, would apply not only on a going-forward basis but also retroactively. That meant, in effect, that the owners would be re-billed for assessments that they had paid (or as Q Club sees it, underpaid) in years past.

The owners' complaint alleged that Q Club's new methodology breached the Declaration as applied both retroactively and prospectively. The district court agreed with the first contention, but a jury disagreed with the second. The parties now appeal the respective judgments against them. The owners separately argue that the district court erred by denying their request for a new trial based on what they say constitutes newly discovered evidence that could have swayed the jury on the prospective-application question. After careful review, we affirm across the board.

I

A

The Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort includes a number of "Commercial Units" and "Residential Units," as well as one "Hotel Unit." The Residential Units aren't your typical condominiums; as the complaint explains, "no guest, including any Residential Unit owner, may occupy a Residential Unit for more than 120 days in any calendar year." This restriction helps to "ensure the transient nature of the use of the Residential Units"; the owners serve dual roles as both "investor[s] and part-time resident[s] who [can] take advantage of the revenue-generating benefits of putting their unit into the hospitality inventory to be rented out as a luxurious hotel suite when not in use."

The "Declaration of Q Club Resort and Residences Condominium" outlines a cost-sharing arrangement for the maintenance of what it calls "Shared Components." These Shared Components-which Q Club is responsible for maintaining-include, among other things, "the main hotel lobby; the pools and pool deck; the fitness center ... and all parking areas and/or parking garages located within the Condominium property." In short, they comprise many of what one might typically call the "common areas." The Declaration grants Residential and Commercial Unit Owners an easement to travel freely through and enjoy the Shared Components in exchange for periodic payments of "Shared Costs." Shared Costs are those "incurred by [Q Club] in (or reasonably allocated to) the repair, replacement, improvement, maintenance, management, operation, ad valorem tax obligations and insurance of the Shared Components." The Declaration requires Unit Owners to pay a portion of these Shared Costs. In particular, Unit Owners must-

*1291 pay to [Q Club] annual charges for the operation and insurance of, and for payment of 40.4967% of the Shared Costs ..., the establishment of reasonable reserves for the replacement of the Shared Components and the furnishings and finishings thereof, capital improvement charges, special charges and all other charges hereinafter referred to or lawfully imposed by [Q Club] in connection with the repair, replacement, improvement, maintenance, management, operation, and insurance of the Shared Components, all such charges to be fixed, established and collected from time to time as herein provided.

Shared Costs, the Declaration further explains, "shall be paid for in part through charges (either general or special) imposed against the Residential Units and the Commercial Units in accordance with the [Declaration's] terms."

This arrangement continued without incident from the Declaration's inception in 2007 until 2012, when Q Club determined that it had inadvertently omitted certain expenses that should have been included as Shared Costs. As Q Club describes it, that meant that the Unit Owners hadn't been paying the required 40.4967% of the Shared Costs. Accordingly, it notified the Unit Owners that it would begin to use a different methodology going forward and, further, that it intended to recoup the forgone charges over a 10-year period by applying the new methodology retroactively.

B

A class of Unit Owners-whom we'll call "Dear," after the lead plaintiff-filed this action in Florida state court, and Q Club successfully removed to federal court pursuant to the Class Action Fairness Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1453 . Dear's complaint asserted (1) that the Declaration doesn't permit Q Club to "back charge" for costs incurred but not assessed and (2) that Q Club's new methodology for determining Shared Costs includes items that it shouldn't. For simplicity's sake, we'll call the first issue the "back-charging" question and the second the "Shared Costs" question.

Because one of the appeals before us turns on whether the district court properly submitted a particular issue-namely, the Shared Costs question-to the jury, a bit of procedural history is necessary. The parties initially agreed in their Joint Pretrial Stipulation that there were no "issues of law" for the district court to decide. On the back-charging question, Dear submitted as an "issue[ ] of fact which remain[ed] to be litigated at Trial" the question whether Q Club, "in violation of the Declaration," retroactively assessed Unit Owners for Shared Costs going back to 2007. Dear further included the Shared Costs question among the "issues of fact" for the jury's consideration-in particular, whether "Q Club breached the Declaration ... by charging and collecting expenses ... as Shared Costs ... that are not authorized by the Declaration." For its part, Q Club didn't say anything about the back-charging issue, but it agreed with Dear that whether it had breached the Declaration "by charging for items that were not Shared Costs" was a question of fact for the jury.

The parties' unanimity on the division of labor between judge and jury was short-lived. When asked by the district court (in a discussion about the appropriateness of considering industry custom) whether "the declaration clearly define[s] what a shared component is," Dear answered "[a]bsolutely." In response, Q Club said that "if this definition is as clear as [Dear] says," then it was "baffled as to why this is a jury trial," and in light of Dear's statement Q Club pivoted to argue that the Shared Costs question was "a matter of law for [the court] to decide, not for the jury."

*1292 Dear, though, stuck to his guns.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
933 F.3d 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-dear-v-q-club-hotel-llc-ca11-2019.