Jayne Greenberg v. Country Isles Section One Maintenance Association, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 10, 2024
Docket2022-2322
StatusPublished

This text of Jayne Greenberg v. Country Isles Section One Maintenance Association, Inc. (Jayne Greenberg v. Country Isles Section One Maintenance Association, 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
Jayne Greenberg v. Country Isles Section One Maintenance Association, Inc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JAYNE GREENBERG, Appellant,

v.

COUNTRY ISLES SECTION ONE MAINTENANCE ASSOCIATION, INC., a Florida corporation, Appellee.

No. 4D2022-2322

[April 10, 2024]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Carlos A. Rodriguez, Judge; L.T. Case No. CACE18- 021905.

Lane Weinbaum of Weinbaum P.A., Coconut Creek, for appellant.

Kimberly K. Berman of Marshall Dennehey, P.C., Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.

WARNER, J.

Appellant challenges a final summary judgment entered by the trial court concluding that res judicata, collateral estoppel, and the statute of limitations barred appellant’s claims. The trial court also made findings that appellant had agreed to certain commitments to settle the issues in the case. However, our reading of the record shows appellant did not make such agreements, and the judgment cannot be supported on the grounds upon which appellee sought summary judgment. We therefore reverse.

Background

Appellant, a homeowner in Country Isles’ condominium complex, is a disabled woman. The instant suit is part of a continuing dispute which began when appellant filed a lawsuit in 2009 against Country Isles. The instant suit involves conduct subsequent to that lawsuit and includes allegations of retaliation for having filed the 2009 lawsuit. In 2009, appellant filed a complaint seeking declaratory relief against Country Isles and the Farrells, appellant’s next-door neighbors. Country Isles’ Covenants contain an outdoor living area easement (the “Easement”) which allows owners of dominant lots to construct improvements on the outdoor living area shared between each parcel’s dominant and servient lots. Appellant and the Farrells live on the same parcel, with the Farrells owning the dominant lot and appellant owning the servient lot. The complaint alleged that the Farrells had constructed a fence pursuant to the easement which interfered with appellant’s safe entry and exit due to her disability. Appellant requested a declaratory judgment that the easement was unenforceable against her because the easement posed an undue burden on her disability. She sought a ruling that the Farrells must remove the fence.

The case proceeded to trial in 2016, but the parties entered a stipulated final order (“SFO”). The SFO found the easement valid and enforceable, and found that the Farrells were in compliance with it. The SFO permitted appellant to install a gate on both sides of the Farrells’ fence, at her own expense, to allow her access to her servient lot without entry on the Farrells’ dominant lot. The construction of that gate was subject to approval by both Country Isles and the city, and appellant was ordered to submit an architectural review application to Country Isles, who in turn was ordered not to withhold approval so long as the gate was compliant with its architectural standards. The SFO ordered the Farrells to remove any improvements, other than the fence, that were physically located on appellant’s servient lot, including trees and shrubbery. Based on these stipulations, the trial court dismissed appellant’s complaint with prejudice, although it retained jurisdiction to enter further orders for compliance with and enforcement of the SFO.

Two years later, appellant filed another complaint against Country Isles and the Farrells. Appellant amended the complaint three times, with the third amended complaint alleging that Country Isles was retaliating against her for filing the 2009 lawsuit by, among other things, refusing to trim appellant’s trees and to fulfill other maintenance requests, selectively enforcing rules against her, and issuing an unreasonable amount of notices of violations since appellant had filed the initial lawsuit. She also made a claim that Country Isles was in violation of the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”), because Country Isles had rejected her proposed accommodation for her disability and had failed to provide a reasonable alternative. She sought an injunction and damages for relief. Other than a summary of appellant’s tumultuous relationship with the Farrells, the third amended complaint’s allegations exclusively concerned conduct that had occurred after the SFO was entered.

2 Country Isles filed an answer and affirmative defenses to the third amended complaint. Country Isles’ affirmative defenses included, among other things, collateral estoppel, res judicata, and the FHA’s statute of limitations. Country Isles argued that appellant was rehashing the same claims as the 2009 case. Appellant responded to these affirmative defenses, arguing that the 2009 case concerned whether the easement was valid and whether the Farrells’ fence complied with the easement, while the instant case concerned retaliation and harassment since the SFO.

Country Isles filed a motion for summary judgment on all four of appellant’s claims based on its affirmative defenses of collateral estoppel, res judicata and the FHA’s statute of limitations. Country Isles did not address appellant’s claims on the merits. Appellant filed a memorandum opposing Country Isles’ affirmative defenses. Appellant argued that collateral estoppel and res judicata did not apply because she was raising new allegations and new issues based on conduct subsequent to the SFO. Appellant argued that the FHA’s statute of limitations did not apply because she had suffered the discriminatory housing practice after the SFO was entered and within the limitations period.

At the MSJ hearing, the trial court appears to have been vexed by the continued controversy, which had lasted for over ten years. The trial court declared that the case was “just plain and simple a waste of everybody’s money,” and that the parties needed to reach “some sort of accommodation.” The court suggested some solutions regarding the fencing, to which Country Isles agreed but appellant opposed, expressing intent to continue the litigation. To settle the entire controversy, Country Isles made an offer to which appellant did not respond. But the court said, “Well, it sounds like everything’s resolved in this case, you know.” Appellant argued the issues were not all settled. The court then ended the hearing with the following exchange:

THE COURT: You guys try to work this out on your own. I’m done trying to be reasonable here, because this is not that kind of case. Summary Judgment is granted, and -

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Granted?

THE COURT: -- and you’ll -- yeah, it’s granted.

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: How is Summary Judgment granted?

3 THE COURT: Granted. It’s out. You’re done. That’s it. Everything has been resolved. First of all, the FHA claim before about the aluminum gate, the Order before required [Appellant] to pay for it. So [Country Isles] will approve it. She’ll put up a brown-colored fence that’s aluminum. That’s fine. But as far as the rest of this case, it’s already been done. It’s already been decided. And there’s no outstanding penalty –

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Judge, I think what -- I think –

THE COURT: -- or anything else. They’ve agreed they’re going to do the maintenance anyway, and we don’t need an Injunction. So the Summary Judgment is granted. Let me have [Country Isles] submit the Order.

The court’s final summary judgment order found that the issues presented in this case were addressed and litigated in the prior case, and settled in the SFO. The court found that appellant’s Florida law claims were barred by res judicata and/or collateral estoppel, and that her FHA claim was barred by the FHA’s statute of limitations. To the extent the instant case concerned compliance with the SFO, the court found that those issues were resolved at the hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
Jayne Greenberg v. Country Isles Section One Maintenance Association, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jayne-greenberg-v-country-isles-section-one-maintenance-association-inc-fladistctapp-2024.