JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA v. JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 25, 2023
Docket22-1007
StatusPublished

This text of JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA v. JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC (JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA v. JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC) 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
JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA v. JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC, (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA, Petitioners-Appellants,

v.

JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC, a Florida limited liability company, Respondents-Appellees.

Nos. 4D22-1007 and 4D22-1030

[January 25, 2023]

Consolidated petition for writ of certiorari and appeal of nonfinal order from the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, Martin County; Gary L. Sweet, Judge; L.T. Case No. 432022CA000093.

Christopher J. Stearns of Johnson, Anselmo, Murdoch, Burke, Piper & Hochman, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for petitioner/appellant Joyce Bullen Gay.

Jesse Panuccio, Stuart H. Singer and James Grippando of Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for petitioner/appellant Adena Testa.

Ethan J. Loeb, Cynthia G. Angelos, Elliot P. Haney, Steven Gieseler, and Nicholas M. Gieseler of Bartlett, Loeb, Hinds & Thompson, PLLC, Tampa, for respondents/appellees.

GERBER, J.

In an earlier order, we had consolidated the above-captioned case numbers 4D22-1007 and 4D22-1030 for consideration by the same panel. We now consolidate these cases for opinion purposes as well.

Case number 4D22-1007 arises from a public official’s petition for a writ of certiorari. In that petition, the public official challenges the circuit court’s nonfinal order denying the public official’s motion to dismiss two landowners’ action against her for tortious interference with business relationships. The public official argues she was entitled to dismissal at the pleading stage based on common law absolute immunity because, as pled in the landowners’ complaint, her alleged tortious interference occurred in the scope of her official duties. We agree with the public official’s reading of the landowners’ complaint, and therefore grant her certiorari petition. We direct the circuit court, on remand, to vacate its prior order and issue a final judgment granting the public official’s motion to dismiss the landowners’ action against her with prejudice based on common law absolute immunity.

Case number 4D22-1030 arises from the public official’s appeal of the same nonfinal order denying the public official’s motion to dismiss, but alternatively based on immunity under section 768.28(9)(a), Florida Statutes (2020). See Fla. R. App. P. 9.130(a)(3)(F)(ii) (“Appeals to the district courts of appeal of nonfinal orders [include] those that … deny a motion that … asserts entitlement to immunity under section 768.28(9), Florida Statutes ….”); § 768.28(9)(a), Fla. Stat. (2020) (“No officer, employee, or agent of the state or of any of its subdivisions shall be held personally liable in tort or named as a party defendant in any action for any injury or damage suffered as a result of any act, event, or omission of action in the scope of her or his employment or function, unless such officer, employee, or agent acted in bad faith or with malicious purpose or in a manner exhibiting wanton and willful disregard of human rights, safety, or property.”).

Our holding in case number 4D22-1007—that the public official was entitled to dismissal with prejudice at the pleading stage based on common law absolutely immunity—moots the public official’s argument in case number 4D22-1030 for immunity under section 768.28(9)(a).

However, to the extent our common law absolute immunity holding in case number 4D22-1007 may be subject to review which necessitates our reaching the merits in case number 4D22-1030, our holding in case number 4D22-1030 would have been that the public official was not entitled to dismissal at the pleading stage for immunity under section 768.28(9)(a). Although the landowners’ complaint pleads that the public official acted in the scope of her official duties, the landowners’ complaint also pleads the public official acted in bad faith or with malicious purpose, thus precluding the public official from obtaining dismissal at the pleading stage based on immunity under section 768.28(9)(a).

We present this opinion in three parts: 1. The landowners’ complaint; 2. Our certiorari review of the absolute immunity argument; and 3. Our rule 9.130 review of the section 768.28(9)(a) argument.

2 1. The Landowners’ Complaint

Respondents-Appellees Jupiter Island Compound LLC and Dolphin Suite LLC (collectively, “the landowners”) sued Joyce Bullen Gay (“the public official”) for engaging in tortious interference while serving as the Town of Jupiter Island’s Impact Review Committee chairperson. The landowners also sued three Town residents—Adena Testa, Anne Geddes and Michael Brooks—who allegedly conspired with the public official to commit the tortious interference. In the complaint, the landowners materially alleged, in pertinent part, as follows.

The landowners’ properties are located in the Town of Jupiter Island and face the Atlantic Ocean. The landowners intended to construct beach houses on their respective properties. To properly submit their construction applications to the Town, the landowners retained various professionals whose services required payment on an hourly basis. One of the landowners submitted their construction application to the Town in November 2020, and the other landowner submitted their application to the Town in March 2021.

The Town’s Code of Ordinances required the landowners to obtain approval of their construction applications from the Town’s appointed five- person Impact Review Committee (“the IRC”). The IRC’s duty was to ensure the landowners’ proposed construction: (i) would not adversely affect the public interest; and (ii) would conform with the Town’s neighborhood character. IRC members sat as quasi-judicial officers and were required to disclose ex parte communications which they had with other people regarding the landowners’ construction applications. Those disclosures would have allowed the landowners to seek to disqualify IRC members for possible bias before having their construction applications determined.

When the landowners submitted their construction applications to the IRC, the public official was the IRC chair. According to the landowners’ complaint, as the IRC chair, the public official’s duties included: (i) helping other IRC members gather information to support or deny an application; (ii) setting the agenda, timing, and tone of any hearing; (iii) controlling the timing and participation of individuals at any hearing; (iv) testing other IRC members’ viewpoints and shifting viewpoints of a hearing into a certain direction; and (v) delaying any hearing if she deemed it necessary.

The landowners’ complaint further alleged that although the public official was aware the landowners’ applications had satisfied the IRC’s

3 approval criteria, the public official embarked upon a series of acts with her three co-conspirators to delay the landowners’ applications and interfere with their relationships with their retained professionals. The landowners’ complaint detailed the public official’s acts as follows.

Sometime in or before February 2021, the public official had oral communications with Testa and Geddes to discuss the goals of delaying, and preventing the approval of, the landowners’ construction applications. Testa and Geddes then recruited Brooks to join the effort. Brooks initiated meetings between Testa, Geddes, and other Town residents to spread a false narrative surrounding the landowners’ applications so that the public official could delay approval and increase the landowners’ costs.

On March 4, 2021, the IRC held a hearing at which it initially considered the first landowner’s construction application.

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JOYCE BULLEN GAY and ADENA TESTA v. JUPITER ISLAND COMPOUND, LLC and DOLPHIN SUITE, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyce-bullen-gay-and-adena-testa-v-jupiter-island-compound-llc-and-fladistctapp-2023.