K & H Development Group, Inc. v. Howard

255 F.R.D. 562, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6812, 2009 WL 113051
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 16, 2009
DocketNo. 3:06cv494/MD
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 255 F.R.D. 562 (K & H Development Group, Inc. v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K & H Development Group, Inc. v. Howard, 255 F.R.D. 562, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6812, 2009 WL 113051 (N.D. Fla. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTIONS TO STRIKE AND EXCLUDE EVIDENCE

MILES DAVIS, United States Magistrate Judge.

Before the court are the motions to strike and exclude evidence filed by defendant In-trawest Sandestin Company, L.L.C. (“In-trawest”) (doc. 407) and joined by defendant Walton County (doc. 425), defendants Keith Howard and the Howard Company of the Southwest, Inc., (“the Howard Defendants”) (doc. 426), and defendant Sandestin Owners Association (“SOA”) (doc. 427). Plaintiff has responded in opposition to the motions. (Doc. 424, 430, 431, 432). Because the parties have joined in and adopted each other’s arguments, the court enters a single order.

Case history and procedural background

Plaintiff K & H Development Group, Inc., a Florida corporation (“K & H”) filed its original Verified Complaint (Doc. 1) against Keith Howard and The Howard Company of the Southeast, Inc. (collectively, the “Howard Defendants”); Intrawest Sandestin Company, L.L.C., a foreign corporation and Intrawest Resorts, a foreign corporation (collectively “Intrawest”); Sandestin Owners Association, Inc., a Florida Non-Profit Corporation (“Sandestin”); and Walton County, Florida, a subdivision of the State of Florida, (‘Walton County” or the “County”). Plaintiff alleged generally that, through the collective and individual efforts of the defendants, it had been prevented from developing a 1.453 acre piece of property it owned on the north side of U.S. Highway 98 within the Sandestin Development of Regional Impact (hereafter, “DRI”). After initial responses to that Complaint were filed, K & H sought, and was granted, leave to file a Verified Amended Complaint (Doc. 48, 49, 58).

The eight-count verified amended complaint contained the following claims:

[564]*564Count I — Tortious interference with business relationship against the Howard defendants

Count II — Equal protection violation under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against all defendants

Count III — Substantive Due process violation under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against all defendants

Count IV — Equitable Estoppel against Walton County

Count V- — Conversion against the Howard defendants

Count VI — Fraudulent Misrepresentation against the Howard defendants, Sandestin and Intrawest

Count VII — Inverse condemnation under Article X, § 6(a) of the Florida Constitution against Walton County

Count VIII — Civil Theft against the Howard defendants.

(Doc. 49).

In response to the Verified Amended Complaint, Walton County and the Howard Group Defendants answered (Doe. 64, 69), while the remaining defendants moved to dismiss (Doe. 61, 62). The Howard Defendants also filed a counterclaim against K & H, adding Howard affiliated companies Bay-towne Commercial Joint Venture Partners, Baytowne Commercial Joint Venture Partners II, Baytowne Office Plaza Joint Venture Partners and Baytowne Restaurant Sites, Inc., as Counter-Plaintiffs (Doc. 69). Upon denial of the motions to dismiss (Doc. 128), Intrawest and the SOA also answered the Verified Amended Complaint (Doc. 129, 130, 132).

The defendants filed motions for summary judgment (doc. 181, 185, 187 & 191) which were pending when, on July 8, 2008, the plaintiff filed a supplemental pleading to join Bla-Lock Development Group, Inc. (“Bla-Lock”) as a plaintiff in this action. (Doc. 350). The Supplemental Pleading addressed the fact that the K & H property had been sold in foreclosure. Roger Murray, Jr. as plaintiff placed the high bid1 for the property and assigned his bid and his rights to Bla-Lock. (Doe. 350 at 3-4). Title to the property thus transferred from K & H to Bla-Lock, who submitted an application to Defendant Walton County for approval of a development order for the property. Because defendant Intrawest did not acknowledge that the property had any development rights, Walton County would neither approve nor deny Bla-Lock’s application. (Id. at 4). Plaintiffs sought damages and equitable relief based upon the date of transfer of title, attorney’s fees and costs and other relief. (Id. at 5). No new theories of damages were specifically asserted.

After the supplemental pleading was filed, Intrawest filed a second motion for summary judgment or to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and statement of facts (doc. 355 & 356). After reviewing that motion, this court denied all pending summary judgment motions without prejudice and directed the parties to file superseding motions for summary judgment based on the newly discovered facts pertaining to the foreclosure sale of the subject property. (Doc. 367). Each of the parties has done so, (doc. 382, 385, 390 & 394), and plaintiffs have responded. (Doc. 404, 405, 408, 409, 414, 415, 416 & 417).

Defendant Intrawest argued in its superseding motion for summary judgment, among other things, that judgment should be entered in its favor because K & H and Bla-Lock have no damages in light of the fact that the K & H property was sold at the foreclosure sale for $2,625,000, a sum well in excess of K & H’s alleged damages for “lost” development rights as calculated by its own damages expert, appraiser Walter H. Humphrey.

K & H served the expert report of appraiser Walter H. Humphrey, its damages expert, on or about August 10, 2007. (Doc. 227-3; appendix 46). The purpose of the appraisal as described on the Summary Appraisal Report itself was:

to develop an opinion of the diminution in market value related to the entitlements for commercial improvements of 15,628 [565]*565square feet (SF) compared to the absence of any future potential for development or structural improvement.

(Doc. 227-3 at 8). The appraisal analysis of the property “as vacant” assumed alternatively that the land had no future potential for development or structural improvement and that the land had entitlements to construct 15,628 SF of commercial office and retail improvements. (Id.). Mr. Humphrey opined that the market value of the subject property as of November 14, 2002 with development options was $1,400,000. Without any development potential, the property’s value was $12,500, yielding a diminution in value (damages) of $1,387,500. The market value as of September 28, 2006 with development options was $2,000,000 and only $12,500 without any development potential, for a total diminution in value (damages) of $1,987,500. (Id. at 15). These figures pertaining to the diminution in market value were the only numbers offered with respect to differential valuation of the property with or without development rights.

When defendants deposed Mr. Humphrey on September 19, 2007,2 he stated that he had been tasked by plaintiffs counsel with developing an opinion of market value and any related dimunition of value in the subject property with or without the potential for commercial development or structural improvements. (Doe. 355-4 at 5; Deposition of Walter H. Humphrey, page 13, lines 10-24).

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255 F.R.D. 562, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6812, 2009 WL 113051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-h-development-group-inc-v-howard-flnd-2009.