Kalil v. BLUE HERON BEACH RESORT DEVELOPER, LLC

720 F. Supp. 2d 1335, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63906, 2010 WL 2611738
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJune 28, 2010
DocketCase 6:08-cv-2192-Orl-28KRS
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 720 F. Supp. 2d 1335 (Kalil v. BLUE HERON BEACH RESORT DEVELOPER, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kalil v. BLUE HERON BEACH RESORT DEVELOPER, LLC, 720 F. Supp. 2d 1335, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63906, 2010 WL 2611738 (M.D. Fla. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN ANTOON II, District Judge.

Defendants liken this case “to a kindergarten game of musical chairs.” (Doc. 69 at 21). Plaintiffs, on the other hand, characterize it as “the old game show To Tell The Truth,” with the caveat that “unlike the contestants on To Tell The Truth, Plaintiffs did not know they were being misled.” (Doc. 78 at 19). Having reviewed the record evidence and the parties’ arguments on summary judgment, the Court agrees with Defendants’ characterization — Plaintiffs lost at the condominium-flipping game when they were left without a metaphorical chair when the music stopped and the real estate market collapsed, and Defendants did not mislead them as to any material issue in the playing of that game.

I. Background

This case arises from the purchase by Plaintiffs, Assed Kalil and Stephen Ponsler, of a three-bedroom, sixteenth-floor penthouse condominium at a new development in Orlando, Florida. Hoping to “flip” the condominium for a profit, Plaintiffs signed a purchase agreement in September 2005 — before construction was complete — and closed on the unit in May 2006. *1337 They now seek rescission of the transaction — or alternatively, damages of more than $1 million — contending that the developer, Defendant Blue Heron Beach Resort Developer, LLC (“Blue Heron”), and other Defendants defrauded them in connection with the purchase.

Plaintiffs are residents of the state of Indiana. Sometime during the summer of 2005, Jackie Lindsay, an Orlando realtor, visited a friend — Plaintiff Kalil’s mother— in Indiana. (Kalil Dep., Attach, to Doc. 68, at 26-28). During that visit, Kalil asked Lindsay to let him know if she found any good real estate investment deals in Florida, (id. at 27-28); Kalil and co-Plaintiff Ponsler regarded Florida as an attractive market for real estate investment at the time, (Ponsler Dep., Attach, to Doc. 69, at 10). Sometime after Lindsay returned to Florida, she called Kalil and asked him if he was interested in a “fairly quick opportunity” to acquire a condominium unit at Blue Heron’s development. (Kalil Dep. at 27). Lindsay had spoken to someone at Defendant Premier Real Estate of Destín, Inc. (“Premier”) — a sales agency that Blue Heron had engaged to sell the units— about the development, and Lindsay relayed to Kalil that there was one last three-bedroom unit available, that the project would be completed in six to nine months, and that there was an opportunity to make money on it. (Id. at 29).

Kalil was interested in this prospect, and thereafter he spoke with Cynterra Lezotte of Premier on the telephone between five and ten times regarding the unit. (Id. at 20). At first, Lezotte indicated that the price of the unit was $885,000, but she then told Kalil that she could sell it to him for $850,000 and that that was “the best she could get from the developer.” (Id. at 44). There were no back-and-forth negotiations; Kalil merely asked Lezotte what the best price was that he could get on the unit, and she responded with the $850,000 figure. (Id. at 44-46). Lezotte told Kalil that once the project was completed, buyers would be willing to pay 1.2 million dollars for the unit. (Id. at 21).

Kalil asked Lindsay if she thought that Lezotte’s estimated resale amount of $1.2 million seemed reasonable to her, and Lindsay told Kalil that it did, explaining the state of the Orlando real estate market to him. (Id. at 42-43). Lindsay thought that $850,000 was a good price and that Kalil would be able to resell the unit for $1.2 million. (Id. at 55).

On September 2, 2005, without visiting the Orlando sales office, Kalil and Ponsler executed a Subscription and Purchase Agreement (“SPA”) for Unit 1-1602 at the Blue Heron development for a price of $850,000, paying a twenty-percent deposit — $170,000. Although Plaintiffs had hoped to “flip” the condominium before closing and make a profit on it, they were unable to resell the unit and they closed on it on May 11, 2006.

More than two years later, in October 2008, Plaintiffs learned that before they had entered into their SPA, Blue Heron had contracted with Defendant Vincent Bilello for the sale of the same unit. 1 In *1338 deed, Bilello had signed a SPA on March 8, 2004, agreeing to purchase Unit 1-1602 for a price of $435,525 and paying a deposit of $87,105. (Bilello SPA, Ex. 8 to Doc. 78). Bilello then asked Premier to try to find a buyer for the unit before he closed on it; Premier, through Lezotte, found such buyers in Plaintiffs. Then, on September 20, 2005 — three weeks after Plaintiffs signed their SPA for Unit 1-1602— Bilello and Blue Heron executed a “Cancellation Agreement” terminating Bilello’s SPA, and Bilello’s deposit was returned to him. (Cancellation Agreement, Ex. 9 to Doc. 78).

Blue Heron agreed to allow Bilello to receive the difference between his contract price and the price that Plaintiffs paid when and if they closed; this agreement is documented in a “Unit Resale Record” signed by Bilello on December 9, 2005 and by Blue Heron on January 9, 2006. (Unit Resale Record, Ex. 10 to Doc. 78). That document states that Bilello would receive net profit of $380,896 “at time of unit closing by new Buyer upon completion of Tower I.” (Id.). The document also gave Bilello the option to buy the unit at his original price in the event that Plaintiffs failed to close on the unit. (Id.). The closing statement from Plaintiffs’ May 11, 2006 closing includes a line indicating “Assignment Proceeds ... to Vincent Bilello” in the amount of $378,824-$380,896 less $2072 in costs paid by Bilello. (HUD-1 Settlement Statement, Ex. 16 to Doc. 78, at 2). Thus, as agreed between Bilello and Blue Heron, when Plaintiffs closed on the unit Bilello received essentially the full difference between the price he had contracted to pay more than two years earlier and the price that Plaintiffs paid for the unit; Blue Heron received the same amount from the sale of the unit as it would have received if Bilello had closed pursuant to his SPA.

On December 31, 2008, two months after learning of Bilello’s involvement with the unit, Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against Blue Heron, Premier, Bilello, and F.W. “Freddie” Schinz, the managing member of Blue Heron. Plaintiffs contend that instead of “directly” buying the unit from the developer at a “preconstruction price” as they had believed they were doing, they actually purchased a “resale” unit from Bilello. They assert that they would not have entered into the SPA or closed on the purchase if they had known of Bilello’s prior contract, and they seek rescission of the transaction.

In the Amended Complaint (Doc. 47), Plaintiffs set forth three claims: violation of the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSFDA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq., by all Defendants (Count I); fraudulent inducement under Florida law against Bilello, Blue Heron, and Premier only (Count II); and fraudulent concealment under Florida law against all Defendants (Count III).

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Bluebook (online)
720 F. Supp. 2d 1335, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63906, 2010 WL 2611738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalil-v-blue-heron-beach-resort-developer-llc-flmd-2010.