LeNeve v. via South Florida, LLC
This text of 908 So. 2d 530 (LeNeve v. via South Florida, 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.
Opinion
W. Lawrence LeNEVE, Appellant,
v.
VIA SOUTH FLORIDA, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company, Indiantown Realty Partners, Limited Partnership, a Florida limited partnership by and through Eastern Alliance, L.L.C., its sole general partner, and L & G GP, Inc., a Florida corporation, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*532 R. Stephen Ottewell of Law Office of R. Stephen Ottewell, P.A., Boca Raton, for appellant.
L. Louis Mrachek, Alan B. Rose, and Jennilynn E. Lawrence of Page, Mrachek, Fitzgerald & Rose, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellees Via South Florida, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company, and Indiantown Realty Partners, Limited Partnership, a Florida limited partnership by and through Eastern Alliance, L.L.C., its sole general partner.
GROSS, J.
This is an appeal from an order confirming an arbitration award. Via South Florida, L.L.C. and Indiantown Realty Partners, L.P. acquired a multimillion dollar award against W. Lawrence LeNeve in an arbitration proceeding. When Via South and Indiantown Realty Partners moved to confirm the award in the circuit court, LeNeve moved to vacate it. The court confirmed the award and entered judgment against LeNeve. We affirm, holding that LeNeve waived his right to litigate partnership claims in the circuit court.
Via South and L & G GP, Inc. created the limited partnership, Indiantown Realty Partners, to conduct real estate transactions. A written agreement contained the terms of the partnership. As the only limited partner, Via South contributed 99% of the financing in return for a 99% share in the profits. L & G, the general partner, contributed 1% of the financing and agreed to conduct the day-to-day management of Indiantown Realty Partners in return for 1% of the profits.
LeNeve controlled L & G as its president and director; however, in his individual capacity, he was neither a partner of Indiantown Realty Partners nor a signatory to the partnership agreement.
After the partnership began operating, Via South filed suit against Indiantown Realty Partners and L & G seeking: (1) a declaration that L & G had breached the partnership agreement and (2) an injunction removing L & G as the general partner. LeNeve was not named as a party to that lawsuit.
Indiantown Realty Partners and L & G responded to Via South's suit by filing, among other things, a motion to compel arbitration based on section 14.1 of the partnership agreement, which provided for arbitration of "[a]ll claims, disputes, and other matters in question among the Partners arising out of or relating to this Agreement or breach thereof." That part of section 14.1 pertinent to this appeal provided:
No arbitration arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall include, by consolidation, joinder, or in any other manner, any additional person not a party to this Agreement or an Interest Holder except by written consent containing a specific reference to this Agreement and signed by the parties hereto in dispute and any other person sought to be joined. Any consent to arbitration involving an additional person or persons shall not constitute consent to arbitration of any dispute not described therein or with any person not named or described therein. This agreement to arbitration and any agreement to arbitration with an additional person or persons duly consented to by the parties to this Agreement shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law.
*533 Before the circuit court ruled on the motion to compel arbitration, Via South filed a notice of intent to arbitrate and a statement of claim against Indiantown Realty Partners and L & G with the American Arbitration Association. The circuit court later stayed Via South's suit pending AAA arbitration.
At the commencement of the arbitration, Indiantown Realty Partners, L & G, and LeNeve were all represented by the same attorney. On behalf of her clients, that attorney responded to Via South's statement of claim by filing a motion to dismiss, asserting affirmative defenses, and raising a number of counterclaims. Although LeNeve was not named as a party in Via South's initial statement of claim, LeNeve authorized his attorney to include him as a counter-petitioner along with the partnership and L & G in the counterclaims.
Once the panel realized that a non-party to the partnership agreement had been included as a plaintiff in the counterclaims, it contacted the parties and asked them to respond to two questions:
First, the Panel would like to know if any party that is not a signatory to a contract which contains an arbitration provision would like to waive such defense and join the arbitration proceedings in order to more fully effectuate the goals and purposes of this arbitration?
If the answer to the preceding question is no, then the Panel would like the following issue briefed . . .: Can a party be compelled to arbitrate even though they have not signed an arbitration provision, and if so, under what conditions?
LeNeve's attorney responded by letter to the panel's inquiry. She wrote that LeNeve was affirmatively waiving his right to "submit his claims" in circuit court. The letter stated:
Regarding the additional party petitioner in the Counterclaim, who is not a signatory to the governing arbitration clause (i.e., Mr. LeNeve), consider this confirmation of Mr. LeNeve's waiver of his right to submit his claims in an alternative forum, in order to accomplish the goals and purposes of arbitration.[1]
After receiving the letter, the panel entered an order recognizing LeNeve as a party to the arbitration based on his "consent[] to such jurisdiction." The parties never executed a formal document expressly consenting to LeNeve's joinder as required by section 14.1 of the partnership agreement.
The same day the panel accepted jurisdiction over LeNeve, Via South amended its statement of claim to include causes of action against LeNeve, individually. Among those claims was that LeNeve engaged in unauthorized transactions through L & G that provided LeNeve with secret commissions and loan proceeds. The prayer for relief sought (among other things) "appropriate money damages from L & G and LeNeve." Thus, as of February, 2001, claims for affirmative relief were pending against LeNeve in the arbitration proceeding.
Following LeNeve's inclusion in the arbitration, the parties aggressively litigated their respective claims. Via South filed numerous documents referencing its claims against LeNeve and sought discovery on those claims. LeNeve took no action challenging the panel's jurisdiction to grant relief against him.
*534 In April, 2001, the arbitration panel held a five-day hearing on whether L & G should be removed as the general partner of Indiantown Realty Partners based on its misconduct. In May, 2001, the panel ruled in Via South's favor, ordering the removal of L & G and naming a Via South affiliate as the new general partner. That order essentially resolved the liability issues of the case in Via South's favor; the remaining issues related primarily to damages. A few days later, Indiantown Realty Partners filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
908 So. 2d 530, 2005 WL 1750621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leneve-v-via-south-florida-llc-fladistctapp-2005.