Green Acres, Inc. v. First Union National Bank of Florida
637 So. 2d 363 (Fl. Ct. App. 1994)
Pariente, J.
We reverse a dismissal with prejudice of a complaint brought by
appellants (purchasers) against appellees (sellers) arising out of a commercial real
estate transaction. We find that the court acted prematurely by not giving purchasers a
second chance to amend the complaint to state a cause of action.
The transaction involved sixty-three acres of undeveloped commercial
property in Miramar, Florida which the purchasers intended to develop as a community of
homes. The complaint alleges that shortly before closing, one of the sellers obtained an
archeological survey which revealed that the property was:
The site of an ancient Indian campsite which eventually was determined to be the first site in South Florida of the Seminole Tribe, thereby rendering the property of historical and archaeological significance with human remains being located thereon which placed severe limitations on the property and made it undevelopable for the expressed intended purposes of the Plaintiffs to develop the same as a community of homes. The location and size of the protected area(s) could preclude any type of development.
Purchasers contend sellers, who knew of these material facts,
intentionally withheld this information.
The trial court dismissed the complaint, finding that caveat emptor
still applied in commercial real estate transactions, and additionally, because the
complaint did not properly allege privity between purchasers and sellers. Based on the
documents attached to the complaint, it does appear that the complaint is amendable to
assert privity. However, under the present state of the law in Florida, even intentional
nondisclosure of known material facts in a commercial real estate transaction is not
actionable. The complaint does not allege a misrepresentation, active concealment or other
scheme for creating a false impression which would be required to set forth a cause of
action for fraud in a commercial real estate transaction.
Purchasers contend that they should have been granted leave to amend to
set forth a cause of action based on exceptions to caveat emptor. Exceptions arise: 1)
where some artifice or trick has been employed to prevent the purchaser from making
independent inquiry; 2) where the other party does not have equal opportunity to become
apprised of the fact; and, 3) where a party undertakes to disclose facts and fails to
disclose the whole truth. Based on purchasers' concessions at oral argument, we fail
to see any factual basis upon which the exceptions could be predicated.
Alternatively, purchasers argue that they should have been allowed to
plead a contractual breach arising from the nondisclosure, based on specific contractual
language in the actual documents which they allege creates a contractual duty to disclose.
Sellers concede the contract language is ambiguous. We agree we cannot shut the courthouse
door in this instance without giving purchasers an opportunity to amend. While "three
strikes" may not be the law regarding opportunities to amend before dismissing a
complaint with prejudice, purchasers should be afforded a second chance here.
In addressing the caveat emptor barrier, purchasers assert that when
the Florida Supreme Court abolished caveat emptor in residential real estate transactions,
it implicitly extended the same duty to disclose known facts materially affecting the
value of property to all real estate when it held:
Where the seller of a home knows of facts materially affecting the value of the property which are not readily observable and are not known to the buyer, the seller is under a duty to disclose them to the buyer. This duty is equally applicable to all forms of real property, new and used.
Johnson v. Davis, 480 So. 2d 625, 629 (Fla. 1985). We do not agree that Johnson
extended the duty to disclose to commercial real estate transactions. Two sister courts
[i.e. other Florida Courts of Appeal] have expressly declined to extend the duty to sales
of commercial real property.
The first district [i.e. another Florida Court of Appeal], however, has
concluded that the duty should be extended to commercial real estate transactions,
recognizing that investors run the gamut from small businesses to large corporations and
that individuals who buy real estate vary widely in their experience, knowledge,
sophistication, bargaining power, wealth and access to outside advisers and experts.
The first district traced the roots of the caveat emptor doctrine opining that
"there is little justification for continuing to draw a distinction between
transactions involving residential real property and transactions involving commercial
property." While the first district expressed a desire to extend a duty to disclose
known material facts to commercial transactions, it recognized the appropriate procedure
was to certify the question to the [Florida] supreme court which it did. Unfortunately the
supreme court did not answer the question.
In light of our decision to reverse, which grants purchasers leave to
amend to allege an express breach of contract, this case is not in a procedural posture to
consider certification. Therefore, it would be inappropriate at this time to consider
whether Johnson should be extended to commercial real estate transactions with any
additional limitations on the duty to disclose such as size of property, nature of the
investment or type of the allegedly material omitted fact. We expressly do not reach this
issue. Accordingly the order of dismissal is reversed and purchasers shall be granted
leave to amend their complaint in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and Remanded.