SUMMERLAND KEY COVE PARK, LLC v. JOHN C. MURPHY ( 2021 )


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  •       Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed May 19, 2021.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D19-801
    Lower Tribunal No. 15-565-K
    ________________
    Summerland Key Cove Park, LLC, et al.,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    John C. Murphy, et al.,
    Appellees.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Timothy J.
    Koenig, Judge.
    Annesser Armenteros, PLLC, and Miguel Armenteros and John W.
    Annesser, for appellants.
    Robert Cintron, Jr., for appellees.
    Before SCALES, MILLER and LOBREE, JJ.
    SCALES, J.
    Appellants, defendants below, Summerland Key Cove Park, LLC (the
    “New LLC”), Walter Cain, Charles Eidschun and Orval Gaster 1 seek review
    of an April 1, 2019 final judgment (“Final Judgment”) entered after a bench
    trial on the claims of appellees, plaintiffs below, John Murphy (“Murphy”),
    individually and on behalf of Summerland Key Cove AMD Homeowners
    Association, Inc. (“Old HOA”) and Summerland Key Cove Homeowners’
    Association, Inc. (“New HOA”). The Final Judgment determined that: (i) the
    plat language granting Murphy a use easement to a park in a residential
    subdivision prevented the New LLC from placing any restrictions, reasonable
    or otherwise, on the easement; and (ii) the Individual Directors and the New
    LLC usurped a corporate opportunity of the Old HOA by purchasing the park.
    We reverse that portion of the Final Judgment concluding that the Individual
    Directors and the New LLC usurped a corporate opportunity of the Old HOA
    because the record does not support the finding that the Old HOA had the
    financial ability to buy the park. We reverse that portion of the Final Judgment
    determining that the plat language granting the easement precluded the
    imposition of any restrictions on the easement, and remand for a
    determination as to whether the imposed restrictions are reasonable.
    1
    We refer to appellants Cain, Eidschun and Gaster, collectively, as the
    “Individual Directors.”
    2
    I.      Relevant Facts and Procedural Background
    A. The Subdivision, the Park, the Entities Created by the Individual
    Directors, and the Park Restrictions
    In 1957, the Monroe County Commission approved a plat for the
    Summerland Key Cove subdivision (“the plat”). The subdivision consisted of
    approximately one hundred and thirty residential lots, along with a park that
    included a small lake, canals and footpaths (“the park”). The plat contains
    language granting, among other things, the owners of the residential lots a
    use easement in the park. That easement language reads, in its entirety, as
    follows: “The park, lake, canals and footpaths are reserved for the exclusive
    use of the property owners in this subdivision.” Over the years, the residential
    lots were sold to various buyers, including Murphy and each of the Individual
    Directors. Ownership of the park, however, remained with the subdivision
    developer.
    In 2007, the Individual Directors, pursuant to chapter 617 of the Florida
    Statutes, incorporated the Old HOA as a not-for-profit voluntary
    homeowners’ association. The Individual Directors attempted to convert the
    Old HOA into a mandatory homeowners’ association (governed by chapter
    720 of the Florida Statutes); however, the subdivision’s existing owners did
    not give sufficient consent. The Old HOA’s bylaws provided that “[m]embers
    shall be automatically admitted to membership in the [Old HOA] after
    3
    completing an application for membership supplied by the Board of Directors
    and accompanying same with the appropriate annual dues.” Despite this
    language in the Old HOA bylaws, the record reflects, and the parties do not
    dispute, that no membership application was developed, no membership list
    existed, and no dues were ever collected. In fact, the Old HOA did not
    maintain a bank account. At certain points in time, the Individual Directors
    attempted to raise funds for the Old HOA by soliciting their subdivision
    neighbors, but such fundraising attempts were not successful.
    In 2014, the subdivision developer approached the Individual Directors
    (who served as the officers for the Old HOA) to see whether the Old HOA
    would purchase the park from the developer. The record reflects that,
    because the Old HOA had no funds, the Individual Directors tried (without
    success) to persuade the developer to convey the park to the Old HOA for
    free. Ultimately, the developer reduced the park purchase price to $15,000.
    Because the Old HOA had no funds to purchase the park, the Individual
    Directors created a new entity – the New LLC – to purchase and operate the
    park.
    The record does not reflect any overt effort by the Individual Directors
    to notify Murphy (or the other property owners in the subdivision) of the
    developer’s $15,000 offer to sell the park; similarly, the record does not
    4
    reflect any overt efforts by the Individual Directors to engage in a fundraising
    drive on behalf of the Old HOA to enable the Old HOA to purchase the park.
    Instead, the Individual Directors put up their own money to purchase the park
    in the New LLC’s name. Shortly after the New LLC’s purchase of the park
    from the developer, the Individual Directors administratively dissolved the
    Old HOA.
    The New LLC then proceeded to clean up and manage the park. As
    the new owner of the park, the New LLC also enacted rules and restrictions
    governing subdivision property owners’ use and access to the park.
    Specifically, the New LLC:
    (a)     prohibited after-dark use of the park;
    (b)     required a $50.00 monthly fee for vehicle/vessel access to the park;
    (c)     erected a locked gate to control the park access and limited the park
    access to only this gated entrance;
    (d)     erected a cable across the shore of the lake to prevent unauthorized
    boat launching; and
    (e)     required a liability release for use of the park
    (collectively, the “Restrictions”).
    B. The New HOA and the Instant Lawsuit
    5
    In response to the Restrictions imposed by the New LLC, subdivision
    resident Murphy proceeded, pursuant to chapter 617, to incorporate a new,
    not-for-profit voluntary homeowners’ association, the New HOA. Eventually,
    the New HOA had thirty-seven members from the subdivision and raised
    $26,000, which was earmarked to purchase the park from the New LLC.
    Upon the imposition of the Restrictions by the New LLC, Murphy, in
    June 2015, filed the instant lawsuit both on his own behalf, and derivatively
    on behalf of the dissolved Old HOA. 2 In the lawsuit, Murphy sought
    declaratory relief against the New LLC, alleging that the Restrictions
    unreasonably interfered with his easement rights, as granted in the plat.
    Also, Murphy, derivatively, on behalf of the Old HOA, sought injunctive and
    other equitable relief against the Individual Directors and the New LLC,
    asserting that the Individual Directors – by creating the New LLC to purchase
    the park – had usurped a corporate opportunity belonging to the Old HOA.
    C. The Challenged Final Judgment
    On January 25, 2019, the trial court conducted a bench trial on
    Murphy’s claims and, shortly thereafter, rendered the challenged April 1,
    2
    The New HOA was also a named plaintiff in the suit, but in the Final
    Judgment, the trial court determined that the New HOA lacked standing to
    bring suit against any of the defendants. The New HOA did not cross-appeal
    this ruling.
    6
    2019 Final Judgment. The trial court’s detailed Final Judgment relates this
    case’s rather complicated factual history and ultimately concludes that,
    “despite the good intentions of the [Individual Directors], and however well
    meaning their actions, the law does not permit what occurred here without
    the consent of all of the affected owners.”
    Specifically, the Final Judgment concludes that the plat’s easement
    language precludes the imposition of any restrictions, whether reasonable or
    not, declaring that “[Murphy] may use the [park] at any time, access the [park]
    with his vehicles to launch and retrieve watercraft from the lake without
    preapproval or fee, and access the [park] from whichever entrance he
    desires.” As to a claim of the usurpation of corporate opportunity, the trial
    court – after concluding that the Individual Directors and the New LLC did
    usurp a corporate opportunity of the Old HOA – fashions a remedy requiring
    that the New LLC hold the park in a constructive trust on behalf of the long-
    since dissolved Old HOA, and “[u]pon the [Old HOA’s] reinstatement, the
    [New LLC] shall transfer [the park] to the [Old HOA] in exchange for the
    [park]’s . . . $15,000 purchase price.”
    The Individual Directors and the New LLC timely appealed this Final
    Judgment.
    II.     Analysis
    7
    The Individual Directors and the New LLC challenge both portions of
    the trial court’s Final Judgment. They assert that the trial court erred both in
    its construction of the plat’s easement language, and by finding that the
    Individual Defendants and the New LLC had usurped a corporate opportunity
    of the Old HOA. We address both arguments in turn.
    A. Did the Restrictions Unreasonably Interfere with Murphy’s Easement
    Rights Conveyed in the Plat?3
    In its Final Judgment, the trial court determined, as a matter of law,
    that, because the plat grants the subdivision property owners “exclusive use”
    of the park, the New LLC is prohibited from placing any restrictions
    whatsoever on the subdivision owners’ use of the park: “[The New LLC does]
    not have a right to impose restrictions, reasonable or not, on use of that
    easement.” Thus, without reaching the issue of whether the Restrictions
    unreasonably interfered with Murphy’s easement rights, the trial court
    3
    We review a trial court’s construction of an easement provision de novo.
    Five Seas Invs., Inc v. Guzman, 
    258 So. 3d 569
    , 571 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018).
    When determining whether a restriction placed upon an easement by the
    servient owner violates an easement right, the court first looks to the
    language of the document creating the easement to see if the grantor
    reserved the right to impose such restrictions; if, as here, the easement
    document does not address this issue, then whether the restriction may be
    imposed depends on whether the restriction unreasonably interferes with the
    rights of the easement holder. Sandlake Residences, LLC v. Ogilvie, 
    951 So. 2d 117
    , 120 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007) (citation omitted).
    8
    concluded that the Restrictions violated the plat’s use easement and
    declared that Murphy is not bound by the Restrictions.
    While, by virtue of the plat’s use easement, Murphy and the other
    owners in the subdivision enjoy a property interest in the park, their interest
    is distinct from ownership and does not confer title to the park. Dianne v.
    Wingate, 
    84 So. 3d 427
    , 429 (Fla. 1st DCA 2012). The New LLC, as the
    park’s owner, continues to enjoy all rights to the park, except as limited by
    the easement, in any manner that does not unreasonably interfere with the
    subdivision property owners’ lawful use of the easement. 
    Id.
     Yet, the trial
    court’s conclusion – that, as a matter of law, the New LLC is powerless to
    place any restrictions on the subdivision property owners’ use of the park –
    effectively grants the subdivision property owners “absolute ownership of the
    easement property contrary to well-established property law.” 
    Id. at 431
    .
    In Dianne, grantors of an access easement placed speed bumps on
    the easement access road along with concrete barriers on the road’s
    shoulders, thus preventing easement holders from driving around the speed
    bumps. 
    Id. at 428
    . The trial court entered a summary judgment for the
    easement holders, concluding that, as a matter of law, the easement
    grantors had unlawfully interfered with the easement. 
    Id. at 429
    . The First
    District reversed the summary judgment, concluding that whether the
    9
    easement grantors’ actions constituted unreasonable interference with the
    easement was a question of fact. 
    Id. at 431
    ; see Sandlake Residences, LLC
    v. Ogilvie, 
    951 So. 2d 117
    , 121 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007); BHB Dev., Inc. v.
    Bonefish Yacht Club Homeowners Ass’n, 
    691 So. 2d 1174
    , 1176-77 (Fla. 3d
    DCA 1997) (concluding, based upon the parties’ stipulation that no genuine
    factual issues existed, that the servient estate owner unreasonably interfered
    with an access easement because “the record contains evidence that the
    placement of a locked gate across the easement amounts to a substantial
    interference of the . . . easement holders’ right to use the easement”).
    We view the easement’s “reserved for the exclusive use” language as
    preventing the park’s owner from allowing any party other than property
    owners in the subdivision to use the park; that is, the plat reserves use of the
    park exclusively to owners of property in the subdivision. 4 We do not view
    the plat’s easement language as absolutely precluding the park owner from
    imposing any restrictions on subdivision property owners’ use of the park.
    But, because the plat’s easement language contains no express provision
    authorizing the park owner to impose the Restrictions on the use easement,
    the lower court must conduct the required reasonableness inquiry. Dianne,
    4
    Murphy has made no allegation that the New LLC, via the Restrictions or
    otherwise, has violated the easement’s “exclusive use” reservation by
    allowing non-owners to use the park.
    10
    
    84 So. 3d at 431
    . We therefore reverse that portion of the Final Judgment
    finding that the New LLC “does not have the right to impose restrictions,
    reasonable or not, on use of [the] easement,” and remand for the trial court
    to conduct those proceedings it deems necessary to determine the fact issue
    of whether the Restrictions unreasonably interfere with Murphy’s easement
    rights as granted in the plat. 5
    B. Did the Individual Directors and the New LLC Usurp a Corporate
    Opportunity of the Old HOA by their Purchase of the Park from the
    Developer?6
    The Final Judgment also concluded that the Individual Directors and
    the New LLC usurped a corporate opportunity of the Old HOA by purchasing
    the park from the developer. Consequently, the trial court fashioned a
    remedy that dispossessed the New LLC of the park upon a $15,000 payment
    (presumably by the New HOA) to the New LLC. We begin our analysis of
    this issue with a brief explanation of the doctrine of, and cause of action for,
    “usurpation of a corporate opportunity.” The doctrine derives from fiduciary
    duties that directors and officers owe to their corporation. Farber v. Servan
    5
    We express no opinion on the reasonableness of any of the Restrictions.
    6
    We review the factual findings of a trial court after a bench trial for
    competent substantial evidence, while we review a trial court’s legal
    conclusions de novo. Musi v. Credo, LLC, 
    273 So. 3d 93
    , 95-96 (Fla. 3d DCA
    2019).
    11
    Land Co., 
    662 F.2d 371
    , 377 (5th Cir. 1981). Specifically, a director or officer
    breaches the fiduciary duty he or she owes to the corporation by exploiting,
    for his or her own profit, a beneficial opportunity that rightly belongs to the
    corporation. 
    Id.
     To be entitled to relief under the usurpation of a corporate
    opportunity doctrine, a plaintiff must establish, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, three elements: (1) there was a business opportunity, (2) that the
    corporation is financially capable of undertaking, and (3) this opportunity fit
    into the present activities of the corporation or into an established corporate
    policy that acquisition of the opportunity would forward. Uvanile v. Denoff,
    
    495 So. 2d 1177
    , 1179 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986) (citing Farber, 
    662 F.2d at 377
    ).7
    In its Final Judgment, the trial court examined each of these three
    elements and determined that Murphy established all three by a
    preponderance of the evidence. Clearly, the trial court’s findings that
    7
    Because the Individual Directors and the New LLC did not assert below or
    in this Court that the usurpation of corporate opportunity doctrine is
    inapplicable to directors and officers of a not-for-profit corporation such as
    the Old HOA, we need not, and do not, decide this more difficult threshold
    question. We do note that, at oral argument, Murphy’s counsel commendably
    conceded that he was unable to find any reported cases where the doctrine
    has been applied to divest not-for-profit corporation directors or officers of an
    opportunity allegedly usurped by them. Similarly, our research uncovered no
    such cases.
    12
    elements (1) and (3), described above, are supported by competent
    substantial evidence. Indeed, it is undisputed that the Old HOA had an
    opportunity to buy the park, and acquisition of the park plainly fit into the
    activities of the Old HOA, a voluntary homeowners’ association for the
    members of the subdivision.
    We are concerned, however, with the trial court’s analysis of, and
    factual findings regarding, the second element: the Old HOA’s financial
    ability to exploit the opportunity. Regarding this second element, the trial
    court made the following factual finding:
    The preponderance of the evidence shows that the [Old HOA]
    was financially capable of pursuing this business opportunity.
    Pursuant to the [Old HOA]’s Articles of Incorporation, the owners
    of property in the Subdivision were members of the [Old HOA].
    Under Plaintiff Murphy’s leadership, the [Old HOA]’s members
    raised more than enough money to purchase the Subject
    Property. Accordingly, the [Old HOA] was financially capable of
    pursuing this business opportunity. Thus, prong two is satisfied.
    The trial court’s second-prong inquiry focused not on the financial
    ability of the Old HOA to exploit the presented opportunity, but, rather, on
    Murphy’s success in raising funds from subdivision property owners long
    after the opportunity had been presented to the Old HOA. In our view, the
    trial court should have centered its second-prong analysis around the Old
    HOA’s financial ability to purchase the park, focusing on the time period
    when the developer offered to sell the park to the Old HOA, i.e., when the
    13
    corporate opportunity arose. While Murphy was certainly able to raise
    $26,000 well after the New LLC had purchased the property and imposed
    the Restrictions on park access, there is no evidence in the record that, at
    any time, the Old HOA was financially capable of purchasing the property
    from the developer. Indeed, precisely because of its unfavorable financial
    condition and its previous, unsuccessful efforts to raise funds, the Old HOA
    tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to persuade the developer to convey the park to
    the Old HOA for free. When these efforts failed, and the developer refused
    to donate the park to the Old HOA, the Individual Directors created (and
    funded) the New LLC, so that the park could be bought at the negotiated
    $15,000 purchase price and maintained through user fees. 8
    8
    As noted previously, in its Final Judgment the trial court characterizes these
    “actions” by the Individual Directors as “well meaning” and similarly
    characterizes the Individual Directors as having undertaken these actions
    with “good intentions.” We find it difficult to reconcile these express findings
    – which are amply supported by the record and not challenged by Murphy –
    with the trial court’s conclusion that the Individual Directors usurped a
    corporate opportunity of the Old HOA. Indeed, by definition, a director or
    officer who usurps a corporate opportunity breaches a fiduciary duty owed
    to, and commits an intentional tort against, the corporation. Halkey-Roberts
    Corp. v. Mackal, 
    641 So. 2d 445
    , 447 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994). As a practical
    matter (which, because of our limited holding, we neither decide nor address
    further), we are unsure whether a director or officer, through well-meaning
    actions that are undertaken with good intentions, can breach a fiduciary duty
    owed to, and thus commit an intentional tort against, a victim corporation.
    14
    We recognize that some usurpation of corporate opportunity cases
    appear to de-emphasize the second prong. See Cohen v. Hattaway, 
    595 So. 2d 105
    , 108 (Fla. 5th DCA 1992) (“[I]n order to show a corporate opportunity,
    a pleader must allege (1) the existence of a business opportunity, (2) which
    fits into the present activities of the corporation or into an established
    corporate policy which acquisition of the opportunity would forward.”); accord
    Pan Am. Trading & Trapping, Inc. v. Crown Paint, Inc., 
    99 So. 2d 705
    , 706
    (Fla. 1957) (holding that an officer of a corporation who purchased land in
    his own name, rather than in the name of the corporation that had “a valid
    and significant corporate purpose” in purchasing the land to expand its
    operations, usurped a corporate opportunity). These cases, however, do not
    specifically analyze the issue of the corporation’s present ability to undertake
    the corporate opportunity at the time the opportunity is presented. Nor, as
    mentioned in footnote 7, supra, do these cases involve directors and officers
    of not-for-profit corporations with no obvious mechanism for successfully
    raising the funds necessary to undertake the opportunity at the time it is
    presented. The issue is especially acute with the type of entity involved in
    this case – a voluntary homeowners’ association with no membership list, no
    required membership fees, and no ability to levy assessments on
    homeowners.
    15
    Finally, we understand Murphy’s argument that, in analyzing the
    doctrine’s second prong, we should focus on Murphy’s fundraising efforts:
    namely, because Murphy was successful in his after-the-fact fundraising
    efforts, we should presume that, had the Individual Directors tried, they could
    have raised the money back when the opportunity arose. Nevertheless, we
    are uncomfortable with the unintended byproduct of such a misdirected
    focus: imposing on directors or officers of not-for-profit companies, by judicial
    fiat, what amounts to a “fiduciary duty to fundraise.”
    Hence, our holding is as practical as it is narrow and specific: assuming
    the usurpation of corporate opportunity doctrine applies to directors and
    officers of a not-for-profit voluntary homeowners’ association created under
    chapter 617 of the Florida Statutes, for the trial court to impose its equitable
    powers to divest a corporate opportunity usurped from a defendant, the not-
    for-profit voluntary homeowners’ association from which the opportunity was
    usurped must have had the financial ability to undertake the corporate
    opportunity when the opportunity arose.
    Because the record shows that the Old HOA never had the financial
    ability to purchase the park from the developer, Murphy, derivatively on
    behalf of the Old HOA, failed to establish an essential element of the
    asserted action for usurpation of a corporate opportunity of the Old
    16
    HOA. We, therefore, reverse that portion of the Final Judgment and remand
    for entry of a judgment for the Individual Directors and the New LLC on this
    claim.
    III.     Conclusion
    We reverse that portion of the trial court’s Final Judgment declaring
    that, as a matter of law, the New LLC may not impose restrictions, whether
    reasonable or not, on the easement rights granted to Murphy in the plat. We
    remand for the trial court to conduct the required reasonableness inquiry
    regarding the Restrictions. We also reverse that portion of the Final
    Judgment that determined the Individual Defendants and the New LLC had
    usurped a corporate opportunity of the Old HOA and remand for entry of a
    judgment for the Individual Defendants and the New LLC on this claim.
    Reversed and remanded with instructions.
    17