Cooley v. PHEASANT RUN AT ROSEMONT CONDOMINIUM ASS'N, INC., 5D00-1334.
Decision Date | 12 April 2001 |
Docket Number | No. 5D00-1334.,5D00-1334. |
Citation | 781 So.2d 1182 |
Parties | Richard COOLEY, Appellant, v. PHEASANT RUN AT ROSEMONT CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., et al., Appellees. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Sheldon D. Stevens of Sheldon D. Stevens, P.A., Merritt Island, for Appellant.
Kendall B. Rigdon of Rigdon, Muckerman, Alexander & Rigdon, P.A., Cocoa, for Appellee Pheasant Run at Rosemont Condominium, Inc.
Jamie Billotte Moses and Reinald Werrenrath, III of Fisher, Rushmer, Werrenrath, Dickson, Talley & Dunlap, P.A., for Appellees John and Myra Middleton.
This appeal raises the issue of whether a condominium unit owner may be individually joined in a plaintiffs action against the condominium association in respect to an injury occurring on the common elements.
The plaintiff below, Richard Cooley, filed a complaint alleging that he was injured while an invited guest upon the common elements of Pheasant Run at Rosemont. In addition to the Association, he joined the unit owners individually. The trial court, in dismissing said owners with prejudice, held that Florida law does not support such an action against the unit owners, but could only be maintained against the Association.
Prior to 1976 it was clear that a condominium unit owner had no personal liability in an action such as Cooley's, and therefore was not a proper party defendant. At that time former Chapter 711 was replaced by Chapter 718, and more specifically section 718.119, Florida Statutes, which provides in pertinent part:
The question before us is one of legislative intent. Paragraph (2) above would seem to favor the argument of Cooley. Paragraph (3), however, appears to acknowledge that the Association is the proper party defendant in the action: it is assigned the duty of notifying the unit owners of "any legal action in which the Association may be exposed to liability in excess of insurance coverage protecting it and the owners." (Emphasis added). The statute assumes that such owners are not original parties to the action; otherwise such notice would not be necessary. At the point of that notice, the statute gives the unit owners the right, but not the obligation, to intervene and defend. This section of the statute appears to allow participation of the unit owners in the suit as a matter of their discretion and not at the option of the plaintiff. In any event, whether the unit owners decide to participate or not, they are bound by any judgment in a tort victim's favor, limited only by the language contained within section 718.119.
The entire structure of section 718.119 points to the fact that this subsection deals with the liability of unit owners for "common expenses" which may be assessed (subsection (1)) and the liability of unit owners for acts or...
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...to the common elements including balcony additions appurtenant to each unit. We have considered Cooley v. Pheasant Run at Rosemont Condo. Ass'n, Inc., 781 So.2d 1182 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001), and deem it inapposite. In Cooley, the plaintiff sought damages for an injury while an invited guest upo......
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Trintec Const. v. Countryside Vill. Condo.
...had), but rule 1.221 and the Graves decision do not require those procedural steps. Indeed, in Cooley v. Pheasant Run at Rosemont Condominium Ass'n, 781 So.2d 1182 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001), the Fifth District affirmed a trial court ruling that the unit owners were not proper defendants in a pers......
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