FUTURA REALTY, Appellant,
v.
LONE STAR BUILDING CENTERS (EASTERN), INC., еt al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*364 Lapidus & Frankel and Richard L. Lapidus, Miami, for appellant.
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Daniels & Talisman and Sam Daniels, Peeples, Earl & Blank, Jorden, Schulte & Burchette, and Frank Burt, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey and James M. Porter and Anne Talbot, Miami, for appellees.
Before NESBITT, BASKIN and JORGENSON, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In these consolidated appeals, appellant, Futura Realty, Inc. (Futura), the current corporate owner of a parcel of land at 7000 Coral Way in Dade County (the site), claims first, that the property's immediate previous owner, Stanley S. Davidson (Davidson), committed fraud by failing to inform appellant оf certain pollution problems on the property until after its purchase, and second, that Davidson, as well as a prior owner, CSX Trаnsportation, Inc. (Seaboard), and lessee, Lone Star Building Centers (Eastern), Inc. (Lone Star), are strictly liable to Futura for damage done to the site through the use of certain ultrahazardous chemicals.[1] The trial court granted summary judgments to each defendant. We affirm upоn the following analysis.
Futura's claims rest on two key cases, both of which we find inapplicable to the facts at hand. First, relying on Johnson v. Davis,
It appears that Futura rests its claim of fraud in this sale of a commercial site on that statement. However, the statement when reаd in context, as it must be, clearly applies solely to the sale of homes. Nowhere does the court conclude that the duty of disclosure is present in the sale of commercial property. Further, the cases relied on in Johnson are not commercial land sale cases. Nowhere does Johnson address or change the long line of сase law establishing caveat emptor as the rule in the sale of commercial property. See Conklin v. Hurley,
Thus, we need not consider the fаctual allegations as to the obvious nature of the large treatment vats on the site or the visible chemical spills discoloring soil on the property. See Simmons v. Owens,
Second, Futura claims reliance on the rule of strict liability for ultrahazardоus activity resulting in damage to a neighbor's property as laid down by the English court in Rylands v. Fletcher, L.R., 3 H.L. 330 (1868), and long followed by Florida courts. See Great Lakes Dredging and Dock Co. v. Sea Gull Operating Corp.,
However, beyond relying on these cases, Futura asks this court to extend the rule of strict liability to apply to remote owners and users of the land and to extend the cause of action from a claim available to neighbors to a claim available to subsequent owners of the property. We find Futura's argument for an extension of the law of strict liability unpersuasive. Futura asks us to stretch Rylands based upon the single case of T & E Industries v. Safety Light Corp.,
We disagree with that court's analysis and find a better reasoned approach to this issue in Wellesley Hill Realty Trust v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
In the case at hand, Futura was simply not bringing a claim as an injured adjoining landowner. The commercial property vendor owes no duty for damage to the land to its vendee because the vendee can protect itself in a number of ways, including careful inspection and price negotiation. This is the vital legal and practical distinction between the duty owed a neighbor and the duty owed a successor in title which T & E Industries failed to identify.
Accordingly, because we reject Futura's claim that Johnson v. Davis controls as to its fraud claim and because we reject the argument that Rylands v. Fletcher should be еxtended to apply to Futura's claims of strict liability, we affirm the summary judgments rendered below.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Seaboard owned the land from 1941 through 1980. During this period, Seaboard leased the land which was the site of a wood treatment plant, first to Miami Wood Treating Facility from 1941 to 1968, then to Lindsley Lumber, a subsidiary of Lone Star from 1968 to 1972. Lone Star acquired the plant in 1972 and continued operating it until 1979, when it sold the facility to Davidson Lumber. Seaboard's ownership of the land terminated in 1980, when Davidson purchased the land beneath the woodtreating plant. Davidson ceased operation of the plant in 1981. In 1982, Futura entered the picture, purchasing the property from Davidson to conduct its real estate development business. See Seaboard Sys. R.R. v. Clemente,
