The district judge rebuffed the plaintiffs’ effort to characterize a condominium time-sharing purchase and rental agreement as an investment contract subject to the Securities Act of 1933. 15 U.S.C. § 77b(1);
The Fox Hills Golf Villas Condominium is a recreational condominium project (Fox Hills Golf Course is, we were told at argument, the largest golf course in the midwest). Nothing is more common than for the developer of such a project to offer to rent out owned but temporarily unoccupied units as the agent of the owner. Because the resulting division of rental income makes the developer and the condominium owner coven-turers in a profit-making activity, imparting to the condominium interest itself the character of an investment for profit as well as a home for occupancy, those circuits that believe that only “vertical commonality” is required to create an investment contract would deem the combination of sale and rental agreement in this case an investment contract.
SEC v. Koscot Interplanetary, Inc.,
Revak
is the only appellate case that involves the sale of residential condominiums except for
Hocking v. Dubois,
Our circuit’s position comports better, we believe, with the purpose of the 1933 Act than that of the circuits which dispense with the requirement of establishing horizontal commonality. It is true that real estate is an “investment” in the fundamental sense of an outlay intended to yield benefits over a substantial period of time, conventionally at least a year. The benefits can be pecuniary or nonpecuniary but the combination of the “flexible time” agreement with the “4-share” program converts the condominium owner’s investment, even if only temporarily, into a purely pecuniary investment, for the owner obtains no consumption value from his property when he is not occupying it. Even so, the optional character of the “flexible time” and “4-share” agreements makes it difficult to conceive of the sale of the condominium itself as the sale of a security,
Allison v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., supra,
It makes no difference that the rental received by the plaintiffs was not the rental of their own property, which was week 5 of “their” condominium unit. In effect they swapped week 5 for a subsequent week, then rented the subsequent week and received the rental (if there was any, for of course the developer might be unsuccessful in his effort to rent it). Still, they did not receive an undivided share of some pool of rentals or profits. They received the rental on a single apartment, albeit one not owned by them (for it was not their week).
There was a pooling of weeks, in a sense, because the plaintiffs selected their summer swap week from a “pool” of available weeks. But there was not a pooling of profits, which is essential to horizontal commonality. E.g.,
Milnarik v. M-S Commodities, Inc., supra,
We can imagine a case — perhaps
Adams v. Cavanagh Communities Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
