In a market-based economy the price of housing, like other goods, is subject to swings. There was a sharp upward swing in housing prices between late 2000 and the end of 2005, and the resulting bubble was bigger in Florida than it was in most other states. Home prices there rose eighty-two percent in absolute terms during that short period, outstripping the national increase by thirty-one percent. See Gabriel Montes Rojas et al., The Florida Housing Boom, 3 Fla. Focus 1, 2 (2007). All bubbles eventually burst, as this one did. The bigger the bubble, the bigger the pop. The bigger the pop, the bigger the losses. And the bigger the losses, the more likely litigation will ensue. Hence this case.
I.
On March 9, 2005, Alan and Karen Stein signed a contract with Paradigm Mirasol, LLC to purchase for $895,900 a condominium unit in Mirasol I, a six-story condominium building that was being developed in a luxury resort community near Fort Myers, Florida. The Steins made a down payment of $205,370, which included a deposit of $179,180 and an additional payment of $26,190 for upgrades. The contract specified that time was of the essence and that the condominium would be built within two years, although the contract included a force majeure provision that allowed for delays under certain circumstances. The contract also specifically waived the Steins’ right to speculative, punitive, and special damages. As a result, if Paradigm breaehed the contract the remedies available to the Steins were limited; they could choose specific performance or they could get back their deposit with interest and any actual damages.
After the housing bubble burst, the Steins had second thoughts about their decision to purchase the condominium unit. Wanting out of their contract, they seized on to the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq., a federal statute that has become an increasingly popular means of channeling buyer’s remorse into a legal defense to a breach of contract claim. On January 16, 2007, just three weeks before the condominium was completed, the Steins gave Paradigm written notice that they were terminating the contract because Paradigm had failed to provide them with a property report as required by the Disclosure Act. The Steins also demanded that Paradigm return all of the $205,370 they had paid. Paradigm refused, contending that the contract between the parties fits within the exemption set out in the Act for “the sale or lease of any improved land on which there is a residential, commercial, condominium, or industrial building, or the sale or lease of land under a contract obligating the seller or lessor to erect such a building thereon within a period of two years.” See 15 U.S.C. § 1702(a)(2).
Paradigm did complete construction of the condominium building and the Stein’s unit in two years, as it had contracted to do. On February 8, 2007, twenty-three months after the contract was signed, Paradigm provided the Steins with a notice of issuance of the Certificate of Occupancy. That same day, the Steins filed a complaint in district court, alleging that Paradigm *853 had violated the Disclosure Act and seeking to revoke the contract and to recover damages and attorney’s fees. 1 Undeterred, Paradigm attempted to schedule a closing date of February 20, 2007, which would have been within the two-year completion period. The Steins refused to close. Paradigm filed a counterclaim seeking to retain the Steins’ deposit as liquidated damages.
The parties agreed that the material facts were undisputed and filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Steins, allowing them to terminate the contract and requiring Paradigm to return all of the money the Steins had paid it. The court held that the contract’s force majeure clause fatally undermined Paradigm’s obligation to complete construction within two years because the scope of that clause extended beyond events the law would recognize as establishing impossibility of performance. Additionally, the court held that Paradigm could not claim the two-year completion exemption because the contractual provision barring special damages rendered Paradigm’s obligation to construct the condominium “illusory.” This is Paradigm’s appeal.
II.
This case turns on whether the contract is exempt from the requirements of the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 1702(a)(2). If, as the district court concluded, the contract is not exempt, the Steins are entitled to the judgment they received. If the contract is exempt, Paradigm is entitled to a judgment in its favor. With the judgment goes the money the Steins deposited with Paradigm.
The Disclosure Act is a consumer protection statute that “was intended to curb abuses accompanying interstate land sales.”
Winter v. Hollingsworth Props., Inc.,
The Disclosure Act does include a list of exemptions from its requirements. See id. § 1702(a). The one at the center of this case is the exemption that applies to “the sale or lease ... of land under a contract obligating the seller or lessor to erect ... a [condominium] building thereon within a period of two years.” Id. § 1702(a)(2). The dispute is over the meaning of the word “obligating.” The contract provided that Paradigm would complete construction of the Steins’ condominium within two years and Paradigm actually did so. But was the contract one “obligating” Paradigm to do so within the meaning of the exemption provision in § 1702(a)(2) of the Disclosure Act? That is the $64,000 question, or more accurately, the $205,370 question in this case.
*854
Deciding whether the contract in this case fits within the § 1702(a)(2) exemption requires that we look to both federal and state law. Because the Disclosure Act is a federal statute its interpretation is a matter of federal law,
Caley v. Gulfstream Aerospace Corp.,
We begin our federal law analysis by looking to the text of the Disclosure Act.
See Harris v. Garner,
The ordinary meaning of the word “obligating” is: binding by legal or moral duty. See Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com (last visited Sept. 30, 2009) (defining “obligate” as “to bind legally or morally” and “obligation” as “something one is bound to do”); American Heritage Dictionary 857 (2d College ed. 1982) (defining “obligate” as “[t]o bind, compel, or constrain by a social, legal, or moral tie”); Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://dictionary. oed.com (draft rev. 2009) (defining “obligate” as “[t]o bind (a person) morally” or “[t]o bind (a person) legally”); Random House Unabridged Dictionary 1336 (2d ed. 1993) (defining “obligate” as “to bind or oblige morally or legally”); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1103 (8th ed.2004) (defining “obligate” as “[t]o bind “by legal or moral duty”). 2 Federal statutes, generally speaking, concern themselves with legal instead of moral duties, and the Disclosure Act is no exception.
Given the context and the ordinary meaning of “obligating,” the § 1702(a)(2) exemption applies when a contract imposes a legal duty on the developer to perform his promise to construct the condominium or other building within two years. The nature and extent of the duty a contract imposes, however, is a matter of state contract law.
See Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. v. Am. Train Dispatchers Ass’n,
A.
If it appeared to the Steins that Paradigm was not going to complete construction within two years, they had available the remedy of specific performance to force Paradigm to live up to its agreement. Or, if the Steins preferred, they could have waited until it was too late for Paradigm to finish by the deadline. At that point their remedy would have been to rescind the contract, get their money back with interest, and recover any actual damages they had suffered. 3
The Steins contend that those remedies are not good enough to “obligate” Paradigm to construct the condominium in two years, as required by § 1702(a)(2) of the Disclosure Act. They argue that without the remedies of special, consequential, punitive, speculative, and indirect damages, which they expressly waived in the contract, they cannot inflict enough legal pain on Paradigm to force it to carry out its contractual duty to finish within two years.
Specific performance or injunctive relief, if vigorously pursued, ordinarily will be enough to force a seller to fulfill its contractual obligations within the time a contract requires. Florida law provides that a party may sue for specific performance and obtain an injunction that “shall specify the time within which the act shall be performed.” Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.570(c);
see also Wilson v. Sandstrom,
A court order requiring a party to perform as it promised or face civil and criminal contempt sanctions obligates the party to keep its contractual promise. The theory behind injunctive relief, after all, is that parties can be forced to take action that the law demands. Because Florida law provided the Steins with the remedy of injunctive relief to force Paradigm to finish construction of the condominium within two years, the contract was one “obligating” Paradigm to do so.
It might be argued that Paradigm could evade its obligation under the contract and thwart the specific performance remedy simply by conveying the property to another purchaser, as it would have had a special incentive to do if the market value of the property had gone up. It is true that injunctive relief is not available where the property is conveyed to another purchaser before the injunction issues.
See Samara Dev. Corp. v. Marlow,
As a result, even with the limitation of remedies clause, the Steins had an effective remedy to enforce Paradigm’s contractual promise to complete the construction of the condominium within two years. They could have obtained an injunction and brought to bear the threat of civil and criminal contempt if Paradigm was in the process of breaching by not working fast enough. Or if Paradigm had breached the contract by selling the property to another buyer, the Steins could have recouped the benefit of their bargain in the form of damages equal to the difference between *857 their contract price and the fair market value of the property. That is in addition to the return of their deposit with interest. Insofar as remedies are concerned, the law would have threatened or inflicted enough pain on Paradigm for breaching the contract to make the contract one “obligating the seller or lessor to erect such a building thereon within a period of two years” within the meaning of § 1702(a)(2). 5
B.
Alternatively, the Steins contend that even if the contract’s limitation of remedies clause does not take it out of the § 1702(a)(2) exemption, the force majeure clause does. That clause provides:
Construction of the condominium unit will be complete and ready for possession within two (2) years from the execution of this Purchase Agreement in compliance with the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act; provided, however, that Seller shall not be responsible for any delay caused by acts of God, weather conditions, restrictions imposed by any governmental agency, labor strikes, material shortages or other delays beyond the control of the Seller and the completion and occupancy date shall be extended accordingly.
(emphasis added).
The district court concluded that this force majeure clause rendered “the apparent obligation [to complete construction in two years] illusory.” As two examples of what could have happened, the court pointed to a Florida case where delay was excused under a similarly worded force majeure clause due to excessive rain and another one where the president of the development company’s heart attack was held to be beyond the control of the company for force majeure purposes.
See Devco Dev. Corp. v. Hooker Homes, Inc.,
*858
This
force majeure
clause covers events that may or may not happen, but whether they do is “beyond the control of the Seller.” This type of clause is not an opt-out provision; it is limited in scope.
See Gen. Injectables & Vaccines, Inc. v. Gates,
The two examples that concerned the district court do not concern us. Delays caused by excessive rainfall or by the seller suffering a heart attack are not within the seller’s control or subject to his whim. No seller can command the sky to open up and more rain to fall, and we are not aware of anyone deliberately inflicting a heart attack on himself to delay the performance of a contractual duty. The Disclosure Act is an anti-fraud statute.
See Winter,
*859 III.
We REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for judgment to be entered in favor of Paradigm.
Notes
. The complaint also alleged a state law claim for conversion based on Paradigm's refusal to return the deposits.
. Copies of the internet materials cited in this opinion are on file in the Clerk's Office. See 11th Cir. R. 36, I.O.P. 10.
. The remedies clause of the contract provided:
If, for any reason other than Seller's failure to make Seller's title marketable, Seller fails to perform this Agreement and Buyer is not in default of this Agreement, Buyer may seek specific performance or elect to terminate this Agreement by written notice to Seller, in which event the deposit shall be returned to Buyer upon demand, with any interest accrued thereon, and Buyer may commence an action to recover only actual and direct damages (out-of-pocket amounts actually paid by Buyer to third parties). Under no circumstances may Buyer seek or be entitled to recover any special, consequential, punitive, speculative or indirect damages, all of which Buyer specifically waives, from Seller for any breach by Seller of its obligation under this Agreement or any representation, warranty or covenant of Seller hereunder.
(emphasis added).
. Regardless of any breach by Paradigm, the Steins would not have been able to recover speculative or punitive damages. As the district court pointed out, however, under Florida law those types of damages are not recoverable for breach of contract anyway.
See A.R. Holland, Inc. v. Wendco Corp.,
. The Florida Supreme Court has interpreted the Disclosure Act differently than we do.
See Samara,
. Paradigm argues that the force majeure clause is limited to legal impossibility because “Florida law construes
force majeure
clauses to exclude only those delays that are excusable under the doctrine of impossibility.” To support that contention, Paradigm cites
Florida Power Corp. v. City of Tallahassee,
It appears to us that force majeure clauses broader than the scope of impossibility are enforceable under Florida law.
See Devco,
*858
. The HUD Guidelines state that "as a general rule delay or nonperformance must be based on grounds cognizable in contract law such as impossibility or frustration and on events which are beyond the seller's reasonable control.” Guidelines for Exemptions Available Under the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, 24 C.F.R. § 1710 appx. A, at A-2, available at www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/ramh/ils/ ilsexemp.cfm. They also say that "[cjontract provisions which allow for nonperformance or for delays for construction completion beyond the two-year period are acceptable if such provisions are legally recognized as defenses to contract actions in the jurisdiction where the building is being erected.” Id. The syntax of the first statement makes it ambiguous. Assuming it means what the second statement implies, the guidelines’ position is that force majeure clauses that go *859 beyond defenses the law already provides take a contract out of the § 1702(a)(2) exemption.
Because the HUD Guidelines are not “published regulations subject to the rigors of the Administrative Procedure Act, including public notice and comment,” they do not deserve full
Chevron
deference.
Reno v. Koray,
