Bluegreen Vacations Unlimited, Inc. v. Timeshare Lawyers P.A., 2023 WL 7109914, No. 20-24681-Civ-Scola (S.D. Fla. Oct. 27, 2023)
Intro:
In this trial, the Court has learned
that tens of thousands of timeshare owners have been victimized twice: first by
the timeshare industry, which used false and misleading tactics to induce the
owners to purchase their timeshares —often financed with high-interest
mortgages; and second by the timeshare exit industry, which charged the owners
thousands of dollars and used false and misleading tactics to tortiously induce
them to breach their contracts with the timeshare companies, thus exposing them
to damaged credit.
Bluegreen sued a lot of entities, but only the marketing
defendants remained in the case: their role was “to advertise timeshare exit
services by promoting a legitimate process to exit timeshare contracts while
protecting the customers’ credit.” Bluegreen sued them for Lanham Act false
advertising, tortious interference, and violation of Florida’s Deceptive and
Unfair Trade Practices Act. Previously, the court granted partial summary
judgment in Bluegreen’s favor only for tortious interference as to 15 timeshare
owners (except for damages) and its FDUTPA injunctive relief claim. Bluegreen
elected to proceed only on its equitable claims, including requesting
disgorgement, and sought a bench trial. After trial, the court found in
Bluegreen’s favor and awarded $100,000 in disgorgement damages for the false
advertising.
The court began by recounting timeshare owners’ testimony
that Bluegreen lied to them and otherwise defrauded them, including by falsely
promising that owners could rent out timeshares for extra money. “Bluegreen
asked the Court to accept as credible the testimony of the timeshare owners
relating to misrepresentations made to them by Pandora, but to reject the same
owners’ testimony concerning misrepresentations made to them by Bluegreen. This
is simply not plausible.”
Meanwhile, defendants claimed to only accept timeshare
owners who were subjected to misrepresentations—but they also took the position
that this happens to every timeshare owner. (They might be closer to right than
wrong on this one, based on the cases.) When soliciting customers, defendants
made false claims part of the script—e.g., “we’re going to protect your
credit.” This was literally false and highly material to consumers; they
couldn’t guarantee credit protection, and customers testified that they experienced
negative credit effects after ceasing payment to Bluegreen. Indeed, the defendants
failed to introduce any evidence that they protected or repaired even a single
Bluegreen timeshare owner’s credit.
Likewise, the marketing defendants told potential customers
during that an attorney that Bluegreen owners separately retain would provide
them with an exit from their timeshare obligations. They touted attorney
involvement as key to their services. It was literally false to tell potential
customers that the attorneys would provide the exit, because the lawyers’ steps
were insufficient to do so. All the lawyers would do was send a C&D and a
demand letter; they wouldn’t litigate or arbitrate, and they couldn’t force
Bluegreen to act. Any “exit” came from default. Likewise, it was false to claim
that their process cancelled timeshare contracts “permanently and legally ....”
when the defendants “virtually never” delivered an “exit” to a Bluegreen Owner
except through default. In a particularly “yikes” bit, one marketing defendant
1990. In email correspondence with the Lawyer Defendants, a
Marketing Defendant employee stated “[p]lease know that we do not want [the
fact that the lawyers send only two letters] mentioned to clients. Whenever we
ask the firm to contact a client, we are doing so in hopes that the firm
reassures a client that they’re doing all that they can to help cancel, not
that they aren’t doing anything else on the file besides sending out two
letters…. less is more when it comes to clients ....” They kept doing it even
when they knew Bluegreen had a policy of not responding to these letters.
Customers also testified that attorney representation was
material to them, as were other false statements about defendants’ “perfect”
success rate, e.g., “we are consumer advocates, we’ve never lost a single case,
we have won [sometimes ‘resolved’] every case we’ve taken.” This was false
because they’d had to refund timeshare owners for failure to achieve an exit,
and there were other clients who still have active Bluegreen contracts. And
there were false statements that, once the attorney contacts the developer, the
owner is out or done with the timeshare, and can stop making payments. Numerous
owners testified that they stopped paying Bluegreen based on these
instructions, including statements that stopping payments would make the
attorneys’ process “faster,” “quicker,” or “easier.” (Here’s one script: “I
cannot tell you to stop making payment that would be unprofessional and
unethical. However, we have found that we are able to get you out quicker if
you do not make payments.”) This was false because the attorneys had nothing to
do with it: the default was the only thing that mattered.
Lanham Act specific analysis: did the telephone sales
presentations that were the “last stage” of the ad campaign, where the false
statements occurred, constitute “commercial advertising or promotion”? Yes. The
defendants use
a nationwide, multi-stage campaign
involving various dissemination methods, including Pandora’s website, in-person
presentations, and social media. The result of this comprehensive advertising
is the scheduling of timeshare owners to speak with an analyst who delivers the
sales presentation, an integral part of the multi-stage campaign. The sales
presentations were thus “part of an organized campaign to penetrate the
relevant market,” i.e., the market of timeshare owners seeking a release from
their timeshare obligations.
And the falsities were part of the scripts and other
training materials; audio recordings showed that they appeared “with
regularity.”
Bluegreen was also injured, and it didn’t need to prove as
much once it dropped its request for legal remedies. “The burden for
demonstrating causation under the Lanham Act is lower for equitable relief and
actual damages need not be proven.” Disgorgement of profits “is appropriate
where: (1) the defendant’s conduct was willful and deliberate, (2) the
defendant was unjustly enriched, or (3) it is necessary to deter future
conduct.” But disgorgement “shall constitute compensation and not a penalty.”
Equity also requires that the Court consider a plaintiff’s
unclean hands. This is relevant because the owners generally testified that
Bluegreen lied to them first. “But for Bluegreen’s wrongful conduct, owners
would not have sought out Pandora in an attempt to unburden themselves from a
lifetime of limitless and ever-increasing maintenance fees and years of
high-interest loan payments, totaling tens of thousands of dollars, in exchange
for illusory timeshare accommodations.”
But the defendants learned the ropes in the timeshare industry, “then
used their inside knowledge to victimize the owners a second time.”
There was evidence that Bluegreen owners paid over $1.5
million to the marketing defendants; defendants’ deductions were not reliable,
so the court found disgorgement of $100,000 to be appropriate based on
defendants’ and Bluegreen’s own conduct.
Tortious interference: that too.
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