10-0720-cv(L)& 10-1147-cv
Bodansky et al. v. Fifth on the Park Condo et al. & Romero et al. v. Borden East River Realty LLC
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
_______________________________
August Term, 2010
(Argued in Tandem: January 10, 2011 Decided: March 15, 2011)
_______________________________
LOLA BODANSKY, MICHAEL SCHNEIDER, NICHOLAS DANELLIS,
DAVID BARSTOW, BRIAN R. SMITH, JOHN MCATEER, G. WILLIAM HUNTER,
ROBYN HUNTER, STEVE BERGEN, LYNNE SCHALMAN, POH L. ANG,
CAROLINA RODRIGUEZ, LING P. ANG, JKP, LLC, RICHARD D. MEADOW,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
Nos. 10-720-cv, 10-987-cv, 10-997-cv,
10-1014-cv, 10-1023-cv, 10-1047-cv,
10-1051-cv, 10-2270-cv
v.
FIFTH ON THE PARK CONDO, LLC, EYTAN BENYAMIN, ROBERT EZRAPOUR,
Defendants-Appellees.
_______________________________
DANIEL ROMERO, JOANN RAGUSA, WILLIAM LEE, SZUYU PAN, KYUNG YEOL
SHIN, LORA KAYE, JOHN GAENZLER, SARA MOSCOSO-GAENZLER, ANTHONY
ALLICINO, JULIE LIEVRE, DAVID LIEVRE, ZACK FERGUSON-STEGER,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
No. 10-1147-cv
v.
BORDEN EAST RIVER REALTY LLC,
Defendant-Appellee.*
_______________________________
*
The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the official caption in Case No. 10-1147-cv
to conform to the listing of the parties above.
POOLER, KATZMANN, and WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
_______________________________
Defendants-Appellees, developers or agents who sold uncompleted condominium units to
Plaintiffs-Appellants, claim that those sales are exempt from the disclosure requirements of the
Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1701-20, and therefore the
Plaintiffs-Appellants cannot revoke their contracts. In particular, Defendants-Appellees argue
that ILSA’s 100-lot exemption, id. § 1702(b)(1), is determined as of the date 100 or more
nonexempt lots in that subdivision have been or cannot be sold or leased. We disagree. Whether
a lot is exempt under the 100-lot exemption is determined as of the time a purchaser or lessee
signs a contract to purchase or lease that lot. Accordingly, the district courts’ judgments in the
tandem appeals are VACATED and the cases are REMANDED to the district courts from which
they were appealed.
Lawrence C. Weiner, Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer
P.A., Woodbridge, NJ, for Plaintiffs-Appellants
Lola Bodansky, Michael Schneider, Nicholas
Danellis, David Barstow, Brian R. Smith, John
Mcateer, G. William Hunter, Robyn Hunter, Steve
Bergen, Lynne Schalman, Poh L. Ang, Carolina
Rodriguez, Ling P. Ang, Daniel Romero, and Joann
Ragusa.
Paul J. Hanly, Hanly Conroy Bierstein Sheridan
Fisher & Hayes LLP, New York, NY, for Plaintiff-
Appellant JKP, LLC.
Evan Matthew Janush, The Lanier Law Firm,
PLLC, New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant
Richard D. Meadow.
Daniel A. Ross, Sandra J. Rampersaud, and Derek
I.A. Silverman, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP,
New York, NY, for Defendants-Appellees Fifth on
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the Park Condo, LLC, Eytan Benyamin, and Robert
Ezrapour.
Bruce H. Lederman, Brian T. Sampson, and Eric R.
Garcia, D’Agostino, Levine, Landesman &
Lederman, LLP, New York, NY, for Defendant-
Appellee Borden East River Realty LLC.
________________________________
POOLER, Circuit Judge:
This case requires us to determine the extent to which a federal consumer protection law,
the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1701-20, protects
individual buyers or lessees who purchase or lease lots in large, uncompleted housing
developments. Defendants-Appellees, developers or agents who sold condominium units to
Plaintiffs-Appellants, claim that those sales are exempt from the disclosure requirements of
ILSA, and therefore the Plaintiffs-Appellants cannot revoke their contracts. In particular,
Defendants-Appellees argue that ILSA’s 100-lot exemption, id. § 1702(b)(1), is determined as of
the date 100 or more nonexempt lots in that subdivision have been or cannot be sold or leased.
We disagree. Purchasers and lessees are entitled to know at the time of contract signing, or at a
statutorily-defined period thereafter, whether developers must provide them with a property
report disclosing information about the lot. Whether a lot is exempt under the 100-lot exemption
is determined as of the time a purchaser or lessee signs a contract to purchase or lease that lot.
The 100-lot exemption is not determined at an uncertain date in the future when the developer
actually sells or leases (or conclusively does not sell or lease) 100 or more nonexempt lots.
Accordingly, the district courts’ judgments in the tandem appeals are VACATED and the cases
are REMANDED to the district courts from which they were appealed.
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I.
A.
On April 5, 2007, Appellees Fifth on the Park Condo, LLC, Eytan Benyamin, and Robert
Ezrapour (collectively, “Fifth”) filed a New York State Offering Plan with the state attorney
general, indicating that they intended to offer for sale 160 residential condominium units at 1485
Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, across from Marcus Garvey Park.
From June 2007 to May 2008, the Bodansky plaintiffs1 signed contracts to purchase
residential units in Fifth’s condominium and paid deposits ranging from $28,085 to $167,520.
Before contract signing, Fifth provided the Bodansky plaintiffs with the most recent New York
State Offering Plan. Fifth concedes, however, that it did not file a statement of record for the
condominium with the U.S. Department of Housing and Development (“HUD”), did not provide
the Bodansky plaintiffs with a written property report before contract signing, and did not refer
to ILSA or its requirements in the contracts signed by the Bodansky plaintiffs.
Within two years of signing their contracts, the Bodansky plaintiffs sent letters to Fifth,
purporting to revoke and rescind their contracts under ILSA and demanding a refund of all
money paid to Fifth. Fifth refused to rescind the contracts or return their deposits. The
Bodansky plaintiffs then filed lawsuits against Fifth in the United Stated District Court for the
1
“The Bodansky plaintiffs” refers to Plaintiffs-Appellants Lola Bodansky, Michael
Schneider, Nicholas Danellis, David Barstow, Brian R. Smith, John Mcateer, G. William Hunter,
Robyn Hunter, Steve Bergen, Lynne Schalman, Poh L. Ang, Carolina Rodriguez, Ling P. Ang,
JKP, LLC, and Richard D. Meadow.
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Southern District of New York, seeking rescission of their contracts, return of their deposits,
interest, and attorneys’ fees and costs.
On September 10, 2009, Fifth received a Temporary Certificate of Occupancy (TCO) for
its condominium building. As of that date, 90 residential units in Fifth’s condominium were
subject to a contract of sale or had been sold.
On January 22, 2010, plaintiffs Bergen, Bodansky, and Schalman stipulated with Fifth
that their claims could be resolved in a bench trial on their written submissions. Pending
resolution of that lawsuit, the district court (Cote, J.) stayed the cases against Fifth that the other
Bodansky plaintiffs brought in the Southern District of New York.
On January 29, 2010, the district court held that Fifth is exempt from ILSA’s registration
and disclosure requirements. Specifically, the district court found that because Fifth had sold
fewer than 100 residential units before Fifth received a TCO, the remaining units qualified for
ILSA’s improved-lot exemption, and thus the Bodansky plaintiffs’ units qualified for ILSA’s
100-lot exemption. Therefore, the district court concluded that Fifth did not violate ILSA by
failing to provide the Bodansky plaintiffs with a property report before they signed their
purchase agreements. The district court specifically rejected the argument that ILSA’s 100-lot
exemption is determined as of the date a contract is signed to purchase or lease a lot. The district
court then dismissed Bodansky, Bergen, and Schalman’s claims and entered judgment for Fifth.
After issuing Orders to Show Cause why the cases brought by the other Bodansky
plaintiffs should not be dismissed, the district court dismissed those cases as well, citing its
Bodansky decision. The Bodansky plaintiffs timely appealed to this Court, arguing that the units
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they purchased were not exempt from ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements at the
time of their purchase.
B.
On September 11, 2007, Borden East River Realty LLC (“Borden”) filed a New York
State Offering plan with the state attorney general, indicating that it sought to sell 132 residential
units, 26 roof terrace units, and 25 parking space units. Borden sought to sell condominium
units in Hunters Point Condominium in Long Island City, New York. The Hunters Point project
was promoted together with a similarly-named project, Hunters View Condominium, sponsored
by 11/49 Condominium. On the same day the Hunters Point offering plan was filed, 11/49
Condominium filed a New York State Offering Plan for Hunters View with the state attorney
general, indicating that it sought to sell 73 residential units,2 15 roof terrace units, and 37 parking
space units.
From October 2007 to November 2008, the Romero plaintiffs3 signed agreements to
purchase uncompleted condominium units in Hunters Point and paid deposits ranging from
$49,462 to $96,530. Borden does not dispute that neither it nor 11/49 Condominium filed a
statement of record with HUD for Hunters Point or Hunters View. Nor does Borden dispute that
2
In Borden’s tenth amendment to its Hunters View offering plan, filed on or about
March 2008, the number of residential units offered was reduced to 72, as two formerly offered
units were combined into one unit.
3
“The Romero plaintiffs” refers to Plaintiffs-Appellants Daniel Romero, Joann Ragusa,
William Lee, Szuyu Pan, Kyung Yeol Shin, Lora Kaye, John Gaenzler, Sara Moscoso-Gaenzler,
Anthony Allicino, Julie Lievre, David Lievre, and Zack Ferguson-Steger.
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it did not provide the Romero plaintiffs with written property reports before contract signing and
did not refer to ILSA or its requirements in the contract signed by the Romero plaintiffs.
Within two years of signing their contracts, the Romero plaintiffs notified Borden that
they intended to rescind their contracts, alleging that Borden violated ILSA’s disclosure
requirements. Borden refused to rescind the Romero plaintiffs’ contracts or return their deposits.
The Romero plaintiffs then sued Borden in the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of New York.
On February 17, 2009, Borden received a Temporary Certificate of Occupancy (TCO) for
Hunters Point. At that time, 57 units were unsold and 75 had been sold, including one on the day
Borden received the TCO. On March 12, 2009, 11/49 Condominium received a TCO for
Hunters View. At that time, 47 units were unsold, two units were combined into a single unit,
and 25 units had been sold, including one to a purchaser who purportedly acquired it to resell or
lease.
On May 14, 2009, the district court (Ross, J.) ordered all pending ILSA matters against
Borden to be referred to her. In January 2010, the parties filed cross-motions for summary
judgment.
On July 15, 2009, HUD issued an advisory opinion finding the Hunters Point project was
not exempt under the Act because its parking units and rooftop units were “lots” under ILSA.
Two days later, on July 17, HUD issued another advisory opinion that did not include parking
units and rooftop units in the calculation and determined that Hunters Point was exempt under
ILSA. HUD did not explain its reasoning or the disparity between the advisory opinions.
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On March 12, 2010, the district court decided the parties’ cross-motions for summary
judgment. First, relying in part on Judge Cote’s opinion, the district court rejected the Romero
plaintiffs’ argument that the 100-lot exemption is determined at the time of contract signing for a
lot. Rather, the district court held that a developer qualifies for the 100-lot exemption until it
sells or leases 100 nonexempt lots. After aggregating the number of nonexempt units sold or
leased as part of a common promotional plan at Hunters Point and Hunters View, the district
court found that those projects had sold or leased only 98 nonexempt units by the time they
received TCOs. The district court found that the units not yet sold or leased at the time Hunters
Point and Hunters View received TCOs qualified for ILSA’s improved-lot exemption. Thus, the
district court held that both projects were exempt from ILSA’s registration and disclosure
requirements and granted Borden’s motion for summary judgment. The Romero plaintiffs
timely appealed.
C.
Fifth and Borden do not dispute that (1) they did not provide Plaintiffs-Appellants with
printed property reports in advance of signing; and (2) the condominium units purchased by
Plaintiffs-Appellants are “lots” in a “subdivision” under ILSA. Nor do Fifth and Borden
challenge the timeliness of Plaintiffs-Appellants’ notices of revocation. Rather, the parties
principally dispute whether ILSA’s 100-lot exemption applies to the condominium lots at issue.
Plaintiffs-Appellants argue that the exemption is determined as of the time of contract signing,
and argue that at those times, Fifth and Borden’s projects contained 100 or more nonexempt lots.
Fifth and Borden seek to uphold the district courts’ judgments, arguing that the 100-lot
exemption applies until a developer in fact sells or leases 100 or more nonexempt lots.
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II.
A.
In the 1960s, Congress held numerous hearings regarding the unscrupulous marketing
and sale of undeveloped subdivided land, often sight-unseen, to investors in faraway states. As
two contemporary scholars noted, “[t]he testimony laid bare an industry, ambitious and
adolescent, actively engaged in marketing raw and semideveloped subdivided land to the ‘sunset
set’ by means of the mails, magazines, newspapers, and personal or telephone solicitations.”
Ronald J. Coffey & James d’A. Welch, Federal Regulation of Land Sales: Full Disclosure
Comes Down to Earth, 21 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 5, 6 (1969-70) (footnotes omitted) (hereinafter
“Coffey et al., Full Disclosure”). “Untold thousands were being flimflammed into purchasing
parcels which could not be inhabited without serious threat of death from either thirst or
drowning.” Id.
The most uncertain and risky sales, in terms of future development and use, were of large
tracts of subdivided, undeveloped land. Id. at 7-8. Some such land was inhabitable, and other
such land, though possibly habitable, would require an enormous investment by the developer
and local government to make it so. Id. Moreover, developers’ use of sight-unseen sales tactics,
including mailings, telephone calls, and sales parties, provided ready opportunities for fraud. Id.
at 8. Often, the developers’ representations veiled the nature of the land, and the developers’
control over the “legal technicalities” of the sale “shrouded” the quality of title. Id.
Existing laws, although able to deter and punish some abuses, were seen as deficient in
critical respects. The mail fraud statutes, for example, did not reach common sales tactics not
using the mail, and because considerable investigation was required to build a case for fraud,
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“the transgressing promoter [could] strew a great deal of wreckage in his path before he is
brought up short.” Id. at 11. Some policymakers proposed to treat interstate subdivided land
sales as transactions subject to existing securities laws. Id. at 12-13. For installment lot
transactions, where the purchaser did not take title or possession of the property until it made the
final installment payment, the developer essentially sold “a debt instrument coupled with a
specious commitment to repay by means of specific property.” Id. at 13. While there was some
logic to this approach, two former chairs of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
suggested that many real estate transactions would not fall within existing securities laws. Id. at
12.
In 1965, in response to the perceived abuses detailed in the hearings, Senator Harrison A.
Williams, Jr. introduced a bill that required full disclosure to buyers of subdivided land.
Williams’s bill, “to the amusement of some and the chagrin of others, was simply a truncated
version of the Securities Act of 1933, adapted for application to the sale of lots.” Id. at 19; see
also 111 Cong. Rec. 27,310, 27,312 (1965) (“Explanation of S. 2672: This bill is based on the
Securities Act of 1933 and many of its sections are identical to those in the 1933 act.”). “The
bill provided two basic levels of protection: first, liberalized fraud remedies; and second, a
requirement for full disclosure (by way of registration and use of a prospectus).” Coffey et al.,
Full Disclosure, at 19. In 1967, Williams reintroduced the bill, with some minor changes (such
as changing the terms “registration statement,” “prospectus,” and “investor” in various sections
of the bill to “statement of record,” “property report,” and “purchaser,” respectively), 113 Cong.
Rec. 315, 323-24 (1967), although “the motif was still Securities Act, vintage 1933,” Coffey et
al., Full Disclosure, at 19.
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In 1968, Congress passed an amended version of Williams’ bill, now the Interstate Land
Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSA”). Pub. L. 90-448, 82 Stat. 476 (1968). Its striking
resemblance to the Securities Act of 1933 remained intact. See Flint Ridge Dev. Co. v. Scenic
Rivers Ass’n of Oklahoma, 426 U.S. 776, 778 (1976) (“[ILSA] is based on the full disclosure
provisions and philosophy of the Securities Act of 1933, which it resembles in many respects.”
(citation omitted)). ILSA, as enacted in 1968, exempted from its requirements subdivisions
smaller than 50 lots. Pub. L. 90-448, § 1403(a)(1), 82 Stat. 476, 590 (1968).
In 1979, Congress considered amending ILSA. The House Committee on Banking,
Finance and Urban Affairs reported that “the registration and disclosure procedures required by
the Act” and HUD’s enforcement activities “have succeeded in changing industry practices.”
H.R. Rep. No. 96-154, at 30 (1979), reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2317, 2346. However, the
Committee also found that “problems continue as a result of the failure of developers to
complete promised amenities, the use of the installment sales contract and the brief statute of
limitations.” Id. In addition, the Committee found that “small businessmen and persons who
sell occasional lots from a larger inventory of land have been subjected to extensive regulatory
requirements.” Id. In response, the Committee suggested amendments designed to “balance the
consumer’s need for adequate protections and remedies with the small businessman’s concern
with over-regulation.” Id. In addition to providing “improved remedies to assist defrauded
consumers,” the Committee proposed to add “several exemptions and a state certification
procedure.” Id. at 31.
Notably, the Committee proposed to exempt subdivisions smaller than 100 lots from the
registration and disclosure provisions of ILSA. Id. at 31. On December 21, 1979, Congress
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passed a slightly altered version of the House Committee’s recommended amendments,
including the exemption of subdivisions of less than 100 lots. Housing and Community
Development Amendments of 1979, Pub. L. 96-153, 93 Stat. 1101 (1979).
B.
ILSA has changed little since 1979. The Act requires developers to submit “a statement
of record” to HUD, and wait until such statement is “in effect” (at most 30 days, unless the
statement is incomplete or inaccurate) before selling or leasing any nonexempt lot. 15 U.S.C.
§ 1703(a)(1)(A). In addition, with respect to nonexempt lots, it is unlawful:
to sell or lease any lot unless a printed property report . . . has been
furnished to the purchaser or lessee in advance of the signing of
any contract or agreement by such purchaser or lessee . . . .
Id. § 1703(a)(1)(B). If a developer or agent sells or leases a nonexempt lot in violation of this
disclosure provision, Congress provided that:
such contract or agreement may be revoked at the option of the
purchaser or lessee within two years from the date of such signing
....
Id. § 1703(c). Aside from the requirement that the purchaser revoke within 2 years of signing
and bring suit (if necessary) within 3 years of signing, Congress provided no statutory
affirmative defenses in favor of the developer. Congress gave the purchaser an exclusive option
to exercise her right to void the contract, upon showing that she signed the contract before
receiving a property report.
However, ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements do not apply to all lots sold or
leased. ILSA provides exemptions from the registration and disclosure sections of the Act, id.
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§ 1702(b), and from all parts of the Act (including the fraud provisions), id. § 1702(a). The 100-
lot exemption, at issue in this case, exempts from ILSA’s registration and disclosure
requirements:
the sale or lease of lots in a subdivision containing fewer than
one hundred lots which are not exempt under subsection (a) of this
section . . .
15 U.S.C. § 1702(b)(1). This provision explicitly allows a developer to combine the 100-lot
partial exemption with the full exemptions in Section 1702(a). A full exemption relevant here is
the improved land exemption, which exempts from ILSA:
the sale or lease of any improved land on which there is a
residential, commercial, condominium, or industrial building . . . .
15 U.S.C. § 1702(a)(2).
That is, if some lots in a subdivision qualify for the improved land exemption, and the
remaining number of nonexempt lots in the subdivision is less than 100, then ILSA’s registration
and disclosure provisions do not apply to the sale or lease of a lot in the subdivision. Here,
defendants acknowledge that plaintiffs purchased their lots before those lots could be considered
“improved land on which there is a residential, commercial, condominium, or industrial
building.” 15 U.S.C. § 1702(a)(2). Therefore, if plaintiffs’ lots are to be exempt under ILSA,
enough non-plaintiff lots must have qualified for the improved lot exemption so that the
subdivision contained fewer than 100 nonexempt lots. The parties do not dispute this
conclusion. Rather, they disagree about when to determine a lot’s eligibility for the 100-lot
exemption – and thus when a purchaser learns whether the developer was obligated to provide a
property report in advance of contract signing.
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III.
A.
Both district courts below determined that ILSA’s 100-lot exemption is determined not at
the time of contract signing for a lot, but at some point in the future, when a developer in fact
sells one hundred or more non-exempt units. Bodansky v. Fifth on the Park Condo, LLC, 732 F.
Supp. 2d 281, 290 (S.D.N.Y. 2010); Romero v. Borden East R. Realty LLC, No. 09-cv-665, 2010
WL 5758981, at *6 (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 12, 2010). As a pure question of statutory interpretation, we
review this decision de novo. See Harris v. City of New York, 607 F.3d 18, 21 (2d Cir. 2010).
Because HUD is charged with administrating ILSA, 15 U.S.C. § 1715, it has authority to
issue appropriate regulations regarding ILSA, id. § 1718, and has indeed promulgated
regulations regarding ILSA, 24 C.F.R. §§ 1710.1-1710.559, we first determine “whether
Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue,” Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842 (1984). If so, “that is the end of the matter” because
this Court “must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.” Chevron, 467
U.S. at 842-43.
1.
Pursuant to the 100-lot exemption, ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements do
not apply to “the sale or lease of lots in a subdivision containing fewer than one hundred lots”
that are not exempt under Section 1702(a). 15 U.S.C. § 1702(b)(1). Significantly, ILSA defines
“subdivision” as:
any land which . . . is divided or is proposed to be divided into lots
. . . for the purpose of sale or lease as part of a common
promotional plan . . . .
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Id. § 1701(3). In turn, “common promotional plan” is defined as:
a plan, undertaken by a single developer or a group of developers
acting in concert, to offer lots for sale or lease . . . .
Id. § 1701(4).
The 100-lot exemption can be usefully rephrased using the above definitions provided by
Congress. The sale or lease of a lot from land that, for the purpose of a common plan to offer
lots for sale or lease, (1) is divided or is proposed to be divided into lots and (2) contains fewer
than 100 nonexempt lots, is exempt from ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements.
That is, ILSA’s 100-lot exemption is determined as of the time of “the sale or lease” of
the lot. Id. § 1702(b)(1). At that time, it can be determined whether the subdivision – the land
the developer divided or proposed to divide into lots – contains fewer than 100 lots. If the lot is
part of “land which . . . is proposed to be divided into lots . . . for the purpose of sale or lease as
part of a common promotional plan,” and that proposed land division contains 100 or more lots
that are not exempt under Section 1702(a), then the purchased or leased lot is not exempt and a
property report was required to be provided “in advance of the signing.” Id. §§ 1701(3),
1702(b)(1), 1703(a)(1)(B).
In the context of ILSA’s 100-lot exemption, “the sale or lease” of a lot occurs on the date
of signing a contract or agreement to purchase or lease the lot. See, e.g., Markowitz v. Northeast
Land Co., 906 F.2d 100, 104 (3d Cir. 1990); Yeomans v. Le Triomphe P’ship, 884 F.2d 847, 848-
49 (5th Cir. 1989); Winter v. Hollingsworth Props., Inc., 777 F.2d 1444, 1449 (11th Cir. 1985);
Aldrich v. McCulloch Props., Inc., 627 F.2d 1036, 1043-44 (10th Cir. 1980). The interlocking
protections Congress provided in ILSA offer purchasers the ability to make an informed decision
at the time they sign a contract to purchase or lease a lot. ILSA provides that the purchaser of a
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nonexempt lot must receive a property report “in advance of the signing” of a contract, 15 U.S.C.
§ 1703(a)(1)(B), may revoke the contract “within two years from the date of such signing,” id.
§ 1703(c), and may bring suit for failure to timely receive a property report within “three years
after the date of signing of the contract of sale or lease,” id. § 1711(a)(1). Although we find
ILSA unambiguous in this regard, we note that HUD’s regulations are in accord with our
interpretation of “sale or lease,” which the regulations define as “any obligation or arrangement
for consideration to purchase or lease a lot directly or indirectly.” 24 C.F.R. § 1710.1(b).
2.
Contrary to Defendants-Appellees’ arguments, ILSA nowhere suggests that purchasers
must wait some unknown length of time – perhaps years – until they learn whether the lot they
purchased was exempt under ILSA’s 100-lot exemption – and thus learn that they had no right to
receive a property report and cannot revoke their contract.
First, the revocation right under Section 1703(c) runs for 2 years from the date of contract
signing. The possibility of revocation would be of limited value to purchasers if they had to wait
an indefinite length of time to learn whether they could revoke. We do not believe that Congress
enacted this consumer protection statute intending that when the statute was violated a diligent
injured party could not timely invoke the statute’s remedies. Rather, the text of ILSA suggests
that a purchaser would be able to determine, on the date of contract signing, whether she could
revoke her contract because the 100-lot exemption did not apply.
Second, ILSA’s statute of limitations provisions shows that the 100-lot exemption is
determined at signing, and not after an event that happens at an indefinite point thereafter. In
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particular, Congress provided two different statutes of limitations, depending on the type of
claim.
ILSA provides a statute of limitations of “three years after the date of signing of the
contract” for claims of, inter alia, selling or leasing a lot (1) without an effective statement of
record; (2) without delivering a property report prior to contract signing; or (3) where the
property report or statement of record contains an untrue statement of material fact or omits a
material fact. 15 U.S.C. § 1711(a)(1), (b).
In contrast, the statute of limitations is “three years after discovery of the violation or
after discovery should have been made by the exercise of reasonable diligence” for claims that,
inter alia, a developer or agent (1) employed a device, scheme, or artifice to defraud; (2)
obtained money by means of an untrue statement of material fact or an omission of a material
fact; or (3) engaged in a transaction, practice, or course of business that would operate as a fraud
or deceit. Id. § 1711(a)(2).
In these provisions, Congress required that claims that could be discovered at signing or
soon thereafter be brought within 3 years of signing. Id. § 1711(a)(1), (b). For claims that arose
at an indefinite point in the future, Congress required that they be brought within 3 years after
discovery of the violation or after discovery should have been made by the exercise of
reasonable diligence. 15 U.S.C. § 1711; see also H.R. Conf. Rep. 96-706, at 88 (1979),
reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2402, 2447 (summarizing provision now located at 15 U.S.C. §
1711). Determining at contract signing whether the 100-lot exemption applies to a purchased or
leased lot allows the purchaser or lessee to learn soon after signing whether she may revoke her
contract if she did not receive a property report in advance of signing. Such timing is most
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consistent with the text of the exemption and with ILSA’s 2-year revocation provision and 3-
year statute of limitations.
In sum, neither ILSA’s Section 1703(c) revocation provision nor its statute of limitations
provision suggest that purchasers must wait an indefinite period after signing to determine
whether the developer was required to provide a property report in advance of their purchase or
lease of the lot.
3.
The parties dispute the impact of another ILSA provision, the twelve-month exemption.
This partial exemption provides that ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements do not
apply to:
the sale or lease of lots in a subdivision if, within the twelve-month
period commencing on the date of the first sale or lease of a lot in
such subdivision after the effective date of this subsection, or on
such other date within that twelve-month period as the Secretary
may prescribe, not more than twelve lots are sold or leased, and the
sale or lease of the first twelve lots in such subdivision in any
subsequent twelve-month period, if not more than twelve lots have
been sold or leased in any preceding twelve-month period after the
effective date of this subsection . . . .
15 U.S.C. § 1702(b)(2).
That is, under ILSA’s twelve-month exemption, a purchased or leased lot is exempt if 12
or fewer lots in the subdivision “are sold or leased” in a specified twelve-month period, and not
more than 12 lots were “sold or leased” in a previous twelve-month period. 15 U.S.C.
§ 1702(b)(2). This provision allows a developer that is gradually selling a dozen or fewer lots
per year in a subdivision to avoid ILSA’s registration and disclosure requirements.
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Fifth and Borden argue that this exemption shows that the district courts below, in
determining whether a purchased or leased lot was exempt, correctly focused on the sale or lease
of other lots in the subdivision. The twelve-month exemption clearly provides that a purchased
or leased lot’s exemption from ILSA depends on whether (and to what extent) other lots in the
subdivision were “sold or leased.” In contrast, the 100-lot exemption includes no such language.
The exemption is satisfied when the purchased or leased lot was in a subdivision “containing”
less than 100 nonexempt lots. If the purchased or leased lot is not exempt at contract signing, it
will not be made exempt under the 100-lot exemption by the later sale or lease of other lots in
the subdivision.
Although the twelve-month exemption exempts a purchased or leased lot based on sales
or leases of other lots in the subdivision, Congress strictly limited the scope of the other relevant
sales to a twelve-month period. This is well within the 2-year revocation period under Section
1703(c). With this explicit limitation, the twelve-month exemption allows every purchaser and
lessee to learn, with enough time to exercise her right of revocation, whether her purchased or
leased lot is exempt. The 100-lot exemption, by contrast, contains neither this explicit limitation,
nor does it explicitly depend on future sales or leases of other lots in the subdivision.
We decline to equate the twelve-month exemption with the 100-lot exemption. In the
same year and with the same legislation, Congress amended ILSA to include both exemptions.
Housing and Community Development Amendments of 1979, Pub. L. 96-153, § 402, 93 Stat.
1101, 1123-24 (1979). Congress did so with different language appropriate for different aims,
and we must give effect to Congress’s unambiguously expressed intent. The twelve-month
exemption exempts a lot sold or leased during a trickle of lot sales or leases in a subdivision.
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Aware of the risks presented by quick sales of large numbers of unimproved lots, Congress
provided that the exemption for a slow seller of a few lots would be determined within twelve
months of contract signing. In contrast, the 100-lot exemption exempts a lot sold or leased when
the proposed land division contains a relatively small number of lots. Congress determined that
a purchaser has a greater need for disclosure when she buys or leases a lot in a subdivision
containing a large number of unimproved lots. Although the other lots may someday be sold or
leased and improved, Congress required a property report “in advance of the signing” and
provided a revocation right that began on “the date of such signing.” 15 U.S.C. § 1703(a)(1)(B),
(c). As the text of ILSA indicates, Congress also required the 100-lot exemption to be
determined as of the date of signing. Id. § 1702(b)(1).
For substantially similar reasons, the Dictionary Act does not compel a different result.
The Act provides that “[i]n determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, unless the context
indicates otherwise . . . words used in the present tense include the future as well as the present.”
1 U.S.C. § 1 (emphasis added); see Rowland v. Cal. Men’s Colony, Unit II Men’s Advisory
Council, 506 U.S. 194, 199-200 (1993). Here, incorporation of the future tense into the 100-lot
exemption, as urged by Defendants-Appellees, runs contrary to ILSA’s revocation and statute of
limitations provisions. In short, the definition supplied by 1 U.S.C. § 1 does not fit within this
statutory scheme. See Rowland, 506 U.S. at 200. Consequently, this argument is rejected.
4.
In sum, the text of ILSA unambiguously provides that the 100-lot exemption is
determined as of the date a purchaser signs a contract or agreement to purchase or lease a lot.
Because “Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue,” we need not determine
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the level of deference, if any, to provide HUD’s interpretations of ILSA’s 100-lot exemption, as
stated in HUD’s regulations, interpretive guidelines, and advisory letters. Chevron, 467 U.S. at
842.
IV.
Borden requests that we “apply basic concepts of equitable jurisprudence” to deny relief
to Plaintiffs-Appellants. Def.-Appellee’s Br. 60. Borden argues that Plaintiffs-Appellants have
“buyer’s remorse” and “are in no way, shape or form the types of purchasers which ILSA was
enacted to protect in the first place.” Id. at 62-63. Borden proposes that “equity should not aid
people who under such circumstances [of changes in the economy] make no allegations of
fraud.” Id. at 64.
We decline Borden’s request. The statutory text enacted by Congress is clear and
unambiguous. Congress enacted a registration and disclosure scheme for certain interstate land
sales – modeled on the Securities Act of 1933 – and provided that if a developer violated the
disclosure requirement, then the purchaser could revoke the agreement within 2 years of contract
signing. Pointedly, Congress gave purchasers an exclusive right to revoke and did not provide
for affirmative defenses other than the revocation and limitations periods. To the extent Borden
questions the wisdom of Congress’s statutory scheme, we note that Congress enacted a strict-
liability revocation provision to (1) ensure that registration and disclosure in fact occurs, (2) limit
the costly oversight of federal agencies into an activity traditionally regulated by state and local
governments, and (3) allow unsophisticated purchasers to enforce their rights. Congress passed
ILSA at a time when mail fraud statutes and common law fraud doctrines appeared ineffective to
check the abuses in the land sales industry, in part because both required plaintiffs to show
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reliance and quantify damages as a result of a developer’s material misrepresentation or
omission. Borden, by seeking to graft such a requirement onto ILSA, would disregard a key
reason Congress enacted ILSA.
We note, however, that we are not unsympathetic to Defendants’ claims that developers
could be burdened by two sets of disclosure regulations for condominium sales. State disclosure
laws and regulations could substantially overlap with ILSA’s disclosure requirements, without
providing additional protection for consumers. However, Congress was aware of such a
possibility and explicitly provided a solution, allowing states to request HUD to certify that the
state’s disclosure requirements are “at least substantially equivalent” to ILSA’s disclosure
requirements or otherwise “provide sufficient protection for purchasers and lessees” with respect
to such matters. 15 U.S.C. § 1708(a); see also 24 C.F.R. § 1710.500(a) (“The purpose of State
Certification is to lessen the administrative burden on the individual developer, arising where
there are duplicative state and federal registration and disclosure requirements, without affecting
the level of protection given to the individual purchaser or lessee.”). If a state is certified under
Section 1708 of ILSA, a developer selling or leasing nonexempt lots in that state could use the
required state disclosures to fulfill ILSA’s statement of record and property report requirements
for those sales or leases. 15 U.S.C. § 1708(b). In sum, to the extent that ILSA and state-law
registration and disclosure requirements are duplicative, Congress provided a solution in Section
1708 of ILSA. To the extent that Defendants still have concerns, their recourse is to Congress,
not to this Court, which is bound to adhere to the meaning of an unambiguous statute.
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V.
We hold that under ILSA, a lot’s eligibility for the 100-lot exemption is determined as of
the time a purchaser or lessee signs a contract to purchase or lease that lot. Absent a clear and
undisputed record, we allow the fact finders below to make the necessary factual determinations
in the first instance.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district courts’ judgments in the tandem appeals are
VACATED and the cases are REMANDED to the district courts from which they were
appealed.
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