Casa Clara Condominium Ass'n, Inc. v. Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc. Case Brief

Master Florida Supreme Court applied the economic loss rule to bar homeowners' tort claims against a concrete supplier where the defective concrete damaged only the homes themselves. with this comprehensive case brief.

Introduction

Casa Clara is a cornerstone Florida Supreme Court decision on the economic loss rule in products liability, especially in the construction context. The case addresses whether homeowners and condo associations may recover in tort from an upstream component supplier when a defective building material causes deterioration of the structure but no personal injury or damage to property other than the structure itself. The Court adopted and extended the integrated product approach, treating a finished home as the relevant product for economic loss analysis, thereby foreclosing tort recovery for disappointed commercial or quality expectations and pushing such disputes into the realm of contract and warranty.

For law students, Casa Clara is essential because it synthesizes Florida's adoption of the U.S. Supreme Court's East River doctrine, clarifies the "other property" exception, rejects a "sudden and calamitous" failure carveout, and reaffirms privity barriers to implied warranty for purely economic loss. Although Florida later narrowed the economic loss rule in Tiara Condominium Ass'n v. Marsh & McLennan (2013), Casa Clara remains controlling in products cases and a frequent exam minefield on drawing the tort–contract boundary in construction defect litigation.

Case Brief
Complete legal analysis of Casa Clara Condominium Ass'n, Inc. v. Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc.

Citation

620 So. 2d 1244 (Fla. 1993)

Facts

Condominium associations and individual homeowners in the Florida Keys sued Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc. (a concrete supplier), alleging that concrete supplied for construction of their homes and condominium buildings contained excessive chloride. The chloride allegedly corroded embedded steel reinforcement, leading to cracking, spalling, and deterioration of the concrete. Plaintiffs sought damages for repair and replacement costs, diminution in value, and loss of use—no personal injuries were alleged, and no damage to property other than the structures themselves was claimed. Plaintiffs asserted negligence, strict products liability, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of implied warranty against Toppino. There was no privity of contract between the plaintiffs and Toppino; Toppino sold concrete to the builders/developers. The trial court dismissed the claims under the economic loss rule. On review, the Florida Supreme Court was asked whether such tort and implied warranty claims may proceed when the only losses are economic and the defective component harmed only the completed structures into which it was incorporated.

Issue

Can homeowners and condominium associations recover in tort (negligence or strict liability) or on implied warranty against an upstream component supplier for purely economic losses where a defective product (concrete) damages only the completed structure of which it is a part and not other property?

Rule

Under Florida's economic loss rule, a party may not recover in tort (including negligence and strict products liability) for purely economic losses caused by a defective product where the product damages only itself and there is no personal injury or damage to other property. For purposes of the "other property" exception, the relevant product is the finished product purchased by the plaintiff; integrated components of that product are not "other property." Absent privity, a plaintiff generally cannot recover purely economic losses on a common-law implied warranty theory against a remote supplier.

Holding

No. The economic loss rule bars plaintiffs' negligence and strict liability claims because the defective concrete damaged only the structures themselves—the products the plaintiffs purchased—and not other property. The common-law implied warranty claim fails for lack of privity. The negligent misrepresentation claim likewise cannot proceed under these circumstances.

Reasoning

The Court began by defining economic loss as damages for inadequate value, costs of repair or replacement, and consequential commercial losses without accompanying personal injury or damage to other property. Citing Florida Power & Light Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp. and the U.S. Supreme Court's East River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc., the Court reaffirmed that tort law is aimed at safety—preventing personal injury and property damage—whereas contract and warranty law allocate the risk of product quality and performance. Allowing tort remedies for disappointed expectations would circumvent bargained-for risk allocation and privity limits. On the "other property" exception, the Court adopted the integrated product approach: the product is what the plaintiff purchased. These homeowners and associations purchased completed dwellings or condominium units, not sacks of concrete. Because the allegedly defective concrete injured only the buildings into which it was incorporated, the loss was to the product itself. Treating a component as separate "other property" would collapse the tort–contract boundary and expose remote suppliers to indeterminate tort liability for quality defects in finished goods. The Court rejected a proposed "sudden and calamitous" exception under which some courts permit tort recovery if the product fails dangerously, explaining that whether failure is sudden or gradual is immaterial if the only injury is to the product. As to implied warranty, Florida law generally requires privity to recover purely economic loss on common-law implied warranty theories against a remote manufacturer or supplier. Plaintiffs had no privity with Toppino; their remedies, if any, lay in contractual or statutory warranties running from their sellers or developers. Finally, negligent misrepresentation could not salvage the claims because the alleged misstatements were not independently actionable apart from the product defect and purely economic nature of the losses; nor did plaintiffs allege direct representations to, or reliance by, them. Accordingly, the Court reinstated dismissal of the complaint.

Significance

Casa Clara is the leading Florida case applying East River's economic loss doctrine to construction defects, making three enduring points: (1) the integrated product test defines the "product" as what the plaintiff purchased, so damage to a finished structure by a defective component is not damage to "other property"; (2) tort claims for product quality and performance are barred absent personal injury or other property damage; and (3) privity is required to recover purely economic loss on implied warranty from a remote supplier. Even after Tiara narrowed the economic loss rule to the products-liability context, Casa Clara continues to govern Florida products cases and is tested frequently for its precise articulation of the other-property analysis and the limits of tort in construction disputes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is the economic loss rule and how did Casa Clara apply it?

The economic loss rule bars tort recovery (e.g., negligence, strict liability) for purely economic losses—repair costs, replacement, diminished value, lost use—when a defective product harms only itself and causes no personal injury or damage to other property. Casa Clara applied this rule to hold that homeowners could not sue a concrete supplier in tort because the defective concrete damaged only the buildings (the products they purchased), not other property.

How does Casa Clara define the product and the 'other property' exception?

Casa Clara adopts the integrated product approach: the relevant product is the finished item purchased by the plaintiff. Integrated components (like concrete within a home) are part of that product, not 'other property.' Thus, damage to the home by defective concrete is damage to the product itself, and the 'other property' exception does not apply.

Did the Court allow any tort claim based on a 'sudden and calamitous' failure exception?

No. The Court rejected a 'sudden and calamitous' exception, reasoning that the manner of failure—sudden versus gradual—is irrelevant when the only damage is to the product. Tort duties in products cases are about safety; contract and warranty govern quality and performance.

Why did the implied warranty claim fail in Casa Clara?

Florida generally requires privity to recover purely economic loss on common-law implied warranty against a remote manufacturer or supplier. The homeowners and associations were not in privity with the concrete supplier, so their implied warranty claim failed. Their potential remedies lie with their sellers/builders or statutory warranties created by the Legislature.

What is the impact of Tiara Condominium Ass'n v. Marsh & McLennan on Casa Clara?

Tiara (2013) narrowed Florida's economic loss rule to the products-liability context, curbing its use in general contract disputes. Casa Clara, however, is a products case and remains good law on the integrated product analysis, the bar on tort recovery for purely economic loss in products cases, and the privity requirement for implied warranty against remote suppliers.

What practical remedies remain for homeowners after Casa Clara?

Homeowners typically must pursue contract and warranty remedies against their sellers, builders, or developers (including any applicable statutory warranties), seek assignments of rights against upstream parties, or assert code-based or statutory claims where available. Casa Clara signals that absent personal injury or other property damage, tort is not the vehicle to recover pure repair and replacement costs from remote product suppliers.

Conclusion

Casa Clara draws a firm line between tort and contract in Florida products cases: when a defective component causes only deterioration of the completed product the plaintiff purchased, the loss is economic and remedy lies in contract and warranty, not tort. By treating the completed home as the relevant product and rejecting both 'other property' arguments based on component parts and a 'sudden and calamitous' exception, the Court aligned Florida with East River and curtailed end runs around bargained-for risk allocation.

For law students and practitioners, the case provides a durable framework for analyzing construction defect disputes: identify the product the plaintiff purchased, ask whether there is personal injury or other property damage, and, if not, route claims through contract and warranty, minding privity. Even as Florida refined the economic loss doctrine in other contexts, Casa Clara remains a touchstone for products liability and construction litigation in the state.

Master More Torts (Products Liability) / Contracts (Economic Loss Rule) Cases with Briefly

Get AI-powered case briefs, practice questions, and study tools to excel in your law studies.

Share:

Need to cite this case?

Generate a perfectly formatted Bluebook citation in seconds.

Use our Bluebook Citation Generator →