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The Villages
Friday, March 29, 2024

Fruitland Park scores victory in ongoing lawsuit against owner of defunct BBQ eatery

The City of Fruitland Park has scored a victory in court against the owner of a defunct barbecue restaurant.

Fruitland Park Attorney Anita Geraci-Carver reported to Fruitland Park commissioners Thursday night that a Lake County judge recently threw out a request for summary judgment filed by the attorney for ex-restauranteur Timothy D. Burke, owner of Burke’s BBQ.

Fruitland Park filed suit against Burke this past September after he failed to follow through with a 2012 commitment to eventually hook up to the city’s water and sewer systems, install a fire hydrant at the restaurant, located at 311 County Road 466A, and pay significant impact fees. At the time, the initial source for fire protection at the restaurant was a hose running from a swimming pool at a house located next to the eatery.

In October, attorney Lindsay Holt, of Crawford, Modica & Holt, had requested that the lawsuit be tossed out because of what appeared to be a technicality. She claimed the suit wasn’t valid largely because the city’s beef was with Burke’s Bar-B-Que Co., not Burke himself. She claimed that Burke signed the document in his capacity as a shareholder/owner of the business, not as an individual.

Holt also asked the judge to dismiss the complaint with prejudice, which would have amounted to a final judgment and prevented the city from amending the suit. Holt said any attempt by the city to “overcome this deficiency” or amend the complaint “would be futile.”

On Thursday, Ceraci-Carver labeled the judge’s ruling a victory and said the suit will now proceed through the court system. She said she wasn’t sure when the next hearing would take place largely because courts are running behind in hearings amid the COVID-19 crisis.

The decision to file suit against Burke was led by Commissioner Patrick DeGrave, who lives in The Villages portion of the city. He said in June 2019 that it was a fundamental issue for him and had nothing to do with who owned the property.

“You signed an agreement, honor the agreement,” he said at an August 2019 commission meeting. “I think that’s the message the city has to send any property owner. You come in and make a deal with us, expect to live up to the deal.”

In July 2019, Burke’s BBQ announced on its Facebook page that the restaurant would be closing. It followed up with posts announcing a going-out-of-business sale where the public and other restaurant owners were invited to attend and purchase supplies and equipment that was still inside the building.

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