HIGHLAND BEACH — A Highland Beach couple has filed a civil lawsuit in Palm Beach County Circuit Court against the condominium association that governs their oceanfront building, alleging the board retaliated against them after they reported a fellow board member to police, refused to accommodate an assistance dog, and enforced rules that discriminate against families with children.
|
Parker Highland East Condominium, the Palm Beach County building at the center of the civil lawsuit filed July 2, 2026 |
The complaint alleges that board member
Robert Grosso photographed the plaintiffs' minor daughter
and other children without parental knowledge or consent.
According to the lawsuit, Grosso later acknowledged to
Highland Beach Police that he had taken the photographs. The
complaint says the plaintiffs reported the incident to the
Highland Beach Police Department, and that an updated police
event report concluded their report was not a false one
because the conduct they described was confirmed.
The lawsuit alleges that on April 16, 2026, the
association's board of directors adopted a resolution
suspending the plaintiffs' common-element use rights for
three months. According to the complaint, the resolution
cited three grounds: "Unauthorized Pet in Restricted Common
Area," "Unsupervised Children in the Fitness Center," and
"Filing a False Police Report and Retaliatory Conduct."
According to the filing, the association later issued a
notice of trespass barring the family, guests, and invitees
from a broad list of common areas including the social room,
fitness center, pool, spa, beach access, lobby, elevators,
stairways, hallways, and parking areas. The complaint
alleges that suspending access to the elevators, stairways,
hallways, and parking areas is barred by Florida law, which
excludes those elements from any suspension of use rights.
The complaint brings eight counts. It alleges failure to
produce official records under Section 718.111(12), Florida
Statutes; unlawful retaliation under Section 718.1224(3);
breach of the condominium's governing documents and
selective enforcement under Section 718.303; and disability
discrimination and failure to make a reasonable
accommodation under the Florida Fair Housing Act and Palm
Beach County Ordinance 90-1. Two counts allege
familial-status discrimination targeting association rules
that require adult supervision of children under 16 in the
fitness room, common areas, and elevators. Two additional
counts allege failure to investigate a board member's
conduct and seek a declaratory judgment that the April 16
resolution and the trespass notice are unlawful and void.
The lawsuit states that on or about June 5, 2026, the
plaintiffs filed a housing discrimination complaint with the
Palm Beach County Office of Equal Opportunity, dual-filed
with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
under PBEO Case No. 2600215. The complaint states the
parties attended pre-suit mediation on June 10, 2026, as
required by Section 718.1255, Florida Statutes, and that the
mediation concluded at an impasse.
The plaintiffs are seeking an order restoring their
common-area use rights, an order requiring the association
to grant the reasonable accommodation for the assistance
animal, an order requiring the association to amend rules
that impose supervision requirements on children under 16,
actual and compensatory damages, statutory damages for the
records violation, and attorney's fees and costs.
The filing reviewed by Boca Post does not include a response
from the defendant. The claims are allegations that have not
been proven in court.
Boca Post reviewed the complaint, Barros et al. v. Parker
Highland East Condominium Association, Inc., [Case No.
502026CA007438XXXAMB], filed July 2, 2026, in the Fifteenth
Judicial Circuit in and for Palm Beach County. The case is
newly filed, a jury trial has been demanded, and no hearing
dates are listed in the reviewed filing.
Boca Post’s Palm Beach County Lawsuits coverage documents
recent civil complaints and court filings from communities
throughout the county.
