ALLINGTON TOWERS CONDOMINIUM NORTH, INC., Appellant,
v.
ALLINGTON TOWERS NORTH, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*119 Judith A. Bass and Sharon B. Jacobs of Simons, Schindler & Tripp, P.A., Miami, for appellant.
Alvin Capp of Capp, Reinstein, Kopelowitz & Atlas, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
The defendant below appeals from an order granting the plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment as to liability in a slander of title action.
Allington Towers Condominium North, Inc., a condominium association, upon advice of counsel filed a claim of lien against unsold condominium units for alleged building defects. Allington Towers North, Inc., the developer, then filed a complaint against the association seeking removal of the lien and damages for slander of title resulting from the allegedly improper claim of lien. The developer alleged that the association maliciously filed an improper claim of lien which disparaged its title to the unsold condominium units, thereby causing actual damage. The association, in its answer, asserted a good faith defense to the slander of title claim.
The trial court granted the developer's motion for partial summary judgment as to the removal of the lien. This court then affirmed that order. Allington Towers Condominium North, Inc. v. Seidler,
Subsequently, the developer filed a motion for partial summary judgment determining liability with respect to the slander of title claim. The trial court found that the association is liable to the developer for slander of title. Accordingly, the court granted the developer's motion. This appeal followed.
The association asserts that summary judgment was improper due to issues of material fact as to the association's malicious intent in filing the claim of lien. The developer, however, contends that actual malice is not an essential element of a cause of action for slander of title. The developer argues that liability exists where a party:
(a) communicates to a third person;
(b) a statement disparaging title;
(c) which statement is untrue; and
(d) causes actual damage.
Lehman v. Goldin,
We hold that the association's affirmative defense of good faith creates a factual dispute as to the malicious intent element of a cause of action for slander of title. See Crabtree v. Rogers,
A rival claimant to the property disparaged, in his capacity as such, is recognized as privileged to assert a bona fide claim by any appropriate means of publication ... The privilege is uniformly held, however, to be a qualified one, and it is *120 defeated if the defendant's motive is shown to be solely a desire to do harm, or if it is found that he did not honestly believe his statements to be true, or that the publication of the statement was excessive. A few cases have gone further and have said that he must have reasonable grounds for believing his disparaging words to be the truth; but the better view, which is now more generally accepted, is that a genuine belief in their truth is sufficient, however unfounded or unreasonable it may be. The absence of probable cause for the belief may permit the jury to infer that it does not exist, but it is not necessarily conclusive; and the advice of counsel, while it is evidence in favor of good faith, is likewise not determinative in itself. When it appears that a privilege exists, the burden is upon the plaintiff to establish the existence of the "malice" which will defeat it. (Footnotes omitted.)
Accordingly, the pleadings in the present case create an issue of material fact as to the existence of malice which could defeat the qualified privilege of a rival claimant to the property. This factual dispute cannot be resolved on summary judgment. Crabtree v. Rogers, supra; Bruce v. Turnbull,
We, therefore, reverse the partial summary judgment on the issue of liability.
GLICKSTEIN, HURLEY and DELL, JJ., concur.
