BIEL REO, LLC, Appellant, v. BAREFOOT COTTAGES DEVELOPMENT COMPANY LLC, A FLORIDA LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, CURTIS H. GWIN AND H. RAY SHOULTS, WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK, ET AL., Appellees.
CASE NO. 1D14-46
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
December 12, 2014
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
An appeal from the Circuit Court for Okaloosa County.
John T. Brown, Judge.
Craig S. Barnett of Greenberg Traurig P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for Appellant.
Louis K. Rosenbloum, Pensacola, James L. Dye, and David P. Healy, Tallahassee, H. Bart Fleet, and Whitney Leigh Smith, Shalimar, for Appellees.
OSTERHAUS, J.
This case involves proceedings supplementary to execution,
Curtis H. Gwin and H. Ray Shoults guaranteed a commercial loan from a bank to their development company for a project near Port St. Joe. Then within weeks of the company defaulting on the loan in 2008, Gwin and Shoults transferred millions of dollars into newly established irrevocable family trusts (“Family Trusts“). The Family Trusts named Gwin and Shoults as beneficiaries as co-tenants by the entirety with their wives. And their wives were named as the trustees. Later, after the bank obtained a $4.5 million judgment against Gwin and Shoults (“Debtors“) in 2010, appellant Biel Reo, LLC, the assignee of the judgment, initiated proceedings supplementary to satisfy the execution; and they impleaded the trustees. The Trustees—Appellee Rita C. Gwin, as Trustee of the Gwin Family Irrevocable Trust, and Appellee Marion Buckley Shoults, as Trustee of the Shoults Family Irrevocable Trust—moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted on the basis that Biel Reo‘s Family Trust-related claims were barred by laches and the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act‘s statute of limitations and could not otherwise survive. Biel Reo appealed.
We now reverse because proceedings supplementary may be initiated by a judgment holder for the life of the judgment, “[w]hen any person or entity holds an unsatisfied judgment or judgment lien” and files the requisite affidavit.
I.
A.
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo. See Volusia Cnty. v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P., 760 So. 2d 126, 130 (Fla. 2000). Summary judgment is appropriate only “if there is no genuine issue of material fact and if the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Id. (citing Menendez v. Palms West Condo. Ass‘n, 736 So. 2d 58 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999)).
B.
What is required for a judgment creditor to initiate proceedings supplementary to execution is to file a motion and an affidavit averring specific information about the judgment or judgment lien and the existence of an unsatisfied execution.
After initiation of proceedings supplementary, a judgment creditor may pursue assets held by the debtor,
[N]o rights of such third parties should be adjudged to be affected, impaired, or finally cut off . . . unless [they] have been first fully impleaded and brought into the case as actual parties to the proceeding, and, as such, given an opportunity to fully and fairly present their claims as parties[.]
Viney, 163 So. at 60; see also Pollizzi v. Paulshock, 52 So. 3d 786, 789 (Fla. 5th DCA 2010); Mejia v. Ruiz, 985 So. 2d at 1112-13.
II.
In 2012, Biel Reo initiated proceedings supplementary under
The problem we have with the Trustees’ statute of limitations argument is that it does not comport with the text of
That sets the machinery in motion which secures to him an examination of the defendant and, if the circumstances warrant it, of others who have been involved in gifts, transfers, or assignments of the defendant‘s property. Upon the information so obtained, the judge may order such property in the hands of the judgment debtor himself or others as the evidence justifies to be applied toward the satisfaction of the debt.
In Young, the Court linked the timeliness of initiating proceedings supplementary to “the period of efficacy of an execution,” concluding that proceedings supplementary could be brought for the twenty-year life of the judgment. Id. at 185-86.
The Trustees would have us apply a different statute of limitations for proceedings supplementary that involve fraudulent transfers under
Likewise in Ferre v. City Nat‘l Bank of Miami, 548 So. 2d 701 (Fla. 3d DCA 1989), the Third District rejected statute of limitations and laches arguments made by an impleaded spouse who received more than a million dollars from her debtor husband. Almost a dozen years had passed between the entry of judgment against the debtor and the initiation of proceedings supplementary, but the court looked to the life of the judgment:
The Supreme Court of Florida long ago indicated that an action to enforce a judgment involving fraudulent conveyances to a member of the judgment debtor‘s family, particularly when the judgment debtor continued to enjoy the benefits of the transferred asset, was viable for the life of the judgment. See Robinson v. The Springfield Co., 21 Fla. 203 (1885) and Isaacs v. Mulray, 112 Fla. 197, 150 So. 232 (1933).
Id. at 703-04 (emphasis added).
The cases cited by the Trustees do not compel the application of a different statute of limitations. Although the Trustees are correct that the manner of proving and defending fraudulent transfer claims under
III.
We therefore reverse the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment insofar as it found Biel Reo‘s proceedings supplementary to be time-barred and remand for further proceedings supplementary under
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
VAN NORTWICK, J., and FENSOM, JAMES B., ASSOCIATE JUDGE, CONCUR.
