In this consolidated appeal, Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (“Citizens”) seeks review of the following three trial court orders: (1) an order granting, with prejudice, Alexandra Ifergane’s motion to be dismissed as a party; (2) an order granting Haim Ifergane’s motion for partial summary judgment as to coverage; and (3) the subsequent order of final judgment in favor of Haim Ifergane. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the first order, but reverse the second and third orders.
1. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2004, Haim and Alexandra Ifergane, husband and wife (“Haim” and “Alexandra”), jointly purchased a residential property on Venetian Drive in Miami Beach, Florida (“the Property”). The Property, which the Iferganes intended to renovate before moving in, was insured by Citizens under a wind-only dwelling policy.
The applicable provisions of the policy provide:
4. Your Duties After Loss. In case of a loss to covered property, you must:
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b. Take the following steps:
(1) Protect the property from further damage; and
(2) Make reasonable and necessary repairs to protect the property;
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c. As often as we reasonably require:
(1) Show us the damaged property;
(2) Provide us with records and documents we request and permit us to make copies; and
(3) Submit to examinations under oath while not in the presence of any other named insureds and sign the same;
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Under the terms of the policy, the terms “you” and “your” referred to both the “named insured” and “the spouse if a resident of the same household.”
On November 17, 2005, Alexandra filed for divorce from Haim. As part of a marital settlement agreement, Alexandra executed a quit claim deed on April 4, 2006, assigning to Haim “all the right, title, interest, claim and demand which [she] has in and to the ... [Property]” (hereinafter the “Assignment”).
Citizens made an initial payment on the Hurricane Wilma claim in the amount of $44,955.08. Thereafter, Citizens became concerned that the Property had suffered additional damage that was not covered under the policy and sought to take examinations under oath (“EUOs”) of Haim and Alexandra. Citizens also requested a sworn proof of loss. Citizens sent Alexandra two letters reminding her of the policy exclusions and her duty to mitigate property damage, and reserving its right to deny coverage. Haim complied by providing a sworn proof of loss and sitting twice for an EUO. However, Alexandra refused to comply with Citizens’ requests that she attend an EUO, asserting she was not obligated to do so because she had assigned to Haim all of her rights and interest in the Property.
On March 31, 2008, Citizens notified Alexandra that it could not complete its investigation or determine coverage for the claim because she had not appeared at the requested EUOs. The letter indicated that since it was unclear whether she and Haim were residing in the house together on the date of loss,
On April 8, 2008, Haim made a demand under the policy for appraisal. In response, Citizens in May of 2008 filed an action for declaratory judgment .against the Iferganes, seeking a determination regarding its coverage obligations. As to Alexandra, Citizens’ complaint demanded a declaratory judgment as follows: to determine the validity of the Assignment; to declare that the Assignment does not relieve Alexandra of her policy obligations; to declare that Alexandra is obligated to appear for an EUO and comply with other policy conditions; “to determine the effect of [Alexandra’s] ... breach of the policy” by failing to appear for an EUO and comply with other policy conditions; to declare that the Iferganes failed to mitigate their damages and make temporary repairs to the Property, which constituted a breach of the policy; and to declare that the Iferganes representation that the Property was “tenant occupied” was a material misrepresentation voiding the policy.
Alexandra moved to dismiss the complaint, claiming that because she had assigned to Haim “all her rights and interest (including any insurance claims) via Quit Claim Deed” to the Property, she was not a party in interest. The motion was denied.
Alexandra then moved for summary judgment, requesting that the trial court determine that the Assignment was valid.
Haim filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment against Citizens on the coverage issue. Halm argued that the undisputed facts established he was a resident spouse co-insured under the policy, that he had complied with the policy’s post-loss requirements, and that Alexandra’s alleged failure to comply could not be imputed to him, an innocent co-insured, and therefore no breach of contract had occurred as a matter of law.
In October 2008, the trial court granted Alexandra’s motion for partial summary judgment, finding that “the Iferganes intended to transfer interest in the insurance claim from marital property to Haim Ifer-gane.” The trial court’s order, however, did not dismiss Alexandra as a party.
In March 2009, Citizens filed an amended complaint for declaratory relief seeking a declaration as to whether there was a valid and legal assignment of the claim, and if so, whether such assignment relieved Alexandra of her contractual obligations under the policy. The amended complaint alleged no new facts with respect to the validity of the Assignment and contained a prayer for relief identical to that contained in the original complaint. Alexandra again moved to dismiss based on the Assignment of all her rights to Haim, and additionally based on the fact that she never made a claim for insurance proceeds. The trial court granted Alexandra’s motion to dismiss with prejudice.
In addition, Citizens’ prior motion for summary judgment relating to Alexandra’s policy duties was denied, and Haim’s motion for partial summary judgment as to coverage was granted.
II. ANALYSIS
1. The order granting, with prejudice, Alexandra Ifergane’s motion to be dismissed as a party.
With regard to the first issue raised, Citizens argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it granted Alexandra’s second motion to dismiss, where Alexandra had assigned “all the right, title, interest, claim and demand which [she] has in and to the ... [Property]” to Haim and the trial court previously had determined (on Alexandra’s motion for partial summary judgment) that the Assignment was valid.
We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion. Citizens’ amended complaint alleged no new facts and sought no new relief with respect to Alexandra and the Assignment. The validity of the Assignment was already adjudicated in the trial court’s order granting partial summary judgment, and no justiciable controversy remained between the parties on that issue.
“[T]he test for the sufficiency of a complaint for declaratory judgment is not whether the plaintiff will succeed in obtaining the decree he seeks favoring his position, but whether he is entitled to a declaration of rights at all.” Meadows Cmty. Ass’n, v. Russell-Tutty, 928 So.2d
Citizens was not entitled to declaratory relief against Alexandra because she had no “actual, present, adverse and antagonistic interest” in the subject matter of the amended complaint, which sought to define Citizens’ obligations with respect to the insurance policy and claim for benefits related to Hurricane Wilma. Pursuant to the parties’ Marital Settlement Agreement, Alexandra assigned “all the right, title, interest, claim and demand which [she] has in and to the ... [Property]” to Haim. Post-loss insurance claims are freely assignable without the consent of the insurer. See Lexington Ins. Co. v. Simkins Indus., Inc.,
Citizens points to Bethel v. Security National Insurance Co.,
Unlike Bethel, Conde, and Paule-kas, Alexandra’s absence from Citizens’ suit for declaratory relief does not subject Citizens to the threat of future litigation by a potential claimant. Alexandra assigned to Haim any and all rights to benefits under the policy, and she is not and cannot be a potential claimant under the policy. In short, while Alexandra may remain obligated to perform the post-loss duties imposed by the language of the policy, she need not be a party to any coverage decision. See Conde,
2. The order of final judgment and the order granting Haim Ifergane’s motion for partial summary judgment as to coverage.
In his motion for partial summary judgment, Haim Ifergane argued he was entitled to summary judgment, as to the issue of coverage, for two reasons: (1) he was a resident insured under the policy; and (2) he was an innocent co-insured, therefore any failure on Alexandra’s part to comply with the policy’s post-loss obligations was irrelevant. The trial court agreed, finding that Haim was a resident spouse, and therefore, entitled to coverage as a matter of law. Because we find there were genu
a. Resident Spouse
Summary judgment cannot be granted where there exist genuine issues of material fact. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.510(c); Holl v. Talcott,
b. Post-Loss Obligations
The Citizens policy at issue requires the named insured and any resident spouse to submit to an EUO, at Citizen’s request. This Court has previously held that an insured’s refusal to submit to an EUO relieves the insurer of its obligation to pay under the policy. Stringer v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
Although Alexandra assigned her right to benefits under the policy, she did not assign to Haim her obligations under the policy. Marlin Diagnostics v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Citizens was entitled to an EUO from Alexandra, its named insured, regardless of the Assignment. Alexandra’s refusal to submit to a requested EUO precludes recovery under the policy, because the EUO stands as a condition precedent to coverage. De Ferrari v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co.,
Affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.
Notes
. The effective dates of the policy were June 22, 2005, to June 22, 2006.
. The undisputed evidence established that, although Haim’s name was left off the policy, he paid the premium and the mortgage on the subject property.
. There was confusion as to whether the Ifer-ganes were living together on the date of the hurricane because Haim testified at his first EUO that he was living alone at the Property on the date of the hurricane, and later filed an affidavit asserting that he was living elsewhere with Alexandra on that date.
. Under the terms of the policy, coverage was available to Haim as the spouse of the named insured if, at the time of the loss, he was "a resident of the same household.”
. Citizens' motion for rehearing also was denied.
. Citizens argues that any consideration of the prior order granting summary judgment on the issue of the validity of the Assignment is beyond the four comers of its amended complaint. The trial court’s prior partial summary judgment order resolved the issue of the validity of the Assignment, and the court was not required to ignore its own prior ruling disposing of a claim Citizens merely reasserted in its amended complaint. See Brown v. Progressive Cas. Ins. Co.,
