CMR DISTRIBUTORS, INC., a Florida Corporation, Carlos Rodriguez, and Rosa Rodriguez, Appellants,
v.
The RESOLUTION TRUST CORPORATION, as Conservator for Professional Federal Savings Bank, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Kelly Black Black Byrne Beasley Bales & Ross, P.A., and Lauri Waldman Ross, Miami, for appellants.
Concepcion DeGrandy & Sexton, Coral Gables, and Lillian Valdespino, Miami, and Carlos Concepcion, Coral Gables, for appellee.
Before BASKIN, JORGENSON and LEVY, JJ.
JORGENSON, Judge.
Carlos and Rosa Rodriguez appeal from a nonfinal order denying their motion to dismiss an interpleader action. Because the order is injunctive in nature and because the trial court effectively seized and froze the Rodriguez' assets prior to judgment, we reverse.
The Resolution Trust Corporation [RTC], as conservator for Professional Savings Bank, sued CMR Distributors, Inc., on a promissory note. The Rodriguezes were sued as guarantors. In a renewal note, the guarantors had given to the bank the right to set off, against the amount owed, any deposits they had with the bank. The renewal note specified that the right to set off did not apply to any IRA account or other tax deferred retirement account. The Rodriguezes are fiduciaries for the participants in the CMR Distributors, Inc. Profit Sharing Plan; the res of the plan consists of two certificates of deposit.
RTC sought to have the proceeds of the plan deposited into the registry of the court, questioning the tax exempt status of the plan. RTC expressed concern that the res of the plan would be withdrawn by the participants before judgment, destroying the right of set-off. The trial court denied the motion.
CMR then declared bankruptcy. RTC filed an amended complaint that included a count for interpleader of the certificates of deposit that comprised the res of the pension plan. As a basis for the interpleader action, RTC alleged that because CMR had *594 filed for bankruptcy, the trustee in bankruptcy had a potential claim to the certificates of deposit and that competing claims to the same fund therefore existed. The Rodriguezes immediately moved to dismiss the interpleader action. The trial court denied the motion and ordered the proceeds of the pension fund deposited into the registry of the court. The Rodriguezes appeal the order denying their motion to dismiss.
We have jurisdiction to review the order pursuant to Fla.R.App.P. 9.130(a)(3)(B), which allows review of nonfinal orders that "grant, continue, modify, deny or dissolve injunctions." We recognize that, as a general rule, this court has no jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from an order denying a motion to dismiss a complaint. Fineman v. Greenberg,
The trial court erred in requiring the deposit of the pension fund into the registry of the court. "It is entirely settled by a long and unbroken line of Florida cases that in an action at law for money damages, there is simply no judicial authority for an order requiring the deposit of the amount in controversy into the registry of the court ... or indeed for any restraint upon the use of a defendant's unrestricted assets prior to the entry of judgment." Konover Realty Assoc.,
Reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss the count for interpleader and release the fund from the court's registry.
