Florida Community Bank, N.A., etc., Appellant, vs. Red Road Residential, LLC, etc., et al., Appellees.
No. 3D15-2039
Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
June 8, 2016
Lower Tribunal No. 11-37717
Friedman & Frost, P.L., and Todd R. Friedman and Paul D. Friedman, for appellant.
Denise V. Powеrs, P.A., and Denise V. Powers, for appellee Ada Rios.
Before WELLS, SALTER and SCALES, JJ.
SCALES, J.
Florida Community Bank, N.A. (“the Bank“), the plaintiff below, appeals a judgment awarding attorney‘s fees to defendant and appellee Ada Rios. We reverse the judgment because Ada Rios failed to meet her burden to establish that she was a party to the underlying mortgage containing the attorney‘s fee provision.
I. Facts
After the corporate borrower and its guarantor, Jesus Rios, defaulted on а loan owed to the Bank, the Bank modified the borrower‘s loan by advancing additional funds to the guarantor and acquiring additional collateral for the loan. As part of its additional collateral for this loan modification, the Bank obtained what appeared to be a mortgage on residential property in Monroe County owned by Jesus Rios and his wife Ada Rios. The mortgage was signed by Jesus Rios and, ostensibly, by Ada Rios.
When the modified loan was nоt repaid as agreed, the Bank sued the corporate borrower, the guarantor (Jesus Rios), and Jesus Rios‘s co-mortgagor on the Monroe County property, Ada Rios. The Bank‘s lawsuit sought, among other things, to foreclose the mortgage on the Rios‘s property that the Bank thought it had obtained in the modification process. The Bank‘s lawsuit also sought the recovery of its attorney‘s fees pursuant to the attorney‘s fee provision of the subjеct mortgage.1 In its verified complaint, the Bank alleged
Ada Rios responded to the Bank‘s lawsuit first by filing a motion to dismiss, asserting that she never signed the mortgage, and that the mortgage dоcuments containing her purported signature were fraudulent. After her motion to dismiss was denied, Ada Rios answered the Bank‘s lawsuit, again making these same assertions in specific denials and affirmative defenses. During the ensuing litigation, Ada Rios echoed this position in sworn interrogatory responses, sworn deposition testimony and in sworn affirmations in an affidavit.2 After providing the Bank with the 21-day “safe harbor notice” required by
Ultimately, rather than litigating its claim against Ada Rios, the Bank voluntarily dismissed her from its lawsuit, with prejudice. Ada Rios then sought attorney‘s fees and costs against the Bank pursuant to
The Bank appeals this judgment.5
II. Standard of Review
Because the issue on appeal concerns a pure question of law (that is, whether a prevailing party is entitled to attorney‘s fees based on an interpretation of the fee provision in the subject mortgage and the corresponding application of
III. Analysis
As is typical in most mortgages, the fee provision in the subject mortgage plainly entitles the Bank, as mortgagee, to the recovery of its attorney‘s fees if the borrower defaults on the note secured by the mortgage and the Bank successfully brings an action to foreclose on the mortgage. Because the subject mortgage was
The Bank does not dispute that Ada Rios was the prevailing pаrty. Rather, the Bank challenges whether the trial court correctly applied
Ada Rios does not apрear to contest this proposition. Rather, in oral argument, she sought to distinguish the reasoning in Novastar by arguing that, in Novastar and other similar cases, the trial court actually adjudicated that the party seeking fees was not a party to the contract. Ada Rios points out that, in this case, the Bank voluntarily dismissed its lawsuit before such an adjudication occurred. Ada Rios argues that, as the prevailing party (by virtue of the Bank‘s dismissal), she should be the beneficiary of the fact that her status as a mortgagor specifically was not adjudicated.
Not surprisingly, the Bank takes the contrary position in the form of this syllogism: because Ada Rios‘s principal defense was that she was not a party to the mortgage, and because Ada prevailed, therefore, for the purposes of
Regarding whether Ada Rios was a party to the mortgage, we note that both the Bank and Ada Rios take positions opposite to the pоsitions they took before the Bank‘s voluntary dismissal of Ada Rios from the lawsuit. While both the Bank and Ada Rios suggest that the other party should be estopped from making its respective argument about whether Ada was a party to the mortgage,6 we view the
case
In our view, in order to avail herself of
Our decision should not be construed to prevent a party suеd on a contract from ever recovering prevailing party fees when the party‘s defense is that the defendant was not a party to the subject contract. Both Florida‘s offer of judgment/proposal for settlement scheme, codified in
Statutes and
IV. Conclusion
Only the parties to a contract may avail themselves of
We reverse the attorney‘s fee judgment for Ada Rios and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
SCALES, J.
Notes
This provision reads, in relevant part, as follows:
12. Mortgagor shall pay or reimburse Mortgagee for all costs, charges and expenses, including reasonable attorney‘s fees . . . incurred or paid by Mortgagee in any threatened, pending or completed action, proceeding or dispute in which Mortgagee is or might be made a party or appears as a рarty plaintiff or party defendant and which affect the Note, this Mortgage or any other instrument securing the Note, or the Mortgaged Property or any part thereof, or the interests of Mortgagor or Mortgagee therein, including, but not limited to, the foreclosure of this Mortgage . . . including all appellate proceeding in connection with or arising out of any of the foregoing.
If a contract contains a provision allowing attorney‘s fees to a party when he or she is required to take any action to enforce the contract, the court may also allow reasonable attorney‘s fees to the оther party when that party prevails in any action, whether as plaintiff or defendant, with respect to the contract. This subsection applies to any contract entered into on or after October 1, 1988.
