Ruth MERCURIO, Appellant,
v.
Richard Lee HEADRICK, as personal representative of the Estate of Talmadge Leo Headrick, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
Joel F. Foreman of Foreman & Olvera, P.A., Lake City, for Appellant.
Thomas J. Kennon of Robinson, Kennon & Kendron, P.A., Lake City, for Appellee.
KAHN, J.
Appellant Ruth Mercurio appeals a final order partitioning property she and the late Talmadge Headrick held as joint tenants with right of survivorship. Because Mr. Headrick died before the proceedings below produced a final order of partition, the joint tenancy was intact at his death. Ms. Mercurio, by reason of the joint tenant's death, owned an undivided interest in the property. We therefore reverse the posthumously rendered partition order and remand for entry of summary judgment for Ms. Mercurio.
BACKGROUND
Ms. Mercurio and Mr. Headrick acquired the property at issue as joint tenants with right of survivorship in 2004. In May 2006, Mr. Headrick filed the action below, seeking partition of the property by way of a complaint alleging, in relevant part, the following: (1) the property "is owned by Plaintiff and Defendant as joint tenants with right of survivorship, with each party owning an undivided interest in the property," (2) "[t]he property is not reasonably susceptible of an equitable physical division because of the configuration of certain improvements on it. A private sale of the property . . . would not be prejudicial to the interest of the Defendant," *774 and (3) the partition action was for both parties' benefit.
Ms. Mercurio filed an answer to the complaint with the following admissions, among others: (1) she and Mr. Headrick owned the property as joint tenants with right of survivorship, (2) a private sale, rather than an equitable distribution, would avoid prejudice to her interests, and (3) the partition action was for both parties' benefit. Ms. Mercurio denied, however, an allegation in the complaint that Mr. Headrick provided funds for the full purchase price of the real estate and should receive all interest in the property upon its sale.
The trial court ordered the parties to mediation in September 2006, but they apparently did not reach an agreement over their lingering disputes before Mr. Headrick died in late October. Ms. Mercurio moved for summary judgment on the ground that the joint tenancy remained intact at Mr. Headrick's death, and that she was entitled to an undivided interest in the property as his joint tenant with a right of survivorship. Both the original judge and his successor judge denied Ms. Mercurio's motion, finding that Ms. Mercurio's admissions in her answer signified the parties' mutual intent to partition the property. The successor judge ultimately rendered a final order partitioning the property and directing the parties to sell it at a private sale. Ms. Mercurio appeals that order.
ANALYSIS
The question in this case is whether a pending action to partition a joint tenancy with right of survivorship survives one joint tenant's death. We hold that such an action does not survive the death of a joint tenant and, accordingly, absent a final judgment of partition at the tenant's death, the action is abated, because the surviving tenant receives full title to the property, consistent with the right of survivorship.
This issue is one of first impression in Florida. Other jurisdictions, however, have confronted the question, and we adopt their common approach which we find persuasive and logical.
In Cobb v. Gilmer, a family law case, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia noted "the apparently universal rule in this country is that a pending suit for a partition of a joint tenancy does not survive the death of one of the tenants."
This approach comports with the established and undisputed rule in Florida that only a complete, final conveyance or disposition of jointly held property severs a joint tenancy with right of survivorship. See Kozacik v. Kozacik,
We find further support in analogous Florida family law cases in which courts have held that the death of one party terminates a pending divorce action. In Marlowe v. Brown, for instance, where the husband died during the pendency of a divorce action in which both parties filed petitions for dissolution, the Fourth District held, "The dissolution of marriage action terminated with the death of the husband and the dissolution judge should have dismissed the case upon the wife's motion."
CONCLUSION
We adopt what other jurisdictions have recognized as "the apparently universal rule in this country" and hold that the action for partition abated when Mr. Headrick died. We REVERSE the summary judgment entered for Mr. Headrick's estate and REMAND for entry of summary judgment for Ms. Mercurio, giving effect to the undivided interest in the property that vested in her as Mr. Headrick's joint tenant with a right of survivorship.
BROWNING, C.J., and THOMAS, J., concur.
