Wе affirm the procedure the circuit courts utilized in the final foreclosure judgments on appeal, where the courts allowed the plaintiff to pursue its remedy at law and authorized the initiation of the equita
Facts
These consolidated appeals involve loans that PNC Bank made to corporate entities associated with Anthony V. Pugliese III. In a representative case, PNC sued Pug-liese, Royal Palm Corporate Center Association, Ltd., and Royal Palm Corporate Center, Inc. in a two-count complaint. According to the complaint, PNC lent Royal Palm Corporate Center Association over $3 million. Royal Palm Corporate Center Association put up a piece of real estate as security for the loan; this was not a loan for the purchase money of the real estate. Royal Palm Corporate Center, Inc., the general partner of Royal Palm Corporate Center Association, and Pugliese each executed commercial guaranties for security.
In count one of the complaint, PNC sought a foreclosure judgment on the mortgaged property and, if necessary, a deficiency judgment. In count two, PNC sought money damages for breach of the note and guaranties. The case went to a non-jury trial.
The trial court found in favor of PNC. On the foreclosure count, the court detеrmined that the defendants owed PNC $4,753,786.19. The final judgment did not set a sale of the mortgaged property, but provided:
C. The court is withholding having a sale of the mortgaged property, pending an application by the plaintiff requesting a sale of the mortgaged property and certifying that the monetary judgment has not been satisfied.
D. Upon application by plaintiff requesting a sale of the Mortgaged Property and certifying that the monetary judgment has not been satisfied, this court shall enter an order instructing the Clerk of Court to sell the mortgaged property at the nеxt available sale date in accordance with Section 45.031, Florida Statutes.
The court reserved jurisdiction to handle any remaining issues, such as a deficiency judgment. On the damages count, the trial court repeated that the defendants owed PNC $4,753,786.19, and ordered that PNC “recover from the defendants” that amount, “for which let execution issue.”
The defendants moved for reconsideration and rehearing, among other things. They attacked the structure of the final judgment, which allowed PNC to attempt collection on the money judgment before setting a foreclosure sale. It does not appear that the court ruled on the motion prior to the filing of the notice of appeal.
The above summary of the facts in PNC Bank, N.A. v. Royal Palm Corporate Center Association, Ltd., is similar to the resolution of the other cases. In each case, PNC sued Pugliese and an associated corporation for foreclosure and damages. In each, the trial court found for PNC and implemented the two-step struсture of the final judgment described above. The judgments are nearly identical.
Section 45.031 Did Not Require the Trial Courts to Set a Foreclosure Sale
Defendants first contend that the trial courts contravened section 45.031, Florida Statutes (2008), by granting foreclosure without scheduling a foreclosure sale. They argue that subsection 45.031(l)(a) requires that the foreclosure sale be set within a certain time and that it was an abuse of discretion to indefinitely stay the sale. We reject this argument.
In relevant part, subsection 45.031(l)(a) provides:
In the order or final judgment, the court shall direct the clerk to sell the property*927 at public sale on a specified day that shall be not less than 20 days or more than 35 days after the date thereof, on terms and conditions specified in the order or judgment.
The defendants rely on the above language.
However, the plain language of the statute demonstrates that the procedure set forth in section 45.031 is not the exclusive procedure for setting a foreclosure sale and that a judge has the discretion to use a different procedure. Thе introductory paragraph of section 45.031 states:
In any sale of real or personal property under an order or judgment, the procedure provided in this section and ss. 45.0315-45.035 may be followed as an alternative to any other sale procedure if so ordered by the court.
(Emphasis supplied.) By the use of the term “may” and the suggestion that section 45.031 procedure is an “alternative to any other sale procedure,” the statute plainly gives a circuit judge discretion to tailor the procedure for a foreclosure sale. See The Fla. Bar v. Trazenfeld,
The nature of mortgage foreclosures lends support to this interpretation. Mortgages are “foreclosed in equity.” § 702.01, Fla. Stat. (2008). “Historically, courts of equity came into being in order to provide a forum for the granting of relief in accordance with the broad principles of right and justice in cases where the restrictive technicalities of the law prevented the giving of relief.” Hedges v. Lysek,
The defendants cite a line of cases to argue that a trial court’s indefinite stay of a sale constitutes an abuse of discretion. Those cases are distinguishable because they involve courts working within the structure of a section 45.031 sale procedure and mortgagees that are prevented from realizing the benefits of a foreclosure judgment, without an equitable basis which justifies the bar.
An exemplar is First Nationwide Savings v. Thomas,
Thomas presents a scenario different than this case. There, the trial court in the final judgment set a date for the sale and adopted the alternative procedure set out in section 45.031, rather than fashioning its own procedure. Once it adopted the statutory procedure, the court’s discretion to indefinitely delay the sale sought by the plaintiff was limited, in the absence of circumstances justifying the delay. In the
The other cases in the line likewise involved situations where sales were actually set, and where the failure to reschedule the sales unjustifiably frustrated the rights of the plaintiffs to the sale of the foreclosed property. See Bankers Trust Co. v. Edwards,
In addition, the defendants rely on LR5A-JV v. Little House, LLC,
Finally, the defendants base an argument upon Rule of Civil Procedure Form 1.996(a), “Final Judgment of Foreclosure.”
In sum, because section 45.031 gives a circuit court discretion to fashion the foreclosure sale procedure, and limits that discretion only after the court uses the statutory procedure to set a sale date, the trial сourts in these cases did not abuse their discretion in withholding the setting of the sale of the subject properties until PNC certified that its money judgments were unsatisfied.
PNC Could Pursue an Action on the Note and and an Action on the Mortgage at the Same Time
In their second issue, the defendants contend that the trial courts abused their
It has long been the common law that, to collect money owed on a note, a mortgagee may pursue its legal and equitable remedies simultaneously, until the debt is satisfied. In the early case of Booth v. Booth (1742) Eng. & Wales Chancery, 2 Atk. 242 (3d. ed. 1754), the plaintiff brought an action against the defendant for the accounting of an estate owned by the plaintiffs brother, for which estate the defendant had been the guardian and on which he had obtained a mortgage. Id. at 242-48. The defendant brought the action of ejectment for рossession of the estate
More than 200 years later, the supreme court of New Mexico articulated the complete rule, its rationale, and the minority view:
Under the traditional common law rule, upon default by the mortgagor, a mortgagee has independent remedies which he or she may pursue. The mortgagee may sue either on the note or foreclose on the mortgage, and may pursue all remedies “at the same time or consequently.” As long as there is no double recovery on the debt, the mortgagee may pursue either or both remedies. Absent a statute to the contrary, “state courts have uniformly held that holders of notes secured by a deed of trust can both sue the maker or guarantor and foreclose on the property regardless of which action they pursue first.”
The distinction between the two remedies is found in the historic view that a foreclosure action is purely quasi in rem, affording relief only against the secured property, and a suit on a bond or note is in personam.[5 ] A judgment of foreclo*930 sure applies only to the property secured by the mortgage, and does not impose any personal liability on the mortgagor. If the foreclosure of the mortgaged property fails to satisfy the debt secured by the mortgage, the creditor may then pursue an action on the underlying note.
Some jurisdictions have adopted legislation providing for a “one action” rule that requires a mortgagee to file only one lawsuit in which he.or she pursues all remedies for a debt that is secured by a mortgage. One of the purposes of such statutes is to protect the mortgagor from multiple lawsuits since the mortgagee’s separate causes of action, even though theoretically distinct, are closely connected and should be decided in one suit.
Kepler v. Slade,
The traditiоnal common law rule is the majority rule in the United States; it has been recognized by the Supreme Court of the United States on at least three occasions.
We have found no Florida statute, and none has been called to our attention, that would prevent a mortgagee from pursuing legal and equitable remedies at the same time. The statute concerning deficiencies, section 702.06, Florida Statutes (2008), is more limited in nature than the statutes in the minority of states. Although the reporters of the Restatement seem to believe that section 702.06 is something of a one-action rule, see Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 8.2 cmt. b (1997), neither its language nor its history or purpose support that reading.
Section 702.06 binds a plaintiff to a deficiency decree once the plaintiff sets the deficiency process in motion, but expressly provides that “the complainant shall also have the right to sue at common law to recover such deficiency,” except against an original mortgagor when the mortgage was for the purchase price of the subject property, thе original mortgagee buys the property at the foreclosure sale, and the original mortgagee obtains a deficiency decree against the original mortgagor.
With regard to the statute’s history, the legislature enacted what is now section 702.06, which took the place of an old equity rule of like effect, to grant a court the power to enter deficiency decrees; “[b]efore the adoption of [the equity rule] in 1873 ... no deficiency was authorized in equity courts, and the only remedy for a balance due was a suit at law.”
It appears we have not seen these remedies pursued at the same time in the same action because, before 1967, a suit at law on a note and a suit in equity to foreclose a mortgage proceeded in separate courts. In 1967, Florida adopted rules of civil procedure which gave circuit courts jurisdiction to hear cases in which counts at law and counts in equity could be set forth in the same complaint as alternative grounds for relief. In re Fla. Rules of Civil Procedure 1967 Revision,
As alluded to by the Kepler court, the reason that an action at law on a note may be pursued simultaneously with the equitable remedy of foreclosure is that the two remedies are not inconsistent. Junction Bit & Tool Co. v. Village Apartments, Inc.,
Defendants rely heavily on Farah v. Iberia Bank,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Florida Supreme Court adopted this form in In re Amendments to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure,
. Ejectment is an action at law for a person to recover possession of property from a second person possessing it in hostility to the first person's right. 28A C.J.S. Ejectment §§ 3, 6.
. Mortgagors held the equity of redemption; to obtain clear title to the mortgaged property, the mortgagee would bring a suit to foreclose that equity. See Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 3.1 cmt. a (1997).
. See also Burnell v. Martin (1780) King’s Bench,
. Ga. Cas. Co. v. O'Donnell,
. See Ober v.Gallagher,
. See Alaska Stat. § 09.45.200 (consecutively); Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 33-722 (consecutively); Cal. C.C.P. § 726 (one action); Idaho C. § 6-101 (one action); Ind.Code § 32-30-10-10 (consecutively); Iowa Code § 654.4; Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.3105 (consecutively); Minn.Stat. § 580.02 (consecutively); Mont.Code § 71 — 1— 22 (one action); Neb.Rev.Stat. § 25-2140 (consecutively); N.J. 2A:50-2 (consecutively); Nev.Rev.Stat. § 40.430 (consecutively, though there is an express provision for waiver in another statute); Or. L. § 429 (consecutively); Utah Code § 78B-6-901 (one action); Wash. Rev.Code § 61.12.120 (consecutively); Wyo. Stat. § 34-4-103 (consecutively). In North
. Section 2.01, Florida Statutes (2008), provides that the common law of England as of July 4, 1776 is "of force in this state,” provided that it is of a "general and not local nature” and is "not inconsistent with” federal or state cоnstitutions and statutes.
. A general prayer for relief in a foreclosure action is sufficient to permit a court in its discretion "to render a deficiency degree if an appropriate motion therefor was made.” Boyles v. Alt. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n of Ft. Lauderdale,
. Rule 89 of Florida Rules of Equity Actions was adopted in 1873 and provided that a deficiency "could be granted under prayer for general relief if the defendant was personally served with process, or appeared.” Letchworth,
. Based on the time frames described in Klondike, it appears that the suit at law was filed before the 1967 merger of the law and equity courts.
. See Kay v. Anderson,
. PNC has filed a copy of the Farah final judgment as an appendix to its answer briefs. This has assisted us in discerning the facts upon which the opinion is based.
