Margaret SHARP and H.S. Musselwhite, Appellants,
v.
Magali C. HAMILTON, et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Tucker H. Byrd of Winderweedle, Haines, Ward & Woodman, P.A., Winter Park, for appellant Musselwhite.
William H. Morrison, Altamonte Springs, for appellant Sharp.
J. Don Friedman of Friedman & Friedman, P.A., Longwood, for appellees.
COBB, Judge.
Magali Hamilton and L.E. Hamilton, as husband and wife, were the owners of a parcel of property in Seminole County, Florida, as tenants by the entirety prior to *236 the dissolution of their marriage by final judgment entered on May 24, 1984. The final judgment of dissolution provides, for purposes pertinent to this appeal:
The husband's interest in the marital home of the parties described above be and it is hereby awarded to the wife as lump sum alimony. Title to the following property is by this final judgment of dissolution of marriage hereby transferred, set over and conveyed to the wife, Magali C. Hamilton, in fee simple absolute.
During the Hamiltons' marriage, L.E. Hamilton executed, on his own, a $10,000 mortgage on the property in favor of Appellant Margaret Sharp. Appellant Musselwhite had a final judgment against L.E. Hamilton in the amount of $22,608.34.
The present cause began when Sharp filed a complaint seeking to, inter alia, foreclose her mortgage on the subject property. Musselwhite filed an answer and counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment as to his rights against the property. Ultimately, all the parties moved for motions for summary judgment.
The lower court determined that the final judgment of dissolution, awarding Magali Hamilton title to the property as "lump sum alimony," vested ownership of the property in her, free and clear of Musselwhite's judgment lien and Sharp's mortgage. The court thereupon quieted title to the property in favor of Hamilton as against Musselwhite and Sharp.
The issue on this appeal is whether, upon dissolution, a judgment lien against, and mortgage executed solely by, the husband attach to property previously held as a tenancy by the entirety and awarded to the wife as lump sum alimony. The law of Florida, although consisting of only five cases, is split.
In Hillman v. McCutchen,
It will be noted in the instant case that the property of the husband was sequestered by the decree of divorce to satisfy a future claim of the wife; that is, her right to alimony. Thus, it was necessary that the property subjected to the claim be the property of the husband. The only way that this could be effected was for the estate by the entirety to be terminated first and then for the interest of the husband to be transferred to the wife by judicial decree.
The court saw the process as a short-circuit of a court ordered sale of the property, with the award of money to the wife, noting that the plaintiff's lien clearly would have attached if that procedure had been followed.
In State Dept. of Commerce, Division of Employment Security v. Lowery,
Mrs. Lowery subsequently filed a quiet title suit and prevailed at the trial level. The First District affirmed, determining that the conveyance to the wife terminated the estate by the entirety and, thus, when the final judgment of dissolution was signed, the former husband had no interest to which any judgment or lien could attach.
Lowery was followed by Liberman v. Kelso,
However, this statute [section 689.15] has never been construed to prohibit a court in a dissolution proceeding from awarding full title to entireties property to one of the spouses. See Quick v. Leatherman,96 So.2d 136 (Fla. 1957). Thus, the judgment of dissolution, the very event upon which the appellants rely to make [the husband] a tenant in common, ordered that the appellee should have sole title to the property. We do not consider the fact that the deed was not actually executed until after the dissolution as relevant because we deem the judgment of dissolution to be controlling. In essence, we believe that the transfer of the husband's interest to the wife pursuant to the judgment of dissolution was equivalent to the defeasance of the husband's interest in the property which would have occurred had he predeceased his wife while the parties were still married.
This court addressed this issue in Holt v. Boozel,
The Boozels subsequently dissolved their marriage, with the wife being awarded a special equity in the subject real property. The dissolution judgment, as amended, included a provision that the husband execute a quit-claim deed conveying his one-half interest to the wife. This conveyance took place some five months after the entry of the final judgment of dissolution. Holt then attempted to levy on the property, claiming that his judgment against the husband attached between the time the judgment of dissolution was entered and the quit-claim deed was executed (while Mr. Boozel was a tenant in common).
The trial court, by summary judgment, quieted title in favor of the wife, and this court affirmed. This court distinguished Hillman, since the wife in Holt was awarded the property as a special equity, rather than as lump sum alimony, as in Hillman. The court stated:
The husband, James Boozel, did not acquire a vested tenancy in common by reason of the judgment, not even by implication nor for the "twinkling of an eye." The trial court in the instant case did not determine that the husband's tenancy in common should go to the wife as lump-sum alimony resulting from the dissolution, *238 but rather that the special equity interest of the wife in the property had been acquired during the marriage and prior to the dissolution.
The most recent decision in this area is Jonas v. Logan,
The Third District affirmed the trial court, finding that the mortgage lien neither attached on the estate when the property settlement agreement was entered into, nor on the entry of the dissolution.[2] The court distinguished Hillman on the basis that the conveyance here occurred prior to the dissolution, vesting sole interest in Mrs. Logan before the dissolution was entered.
Property held as a tenancy by the entirety is not subject to the lien of a judgment against one tenant alone. Teardo v. Teardo,
AFFIRMED.
DAUKSCH and ORFINGER, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Section 689.15, Florida Statutes (1985), provides that a tenancy by the entirety becomes a tenancy in common upon dissolution.
[2] The court determined that it did not attach on the entry of the dissolution based on Lowery, since the interest was conveyed prior to the final judgment of dissolution.
[3] As pointed out in Holt and Liberman, denying recovery to the lienors does not preclude an attack by them on the transfer as a fraud on the creditors. No such attack has been either pled or proven here.
