VOSR INDUSTRIES, INC., and Florida Industries Investment Corporation, Appellants,
v.
MARTIN PROPERTIES, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*555 Bart R. Valdes and David H. Simmons of de Beaubien, Knight, Simmons, Mantzaris & Neal, LLP., Orlando, for appellant VOSR.
William G. Osborne of William G. Osborne, P.A., Orlando, for appellant FIIC.
Jay Williams, Catherine M. Masters, and Neil Lloyd of Schiff, Hardin, LLP., Chicago, Illinois, for appellee.
FARMER, J.
We now have the third appeal arising from a foreclosure action brought in 1998. See Indian River Farms v. YBF Partners,
The relevant facts for the issue we face today center around attempts of the mortgagor to assign its right of redemption after the sale but before title had passed. During the foreclosure action, the mortgagor had entered into negotiations with Martin Properties, Inc. (MPI) in attempt to save the property. When it became obvious that the documentation and loan processing could not be completed in time, MPI is said to have agreed to buy the property at the judicial sale and convey it back to the mortgagor. MPI succeeded in becoming the buyer at the foreclosure sale, with a bid covering the sums due in the final judgment of foreclosure (approximately $1.6 million[1]). The Clerk issued a certificate of sale to MPI.
At that point, the mortgagor timely filed an objection to the sale. A few days after the objection had been clarified, the court entered an order denying the objection. Two days after the order overruling the objection was entered but before the issuance of a certificate of title, the mortgagor reached an agreement assigning its right of redemption to VOSR Industries, who then arranged for another entity[2] to tender on its behalf the full amount due under the final judgment of foreclosure. This other entity so tendered a check to the *556 Clerk in the late afternoon of the same day. The Clerk refused to accept the check and issued the certificate of title in the name of MPI.[3] VOSR promptly filed a motion asserting the foregoing details and sought an order setting aside the sale and confirming its exercise of the right of redemption.
On remand from the first appeal, the trial court determined that the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale had no standing to object to the claimed right of redemption. In the second appeal we reversed that decision and held that the buyer at the sale did indeed have standing to object. On remand from that appeal, the trial court found that the mortgagor could not assign its statutory right of redemption without also transferring title to the underlying property and that in exercising the right of redemption its purported assignee had not properly tendered the funds. We now reverse those determinations.
The mortgagor's privilege to redeem the property before a foreclosure sale becomes final is an old common law right. See Allstate Mortgage Corp. of Florida v. Strasser,
Florida has a strong public policy favoring the free right of transfer of interests in real property. See 22 FLA. JUR.2D, Estates Powers and Restraints, §§ 70-75 (right of alienation is an inseparable attribute of an estate in fee simple). The right of redemption is an innate feature of every mortgage. Quinn Plumbing Co. v. New Miami Shores Corp.,
There is no statutory prohibition against an assignment of the right of redemption. Moreover, under the common law anyone claiming under the mortgagor could exercise such a right. Robbins v. Blanc,
The buyer at the sale has not shown any good reason why we should *557 refuse to recognize the mortgagor's assignment of the right of redemption in this case. Nor has it shown any good reason why the assignee may not exercise that right through funds coming from still another party. So long as the funds are tendered on behalf of the assignee of the right of redemption, as here, and thereby placed unconditionally at the disposition of the Clerk, there is no good reason not to honor the redemption. The buyer argues that allowing redemption under the facts of this case threatens to diminish the pool of those interested in bidding at Clerk's sales, but the very persistence of the buyer in this much prolonged case demonstrates the failing in this argument.
We conclude that VOSR properly exercised this right of redemption by causing cleared funds to be tendered in its name to the Clerk. For the tender to be effective, VOSR was not required to tender a check from its own account or drawn in its own name. Cf. Southeast First Nat'l v. Taines,
Reversed.
POLEN and TAYLOR, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The record is filled with suggestions, assertions and speculations galore that the property is actually worth several million dollars more.
[2] Concord Development Corporation.
[3] We later vacated that certificate of title on the first appeal. Indian River Farms,
