David L. Griffin v. LaSalle Bank, N.A., etc. ( 2020 )


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  •           Supreme Court of Florida
    ____________
    No. SC18-1132
    ____________
    DAVID L. GRIFFIN,
    Petitioner,
    vs.
    LASALLE BANK, N.A., etc., et al.,
    Respondents.
    February 6, 2020
    POLSTON, J.
    David Griffin seeks review of the decision of the First District Court of
    Appeal in LaSalle Bank, N.A. v. Griffin, 
    248 So. 3d 191
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2018),
    regarding whether the circuit court presiding over the foreclosure action has
    continuing jurisdiction to consider a third-party purchaser’s motion to recover the
    value of repairs and improvements made to the property he purchased at a
    foreclosure sale that was later vacated. 1 For the reasons that follow, we conclude
    that the circuit court had continuing jurisdiction to consider Griffin’s motion for
    damages. Accordingly, we quash the First District’s decision.
    1. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The First District set forth the pertinent facts as follows:
    Petitioner LaSalle Bank, N.A., seeks a writ of prohibition to
    prevent the circuit court from considering a motion for damages due
    to betterment that a third party purchaser filed against Petitioner after
    the circuit court entered a final judgment of foreclosure in Petitioner’s
    favor. Agreeing that the circuit court lacks jurisdiction to consider the
    motion, we grant the writ.
    The circuit court entered a final judgment of foreclosure in
    March of 2010. Before the foreclosure sale, the defendant property
    owners, with Petitioner’s approval, entered into a short sale agreement
    with a third party, John Warren, and negotiated a sale price of
    $900,000. However, due to an error, the law firm representing
    Petitioner at the time did not file a motion to cancel the sale. The
    property was sold at a foreclosure sale to Respondent David Griffin
    for $75,000.
    Three days after a certificate of title was issued to Griffin,
    Petitioner moved to vacate the sale and title. In December of 2011,
    the circuit court granted the motion and entered an order vacating sale.
    The circuit court found that Griffin was the brother-in-law of John
    Warren, appeared at the sale at the request of John Warren, and
    purchased the property pursuant to the instructions of John Warren
    and using funds provided by John Warren. The court found that the
    foreclosure bid was grossly inadequate, and that while there was no
    misconduct, Griffin knowingly capitalized on Petitioner’s law firm’s
    failure to cancel the sale and his bid could not be characterized as a
    good faith bid. Griffin had objected to the motion to vacate, claiming
    that he had spent approximately $160,000 related to the repair of the
    property.
    Griffin moved for rehearing of the order vacating sale, arguing
    that the order failed to order the return of his purchase funds to him
    and had not reserved jurisdiction to determine the amount of money
    he was owed for his improvements to the property. Thereafter, on
    June 21, 2012, the circuit court entered an amended order vacating
    sale. The sale remained vacated, but the amended order provided that
    Griffin was entitled to a return of his foreclosure sale purchase price.
    The circuit court also “reserve[d] jurisdiction to consider whether or
    not Mr. Griffin is entitled to damages and or other relief for the value
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    added to the Property for the repairs and improvements made by Mr.
    Griffin to the Property. Mr. Griffin shall have twenty (20) days from
    the date of this Amended Order Vacating sale to file an appropriate
    pleading with this Court seeking damages or such other relief as the
    Court deems just.”
    On July 11, 2012, Griffin filed a motion for damages due to
    betterment. He sought the value of the improvements he had made to
    the property, in the amount of $368,000. The motion remained
    pending for over four years, as a subsequent foreclosure sale was
    vacated and the foreclosure sale was rescheduled two more times. In
    October of 2016, the circuit court granted Griffin’s motion to refer his
    motion for damages to mediation. No agreement was reached at
    mediation, and, at a foreclosure sale in May of 2017, the property was
    sold to U.S. Bank in its capacity as Successor Trustee. In August of
    2017, Griffin noticed his motion for damages for hearing, and the
    circuit court again referred the matter to mediation.
    At that point, Petitioner moved to strike the order referring the
    case to mediation, arguing the circuit court was without jurisdiction to
    order it to mediate the motion for damages more than seven years
    after the foreclosure judgment had become final. The circuit court
    denied this motion, finding it had jurisdiction to order the parties to
    mediation.
    
    Griffin, 248 So. 3d at 191-92
    .
    On appeal, the First District concluded “that the circuit court did not have
    jurisdiction to entertain Griffin’s third-party motion for damages after it rendered
    the final judgment of foreclosure in 2010.” 
    Id. at 192.
    The First District explained
    that “the trial [c]ourt loses jurisdiction of a cause after a judgment or final decree
    has been entered and the time for filing petition for rehearing or motion for new
    trial has expired or same has been denied.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted)
    (quoting Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am. v. Culbreath Isles Prop. Owners Ass’n,
    Inc., 
    103 So. 3d 896
    , 899 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012)). The First District further
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    concluded that the circuit court’s reservation of jurisdiction to consider Griffin’s
    claim “was not related to its ability to enforce the final judgment of foreclosure”
    and that “Griffin’s motion for damages raised a new claim” that exceeded the
    circuit court’s jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 193.
    The First District also concluded that
    LaSalle Bank did not waive this jurisdictional defect by participating in the first
    mediation because such a claim cannot be waived. 
    Id. Ultimately, the
    First
    District “grant[ed] the petition for writ of prohibition and quash[ed] the order
    denying [the bank’s] motion to strike the order referring the case to mediation.”
    
    Id. II. ANALYSIS
    Griffin argues that the circuit court presiding over the foreclosure action has
    continuing jurisdiction to consider his motion for damages for repairs and
    improvements made to the property he purchased at a foreclosure sale that was
    later vacated.2 We agree and quash the First District’s decision.
    “In a foreclosure case, after entry of a final judgment and expiration of time
    to file a motion for rehearing or for a new trial, the trial court loses jurisdiction of
    the case . . . unless jurisdiction was reserved to address that matter or the issue is
    2. “Questions regarding the trial court’s jurisdiction are reviewed de novo.”
    Marlin Yacht Mfg., Inc. v. Nichols, 
    254 So. 3d 1022
    , 1024 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018);
    see also State v. Green, 
    256 So. 3d 957
    , 958 (Fla. 1st DCA 2018) (“We review de
    novo the issue of whether a trial court’s jurisdiction expired or was divested.”).
    -4-
    allowed to be considered post-judgment by statute or under a provision of the
    Florida Rules of Civil Procedure.” Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Callahan, 
    155 So. 3d 373
    ,
    375 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014) (alteration in original) (quoting Ross v. Damas, 
    31 So. 3d 201
    , 203 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010)). However, a court of equity has the power to set
    aside the sale of mortgaged property made pursuant to foreclosure “to protect
    parties from all fraud, unfairness, and imposition.” Macfarlane v. Macfarlane, 
    39 So. 995
    , 998 (Fla. 1905). This Court has reemphasized “that the trial courts’ use of
    their equity powers in resolving disputes pertaining to judicial foreclosure sale set
    aside actions is essential.” Arsali v. Chase Home Fin. LLC, 
    121 So. 3d 511
    , 518
    (Fla. 2013).
    In Bridier v. Burns, 
    4 So. 2d 853
    , 853 (Fla. 1941), opinion supplemented on
    other grounds, 
    7 So. 2d 142
    (Fla. 1942), this Court addressed the claims of the
    “owners of the equity of redemption” to take possession of the premises following
    a foreclosure sale set aside. The purchasers were “Clive Hansard and wife, Olivia
    Hansard.” 
    Id. The Hansards
    “assert[ed] large sums of money [were] due them for
    betterments to the property made in good faith.” 
    Id. at 855.
    This Court explained
    that “[t]he purchaser also is entitled to be put into the same situation he was before
    the purchase.” 
    Id. at 854.
    This Court further explained that the purchaser is also
    entitled to such sums the purchaser may have paid out in good faith, relying on the
    validity of the title transferred under the sales, for improvements on the property, at
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    least to the extent that the value of the property was increased by such
    improvements. 
    Id. at 855.
    This Court directed, following the order vacating the
    Hansards’ title, that the lower court should require the Hansards to account for
    rents collected following the vacated sale; order “the parties to file pleadings,
    thereby arriving at issues as to the credits and debits which have accrued since the
    entry of the final decree”; and enter judgment on those new pleadings. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    circuit court retained jurisdiction to address claims the Hansards
    could have raised arising after the order vacating their title. See 
    id. Contrary to
    our decision in Bridier, the First District in this case concluded
    that the circuit court lost jurisdiction to address a purchaser’s claims arising after
    the final judgment and that Griffin’s claims are appropriately the subject of a new
    proceeding. 
    Griffin, 248 So. 3d at 193
    . In our decision in Bridier, the circuit court
    retained jurisdiction to address claims the purchasers could have raised arising
    after entry of final judgment and vacated foreclosure 
    sale. 4 So. 2d at 855
    ; see also
    
    Macfarlane, 39 So. at 998
    (in the same action in the trial court involving the
    original foreclosure action, the trial court had continuing jurisdiction to enter an
    order regarding the disposition of proceeds, including the return of monies paid for
    necessary repairs and expenses to the purchaser following the vacating of the
    foreclosure sale).
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    The First District’s holding in 
    Griffin, 248 So. 3d at 192
    , that “the circuit
    court did not have jurisdiction to entertain Griffin’s third-party motion for damages
    after it rendered the final judgment of foreclosure in 2010,” is too broad. Contrary
    to the First District’s holding in Griffin, circuit courts retain postjudgment
    jurisdiction to address a number of possible issues that can arise. See, e.g., Grace
    v. Hendricks, 
    140 So. 790
    , 792-93, 795 (Fla. 1932) (concluding that the circuit
    court in a foreclosure case did not exceed its authority when, after entering the
    final decree of foreclosure, the circuit court stayed the scheduled sale and later
    reopened the pleadings, thereby vacating the foreclosure decree); Citation Way
    Condo. Ass’n, Inc. v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 
    172 So. 3d 558
    , 559 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2015) (concluding that the circuit court had jurisdiction to adjudicate postjudgment
    dispute regarding unpaid condominium assessments); Blue v. Covington Cty. Bank,
    
    77 So. 3d 909
    , 911 (Fla. 1st DCA 2012) (reservation of jurisdiction in a final
    judgment to determine a set-off in a foreclosure sale indicates that “judicial labor is
    not complete” and appellate review is therefore premature). Accordingly, a circuit
    court has postjudgment jurisdiction over matters that arise in various contexts,
    including during the vacating of a judicial foreclosure sale.
    III. CONCLUSION
    To summarize, we conclude that the circuit court had continuing jurisdiction
    to consider Griffin’s motion for damages after it rendered the final judgment of
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    foreclosure. Accordingly, we quash the First District’s decision and remand for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    CANADY, C.J., and LABARGA and LAWSON, JJ., concur.
    LAWSON, J., concurs specially with an opinion, in which CANADY, C.J., and
    POLSTON and LABARGA, JJ., concur.
    MUÑIZ, J., dissents with an opinion.
    NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND,
    IF FILED, DETERMINED.
    LAWSON, J., concurring and concurring specially.
    I fully concur in the majority opinion and write separately to address the
    dissent’s arguments that this Court does not have conflict jurisdiction.
    We have jurisdiction to review any decision of a district court of appeal “that
    expressly and directly conflicts with a decision of . . . the supreme court on the
    same question of law.” Art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const. In Macfarlane v.
    Macfarlane, 
    39 So. 995
    , 998 (Fla. 1905), and Bridier v. Burns, 
    4 So. 2d 853
    , 855
    (Fla. 1941), opinion supplemented on other grounds, 
    7 So. 2d 142
    (Fla. 1942), this
    Court ordered the lower court to determine amounts owed to the purchaser
    following a vacated foreclosure sale. In contrast, in the decision on review,
    LaSalle Bank v. Griffin, 
    248 So. 3d 191
    , 193 (Fla. 1st DCA 2018), the First District
    held that entry of the final judgment of foreclosure divested the circuit court of
    jurisdiction to resolve this very question.
    -8-
    The relevant “question of law” is whether a trial court has jurisdiction to
    determine amounts owed to a purchaser following a vacated foreclosure sale. On
    this question, the First District’s holding in LaSalle and the remand instructions
    “expressly” given by this Court in Macfarlane and Bridier are irreconcilable—and
    therefore “directly” conflict with one another. While the dissent argues that this
    Court simply “assumed that the trial court had the requisite jurisdiction on remand”
    and “did not render a decision on the jurisdictional issue,” dissenting op. at 11, I do
    not see why the lack of analysis or a failure to add what would have been a
    redundant statement—that the trial court was authorized to make the determination
    that it erred in not making originally and was being commanded to make on
    remand—removes this question of law from the decision. Even if jurisdiction was
    not a “focus” of Macfarlane and Bridier, dissenting op. at 11, at the core of both
    decisions were express remand directions that were necessarily predicated upon
    and dependent on a conclusion that the lower court had jurisdiction to resolve these
    issues as part of the foreclosure action. See Blackhawk Heating & Plumbing Co.,
    Inc. v. Data Lease Fin. Corp., 
    328 So. 2d 825
    , 827 (Fla. 1975) (“A trial court is
    without authority to alter or evade the mandate of an appellate court absent
    permission to do so [and] [i]f the trial court fails or refuses to comply with the
    appellate court’s mandate, the latter may, generally speaking, take any steps or
    issue any appropriate writ necessary to give effect to its judgment.”) (citation
    -9-
    omitted); see also Mobley v. Mobley, 
    920 So. 2d 97
    , 102 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006)
    (holding that when an appellate court issues specific instructions, a lower court
    “must carry out those instructions and not stray”). In other words, this Court
    expressly commanded the lower court to do what the First District held a trial court
    cannot do and thereby decided that the lower had the jurisdiction to do it. The
    resulting express and direct conflict vests this Court with discretionary jurisdiction
    under article V, section 3(b)(3) of the Florida Constitution.
    CANADY, C.J., and POLSTON and LABARGA, JJ., concur.
    MUÑIZ, J., dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent, because I believe we lack jurisdiction to decide this
    case. The majority bases jurisdiction on an asserted conflict between the First
    District’s decision in this case and this Court’s decisions in Bridier v. Burns, 
    4 So. 2d
    853 (Fla. 1941), and Macfarlane v. Macfarlane, 
    39 So. 995
    (Fla. 1905). For
    there to be conflict jurisdiction, however, our constitution requires that the decision
    under review expressly and directly conflict with a “decision” of a different district
    court or of this Court “on the same question of law.” Art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const.
    It follows from the structure of article V that each of the assertedly conflicting
    decisions must be one with precedential value on the relevant question of law. I do
    not believe that this test is satisfied here.
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    The question of law that the First District decided in LaSalle Bank is
    whether the circuit court exceeded its jurisdiction by “considering a motion for
    damages due to betterment that a third party purchaser filed against [LaSalle] after
    the circuit court entered a final judgment of foreclosure in [LaSalle’s] favor.”
    LaSalle Bank v. Griffin, 
    248 So. 3d 191
    , 191 (Fla. 1st DCA 2018). The First
    District concluded that the circuit court had, in fact, exceeded its jurisdiction by
    proceeding on the motion. The majority finds conflict with language in Bridier
    and Macfarlane indicating that, in proceedings following vacatur of a foreclosure
    sale, a trial court could resolve issues like the one raised by the third-party
    purchaser here. See Bridier, 
    4 So. 2d
    at 855 (directing chancellor to determine
    credits and debits accrued since vacated foreclosure sale); 
    Macfarlane, 39 So. at 998
    (remanding to chancellor for accounting of credits and debits due purchaser
    after vacated foreclosure sale).
    Unlike the First District in LaSalle Bank, however, this Court in Bridier and
    Macfarlane did not render a decision on the jurisdictional issue that this case
    squarely presents—at least not a decision with any precedential value. Instead, in
    those cases this Court simply assumed that the trial court had the requisite
    jurisdiction on remand. The jurisdictional issue was not a focus of those cases;
    there is no indication on the face of our opinions that the trial court’s jurisdiction
    was in dispute or that our Court gave the issue deliberate consideration. As a
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    result, in my view, Bridier and Macfarlane have no precedential value on the
    asserted conflict issue. Cf. United States v. L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., 
    344 U.S. 33
    , 38 (1952) (“Even as to our own judicial power or jurisdiction, this Court
    has followed the lead of Chief Justice Marshall who held that this Court is not
    bound by a prior exercise of jurisdiction in a case where it was not questioned and
    it was passed sub silentio.”).
    We long ago recognized that a “limitation of review to decisions in ‘direct
    conflict’ clearly evinces a concern with decisions as precedents as opposed to
    adjudications of the rights of particular litigants.” Ansin v. Thurston, 
    101 So. 2d 808
    , 811 (Fla. 1958). This emphasis on the precedential value of decisions
    respects the structure of Article V, which makes the district courts of appeal the
    final stop in most cases and gives this Court discretionary conflict jurisdiction to
    ensure harmony in the law. In the absence of a conflict of decisions with
    precedential value, there is nothing of significance to harmonize.
    Under these circumstances, I respectfully conclude that we lack jurisdiction
    to review the First District’s decision in this case.
    Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal – Direct
    Conflict of Decisions
    First District - Case No. 1D17-5122
    (Bay County)
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    Michael S. Burke and Gregory J. Philo of Burke Blue P.A., Panama City Beach,
    Florida,
    for Petitioner
    Allison Morat of Bitman O’Brien & Morat, PLLC, Lake Mary, Florida,
    for Respondent
    - 13 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SC18-1132

Filed Date: 2/6/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/6/2020