THE RESTORATION TEAM a/a/o RICK SANTOS and IDALIA SANTOS v. SOUTHERN OAK INSURANCE COMPANY ( 2023 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed February 15, 2023.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D21-1932
    Lower Tribunal No. 21-6801 SP
    ________________
    The Restoration Team a/a/o Rick Santos and Idalia Santos,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Southern Oak Insurance Company,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the County Court for Miami-Dade County, Elijah A.
    Levitt, Judge.
    Giasi Law, P.A., and Melissa A. Giasi and Erin M. Berger (Tampa), for
    appellant.
    Quintairos, Prieto, Wood & Boyer, P.A., and Thomas A. Valdez and
    Megan G. Colter (Tampa), for appellee.
    Before EMAS, HENDON and MILLER, JJ.
    EMAS, J.
    INTRODUCTION
    The Restoration Team (“TRT”), as assignee of Rick and Idalia Santos
    (“Santos”), appeals the trial court’s order dismissing its breach-of-contract
    lawsuit against Southern Oak Insurance Company.          The dismissal was
    based on TRT’s failure to comply with section 627.7152, Florida Statutes
    (2019). TRT asserts that the trial court erroneously applied the statute
    retroactively, and that TRT was not required to comply with its provisions.
    TRT is incorrect and, for the reasons that follow, we affirm and hold that the
    trial court correctly applied section 627.7152 to the assignment of benefits
    agreement in this case, and that such application was prospective, not
    retroactive.
    FACTS AND BACKGROUND
    Santos owned a home that was insured against property damage by
    Southern Oak Insurance Company under a policy which was effective from
    August 12, 2018 to August 12, 2019. Santos’ home reportedly sustained
    windstorm damage on August 6, 2019 and Santos subsequently assigned
    their rights under the insurance policy to TRT.
    Thereafter, TRT presented Southern Oak with an invoice for mitigation
    services provided at the property, in the amount of $6,246.27.         When
    2
    Southern Oak failed to pay, TRT filed the instant complaint, alleging breach
    of contract and seeking damages.
    Southern Oak moved to dismiss the complaint, asserting that the
    assignment was invalid under section 627.7152 because, inter alia, the
    assignment did not contain a “written, itemized, per-unit cost estimate of the
    services to be performed by the assignee,” section 627.7152(2)(a)(4), and
    because the assignment of benefits violated the $3,000 or 1% cap set forth
    in section 627.7152(2)(c).
    In response, TRT contended it was not required to comply with section
    627.7152 because the statute did not exist when the insurance policy
    became effective on August 12, 2018, and, further, that the motion to dismiss
    improperly contained allegations outside the four corners of the complaint.
    Following a hearing, the trial court granted the motion to dismiss,
    finding section 627.7152 applied to the assignment of benefits, despite the
    effective date of the insurance policy, because the assignment of benefits
    was executed after the effective date of the statute. The court further found
    that because the assignment of benefits failed to comply with the
    requirements of section 627.7152, it was invalid and that this failure to
    comply was evident from the four corners of the complaint and its
    attachments. This appeal followed.
    3
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Because the issue on appeal is one of statutory construction, we apply
    a de novo standard of review. Richards v. State, 
    288 So. 3d 574
    , 575 (Fla.
    2020) (“Because the issue in this case ultimately turns on the interpretation
    of a statute, we review it de novo”). Further, the “question of whether a
    statute applies retroactively or prospectively is a pure question of law; thus,
    our standard of review is de novo.” Dimitri v. Com. Ctr. of Miami Master
    Ass’n, Inc., 
    253 So. 3d 715
    , 718 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018) (quoting Bionetics Corp.
    v. Kenniasty, 
    69 So. 3d 943
    , 947 (Fla. 2011)).
    ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
    In this appeal we must determine whether an assignment of benefits
    is subject to the requirements of section 627.7152 (entitled “Assignment
    agreements”) where it was executed after the statute’s effective date but the
    corresponding insurance policy was in force prior to the effective date of the
    statute.
    Section 627.7152 imposes certain requirements for an assignment of
    post-loss benefits under a property insurance policy in Florida, including,
    relevant to our discussion, that an assignment agreement must:
    Contain a written, itemized, per-unit cost estimate of the services
    to be performed by the assignee.
    § 627.7152(2)(a)4.
    4
    In addition, subsection (2)(c) provides:
    (c) If an assignor acts under an urgent or emergency
    circumstance to protect property from damage and executes an
    assignment agreement to protect, repair, restore, or replace
    property or to mitigate against further damage to the property, an
    assignee may not receive an assignment of post-loss benefits
    under a residential property insurance policy in excess of the
    greater of $3,000 or 1 percent of the Coverage A limit under such
    policy. For purposes of this paragraph, the term “urgent or
    emergency circumstance” means a situation in which a loss to
    property, if not addressed immediately, will result in additional
    damage until measures are completed to prevent such damage.
    Finally, subsection (13) provides the effective date:
    § 627.7152(2)(c)
    Finally, and most significant to our review, the Legislature provided, in
    the final subsection of the statute, express language regarding the statute’s
    effective date:
    (13) This section applies to an assignment agreement
    executed on or after July 1, 2019.
    § 627.7152(13) (emphasis added).
    Thus, by its express terms, the statute applies to the instant
    assignment of benefits: it is undisputed that the assignment was executed
    after the statute’s July 1, 2019, effective date.
    Nevertheless, TRT contends that requiring this assignment to comply
    with the statute constitutes a retroactive application of the statute, because
    Santos’ insurance policy went into effect on August 12, 2018, prior to the
    5
    effective date of the statute. For this argument, TRT relies on Menendez v.
    Progressive Express Ins. Co., 
    35 So. 3d 873
     (Fla. 2010), which held that an
    amendment to the PIP statute (adding a presuit notice requirement) could
    not be applied in a case involving an insurance policy issued before the
    effective date of the statutory amendment. In so holding, Menendez stated
    the general proposition that “the statute in effect at the time an insurance
    contract is executed governs substantive issues arising in connection with
    that contract.” 
    Id. at 876
     (citations omitted).     Menendez, however, is
    distinguishable, and does not support TRT’s position that the instant statute
    is being applied retroactively to the assignment of benefits.
    Section 627.7152 does not apply to an insurance agreement executed
    on or after July 1, 2019; rather it applies to an assignment agreement
    executed on or after July 1, 2019, without regard to when the underlying
    policy was executed. While TRT is correct that the insurance policy itself—
    a contract between Santos and Southern Oak, and not involving TRT—
    predated the effective date of the statute, the assignment of benefits
    agreement—between Santos and TRT—was executed on August 23, 2019,
    well after the July 1, 2019 effective date expressly provided by the
    Legislature.
    6
    In Menendez, the statutory amendment imposed a presuit notice
    requirement upon insurance policies which were in effect prior to the
    amendment, affecting pre-existing contractual rights between the insured
    and the insurer. By contrast, TRT’s contractual rights did not come into
    existence until the assignment of benefits agreement was executed, some
    seven weeks after the statute’s effective date. The date on which the insured
    and insurer executed the underlying insurance policy is irrelevant here,
    because section 627.7152 (unlike the statute in Menendez) does not impose
    requirements upon an existing insurance policy, but rather imposes
    requirements upon an assignment of benefits agreement entered into
    between an assignor and assignee after the effective date of the statute.
    We reject TRT’s argument that, because it stands in the shoes of the
    insureds, it is the date of execution of the underlying insurance policy that
    governs. Section 627.7152 was not enacted to modify rights and duties as
    between the insured and insurer under a preexisting insurance policy; it was
    enacted “to regulate assignment agreements that seek to transfer insurance
    benefits from the policyholder to a third party.” Total Care Restoration, LLC
    v. Citizens Prop. Ins. Corp., 
    337 So. 3d 74
    , 75-76 (Fla. 4th DCA 2022).
    It must be kept in mind that the “agreement” addressed by section
    627.7152 is not the insurance agreement between the insured and insurer,
    7
    but   rather    the   post-loss     assignment     agreement   between     the
    insured/assignor and the third-party assignee. “A trial court applies a statute
    prospectively, not retroactively, to a contract where the statute preexisted
    the contract.” Kidwell Grp., LLC v. Am. Integrity Ins. Co. of Fla., 
    347 So. 3d 501
    , 506 (Fla. 2d DCA 2022). Once the focus is properly placed on the
    agreement at issue (the assignment of benefits rather than the insurance
    policy), it becomes self-evident that the statute is being applied
    prospectively, not retroactively.
    We are guided by this court’s recent decision in Adjei v. First Cmty.
    Ins. Co., 47 Fla. L. Weekly D2116, 
    2022 WL 10733838
     (Fla. 3d DCA Oct.
    19, 2022).     In that case, homeowners covered by an insurance policy
    sustained damage to their property following Hurricane Irma, and later
    assigned their post-loss benefits under that policy to their children. Although
    the insurance policy was in effect before the effective date of section
    627.7152, the post-loss assignment agreement was executed three months
    after the statute’s July 1, 2019 effective date.
    The children-assignees later filed a breach of contract suit against the
    insurance company, and the insurance company moved to dismiss the suit,
    contending “the assignment was noncompliant because it omitted essential
    items [required by section 627.7152], including the assignees’ signatures, a
    8
    rescission provision, a cost estimate, an indemnification clause, a boilerplate
    statutory notice provision, and language confirming that the assignees would
    furnish the insurer with a copy of the agreement within three business days
    after either execution or commencement of work.” Id. at *2.1 The children-
    assignees countered, inter alia, that applying this statutory “checklist” to a
    post-loss assignment agreement, where the insurance policy was in effect
    before the statute’s effective date, would result in an unconstitutional
    impairment of contract in violation of Article I, Section 10 of the United States
    Constitution.2 The trial court dismissed the case and this court affirmed,
    holding in relevant part that the portion of section 627.7152 at issue
    merely regulates the contents of any assignment agreement by
    requiring the contracting parties to include certain language. Had
    the legislature wished to do so, it indubitably could have
    designated certain claims unassignable, prohibited a class of
    potential assignees from accepting an assignment, limited the
    circumstances under which an insured might legally assign a
    claim, or imposed any other substantively restrictive measures.
    Consequently, insofar as it merely requires the inclusion of
    certain words, we conclude the statute solely “affect[s] rights
    under the assignment of benefits, not substantive rights under
    1
    Assignment agreements that fail to comply with the statutory requirements
    of section 627.7152 are “invalid and unenforceable.” § 627.7152(2)(d), Fla.
    Stat.
    2
    We note that no party to the instant appeal has raised the applicability of
    section 627.7153, Florida Statutes (2019). See also Adjei v. First Community
    Ins. Co., 47 Fla. L. Weekly D2116, 
    2022 WL 10733838
     at *1 n.1 (Fla. 3d
    DCA Oct. 19, 2022) (“We summarily reject the notion that section 627.7153,
    Florida Statutes (2019), which governs anti-assignment provisions in
    insurance policies, has any application to this case.”)
    9
    the insurance policy.” SFR Servs., LLC v. Indian Harbor Ins. Co.,
    
    529 F. Supp. 3d 1285
    , 1290 (M.D. Fla. 2021). Thus, applying the
    provisions to assignments executed after its effective date does
    not “impair rights a party possessed when he acted, increase a
    party's liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with
    respect to transactions already completed.” Landgraf [v. USI Film
    Prod.], 511 U.S. [244], at 280, 
    114 S.Ct. 1483
    .
    We further note that our sister court, on relevant facts indistinguishable
    from the instant case, has held:
    This case does not involve the application of a statute to a
    preexisting insurance policy; it concerns a statute's application to
    an assignment created after the effective date of the statute.
    Thus, section 627.7152—the law in effect at the time the
    assignment of benefits was executed—was properly applied to
    the assignment in this case.
    Total Care Restoration, 337 So. 3d at 77.
    As in Adjei, the application of section 627.7152 to the instant
    assignment agreement—executed after the statute’s effective date—does
    not constitute a retroactive application or unconstitutionally impair the
    parties’ right to contract.   Instead, and as observed in Total Care, the
    application of section 627.7152 to the assignment agreement is prospective.
    We note that two other district courts have adopted this analysis. See
    Kidwell Grp, LLC v. Olympus Ins. Co., 
    346 So. 3d 658
     (Fla. 5th DCA 2022)
    (aligning with the Fourth District’s decision in Total Care, holding that the trial
    court properly applied section 627.7152 prospectively to the assignment
    agreement, and that because the assignee failed to comply with section
    10
    627.7152 it never stepped into the insurer’s shoes); Kidwell Grp., LLC, 347
    So. 3d at 507 (the Second District, relying upon Total Care, held: “It seems
    beyond cavil that an assignee acquires no rights to an insured claim until it
    executes a valid AOB” and reaffirming that “the law in effect at the time the
    parties executed the AOB controls). 3
    CONCLUSION
    Consistent with this court’s earlier decision in Adjei, as well as the
    related decisions of the Second, Fourth and Fifth District Courts of Appeal,
    we hold that the assignment of benefits agreement executed after July 1,
    2019 was governed by section 627.7152 and did not constitute a retroactive
    application of the statute, even if the underlying insurance policy was in effect
    prior to July 1, 2019. As a result, because the assignment of benefits did not
    comply with the requirements of that statute, the trial court correctly
    3
    But see Procraft Exteriors, Inc. v. Metro. Cas. Ins. Co., 29 Fla. L. Weekly
    Fed. D71, 
    2020 WL 5943845
     (M.D. Fla. May 13, 2020) (holding section
    627.7152 did not apply to an AOB issued after July 1, 2019 because the
    version of the statute in effect when the insurance policy was issued is the
    version that applies). We note that at the time the United States District Court
    issued its decision in Procraft, Florida appellate courts had yet to decide the
    question presented.
    11
    determined the assignment was invalid and properly dismissed TRT’s suit
    against Southern Oak.4
    Affirmed.
    4
    TRT also argues the trial court erred in dismissing the case because it relied
    on matters outside the four corners of the complaint in doing so. However,
    attached to the complaint was the insurance policy, the assignment of
    benefits and the estimate of repairs dated three days later. The trial court
    properly considered these attachments in reaching its determination that the
    assignment of benefits failed to comply with the statute. See Santiago v.
    Mauna Loa Invs., LLC, 
    189 So. 3d 752
    , 756 (Fla. 2016) (holding that the
    “four-corners rule” allows a court to review not only the complaint, but also
    any exhibit attached thereto).
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 21-1932

Filed Date: 2/15/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/15/2023