Dever v. Wells Fargo Bank National Association , 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 13259 ( 2014 )


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  •               NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    CORNELIUS J. DEVER and              )
    ASSUNTA A. DEVER,                   )
    )
    Appellants,              )
    )
    v.                                  )              Case No. 2D13-5830
    )
    WELLS FARGO BANK                    )
    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS            )
    SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO              )
    WACHOVIA BANK NATIONAL              )
    ASSOCIATION; FIFTH THIRD            )
    MORTGAGE COMPANY; and RBC           )
    BANK (USA),                         )
    )
    Appellees.               )
    ___________________________________ )
    Opinion filed August 27, 2014.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lee
    County; Sherra Winesett, Judge.
    Richard E. Stadler of Darby Peele Crapps
    Green & Stadler, LLP, Lake City, for
    Appellants.
    Todd A. Armbruster of Moskowitz, Mandell,
    Salim & Simowitz, P.A., Fort Lauderdale,
    for Appellee Wells Fargo Bank National
    Association, as Successor by Merger to
    Wachovia Bank National Association.
    No appearance for remaining Appellees.
    KHOUZAM, Judge.
    This appeal arises from a dispute over the disbursement of surplus
    proceeds from a foreclosure sale. Cornelius and Assunta Dever (the record property
    owners) as well as Wells Fargo Bank (the holder of an unsatisfied mortgage) claimed
    that they were entitled to the surplus proceeds. The circuit court ordered the surplus to
    be disbursed to Wells Fargo, and the Devers appealed. We reverse and remand for the
    circuit court to order the surplus disbursed to the Devers.
    Fifth Third Mortgage Company filed a foreclosure suit against the Devers
    in April 2011. In the complaint, Fifth Third asserted that Wells Fargo was a junior
    lienholder. Wells Fargo filed an answer, admitting that it was a junior lienholder and
    stating that it would be entitled to any and all surplus funds generated by a foreclosure
    sale in this case up to the full amount of indebtedness. The Devers owed Wells Fargo
    $134,578.17.
    A default judgment was entered against the Devers on March 23, 2012.
    The final judgment of foreclosure included the following language, as required by
    section 45.031(1), Florida Statutes (2011):
    IF THIS PROPERTY IS SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION,
    THERE MAY BE ADDITIONAL MONEY FROM THE SALE
    AFTER PAYMENT OF PERSONS WHO ARE ENTITLED
    TO BE PAID FROM THE SALE PROCEEDS PURSUANT
    TO THIS FINAL JUDGMENT.
    IF YOU ARE A SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDER CLAIMING A
    RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU
    MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN
    60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A
    CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY
    REMAINING FUNDS.
    -2-
    IF YOU ARE THE PROPERTY OWNER, YOU MAY CLAIM
    THESE FUNDS YOURSELF.
    A foreclosure sale was held on April 25, 2012, and resulted in a surplus of
    $85,899.06, which was placed in the court registry. The certificate of disbursements
    was filed on May 8, 2012, and included the following language as required by section
    45.031(7)(b):
    If you are a person claiming a right to funds remaining after
    the sale, you must file a claim with the clerk no later than 60
    days after the sale. If you fail to file a claim, you will not be
    entitled to any remaining funds. After 60 days, only the
    owner of record as of the date of the lis pendens may claim
    the surplus.
    No claims to the surplus were filed during this sixty-day period.
    In November 2012, the Devers filed a motion to disburse surplus sale
    proceeds. In the motion, the Devers acknowledged that Wells Fargo, as a subordinate
    lienholder, may at one point have had a claim to the surplus funds. But the Devers
    argued that Wells Fargo was barred from claiming the surplus because it had failed to
    file a claim for the funds within the sixty days following the sale. Wells Fargo responded
    in March 2013 by filing its own motion to disburse surplus funds and memorandum of
    law opposing the Devers' motion. Relying on Citibank v. PNC Mortgage Corp. of
    America, 
    718 So. 2d 300
    (Fla. 2d DCA 1998), Wells Fargo argued that it had timely
    raised a claim to the surplus in its answer. The circuit court granted Wells Fargo's
    motion, denied the Devers' motion, and ordered the funds to be disbursed to Wells
    Fargo.
    We hold that the circuit court erred in ordering the funds to be disbursed to
    Wells Fargo. Wells Fargo is barred from claiming any interest in the surplus funds
    -3-
    because it failed to file a claim for the surplus within the sixty days after the sale. This
    court recently addressed this exact issue in Mathews v. Branch Banking & Trust Co.,
    
    139 So. 3d 498
    (Fla. 2d DCA 2014). In Mathews, this court held that the language in
    section 45.031(7)(b) is clear and unambiguous: any person claiming a right to the
    surplus funds must file a claim with the clerk no later than sixty days after the sale. And
    section 45.031(1)(a) specifically warns that if a subordinate lienholder fails to file a
    claim, it will not be entitled to any remaining funds. Subsection (7)(b) reiterates this
    requirement. Further, section 45.032(2) establishes a rebuttable presumption that the
    owner of record is entitled to the surplus after any subordinate lienholders who timely
    filed claims have been paid. Accordingly, we must reverse and remand for the circuit
    court to order the surplus disbursed to the Devers.
    We also note that Citibank, on which both Wells Fargo and the circuit
    court relied, does not apply here. In Mathews, this court specifically held that the circuit
    court's reliance on Citibank was misplaced because it was decided before chapter 45
    was amended to include the sixty-day time limit to file a claim for surplus funds. 
    139 So. 3d
    at 501. The time limit was not added until 2006 and did not take effect until July of
    that year. Ch. 06-175, §§ 1-2, at 1810-17, Laws of Fla. We similarly conclude that U.S.
    v. Sneed, 
    620 So. 2d 1093
    (Fla. 1st DCA 1993); JP Morgan Chase Bank v. U.S. Bank
    National Ass'n, 
    929 So. 2d 651
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2006); and other cases that were decided
    before the effective date of the amendment are inapplicable here for the same reason.
    We disagree with Wells Fargo's argument that the language found in
    section 45.032(3)(b) undermines the clear language in section 45.031(7)(b). Section
    45.032(3)(b) provides in relevant part:
    -4-
    If any person other than the owner of record claims an
    interest in the proceeds during the 60-day period or if the
    owner of record files a claim for the surplus but
    acknowledges that one or more other persons may be
    entitled to part or all of the surplus, the court shall set an
    evidentiary hearing to determine entitlement to the surplus.
    (emphasis added). Wells Fargo argues that this section sets up two possible scenarios
    where a hearing would be needed—one where a claim has been filed within the sixty-
    day period and another where the owner has acknowledged at any time that there is a
    subordinate lienholder that may be entitled to funds. But Wells Fargo has taken this
    statutory language out of context.
    Section 45.031 sets out the procedure for judicial sales and establishes
    the sixty-day deadline for claims to any surplus, see §§ 45.031(1)(a), (2)(f), (7)(b).
    Section 45.032 then provides the procedure for the disbursement of surplus funds after
    a judicial sale and establishes "a rebuttable legal presumption that the owner of record
    on the date of the filing of a lis pendens is the person entitled to surplus funds after
    payment of subordinate lienholders who have timely filed a claim," see § 45.032(2)
    (emphasis added). Section 45.032(3) provides that the clerk shall hold the surplus for
    sixty days after the certificate of disbursements is issued, pending a court order. If the
    owner claims the surplus during the sixty-day period, the owner should acknowledge if
    there are any subordinate lienholders who may have a right to the funds. §
    45.032(3)(a). So section 45.032(3)(b), read in the context of the surrounding statutory
    sections, clearly indicates that a hearing must be held where any subordinate
    lienholders have been brought to the clerk's attention during the sixty-day period—either
    where the subordinate lienholder files its own claim or the owner files a claim but
    acknowledges the existence of the subordinate lienholder. Thus, section 45.032,
    -5-
    considered in its entirety and read in conjunction with section 45.031, undoubtedly
    contemplates that all claims to the surplus be filed within the sixty days following the
    sale and that if no claims are filed during that period the owner is presumed to be
    entitled to the surplus.
    Reversed and remanded with directions.
    WALLACE, J., and DAKAN, STEPHEN L., ASSOCIATE SENIOR JUDGE, Concur.
    -6-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2D13-5830

Citation Numbers: 147 So. 3d 1045, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 13259, 2014 WL 4212760

Judges: Khouzam, Wallace, Dakan, Stephen

Filed Date: 8/27/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024