FETTIG'S CONSTRUCTION, INC. v. PARADISE PROPERTIES & INTERIORS \"LLC\" ( 2020 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    FETTIG’S CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    PARADISE PROPERTIES & INTERIORS LLC,
    Respondent.
    No. 4D20-133
    [November 4, 2020]
    Petition for writ of certiorari to the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth
    Judicial Circuit, Indian River County; Janet C. Croom, Judge; L.T. Case
    No. 31-2019 CA-000319.
    J. Garry Rooney and D. John Rhodeback of Rooney & Rooney, P.A.,
    Vero Beach, for petitioner.
    Joseph Altschul of Joseph E. Altschul, LLC, Pembroke Pines, for
    respondent.
    ON MOTION FOR REHEARING AND/OR REHEARING EN BANC
    WARNER, J.
    We deny the motion for rehearing, but withdraw our prior opinion and
    substitute the following in its place.
    Petitioner, Fettig’s Construction, challenges a partial final judgment
    which dismissed its claim to foreclose a mechanic’s lien with prejudice and
    discharged petitioner’s lis pendens and lien recorded against the subject
    property. The trial court concluded that petitioner failed to properly serve
    the claim of lien or contractor’s affidavit in accordance with the provisions
    of section 713.18, Florida Statutes (2019) and therefore was not within the
    applicable statute of limitations. Because we conclude that the statute
    allows service on the last known address of the person to be served, we
    grant the petition for writ of certiorari.
    We have jurisdiction, because the discharge of the lien would allow the
    respondents to sell or transfer their property and deprive petitioners of
    their statutory basis for their claim, which cannot be remedied on post
    judgment appeal. See Dracon Const., Inc. v. Facility Const. Mgmt., Inc., 
    828 So. 2d 1069
    , 1070 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002) (concluding that certiorari is
    appropriate to review an order granting a motion to vacate a lien); see also
    Premier Finishes, Inc. v. Maggirias, 
    130 So. 3d 238
    , 239 (Fla. 2d DCA 2013)
    (finding departure where trial court discharged the claim of lien without
    determining if any adverse effect resulted from the discrepancy between
    the named lienor on the claim of lien and the named contractor on the
    contract).
    The Litigation
    Respondent Paradise Properties (Owner) hired Fettig’s (Contractor) in
    January 2018 as a general contractor to renovate its premises. Contractor
    recorded its notice of commencement on January 19, 2018. That notice
    listed the property’s address as 628 Banyan Rd, Vero Beach, FL.
    Contractor sued Owner in April 2019 alleging three counts. Count 1
    alleged a claim to foreclose a construction lien which the trial court
    dismissed. Contractor alleged that it served the claim of lien and recorded
    it on May 1, 2018, thus the suit was timely. See § 713.22, Fla. Stat. (2019).
    Counts 2 and 3 alleged breach of contract and unjust enrichment,
    respectively, and those counts remain pending.
    Owner answered and asserted affirmative defenses and a counterclaim.
    Thereafter, Owner moved for summary judgment on the lien foreclosure
    count claiming that the lien and Contractor’s affidavit were not properly
    served in accordance with section 713.08, Florida Statutes (2019).
    Specifically, neither the claim of lien nor the Contractor’s affidavit were
    delivered to Owner, nor posted on the property as the statute required.
    The trial court agreed, discharged the lien, and granted summary
    judgment. We quash that order and remand the case for further review as
    outlined below.
    Analysis
    The documents and affidavits revealed the following regarding sending
    the claim of lien:
    • Contractor’s Jan. 19, 2018, notice of commencement lists
    owners as Jackie and Keith Schaeffer Paradise Properties &
    Interiors with a Vero Beach address (628 Banyan Road)
    • Contractor’s claim of lien filed and recorded May 1, 2018
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    • Contractor’s claim of lien sent May 3, 2018, by certified mail
    and regular mail to a different Vero Beach address (855 Reef
    Rd), and to an Orlando address (635 Terrace Blvd). Both
    certified mailings were returned to Contractor as “unclaimed,”
    “vacant,” and “undeliverable.” The regular mail was not
    returned.
    The Orlando address was the address which Owner provided to the State
    of Florida as its mailing address, registered agent’s address, and the
    mailing address for its two members, Jackie and Keith Schaeffer. The
    other Vero Beach address on Reef Road is the address which Owner
    identified as its mailing address with the Indian River County Property
    Appraiser.
    Section 713.08 governs the filing of claims of lien for construction.
    Subsections (1)-(3) detail the content of the claim, while subsection (4)(c)
    provides that the claim of lien shall be served on the owner. That
    subsection provides:
    (c) The claim of lien shall be served on the owner. Failure to
    serve any claim of lien in the manner provided in s. 713.18
    before recording or within 15 days after recording shall render
    the claim of lien voidable to the extent that the failure or delay
    is shown to have been prejudicial to any person entitled to rely
    on the service.
    Section 713.18 provides for the method of service of a claim of lien:
    (1) Service of notices, claims of lien, affidavits, assignments,
    and other instruments permitted or required under this part,
    or copies thereof when so permitted or required, unless
    otherwise specifically provided in this part, must be made by
    one of the following methods:
    (a) By actual delivery to the person to be served; if a
    partnership, to one of the partners; if a corporation, to an
    officer, director, managing agent, or business agent; or, if a
    limited liability company, to a member or manager.
    (b) By common carrier delivery service or by registered,
    Global Express Guaranteed, or certified mail, with postage or
    shipping paid by the sender and with evidence of delivery,
    which may be in an electronic format.
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    (c) By posting on the site of the improvement if service as
    provided by paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) cannot be
    accomplished.
    ....
    (3)(a) Service of an instrument pursuant to this section is
    effective on the date of mailing the instrument if it:
    1. Is sent to the last address shown in the notice of
    commencement or any amendment thereto or, in the
    absence of a notice of commencement, to the last address
    shown in the building permit application, or to the last
    known address of the person to be served; and
    2. Is returned as being “refused,” “moved, not forwardable,”
    or “unclaimed,” or is otherwise not delivered or deliverable
    through no fault of the person serving the item.
    (Emphasis added). While subsection (1) does not direct that service be
    made to any particular address, subsection (3)(a) provides that it must be
    sent to certain addresses to be effective on the mailing date when it is not
    received by the property owner.
    Contractor did not send the claim of lien to the address listed on the
    notice of commencement under section 713.18(3)(a)1. Nor did it send the
    claim to the last address shown in the building permit application.
    Instead, Contractor sent the claim of lien to what it stated was the last
    known address of the person to be served, namely, the Orlando address of
    the corporation contained in the records of the Department of State; and
    to the corporation at the Reef Road address in Vero Beach, the mailing
    address for the corporation in the property appraiser’s records. This was
    based upon counsel’s experience with attempting and finally securing
    service on the Owner for a subcontractor’s claim of lien.
    Both certified mailings were returned as unclaimed or undeliverable.
    Thus, Contractor contends that in accordance with section 713.18(3)(a)2.
    the claim of lien was served within fifteen days of its recording, making it
    timely.
    Whether the claim of lien was timely served depends upon the
    construction of subsection (3)(a)1. Contractor argues that the statute
    provides for alternative methods of service through the use of the
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    conjunction “or,” and it used the alternative of serving at the last known
    address of the Owner.
    Owner, on the other hand, argues that a lienor may avail itself of the
    benefit of the effective date for mailing when the claim is mailed to the
    address in the notice of commencement first, and only in the absence of
    that notice can the alternative be used of the address on the building
    permit or the last known address of the person to be served. Owner argues
    that either the statute is unambiguous or that, applying the doctrine of
    last antecedent, the absence of a notice of commencement is a prerequisite
    to either alternative method of service.
    Our construction of the statute leads us to conclude that the statute
    authorizes alternative addresses for service, and the absence of a notice of
    commencement is not required for service on the last known address of
    the party to be served. The statute provides for addresses to which the
    claim of lien can be sent as “the last address shown in the notice of
    commencement or any amendment thereto or,”. (emphasis added). It is
    significant that there is no comma prior to the “or” in this list. The comma
    comes after the “or” and sets off the phrase “in the absence of a notice of
    commencement” which ends with another comma. Given both the
    punctuation and the location of that phrase, it applies only to the
    immediately prior antecedent—the notice of commencement. The relevant
    doctrine provides:
    Under the “doctrine of the last antecedent,” “relative and
    qualifying words, phrases and clauses are to be applied to the
    words or phrase immediately preceding, and are not to be
    construed as extending to, or including, others more remote.”
    Kasischke v. State, 
    991 So. 2d 803
    , 811 (Fla. 2008) (quoting
    City of St. Petersburg v. Nasworthy, 
    751 So. 2d 772
    , 774 (Fla.
    1st DCA 2000)). In addition, a qualifying phrase is read as
    limited to the last item in a series when the phrase follows
    that item without a comma. State ex rel. Owens v. Pearson,
    
    156 So. 2d 4
    , 6 (Fla. 1963). Accord 
    Kasischke, 991 So. 2d at 812
    –13.
    Jacques v. Dep't of Bus. & Prof'l Regulation, Div. of Pari-Mutuel Wagering,
    
    15 So. 3d 793
    , 796 (Fla. 1st DCA 2009). Thus, the relative and qualifying
    phrase “or, in the absence of a notice of commencement, to the last
    address shown in the building permit application,” (emphasis added)
    applies to the notice of commencement, because the qualifying phrase
    follows the notice of commencement or amendments thereto with an “or”
    without a comma.
    5
    The phrase “the last known address of the person to be served” is not
    the last antecedent to “notice of commencement” as it is separated from
    the prior phrases by a comma and then the word “or” which is significant
    because:
    the word “or” is generally construed in the disjunctive when
    used in a statute or rule. Telophase Society of Florida, Inc. v.
    State Board of Funeral Directors & Embalmers, 
    334 So. 2d 563
          (Fla. 1976). The use of this particular disjunctive word in a
    statute or rule normally indicates that alternatives were
    intended.
    Sparkman v. McClure, 
    498 So. 2d 892
    , 895 (Fla. 1986); accord Kirksey v.
    State, 
    433 So. 2d 1236
    (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). Thus, both the Legislature’s
    use of the comma and “or” signify that using the last known address of the
    person to be served is an alternative to using the notice of commencement
    or building permit address. In other words, for purposes of the effective
    date of service, a claim of lien must be served either 1) on the address in
    the notice of commencement, or, in the absence of the notice of
    commencement, the address on the building permit, or 2) the last known
    address of the person to be served.
    Whether the addresses used by Contractor to serve the claim of lien are
    the “last known address” of Owner remains a question of fact. While
    Contractor presented the information regarding where a subcontractor
    served its claim of lien, Owner contends that the addresses used predate
    the claim of lien and do not constitute its last known address. The issue
    was not conclusive either way as is required for summary judgment.
    Further, as to the delivery of the claim of lien, section 713.08(4)(c)
    provides that failure to timely serve the claim of lien renders the claim
    voidable only to the extent that prejudice to the person entitled to service
    is shown. The trial court did not reach that issue, although Contractor
    did raise the issue at the summary judgment hearing. The issue is one of
    fact, which was not conclusively shown, as is required to support a
    summary judgment.
    As to the Contractor’s affidavit, it appears that it was served prior to
    suit in accordance with section 713.06(3)(d)1., Florida Statutes (2019).
    Contractor’s documents reflect that counsel sent the affidavit months
    before suit was filed via certified and regular mail to the address on the
    notice of commencement. That would comply with section 713.18(3)(a)1.
    if there was evidence of non-delivery of the certified letter or proof that it
    6
    was not delivered “through no fault of the person serving the item.” §
    713.18(3)(a)2., Fla. Stat. (2019). This too requires an evidentiary hearing
    to determine the facts, as the summary judgment did not address whether
    the failure of delivery was not the fault of Contractor or its counsel.
    We therefore conclude that the court departed from the essential
    requirements of law in entering summary judgment based upon a clearly
    erroneous construction of the statute. We grant the petition and quash
    the partial final judgment, as Contractor could use the “last known
    address” of Owner to effectuate service pursuant to the statute.
    Remaining, however, is the question of whether the address Contractor
    used qualifies as Owner’s last known address and whether, if it was not
    served at the last known address, Owner suffered prejudice due to the
    failure to receive the claim of lien. Those are factual issues to be decided
    in further proceedings.
    Petition Granted with directions to quash partial final judgment.
    MAY and KUNTZ, JJ., concur.
    *         *         *
    Final Upon Release; No Motion For Rehearing Will Be Entertained
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