Bank of America, N.A. v. Kipps Colony II Condominium Association, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 9, 2015
Docket2D14-858
StatusPublished

This text of Bank of America, N.A. v. Kipps Colony II Condominium Association, Inc. (Bank of America, N.A. v. Kipps Colony II Condominium Association, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of America, N.A. v. Kipps Colony II Condominium Association, Inc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

OF FLORIDA

SECOND DISTRICT

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case Nos. 2D14-858 ) 2D14-4436 KIPPS COLONY II CONDOMINIUM ) ASSOCIATION, INC., a Florida corporation ) CONSOLIDATED not for profit; INLAND ASSETS, LLC; ) CHARLES C. KNIGHTON; and MEGAN A. ) KNIGHTON, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Opinion filed December 9, 2015.

Appeals pursuant to Fla. R. App. 9.130 from the Circuit Court for Pinellas County; Pamela A.M. Campbell, Judge.

Adam M. Topel, J. Randolph Liebler, and Tricia J. Duthiers of Liebler, Gonzalez & Portuondo, Miami, for Appellant.

Shawn G. Brown of Redding & Brown, PLLC, Tampa; and Lang & Raffa, P.A., St. Petersburg, for Appellee Kipps Colony II Condominium Association, Inc.

Mark P. Stopa of Stopa Law Firm, Tampa, for Appellee Inland Assets, LLC.

No appearance for remaining Appellees. BLACK, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, Bank of America, N.A., challenges the trial

court's rulings on two motions for relief from judgment. Bank of America raises multiple

claims of error in the appeal from the denial of its Florida Rule of Civil Procedure

1.540(b) motion. Because we find merit in one of those arguments, requiring reversal of

the order denying relief from judgment, we do not address the remaining claims. As to

Bank of America's appeal from the denial of the rule 1.540(a) motion, we affirm without

comment.

I. Background

Kipps Colony II Condominium Association filed a lien foreclosure action

against Charles and Megan Knighton for failure to pay their condominium assessments.

The Association's complaint named Bank of America as a defendant. The complaint

alleged that Megan Knighton "may claim an interest in the Unit by virtue of that certain

Mortgage on the Unit, recorded in O.R. Book 13524, Page 595, and that certain

Mortgage on the Unit, recorded in O.R. Book 14385, Page 1957." The complaint also

alleged that Bank of America "may claim an interest in the Unit by virtue of its mortgage

recorded in O.R. Book 14385, Page 1957, which interest, if any, is inferior and

subordinate to" the Association's lien. The complaint did not otherwise identify the

mortgages on the condominium or expressly state that Bank of America held both the

first and second mortgages on the property, only the second of which was inferior to the

Association's lien. It did, however, allege that the Association was not required to give

Charles Knighton notice of its intention to foreclose the lien because an action to

foreclose a mortgage on the condominium was pending before the trial court. The

-2- Association requested that "the Defendants and all other persons who have any lien

junior to the lien of [the Association] be barred and forever foreclosed of all right, title,

interest, equity or redemption or lien in or to or against the [condominium unit]."

A default was entered against Bank of America. The Association then

moved for summary judgment, and a final summary judgment of foreclosure was

rendered December 19, 2011. Paragraph five of the uniform final judgment states:

The lien of [the Association] is superior in dignity to any right, title, interest or claim of the defendants through or under the defendants and all persons, corporations, or other entities claiming by, through or under the defendants or any of them and the property will be sold free and clear of all claims of the defendant with the exception of any assessments that are superior pursuant to sections 718.116 or 20.3085, Florida Statutes.

(Emphasis added.)

The property was sold on January 28, 2013, more than a year after entry

of the final judgment. The parties have not provided an explanation for the delay from

March 2012 to January 2013. Inland Assets, LLC, purchased the property at the

foreclosure sale. A certificate of title was issued in February 2013, and Inland Assets

immediately filed a quiet title action against Bank of America and the Knightons. Bank

of America again failed to appear,1 and Inland Assets obtained a quiet title judgment on

March 18, 2013. That judgment provides, in pertinent part:

[Inland Assets] is the rightful and lawful owner of the Property, free and clear of any liens or encumbrances by [Bank of America] (or any persons claiming by, through, or under [Bank of America]) and to the exclusion of any claims, liens, or mortgages of [Bank of America], including but not

1 Bank of America filed motions in both the foreclosure lawsuit and the quiet title action seeking to quash service of process and arguing that the judgments were void for lack of service on the correct Bank of America entity.

-3- limited to the mortgages recorded in the Official Records of Pinellas County, Florida at OR Book 13524, Page 595.

Notably, although the complaint to quiet title does not specify the

mortgages that may be at issue or give the O.R. Book and page number of any

mortgage, the judgment specifically includes the O.R. book and page number of the first

mortgage held by Bank of America. The appendices provided to this court do not

include a copy of the motion for final judgment in the quiet title action. Thus, it appears

that Inland Assets knew it had received a windfall via the language of the final judgment

of foreclosure.

On the same date that the court issued the quiet title judgment, Bank of

America filed a motion to quash service of process and vacate the clerk's default. Later,

Bank of America filed a rule 1.540(b) motion to set aside the quiet title judgment alleging

that the quiet title judgment was void for lack of service. Both motions were denied

without prejudice.

On August 21, 2013, Bank of America filed a motion to quash service of

process and to vacate default and set aside the summary final judgment of foreclosure

in the foreclosure action. Citing rule 1.540(b)(4), the motion alleged both that the final

judgment is void for lack of service and that it is void and erroneous as a matter of law

insofar as paragraph five purported to foreclose the first mortgage.

The trial court held a hearing on the motion and orally denied it, finding no

issue with service of process. When asked about the ruling as to the paragraph five

issue, the court stated the motion was denied on the same grounds. The trial court's

-4- written order is boilerplate and provides no findings or conclusions. Bank of America

appealed that order, commencing case number 2D14-858.

During the pendency of the appeal and before it was perfected, the

Association, as an appellee in the case, asked this court to relinquish jurisdiction to

allow the trial court to rule on the Association's motion to amend the final judgment

pursuant to rule 1.540(a), which alleged that the foreclosure judgment contained a

clerical error. This court relinquished jurisdiction. Bank of America joined in the

Association's rule 1.540(a) motion. At the hearing on that motion, the Association

argued that the final judgment failed to delineate which of Bank of America's mortgages

the Association's lien was foreclosing and that this was a clerical error or misnomer,

correctable via a rule 1.540(a) motion. The trial court denied the motion, finding that the

complaint "only alleged the one Bank of America O.R. book and page of the mortgage,"

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