Bob Montgomery Real Estate v. Djokic
This text of 858 So. 2d 371 (Bob Montgomery Real Estate v. Djokic) 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.
Opinion
BOB MONTGOMERY REAL ESTATE d/b/a Ocean & Intracoastal Properties, Appellant,
v.
Noreen DJOKIC and Jeannette Teufel, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*372 Derek T. Montgomery, Lantana, for appellant.
Walter H. Djokic of McIntosh, Sawran, Peltz, Cartaya & Petruccelli, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellees.
STONE, J.
Bob Montgomery Real Estate, Inc. (Montgomery), a real estate broker, sued Appellees, real estate agents, alleging tortious interference with contractual relationships. The trial court dismissed two counts of the complaint as a sanction against Montgomery, concluding that Montgomery had attached a forged and an altered document to its amended complaint. We reverse.
Although dismissal is an available remedy for knowingly submitting forged or altered documents with the intent to deceive, Morgan v. Campbell, 816 So.2d 251 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002), here, there is no evidence that Montgomery did so.
Montgomery hired Appellees as agents and, in that capacity, they entered into exclusive right of sale listing agreements with three real estate owners. When Montgomery later fired Appellees, the three property owners cancelled the exclusive listings. The counts as to two of the properties are the subject of this appeal.
Appellees had earlier moved to dismiss the amended complaint, arguing that the listing agreement on property at 826 Oyster Lane expired on September 17, 1998, well before the alleged tortious interference occurred. Montgomery filed a second amended complaint, attaching a form captioned "Change Form" to the listing attached as an exhibit, which purported to extend the length of the listing agreement of the Oyster Lane property.
Appellees charge that the owner's signature on the "Change Form" concerning the Oyster Lane property was forged. Attached to the motion to dismiss was an affidavit by the Oyster Lane property owner, denying that she signed the "Change Form." Appellees also charge that the listing agreement on another exhibit, the Austin Lane property, was altered. The copy of the listing agreement on the Austin Lane property reflects that the inception and termination dates had *373 been altered with white-out in order to extend the length of the contract.
An evidentiary hearing was held on Appellees' motion to dismiss as a sanction, at which defense counsel proposed that the dates on the listing agreement governing the Austin property were altered with white-out to extend the listing and contended that the owner's signature was forged on the "Change Form."
In response, Mr. Montgomery advised the trial court that he was not contesting the fact that the listing agreement for Austin Lane had white-out on it; however, he did not know who altered the document. Montgomery also testified that he had no knowledge concerning the allegedly forged signature on the "Change Form."
Appellee agent, Noreen Djokic, testified that she procured the listing for the Austin Lane property, but did not have access to the listing agreement after she was fired and denied altering the document. As to the Oyster Lane property, Djokic testified that the owner lived in Germany. Djokic admitted that there was a letter in the file that purported to be from her, written and faxed to the German owner, advising her that the listing agreement was going to expire and needed to be re-listed, but Djokic asserted that she did not remember writing the letter and had no recollection concerning whether the owner signed anything authorizing the extension of the listing.
Djokic admitted that she had access to the listing agreements before she left and conceded that the secretary in the office would occasionally handle the extensions of listing agreements. When asked whether the document was altered by Mr. Montgomery, she replied, "I don't have any idea who prepared it." Also concerning the Oyster Lane property, Djokic was asked, "Did you ever at any time obtain an extension from either of the owners?" She replied, "I don't know." When she was directly asked whether Montgomery forged the signature on the change form, Djokic responded, "I don't know. I don't know who filled it out." The parties stipulated that the Oyster Lane property was re-listed by Djokic while working for her new broker, the day after the extension expired as set forth in the allegedly forged "Change Form."
Montgomery testified that he did not white-out the dates on the Austin Lane listing agreement, but instead, found the document that way when the litigation began. In his answers to damage interrogatories filed five months before the defendants' motion to dismiss, he admitted that the expiration date of the listing agreement on the Austin Lane property should have been January 8, 1999, not the inserted later date. Montgomery notes that it would have been the agent's responsibility, not his, to procure the extension for any listing on the Oyster Lane property.
Appellees do not contend that Montgomery was the author of the forged or altered documents. Rather, the crux of the misconduct, which the trial court sanctioned, was that the documents were proffered as exhibits to the amended pleading, notwithstanding Montgomery's knowledge, gleaned in discovery, that they were not genuine. Appellees admit that the source of the additions to the documents remains open to speculation, with each side asserting only that the circumstances point to the other.
Appellees suggest that since Montgomery's answers to interrogatories concede that the expiration date on the Austin Lane contract was initially earlier than the altered date stated thereon, he therefore knew about the alteration and did nothing to advise the court of a possible fraud or to also submit an accurate copy of the unaltered *374 document. As for the alleged forged extension document executed on the Oyster Lane property, Appellees contend that if the exhibit existed, why was it not attached to the earlier complaint and amended complaint?
On the other hand, there is evidence that Djokic was in possession of the file and documents until she left and that she was responsible for submitting the listings to the multiple listing service. Montgomery notes that the multiple listing service will not accept a listing that is more than five days old and that when the expiration date was changed, the beginning date was also changed, coinciding with the date it was listed.[1] Montgomery also points to correspondence in the files indicating that Djokic and the Oyster Lane owner understood the listing was extended.
Although a dismissal imposed as a sanction is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard, the trial court's discretion is narrowed where dismissal is imposed for fraudulent conduct such as that alleged here, in which a more stringent abuse of discretion standard is appropriate. Such sanction may be imposed only on a "clear showing of fraud, pretense, collusion, or similar wrongdoing." Tri Star Inv. v. Miele, 407 So.2d 292, 293 (Fla. 2d DCA 1981); see also Cox v. Burke, 706 So.2d 43, 46 (Fla. 5th DCA 1998).
The record reflects nothing but tenuous and conflicting evidence about the claims of misconduct. Given the equivocal testimony, we are guided by this court's recent, albeit distinguishable, opinion in Arzuman v. Saud, 843 So.2d 950 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003).
In Arzuman, the plaintiff offered conflicting testimony in which he claimed to own shares of stock in a corporation, but also claimed that the corporation was owned entirely by the defendant.
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858 So. 2d 371, 2003 WL 22493429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bob-montgomery-real-estate-v-djokic-fladistctapp-2003.