ECHEVARRIA, MCCALLA, RAYMER v. Cole

896 So. 2d 773, 2004 WL 3015184
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 30, 2004
Docket1D02-4746, 1D02-4982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 896 So. 2d 773 (ECHEVARRIA, MCCALLA, RAYMER v. Cole) 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
ECHEVARRIA, MCCALLA, RAYMER v. Cole, 896 So. 2d 773, 2004 WL 3015184 (Fla. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

896 So.2d 773 (2004)

ECHEVARRIA, MCCALLA, RAYMER, BARRETT & FRAPPIER, a Florida general partnership; Barrett, Daffin & Frappier, L.L.P., a foreign limited liability partnership; McCalla, Raymer, Padrick, Cobb, Nichols & Clark, L.L.C., a Georgia limited liability company engaging in the practice of law; Echevarria & Associates, P.A., a Florida corporation engaged in the practice of law; and Michael Echevarria, individually, Appellants,
v.
Bradley COLE, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Appellee.

Nos. 1D02-4746, 1D02-4982.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

December 30, 2004.
Rehearing Denied March 21, 2005.

*774 John Beranek of Ausley & McMullen, Tallahassee; Michael J. McGirney and Dale T. Golden of Marshall, Dennehey, Warner, Coleman & Goggin, Tampa, for Appellee.

Vikki R. Shirley, Thomas J. Guilday, Claude R. Walker and Shawn M. Heath of Huey, Guilday, Tucker, Schwartz & Williams, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellants.

PER CURIAM.

This case is before the court on an appeal and cross-appeal from a class certification order in an action under the Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act, section 559.77, Florida Statutes, and the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, section 501.204, Florida Statutes. The appellants contend the motion for class certification was rendered moot by a settlement with the original plaintiffs, and the appellee, who was subsequently added as a party, contends that the class was defined too narrowly. We affirm the trial court's decision to certify a class but we conclude that the class was improperly restricted.

The plaintiffs are property owners who defaulted on their mortgages with their respective lenders. The Echevarria firm, one of the defendants below, was the primary firm retained by the lenders to handle the foreclosure proceedings against the plaintiffs. Echevarria sent reinstatement letters to the plaintiffs at the outset of the foreclosure proceedings, stating that the plaintiffs were in default on their respective mortgages and faced foreclosure unless they reinstated the mortgages by bringing their payments up to date. The letters further claimed that the plaintiffs owed certain costs incurred by the lenders in the course of the proceedings. Kim Nabors and Otis Pye, the original plaintiffs in this action, both had defaulted on their respective mortgages and received reinstatement letters from Echevarria. Neither reinstated their mortgage, and their properties were ultimately foreclosed.

Nabors and Pye filed suit against Echevarria and the other named defendants, alleging that the firm had violated the Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act and the Florida Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act. The essence of the complaint was that the defendants acted unlawfully by asserting a claim for a debt that was in excess of the actual costs their clients incurred during the foreclosure proceedings. Specifically, the plaintiffs argued that the reinstatement letter claimed costs of $325 for title search and examination and various other charges for service of process, when the only cost incurred by the firm was $55 for the title search.

In response, the defendants asserted that the $325 charge was legitimate, as it included $150 for a title search and $175 for a title examination performed by their in-house staff. They further argued that they had not violated either of the statutes referred to in the complaint because their contracts with their lender clients authorized them to charge these amounts.

Nabors and Pye filed a motion for class certification on June 8, 2000. This motion was originally scheduled for a hearing the following November, but it was not resolved until the winter of 2001. Several *775 important events took place in the interim. Two of the defendants, the Echevarria firm and Michael Echevarria, made a formal proposal to pay Nabors and Pye $5,000.00 each, to settle the claims.[1] The proposal was accepted, and shortly thereafter the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the case on the ground that it was moot. On the day this motion was filed, the defendant Barrett made a separate proposal to pay Nabors and Pye $500.00 each to settle the claims. Before Barrett's proposal was accepted and before the trial court ruled on the motion for class certification, the current plaintiff, Bradley Cole, moved to intervene.

Cole had previously received a reinstatement letter from Echevarria regarding the potential foreclosure of his mortgage, and as a result, paid the disputed amounts to reinstate his mortgage. On November 13, 2000, Cole, Nabors and Pye moved for leave to file a third amended complaint to assert Cole's statutory claims.

On December 18, 2000, the trial court issued an order including Cole among the plaintiffs and denying Echevarria's motion to dismiss, explicitly ruling that the settlement offers did not moot the class action. Echevarria then filed a motion for rehearing or clarification. The trial court denied this motion on January 8, 2001, noting that it was permitting the continued maintenance of Nabors and Pye's claims "for purposes of class certification."[2]

Later, Cole, as the putative class representative, filed a motion to certify a class that consisted of "all persons from whom the defendants have filed foreclosure actions and claimed, attempted or threatened to collect costs in the collection of a `consumer debt,' as that term is defined in § 559.55(1) Florida Statutes, which were in excess of the amount allowed or authorized by law" for the four years prior to the filing of the initial complaint through the present. He subsequently filed an amended motion for class certification seeking to define the class as all persons in Florida to whom the defendants sent reinstatement letters or against whom they had filed a foreclosure action as counsel for a lender or mortgagee for the period of July 6, 1994, through June 30, 2001.

The trial court granted the plaintiff's amended motion to certify the class action, and concluded that Cole was an appropriate class representative under rule 1.220, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure. In the certification order, the trial court defined the class as all persons in Florida to whom the Echevarria firms sent reinstatement letters between July 6, 1994, and June 30, 2001, seeking to collect amounts for (1) a title search or examination exceeding the firms' actual out-of-pocket expenses incurred to a third-party vendor; (2) service of process; and (3) fees or costs that had not been incurred at the time the firms sent the reinstatement letter. However, the court limited the class to those persons whose default or failure to timely pay their mortgage obligations did not ultimately result in a foreclosure judgment or sale.

Cole argues on appeal that the trial court defined the class too narrowly by excluding those persons who received a reinstatement letter but who failed to reinstate *776 their mortgage, resulting in a foreclosure judgment or the sale of their respective properties. According to Cole, the exclusion of these potential plaintiffs was error, because an action under the Consumer Collection Practices Act is independent of any action by the creditor to collect on the debt and does not depend on whether the underlying debt is valid, owed, paid or reduced to judgment. Rather, he maintains, the right to bring suit under the Act arises from the debt collector's conduct in collecting the debt, where that conduct violates the Act's proscriptions against unscrupulous debt collection practices.

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729 F. Supp. 2d 1328 (M.D. Florida, 2010)
Cole v. ECHEVARRIA, MCCALLA, RAYMER
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618 F. Supp. 2d 1356 (M.D. Florida, 2007)
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Williams v. Edelman
408 F. Supp. 2d 1261 (S.D. Florida, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
896 So. 2d 773, 2004 WL 3015184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echevarria-mccalla-raymer-v-cole-fladistctapp-2004.