EVA MARIA ANDERSON v. IN RE: ESTATE OF MARIO QUINTERO

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 31, 2022
Docket21-2021
StatusPublished

This text of EVA MARIA ANDERSON v. IN RE: ESTATE OF MARIO QUINTERO (EVA MARIA ANDERSON v. IN RE: ESTATE OF MARIO QUINTERO) 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
EVA MARIA ANDERSON v. IN RE: ESTATE OF MARIO QUINTERO, (Fla. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed August 31, 2022. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D21-2021 Lower Tribunal No. 20-4641 ________________

Eva Maria Anderson, Appellant,

vs.

In Re: Estate of Mario Quintero, Appellee.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto, Judge.

Law Offices of Scott Alan Orth, P.A., and Scott Alan Orth and Eric Salvatore Giunta (Hollywood), for appellant.

Solomon Appeals, Mediation & Arbitration, and Donna Greenspan Solomon (Ft. Lauderdale), for appellee.

Before SCALES, LINDSEY and LOBREE, JJ.

SCALES, J. Appellant Eva Maria Anderson, the decedent’s step-granddaughter,

appeals two orders of the probate court: (i) a September 8, 2021 order

determining the homestead status of the residence of decedent Mario

Quintero (“September 8 order”); and (ii) a January 11, 2022 order that denied

both Anderson’s Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540(b) motion to vacate

the September 8 order and Anderson’s motion to strike the personal

representative’s statement regarding creditors (“January 11 order”).

Because Anderson challenges only that portion of the September 8 order

that merely reiterates an intestacy determination made in a prior order that

was not timely appealed, we affirm the September 8 order, and dismiss, for

lack of jurisdiction, Anderson’s appeal of the reiterated intestacy finding. We

affirm that portion of the January 11 order denying Anderson’s rule 1.540(b)

motion. We lack jurisdiction to adjudicate, and therefore, also dismiss that

portion of Anderson’s appeal of the January 11 order that denied Anderson’s

motion to strike the personal representative’s statement regarding creditors.

I. Relevant Background

Mario Quintero died on October 16, 2020. On November 19, 2020, one

of Quintero’s daughters, Maria McGowan, filed a petition for administration

of Quintero’s estate, seeking appointment as the estate’s personal

representative. Four days later, on November 23, 2020, Anderson filed a

2 purported will, claiming it to be Quintero’s will. This will is not fully dated,

showing only the year 2017, and is not witnessed, although it is signed and

notarized. 1 Anderson then filed her petition to establish a lost or destroyed

will, alleging that the document she had earlier filed was Quintero’s will, and

that Quintero had signed it on October 26, 2017, before two people identified

by Anderson as having witnessed Quintero’s signature. McGowan filed an

objection to Anderson’s petition. The probate court ultimately appointed

McGowan as the personal representative, the two witnesses were deposed,

and, on July 16, 2021, Anderson filed an amended petition for lost or

destroyed will, attaching the transcripts of the two witnesses’ depositions.

On August 11, 2021, the probate court conducted an evidentiary

hearing on Anderson’s amended petition, and, on August 17, 2021, it

rendered an order adjudicating Anderson’s amended petition. (“August 17

order”). The operative portion of the August 17 order reads as follows: “1.

The Amended Petition for Establishment and Probate of Lost or Destroyed

Will . . . is hereby DENIED without prejudice. 2. The probate case shall

1 As the probate court observed, though, the notary stamp shows an April 30, 2022 expiration. The partial 2017 execution date, therefore, is problematic because a notary commission lasts only four years. See § 117.01(1), Fla. Stat. (2017).

3 proceed intestate.” Anderson did not appeal, nor did she seek rehearing of,

the August 17 order.

On August 6, 2021, the personal representative filed a petition in the

probate court seeking a determination that Quintero’s residence was his

homestead. On August 23, 2021, the personal representative filed a

statement regarding creditors in which the personal representative identified

no creditors of the estate. On September 15, 2021, the personal

representative filed a petition for discharge to which Anderson, the next day,

filed an objection.

The probate court rendered the challenged September 8 order 2 in

which the probate court specifically identified the issue being adjudicated by

the order as the personal representative’s petition “for an order determining

homestead status of real property.” While this September 8 order determined

only that the subject property was the decedent’s homestead, the order

reiterated the determination the probate court had made earlier – in its

August 17 order – that the decedent died intestate. Specifically, the

September 8 order provides: “1. The decedent died intestate and was

domiciled in Miami-Dade County, Florida.”

2 Our record does not reflect a hearing date related to the September 8 order.

4 Anderson appealed this September 8 order on October 8, 2021, and,

on October 12, 2021, Anderson also filed in the probate court a Florida Rule

of Civil Procedure 1.540 motion seeking to vacate the portion of the

September 8 order reciting that the decedent had died intestate. This motion

also sought to strike the personal representative’s statement regarding

creditors (“October 12 motion”). We relinquished jurisdiction to allow the

probate court to adjudicate the October 12 motion. On December 23, 2021,

the probate court conducted a hearing on Anderson’s October 12 motion

and, subsequently, entered the unelaborated January 11 order denying this

motion. Anderson then amended her appeal also to challenge the January

11 order.

II. Analysis

A. The appeal of the September 8 order and that portion of the January 11 order denying Anderson’s rule 1.540(b) motion.

While Anderson’s amended notice of appeal identifies the challenged

order as the September 8 order that determined the decedent’s property as

homestead, Anderson's principal argument on appeal is that the probate

court erred when, in its August 17 order, it denied Anderson’s amended

petition for lost or destroyed will and, concomitantly, found that the decedent

died intestate.

5 The August 17 order, though, was an appealable final order. Fla. R.

App. P. 9.170(b)(3). 3 Anderson neither sought rehearing of, nor did she

appeal, the August 17 order. Because Anderson did not appeal the August

17 order, we lack appellate jurisdiction to review the probate court’s intestacy

determination contained in that order. Cordero v. Washington Mut. Bank, 241

So. 3d 967, 968 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018).

Anderson argues that, notwithstanding rule 9.170(b)(3)’s clear and

unambiguous language, the probate court's use of the term “without

prejudice” in the August 17 order converted this otherwise appealable final

order into a non-appealable, non-final order. Anderson suggests that due

process considerations require us to review that portion of the September 8

order that merely reiterated the August 17 order’s determination of

Anderson’s amended petition to establish a lost or destroyed will. We

disagree.

This is not a situation where the trial court dismissed a complaint

without prejudice, giving the plaintiff leave to file an amended complaint. In

3 Rule 9.170(b)(3) reads, in pertinent part, as follows: “[A]ppeals of orders rendered in probate . . .

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EVA MARIA ANDERSON v. IN RE: ESTATE OF MARIO QUINTERO, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eva-maria-anderson-v-in-re-estate-of-mario-quintero-fladistctapp-2022.