Garden State Holdings, LLC, Etc. v. Shazbop, LLC, Etc.
This text of Garden State Holdings, LLC, Etc. v. Shazbop, LLC, Etc. (Garden State Holdings, LLC, Etc. v. Shazbop, LLC, Etc.) 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
Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
Opinion filed May 7, 2025. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D24-1113 Lower Tribunal No. 21-CA-159-M ________________
Garden State Holdings, LLC, etc., Appellant,
vs.
Shazbop, LLC, etc., et al., Appellees.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Mark H. Jones, Judge.
Law Office of Paul A. Krasker, P.A., and Marshall J. Osofsky (West Palm Beach), for appellant.
Lydecker LLP, and Forrest L. Andrews and Debbie Maken, for appellee Shazbop, LLC.
Before MILLER, GORDO and BOKOR, JJ.
BOKOR, J. In these consolidated appeals,1 Garden State Holdings, LLC,
challenges a summary judgment and a related cost and fee award entered
against it in an action to vacate a tax deed sale. Garden State argues that it
was the owner of the property subject to the tax deed sale and that the sale
was invalid because it was not provided proper notice prior to the sale of the
property to Shazbop, LLC. Alternatively, Garden State claims ambiguity in
the property description rendering summary judgment inappropriate.
Because the relevant title documents unambiguously reflect that Garden
State was not the owner of the subject property, we affirm.
Garden State’s claim to the tax deed property derived from a
September 13, 2016 warranty deed conveying certain property in Monroe
County, Florida, to Garden State from the Grassy Key Land Company, Inc.
This deed begins by describing the subject property as “All of Government
Lot 1, Section 26, Township 65 South, Range 33 East, on Grassy Key,
Monroe County, Florida, Except the Following Described Tracts of Land.”
The deed then includes one additional line stating, in parentheses, “Less &
Except the Following Described Parcels” before giving detailed metes and
1 Cases 3D2023-2014 and 3D2024-1113 were ordered “consolidated for purposes of travelling together only.” This court heard one oral argument pertaining to both appeals, and issues the identical opinion under both case numbers.
2 bounds descriptions of the overall lot with several carve-outs, including the
tax deed parcel. The deed then reiterates these carve-outs under the header
“Also Known As” before adding one additional carve-out under the header
“And Further Lessing the Following.”
In opposition to summary judgment, Garden State claimed that the
deed either conveyed the subject parcel to it or contained ambiguity
precluding entry of summary judgment as to whether the deed included the
parcel subject to the tax deed sale. Both parties also proffered competing
surveyor maps and affidavits disputing whether the subject parcel was
encompassed by the conveyance, though the parties did not dispute that the
metes and bounds descriptions of the parcels within the deed were accurate
and that the surveys reflected the property descriptions. So the only
remaining dispute concerned the effect of the conveyance language in the
deed. Specifically, did the deed include the parcel later subject to the tax
deed sale, for which Garden State did not receive notice? The trial court
found that the deed unambiguously did not convey the tax deed parcel to
Garden State. Garden State was therefore not entitled to notice of the tax
deed sale. This appeal followed.
Summary judgment is typically improper when a contract is
ambiguous. See, e.g., Nationstar Mortg. Co. v. Levine, 216 So. 3d 711, 714
3 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017). A contract is ambiguous when it can be reasonably
interpreted in more than one way. Id. at 715. But “[a] true ambiguity does not
exist merely because a contract can possibly be interpreted in more than one
manner.” Am. Med. Int’l, Inc. v. Scheller, 462 So. 2d 1, 7 (Fla. 4th DCA 1984).
Additionally, “extrinsic evidence . . . should not be used to introduce [a
contractual] ambiguity where none exists.” EcoVirux, LLC v. BioPledge, LLC,
357 So. 3d 182, 187 (Fla. 3d DCA 2022) (quotation omitted). Here,
examining the entire conveyance in context, the only reasonable
interpretation of the warranty deed excludes the subject tax deed parcel.
Notwithstanding some redundant header language, the undisputed property
descriptions clearly reflect that the additional parcels (denoted “Parcel A” and
“Parcel B”) were carve-outs from the overall lot rather than inclusions. Thus,
because the deed unambiguously conveyed the Grassy Key lot except for
the excluded parcels, and the excluded parcels included the tax deed parcel
at issue, the trial court did not err in finding Shazbop entitled to summary
judgment.
Affirmed.
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