Jenkins v. Plaza 3000, Inc.

134 So. 3d 1127, 2014 WL 537494, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1838
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 12, 2014
DocketNo. 4D12-4326
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 134 So. 3d 1127 (Jenkins v. Plaza 3000, 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
Jenkins v. Plaza 3000, Inc., 134 So. 3d 1127, 2014 WL 537494, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1838 (Fla. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

Appellant, Scherry Jenkins, appeals and appellee, Plaza 3000, Inc, cross-appeals a final judgment entered for Plaza. Plaza sought a judgment and to foreclose a lien for unpaid maintenance assessments. Appellant had counterclaimed against Plaza alleging multiple causes of action, which counterclaim was dismissed by the trial court for failure to state a cause of action. Attorney’s fees were also assessed against Jenkins based on the counterclaim. After a non-jury trial, the court denied foreclosure but awarded breach of contract damages to Plaza.

Appellant claims that the court erred in dismissing her counterclaim and awarding attorney’s fees, as well as in granting judgment in favor of Plaza because it failed to prove the amount due and owing. She also challenges the inclusion of future assessments for attorney’s fees and interest thereon, which were added by the trial court without any evidence to support them. We reverse the judgment and conclude that appellant did state a cause of action in her counterclaim for slander of title. As to the final judgment, we agree that Plaza failed to prove the amount, that appellant owed in assessments, with competent, substantial evidence. As to the future assessments, we agree that the court erred in awarding them without a hearing as to their amount and despite its oral pronouncement to the contrary.

[1129]*1129Plaza is a non-profit corporation whose shareholders own lots in a commercial shopping plaza. It owns and maintains the plaza’s common areas and has the power— under its articles of incorporation, bylaws, and recorded dedications and restrictive covenants — to assess lot owners for a pro rata share of maintenance costs and collect interest on unpaid assessments. The rate of interest is not specified in the documents.

Jenkins holds title to three lots in the plaza, which are managed by her husband who took care of the assessments to the association. He has been habitually late in paying the assessments, having paid on time only twice in fifteen years. Plaza generally accepted his late payments and applied them towards his most delinquent assessment.

There was always a balance due, and the amount of the balance was frequently in dispute. Several times, Mr. Jenkins presented Plaza with checks which he had previously submitted and Plaza had accepted but not credited to his account. Mr. Jenkins also presented Plaza with a check marked “paid in full,” which Plaza cashed with this language scratched out.

On July 21, 2008, Plaza informed Mr. Jenkins that he owed $22,122 in principal and $4,334 in interest, for a total of $26,456. The letter demanded payment within ninety days or suit would be filed to foreclose the maintenance lien. A few months later, Mr. Jenkins sent Plaza a check for $4,651 marked “paid in full to date” and “paid under protest.” Plaza returned the check “as said check was tendered as payment in full” but was not for $26,456.

Plaza recorded a claim of lien against appellant’s property for $26,456 together with interest at the rate of 11% thereafter, reasonable attorney’s fees and costs of collection, and future unpaid assessments. Several months after the claim of lien was recorded, Mr. Jenkins sent Plaza a check for $10,000 with a letter claiming payment in full, less potential attorney’s fees owed. Plaza returned the check, because it was not for the full amount Plaza believed was due.

Plaza then filed a two-count complaint against appellant for breach of contract and to foreclose the claim of lien. Appellant answered, raising fifteen affirmative defenses. Most of these defenses were based on allegations that Plaza had wrongfully refused tendered checks, had not maintained proper accounting records, and had incorrectly charged interest. Appellant also filed a counterclaim, which was dismissed and amended four times, alleging eleven causes of action. Like the affirmative defenses, these claims were mainly based on Plaza’s alleged failure to maintain proper accounting records and Plaza’s filing of the claim of lien, which appellant alleged was inaccurate. After the fifth amendment, Plaza again moved to dismiss and asked for sanctions under section 57.105, Florida Statutes. The court granted the motion, dismissed the counterclaim, and awarded attorney’s fees of $2,500 under section 57.105, Florida Statutes. Appellant paid these fees.

The court held a lengthy bench trial. Plaza’s accountant presented testimony as to the assessments owed on the property. He had prepared one chart of amounts due, with payments credited and interest accrued, which had been attached to the original 2008 demand letter. He also prepared and presented a second chart for trial, updating the information through the end of May 2012. The second chart also attempted to correct errors in the first chart by crediting appellant with payments that the accountant admitted Plaza had credited late, as well as interest Plaza had charged on those payments. As a result of those errors, the accountant admitted that [1130]*1130Mr. Jenkins had been given inaccurate information regarding the amount of assessments owed as well as the interest accrued.

The testimony was confusing as to what payments had been received and credited, as well as how much interest should have been assessed. Importantly, it was not established what percentage interest Plaza actually charged on the late payments. The accountant testified that Plaza had used two different rates, raising the original 8% rate to 11% at some point, although the accountant did not know when the interest rate changed. The trial court took judicial notice of the statutory interest rate, which fluctuated during the relevant time frame.

Despite Plaza belatedly crediting appellant with payments in the accountant’s second chart, there were further disputes over other payments Mr. Jenkins made— some as long ago as the 1990s — which were not resolved. On cross-examination of the accountant, appellant’s counsel attempted to establish that interest was improperly charged on these payments and included in the claim of lien. The accountant did not appear to have any personal knowledge of when these payments were made by Mr. Jenkins or received by Plaza, but he agreed to counsel’s statements as to these facts. Counsel argued that, as of August 3, 2004, Mr. Jenkins would have properly paid all of the assessments, if it were not for the wrongly included interest on payments that were counted late.

After hearing the evidence and the parties’ closing statements, the court orally pronounced judgment, finding that “This case is a mess. The accounting was a mess.” Although doubtful that Plaza had proved the actual amount owed, the court determined that it would enter judgment for $10,037 for assessments accrued as of the claim of lien, relying on calculations made by appellant’s counsel. The court declared it would not include interest on assessments accrued after the claim of lien, because Plaza had rejected proffered payments and also because the interest rate was in dispute. The court further ordered that appellant was not responsible for “portions of the special assessments that the attorney’s fees include herein” because “I don’t think he should pay to sue himself, and certainly there’s interest there.” The court also declined to foreclose the lien, finding “it would be completely and totally inequitable,” and determined “each side will bear their own attorney’s fees and costs.”

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 3d 1127, 2014 WL 537494, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-plaza-3000-inc-fladistctapp-2014.