Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
Opinion filed August 13, 2025. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D25-0109 Lower Tribunal No. 24-10318-CA-01 ________________
Jorge Hernandez, Appellant,
vs.
Burleigh House Condominium, Inc., Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Antonio Arzola, Judge.
Valiente, Carollo & McElligott, PLLC, and Matthew McElligott, for appellant.
Bogen Law Group, P.A., and Veronica Doss and Mark D. Bogen (Coral Springs), for appellee.
Before SCALES, C.J., and LINDSEY and LOBREE, JJ.
SCALES, C.J. Appellant Jorge Hernandez, the plaintiff below, appeals a December
19, 2024 final summary judgment in favor of the defendant below, Burleigh
House Condominium, Inc. (“Burleigh House”) on Hernandez’s unjust
enrichment claim that seeks damages for unpaid restoration services. We
reverse the challenged judgment and remand for further proceedings
because the trial court erred in finding that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment
claim is barred by Florida’s Construction Lien Law, Chapter 713, part I,
Florida Statutes (2022).
I. Relevant Background
Hernandez is the former owner of First Response Restoration Team,
LLC (“First Response”), a provider of restoration services to damaged
property. In October 2022, Burleigh House allegedly hired First Response,
pursuant to an oral agreement, to repair property that had been damaged in
a fire. First Response allegedly completed the repairs on or about October
17, 2022, billing Burleigh House $155,147.14 for its services. Burleigh
House, though, refused to make any payment to First Response.
On December 20, 2022, Hernandez, acting on behalf of First
Response, recorded a claim of lien against Burleigh House’s property for the
unpaid repairs. See § 713.02, Fla. Stat. (2022) (creating the right to a lien on
real property with respect to services that improve the property); § 713.08,
2 Fla. Stat. (2022) (prescribing the recordation requirements for a claim of lien).
On January 11, 2023, Burleigh House recorded a notice contesting First
response’s claim of lien. See § 713.22(2), Fla. Stat. (2022). First Response
then had sixty days (until March 13, 2023), to file an action to enforce its
claim of lien or the lien would be “extinguished automatically.” Id. First
Response, though, took no further action and its claim of lien was
extinguished by operation of law.
In September 2024, Hernandez – who by this time had sold First
Response to a third party but allegedly retained First Response’s accounts
receivable – filed the instant unjust enrichment lawsuit against Burleigh
House in the Miami-Dade County circuit court. Hernandez’s operative
amended complaint seeks $155,147.14 in damages for the unpaid
restoration work that First Response had allegedly performed at Burleigh
House’s property. Burleigh House filed a responsive pleading and then
moved for summary judgment.
In its summary judgment motion, Burleigh House argued that
Hernandez’s lawsuit is time-barred by section 713.22(2) of the Florida
Statutes. Burleigh House asserted that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim
essentially seeks to enforce the lien that was extinguished when First
Response failed to timely file a lien enforcement action after Burleigh House
3 recorded its notice of lien contest. In response, Hernandez asserted that his
lawsuit is not time barred because section 713.30 of the Florida Statutes
(2022) expressly permits a lienor to pursue other contractual remedies.1
After holding a summary judgment hearing, the trial court entered the
challenged final summary judgment in favor of Burleigh House. In its
summary judgment order, the trial court, relying principally on this Court’s
opinion in Doral Collision Center, Inc. v. Daimler Trust, 341 So. 3d 424 (Fla.
3d DCA 2022), held that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim “is based on
precisely the same services upon which the Claim of Lien was based,” and
that Hernandez cannot “circumvent” section 713.22(2)’s time requirements
for filing a lien enforcement action by “calling the lien claim one for unjust
enrichment.” Further, the trial court held that “Florida Statute § 713.30 does
not save [Hernandez] because his unjust enrichment claim is not an action
at law as required by that statute.” Hernandez timely appealed the trial
court’s final summary judgment.
II. Analysis2
1 On appeal, the parties make the same arguments they asserted below. 2 “We review questions of statutory interpretation and the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.” Fla. Retail Fed’n, Inc. v. City of Coral Gables, 282 So. 3d 889, 892 (Fla. 3d DCA 2019).
4 The issue in this case is whether the Construction Lien Law’s
extinguishment of First Response’s construction lien also extinguished
Hernandez’s common law unjust enrichment claim. Based on the express
language of section 713.30, and an unbroken line of Florida cases, we
conclude that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim was not extinguished.
“Chapter 713 of the Florida Statutes, entitled ‘Construction Lien Law,’
establishes a statutory framework for establishment and enforcement of
construction liens by subcontractors, laborers and materialmen.” Trump
Endeavor 12 LLC v. Fernich, Inc., 216 So. 3d 704, 707 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017).
The law provides “a security device in the form of a mechanic’s lien to secure
the payment of sums otherwise due and owing.” Tropical Supply Co. v.
Verchio, 402 So. 2d 1284, 1286 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981). But the law “does not
purport to change, except in a very limited way, the rights and duties arising
out of a sale or a contract to pay money.” Id. Importantly, the law expressly
provides that a construction lien is not an exclusive remedy that precludes a
lienor from maintaining an action at law to collect on an unpaid debt:
This part shall be cumulative to other existing remedies and nothing contained in this part shall be construed to prevent any lienor or assignee under any contract from maintaining an action thereon at law in like manner as if he or she had no lien for the security of his or her debt, and the bringing of such action shall not prejudice his or her rights under this part, except as herein otherwise expressly provided.
5 § 713.30, Fla. Stat. (2022) (emphasis added). Further, the Construction Lien
Law defines “contract” as “an agreement for improving real property, written
or unwritten, express or implied, and includes extras or change orders.” §
713.01(6), Fla. Stat. (2022) (emphasis added).
Indeed, it is well settled that the discharge of a construction lien does
not preclude a lienor from pursuing other contractual remedies that are
available under the common law.3 This includes, as here, quasi contract
(implied in law) claims for unjust enrichment that seek damages. See
Unnerstall v. Designerick, Inc., 17 So. 3d 900, 902 n.2 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009)
(directing the trial court to discharge a construction lien for the lienor’s failure
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Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
Opinion filed August 13, 2025. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D25-0109 Lower Tribunal No. 24-10318-CA-01 ________________
Jorge Hernandez, Appellant,
vs.
Burleigh House Condominium, Inc., Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Antonio Arzola, Judge.
Valiente, Carollo & McElligott, PLLC, and Matthew McElligott, for appellant.
Bogen Law Group, P.A., and Veronica Doss and Mark D. Bogen (Coral Springs), for appellee.
Before SCALES, C.J., and LINDSEY and LOBREE, JJ.
SCALES, C.J. Appellant Jorge Hernandez, the plaintiff below, appeals a December
19, 2024 final summary judgment in favor of the defendant below, Burleigh
House Condominium, Inc. (“Burleigh House”) on Hernandez’s unjust
enrichment claim that seeks damages for unpaid restoration services. We
reverse the challenged judgment and remand for further proceedings
because the trial court erred in finding that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment
claim is barred by Florida’s Construction Lien Law, Chapter 713, part I,
Florida Statutes (2022).
I. Relevant Background
Hernandez is the former owner of First Response Restoration Team,
LLC (“First Response”), a provider of restoration services to damaged
property. In October 2022, Burleigh House allegedly hired First Response,
pursuant to an oral agreement, to repair property that had been damaged in
a fire. First Response allegedly completed the repairs on or about October
17, 2022, billing Burleigh House $155,147.14 for its services. Burleigh
House, though, refused to make any payment to First Response.
On December 20, 2022, Hernandez, acting on behalf of First
Response, recorded a claim of lien against Burleigh House’s property for the
unpaid repairs. See § 713.02, Fla. Stat. (2022) (creating the right to a lien on
real property with respect to services that improve the property); § 713.08,
2 Fla. Stat. (2022) (prescribing the recordation requirements for a claim of lien).
On January 11, 2023, Burleigh House recorded a notice contesting First
response’s claim of lien. See § 713.22(2), Fla. Stat. (2022). First Response
then had sixty days (until March 13, 2023), to file an action to enforce its
claim of lien or the lien would be “extinguished automatically.” Id. First
Response, though, took no further action and its claim of lien was
extinguished by operation of law.
In September 2024, Hernandez – who by this time had sold First
Response to a third party but allegedly retained First Response’s accounts
receivable – filed the instant unjust enrichment lawsuit against Burleigh
House in the Miami-Dade County circuit court. Hernandez’s operative
amended complaint seeks $155,147.14 in damages for the unpaid
restoration work that First Response had allegedly performed at Burleigh
House’s property. Burleigh House filed a responsive pleading and then
moved for summary judgment.
In its summary judgment motion, Burleigh House argued that
Hernandez’s lawsuit is time-barred by section 713.22(2) of the Florida
Statutes. Burleigh House asserted that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim
essentially seeks to enforce the lien that was extinguished when First
Response failed to timely file a lien enforcement action after Burleigh House
3 recorded its notice of lien contest. In response, Hernandez asserted that his
lawsuit is not time barred because section 713.30 of the Florida Statutes
(2022) expressly permits a lienor to pursue other contractual remedies.1
After holding a summary judgment hearing, the trial court entered the
challenged final summary judgment in favor of Burleigh House. In its
summary judgment order, the trial court, relying principally on this Court’s
opinion in Doral Collision Center, Inc. v. Daimler Trust, 341 So. 3d 424 (Fla.
3d DCA 2022), held that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim “is based on
precisely the same services upon which the Claim of Lien was based,” and
that Hernandez cannot “circumvent” section 713.22(2)’s time requirements
for filing a lien enforcement action by “calling the lien claim one for unjust
enrichment.” Further, the trial court held that “Florida Statute § 713.30 does
not save [Hernandez] because his unjust enrichment claim is not an action
at law as required by that statute.” Hernandez timely appealed the trial
court’s final summary judgment.
II. Analysis2
1 On appeal, the parties make the same arguments they asserted below. 2 “We review questions of statutory interpretation and the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.” Fla. Retail Fed’n, Inc. v. City of Coral Gables, 282 So. 3d 889, 892 (Fla. 3d DCA 2019).
4 The issue in this case is whether the Construction Lien Law’s
extinguishment of First Response’s construction lien also extinguished
Hernandez’s common law unjust enrichment claim. Based on the express
language of section 713.30, and an unbroken line of Florida cases, we
conclude that Hernandez’s unjust enrichment claim was not extinguished.
“Chapter 713 of the Florida Statutes, entitled ‘Construction Lien Law,’
establishes a statutory framework for establishment and enforcement of
construction liens by subcontractors, laborers and materialmen.” Trump
Endeavor 12 LLC v. Fernich, Inc., 216 So. 3d 704, 707 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017).
The law provides “a security device in the form of a mechanic’s lien to secure
the payment of sums otherwise due and owing.” Tropical Supply Co. v.
Verchio, 402 So. 2d 1284, 1286 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981). But the law “does not
purport to change, except in a very limited way, the rights and duties arising
out of a sale or a contract to pay money.” Id. Importantly, the law expressly
provides that a construction lien is not an exclusive remedy that precludes a
lienor from maintaining an action at law to collect on an unpaid debt:
This part shall be cumulative to other existing remedies and nothing contained in this part shall be construed to prevent any lienor or assignee under any contract from maintaining an action thereon at law in like manner as if he or she had no lien for the security of his or her debt, and the bringing of such action shall not prejudice his or her rights under this part, except as herein otherwise expressly provided.
5 § 713.30, Fla. Stat. (2022) (emphasis added). Further, the Construction Lien
Law defines “contract” as “an agreement for improving real property, written
or unwritten, express or implied, and includes extras or change orders.” §
713.01(6), Fla. Stat. (2022) (emphasis added).
Indeed, it is well settled that the discharge of a construction lien does
not preclude a lienor from pursuing other contractual remedies that are
available under the common law.3 This includes, as here, quasi contract
(implied in law) claims for unjust enrichment that seek damages. See
Unnerstall v. Designerick, Inc., 17 So. 3d 900, 902 n.2 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009)
(directing the trial court to discharge a construction lien for the lienor’s failure
to strictly comply with Chapter 713’s requirements, but noting that the lienor
3 See, e.g., Ruffolo v. Parish & Bowman, Inc., 966 So. 2d 434, 437 (Fla. 1st DCA 2007) (concluding that a contractor’s construction lien must be discharged for failing to strictly comply with Chapter 713’s requirements, but observing that “cancellation of [the] lien does not leave [the contractor] without a remedy, as it may enforce its contractual claim.”); Summerton v. Mamele, 711 So. 2d 131, 133 (Fla. 5th DCA 1998) (“While Summerton may have forfeited his right to enforce a lien by failing to file a contractor’s affidavit, he did not forfeit his right to pursue the available remedies for breach of contract, including an award of prejudgment interest.”); accord Hiller v. Phoenix Assocs. of S. Fla., Inc., 189 So. 3d 272, 275-76 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016) (recognizing that, while the lienor’s “failure to bring an action against the surety within a certain time period after the transfer [of the construction lien to a bond] results in the extinguishment of the right to make a claim on the bond,” the lienor “is still free to pursue its underlying contract claims”).
6 “still may enforce its contractual claims” for breach of oral contract, open
account, and unjust enrichment); Commerce P’ship 8098 Ltd. P’ship v.
Equity Contracting Co., 695 So. 2d 383, 389-90 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997) (“The
construction lien statutes of some states preclude, or have been construed
to preclude, the maintenance of a quasi contract claim. Florida’s construction
lien statute contains no similar limitation on a lienor’s potential remedies. . .
. [I]n Florida, . . . all implied contract actions were part of the action of
assumpsit, which was an action at law under the common law.”) (citations
omitted).4
In granting Burleigh Home’s summary judgment motion, the trial court
principally relied upon this Court’s Doral Collision Center decision. Our Doral
Collision Center case, though, considered whether Florida’s Motor Vehicle
Repair Act5 precluded a vehicle repair shop’s unjust enrichment claim, not
4 The trial court was seemingly concerned because unjust enrichment claims are equitable in nature. See Duty Free World, Inc. v. Miami Perfume Junction, Inc., 253 So. 3d 689, 694 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018). But as this Court observed in Duty Free World, “the use of the term ‘equitable’ in reference to an unjust enrichment claim denotes fairness and does not mandate that unjust enrichment be construed as seeking only an equitable, as opposed to a legal, remedy.” Id. Where, as here, an unjust enrichment claim seeks the payment of damages, it is an action at law. Id. at 695. 5 The Motor Vehicle Repair Act is a consumer protection statute that requires vehicle repair estimates be in writing “to protect consumers from misunderstandings arising from oral estimates of motor vehicle repairs and the legal disputes and litigation that follow the fact that repairs have been
7 whether a construction contractor’s unjust enrichment claim is precluded by
Florida’s Construction Lien Law.6
Moreover, Florida’s Motor Vehicle Repair Act does not contain a
provision similar to section 713.30 of Florida’s Construction Lien Law that
expressly preserves a contractor’s alternate remedies. Nor is there a body
of caselaw interpreting Florida’s Motor Vehicle Repair Act that so plainly
authorizes a lienor – whose statutory lien has been extinguished – to pursue
common law remedies. Doral Collision Center is simply not applicable to the
instant case.
III. Conclusion
made prior to their resolution.” Lieberman v. Collision Specialists, Inc., 526 So. 2d 102, 103 (Fla. 4th DCA 1987). 6 Relying on Osteen v. Morris, 481 So. 2d 1287, 1290 (Fla. 5th DCA 1986) – wherein the Fifth District found that the 1986 version of the Motor Vehicle Repair Act precluded a repair shop’s quantum meruit claim – the Doral Collision Center court found that the 2018 version of the Motor Vehicle Repair Act similarly precluded a repair shop’s unjust enrichment claim. Two years after our Doral Collision Center decision issued, however, the Florida Supreme Court called Osteen and its progeny into doubt, concluding that Osteen’s rationale for disallowing a quantum meruit claim “is not a reliable guide to the Repair Act in its current form.” Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v. Glassco Inc., 394 So. 3d 1115, 1121 (Fla. 2024). Disregarding Osteen as inapplicable to the 2016-2019 versions of the Act, the Florida Supreme Court determined that a repair shop’s failure to provide a written repair estimate does not void a repair invoice for completed repairs so as to preclude the repair shop from being paid. Id. at 1120-21.
8 We reverse the summary judgment for Burleigh House and remand for
further proceedings.7
7 We express no opinion on the merits of Hernandez’s claim or any other defenses raised by Burleigh House.