Kelly A. Kranci v. Casey J. Kranci

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
Docket4D2023-1808
StatusPublished

This text of Kelly A. Kranci v. Casey J. Kranci (Kelly A. Kranci v. Casey J. Kranci) 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
Kelly A. Kranci v. Casey J. Kranci, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

KELLY A. KRANCI, Appellant,

v.

CASEY J. KRANCI, Appellee.

No. 4D2023-1808

[November 20, 2024]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Natasha DePrimo, Judge; L.T. Case No. FMCE19- 001348.

Catherine L. Roselli, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.

Erin Pogue Newell of Open Book Appeals, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.

GROSS, J.

We reverse a final judgment for dissolution of marriage, primarily because the circuit court erred in holding the wife to a 2021 stipulation on the value of the marital home in a 2023 trial. We remand to the trial court for reevaluation of equitable distribution, the wife’s attorney’s fees, and alimony consistent with this opinion. 1

Factual and Procedural Background

The parties were married in 1998. The wife petitioned for dissolution of marriage on January 31, 2019. The parties’ youngest child was almost 17 at the time of the petition. The parties had purchased a home in Davie, Florida in 2015. In 2019, the home was appraised at $560,000. After the petition was filed, the parties lived together in the marital home until the wife moved to Iowa to stay with a friend in May 2019.

1 We affirm the circuit court’s rulings on retroactive alimony and all child support

issues without further discussion. The case first went to trial before Judge Peter Holden on February 16, 2021. The wife wanted to argue that the home’s fair market value was $668,000, but she did not have a current appraisal of the home. The husband thought the home’s fair market value was $533,000. Because of such a discrepancy in the parties’ positions as to the home’s value, without evidence to support it, Judge Holden recognized that the case could not proceed at that time unless the parties worked out an agreement on valuation. To avoid a postponement of the case, the parties conferred during a recess and agreed that the husband would retain the home in equitable distribution at a $600,000 valuation.

The final hearing did not conclude on February 16. The husband suggested that the parties attend mediation. With the wife’s consent, the judge entered a mediation order. The parties attended a mediation on April 1, 2021, but they could not reach an agreement.

Although the case was scheduled for trial several more times, the dissolution trial did not resume before Judge Holden over the next two years. Judge Holden was transferred out of the family law division and Judge Natasha DePrimo eventually replaced him.

Meanwhile, the wife had moved to set aside the stipulation as to the marital value of the home, arguing that the stipulation was made with the understanding that the trial court would render a final judgment during or shortly after the February 2021 hearing.

The substitution of judges caused issues regarding which judge should preside over the case at that point. In May 2022, Judge DePrimo directed that all matters related to the case, including the conclusion of the final hearing, be heard before Judge Holden. Judge DePrimo also cancelled the special set hearing on the wife’s “Third Urgent Motion for Temporary Support and Temporary Fees and Costs,” 2 directing that the matter be heard by Judge Holden.

2 The record does not reflect that any temporary relief order regarding support or

attorney’s fees was ever entered. Within six months of the petition being filed in 2019, the wife moved for temporary spousal and child support and temporary attorney’s fees and costs. At a February 3, 2020, hearing on the motions, Judge Holden granted the husband’s motion for continuance without ruling on the wife’s motions. From the wife’s standpoint, the inability to obtain any temporary relief order magnified the need to obtain a final judgment of dissolution when the case went before Judge Holden for trial.

2 After a July 13, 2022, case management conference with Judge Holden, the wife moved for disqualification, contending that the judge would always give trial priority to in-custody criminal defendants over this family court matter. Judge Holden denied the motion for disqualification in August 2022 and returned the case to the family law division where the case “would have to start from the beginning.”

Within ten days of Judge Holden’s order, the wife moved for a case management conference in this case that had been pending for 3½ years.

A hearing on the wife’s motion to set aside the February 2021 stipulation on the value of the marital home was held before Judge DePrimo on March 24, 2023. A February 1, 2023, appraisal of the home valued it at $845,000. Judge DePrimo denied the motion to set aside the stipulation.

When the case came before the court for trial on March 27, 2023, Judge DePrimo reaffirmed her earlier ruling on the stipulation. At this point, Judge DePrimo became involved in a discussion of whether the wife would pursue an appeal of the judge’s ruling on the stipulation. She said “if I begin the trial, we’re going to have the same issue that if it goes up on appeal and then it’s coming back—or whatever happens with it, then it could affect the proceedings and how it’s proceeding forward.” She told the wife that “the issue is we don’t want to do this again. And for this family, in particular, they’ve gone through this enough times that they don’t need to have it all over again.” She announced that she was taking a recess to give the wife time to talk to her attorney “to figure out whether or not you want to appeal my ruling or how you want to proceed.” 3

After the recess, the parties went back on record. Judge DePrimo asked whether the parties were ready to proceed. The wife’s attorney responded: “Yes, Your Honor. So, I discussed with my client the issue of Your Honor’s ruling on Friday, and she will not be appealing . . . that ruling with regards to the value of the house and the upholding of that stipulation.” The parties then proceeded with the trial.

On June 11, 2023, Judge DePrimo entered the final judgment now on appeal.

3 The judge’s oral ruling on the stipulation, if it had been reduced to an order,

would have been a non-appealable, non-final order. See Fla. R. App. P. 9.130.

3 The Circuit Court Abused its Discretion in Refusing to Set Aside the 2021 Stipulation as to the Marital Home’s Value

We reject the husband’s contention that Judge DePrimo acted properly regarding the wife’s rights to appeal the judge’s denial of the motion to set aside the stipulation. In the criminal arena, where judges are required to inform defendants of their legal rights, judges routinely advise defendants of their right to appeal. See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.172(c)(4). A trial judge has no business conditioning a trial, or appearing to do so, upon a litigant’s waiver of the right to appeal a pretrial ruling. In T.A. Enterprises, Inc. v. Olarte, Inc., 931 So. 2d 1016 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006), we wrote:

Article V, section 4(b)([1]) of the Florida Constitution grants a constitutional right to appeal as a matter of right, from final judgments or orders of trial courts. The supreme court has written that the legislature may implement this constitutional right and place reasonable conditions upon it so long as they do not thwart the litigants’ legitimate appellate rights.

Id. at 1018 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). We are aware of no rule, statute, or legal principle that empowers a judge to engage in conduct that has the effect of curtailing a litigant’s appellate rights.

The trial judge’s insistence on applying the 2021 stipulation to the 2023 trial was an abuse of discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kelly A. Kranci v. Casey J. Kranci, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-a-kranci-v-casey-j-kranci-fladistctapp-2024.