Klein v. Meza

4 So. 3d 51, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 1285, 2009 WL 383617
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 18, 2009
Docket3D08-1090
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 So. 3d 51 (Klein v. Meza) 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
Klein v. Meza, 4 So. 3d 51, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 1285, 2009 WL 383617 (Fla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

WELLS, Judge.

Linda Klein appeals from a final judgment quieting title in Melania Flores Meza to a condominium unit previously owned by Klein’s mother, Isobel Isserlis. Because there is no evidence to support a judgment in Meza’s favor, we reverse.

This action commenced in January 2000 when the Kendall Acres Condominium Association brought suit to collect approximately $3,400 allegedly due in connection with condominium unit G-5. Meza, the occupant of the unit, and Isserlis, its title holder, were joined in the suit.

Meza, who years earlier had entered into a contract for deed 1 with Isser-lis, claimed that she had paid the charges at issue and that the association had made a bookkeeping error. Klein, claiming to be Isserlis’ only child and heir, was substituted for Isserlis who died before the action was commenced and counterclaimed pro se, on her own behalf and, astoundingly as a non-Bar member, on Meza’s behalf, asserting the association’s malicious prosecution, slander of title, and abuse of process.

Within weeks after this suit commenced, the almost $45,000 balloon payment that Meza was required to make to Isserlis (or to her estate, beneficiaries or heirs) under the terms of the contract for deed for unit G-5 came due. 2 Meza did not, however, make this payment to acquire title as required. Rather, according to Meza, she trusted Klein to secure the financing necessary for her to comply with the contract for deed. No financing was secured by either Klein or Meza, and Meza never *53 made the balloon payment necessary to acquire title. Meza did, however, continue to occupy unit G-5 and to pay the same amount monthly to Klein that she had been paying under the contract for deed.

In August 2004, over four years after this action commenced (and after Meza failed to make the balloon payment), the court below began to question whether Klein was the owner of the unit and a proper party to the association’s suit. To address this concern, Klein took Meza to a lawyer who had Meza execute a quitclaim deed conveying unit G-5 to Klein. According to Meza, it was only at this juncture that she “finally realized that neither Klein nor the lawyers [Klein] retained could fairly represent [Meza’s] interests,” and she hired her own lawyers. Meza then brought a cross claim against Klein, claiming (i) that Meza had become the owner of the unit by adverse possession; (ii) that Klein had illegally terminated the contract for deed; and (iii) that the 2004 quitclaim deed from Meza to Klien was invalid.

In response to Meza’s claim regarding the validity of the 2004 deed from herself to Klein, Klein asserted ownership under another deed, one dated 1997, purportedly executed by Klein’s mother, conveying unit G-5 to Klein. Although Klein claimed that this earlier deed had been witnessed and notarized at the time it was signed (in 1997), later testimony confirmed this to be a lie.

Based on (1) Meza’s claim that she, Klein’s former housekeeper with little knowledge of English, had relied on Klein, a sophisticated real estate investor and broker in the underlying contract for deed, in not making the balloon payment due under the contract for deed and in executing the 2004 quitclaim deed, and (2) Klein’s purported attempt to perpetrate a fraud on the court with regard to the 1997 deed, the court below struck all of Klein’s pleadings and entered a default against Klein. The court then entered final judgment invalidating both the 1997 and 2004 deeds and quieting title in Meza against both Klein and Isserlis’ estate on Meza’s section 95.18 adverse possession claim. See § 95.18, Fla. Stat. (2000).

We reverse this judgment in its entirety because, as a matter of law, the facts alleged, even if admitted, do not support quieting title in Meza on her section 95.18 adverse possession claim. At the outset, we note that the trial court’s rulings regarding the validity of the 1997 and 2004 deeds have no bearing on the ultimate outcome of this case. Even if the 1997 deed from Isserlis to Klein is invalid, the fact remains that either Isserlis’ estate, her heirs, or her beneficiaries have at all times material held title to unit G-5 and are entitled to enforce the contract for deed executed by Meza, unless Meza is legally excused from performing under that contract. Likewise, even if the 2004 deed from Meza to Klein is invalid, the fact remains that Meza never made the balloon payment required by the contract for deed and thus never became the owner of unit G-5 with anything to convey.

Reduced to its essence, Meza’s claim is that her failure to comply with the contract for deed should be forgiven because she relied on representations made by Klein and thus she should be allowed to complete the sale. Alternatively, Meza claims that by virtue of the adverse possession statutes, sections 95.16 and 95.18 of the Florida Statutes, she is entitled to ownership outright without paying the remainder of the contract price. The trial court decided that Meza is entitled to title outright under section 95.18, the adverse possession without color of title provision. We disagree.

Section 95.18(1) of the Florida Statutes provides that where no written instrument exists, continued occupancy for seven *54 years under a claim of exclusive title constitutes adverse possession if the person in possession has made a return of the property by proper legal description to the property appraiser within a year of taking possession and has made payment of all taxes and matured installments of special improvement liens levied by governmental entities:

Real property actions; adverse possession without color of title
(1) When the occupant or those under whom the occupant claims have been in actual continued occupation of real property for 7 years under a claim of title exclusive of any other right, but not founded on a written instrument, judgment, or decree, the property actually occupied shall be held adversely if the person claiming adverse possession made a return of the property by proper legal description to the property appraiser of the county where it is located within 1 year after entering into possession and has subsequently paid all taxes and matured installments of special improvement liens levied against the property by the state, county, and municipality.

§ 95.18(1), Fla. Stat. (2008).

The complaint in this case alleges facts that establish that Meza enjoyed possession of unit G-5 from January 1991 through February 2000 pursuant to a written contract for deed. As both section 95.18 and the Florida Supreme Court make clear, “possession under an executo-ry contract is not adverse as to the vendor and his privies.” Wright Estates v. Germain, 152 Fla. 612, 12 So.2d 451, 452 (1943) (citations omitted). Adverse possession during this period of time could not, therefore, exist.

Meza’s continued occupancy following her conceded failure in February 2000 to make the balloon payment called for in the contract for deed also does not constitute adverse possession under section 95.18.

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Related

Klein v. Meza
20 So. 3d 945 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 So. 3d 51, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 1285, 2009 WL 383617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-meza-fladistctapp-2009.