Lentz and Marcos v. Community Bank of Florida, Inc.

189 So. 3d 882, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 3562
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 9, 2016
Docket14-0726
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 So. 3d 882 (Lentz and Marcos v. Community Bank of Florida, 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
Lentz and Marcos v. Community Bank of Florida, Inc., 189 So. 3d 882, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 3562 (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SCALES, J.

Appellants Gene Lentz, Maria Lentz and Gladys Marcos (“Borrowers”) appeal a final summary judgment of foreclosure in favor of Appellee Community Bank of Florida (“Bank”). Because the trial court erred by not enforcing the parties’ mediated settlement agreement (“MSA”), we reverse and remand to the trial court for the appropriate enforcement of the MSA.

I. Facts

A The MSA

In April 2010, after the Borrowers had stopped making payments on a promissory note secured by a mortgage encumbering residential real property in Key Largo (the “Property”), the Bank brought suit against the Borrowers seeking to foreclose on the Bank’s mortgage.

The trial court ordered the case to mediation. The parties mediated' the case on October 24, 2011. At the time of the mediation, the Bank’s records indicated that the Borrowers owed $337,328.41 in principal on the promissory note. The mediation resulted in the MSA which, in handwritten form, contained .twelve enumerated provisions, several of which , are pertinent to this appeal.

In the MSA, the Bank agreed to reinstate/modify the loan, if the Borrowers qualified for such reinstatement/modification. Pursuant to the MSA, the principal amount of the new. loan would be $382,500 (representing the $337,328.41 in outstanding principal, plus approximately $41,000 in legal expenses and approximately $4,100 in other expenses incurred by the Bank related to the Property) (the “New Loan”).

Pursuant to the MSA, monthly payments.for the New Loan would be calculated based on a 6% interest rate (as opposed to the “old” loan’s 7.5% interest rate), with a 40-year amortization and a balloon payment due after five years. Additionally, the Borrowers’ monthly payment would include escrow payments for real property taxes and insurance. The Borrowers would be required to pay all closing costs associated with the New Loan. 1

Per the MSA, assuming the Borrowers qualified for the New Loan, the closing on the New Loan would occur at the Bank’s office in Homestead within forty-five days from the date of the MSA. Upon closing, the Bank would dismiss the foreclosure case with prejudice and report the modification to the credit reporting agency.

The MSA also required the Borrowers, within seventy-two hours of the effective date of the MSA, to pay the Bank the cash amount of $52,000, which the parties stipulated was the amount necessary to bring the “old” loan current. The MSA required that the Borrowers’ $52,000 cash payment *884 be held in escrow by Bank, and refunded to the Borrowers within seventy-two hours if and when the Bank did not qualify the Borrowers for the New Loan. As is cus-tomaiy in these situations, the Borrowers were required to provide documents to the Bank to allow the Bank to make its.qualification determination.

B. The MSA Aftermath

. Shortly after the MSA was executed, the Borrowers made the $52,000 cash payment to the Bank, which, initially, held the funds in escrow as required by the MSA. The MSA’s 45-day time period passed, however, without the occurrence of a closing for the New Loan. In fact, the record indicates the Bank did not prepare any documents associated with the New Loan (i.e., a revised promissory note or a mortgage modification agreement).

The parties dispute the reasons for the New Loan not closing within the 45-day period required by the MSA. The Bank suggests that the Borrowers did not provide the requisite information (i.e., proof of property insurance and Borrower bank statements) to allow, the Bank to qualify the Borrowers for the New Loan. Yet, despite its not receiving complete information to qualify the Borrowers, the Bank did not return the $52,000 to the Borrowers as was required if the Borrowers failed to qualify for the New Loan.

Pointing to correspondence between the Bank and its counsel, 2 the Borrowers suggest that the Bank did not intend to honor the terms of the MSA, and merely used the mediation process to obtain a $52,000 cash payment from the Borrowers.

In any event, approximately ninety days after the MSA — on January 23, 2012 — the Bank issued a commitment letter to the Borrowers purporting to offer the Borrowers a loan modification reflecting the terms of the MSA. The commitment letter stated that the Bank had qualified the Borrowers for the New Loan; the commitment letter also required the signature of the Borrowers prior to January 31, 2012.

Pursuant to this commitment letter, the Bank would presumably prepare the loan modification documents and, at closing on the New Loan, apply the $52,000 paid by the Borrowers to “past due delinquent payments” for the “old” loan. The letter, however, required any ádditional past due amounts on the “old”’ loan, “including and not limited to past due interest, Lender’s Placed Insurance and Real Estate Taxes,” to be paid in cash by the Borrowers at closing on the New Loan. ■ According to a schedule attached to the’ Bank’s commitment letter, this additional amount due at closing totaled $19,983.01.

The commitment letter called for a February 23, 2012 closing date on the New Loan. According to the commitment letter, the Borrowers would agree that, in the event, the New Loan did not close on or before February 23, 2012, the $52,000 they had paid into escrow would be applied to delinquent amounts due on the “old” loan, and the Borrowers would no longer be eligible for the modification arrangement.

Asserting that the Bank had unilaterally and materially altered the terms of the *885 MSA, the Borrowers refused to execute the Bank’s January 23, 2012 commitment letter. 3

Without seeking leave of the trial court, and without either: (i) seeking to enforce the MSA against the Borrowers, or (ii) asserting that the Borrowers had-breached the MSA, the Bank removed the $52,000 from the escrow account and applied the payment to ■ the Borrowers’ ' past due amounts on the “old” loan. The Bank then proceeded with the foreclosure.

The Borrowers, however, filed a motion in the trial court seeking an order requiring the Bank to honor the terms- of the MSA.

C. The Trial Court’s Order on the Bor-roivers’Motion to Enforce MSA

Over the course of two days, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing, eliciting testimony from the Borrowers and from a representative of the Bank. In November 2013, the trial court rendered an order denying the Borrowers any relief.

The trial court determined that the parties inadvertently created an ambiguity in the MSA by not articulating the conditions under which the $52,000 either would be forfeited by, or returned to, the Borrowers. The MSA’s only express provision in this regard was that the funds had to be returned to the Borrowers in the event the Bank did not qualify the Borrowers for the New Loan.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 3d 882, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 3562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lentz-and-marcos-v-community-bank-of-florida-inc-fladistctapp-2016.