MARK KOYFMAN v. 1572 PLEDGER LLC

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 16, 2020
Docket19-1521
StatusPublished

This text of MARK KOYFMAN v. 1572 PLEDGER LLC (MARK KOYFMAN v. 1572 PLEDGER LLC) 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
MARK KOYFMAN v. 1572 PLEDGER LLC, (Fla. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed December 16, 2020.

________________

No. 3D19-1521 Lower Tribunal No. 13-38896 ________________

Mark Koyfman, Appellant,

vs.

1572 Pledger LLC, Appellee.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Abby Cynamon, Judge.

Michael S. Kaufman, for appellant.

Stok Kon + Braverman, and Robert A. Stok and Michael E. Bonner (Fort Lauderdale), for appellee.

Before EMAS, C.J., and GORDO and LOBREE, JJ.

LOBREE, J.

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING We deny the motion for rehearing but withdraw our prior opinion and issue

the following in its stead.

Mark Koyfman appeals from a final judgment of foreclosure entered in favor

of 1572 Pledger, LLC (the “subsequent mortgagee”), as well as the denial of his

counterclaim to quiet title, charging error to the trial court’s failure to dismiss the

suit below and enter judgment in his favor pursuant to CDC Builders, Inc. v.

Biltmore-Sevilla Debt Investors, LLC, 151 So. 3d 479 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014). For the

following reasons, we agree and reverse. 1

Having lived together and just had a child, Koyfman and Irina Kosterina

decided to move to Florida in 2003. He was a licensed realtor by trade. She was an

accountant. As a couple, they invested in at least one business and purchased several

properties. In 2007, Kosterina acquired the apartment foreclosed on below and

executed a note and mortgage in favor of Regions Bank (the “original mortgagee”)

in connection with a personal $50,000 line of credit. In 2008, she quit-claimed the

property to 604 Harbour House, LLC (the “first company”), an entity she formed

and managed herself.

In 2009, Koyfman and Kosterina ended their personal and business

relationship. Kosterina, through her first company, quit-claimed the apartment to

1 We decline to reach the remaining issues raised on appeal.

2 Koyfman. The deed was “[s]ubject to that certain Mortgage given by [Kosterina] in

favor of [the original mortgagee].” Koyfman made the apartment his primary

residence, and paid for maintenance, condominium dues, and all property taxes. He

failed, however, to make any mortgage payments.

In 2013, after several years of continuing to make mortgage payments on the

loan for which the apartment served as collateral and having consulted the attorneys

who represented her below, Kosterina created Apt. 604 Bal Harbour Condo, LLC

(the “second company”). According to her testimony, she did this “in order to

purchase the mortgage and note from [the original mortgagee] to satisfy [her] debts

and recover [her] loss.” Through her second company, created and managed solely

by her, Kosterina paid off the balance of the loan. However, she asked the original

mortgagee to sell the rights to the mortgage to her second company, instead of

satisfying the loan and extinguishing the mortgage. Her second company then

obtained the assignment of the mortgage by the original mortgagee.

That same year, her attorneys—now representing the second company—

allegedly wrote to Koyfman to alert him of his continuing default on the mortgage

from the time he took title. Thereafter, Kosterina’s second company sued to

foreclose, accelerating payment on the mortgage and naming both Kosterina and

Koyfman as defendants. Koyfman’s answer alleged that the first company had failed

to effectively purchase the mortgage it attempted to foreclose on, since the payment

3 for the assignment should have satisfied the debt and extinguished the mortgage

instrument’s obligation. He also counterclaimed to quiet title due to the cloud

created by the purported assignment.

In 2017, Kosterina found it hard to cope with the litigation expenses of her

second company’s foreclosure suit. Having consulted her attorneys, she then

assigned her second company’s rights under the mortgage to a third legal entity: the

subsequent mortgagee. That same year, the subsequent mortgagee was substituted

as the party foreclosing below. Koyfman then filed an answer to the second

company’s cross counter-claim, again challenging the subsequent mortgagee’s

standing as a note holder and alleging that he was not unjustly enriched because

Kosterina deeded him the property in exchange for other real property interests of

his.

After discovery and a trial where Koyfman and Kosterina testified, and

different views were expressed as to the nature of the transaction, 2 the lower court

entered judgment of foreclosure in favor of the subsequent mortgagee. The order

2 It was disputed whether Kosterina’s transfer of title to Koyfman was “gratuitous,” as claimed by her, or one “among numerous exchanges of assets,” as claimed by him. Koyfman gave deposition testimony that, in an independent effort to amicably and fairly split their assets, he ceded to Kosterina sole title to the property where the couple lived at the time, while, in return, she quit-claimed the apartment at issue to him. The trial court made no findings on this issue and, neither set of circumstances, if true, would change the legal result here. Accordingly, we express no view on this issue.

4 relevantly found that the subsequent mortgagee owned a valid and outstanding

mortgage lien against the apartment; that Koyfman’s deed subjected his interest to

said mortgage; that both Koyfman and Kosterina had defaulted on the mortgage, the

balance of which ascended to $72,095.27; and, as such, while Kosterina was

personally liable for that debt, Koyfman was estopped from challenging the validity

of the mortgage. Accordingly, the trial judge denied Koyfman’s counterclaim and

ordered the sale of Koyfman’s apartment to satisfy the outstanding mortgage.

“To the extent the trial court’s final judgment of foreclosure ‘is based on

factual findings, we will not reverse unless the trial court abused its discretion;

however, any legal conclusions are subject to de novo review.’” Gonzalez v. Fed.

Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 276 So. 3d 332, 335 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018) (quoting Verneret v.

Foreclosure Advisors, LLC, 45 So. 3d 889, 891 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010)). Koyfman

argues that the trial court erred in failing to find that the subsequent mortgagee did

not own a valid mortgage assignment given that the purchase by or assignment of

the original mortgage to Kosterina’s second company was unenforceable under the

Third Restatement of Property and CDC Builders, 151 So. 3d at 479. Before

analyzing whether this case falls under CDC Builders, we clarify the contours of the

standard recognized therein.

In CDC Builders, 151 So. 3d at 480, a contractor holding junior liens on real

property built under contract appealed from a final summary judgment of foreclosure

5 in favor of the senior lien. The contractor unsuccessfully defended against the

foreclosure and extinguishment of its liens, arguing that the foreclosing entity that

acquired the senior mortgage by assignment was formed and managed by the same

individuals controlling the entity that was the original owner and mortgagor of the

property, and that the assignment had been a strategy by the owner to improve its

development, fail to pay the contractor, and later extinguish any resulting liens. Id.

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Related

CDC Builders, Inc. v. Biltmore-Sevilla Debt Investors, LLC
151 So. 3d 479 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2014)
Gregory Sandefur v. RVS Capital, LLC, Rio Vista Saloon, LLC, and David Zwick
183 So. 3d 1258 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2016)
Verneret v. Foreclosure Advisors, LLC
45 So. 3d 889 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2010)
Miller v. Kondaur Capital Corp.
91 So. 3d 218 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2012)
C.T.W. Co. v. Rivergrove Apartments, Inc.
582 So. 2d 18 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1991)

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MARK KOYFMAN v. 1572 PLEDGER LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-koyfman-v-1572-pledger-llc-fladistctapp-2020.