Profile Investments, Inc. v. Delta Property Management, Inc.

19 So. 3d 1013, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12878, 2009 WL 2602326
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 26, 2009
DocketNo. 1D08-515
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 So. 3d 1013 (Profile Investments, Inc. v. Delta Property Management, 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
Profile Investments, Inc. v. Delta Property Management, Inc., 19 So. 3d 1013, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12878, 2009 WL 2602326 (Fla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Profile Investments, Inc. (Profile) appeals a final summary judgment invalidating a tax deed and denying Profile’s motions for summary judgment against the appellees. Profile also appeals a corrected final judgment to Profile for damages in favor of Profile and against DPI, Inc. in the amount of $290,755.41, accrued during Profile’s use and occupancy of the subject party. We reverse and remand with instructions to the trial court to enter judgment in favor of Profile. Our ruling moots the damages award.

BACKGROUND

When Delta failed to pay its 1997 ad valorem taxes, the City of Jacksonville/Du-val County Tax Authority issued a tax certificate, which Profile purchased in April 1998. In April 2000, after Delta failed to redeem the tax certificate within two years, Profile applied for a tax deed under section 197.502(1), Florida Statutes (1999), which states in pertinent part:

The holder of any tax certificate, other than the county, at any time after 2 years have elapsed since April 1 of the year of issuance of the tax certificate and before the expiration of 7 years from the date of issuance, may file the certificate and an application for a tax deed with the tax collector of the county where the lands described in the certificate are located. The application may be made on the entire parcel of property or any part thereof which is capable of being readily separated from the whole.

The events that ensued have been summarized as follows:

Thereafter, the tax collector, pursuant to section 197.502(4), Florida Statutes (1999), prepared a statement which listed Delta as a party entitled to notice and specified Delta’s address at it appeared on the 1999 tax assessment roll, the most recent assessment roll at the time of the issuance of the statement. The tax collector forwarded the statement to the clerk of the circuit court on May 30, 2000. The clerk then waited over three months before preparing a notice of tax sale, which was mailed to [1015]*1015Delta on September 7, 2000, at the address indicated in the tax collector’s statement. Because Delta was no longer located at the address specified in the statement, the notice was returned to the clerk as undeliverable. Profile thereafter placed the winning bid at the tax deed sale.
Profile brought an action to quiet title to the property in its favor, and Delta counterclaimed, asserting that it was still the titleholder because the clerk had failed to provide proper notice of the sale. Profile and Delta each moved for summary judgment with the dispositive legal issue being whether the clerk had complied with the statutory notice requirements of section 197.522(1), Florida Statutes (1999), when he relied exclusively upon the tax collector’s statement in preparing the notice of the tax sale. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Profile, concluding that the clerk was not required to look beyond the statement to determine the names and addresses of the parties were correctly listed on the tax collector’s statement. The First District Court of Appeal agreed and affirmed the summary judgment.

Delta Prop. Mgmt., Inc. v. Profile Inv., Inc., 875 So.2d 443, 444-45 (Fla.2004), reversing 830 So.2d 867 (Fla. 1st DCA 2002).

In determining the clerk’s duties and obligations as to sending notices of tax sales, the Florida Supreme Court construed the relevant statutes as follows:

Section 197.522(l)(a) unequivocally indicates that the clerk of the circuit court must notify by mail those persons listed in the tax collector’s statement of any pending tax deed sale. Additionally, section 197.502(4)(a) clearly states that, “if the legal titleholder of record is the same as the person to whom the property was assessed on the tax roll for the year in which the property was last assessed, then the notice may only be mailed to the address of the legal titleholder as it appears on the latest assessment roll.” [emphasis added by Florida Supreme Court] When read together, these statutory provisions require the clerk to mail a notice of tax deed sale to the legal titleholder at the titleholder’s address as it appears on the latest assessment roll. When the clerk in the instant case mailed the notice to Delta on September 7, 2000, the latest assessment roll was, presumptively, the 2000 roll, not the 1999 roll, because section 193.023(1) mandates that the roll be updated “no later than July 1 of each year.” § 193.023(1), Fla. Stat. (1999). [emphasis added by Florida Supreme Court] The clerk should have obtained an updated assessment roll from the tax collector, if available, but he failed to do so. Thus the clerk erred by mailing the notice to Delta at the address listed in the tax collector’s statement (i.e., the 1999 address) without determining if the 2000 tax assessment roll was available. If we were to hold otherwise, Delta would be denied its property without due process of law.

Delta, 875 So.2d at 447. The Florida Supreme Court concluded:

[T]he clerk waited more than three months before noticing and setting the tax deed sale. By that time, the titleholder’s address had changed. The notice of the tax deed sale should have been mailed to the titleholder’s new address if that address was “reasonably ascertainable” from the latest tax assessment roll.... We find that the clerk’s notice of a tax deed sale must be mailed, pursuant to section 197.502(4)(a), to the legal titleholder at the titleholder’s address as it appears on the latest assessment roll at the time the notice of [1016]*1016the tax deed sale is sent. Therefore, we quash the decision of the First District in this ease and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Delta, 875 So.2d at 448.

On remand to the trial court, Profile moved for summary judgment on the ground that the 2000 tax roll allegedly containing Delta’s new address had not been completed and certified when the notices of sale were mailed and, thus, was not available to the clerk. Accordingly, Profile asserted that the Clerk’s new duty as imposed by the Florida Supreme Court would have yielded the same result because the 2000 assessment roll did not become available to the clerk before the clerk mailed notices of sale. The trial court nevertheless quieted title in Delta. Profile appealed, and we reversed for the following reason:

On remand, the trial court did not allow Profile to present any new evidence concerning the availability of the tax assessment roll and entered summary judgment in Delta’s favor. We find there is a factual dispute over whether Delta’s new address was reasonably ascertainable from the latest tax assessment roll available at the time the clerk mailed the notice of the tax deed sale. Because there are genuine issues of material fact that are in dispute, summary judgment is not appropriate.

See Profile Inv., Inc. v. Delta Prop. Mgmt., Inc., 913 So.2d 661, 662 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005). Through protracted litigation, then, including two summary judgments, two appeals to this court, and review by the Florida Supreme Court, this case moved inexorably toward resolution on the question of whether an updated tax roll would have been available to the clerk and, if so, whether such roll would have allowed the clerk to provide better notice to Delta.

On the most recent remand, Delta and Profile engaged in discovery.

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Related

Delta Property Management v. Profile Investment, Inc.
87 So. 3d 765 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
19 So. 3d 1013, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12878, 2009 WL 2602326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/profile-investments-inc-v-delta-property-management-inc-fladistctapp-2009.