Radison Properties, Inc. v. Flamingo Groves, Inc.
This text of 767 So. 2d 587 (Radison Properties, Inc. v. Flamingo Groves, 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.
Opinion
RADISON PROPERTIES, INC. and Ahmad Nader Beydoun, Appellants,
v.
FLAMINGO GROVES, INC., a Florida corporation, Elias Kanaan, Allen R. Greenwald, Jill F. Greenwald and City National Bank of Florida, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*588 Gerald V. Walsh of Gerald V. Walsh, P.A., Coral Springs, for appellants.
Edmund O. Loos III and William Berger of Greenspoon, Marder, Hirschfeld, Rafkin, Ross & Berger, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellees Greenwald and City National Bank.
DELL, J.
Radison Properties, Inc. and Ahmad Nader Beydoun ("Nader") appeal from a final judgment and an amended final judgment of foreclosure. They contend that section 692.01, Florida Statutes (1995), does not apply to appellees, Allen R. and Jill F. Greenwalds' mortgage, that appellee, Elias Michael Kanaan, did not have apparent authority to mortgage the property, that in the absence of a valid mortgage, the Greenwalds are not entitled to an equitable lien on the property, and that costs and legal fees should not have been awarded. We reverse and remand.
On April 24, 1992, Gerald Walsh, an attorney, incorporated Radison Properties, Inc. for Nasser Beydoun ("Nasser"). All rights to the 200,000 shares of authorized, but unissued, stock were assigned to Nasser. He named Elias Michael Kanaan president and secretary of Radison. On April 28, 1992, Nasser transferred four parcels of real property by deed to Radison.[1] A sales contract between Nasser and Radison provided for a purchase price of $648,471.00. Kanaan claimed he paid Nasser $648,471.00 for the property. However, Nader (Nasser's brother) stated that the funds only went from "Nasser's left pocket to his right pocket."
In June 1993, Radison's annual report indicated that Kanaan was a director, president, and secretary of Radison. On April 6, 1994, Nasser called a special meeting of the Radison shareholders (of which he was the only one) and replaced Kanaan with Robert H. Davis, Jr. as the sole director of the corporation. Kanaan testified that he did not receive notice of the meeting. Immediately thereafter, a board of directors meeting was conducted. Nasser, Walsh, and Davis attended the meeting. Davis, as sole director, named himself president and secretary, and named Walsh assistant secretary. Kanaan was not furnished with notice of this meeting. Nader testified that Kanaan was notified by letter written in Arabic that he was no longer president of the company.
On June 20, 1995, Nasser Beydoun died. Nader was the beneficiary of his estate and is the current shareholder of Radison. In 1996, Walsh filed Radison's annual report indicating the following changes: Davis and Walsh were removed as officers and Davis was removed as director; Nader was named president and director; Mustafa Beydoun (Nader's son) was named secretary, treasurer, and director; and Wassim Beydoun (Nader's other son) was named director and vice-president. Kanaan maintains that as far as he knew, he was and still is the owner, president, and secretary of Radison.
In March, 1997, Nader went to the county tax collector to pay taxes on the Radison property. After he could not locate property under the name Radison, he discovered that on April 22, 1996, the property had been conveyed from Radison to Flamingo Groves, Inc. (Kanaan's company) by a deed signed by Kanaan as president of Radison. He also discovered that the taxes had been paid and that there was a *589 mortgage on the property from Flamingo to the Greenwalds. Kanaan testified that he transferred the property from Radison to Flamingo and that Flamingo mortgaged the property to the Greenwalds for $150,000.[2]
As part of the mortgage transaction, $39,141.15 was paid from the Greenwalds' mortgage proceeds to the Broward County Tax Collector to satisfy unpaid delinquent taxes and liens on the property. On February 7, 1997, the Greenwalds filed a foreclosure action against Kanaan and Flamingo. On April 2, 1997, Radison filed a Motion to Intervene and attached its own Complaint against Flamingo and Kanaan for declaratory relief, common law theft, fraud, and conspiracy. The trial court granted the motion to intervene and consolidated the two cases.
After a non-jury trial, the trial court issued a Final Judgment finding, in pertinent part, that the property was originally conveyed from Nasser to Radison by a series of deeds dated April 28, 1992, that on April 22, 1996, the property was conveyed from Radison to Flamingo by a deed signed by Kanaan as president of Radison and that at the time of the conveyance, Kanaan was not the president of Radison, and that no consideration passed from Flamingo to Radison for the conveyance of these deeds. The trial court also found it unworthy of belief that Kanaan gave Nasser $648,000 cash for the property. The trial court further found that on October 31, 1996, the Greenwalds received a mortgage and security agreement covering the four parcels of the property from Flamingo, but that as between Radison and Flamingo, the deeds were invalid. The trial court concluded, however, that the Greenwalds were without notice of the invalidity of the deeds between Radison and Flamingo and were good faith purchasers for value in accepting a mortgage on the four parcels of property from Flamingo because Kanaan had apparent authority from Radison and Nasser to sign the note and mortgage. The court concluded that the mortgage and security agreement in favor of the Greenwalds was a valid encumbrance against the properties and that the foreclosure on the properties could proceed because the Greenwalds were protected by section 692.01, Florida Statutes. Subsequently, the trial court entered an Amended Final Judgment of Foreclosure in favor of the Greenwalds.
First, appellants contend that the trial court erred when it granted a judgment of foreclosure in favor of the Greenwalds against Radison's property. They argue that the court erroneously interpreted section 692.01, Florida Statutes, because Kanaan was not an officer of Radison when he deeded the property to Flamingo. Section 692.01, Florida Statutes, provides in its entirety as follows:
Conveyances by corporations.Any corporation may execute instruments conveying, mortgaging, or affecting any interest in its land by instruments sealed with the common or corporate seal and signed in its name by its president or any vice president or chief executive officer. Assignments, satisfactions, or partial releases of mortgages and acquittances for debts may be similarly executed by any corporate officer. No corporate resolution need be recorded to evidence the authority of the person executing the deed, mortgage, or other instrument for the corporation, and an instrument so executed shall be valid whether or not the officer signing for the corporation was authorized to do so by the board of directors, in the absence of fraud in the transaction by the person receiving it. In cases of fraud, subsequent transactions with good faith purchasers for value and without notice of the fraud shall be valid and binding on the corporation.
*590 Appellants correctly point out that because the entire section of 692.01 refers to actions by either a president, vice president, chief executive officer, or any corporate officer, that the last sentence, referring to fraud, must also deal with actions taken by an officer. Both parties cite Ocean Bank of Miami v. Inv-Uni Inv. Corp., 599 So.2d 694 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992); Prezioso v. Cameron, 559 So.2d 423 (Fla. 4th DCA 1990); and Snead v.
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767 So. 2d 587, 2000 WL 1283820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radison-properties-inc-v-flamingo-groves-inc-fladistctapp-2000.