Republic Funding Corp. v. Americable Associates, Ltd.
This text of 478 So. 2d 1097 (Republic Funding Corp. v. Americable Associates, Ltd.) 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
The plaintiff-appellant, Republic Funding Corporation, a New York corporation, recovered a jury verdict — resulting in a $260,-000 award — in an action on an oral brokerage agreement for securing a $13,000,000 [1098]*1098loan from the Bank of Montreal to partially finance defendant-appellees’ Florida cable TV business.1 On post-trial motions, however, the lower court entered judgment for the defendants on the ground that, because Republic was not a registered Florida mortgage broker, the action was barred by the Florida Mortgage Brokers Act, section 494.04(1), Florida Statutes (1983):
No person shall act as a mortgage broker or mortgage solicitor in this state, or in, out of, or from offices in this state, without a license therefor as provided in this act.2
I
While it is established law that brokers who are not properly registered in Florida as required by statute may not recover commissions for that reason, 7 Fla. Jur.2d Brokers § 74 (1978), we find that, for at least two separate reasons,3 this principle does not apply here and that the ruling below is therefore erroneous.
1. The record shows, not only that the defendants’ principal, Hermanowski, went to New York City to seek out Republic and that the agreement sued upon was entered into there,4 but, more important for the present purposes, that all of the plaintiff’s services in arranging the loan with the Bank of Montreal were performed in that state. Indeed, Republic’s only contact with Florida occurred when its representative accompanied Hermanowski and officers of the prospective lender when they met in Miami to inspect the site and discuss the defendants’ proposed operation; it is undisputed, however, that Republic engaged in no negotiations whatever during that time. Since none of the broker’s compensable activities took place in Florida, it is clear that section 494.04, which refers specifically to one’s acting as a mortgage broker “in this state, or in, out of, or from offices in this state,” does not apply. See Lucas v. Gulf & Western Industries, Inc., 666 F.2d 800 (3d Cir.1981) (holding on indistinguishable facts that equivalent provision of Florida real estate licensing law inapplicable to bar claim for services in selling Florida real estate performed in New Jersey); Paulson v. Shapiro, 490 F.2d 1 (7th Cir.1973) (same result under Wisconsin law as to services relating to Wisconsin realty performed in Illinois); see generally Geneva Investment, Ltd. v. Trafalgar Developers, Ltd., 274 So.2d 581 (Fla. 3d DCA 1973), cert. discharged, 285 So.2d 593 (Fla.1973).
2. When the $18,300,000 in loans were closed in New York City, the borrowers executed a standard UCC-1 financing form which granted the lenders a lien on all their assets. Completely fortuitously, these included a parcel of Florida land worth $200,-000 which thus became subject to a mortgage which, in a very small part, secured the entire loan: this was the only aspect of the entire arrangement which involved a “mortgage loan” 5 at all. There is no question that the existence of this mortgage, covering property valued at less than 2% of the entire loan, was a totally adventitious circumstance which was immaterial to the consummation of the loan, which, like the plaintiff’s compensable efforts in arranging [1099]*1099it, would have taken place in precisely the same manner in its absence. Under the prevailing law, the mere presence of an incidental element such as this — even one which, standing alone, would have involved a regulatory provision like section 494.04— does not subject the entire transaction to the statute and its invalidating effect. Thus, in Hughes v. Chapman, 272 F.2d 193 (5th Cir.1959), the court rejected the contention that an unregistered media broker’s commission claim for the sale of a radio station situated on a 99-year Florida leasehold was barred by the Florida Real Estate Brokerage Act. Affirming the trial court’s determination that the transfer of the leasehold, while it itself involved realty, was only incidental to the entire sales transaction, the fifth circuit quoted with approval from Weingast v. Rialto Pastry Shop, Inc., 243 N.Y. 113, 152 N.E. 693 (1926):
We do not think this provision broad enough to cover or was intended to cover, every transaction in which an interest in real estate may be part of the subject transfer.
Id. at 116, 152 N.E. at 694. Similarly, in Schindler v. Florida Real Estate Commission, 144 So.2d 862 (Fla. 3d DCA 1962), this court reversed a suspension imposed upon the petitioners because they had unlawfully shared commissions with unlicensed persons. We held that the transactions in question, although including the transfer of leases, were not subject to the Florida statutes, because
[t]he two transactions on which those charges were based, related to the sale of businesses, and the leases transferred in connection therewith were incidental.
Id. at 863. We believe that these authorities compel the determination that the highly “incidental” $200,000 mortgage did not place the loan under section 494.04.6
II
The trial court ruled, and the parties now agree, that New York law governs the brokerage contract between them. By way of limited counter-attack, the defendants contend that, even if, as we have concluded, Republic’s claim may not be wholly invalidated, its recovery should be limited to $65,000 by New York General Obligation Law, section 5-531 (McKinney 1978) which, when the contract was formed in 1982,7 provided
1. No person shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive more than fifty cents for a brokerage, soliciting, driving or procuring the loan or forbearance of one hundred dollars, and in that proportion for a greater or less sum, except loans on real estate security; nor more than thirty-eight cents for making or renewing any bond, bill, note or other security given for such loan or forbearance, or for any counter bond, bill, note or other security concerning the same.
We reject the appellees’ contention to this effect on the basis of Armstrong v. Rangaire Corp., 493 F.Supp. 390 (S.D.N.Y.1980). In that decision, the court concluded, upon a comprehensive and erudite analysis of the statute and the prior New York cases, including those cited by the appel-lees, that the applicable version of section 5-531 does not apply to a transaction such as the one before us: a large arms-length private placement loan from institutional lenders to prosperous, unpressed borrowers.8,9 We are convinced that Arm[1100]*1100strong s resolution of the issue is the correct one.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
478 So. 2d 1097, 10 Fla. L. Weekly 2435, 1985 Fla. App. LEXIS 16486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-funding-corp-v-americable-associates-ltd-fladistctapp-1985.