Siegel v. Rowe

71 So. 3d 205, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 15722, 2011 WL 4578543
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 5, 2011
Docket2D10-2796, 2D10-2864
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 71 So. 3d 205 (Siegel v. Rowe) 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
Siegel v. Rowe, 71 So. 3d 205, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 15722, 2011 WL 4578543 (Fla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

WALLACE, Judge.

Gary R. Siegel and Cynthia A. Leahy-Fernandez challenge awards of attorney’s fees made against them under section 57.105(1), Florida Statutes (2006). In the underlying action brought by Ms. Leahy-Fernandez, who was represented by Mr. Siegel, the circuit court ruled against Ms. Leahy-Fernandez on her claims. Because Ms. Leahy-Fernandez presented evidence at the final hearing that tended to prove the material facts necessary to establish her claims, we reverse the attorney’s fee awards.

I. THE FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Ms. Leahy-Fernandez was a petty officer in the United States Navy. Her husband, Roberto Fernandez, worked as a long-distance truck driver. Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and her husband had gradually acquired a few rental houses in the Tampa area. However, the demands of Ms. Le-ahy-Fernandez’s service in the Navy frequently required the couple to live outside the United States. When Ms. Leahy-Fer-nandez and Mr. Fernandez were in the area, they managed their rental houses themselves. But when they were out of the country, they employed Five-Star Realty, Inc., to manage their rental houses. The couple also used Five-Star Realty as their listing agent whenever they sold a property.

Raymond Rowe and Polly Rumbough operated Five-Star Realty. Neither Ms. Leahy-Fernandez nor her husband was related to Mr. Rowe or to Ms. Rumbough, and the parties did not have a close personal relationship. However, for several years Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and her husband had enjoyed a cordial business association with Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough. In April 2004, Mr. Fernandez incurred a debt that he was unable to pay. He called Mr. Rowe for help, and Mr. Rowe loaned him $11,000. Mr. Fernandez timely repaid the loan with interest.

Later in 2004, after Ms. Leahy-Fernan-dez and her husband had sold their home in Hawaii, they sent a total of $50,000 to Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty. Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez transferred the money by three checks drawn on their joint account at a bank in Hawaii. Each of the three checks was dated November 1, 2004. One of the checks was payable to Mr. Rowe for $20,000. Another check was payable to Ms. Rumbough for $20,000. The third *208 check was payable to Five-Star Realty for $10,000. The memorandum line on the checks payable to Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rum-bough read, “PERSONAL.” The memorandum line on the check payable to Five-Star Realty was blank. Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty received the checks by mail from Hawaii and deposited the checks into their respective bank accounts. The checks were paid in the regular course of business.

Neither of the parties sent any letters or e-mails establishing the purpose for which Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez sent the $50,000. Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rum-bough, and Five-Star Realty did not sign a promissory note or other memorandum with a promise to repay the money. In fact, they did not even send a written acknowledgment of receipt of the funds. There were never any payments of interest or principal indicating that the parties regarded the transaction as a loan. Thus, except for the cancelled checks, the $50,000 transaction between the two unrelated parties was completely undocumented. In addition, there were no third-party witnesses with knowledge of the parties’ intent.

On March 15, 2007, approximately two and one-half years after sending the $50,000, Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez filed an action against Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty to recover the money. Mr. Fernandez was diagnosed with cancer in May 2007; he died in 2008 while the action was pending. Neither of the parties arranged for the taking of Mr. Fernandez’s deposition.

In a second amended complaint filed after Mr. Fernandez’s death, Ms. Leahy-Fernandez asserted her ownership of the entire claim as the surviving spouse of Mr. Fernandez. She alleged that the $50,000 was a loan that Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty had promised to pay on or before November 1, 2006. Ms. Le-ahy-Fernandez alleged further that Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty had promised and failed to deliver a note for the loan secured by a mortgage on the business premises of Five-Star Realty. In her second amended complaint, Ms. Le-ahy-Fernandez asserted four claims against Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty: Count I, money lent; Count II, fraud in the inducement; Count III, a request for the imposition of a constructive trust; and Count IV, a claim for the imposition of an equitable mortgage on the business premises of Five-Star Realty.

Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty took the position that Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez sent them the $50,000 as a gift rather than as a loan. They also claimed that the Statute of Frauds, section 725.01, Florida Statutes (2004), barred Ms. Leahy-Fernandez’s claims. In support of their defense based on the Statute of Frauds, Mr. Rowe, Ms. Rumbough, and Five-Star Realty alleged that the purported loan agreement was unenforceable because it was not in writing and was not signed by them.

II. THE EVIDENCE AT THE FINAL HEARING

The pretrial conference order summarized the issues to be tried as follows: “Whether the $50,000.00 was a gift or a loan. If the $50,000.00 was a loan, then did the Defendants fraudulently induce the loan, and if so, should a constructive trust/equitable mortgage be awarded.” The circuit court tried the case without a jury. At the final hearing, Ms. Leahy-Fernandez, Mr. Rowe, and Ms. Rumbough were the only witnesses who testified. We review their testimony briefly.

Ms. Leahy-Fernandez identified the three cancelled checks, and they were received in evidence. Ms. Leahy-Fernandez *209 testified that she and Mr. Fernandez finally agreed to loan the $50,000 after Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough bombarded them by telephone for three weeks with requests for the money. Although there were three separate checks, there was a single loan for $50,000. 1 According to Ms. Leahy-Fernandez, Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough promised to provide a note for the loan secured by a mortgage on the business premises of Five-Star Realty. Despite repeated requests, Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and her husband never received the promised documentation for the loan.

Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough denied asking Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez for any money. They testified that the three checks arrived unexpectedly one day in the mail at the Five-Star Realty office in Tampa. At the time, Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough were taking care of personal matters in North Carolina. According to Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough, Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez sent the $50,000 to thank them for their services over the years. Mr. Rowe and Ms. Rumbough denied making any promise to repay the money. They both testified that when they received the funds, they never had any intent to repay Ms. Leahy-Fernandez and Mr. Fernandez.

III. THE CIRCUIT COURT’S RULINGS

At the conclusion of Ms. Leahy-Fernan-dez’s testimony, the circuit court ruled that the Statute of Frauds barred Count I, the claim for money lent. The defense theory was that the claimed oral promise to repay the $50,000 was unenforceable because of the absence of a signed memorandum acknowledging a promise to pay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 So. 3d 205, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 15722, 2011 WL 4578543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siegel-v-rowe-fladistctapp-2011.