Suzanne Revah v. Cecile Revah, Etc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 12, 2025
Docket4D2024-1992
StatusPublished

This text of Suzanne Revah v. Cecile Revah, Etc. (Suzanne Revah v. Cecile Revah, Etc.) 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
Suzanne Revah v. Cecile Revah, Etc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

SUZANNE REVAH, Appellant,

v.

CECILE REVAH, individually and as Successor Trustee of THE SALOMON REVAH REVOCABLE TRUST DATED DECEMBER 9, 1999, and as Trustee of THE SUZANNE REVAH REVOCABLE TRUST DATED DECEMBER 9, 1999, Appellee.

No. 4D2024-1992

[November 12, 2025]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; Charles E. Burton, Judge; L.T. Case No. 502022CP004158.

Robert J. Hauser of Sniffen & Spellman, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellant.

John J. Shahady of Shahady & Wurtenberger P.A., Fort Lauderdale, and Samantha Tesser Haimo of Feigeles & Haimo LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.

GROSS, J.

This case involves an unhappy family dynamic involving a mother who has sued her daughter over the daughter’s performance as the trustee of trusts where the mother was the beneficiary. The case is an object lesson that loose, informal recordkeeping common to family finances is contrary to the requirements imposed on trustees by Florida statutes.

With the exception of a single count, we reverse the final judgments and orders entered in favor of the daughter and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Background Facts

This case arises from a dispute between Suzanne Revah, a trust beneficiary who was around 90 years old when the litigation began in 2022, and one of her children, Cecile Revah, concerning actions Cecile had taken during her tenure as trustee of two trusts.

Suzanne’s husband, Salomon Revah, died in April 2012. His estate was administered in Palm Beach County. According to the petition for administration, his estate’s assets consisted of two parcels of real property, having a total value of $714,000. His pour-over will directed that his estate assets be transferred to his trust (the “Salomon Trust”). The two properties were the only assets in his probate estate.

Cecile became the successor trustee of the Salomon Trust upon her father’s death. The Salomon Trust’s two parcels were both sold—one in 2014 and the other in 2017.

Meanwhile, in December 2012, Suzanne and Cecile became co-owners of a house in the Woodfield Country Club in Boca Raton (the “Woodfield House”). The purchase price was $510,000 plus settlement charges, and there was no mortgage on the property. The Woodfield House was titled in the names of Suzanne and Cecile as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. The property is worth about $2.2 million today.

At the bench trial in this case, Cecile admitted that she purchased the Woodfield House and then reimbursed herself with funds from the Salomon Trust, which she characterized as “dad’s money.”

In April 2014, Suzanne executed a quitclaim deed transferring her entire interest in the Woodfield House to Cecile, leaving Cecile as sole owner. Throughout this litigation, Suzanne took the position that she did not understand the significance of this transaction. Suzanne is illiterate and speaks “French, not English.”

In February 2021, Cecile executed a deed transferring a 50% interest in the Woodfield House to Suzanne, as Trustee of the Suzanne Revah Revocable Living Trust (the “Suzanne Trust”). The summary judgment record contains no explanation for this transaction. 1

1 At the bench trial which took place after the order granting her motion for summary judgment, Cecile testified that she made the February 2021 transfer because Suzanne was ill with Covid-19 and Cecile wanted to honor a promise that Suzanne’s share of the house could pass to her heirs. Cecile explained, “So that’s why I transferred it back to her, because I made her that promise, but not because she was entitled to it.” Cecile testified that her agreement with Suzanne was that “anything that I paid [on behalf of Suzanne], I would be able to get it back from the value of the house.”

2 Just prior to Cecile’s resignation as trustee of the Suzanne Trust in January 2022, Suzanne asked Cecile for an accounting. Cecile refused in no uncertain terms. This chain of events, including Suzanne learning that her name was not on the title to her own home, led Suzanne to suspect that Cecile had mismanaged trust assets of both trusts. Suzanne attested in her affidavit that Cecile “did not keep accurate accounting records, and reconstructed accounting records many years after the fact . . . .”

Suzanne’s affidavit stated that the Woodfield House had “never belonged to Cecile” and that “Cecile’s name should have never been on the title, at least not for any permanent purposes.” When asked at a deposition about the joint titling of the Woodfield House, Suzanne testified that this was done behind her back. Suzanne further testified that Cecile put herself on the title to the house without Suzanne’s knowledge. Suzanne elaborated that Cecile put “half of the house under her name and . . . half of the house under my name. For what? I didn’t know about that.” 2

Suzanne’s Complaint

In August 2022, Suzanne filed a complaint against Cecile, asserting four counts: (I) a claim for trust accounting; (II) a claim for damages arising under accounting, which sought damages “to the extent of any defalcations or breaches of fiduciary duty arising out of such accounting (and any objections to the accounting)”; (III) a claim for removal of Cecile as trustee of the Salomon Trust and the Suzanne Trust; and (IV) a claim for imposition of a constructive trust over Cecile’s interest in the Woodfield House on the grounds of undue influence and abuse of fiduciary duties.

The trial court granted Cecile’s motion to dismiss Count II without prejudice, ruling that Suzanne “may move to amend at a later date if damages can be alleged with more specificity.”

2 Especially when viewed in the light most favorable to Suzanne, the record contains much that demonstrates Suzanne’s concern that the house had been placed in Cecile’s name alone. At one point, Suzanne questioned, “Why did she put 50 percent in her name? For what reason? The house was paid for in cash in my name. For what reason did she do this?” Suzanne added: “But she shouldn’t have that 50 percent. Never.” Suzanne reiterated that she “never asked [Cecile] to put the house in her name. This was done behind my back.” Suzanne also remarked: “This is not normal.”

3 Cecile’s Answer, Affirmative Defenses, and Counterclaim and Suzanne’s Reply

Cecile filed an answer, affirmative defenses, and counterclaim.

In her operative counterclaim, Cecile sued for unjust enrichment and partition of the Woodfield House. Cecile alleged that Suzanne had been unjustly enriched because Cecile had spent over $900,000 on behalf of Suzanne or the property. Cecile alleged that “it was the intent that Cecile own the Property as a 50% owner to secure all payments made on Suzanne’s behalf and to maintain the Property.” Based on her allegations that she was a 50% owner of the Woodfield House and that she was entitled to credit for payments she made toward the purchase or maintenance of the property, Cecile brought a partition claim to declare the parties’ interests in the property and to order its sale.

In her amended affirmative defenses, Cecile contended that “Suzanne’s claims are barred by the applicable statute of limitations and laches,” arguing that “any and all claims relating to alleged improper ownership, undue influence, fraud, or breach of fiduciary duty, accrued in or around 2012 or, at the latest, April 2014, when the property was transferred to Cecile’s name only.”

Suzanne’s reply to Cecile’s affirmative defenses asserted that Cecile’s fraudulent conduct tolled the running of the statute of limitations.

Summary Judgment Proceedings

Cecile moved for summary judgment on Suzanne’s Counts I, III, and IV.

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