THE BURGESS LAW FIRM, P.A. and FREDERICK BURGESS v. JBJ INVESTMENT OF S. FLORIDA, INC.

251 So. 3d 173
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 5, 2018
Docket16-3974
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 251 So. 3d 173 (THE BURGESS LAW FIRM, P.A. and FREDERICK BURGESS v. JBJ INVESTMENT OF S. FLORIDA, 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
THE BURGESS LAW FIRM, P.A. and FREDERICK BURGESS v. JBJ INVESTMENT OF S. FLORIDA, INC., 251 So. 3d 173 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JBJ INVESTMENT OF SOUTH FLORIDA, INC., a Florida corporation, Appellant,

v.

SOUTHERN TITLE GROUP, INC., a Florida corporation, THE BURGESS LAW FIRM, P.A., a Florida professional corporation, and FREDERICK BURGESS, an individual, Appellees.

Nos. 4D16-1925 & 4D16-3974

[ July 5, 2018 ]

Consolidated appeal and cross-appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; John B. Bowman, Judge; L.T. Case No. CACE14024230 (02).

Robin F. Hazel of Hazel Law, P.A., Pembroke Pines, for appellant.

Melinda S. Thornton and Kathryn L. Ender of Cole, Scott & Kissane, P.A., Miami, for appellees.

TAYLOR, J.

JBJ Investment of South Florida (“JBJ”) appeals a final summary judgment entered in favor of Frederick Burgess, Esq., and the Burgess Law Firm, P.A., (collectively the “Burgess Defendants”) on JBJ’s claims for legal malpractice. The Burgess Defendants appeal the trial court’s order denying their motion for attorney’s fees pursuant to a proposal for settlement. We reverse the summary judgment in favor of the Burgess Defendants, rendering it unnecessary for us to reach the issue concerning validity of the proposal for settlement.

Facts

JBJ filed the underlying lawsuit against Southern Title for negligence and against the Burgess Defendants for legal malpractice. The gravamen of the claim against the Burgess Defendants is that they prepared a mortgage containing incorrect legal descriptions of properties that were to secure a loan made by JBJ. The summary judgment evidence established the following facts.

Incel Hernandez is the principal and sole employee of JBJ. One of JBJ’s business activities is to lend money for real estate transactions. Luis Sotero, a personal friend of Mr. Hernandez, would refer borrowers to Mr. Hernandez. Mr. Sotero informed Mr. Hernandez of the opportunity to lend money to the Maslanka family. 1

In March 2011, JBJ agreed to loan $135,000 to the Maslanka family and its related family trusts. The loan was to be secured by a note and mortgage on five properties owned by the Maslanka family, including a commercial property in Osceola County known as the Modern Day Furniture Store. The Modern Day property was the most valuable of all the properties and was essential to JBJ’s decision to make the loan.

The title agency handling the closing for the loan was Southern Title. JBJ decided to use Southern Title because one of its title agents, Ingrid Goenaga, was a friend of both Mr. Hernandez and Mr. Sotero.

Ms. Goenaga, who is not an attorney, performed title services and prepared customary documents in connection with the closing, such as the HUD statement and deeds. At some point, Ms. Goenaga was provided with the parcel identification numbers for the five properties that were to be used as collateral for the loan.

The summary judgment evidence is conflicting as to whether anyone on behalf of JBJ asked Ms. Goenaga to engage the services of a lawyer to work on the loan transaction. Ms. Goenaga testified that no agent or employee of JBJ specifically asked for a lawyer to work on the mortgage. By contrast, Mr. Hernandez testified that he told Ms. Goenaga he wanted an attorney to prepare and review all of the loan documents for accuracy.

In any event, it is undisputed that Ms. Goenaga hired the Burgess Defendants to prepare the note and mortgage. Mr. Hernandez gave his version of how Mr. Burgess became involved in the transaction: “I requested that I need an attorney. I requested that everything should be a hundred percent proof, and I told Southern Title that that’s what I wanted and they are the ones who selected Burgess.”

1 Mr. Hernandez testified that he was the only person with “any authorization to do business” on behalf of JBJ, and that Mr. Sotero was not an employee or independent contractor of JBJ. Nevertheless, Mr. Sotero handled the communications regarding the loan with the title agency and the Maslanka family.

2 Ms. Goenaga testified that she sent the work to Mr. Burgess because she was a former employee of Mr. Burgess’s law firm and they maintained a working relationship where he would engage her as a subcontractor to process his transactions. Ms. Goenaga explained that she would refer files to Mr. Burgess if “something legal” needed to be done, which in this case was preparing the mortgage and the note.

It is undisputed that Mr. Hernandez never met or communicated with Mr. Burgess. Mr. Hernandez admitted that there was no communication whatsoever between JBJ and Mr. Burgess on the issue of JBJ’s expectations concerning Mr. Burgess’s legal services. However, Mr. Hernandez claimed that JBJ “indirectly” hired Mr. Burgess, and that Ms. Goenaga communicated with Mr. Burgess on JBJ’s behalf. 2

The Burgess Defendants prepared the note and mortgage. The mortgage stated that it encumbered the property legally described in Exhibit “A.” Exhibit “A” was attached to the mortgage and contained the legal descriptions of five properties. However, the Burgess Defendants did not prepare Exhibit “A.” Instead, Southern Title prepared Exhibit “A” and the legal descriptions contained therein.

Ms. Goenaga testified that she did not send Mr. Burgess the list of the properties to be included in Exhibit “A.” She explained that the extent of Mr. Burgess’s involvement in the transaction was preparing the note and mortgage. Ms. Goenaga alone created the final list of encumbered properties. She did not consider the list of legal descriptions to be something that needed to be done by an attorney.

The loan transaction closed in March 2011, and the documents were recorded the next month. A payment of $1,350 was made to the Burgess Law Firm for “Attorney Fees/Doc Prep.” The attorney’s fee was debited against the loan funds at closing.

The borrowers eventually defaulted on the loan, prompting JBJ to initiate foreclosure proceedings in 2013. When JBJ started foreclosure proceedings, however, JBJ learned that Exhibit “A” to the mortgage

2 At another point in his deposition, however, Mr. Hernandez seemed to admit that he did not have any conversations with anyone at Southern Title regarding his expectations for Mr. Burgess’s legal work. Nonetheless, Mr. Hernandez emphasized that he expected “someone to look over [his] paperwork and make sure it was right.” Mr. Hernandez explained: “I don’t think I should [have to] tell anybody that they need to look over and make sure that things are right.”

3 contained a duplicate legal description for one of the small properties and completely omitted the legal description of the Modern Day property, which was the most valuable property.

JBJ thereafter commenced the instant action against Southern Title and the Burgess Defendants, seeking to recover damages as a result of the erroneous legal descriptions in the mortgage. The Burgess defendants answered and raised as an affirmative defense that there was no attorney- client relationship.

The Burgess Defendants later moved for summary judgment, arguing in relevant part that: (1) there was no attorney-client relationship as a matter of law due to the “complete lack of communication and consultation” between JBJ and the Burgess Defendants; and (2) JBJ could not show that the Burgess Defendants’ responsibilities included preparing Exhibit “A” to the mortgage.

The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment. For purposes of its ruling, the trial court assumed, for the sake of argument, that an attorney-client relationship existed, but concluded that the Burgess Defendants’ role in the transaction did not include preparing the legal descriptions set forth in Exhibit “A.”

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