TILIA CORDATA, LLC v. YELLOW FUNDING CORP.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 8, 2023
Docket22-1101
StatusPublished

This text of TILIA CORDATA, LLC v. YELLOW FUNDING CORP. (TILIA CORDATA, LLC v. YELLOW FUNDING CORP.) 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
TILIA CORDATA, LLC v. YELLOW FUNDING CORP., (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed February 8, 2023. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D22-1101 Lower Tribunal No. 19-16332 ________________

Tilia Cordata, LLC, Appellant,

vs.

Yellow Funding Corp., et al., Appellees.

An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jose M. Rodriguez, Judge.

Darius Asly, for appellant.

Michel O. Weisz, P.A., and Michel O. Weisz; Bakalar & Associates, P.A., and Susan P. Bakalar and Raymond A. Piccin (Coral Springs), for appellees.

Before EMAS, SCALES and LOBREE, JJ.

ON MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL

SCALES, J. In this mortgage foreclosure action, Tilia Cordata, LLC (“Cordata”), a

purported junior mortgagee, seeks appellate review of the trial court’s May

26, 2022 order denying Cordata’s May 22, 2022 post-judgment motion

captioned as “Emergency Third-Party Motion to Defer Writ of Possession”

(“defer motion”). Cordata, though, was not a party to the action below when

it filed its defer motion, because, on March 4, 2021, the trial court (i) granted

Cordata’s motion to quash service of process on Cordata, and (ii) vacated

the clerk’s default and judicial default entered previously against Cordata.

Because Cordata was not a party to the lower proceedings when it filed the

defer motion and the trial court entered the challenged May 26, 2022 order,

Cordata cannot seek appellate review of the order in this Court; therefore,

we are compelled to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. See Fla. R.

App. P. 9.020(g)(1) (defining “Appellant” as a “party who seeks to invoke the

appeal jurisdiction of a court”) (emphasis added); Edwards v. CIT Bank, N.A.,

306 So. 3d 217, 219 (Fla. 3d DCA 2020) (“Florida law clearly establishes

that ‘a non-party in the lower tribunal is a ‘stranger to the record’ and,

therefore, lacks standing to appeal an order entered by the lower tribunal.’”

(quoting Portfolio Invs. Corp. v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr. Co., 81 So. 3d 534,

536 (Fla. 3d DCA 2012))).

2 I. RELEVANT BACKGROUND

On May 2, 2018, Arthur Morburger executed a mortgage pledging his

Miami Beach residential condominium as security for a $300,000 loan from

appellee Yellow Funding Corp. (“Yellow Funding”). On May 4, 2018, the

mortgage was recorded in the public records.

When Morburger subsequently defaulted on the loan, Yellow Funding,

on May 30, 2019, filed the instant action against Morburger in the Miami-

Dade County circuit court, seeking to foreclose on Morburger’s

condominium. Yellow Funding’s operative second amended complaint

named Cordata as a co-defendant, alleging therein that Cordata may claim

some interest in Morburger’s condominium by virtue of an August 18, 2018

recorded mortgage that was “inferior in dignity” to Yellow Funding’s May 4,

2018 recorded mortgage. Yellow Funding sought to perfect substituted

service of process on Cordata by serving Florida’s Secretary of State on

September 3, 2020. See § 48.181, Fla. Stat. (2020) (providing the requisites

for substituted service of process on a foreign corporation engaging in

business in the state of Florida); § 48.161, Fla. Stat. (2020) (providing the

method for substituted service of process on a nonresident).

When Cordata did not file a responsive pleading, Yellow Funding

obtained a clerk’s default against Cordata on September 28, 2020, followed

3 by a judicial default on October 14, 2020. On November 26, 2020, Cordata

filed its “Motion to Quash Service of Process, to Vacate Default, and to

Dismiss for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction” (“motion to quash”), filing a

supplement thereto on February 7, 2021. Cordata’s motion to quash, as

supplemented, argued that Yellow Funding had failed to comply with section

48.161 and 48.181’s statutory requisites and procedures for effectuating

substituted service of process on a foreign corporate defendant through the

Secretary of State.

Without first seeking to have Cordata’s motion to quash adjudicated,

Yellow Funding sought to obtain a final judgment of foreclosure. Yellow

Funding’s efforts succeeded, for the trial court, on December 4, 2020,

entered a final judgment of foreclosure against Morburger in Yellow

Funding’s favor (“foreclosure judgment”).1 Presumably to address Cordata’s

pending motion to quash, the foreclosure judgment provided as follows:

1 In a consolidated appeal (appellate case numbers 3D21-318 and 3D21- 881), this Court affirmed both the foreclosure judgment and the trial court’s order denying Morburger’s post-judgment motion objecting to the foreclosure sale. See Morburger v. Yellow Funding Corp., 329 So. 3d 214 (Fla. 3d DCA 2021), review denied, SC21-1730, 2022 WL 852766 (Fla. Mar. 23, 2022). While the consolidated appeal was pending, Morburger, on April 4, 2021, filed a Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540 motion in the trial court seeking to set aside the foreclosure judgment. The trial court’s order denying Morburger’s rule 1.540 motion is the subject of Morburger’s pending appeal in this Court (appellate case number 3D22-734).

4 4. Severance of claim. The claim of Defendant Tilia Cordata, LLC is hereby severed. The priority of its mortgage lien shall be determined separately.[2]

The trial court conducted a January 15, 2021 hearing on Cordata’s

motion to quash and, on March 4, 2021, entered an order granting the motion

(“quashal order”). The trial court’s quashal order vacated the prior defaults

and quashed Yellow Funding’s purported service of process on Cordata.

Meanwhile, the judicial sale of Morburger’s condominium was conducted on

January 19, 2021, at which the property was sold to a third party purchaser,

appellee Miami Opa Locka Business Park, LLC (“Park”). The lower court

clerk issued Park a certificate of title on March 10, 2021.

After this Court affirmed the foreclosure judgment and the trial court’s

order denying Morburger’s post-judgment motion objecting to the foreclosure

sale, 3 Park moved below for issuance of a writ of possession. On April 13,

2022, the trial court entered an order directing the lower court clerk to issue

a writ of possession to Park on May 23, 2022. The day before the clerk was

2 Nothing in our record reveals any attempt by Cordata to obtain any type of affirmative relief in this action. Rather, it appears that Cordata advised the trial court that Cordata intended to file a mortgage lien claim against Morburger in a separate action. 3 See footnote 1, supra.

5 to issue the writ of possession, May 22, 2022, Cordata filed in the trial court

its defer motion, the adjudication of which is the subject of this appeal.4

Cordata’s defer motion requested that the trial court: (i) “defer” issuance of

the writ of possession; (ii) grant Cordata “relief” from the foreclosure

judgment; and (iii) grant Cordata “leave” to file its own mortgage lien claim

against Morburger and a claim against Park to “clear[] and set[] aside the

cloud on title created by [Park’s] Certificate of Title.”

The trial court conducted a May 25, 2022 hearing on the defer motion,

and, on May 26, 2022, the trial court entered the challenged, unelaborated

order denying Cordata’s defer motion. It is this order that Cordata now seeks

to appeal.

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