Visoly v. Security Pacific Credit Corp.

768 So. 2d 482, 2000 Fla. App. LEXIS 10508, 2000 WL 1153879
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 16, 2000
Docket3D99-1155
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 768 So. 2d 482 (Visoly v. Security Pacific Credit 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
Visoly v. Security Pacific Credit Corp., 768 So. 2d 482, 2000 Fla. App. LEXIS 10508, 2000 WL 1153879 (Fla. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

768 So.2d 482 (2000)

Miri Mayost VISOLY and Aviad Visoly, Appellants,
v.
SECURITY PACIFIC CREDIT CORPORATION, Appellee.

No. 3D99-1155.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.

August 16, 2000.

*484 Avi J. Litwin, Miami Beach, for appellants.

Richard L. Lapidus, Miami, for appellee.

Before LEVY, and GERSTEN, JJ., and NESBITT, Senior Judge.

*485 GERSTEN, J.

We affirm the order below assessing attorney's fees personally against appellants Miri Mayost Visoly and Aviad Visoly [hereafter collectively referred to as "the Visolys"]. We further grant the motion for appellate attorney's fees against the Visolys and their lawyer for the filing of this frivolous appeal which attempts to argue and re-litigate matters long concluded by judgments of the trial court and opinions of this Court, and which is contradicted by the evidence and established case law.

Nothing operates more certainly to demean the profession of practicing law, than does the notion that effective advocacy condones stretching the boundaries of professional ethics in the name of pursuing client interests. We are concerned that the line separating effective advocacy from complicity in a client's violations has been crossed not only by trial counsel, but by appellate counsel as well.

Crossing this line resulted in appellee, Security Pacific Credit Corporation ("Security Pacific"), spending over $750,00 in legal fees to foreclose a mortgage that was held valid in 1990 by the trial court, and was found valid on appeal by this Court. Through 9 years of vexatious litigation, which included defenses based upon false affidavits on issues that had been decided by the trial court and by this Court, 3 motions to recuse judges in the case, 2 petitions for writ of prohibition, and 5 appeals, the Visolys delayed foreclosure causing the properties to be run by receivers and generating unnecessary litigation expenses.

Even after sanctions were imposed in the form of fees assessed against both the Visolys and their trial counsel, the seemingly endless barrage continues. The Visolys and their appellate counsel must recognize that enough is enough.

We stress that the vast majority of appeals which pass through this Court are worthy of review and present issues that genuinely reflect gaps in case law or require application of statutes and rules to peculiar set of facts. However, we would be remiss in our duties as judges if we failed to underscore our lack of tolerance for that small percentage of cases which drain judicial resources and result in unnecessary litigation expenses. The procedural history of this case reflects an abuse of legal processes which demands a more detailed review, and clear message that frivolous appeals will be sanctioned.

Background Facts

Aviad Visoly ("Aviad"), individually and on behalf of all shareholders of Westburry Shoppes Corporation ("Westburry"), filed suit in 1990 against appellant Security Pacific, Westburry's president Ralph Bodek ("Bodek"), and Westburry's secretary, Joseph Hooper ("Hooper"). Aviad claimed the mortgage held by Security Pacific on a shopping center owned by Westburry Shoppes was void. Counsel for both the Visolys and Westburry was attorney Bruce Friedlander.

Aviad's complaint was stricken as a sham and the action was dismissed with prejudice, after Aviad admitted on deposition that he did not own any stock in Westburry, and that Bodek had signed the mortgage. The trial judge's order specifically found that Westburry's shareholders had properly authorized its president to execute the mortgage.

In the interim, the Westburry mortgage had gone into default and Security Pacific filed suit to foreclose. Prior to Westburry filing any pleadings in the foreclosure, Aviad entered into a settlement agreement with Westburry, Bodek, and Hooper. The agreement acknowledged that all of the Westburry stock was owned by Hooper and Bodek, and that a foreclosure suit had been filed by Security Pacific on the shopping center. The parties agreed to allow Aviad to take judgment against Westburry in the amount of $206,304.94.[1]

*486 Three months later in May of 1991, the Visolys' then lawyer, Ivan Benjamin,[2] filed a counterclaim against Security Pacific for cancellation of the mortgage. In support of the allegations in the counterclaim, the Visolys filed individual affidavits in which each claimed to have owned 50% of the stock of the corporation. Each affidavit further claimed that Bodek, who signed the mortgage, was not the company's president, and had forged certificates of the company's stock. This position not only contradicted the trial judges' findings in the order striking the Visolys' complaint for sham, but was also contrary to the position the Visolys took when they sought to cancel the mortgage, and in the settlement agreement.[3]

For the next 4½ years until a final judgment of foreclosure was finally entered, the Visolys engaged in a series of delay tactics. The Visolys filed motions to recuse the three trial judges who heard the case, accompanied by their own affidavits of prejudice, took petitions for prohibition to this Court when their motions were denied, had their lawyers file motions to withdraw, and while the motions were pending, had their lawyers file notices of vacation on their behalf individually. Miri wrote letters to the trial judge accusing Security Pacific's lawyers of assault and battery, and both Visolys moved for a two month extension of time to obtain new counsel because of "the complexity of the issues and the voluminous record in this case". They then had a new lawyer, Itzhak Bachar, appear on their behalf individually. Bachar later filed a motion to withdraw because he was not being paid.

In December of 1995, the trial court entered its final judgment of foreclosure. Security Pacific's assignee then filed a motion for an order directing the receiver to turn over the funds it had collected during the five years the matter had been in litigation. The Visolys opposed the motion through a succession of lawyers, pro se pleadings, and questionable tactics.[4] At one point, an order was entered in October of 1996, granting attorney Bachar's second motion to withdraw from the case, and specifying that future pleadings were to be forwarded to the Visolys at their post office box address in Hallandale. The Visolys in the interim had moved to Israel.

*487 The Motion For Attorney's Fees—Round 1

In January of 1997, the trial court entered an order to disburse all the remaining funds in the receivership account. Thereafter, Security Pacific filed a motion for attorney's fees pursuant to Section 57.105, Florida Statutes (1997), against attorney Friedlander, against Aviad and Miri, individually, and also against Westburry.[5] In November of 1997, the motion for attorney's fees was granted as to Westburry and the Visolys, but was denied as to attorney Friedlander.[6]

Security Pacific appealed the denial of fees as to attorney Friedlander, and this Court reversed finding that: "When Friedlander entered this case, his client's claims had already been struck down by the trial court in another action as a sham. Thus, it was clear that these claims lacked any justiciable issue, were devoid of merit and were completely untenable.... Accordingly, Friedlander cannot claim good faith under section 57.105 and the trial court should have granted SPCC attorney's fees." See Security Pacific Credit Corp. v. Oasis Plaza Corp., 714 So.2d 1039, 1040 (Fla.

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Bluebook (online)
768 So. 2d 482, 2000 Fla. App. LEXIS 10508, 2000 WL 1153879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/visoly-v-security-pacific-credit-corp-fladistctapp-2000.