Williams Management Enterprises v. Buonauro

489 So. 2d 160, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1204, 1986 Fla. App. LEXIS 8524
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 29, 1986
Docket84-1638
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 489 So. 2d 160 (Williams Management Enterprises v. Buonauro) 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
Williams Management Enterprises v. Buonauro, 489 So. 2d 160, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1204, 1986 Fla. App. LEXIS 8524 (Fla. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

489 So.2d 160 (1986)

WILLIAMS MANAGEMENT ENTERPRISES, INC., Appellant,
v.
Robert H. BUONAURO, Appellee.

No. 84-1638.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

May 29, 1986.

*161 Marcia K. Lippincott, P.A., Orlando, for appellant.

Ronald L. Harrop of Gurney & Handley, P.A., Orlando, for appellee.

COWART, Judge.

This case involves the question of whether the action of replevin is available to recover funds held by a defendant in a bank checking account.

The complaint alleges that appellant, a corporation, had a corporate bank checking account subject to the signature of its officer, R. Bruce Williams; that R. Bruce Williams drew a check on appellant's bank account and delivered the check to appellee, an attorney, for deposit into attorney's bank trust account for the account of R. Bruce Williams. The corporation filed a law action in replevin against the attorney alleging that the corporate check drawn on corporate funds was unauthorized and describing the property for which the corporation demanded possession as being "the sum of ... $125,000" and as "monies." The trial court dismissed the replevin complaint and the corporation appeals. The trial court was correct. Replevin is not a proper remedy. The dismissal is affirmed.

Conversion is the name of an act of dominion wrongfully asserted over, and inconsistent with, another's possessory rights in personal property. Depending mainly on whether the object of the action is to recover the immediate possession of the personalty and incidental damages for its detention, or to recover money damages for the value of the converted personalty, four principle law remedies or causes of actions are available: (1) replevin, (2) detinue, (3) trover and conversion, and (4) debt. The first three are ex delicto actions; the fourth is ex contractu. These four actions are described and compared below.[1]

*162 Because replevin and detinue involve recovery of the personalty itself, in specie, the personal property which is the proper subject matter of those actions has, by necessity, always been restricted to the recovery of tangible personalty capable of specific identification and manual seizure. On the other hand, because the cause of action of trover and conversion is only for the recovery of money damages it has never been necessary to the remedy or cause of action of trover and conversion that the wrongfully taken or detained (converted) personalty be capable of specific identification and seizure. In fact, the law actions for money damages on the theories of trover and conversion and for debt are often used for the very reason that the property converted has been lost, hidden, destroyed, or is otherwise not capable of being discovered and recovered under a writ of replevin.

Blackstone, in his Commentaries published in 1765, stated:

in this action of detinue it is necessary to ascertain the thing detained, in such manner as that it may be specifically known and recovered. Therefore it cannot be brought for money, corn, or the like, for that cannot be known from other money or corn, unless it be in a bag or a sack, for then it may be distinguishably marked.

3 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *152. Blackstone then noted that in the action of trover and conversion, "the less degree of certainty requisite in describing the goods" gave that action so considerable an advantage over the action of detinue that actions of trover, originally only to recover damages for property found but then wrongfully detained, were at length permitted to be brought for every wrongful detention. Id. at *153. In Florida, the action of replevin was formerly commenced by the filing of an affidavit; Crandall, after noting that there had been considerable litigation on the certainty required in describing the property in the affidavit, stated:

The general rule is that the description should be such as will enable the officer who makes the seizure to identify it. The plaintiff can not use too much care in preparing this portion of his affidavit.

*163 C. Crandall, Florida Common Law Practice 522 (1928). As to the declaration in the action of detinue, Crandall stated:

The property must be described with sufficient certainty to enable one to identify it, for the judgment and execution are for the recovery of specific property.

Id. at 555.

The general law treatises have always noted this inherent limitation on the type of property that is subject to recovery in an action of replevin:

The general rule is undisputed that replevin lies only for specific property, capable of identification or separation so as to be seized in kind... .

34 Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure 1359 (1910).

Ordinarily, specific personal property, unlawfully taken or detained from the owner thereof, is the subject of an action of replevin ... provided the property sought to be replevied is capable of identification and delivery; but where property cannot be identified or separated so as to be seized in kind, replevin usually will not lie ... Replevin will not lie for incorporeal personal property, such as shares in a corporation, as distinguished from certificates of stock ...

77 C.J.S. Replevin § 9 (1952).

The difficulty which arises in an endeavor to replevy money is to describe it with that degree of accuracy which is required in replevin. Thus, a complaint which contains no allegation showing that the defendant had in his possession any specific money capable of identification, but which shows only that he had collected for the plaintiff a draft deposited by the plaintiff in the usual course of business, is not sufficient.

66 Am.Jur.2d Replevin § 13 (1973).

This is the reason section 78.055(1), Florida Statutes, requires every complaint in replevin to contain "a description of the claimed property that is sufficient to make possible its identification ..." (emphasis added) Accordingly, the action of replevin is inappropriate and unavailable when the personalty converted is, as a practical matter, incapable of being specifically described in a writ of replevin and located, identified, and seized by the sheriff executing the writ.[2]

Personalty can be incapable of identification and seizure either (1) because it is fungible property commingled with property of like kind, or (2) because it is intangible personal property.[3] In both instances specific property is not capable of manucaption. "Funds" deposited in a bank account with other funds suffer from both such identification infirmities. However, intangible personal property must be clearly distinguished from tangible evidence[4] of intangible property, which tangible evidence can usually be identified and, when it can be, such tangible evidence may be the subject of an action of replevin when the issue is who is entitled to the immediate possession of the physical object, but not when the issue is the ownership of the intangible right that is represented by the *164 tangible evidence. Accordingly, replevin will not lie to recover a deed where the title to land is involved in the action.[5] Analogously, replevin does not lie to recover a check or passbook where the title or ownership of the funds on deposit in the bank account is involved. This is because replevin is strictly a possessory action where the sole legal issue is the right of immediate possession, not ownership or title.[6]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
489 So. 2d 160, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1204, 1986 Fla. App. LEXIS 8524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-management-enterprises-v-buonauro-fladistctapp-1986.