Filed: May 01, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed May 1, 2019. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D18-676 Lower Tribunal No. 10-63470 _ Franco D’Agostino, et al., Appellants, vs. CCP Ponce, LLC, Appellee. An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jose M. Rodriguez, Judge. Lamelas Law, PA, and Gustavo J. Lamelas and Daniel Buigas, for appellants. Anthony & Partners, LLC, and John A. Anthony and Nicholas Lafalce (Tampa), for appellee.
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed May 1, 2019. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D18-676 Lower Tribunal No. 10-63470 _ Franco D’Agostino, et al., Appellants, vs. CCP Ponce, LLC, Appellee. An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jose M. Rodriguez, Judge. Lamelas Law, PA, and Gustavo J. Lamelas and Daniel Buigas, for appellants. Anthony & Partners, LLC, and John A. Anthony and Nicholas Lafalce (Tampa), for appellee. ..
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Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed May 1, 2019.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D18-676
Lower Tribunal No. 10-63470
________________
Franco D’Agostino, et al.,
Appellants,
vs.
CCP Ponce, LLC,
Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jose M.
Rodriguez, Judge.
Lamelas Law, PA, and Gustavo J. Lamelas and Daniel Buigas, for
appellants.
Anthony & Partners, LLC, and John A. Anthony and Nicholas Lafalce
(Tampa), for appellee.
Before EMAS, C.J., and SCALES and HENDON, JJ.
SCALES, J.
In this appeal of a foreclosure deficiency judgment, the appellants are the
mortgagor, Ponce Trust, LLC (“Ponce Trust”), and the two guarantors of the
underlying promissory note, Franco D’Agostino (“D’Agostino”) and Dayco
Properties, Ltd. (collectively, the “Guarantors”). Appellee CCP Ponce, LLC (“CCP
Ponce”) is a successor-in-interest of the original lender and mortgagee, Mellon
United National Bank (“Mellon”). On March 6, 2018, the trial court entered the
challenged deficiency judgment that awarded CCP Ponce $7,792,150.35 against
Ponce Trust, and $44,041,969.88 against the Guarantors (“Final Deficiency
Judgment”). For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the Final Deficiency
Judgment as to Ponce Trust, but reverse the Final Deficiency Judgment against the
Guarantors and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.
I. History of the Proceedings
A. The Relevant Loan Documents
In March 2007, Ponce Trust entered into a Construction Loan Agreement
with Mellon. Amending and restating a loan originating in 2004, this March 2007
Construction Loan Agreement, and accompanying loan documents, memorialized
a $50,000,000 principal loan for Ponce Trust to use in constructing a twelve-story
condominium project in Coral Gables, Florida.
In conjunction with the loan, in March 2007, the Guarantors executed two
distinct guaranty agreements: (i) a Guaranty Agreement, and (ii) a Guaranty of
2
Completion. In the Guaranty Agreement, the Guarantors guarantied payment of
Ponce Trust’s loan obligations. The Guaranty Agreement, however, significantly
limited D’Agostino’s liability, providing that, in the event the lender and Ponce
Trust complete Tranche B funding,1 D’Agostino’s guarantee of the loan’s principal
would be eliminated. D’Agostino would then remain liable only for “all costs of
collection, including court costs and attorneys fees through all appellate levels and
post judgment proceedings, and for default rate interest,” as well as for his
obligations under the separate Guaranty of Completion.
In the separate Guaranty of Completion, the Guarantors agreed to perform
Ponce Trust’s “Obligations” in the event Ponce Trust did not complete
construction of the subject condominium project. The term “Obligations” is
specifically defined in the document and includes: (i) constructing the
improvements timely, in accordance with the construction plans, and “in a good
and workmanlike manner;” (ii) furnishing labor and materials and completing
payment therefor; and (iii) providing additional funds from sources outside of the
loan, if necessary, to complete the project.
Potentially relevant in this case, the Guaranty of Completion contains two
provisions that are not found in the Guaranty Agreement: (i) a provision stating
1 Tranche B funding represented $40,375,000 of the total loan. The record
indicates that the lender and Ponce Trust completed Tranche B funding, thus
triggering D’Agostino’s limited liability under the Guaranty Agreement.
3
that the liability assumed under the Guaranty of Completion will not be affected by
the acceptance of any settlement or judgment of a bankruptcy court; and (ii) a
provision stating that the Guarantors’ obligations under the Guaranty of
Completion are “completely independent” from the obligations of Ponce Trust.
While the 2007 Construction Loan Agreement and promissory note were
modified twice again, in 2009 and 2010, the loan documents relevant to this appeal
– the Guaranty Agreement and the Guaranty of Completion – were not amended
by those modifications.
B. The Foreclosure Action
In December 2010, MUNB Loan Holdings, Inc. (“MUNB”), a successor to
Mellon, filed the instant foreclosure action and, in March 2011, MUNB filed the
operative amended complaint. This amended complaint alleges a May 2010 default
date, and asserts seven counts (against various defendants).2 Importantly, while
2 Count I (against Ponce Trust) seeks damages for breach of the promissory note
and alleges that $28,731,231.15 in principal remains due and owing under the note.
Count II (against Ponce Trust) seeks to foreclose on the mortgage securing the
note.
Count III (against Ponce Trust) seeks to foreclose on personal property secured by
other security agreements. Count IV (against the Guarantors) alleges that, to the
extent the Guarantors are in possession of personal property secured by other
security agreements, MUNB is entitled to replevin against the Guarantors. Count V
(against Ponce Trust) seeks enforcement of an assignment of rents document
executed as part of the loan. Count VI (against Dayco Properties, LLC) is a claim
on the Guaranty Agreement premised on Ponce Trust’s failure to meet its payment
obligations under the promissory note. Count VII (against D’Agostino) is a claim
on the Guaranty Agreement premised on Ponce Trust’s failure to meet its payment
obligations under the promissory note.
4
MUNB’s amended complaint specifically alleges that the Guarantors executed and
delivered to Mellon the Guaranty of Completion (and the Guaranty of Completion
is attached as an exhibit to the amended complaint), MUNB’s amended complaint
alleges no claim against the Guarantors under the Guaranty of Completion.
In their answer to MUNB’s amended complaint, Ponce Trust and the
Guarantors denied that default had occurred and was continuing to occur, and
further denied MUNB’s allegations that Ponce Trust was leasing units in violation
of the loan documents. In their affirmative defenses, Ponce Trust and the
Guarantors asserted that: (i) MUNB had unclean hands; (ii) MUNB was mis-
applying their payments; and (iii) payment had been made insofar as MUNB was
holding funds belonging to Ponce Trust and the Guarantors that should have been
used for the required loan payments.
In July 2011, MUNB filed its summary judgment motion seeking a final
summary judgment on all counts in its amended complaint except for the replevin
count (Count IV). The trial court conducted a hearing on MUNB’s motion in
December 2011, and, on June 4, 2012, the trial court entered a First Amended
Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure in favor of MUNB and against Ponce
Trust only (“Foreclosure Judgment”).3 This Foreclosure Judgment: (i) determined
3 The trial court entered the initial foreclosure judgment on December 14, 2011,
shortly after the hearing. The trial court later amended it on June 4, 2012, nunc pro
tunc, to December 14, 2011, to reflect an adjustment in the amounts due.
5
that MUNB was owed a total of $37,346,025.50 (comprising approximately
$28,731,231 in principal on the promissory note, costs, approximately $8,553,000
in default rate interest, and approximately $174,500 in post-judgment interest that
accrued from December 14, 2011, with a credit of approximately $112,000 that
was held in escrow); (ii) foreclosed Ponce Trust’s interest in the real and personal
property in favor of MUNB; and (iii) set a foreclosure sale for the property.
Immediately after liquidating the amount due under the note, the Foreclosure
Judgment contains the following language: “which shall bear interest per year at
the interest rate provided by Section 55.03(1), Florida Statutes (2011).” No party
appealed the Foreclosure Judgment.
The Foreclosure Judgment adjudicated and disposed of Counts I, II, III, and
V of the amended complaint, as well as Ponce Trust and the Guarantors’
affirmative defenses to those claims. With regard to Counts VI and VII (the counts
against the Guarantors under the Guaranty Agreement), the judgment included the
following language: “As to Count VI (Breach of Guaranty Agreement) and Count
VII (Breach of Guaranty Agreement), this Court reserves jurisdiction to determine
the validity and enforceability of the Guaranty Agreement and Guaranty of
Completion, and the extent of Dayco’s and D’Agostino’s liability thereunder, if
any.”4
4 The record is unclear as to the ultimate disposition of the replevin count (Count
6
C. Ponce Trust Files for Chapter 11 Reorganization
On February 22, 2012, prior to the foreclosure sale, Ponce Trust filed for
relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of Florida. Ponce Trust’s filing of the bankruptcy
case stayed the foreclosure proceedings in the trial court.5 In December 2012,
Ponce Trust filed its plan of reorganization, which the Bankruptcy Court approved
on December 26, 2012. The plan identified seventy-seven unsold units in the
condominium project, and required that the creditor6 receive payments on its claim
from revenues generated from the ongoing sale of the units, as well as rental
income from the unsold units. The plan effectively discharged Ponce Trust’s
liability to CCP Ponce for all default rate interest. The plan did not address or
modify the Guarantors’ liability.
In September of 2016, CCP Ponce filed a motion in the Bankruptcy Court to
re-open the bankruptcy case for the sole purpose of terminating the automatic stay
of the foreclosure action. At that point, forty-two condominium units remained
unsold, and the amount of the debt had been reduced from the approximately $37
IV) asserted against the Guarantors. Such disposition is not essential to our
adjudication of this appeal.
5 See 11 U.S.C. § 362.
6 During the pendency of the reorganization, CCP Ponce became the successor-in-
interest of MUNB.
7
million reflected in the Foreclosure Judgment to approximately $19 million. On
October 26, 2016, the Bankruptcy Court granted CCP Ponce’s motion, lifted the
automatic stay, and entered an order allowing the foreclosure sale to go forward.
D. The Foreclosure Sale and CCP Ponce’s Motion for Deficiency Judgment
After the Bankruptcy Court lifted the stay, the trial court set the foreclosure
sale for February 9, 2017. The remaining collateral – now forty-one units – was
sold at foreclosure to CCP Ponce in the bid amount of $900,200.00. Less than a
week later, on February 15, 2017, CCP Ponce filed its motion for deficiency
judgment seeking a judgment against Ponce Trust and the Guarantors for the
difference between the amount due pursuant to the Foreclosure Judgment and the
fair market value of the unsold condominium units (as of the date of the
foreclosure sale).
In its motion, CCP Ponce specifically set forth the amount CCP Ponce
claimed it was owed by Ponce Trust and the Guarantors – the “Deficiency
Balance” – as follows: the amount of the Foreclosure Judgment (as adjusted by
Ponce Trust’s reorganization) remaining due and owing of $19,080,454.14, less the
market value of remaining collateral in the amount of $13,000,000. This resulted in
an alleged Deficiency Balance of $6,080,454.14. Indeed, in three separate
paragraphs of its motion, CCP Ponce claims that this is the amount it is due from
8
Ponce Trust and the Guarantors. CCP Ponce did not assert a claim in this motion
that any amounts were due under the Guaranty of Completion.
E. The Trial and Entry of the Challenged Final Deficiency Judgment
On January 22, 2018, the trial court conducted a bench trial on CCP Ponce’s
motion for deficiency judgment. On the Friday prior to the Monday bench trial,
CCP Ponce filed a pre-trial memorandum indicating that it would be seeking
damages against the Guarantors based not only on the Guaranty Agreement but
also based on the Guaranty of Completion. In this submission, CCP Ponce asserted
that it would be seeking a deficiency judgment of $7,792,150.35 against Ponce
Trust, and $44,041,969.88 against the Guarantors.
At the beginning of the trial, the Guarantors’ counsel objected to any claim
by CCP Ponce based on the Guaranty of Completion:
They have never sued – they have never asserted a Cause of Action on
the Guaranty of Completion. And so I object to any kind of attempt to
shoehorn my client to liability that he did not accept on that theory.
That’s a very important issue.
The trial court, at least initially, seemed to agree, stating in response to CCP
Ponce’s counsel:
[I]f it’s not in your Complaint and you haven’t pled it, you’re not
entitled to receiving [sic] it, period. That’s what the law is . . . It’s a
very simple statement, if you don’t plead it, you’re not entitled to
recover, period, end of sentence . . . . Again, if you didn’t plead it as a
Cause of Action in your Complaint, you’re not entitled to recover.
Period.
9
Yet, over the objections of the Guarantors’ counsel, the trial court permitted
CCP Ponce to put on evidence regarding damages allegedly awardable pursuant to
the Guaranty of Completion, and denied the Guarantors’ involuntary dismissal
motion that sought dismissal of any claims related to the Guaranty of Completion.
Over the objection of the Guarantors, CCP Ponce introduced a Deficiency
Judgment Computation Worksheet that, consistent with CCP Ponce’s pre-trial
memorandum, separately calculated the deficiency amounts allegedly owed by
Ponce Trust and the Guarantors. As discussed in further detail below, the
deficiency damages sought against Ponce Trust were significantly less than those
sought against the Guarantors primarily because: (i) approximately $32 million in
pre-foreclosure sale default rate interest had been discharged in Ponce Trust’s
bankruptcy reorganization; and (ii) the non-discharged interest accrued not at the
eighteen percent default rate outlined in the loan documents, but, rather, at the
significantly lower post-judgment interest statutory rate set by section 55.03(1).7
The trial court rejected the Guarantors’ arguments that they should receive the
same treatment as the principal debtor, Ponce Trust.
Ultimately, on March 6, 2018, the trial court entered the challenged Final
Deficiency Judgment against the Guarantors based on the damage calculations
7 Section 55.03(1) provides that Florida’s Chief Financial Officer shall set, on a
quarterly basis, the interest rate payable on judgments. § 55.03(1), Fla. Stat.
(2011).
10
submitted by CCP Ponce in its pre-trial memorandum and Deficiency Judgment
Computation Worksheet – damages presumably premised on both the Guaranty
Agreement and the Guaranty of Completion. The trial court’s Final Deficiency
Judgment awarded CCP Ponce a deficiency of $7,792,150.35 against Ponce Trust,
and $44,041,969.88 against the Guarantors. In its Final Deficiency Judgment, the
trial court specifically concluded that any limitations on the Guarantors’ liability in
the Guaranty Agreement are irrelevant “because the Completion Guaranty
provides for unlimited liability.” Both Ponce Trust and the Guarantors appealed
this Final Deficiency Judgment.8
II. Issues on Appeal
While the Guarantors make several arguments on appeal, we characterize
and address what we perceive as the three principal issues in this appeal: (i)
whether the trial court erred by allowing claims to proceed based on the Guaranty
of Completion; (ii) whether the trial court erred by not giving the Guarantors the
financial benefits that inured to Ponce Trust by virtue of Ponce Trust’s bankruptcy
reorganization; and (iii) whether the trial court erred by calculating the post-
8 While both Ponce Trust and the Guarantors appealed the Final Deficiency
Judgment, the initial brief advances only the arguments of the Guarantors. Hence,
any challenge to the Final Deficiency Judgment by Ponce Trust is deemed
abandoned. City of Miami v. Haigley,
143 So. 3d 1025, 1027 n.1 (Fla. 3d DCA
2014). Therefore, without further elaboration, we affirm the Final Deficiency
Judgment as it relates to Ponce Trust.
11
Foreclosure Judgment interest at the eighteen percent default rate in the loan
documents, as opposed to the post-judgment interest rate established in section
55.03(1). We address each issue in turn.
III. Analysis
A. CCP Ponce’s Claim Based on the Guaranty of Completion9
As mentioned earlier, over the objections of the Guarantors’ counsel, the
trial court allowed CCP Ponce to assert a claim against the Guarantors based on the
Guaranty of Completion. While not entirely clear from the Final Deficiency
Judgment,10 it does appear that the trial court’s allowing CCP Ponce to assert a
claim under the Guaranty of Completion resulted in significant benefits to CCP
Ponce. By concluding that the Guaranty of Completion provides for “unlimited
liability” of the Guarantors, the trial court did not limit D’Agostino’s liability as
expressly provided in the Guaranty Agreement, nor did the trial court conduct any
legal analysis of whether the Guaranty Agreement limited the liability of the
Guarantors to payments owed to CCP Ponce by Ponce Trust.11 The Guarantors
9 Whether a pleading is sufficient in its allegation of a claim is a question of law
that we review de novo. Patel v. Shah,
217 So. 3d 152, 154 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017).
10 The Final Deficiency Judgment does not itemize which damages against the
Guarantors are premised on the Guaranty Agreement as opposed to the Guaranty
of Completion.
11Because we conclude that CCP Ponce did not plead a claim under the Guaranty
of Completion, we need not, and do not, reach the issue of whether Ponce Trust’s
payment obligations are “Obligations” guaranteed by the Guarantors under the
12
assert, as they did below, that it was error for the trial court to allow CCP Ponce to
prosecute this claim, because no claim was pled on the Guaranty of Completion.
As we have quoted in section
I.E., supra, at the outset of the bench trial on
CCP Ponce’s deficiency judgment motion, the trial court unequivocally stated
what is axiomatic in Florida law: a party cannot recover damages based on an
unpled claim. Michael H. Bloom, P.A. v. Dorta-Duque,
743 So. 2d 1202, 1203
(Fla. 3d DCA 1999) (“It is well settled that a defendant cannot be liable under a
theory that was not specifically pled.”). Given the trial court’s clear statements
that CCP Ponce could not recover on an unpled claim, we can conclude only that
the trial court decided that CCP Ponce had pled a claim against the Guarantors
based on the Guaranty of Completion. We have scoured the record, though, and
are unable find that CCP Ponce pleaded any such claim.12 Neither MUNB’s
operative amended complaint nor CCP Ponce’s deficiency judgment motion raised
such a claim. In fact, in its deficiency judgment motion, CCP Ponce plainly, and
Guaranty of Completion. Nor do we reach the issue of whether the evidence at trial
established whether Ponce Trust failed to complete any of the “Obligations” that
were guaranteed by the Guarantors under the Guaranty of Completion. It certainly
does not appear, though, that the trial court, in its Final Deficiency Judgment,
awarded any damages to CCP Ponce specifically related to Ponce Trust’s failure to
complete the project. It appears, rather, that the trial court simply concluded that
the Guarantors’ liability was unlimited because of certain unidentified language in
the Guaranty of Completion.
12 We note that, at oral argument, CCP Ponce’s counsel was unable to provide a
record citation to where his client’s claim against the Guarantors, based on the
Guaranty of Completion, had been pleaded.
13
without qualification, asserted that the deficiency amount being sought from the
Guarantors – consistent with the Guaranty Agreement – is the difference between
the amount remaining due pursuant to the Foreclosure Judgment (which CCP
Ponce quantified as $19,080,454.14) and the fair market value of the collateral
(which CCP Ponce quantified as $13,000,000). CCP Ponce then – again, consistent
with the Guaranty Agreement – specifically calculated the difference, alleging an
entitlement both from Ponce Trust and from the Guarantors of $6,080,454.14.
While we note that the Foreclosure Judgment “reserves jurisdiction to
determine the validity and enforceability of the Guaranty Agreement and Guaranty
of Completion” (emphasis added), we have been provided with no authority that a
trial court’s mere reference to a document in a reservation of jurisdiction provision
somehow supplants a plaintiff’s burden to plead a cause of action premised on that
document. See, e.g., Marin v. Marin,
842 So. 2d 273, 274-75 (Fla. 3d DCA 2003);
Muhlrad v. Muhlrad,
375 So. 2d 24, 26 (Fla. 3d DCA 1979). As the trial court
correctly stated at the onset of the deficiency trial, a cause of action must be pled
for a trial court to award damages on the cause of action.
Bloom, 743 So. 2d at
1203.
Against this backdrop, we simply are unable to conclude, as the trial court
apparently did, that CCP Ponce pled entitlement to damages against the Guarantors
based on anything other than the Guaranty Agreement. Additionally, as we
14
observed in footnote
10, supra, we are unable to determine from the record which
damages in the Final Deficiency Judgment the trial court awarded against the
Guarantors pursuant to the Guaranty Agreement, as opposed to the Guaranty of
Completion. Therefore, we reverse all of those portions of the Final Deficiency
Judgment that awarded damages against the Guarantors, and remand for the trial
court to recalculate, consistent with this opinion, the damages owed by each of the
Guarantors based exclusively on the Guaranty Agreement, without regard to the
Guaranty of Completion.13 On remand, the trial court may conduct whatever
proceedings, evidentiary and otherwise, it deems necessary to perform the requisite
recalculation.
B. Effect of Ponce Trust’s Bankruptcy on the Guarantors’ Liability
Citing to federal bankruptcy law,14 the Guarantors next argue that the trial
court erred in summarily concluding in the Final Deficiency Judgment that the
13 We note that, in its Final Deficiency Judgment, the trial court purported to
calculate D’Agostino’s liability – without regard to the Guaranty of Completion –
at approximately $15,310,000. It appears that the trial court calculated this sum
simply by eliminating principal from the total amounts owed to CCP Ponce, as is
no doubt required by the Guaranty Agreement. This calculation proved purely
academic, though, after the trial court determined that, irrespective of the Guaranty
Agreement’s limiting provisions, the Guaranty of Completion would provide for
“unlimited liability” of the Guarantors. On remand, the trial court cannot perform
the requisite recalculation of the Guarantors’ liability under the Guaranty
Agreement by restating this sum because this calculation is not informed by our
holdings in sections III. B. and C., infra. On remand, the trial court should
recalculate the amount based on the holdings in this opinion.
14 See, e.g., In re Troutman Enters., Inc,
253 B.R. 8, 11 (B.A.P. 6th Cir.2000)
15
Guarantors’ liability is unaffected by Ponce Trust’s bankruptcy reorganization. The
Guarantors assert that, irrespective of whether CCP Ponce pled a claim under the
Guaranty of Completion, they should nevertheless be entitled to the benefits that
inured to Ponce Trust as a result of Ponce Trust’s bankruptcy reorganization.
Specifically, the Guarantors suggest that, because Ponce Trust’s bankruptcy
reorganization eliminated Ponce Trust’s obligation to pay pre-Foreclosure
Judgment accrued default interest, the Guarantors’ interest obligations should be
similarly discharged.
CCP Ponce responds to the Guarantors’ argument by citing federal authority
suggesting a guarantors’ liability for the debts of a Chapter 11 debtor is unaffected
by a bankruptcy reorganization unless the confirmed plan provides for specific
treatment of the guarantors.15
The issue is obviously significant. According to CCP Ponce’s calculations in
its pre-trial memorandum and Deficiency Judgment Computation Worksheet,
Ponce Trust owes CCP Ponce approximately $36 million less than the Guarantors.
While not entirely clear from the record, suffice to say a significant amount of the
difference results from Ponce Trust’s bankruptcy reorganization plan. So, whether
(“The plan is essentially a new and binding contract between the Reorganized
Debtor and the Petitioning Creditors.”).
15 See, e.g., In re Applewood Chair Co.,
203 F.3d 914, 918 (5th Cir. 2000) (“The
general rule is that a discharge in bankruptcy does not affect a guarantor’s
liability.”).
16
the Guarantors’ liability under the Guaranty Agreement is limited to what Ponce
Trust owes is critical.
While the parties’ arguments on this issue are focused exclusively on federal
bankruptcy law, in our view the issue is one of Florida contract law, that is,
whether the Guaranty Agreement manifests the parties’ intent for the Guarantors to
have liability for (i) Ponce Trust’s obligations to CCP Ponce or, in the alternative,
(ii) all sums due under the loan documents, irrespective of what Ponce Trust might
owe CCP Ponce. We recognize that this issue may pose a purely legal question;
we are loath, however, to reach and adjudicate the issue in the first instance
without giving either the parties or the trial court the opportunity to address it.16
Therefore, on remand, the trial court should specifically address and adjudicate the
parties’ intent regarding the scope of the Guarantors’ liability under the Guaranty
Agreement. On remand, the trial court may conduct whatever proceedings it deems
necessary to perform the requisite inquiry.
C. The Appropriate Post-Judgment Interest Rate for Guarantors’ Liability17
If, on remand, the trial court determines that the parties did not intend for
the Guarantors’ liability to be limited to amounts owed by the borrower, Ponce
16 We express no opinion on the issue.
17We review de novo a trial court’s decision regarding post-judgment interest.
Alexander v. Kalitan,
263 So. 3d 70, 71 (Fla. 4th DCA 2019).
17
Trust,18 then the trial court will need to revisit its calculation of the default interest
owed by the Guarantors. The Guarantors assert that the trial court erred in
awarding CCP Ponce post-Foreclosure Judgment interest at the eighteen percent
default rate contained in the Construction Loan Agreement, rather than the
statutory post-judgment interest rate prescribed in section 55.03(1) of the Florida
Statutes. Again, the practical significance of this issue is hard to overstate: it
appears that well over $26 million of post-Foreclosure Judgment interest awarded
to CCP Ponce is calculated using the eighteen percent default rate. The Guarantors
argue that the amounts Ponce Trust owed to CCP Ponce were liquidated by the
trial court’s adjudication of Count I of CCP Ponce’s amended complaint (CCP
Ponce’s action on the promissory note), and that, once this liability was reduced to
a judgment, pursuant to the express language of the Foreclosure Judgment, post-
judgment interest would accrue at the statutory interest rate, rather than the
contractual default interest rate.
CCP Ponce counters by asserting that the Guarantors were not named as
parties in either Count I (CCP Ponce’s action on the note) or in Count II (CCP
Ponce’s foreclosure count) of the amended complaint, and that, by the express
18 Obviously, if the trial court determines that the Guarantors’ liability under the
Guaranty Agreement is limited to the amount Ponce Trust owed CCP Ponce, then
this step is unnecessary. In calculating the amount due by Ponce Trust, the trial
court applied the statutory, rather than the contractual, default interest rate to the
post-Foreclosure Judgment sums due.
18
terms of the Foreclosure Judgment, the trial court did not adjudicate any of CCP
Ponce’s claims against the Guarantors. CCP Ponce suggests that the Guarantors are
thus similarly situated to the guarantor in Provident National Bank v. Thunderbird
Associates,
364 So. 2d 790 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978).
In Thunderbird, after the bank had obtained a foreclosure judgment against
its borrower and purchased the foreclosed property at a foreclosure sale, the bank
brought a distinct, separate deficiency action against a guarantor of the loan.
Id. at
792-93. After conducting a trial, the trial court entered a deficiency judgment
against the guarantor, in favor of the bank, setting a post-judgment interest rate on
the deficiency judgment at the statutory rate.
Id. at 794. The bank appealed arguing
that, pursuant to the loan agreement, the borrower had agreed to pay default
interest at fifteen percent and, pursuant to the guaranty agreement, the guarantor
had agreed to guarantee the sums payable by the borrower.
Id. at 796-97. Our sister
court agreed with the bank and reversed the trial court. The Thunderbird court
reasoned that, because the guarantor “was not an original party to the action and
the claim against it is founded on the guaranty,” the bank’s contract with its
borrower – calling for a fifteen percent default interest rate – controlled.
Id. at 797-
98. Importantly, underpinning its holding, the Thunderbird court twice makes
reference to the guarantor not being an original party to the foreclosure
19
proceedings, and that the bank’s separate, independent action against the guarantor
was based exclusively on the guaranty.
Id. at 797, 798.
We distinguish Thunderbird from our case. Not only were the Guarantors
original parties to the foreclosure proceedings, the Guarantors’ claims and defenses
were procedurally intertwined with CCP Ponce’s claims against Ponce Trust. In its
summary judgment motion resulting in the Foreclosure Judgment, CCP Ponce
sought to adjudicate fully its claims against, and the defenses of, the Guarantors.
Indeed, the parties litigated the Guarantors’ affirmative defenses to the foreclosure,
and the Foreclosure Judgment adjudicates those defenses Hence, this case is
procedurally distinguishable from Thunderbird, and the Guarantors are not
similarly situated to the Thunderbird guarantor.
Based on our reading of Thunderbird, these distinguishing facts are
dispositive. Because the Guarantors were, at all times, not only parties to, but
active litigants in, the proceedings resulting in the entry of the Foreclosure
Judgment, it makes little sense to conclude that the Foreclosure Judgment’s
liquidation of the amounts due would not inure to, or be binding upon, them. The
Thunderbird decision does not control the post-judgment interest issue of the
instant case. Rather, under the distinctive facts of this case, the trial court should
have followed the general rule that a debt bears interest at the contract rate only to
the date of final judgment, and after that date, the total indebtedness bears interest
20
at the statutory rate. Braswell v. Braswell,
881 So. 2d 1193, 1203 (Fla. 3d DCA
2004).
Thus, on remand, if the trial court determines that the parties did not intend
for the Guarantors’ liability under the Guaranty Agreement to be limited to the
amounts owed by Ponce Trust, the trial court should – when calculating the
amounts due by the Guarantors under the Guaranty Agreement – apply the
statutory interest rate to all post-Foreclosure Judgment sums due. Again, on
remand, the trial court may conduct whatever proceedings it deems necessary to
perform the requisite calculations.
III. Conclusion
We affirm those portions of the Final Deficiency Judgment assessing
damages against Ponce Trust. We reverse those portions of the Final Deficiency
Judgment assessing damages against the Guarantors, and remand for recalculation
of those damages consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.
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