Filed: Oct. 24, 2018
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed October 24, 2018. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D18-112 Lower Tribunal No. 12-23112 _ Luis Antonio Nieto Villamizar, etc., Appellant, vs. Luna Capital Partners, LLC, etc., et al., Appellees. An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto, Judge. Phillip T. Crenshaw (West Palm Beach); Glass Law Office and Lisa Paige Glass (Boca Raton), for appellant. Hinshaw & Culbertso
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed October 24, 2018. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D18-112 Lower Tribunal No. 12-23112 _ Luis Antonio Nieto Villamizar, etc., Appellant, vs. Luna Capital Partners, LLC, etc., et al., Appellees. An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto, Judge. Phillip T. Crenshaw (West Palm Beach); Glass Law Office and Lisa Paige Glass (Boca Raton), for appellant. Hinshaw & Culbertson..
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Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed October 24, 2018.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D18-112
Lower Tribunal No. 12-23112
________________
Luis Antonio Nieto Villamizar, etc.,
Appellant,
vs.
Luna Capital Partners, LLC, etc., et al.,
Appellees.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto,
Judge.
Phillip T. Crenshaw (West Palm Beach); Glass Law Office and Lisa Paige
Glass (Boca Raton), for appellant.
Hinshaw & Culbertson and John C. Lukacs and Maureen G. Pearcy, for
appellees.
Before ROTHENBERG, C.J., and SALTER, and LOGUE, JJ.
SALTER, J.
Judgment creditor Luis Antonio Nieto Villamizar (“Mr. Nieto”) appeals a
final summary judgment entered against him and in favor of four entities impleaded
by Mr. Nieto in proceedings supplementary. Mr. Nieto impleaded the entities as the
purchaser of, and recipients of sales proceeds produced by, the judgment debtor’s
property sold before Mr. Nieto’s judgment against the judgment debtor was entered.
Based on the analysis which follows, we affirm the final judgment.
Lis Pendens, Sale, and Judgment
Mr. Nieto commenced a lawsuit in 2012 to enforce a series of eight unsecured
promissory notes against Luna Developments Group, LLC (“Luna Developments”),
and Bal Harbour Quarzo, LLC (“Bal Harbour Quarzo”), defendants (and, ultimately,
judgment debtors).1 Initially, Mr. Nieto’s complaint to enforce the notes included
equitable lien claims allegedly encumbering (1) 145 Broward County condominium
units (in four buildings) owned by Luna Developments, and (2) a hotel and two
apartment buildings in Miami-Dade County owned by Bal Harbour Quarzo. Mr.
Nieto filed and recorded notices of lis pendens over all of those properties.
The trial court granted a motion to dismiss the equitable liens and to discharge
the notices of lis pendens. Mr. Nieto did not seek review of the non-final order
1
Mr. Nieto held two of the notes individually. He held a power of attorney from
family members who were the payees on the other six notes. Collectively the notes
exceeded $1,000,000.00. See Villamizar v. Luna Dev. Grp., LLC,
202 So. 3d 905
(Fla. 3d DCA 2016).
2
discharging the recorded notices of lis pendens. 2 The third amended complaint
included eight counts for collection of the eight individual promissory notes; it did
not seek enforcement against any of the properties of Luna Developments or Bal
Harbor Quarzo.
Following a non-jury trial, Mr. Nieto obtained judgments on two of the eight
notes against Luna Developments, but the trial court dismissed the six counts
involving the other six promissory notes. Mr. Nieto successfully appealed the
dismissal, and the case returned to the trial court in 2016; Villamizar, cited in note 1
above.
After a non-jury trial in January 2017, Mr. Nieto obtained six amended final
judgments against Bal Harbour Quarzo (three of the promissory notes) and Luna
Developments (three of the remaining notes). The judgments against Bal Harbour
Quarzo were satisfied in July 2017 from proceeds of the sale of property owned by
2
The consensus among Florida appellate courts is that orders granting or
discharging recorded notices of lis pendens, and orders relating to the bonds posted
in connection with such notices, are more appropriately reviewed via certiorari rather
than as injunction-like non-final orders appealable under Florida Rule of Appellate
Procedure 9.130(a)(3)(B). Bankers Lending Servs., Inc. v. Regents Park Inv., LLC,
225 So. 3d 884, 885 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017). Our own decisions on the point, however,
“did not abrogate prior decisions of this Court concluding that we have appellate
jurisdiction to review such non-final orders under Florida Rule of Appellate
Procedure 9.130(a)(3)(B).” Rodriguez v. Guerra, 43 Fla. L. Weekly D900, n.1 (Fla.
3d DCA Apr. 25, 2018).
3
that entity, leaving uncollected judgments of approximately $1.2 million against
Luna Developments.
Proceedings Supplementary
In May 2017, based on documents obtained in efforts to execute on the
judgments against Luna Developments, Mr. Nieto filed his complaint in proceedings
supplementary against the four appellees: Luna Capital Partners, LLC (“Luna
Capital”),3 Silverpeak Real Estate Finance, LLC (“Silverpeak”), SPREF WH II,
LLC (“SPREF”), and Wilmington Trust, National Association, as Trustee
(“Wilmington Trust”). 4
Luna Capital purchased 145 condominium units from Luna Developments
Group for $13,175,000.00 on July 9, 2015 (during the pendency of Mr. Nieto’s
lawsuit on the unsecured promissory notes, but before trial was concluded and
judgments were entered on any of the notes). Silverpeak held a July 9, 2015,
mortgage and other collateral regarding the condominium units purchased by Luna
Capital. SPREF allegedly received an assignment of the Silverpeak mortgage and
3
Luna Developments (the judgment debtor/seller) and Luna Capital (buyer,
impleaded defendant, and appellee) are not related entities or under common control.
They share “Luna” in their respective company names because the condominium
properties at issue in the case are within four phases of “Luna at Hollywood
Condominium.”
4
Wilmington Trust served as Trustee of the COMM 2015-CCRE25 Mortgage Trust
Commercial Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates.
4
collateral in December 2015. Finally, Wilmington Trust, Trustee, received a further
assignment from SPREF of the same mortgage and collateral that were initially
granted by Luna Capital in its July 2015 purchase.
Mr. Nieto’s 2017 complaint in proceedings supplementary alleged that the
July 2015 sale by Luna Developments—which, according to the record, had no
relationship to Luna Capital other than the relationship of buyer and seller—was a
“unique and fraudulent process to avoid obligations,” accomplishing the conveyance
of Luna Developments’ only remaining assets to Luna Capital and the application
of any net proceeds of sale to creditors other than Mr. Nieto (though Mr. Nieto was
not then a judgment creditor). The four impleaded supplemental defendants,
appellees here, moved for final summary judgment on the basis of their affirmative
defenses that the 2015 sale was in good faith and for reasonably equivalent value.
The trial court granted the impleaded defendants’ motion, entered final
summary judgment, and this appeal followed.
Analysis
We review the final summary judgment de novo. Volusia County v. Aberdeen
at Ormond Beach, L.P.,
760 So. 2d 126, 130 (Fla. 2000). We consider whether the
pleadings and summary judgment evidence before the trial court establish that there
is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.
Id. at 131; Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.510(c).
5
Mr. Nieto argues here that two genuine issues of material fact precluded the
entry of summary judgment. First, he contends that the 2015 sale by Luna
Developments to Luna Capital “was permeated with indications that third parties
(including Nieto) had an interest in the [145 condominium units], and that these
indications gave rise to a duty for [Luna Capital] to inquire and to an imputation of
implied actual notice of what that inquiry would have revealed—dozens of claims
and judgments totaling tens of millions of dollars in liabilities.”
Second, Mr. Nieto maintains that Luna Capital did not purchase the properties
from Luna Developments for reasonably equivalent value “because, in comparing
the original sale in 2006 to the current sale in 2015, even with inflation of
approximately 1.64% per year, [Luna Capital] paid approximately 11% less per unit
in 2015 than [Luna Developments] paid in 2006, and thus the prices are too close to
constitute an arms-length transaction and to be for reasonably equivalent value.”
Mr. Nieto also argues that he was not permitted to complete outstanding
discovery, such that “the trial court should have denied the Motion for Summary
Judgment as not being ripe for adjudication.” We address these arguments in order.
“Imputation of Implied Actual Notice”
The fact that a purchaser unrelated to the seller is aware that the seller owes
money to others is not the harbinger of an impending fraud. Sellers of property often
sell so that they can pay some or all of their creditors. Luna Capital’s awareness that
6
Mr. Nieto was suing the seller, Luna Developments, on unsecured indebtedness that
had not yet been reduced to judgment, did not create a legal duty on Luna Capital’s
part. This is so because there is nothing in this record to suggest that Luna Capital
was partially or totally controlled by Luna Developments at the time of the sale, or
that these entities were under common control, or that they were anything other than
a buyer and seller dealing at arm’s length.
Proceedings supplementary allow the judgment creditor to seek execution on
“any property of the judgment debtor not exempt from execution in the hands of any
person,” or “any property, debt, or other obligation due to the judgment debtor which
may be applied toward the satisfaction of the judgment.” § 56.29(1), Fla. Stat.
(2017). When Mr. Nieto filed his “Complaint in Proceedings Supplementary” in
May 2017, the 145 condominium units sold by Luna Developments in July 2015
were not “in the hands of” Luna Developments. Nor did Luna Capital, on this
record, hold any property of Luna Developments or owe any money to Luna
Developments that might be applied toward the satisfaction of Mr. Nieto’s
judgments.
Luna Capital’s alleged knowledge of Luna Development’s debts did not
impose a legal duty on Luna Capital’s part to assure that specific unsecured creditors
of Luna Development were paid. Luna Capital naturally assured that all liens against
7
the condominium units were paid from the proceeds and satisfied of record, but
payment of an unsecured claim in a lawsuit pending trial is not such a matter. 5
Mr. Nieto’s counsel and expert witness (a real estate transactional attorney)
filed affidavits regarding Luna Developments’ “Owner’s Affidavit” and Luna
Capital’s duties in connection with the July 2015 closing. Mr. Nieto’s expert witness
affidavit correctly recited that Luna Developments’ written representations included
notice of “suits, actions or proceedings...with respect to the Real Property,” as well
as “judgments, claims, disputes, demands, or other matters pending against [Luna
Developments] that could attach to the Property.”
But Mr. Nieto’s claims were on unsecured promissory notes and (following
dismissal of the equitable lien claims) did not assert claims against the condominium
units sold to Luna Capital. The expert’s review of title documents argues that the
notices of lis pendens (“even if subsequently discharged”) 6 should have led Luna
Capital to discover the promissory note lawsuit, “which, if successful, would have
5
Mr. Nieto may consider the rights of unsecured creditors in bankruptcy to avoid
“preferences,” 11 U.S.C. § 547, to be equally available under the fraudulent transfer
and “proceedings supplementary” statutes. While both theories of recovery may be
in a creditor’s toolbox, they involve separate elements of proof, are governed by
different procedural requirements, and (in the case of preference claims) are
determined in the United States Bankruptcy Courts.
6
Although the discharge was obviously “subsequent” to the recordation of the lis
pendens notices, the discharge order was actually recorded over two years before the
sale of the properties to Luna Capital.
8
meant a judgment that would become a lien on the property of Defendant, Luna
Developments.” This is no more true for the promissory note lawsuit than it would
be for a hypothetical pending personal injury lawsuit against Luna Developments—
“which, if successful, would have meant a judgment that would become a lien on the
property.”
Section 48.23, Florida Statutes (2017), governs notices of lis pendens. A
notice is only effectual if it describes the affected property, is recorded in the official
records where the property is located, “and has not expired or been withdrawn or
discharged.” § 48.23(1)(a) (emphasis provided). In the present case, the notices of
lis pendens were discharged by the court long before the July 2015 sale, and Mr.
Nieto did not appeal that discharge.
Moreover, section 48.23(2) specifies that a notice of lis pendens “is not
effectual for any purpose beyond 1 year from the commencement of the action and
will expire at that time, unless the relief sought is disclosed by the pleading to be
founded on a duly recorded instrument or on a lien claimed under part I of chapter
713 against the property involved [unless, on motion, the court extends the time of
expiration].” It is undisputed that Mr. Nieto’s initial equitable lien claim against the
condominium units was not based on a duly recorded instrument or a lien claimed
under part I of chapter 713, and that the sale occurred long after the lis pendens
would have expired even if it had not been discharged by the trial court’s order.
9
The expert’s bootstrapping theory of notice and duty is erroneous as a matter
of law on the record and timeline before us, as is his hypothetical title examiner’s
calculation of Luna Developments’ insolvency and “potential bankruptcy.” Buyers
may insist (by contract) on escrows to cover claims-in-process “which, if successful”
might become a judgment lien after the closing, but an arm’s length buyer at a fair
market price is not under a legal duty to do so for the protection of such claimants.
Mr. Nieto’s counsel also executed a “verified memorandum” regarding his
interpretation of the fraudulent transfer statutes and case law. Counsel erroneously
reads the term “good faith” in section 726.109(1), Florida Statutes (2017), within
Chapter 726 (“Fraudulent Transfers”), to mean that an unrelated transferee has no
notice that a transferor has creditors. Neither the statute nor applicable case law
impose such a requirement. Nothing in Mr. Nieto’s affidavits or his opposition to
the motion for summary judgment suggests any actual intention to “hinder, delay or
defraud any creditor of the debtor,” because (as addressed in the following section)
Luna Capital was unrelated to Luna Developments and paid a reasonably equivalent
value.
Expressed another way, the bottom line of the seller’s, Luna Developments’,
balance sheet did not change upon disposition of the condominium units in July
2015. The sale price it received was applied to pay liens on the properties and to
pay creditors. There is no record evidence that Luna Developments “siphoned off”
10
the proceeds to its principals or “badge of fraud” transferees with the knowledge and
assistance of Luna Capital. The transaction simply turned a physical asset into cash
reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset, and those proceeds were distributed
to the seller’s creditors (none of whom were shown to be principals, family members
of principals, or other transferees who might hold them for ultimate distribution to
the seller).
Mr. Nieto’s counsel’s memorandum in opposition to summary judgment
relied on cases such as McCalla v. E.C. Kenyon Construction Co., Inc.,
183 So. 3d
1192 (Fla. 1st DCA 2016). In that case, the defendant construction company
(Kenyon) was sued by the McCallas for breach of contract and other claims. Before
final judgment was entered, Kenyon transferred “all or most of its assets” to two of
Kenyon’s principals “who knew of the McCallas’ pending claims” without receiving
reasonably equivalent value in exchange.
Id. at 1193-94. The asset transfer
“rendered Kenyon unable to satisfy the McCallas’ judgment against it.”
Id. at 1194.
The First District held that the complaint alleged fraudulent transfers under
sections 726.105(1) and 726.106, quoting this Court’s opinion in General Electric
Co. v. Chuly International, LLC,
118 So. 3d 325, 326 n.1 (Fla. 3d DCA 2013).
Id.
But in the present case, the record established that Luna Capital had no tie to Luna
Developments or the other appellees.
“Reasonably Equivalent Value”
11
The record demonstrates that Luna Capital made its purchase offer for the
condominium units based upon a business evaluation of the market, the property’s
income and resale value, and arm’s length negotiations with Luna Developments.
The record demonstrates that the sale of the condominium units resulted from a
public real estate listing by a national brokerage firm. The summary judgment
evidence included the purchase contract, closing statements and other evidence of a
bona fide sale. During discovery, Luna Capital provided Mr. Nieto a copy of an
appraisal and other information regarding the property obtained during the due
diligence period before the sale.
In response, Mr. Nieto’s affiant provided a back-of-the-envelope computation
questioning whether the per-unit price was below market. Unsubstantiated
“guesstimates” of what inflation might have done to values, or what appreciation or
depreciation might have been expected during the period Luna Developments owned
the property, create no genuine issue as against the competent, substantial evidence
of an actual arm’s length sale between “a purchaser willing but not obliged to buy”
and “one willing but not obliged to sell.” See ITT Cmty. Dev. Corp. v. Seay,
347
So. 2d 1024, 1027 (Fla. 1977); American Reliance Ins. Co. v. Perez,
689 So. 2d 290,
291 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997) (defining “fair market value”).
Mr. Nieto did not file an appraisal or other evidence probative of actual market
value of the condominium units as of the July 2015 sale.
12
“Outstanding Discovery”
Finally, Mr. Nieto argues that the trial court should have denied the motion
for summary judgment because the impleaded defendants had not fully responded
to written discovery requests. See Kimball v. Publix Supermarkets,
901 So. 2d 293,
295 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005). We find no abuse of discretion by the trial court on this
point, however, as Mr. Nieto did not seek a continuance of the hearing on the motion
for summary judgment and did not demonstrate the materiality of the discovery
sought to be completed. Vancelette v. Boulan S. Beach Condo. Ass’n, Inc.,
229 So.
3d 398, 400 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017).
Conclusion
Mr. Nieto misreads the statutes on proceedings supplementary and fraudulent
transfers to permit him, in effect, to backdate a judgment lien and demand payment
from a closing that happened well before any such judgment was obtained and
recorded (and even longer before the impleader of the buyer, its lender, and its
lender’s collateral assignee). If the buyer was a straw party or the transaction was a
fraudulent transfer of Luna Developments’ equity to a party holding for the benefit
of the seller, so as to thereby hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, this might be a
different case. But no such record is before us.
Upon our careful review of the summary judgment evidence before the trial
court, and indulging appropriate inferences in favor of Mr. Nieto as required, the
13
summary judgment evidence establishes beyond any genuine dispute that the
appellees negotiated and purchased at arm’s length and in good faith. Beyond the
use of the term “Luna” in their names (because of the name of the condominium
complex), Luna Developments as seller and Luna Capital as buyer had no
interrelated owners, controlling members, or other indications of joint control.
In addition, the summary judgment evidence demonstrates that the sale
negotiations and price conform to the accepted definition of “fair market value,” or,
as relevant here, “reasonably equivalent value.” We thus affirm the trial court order
and final summary judgment in all respects.
14