LUCAS, Judge.
In this residential mortgage foreclosure action, Bank of America appeals the trial court's entry of a final judgment in favor of the defendant homeowner, Brooke Asbury. The trial court determined that Bank of America failed to prove that it had complied with the condition precedent of mailing a default notice to Asbury prior to initiating its foreclosure lawsuit. The court further found that the default letter proffered by Bank of America at the non-jury trial was admissible to show that it had been prepared but would not be admitted to establish that it had been mailed. Because Asbury never identified this condition
Asbury was the owner of residential property in Sarasota County that was encumbered by a promissory note and mortgage. Following nonpayment on her loan, Bank of America
A nonjury trial was held on February 24, 2014. From the record, it appears the circuit court was troubled by what it perceived to be Bank of America's failure to prove that a required default notice had, in fact, been mailed to Asbury before the filing of the lawsuit. The court ultimately entered a final judgment on May 8, 2014, in favor of Asbury. In its judgment, the court found that Bank of America had "failed to introduce any evidence to satisfy to the Court that conditions precedent were met and the default letter was mailed." Bank of America timely appealed.
We find Bank of America's first point on appeal, which revolves around the state of the pleadings at the time of the trial, to be dispositive. Bank of America argues that the trial court was precluded from considering whether a default notice had been delivered because Asbury did not properly raise that issue, either within her answer or as an affirmative defense, prior to trial. Bank of America is correct.
Litigants in civil controversies must state their legal positions within a particular document, a pleading, so that the parties and the court are absolutely clear what the issues to be adjudicated are. As the Florida Supreme Court explained in Hart Properties, Inc. v. Slack, 159 So.2d 236, 239 (Fla.1963):
Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.120(c) establishes a special pleading rule in regard to conditions precedent: "In pleading the performance or occurrence of conditions precedent, it is sufficient to aver generally that all conditions precedent have been performed or have occurred. A
In Cooke v. Insurance Co. of North America, 652 So.2d 1154, 1155 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995), INA, an insurance company, declined its insured customer's claim for losses resulting from a fire. The insured filed a lawsuit against INA, which included an allegation of compliance with all conditions precedent. Id. at 1156. INA's answer offered only a general denial of that allegation, but when the case proceeded to trial, INA for the first time argued that its customer had failed to prove he had provided notice of the fire to INA, submitted an adequate proof of loss, or that INA had declined to pay that loss prior to filing his lawsuit, all of which, INA maintained, were conditions precedent to the insured's claim. Id.
Reversing the trial court's directed verdict for INA, we explained the importance of proper pleading practice for conditions precedent:
Id. at 1156 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
Similarly, in VonDrasek v. City of St. Petersburg, 777 So.2d 989, 990 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000), the City of St. Petersburg answered a personal injury complaint, claiming it was without knowledge whether a plaintiff had fulfilled all of the conditions precedent to filing a personal injury lawsuit. The city later attempted to argue that the complaint should have been dismissed because the plaintiffs failed to provide adequate notice to the city prior to initiating their lawsuit under section 768.28(6), Florida Statutes (1993). Id. We reversed the trial court's dismissal and held that the city's failure to plead a timely, specific denial of whether a condition precedent had occurred or been fulfilled amounted to a waiver of that defense. Id. at 991; see also Griffin v. Am. Gen. Life & Ace. Ins. Co., 752 So.2d 621, 623 n. 1 (Fla. 2d DCA 1999) ("If satisfaction of the condition precedent is not denied with specificity, it is waived.").
The legal rule we applied in Cooke, VonDrasek, and Griffin, that a defendant's failure to identify a specific condition precedent within its pleading results in a waiver of the defense, emanates from the mandatory language found in rule 1.120(c), "[a] denial ... shall be made specifically and with particularity" (emphasis added), as well as the underlying purpose of this special pleading rule: that is, to ensure that the parties in civil litigation are fully apprised, prior to trial, whether the compliance or occurrence of a condition precedent is an issue to be proven at trial and that the party that is presumably in a better position to identify a noncompliance
While recognizing the pleading requisites of rule 1.120(c), Asbury argues that the rule does not apply here because the only condition precedent to the acceleration of her promissory note was the lender's compliance with Paragraph 22 of her mortgage. That paragraph includes the requirement that the lender furnish a default notice to the borrower prior to instituting a foreclosure action. According to Asbury, Bank of America could not have been surprised or caught unaware at trial that it would have to furnish evidence of mailing a default notice because that was the only condition precedent to its lawsuit, and she generally denied that the bank had satisfied that requirement.
Regardless of whether or not the only condition precedent for the filing of the bank's lawsuit was the delivery of a default notice, Asbury's argument for affirmance must be rejected. There is no exception in rule 1.120(c) for claims that have a single condition precedent to their maintenance. Nor will we construe one as Asbury suggests. See Barco v. Sch. Bd. of Pinellas Cnty., 975 So.2d 1116, 1121-22 (Fla.2008) ("[I]t is well settled that the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure are construed in accordance with the principles of statutory construction. When the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous and conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no occasion for resorting to the rules of statutory interpretation and construction; the statute must be given its plane and obvious meaning.") (citations omitted). Asbury's construction would turn the special pleading requirements of rule 1.120(c) completely around. It was Asbury, not Bank of America, who was obliged to frame the specific issue within her pleadings of whether or not a default letter's mailing had occurred. She failed to do so. Nowhere within Asbury's answer or affirmative defenses was there any mention of a purported failure to deliver a default notice. She should not have been heard to challenge that condition precedent at the trial. See VonDrasek, 777 So.2d at 991; Cooke, 652 So.2d at 1155.
Accordingly, we reverse the final judgment and remand for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
VILLANTI, C.J., Concurs.
SILBERMAN, J., Concurs with opinion.
SILBERMAN, Judge, Concurring specially.
I concur in the decision to reverse but make the following observations.
First, Bank of America presented evidence through its sole witness attempting to establish it had properly sent a notice of default, thereby performing that condition precedent to foreclosure. Asbury challenged the evidence, including the witness's competence to testify as to the sending of the notice. But she then elicited specific testimony from the witness supporting Bank of America's contention that the default notice was properly sent. In fact, based on Asbury's prodding, the witness testified that Bank of America's business records would establish the mailing.
Bank of America then resumed questioning the witness. Oddly, rather than introducing the business records into evidence or obtaining additional testimony regarding mailing of the default notice, Bank of America instead got its witness to agree that it was possible a default letter would not be mailed but would instead be "sent to the trash can."
Second, in announcing judgment for Asbury, the trial court ruled that "there's no — nothing in the evidence to satisfy the Court's need to know that the default letter was mailed." The court noted the testimony of the sole witness regarding a postal bar code that was contained in Bank of America's records. The witness had testified that the bar code proved the default letter was sent and went through the mail. The trial court rejected the testimony as hearsay even though no objection was made and, in fact, Asbury had elicited that testimony. Although on appeal Bank of America points to the testimony as establishing its compliance with the condition precedent, it failed to argue to the trial court that the testimony should have been accepted as proof of compliance. See Aills v. Boemi, 29 So.3d 1105, 1108-09 (Fla. 2010) (recognizing that for an argument to be preserved for appeal, the specific legal ground on which the claim is based must be asserted in the trial court).
Based on the foregoing and Asbury's failure to plead the affirmative defense of noncompliance with a condition precedent,
I concur in the majority decision.