MILLER, J.
Appellant, Young Land USA, Inc., seeks review of an order granting final summary judgment and quieting title to certain parcels of property in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Appellant contends that the lower tribunal erred in declaring that the realty is owned, without encumbrance, by appellee, Credo LLC, the purchaser at various execution sales conducted by the sheriff, as its lien was improperly extinguished.
Four years after two separate judgment liens were recorded against property owned by a judgment debtor in the public records of Miami-Dade County, the debtor quitclaimed his real property holdings, consisting of several parceled lots, to appellant, an entity controlled by his sister. The same day, the debtor executed a mortgage, conveying an interest in the property to appellant, without receiving value in exchange. Thereafter, appellant recorded the mortgage.
Approximately one month later, appellant quitclaimed the subject property through four separate deeds: the first parcel back to the debtor; the second parcel to an assumed identity concededly used by the debtor; the third parcel jointly to the debtor and an entity; and the fourth parcel to a different entity.
Several years later, the judgment holders each separately obtained writs of execution for the multiple parcels, and the Miami-Dade County Sheriff scheduled consecutive judicial sales of the subject property. Between the sales, appellant executed and recorded a satisfaction of its mortgage.
Appellee filed suit in the lower tribunal seeking to quiet title, asserting the judgment liens were superior to any other encumbrance, the satisfaction of mortgage extinguished any interest held by appellant
"Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of material fact and if the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."
Appellant asserts that its encumbrance was improvidently extinguished. "It is said that the purchaser at an execution sale takes only the right, title, and interest which the execution debtors had, subject to equities existing at the time the judgment was recorded."
Here, the two certified judgments prompting the execution sales were recorded after the judgment debtor acquired title, and many years before appellant perfected any purported interest in the real property. Moreover, as correctly recognized by the trial court, "[w]hen a mortgage on land and the equity of redemption in the same lands become united in the same person, ordinarily the mortgage is merged and the same ceases to be an [e]ncumbrance and the owner will hold the lands with an un[e]ncumbered title, if there be no other mortgage or lien."
Accordingly, as both the reconveyance of the property back to the judgment debtor, following the recordation of mortgage, and the title derived from the execution sales, relating back to the date of the judgment liens, extinguished any other encumbrances on the property, we conclude the trial court correctly determined appellee is endowed with paramount title. Thus, we affirm.
Affirmed.