ROBERTA A. COLTON, Bankruptcy Judge.
THIS CASE came on for hearing on April 11, 2016, of Debtor's Motion for Reconsideration of Order Overruling in Part Objection to Claim #11 of Christine Goesel (the "Motion").
Creditor, Christine Goesel ("Christine"), is Debtor's former spouse. In connection with the dissolution of their marriage, Debtor and Christine entered into a marital settlement agreement (the "MSA"). The terms of the MSA were incorporated in a Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage entered by the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit of Illinois (the "Judgment"). The Judgment expressly "ratified, confirmed, approved, and adopted" the MSA as if it were an order of the court.
The MSA, incorporated by the Judgment, states that during the course of the parties' marriage, they acquired real property in Nokomis, Florida (the "Property"). The parties agreed that Debtor would pay Christine $50,000.00 for her share of the equity in the Property (the "Equalizer Payment") within 30 days. The MSA further provided that if Debtor did not make the Equalizer Payment within 30 days, the Property would be listed for sale and Christine would receive the first $50,000.00 of any net sale proceeds. The MSA expressly provides that Christine's right to payment constitutes a lien on the Property. Specifically, § 8(b) of the MSA states:
The MSA also required Christine, upon entry of the divorce judgment, to execute a quitclaim deed conveying all her rights, title, and interest in the Property to Debtor. The deed was to be held in escrow until Debtor refinanced the mortgage on the Property and made the $50,000.00 payment to Christine.
Debtor filed his Chapter 13 case on May 28, 2015. In Debtor's bankruptcy schedules, he listed Christine as a general unsecured creditor for "property settlement/Divorce litigation" in the amount of $85,000.00.
Christine filed a proof of claim for $50,000.00 as a secured claim.
On January 11, 2016, the Court conducted a hearing on the Objection. The Court found that because Christine is on title to the Property, her ownership interest is the functional equivalent of a lien and she therefore holds a secured claim. Thereafter, the Court entered its order overruling Debtor's objection.
To prevail on a motion for reconsideration, Debtor must demonstrate that the Court committed clear legal error that would result in a manifest injustice, that there has been an intervening change in controlling law, or that new evidence is available that could not have been presented prior to the entry of judgment.
Debtor contends that under the Florida state court cases of Dyer v. Beverly & Tittle, P.A.
Dyer was a divorce action where the wife obtained final judgments for attorney's fees against the husband. The judgments included language that the judgments themselves constituted a lien on the real property that had been the parties' marital residence. The marital residence was titled only in the husband's name and was expressly acknowledged by the court to be the husband's separate property. Eventually, the wife assigned her judgments to a third party who commenced foreclosure proceedings on the property without recording the judgments in accordance with Fla. Stat. § 55.10. The trial court ruled that the unrecorded judgments provided for a lien on the property and allowed the forced sale of the property. But the appellate court reversed, ruling that the language in the judgments themselves did not convert the judgments into liens. Because the wife and her assignee had failed to record the judgments in accordance with Fla. Stat. § 55.10, the appellate court held that there was no lien on the property.
Dyer is distinguishable from this case; the wife in Dyer was not an owner of the property. Rather, she was a mere a judgment creditor—essentially a stranger to the husband's separately owned property—who necessarily was required to comply with Fla. Stat. § 55.10 in order to acquire an interest in the property. Christine, on the other hand, is an owner of the Property and does not need the assistance of Fla. Stat. § 55.10 to acquire an interest in the Property.
In Butler, the husband and wife owned real property as tenants in common, with each owning an undivided one-half interest in the property. In their divorce proceeding, the wife obtained and recorded three judgments against the husband. The trial court set a clerk's sale on the husband's 50% tenancy-in-common interest. The appellate court reversed, finding that the judgments were not properly converted to liens against the husband's 50% ownership interest because the wife had not complied with the formalities of Fla. Stat. § 55.10. Like Dyer, the wife in Butler was essentially a stranger to the husband's separate ownership interest in the property and therefore was required to comply with the formalities of Fla. Stat. § 55.10 in order to obtain a lien against—and force a sale of—the husband's separate interest in the property. Butler is distinguishable from the facts of this case; Christine is not attempting to enforce a judgment against Debtor's 50% ownership interest in the Property. Rather, she seeks payment for her own 50% ownership interest in the Property, to which she is entitled under the MSA and the Judgment.
Debtor's reliance on Dyer and Butler, as well as the applicability of Fla. Stat. § 55.10, is misplaced. The Florida Supreme Court ruled long ago that the purpose of Fla. Stat. § 55.10 is to allow judgment creditors to establish a lien on real property where the lien did not previously exist.
Debtor also argues that the bankruptcy court's decision in In re Lowe
In Lowe, the debtor was the sole owner of the subject property. Here, Christine has always been a record title owner of the Property, and her ownership interest in the Property serves as the functional equivalent of a security interest in the Property. Although Christine has executed a quitclaim deed, the deed is held by her own attorney until she receives the Equalizer Payment. Because the deed has not been delivered to Debtor, Christine's claim remains secured by virtue of her ownership of the Property.
Christine was not required to record the Judgment in accordance with Fla. Stat. § 55.10 to preserve her already-existing ownership interest in the Property. Her claim for the Equalizer Payment is secured by her ownership in the Property. The Court concludes that its Order Overruling in Part Objection to Claim # 11 of Christine Goesel, which allowed Christine's claim as secured, is not clear legal error that would result in a manifest injustice.
Accordingly, it is