Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed August 8, 2018.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D16-1553
Lower Tribunal No. 13-5691
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Francisco Pijuan, et al.,
Appellants,
vs.
Bank of America, N.A.,
Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Eugene J.
Fierro, Senior Judge.
Loan Lawyers, LLC, and Chase E. Jenkins (Fort Lauderdale), for appellants.
Liebler, Gonzalez & Portuondo, and Adam M. Topel, for appellee.
Before LAGOA, LOGUE and SCALES, JJ.
SCALES, J.
Appellants, defendants below, Francisco, Luisa, Francisco Jr. and Sonia
Pijuan (“Pijuan”)1 appeal the final foreclosure judgment entered in favor of
1 We refer to the four appellants collectively as Pijuan, while noting their different
appellee, plaintiff below, Bank of America (“BOA”). After conducting a bench
trial on BOA’s foreclosure complaint, the trial court found that BOA’s
predecessor, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., had entered into a loan modification
agreement (“LMA”) that constituted a novation of the original loan documents.
Notwithstanding this finding (which BOA has not cross-appealed), the trial court
entered a foreclosure judgment against Pijuan that failed to consider the effect of
its novation finding on the foreclosure case pled and proven by BOA. We conclude
that, under the facts of this case, once the trial court made the finding that the LMA
replaced the original loan, then BOA could not prevail without having pled and
proven a breach of the LMA.
I. Relevant Facts and Procedural Background
In December of 2006, Countrywide loaned Francisco and Luisa Pijuan
$410,000. The loan was memorialized by an adjustable rate promissory note, and
was secured by a mortgage encumbering Miami Beach real property owned by
Pijuan. Pursuant to the terms of the note, Pijuan was required to make monthly
principal and interest payments of $2,050.00 to Countrywide.
In March of 2009, Pijuan received a letter from Countrywide notifying
Pijuan that Countrywide had approved a loan modification. In order for the
modification to be valid, the LMA (enclosed with the letter) would need to be
roles in the events underlying this litigation. All four of the Pijuans executed the
mortgage; however, only Francisco and Luisa executed the note and LMA.
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signed by Francisco and Luisa and returned to Countrywide. Pursuant to the LMA,
Pijuan’s monthly payment was adjusted down from $2,050.00 to $1,630.51,
effective with the payment due on May 1, 2009. The LMA required compliance
with all other covenants of the original documents not altered or amended by the
LMA. The LMA did not alter or amend the condition precedent requirements of
the mortgage’s paragraph 22.2
Francisco and Luisa executed the LMA and, on or about March 12, 2009,
mailed it to Countrywide. From approximately April 20, 2009, through October
13, 2010, Pijuan, consistent with the LMA’s payment terms, made eighteen
monthly payments of $1,630.51, totaling $29,349.36.
Sometime later in 2009, BOA assumed the Pijuan note and mortgage from
Countrywide. Notwithstanding Pijuan’s return of the executed LMA to BOA, and
Pijuan’s eighteen monthly payments made pursuant to the LMA’s payment terms,
BOA, on December 31, 2010, sent a default letter to Pijuan asserting a November
1, 2009 default date. In this default letter (“BOA’s Notice”), BOA instructed
Pijuan that BOA must receive a payment of $42,523.45 prior to January 31, 2011,
in order to “cure” this asserted default. BOA’s Notice did not mention the LMA,
much less assert any default under the LMA. Consistent with BOA’s Notice, in
2 Paragraph 22 of the December 2006 mortgage requires, as a condition precedent
to acceleration and foreclosure, the mortgagee to provide notice to the mortgagor
specifying, among other things, the specific default and cure amount.
3
February 2013, BOA filed the instant suit alleging a default not of the LMA, but of
the December 2006 note and mortgage. BOA’s verified complaint identified
November 1, 2009 as the default date “on the Mortgage Note and Mortgage.”
Paragraph 9 of BOA’s complaint, which was denied by Pijuan, alleged that BOA
had performed all conditions precedent to acceleration. As an affirmative defense
to BOA’s foreclosure action, Pijuan asserted that BOA did not perform a condition
precedent because BOA failed to provide proper default notice as required by the
mortgage. Pijuan also filed a motion for leave to add an additional affirmative
defense specifically relating to the failure of BOA to acknowledge the existence of
the LMA.
While Pijuan’s motion seeking leave to add this affirmative defense was not heard
before trial, the issue of whether the LMA constituted a novation of the original
loan was tried by the parties’ consent.
The bench trial, conducted in May of 2016, focused almost exclusively on
whether, by virtue of the March 2009 LMA and subsequent payments consistent
therewith, the parties had modified the December 2006 loan documents. BOA
argued that, while it had received the executed LMA from Pijuan and credited
Pijuan’s account for Pijuan’s payments made pursuant to the LMA, neither BOA
nor Countrywide ever had approved the modification nor had either entity actually
executed the document. BOA argued that the document therefore was ineffective.
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At the end of the trial, the court specifically found, as a factual matter, that
the parties had entered into the LMA in March of 2009, and that the LMA
constituted a novation of the original December 2006 loan documents. The trial
court, though, rejected Pijuan’s counsel’s argument that, upon finding a loan
modification existed, BOA’s foreclosure case should be dismissed under the
authority of Kuehlman v. Bank of America, N.A., 177 So. 3d 1282, 1283 (Fla. 5th
DCA 2015) (holding that when a loan is modified a lender can foreclose only by
pleading and proving a breach of the modification agreement). Rather, despite no
allegation by BOA of any breach of the LMA, nor any allegation or proof that
BOA had complied with the conditions precedent for suing Pijuan under the LMA,
the trial court found that Pijuan had breached the LMA, and entered the subject
foreclosure judgment, simply crediting Pijuan with the $29,349.36 that Pijuan had
paid pursuant to the LMA. It is from this judgment that Pijuan timely appeals.
II. Discussion
The trial court found that the LMA constituted a novation;3 that is, the
original loan documents had been modified by the subsequent LMA. This finding
has not been challenged on cross appeal by BOA. We follow the persuasive
precedent of our sister courts in holding that, when a loan modification agreement
3 A novation is a separate and new agreement, discharging an existing obligation
and substituting a new one. See Ades v. Bank of Montreal, 542 So. 2d 1013, 1014
(Fla. 3d DCA 1989).
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has been reached, a lender can foreclose only by both pleading and proving a
breach of the modification agreement. Nowlin v. Nationstar Mortg., LLC, 193 So.
3d 1043, 1046 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016); Kuehlman, 177 So. 3d at 1283.
In this case, BOA pleaded a default under the December 2006 loan
documents, and its trial proofs, including its evidence of compliance with all
required contractual conditions precedent to acceleration and foreclosure, were
based exclusively on Pijuan’s alleged breach of the December 2006 loan
documents. BOA vigorously contested the effectiveness of the LMA, and certainly
never pleaded or attempted to prove a default thereunder; nor did BOA plead or
prove that BOA had complied with the conditions precedent to sue Pijuan under
the LMA.4 Therefore, when the trial court concluded that the LMA constituted a
novation, and that the LMA replaced the inconsistent provisions of the original
note, BOA’s foreclosure case – premised entirely on BOA’s allegations and proof
that Pijuan breached the December 2006 loan documents, rather than the LMA –
failed. Nowlin, 193 So. 3d at 1046.5 As argued by Pijuan’s counsel, upon finding
4Indeed, such proof would have undermined BOA’s principal argument that the
LMA was ineffective.
5 Citing dialogue between Pijuan’s counsel and the trial court, the dissent argues
that, in trying the novation issue by consent, Pijuan necessarily (or impliedly)
waived both (i) BOA’s obligation to plead and prove compliance with all
conditions precedent related to a breach of the LMA, and (ii) Pijuan’s affirmative
defense asserting that BOA did not provide proper default notice to Pijuan. Waiver
is the voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a known right. Caraffa v.
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that the LMA constituted a novation of the December 2006 loan documents, the
trial court should have involuntarily dismissed BOA’s case.
We reverse the trial court’s final foreclosure judgment for BOA and remand
with instructions to enter an involuntary dismissal of BOA’s case.
Reversed and remanded, with instructions.
LAGOA, J., concurs.
Francisco Pijuan v. Bank of America
Case No. 3D16-1553
LOGUE, J. (dissenting)
I respectfully dissent. Although the trial court entered a final judgment of
foreclosure after a full trial on the merits, the majority reverses because the Bank’s
complaint alleged only a default of the original loan—not a default of the loan
modification. While the majority is correct that the Bank did not allege a default
Carnival Corp., 34 So. 3d 127, 130 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010). The language of waiver
must be clear and unequivocal. See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Ocean Bank, 208 So. 3d
221, 225 (Fla. 3d DCA 2016). From our review of the record, it does not appear
that Pijuan, at any time, expressly or impliedly waived the requirement that BOA
plead and prove compliance with conditions precedent. Indeed, in our view, the
record reflects just the opposite: immediately after the trial court announced its
novation determination, Pijuan’s counsel argued that dismissal was required based
on Kuehlman precisely because of BOA’s default notice infirmities.
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of the loan modification, it ignores the Borrowers’ failure to raise the loan
modification as an affirmative defense which, as explained below, was their
burden.
More importantly, the majority’s focus on the pleadings misses the point.
The Bank and the Borrowers consented by word and act to try both the issue of
whether a modification existed and whether the Borrowers had breached the
modification. Indeed, it was the Borrowers who offered into evidence their
payments under the loan modification and the fact that they stopped payments. The
Borrowers’ position at trial was that they were excused from making payments
during the foreclosure litigation. Because the trial court rightly rejected that
defense, the final judgment of foreclosure should be affirmed.
At the beginning of trial, the trial court asked both the Bank and the
Borrowers to frame the issues to be tried. The parties agreed the focus of the trial
should be whether there was a loan modification and whether there was a default
under the loan modification. The following exchange took place:
The Court: Okay. Counsel, do you see the issues—any
other issues other than those raised?
Bank’s Counsel: I do not, Judge. In fact, I think the
only real issue is going to be the application of payment
on some alleged loan modification.
Borrowers’ Counsel: That’s correct, Your Honor. I think
that’s the heart of the issue.
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(Emphasis added.) At the end of the exchange, Borrowers’ counsel again
confirmed that the two issues to be tried concerned whether there was a
modification and “how much was paid towards it and whether those payments
were properly applied”:
The Court: So is the issue, as counsel framed it, a
question of how much?
Borrowers’ Counsel: Whether there’s a modification and
how much was paid—how much was paid towards it and
whether those payments were properly applied.
(Emphasis added.)
At trial, the Bank maintained there was no loan modification because the
Bank never signed a modification contract. To prove the Bank agreed to the
unsigned modification, the Borrowers presented evidence that they made eighteen
payments from April 2009 to October 2010 in the amount specified in the loan
modification and the Bank accepted those payments.
Without objection, the Borrowers also admitted to stopping payments after
October 2010. They stopped payments because they believed they did not have to
pay during the foreclosure litigation:
The Court: Now, six years, no payments?
Pijuan: Yes, sir.
Court: No taxes?
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Pijuan: Nothing.
The Court: No insurance?
Pijuan: Nothing.
....
The Court: I want to know why you sat there for six
years with no payment living there, no taxes, no
insurance.
Pijuan: Well, I was told that, you know, that’s how it was
going to—you know, they were going to be paying
everything for now until the case was resolved.
Based on this unobjected-to testimony, the trial court noted that “there’s two
wrongs here,” and “this is not good for either of you.” He ruled against the Bank
and found that a loan modification existed, pointing to the Bank’s acceptance of
eighteen payments in the amount of the loan modification. He then found the
Borrowers had defaulted under the loan modification based upon their own
admission. The court then entered a final judgment of foreclosure that fully
credited the Borrowers for all payments made under the original loan and the loan
modification.
If the parties had not tried by consent the issue of the loan modification, the
judgment of foreclosure would still be proper. The Borrowers’ main defense was
the loan modification, but they never raised it as an affirmative defense.6 It was
6 While Pijuan filed a motion for leave to add an additional affirmative
defense relating to the Bank’s failure to acknowledge the parties’ loan modification
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the Borrowers’ “burden to plead the existence of a modification or forbearance
agreement as an affirmative defense.” Rouffe v. CitiMortgage, Inc., 241 So. 3d
870, 873 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018). Since they failed to raise the loan modification as
an affirmative defense, they technically waived it. Bank of New York Mellon for
Certificateholders of CWABS, Inc., Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-BC5 v.
Bloedel, 236 So. 3d 1164, 1167 (Fla. 2d DCA 2018) (“The effect of a modification
to a legal agreement, to the extent it would constitute an avoidance of all or part of
a defendant’s liability under the agreement, is an affirmative defense that must be
pled and proven by the defendant.”).
The Borrowers are saved from their technical waiver of the defense of a
modification; but only because the issue of the modification was tried by consent.
“The essence of the broad test generally applied to determine whether an issue has
been tried by implied consent is whether the party opposing introduction of the
issue into the case would be unfairly prejudiced thereby.” Smith v. Mogelvang,
432 So. 2d 119, 122 (Fla. 2d DCA 1983). The Borrowers were not only on notice
of the issues relating to the loan modification (it was their main defense), they
expressly agreed to try these issues and provided the evidence of the payments and
default under the loan modification. They cannot now be heard to argue the issues
were not raised in the pleadings. “When issues not raised by the pleadings are tried
agreement, that motion was never heard and never ruled upon.
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by express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects as
if they had been raised in the pleadings.” Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.190(b).
These facts bring this case out of the ambit of the cases relied upon by the
majority. In Nowlin v. Nationstar Mortgage, LLC, 193 So. 3d 1043 (Fla. 2d DCA
2016), the borrowers raised the modification as an affirmative defense and denied
breaching the modification. In Kuehlman v. Bank of America, N.A., 177 So. 3d
1282, 1283 (Fla. 5th DCA 2015) the Fifth District expressly held the breach of the
loan modification was not tried by consent.
Accordingly, the final judgment should be affirmed.
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