Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed April 10, 2019.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D18-771
Lower Tribunal No. 12-17915
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Orlando Benitez, Jr.,
Appellant,
vs.
Eddy Leal, P.A.,
Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Rosa I.
Rodriguez, Judge.
Leόn Cosgrove and Scott B. Cosgrove and Jeremy L. Kahn and Aaron C.
Brownell, for appellant.
Eddy Leal, for appellee.
Before SALTER, SCALES and LINDSEY, JJ.
SALTER, J.
Orlando Benitez, Jr. (“Client”), appeals a final order imposing a charging lien1
asserted by attorney Eddy Leal and his professional association, Eddy Leal, P.A.
(collectively, “Attorney”). The order awarded the Attorney a charging lien against
the Client for $29,459.91, plus interest. For the reasons which follow, we reverse
the order and vacate the charging lien, without prejudice to the Attorney’s rights to
pursue collection of his unsecured claim for fees against his former client.
The underlying circuit court case was a 2012 commercial mortgage
foreclosure case brought by the Client, initially represented by the Attorney, against
a borrower. The Client obtained a pretrial order requiring the borrower to make
monthly payments during the pendency of the foreclosure action, as provided by
section 702.10(2)(f), Florida Statutes (2012). The Attorney then successfully
represented the Client in an appeal of that pretrial order brought by the mortgagor.2
On remand, the Client was awarded a final judgment of attorneys’ fees and costs in
the amount of $29,459.91 for the Attorney’s successful representation in the appeal.
1
The final order sought to be reviewed was entered October 30, 2017, shortly before
the trial judge retired. Thereafter, a motion for rehearing was filed by the Client and
granted by a successor judge. The matter was reopened for an evidentiary hearing,
in the successor judge’s order of December 14, 2017. On March 30, 2018, a third
judge determined that the successor judge lacked jurisdiction to review or rehear the
final order under Groover v. Walker, 88 So. 2d 312 (Fla. 1956), and reinstated that
final order. The Client’s timely appeal of all three orders followed.
2
Andros Dev. Corp. v. Benitez, 178 So. 3d 918 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015). This Court
dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
2
In October 2016, the Attorney moved to withdraw from further representation
of the Client. Neither the motion to withdraw nor the order granting it disclosed any
claim for unpaid fees or for a lien on the Client’s judgment in the case, any proceeds
of collection, or any other property of the Client.
In February 2017, successor counsel for the Client obtained a final judgment
of foreclosure against the borrower and two guarantors.3 A week later, the Attorney
filed and served a notice of filing and asserting a charging lien by Attorney “on all
judgments rendered in the [foreclosure case], and on all money due from any and all
Defendants on any such judgments, and any and all assets, property, money,
proceeds retained, receive, or recovered by [the Client] or any of his assigns in
connection with this matter.”
The Attorney attached to that notice a copy of the Client’s answers to
interrogatories (executed before the Attorney’s withdrawal from representation of
the Client) in which the Client disclosed that he had not paid the Attorney the fees
and costs incurred in the successful appeal, and that there was no written retainer or
fee agreement between the Attorney and the Client regarding the underlying
foreclosure and appeal.
3
The final judgment, totaling $1,928,812.14, included a line item for attorneys’ fees
of $29,459.91, but did not differentiate between fees attributable to the Attorney and
to successor counsel for the Client. The final judgment also specified that all sums
comprising the total, including the attorneys’ fees, were payable exclusively to the
Client.
3
In March 2017, the trial court heard the Attorney’s motion for a charging lien.
The trial court marked up the form of order submitted by the Attorney; rather than
granting or denying the motion, the trial court merely “recognize[d]” that the
Attorney’s motion for charging lien for attorneys’ fees and costs had been filed on
February 23, 2017, “as reflected on the docket.” The trial court marked out a
paragraph in the proposed order which would have specified that the Attorney “does
have and recover a charging lien, together with statutory post-judgment interest from
today, against [Client] for any and all money recovered from [the obligors in the
underlying action] because of judgments assets, property, proceeds retained,
received or recovered in this matter.”
Seven months later, the Attorney filed an emergency motion for imposition
of a charging lien and noticed it for a hearing three business days later. At that
hearing, conducted only one day before the trial judge retired, the court proceeded
with a non-evidentiary hearing on the motion. The transcript of the hearing indicates
that the trial court thought it had already granted a charging lien.
The Client’s successor counsel emphasized the need for an evidentiary
hearing on the charging lien issues. After the non-evidentiary hearing, the Client
submitted a response to the trial court raising various issues of fact: whether the
Attorney was entitled to raise a charging lien; whether the Client’s payments to the
Attorney were properly credited; and whether the Client had rights to a setoff. The
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Client also argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to impose a charging lien
because the Attorney’s notice and claim were untimely filed.
The trial court then entered the order imposing a charging lien. Following
proceedings relating to a motion for rehearing, the order remained in effect, and this
appeal followed.
Analysis
Our standard of review on the issue raised by the Client on subject matter
jurisdiction is de novo. See Greenberg Traurig, P.A. v. Starling, 238 So. 3d 862,
864-65 (Fla. 2d DCA 2018). We also review de novo the legal sufficiency of the
claim of lien, and the propriety of a determination of the claim without an evidentiary
hearing. See Nieves v. Viera, 150 So. 3d 1236, 1238-39 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014).
We reject without extensive discussion the Attorney’s contention that we lack
jurisdiction because the Client’s notice of appeal was untimely. The initial order
granting a lien was indeed a final order, see Trontz v. Winig, 905 So. 2d 1026, 1027
(Fla. 4th DCA 2005), and the Client’s motion for rehearing suspended rendition until
a successor judge denied it (and, for the elimination of doubt, reaffirmed that the
charging lien order “remains in full force and effect”).
As to the claim of a charging lien itself, the Florida Supreme Court has held:
To impose such a lien, the attorney must show: (1) an express or
implied contract between attorney and client; (2) an express or implied
understanding for payment of attorney's fees out of the recovery; (3)
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either an avoidance of payment or a dispute as to the amount of fees;
and (4) timely notice.
Daniel Mones, P.A. v. Smith, 486 So. 2d 559, 561 (Fla. 1986). In that case, the
Supreme Court also observed that such liens are creatures of common law, and are
governed exclusively by case law.
In this case, there are two shortcomings in the Attorney’s claim which require
reversal. The first, a failure to timely notify the Client of the claim of lien, is
preclusively fatal to the claim and we reverse and vacate the order on that basis. The
Attorney did not file his notice of a purported charging lien until after the final
judgment had been entered in favor of his former Client in the case. In Daniel
Mones, P.A., the Florida Supreme court held that the claimant/attorney was
obligated “to notify his clients in some way before the close of the original
proceeding that he intended to pursue the charging lien.” Id.
In Schur v. Americare Transtech, Inc., 786 So. 2d 46, 48 (Fla. 3d DCA 2001),
this Court affirmed the denial of a charging lien as untimely. In that case, the
attorney claiming the lien “did not pursue the charging lien before the entry of the
final judgment,” such that “the fourth requirement of timely notice had not been
met” (referring to the fourth prerequisite for a charging lien as specified in Daniel
Mones, P.A. and other cases). Id.
The Attorney responds with an argument that the final judgment was not truly
final until the disposition of the borrowers’ timely motions for rehearing and relief
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from the final judgment under Florida Rules of Civil Procedure 1.530 and 1.540.
We disagree. The pendency of such motions affects “rendition” of the final
judgment for appellate purposes, but the Attorney was not a party to the case (and
had withdrawn as counsel over a year earlier), had not moved to intervene or been
allowed to do so, and had not objected to the trial court’s determination of the
liquidated amounts awarded in the final judgment. Further, the borrowers’ motions
for rehearing and relief from judgment were denied, such that the final judgment
(entered before the Attorney’s claim of a charging lien was asserted) was not
affected.
The Attorney’s “notice” was too late to permit the parties and the trial court
to consider and determine it before the entry of the final judgment. We cannot
speculate what adjustments, if any, might have been made to the sums claimed by
the Client in the final judgment had the Attorney filed the claim of charging lien
before the final judgment was considered and entered by the trial court.
The Attorney’s “notice” appears to have recognized that the claim was
untimely. The notice included a request that “if a judgment has been entered, [the
Attorney] respectfully requests that this Court vacate the judgment until this Court
adjudicates the charging lien.” The Attorney did not advance this request before the
trial court, and the trial court never vacated the final judgment to adjudicate the late-
filed claim.
7
Although our resolution of the first issue, timeliness, is dispositive of the
appeal, we also consider the second shortcoming raised by the Client so that it may
be addressed on any further appellate review. That second shortcoming is the trial
court’s failure to conduct an evidentiary hearing before approving the imposition of
the Attorney’s charging lien.
There is no written agreement between the Attorney and Client regarding the
fees to be charged, the terms and timing of payment, or any specific funding source.4
There was no admissible evidence that there was any “express or implied
understanding for payment of attorney's fees out of the recovery.” Daniel Mones,
P.A., 486 So. 2d at 561. While represented by the Attorney, however, the Client did
engage in conduct, and he signed interrogatory answers, acknowledging his
obligation to the Attorney for the appellate attorneys’ fees actually awarded by the
trial court after remand. But that conduct and the interrogatory responses did not
address any lien rights, or particular funds or property as a source of secured
recovery, as against the Client. Any implication that the foreclosure itself, and any
property or payment recovered in that lawsuit, would fund the liability to the
4
In this case, as in other reported and unreported disputes between lawyers and
clients, there is a teaching point that lawyers should heed their own usual advice to
“get it in writing.” In the case of a fee contingent in whole or in part on a recovery
for the client, of course, the agreement is only enforceable if “such fee agreement is
reduced to a written contract, signed by the client and by a lawyer for the lawyer or
for the law firm representing the client.” R. Regulating Fla. Bar 4-1.5(f)(2).
8
Attorney, would have required an evidentiary hearing (and thus reversal and remand
by this Court). The trial court’s conclusion that “an evidentiary hearing will serve
no purpose other than to unfairly delay the imposition of a charging lien” includes
no citation to authority and does not withstand appellate scrutiny of the record.
For these reasons, we reverse and vacate the final order imposing a charging
lien against the Client for the benefit of the Attorney and authorizing execution to
collect the lien. This disposition is without prejudice to the Attorney to pursue
payment of any allegedly unpaid fees and costs from his former client as an
unsecured claim, though we express no opinion regarding the merits of any such
action.
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