IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
FIFTH DISTRICT
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
FLORIDA INVEST CONSULTANTS CORP.,
Appellant,
v. Case No. 5D15-4206
CATALONIA PLAZA, LLC, CATALONIA
REAL ESTATE FLORIDA CORP.,
MANER, LLC AND FRANCISCO
JAVIER GARCIA,
Appellees.
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Opinion filed February 24, 2017
Appeal from the Circuit Court
for Orange County,
John Marshall Kest, Judge.
F. Scott Fistel, of Fistel Law Group, P.A.,
Ft. Lauderdale, for Appellant.
Alberto E. Lugo-Janer, of CPLS, P.A.,
Orlando, for Appellees.
PER CURIAM.
Florida Invest Consultants Corp. (“Appellant”) appeals the order granting
Appellees’ motion to enforce the settlement agreement previously executed by the parties
that fully resolved the underlying litigation. Appellant also appeals the separate order
granting Appellees’ motion for recovery of attorney’s fees incurred in seeking to enforce
the agreement.
Reduced to its basic terms, the parties’ settlement agreement provided that
Appellant would pay the sum of $80,000 to Appellees and that Appellees would convey
certain real property to Appellant by quitclaim deed. The agreement required Appellant
to pay Appellees an initial $10,000 upon the “date of sale and delivery of the quitclaim
deed,” with the remaining monies to be paid in specified lump sum installments over the
ensuing twelve months. Pertinent to this appeal, the settlement agreement also provided
that in the event that a valid quitclaim deed was not delivered or the agreed upon
payments were not made, requiring additional litigation to enforce the agreement,
attorney’s fees shall be awardable to the prevailing party.
Not long after executing the settlement agreement, each party believed that the
other was not complying with the agreement, and they separately moved to enforce it.
Appellant asserted that it did not receive a valid quitclaim deed from Appellees, while
Appellees argued that they had not received all payments that had come due. Following
a hearing, the trial court entered the order now under review and this appeal ensued.
Based upon our de novo review of the record containing largely undisputed
material facts, we conclude that the trial court erred in granting Appellees’ motion to
enforce the settlement agreement because Appellees failed to deliver to Appellant a valid
quitclaim deed. Accordingly, we vacate the order on appeal and remand this case to the
trial court for further proceedings.1
1At the time of the appeal, Appellant had paid $30,000 of the $80,000 that it owed
to Appellees under the settlement agreement. We express no position as to the resolution
2
As to the separate issue of attorney’s fees, although we have now vacated the
order which provided the basis for the award, because the amount of attorney’s fees was
not determined in the attorney’s fee order, we lack jurisdiction to review what amounts to
a nonappealable, nonfinal order. See Sanders v. Palmieri, 849 So. 2d 417 (Fla. 5th DCA
2003) (“[A]n award of attorneys’ fees does not become final, and, therefore, appealable
until the amount is set by the trial court . . . .” (citing Montanez v. Montanez, 697 So. 2d
184 (Fla. 2d DCA 1997))).
ORDER GRANTING ENFORCEMENT OF SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
VACATED; CAUSE REMANDED. APPEAL OF ORDER FOR RECOVERY OF
ATTORNEY’S FEES DISMISSED.
TORPY, LAMBERT and EDWARDS, JJ., concur.
of the case on remand but observe that this appeal could have readily been avoided
simply by the execution of a valid quitclaim deed as Appellant requested at the hearing.
3