Edward T. Byrd & Co. Inc. v. Wpsc Venture I

Decision Date05 August 2011
Docket NumberNo. 5D10–561.,5D10–561.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals
PartiesEDWARD T. BYRD & COMPANY, INC., Appellant,v.WPSC VENTURE I, Appellee.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

A. Brian Phillips of A. Brian Phillips, P.A., Orlando, for Appellant.Steven M. Fahlgren of Law Offices of Steven M. Fahlgren, P.A., Hilliard, for Appellee.COHEN, J.

Edward T. Byrd & Company, Inc. (Byrd), sued WPSC Venture I (WPSC) under theories of breach of contract and quantum meruit to recover a mortgage brokerage fee it allegedly earned for obtaining a $21 million loan commitment to refinance WPSC's existing mortgage on a shopping center. On cross-motions for summary judgment, Byrd contended that WPSC breached the contract by failing to pay the fee despite the loan's failure to close, and WPSC countered that no fee was payable because the application it unilaterally signed did not meet the requirements of the Mortgage Brokerage and Mortgage Lending Act (“MBMLA” or Act).1 We affirm the trial court's final judgment entered after it granted WPSC's motion for final summary judgment and denied Byrd's motion.

WPSC signed an application for a mortgage loan commitment with Byrd in order to refinance an existing mortgage loan due to mature in December 2004. Timing was critical for the shopping center to continue in business. Byrd obtained a loan commitment, which WPSC approved. Despite extensions to the closing date from July 14, 2004, to September 9, October 9, and, finally, October 18, 2004, no closing occurred due to problems that ensued after the FBI arrested Edward Byrd on criminal charges. Mr. Byrd immediately placed the company for sale and difficulties arose concerning its status as a servicing agent for the lender and whether it would remain in business. Byrd was dissolved and after reinstatement, it filed suit to obtain the mortgage brokerage fee.

The narrow issue on appeal is whether an individual coborrower, cosignor, or guarantor to a commercial mortgage loan is a “borrower” under the Act. This issue is implicated because Robert Miller, the president of one of WPSC's general partners, was required to execute a personal guaranty to indemnify the lender indefinitely. A “borrower” is not defined in the Act. However, one subpart of the definition of “mortgage loan” describes a [l]oan on commercial real property if the borrower is a natural person or the lender is a noninstitutional investor ....” § 494.001(20)(b). In relevant part, the Act also states:

494.0038 Mortgage broker disclosures.

(1)(a)1. A person may not receive a mortgage brokerage fee except pursuant to a written mortgage brokerage agreement between the mortgage brokerage business and the borrower which is signed and dated by the business and the borrower.

....

494.0042 Brokerage fees.

(3) At the time of accepting a mortgage loan application, a mortgage brokerage business may receive from the borrower a nonrefundable application fee. If the mortgage loan is funded, the nonrefundable application fee shall be credited against the amount owed as a result of the loan being funded. A person may not receive any form of compensation for acting as a mortgage broker other than a nonrefundable application fee, a fee based on the mortgage being funded, or a fee which complies with s.494.00421.

WPSC contends the Act's failure to define the term “borrower” renders it ambiguous and subject to statutory interpretation. WPSC argues that “borrower” should be construed consistently with section 494.0079(3), a related consumer protection statute, which defines a borrower as “any natural person obligated to repay a loan, including, but not limited to, a coborrower, cosignor, or guarantor.”

Byrd argues the Act did not contemplate an individual guarantor be considered a borrower. In support, Byrd asserts that the Act's definitions for [a]ct as a mortgage broker” and [m]ortgage loan” are inseparably intertwined with the terms for [m]ortgage brokerage fee” and [m]ortgage brokerage business.” Read together, Byrd concludes it can collect its fee under section 494.0038(1)(a) 1. See §§ 494.001(3), (18)(20).

At the summary judgment motion hearing, WPSC directed the trial court's attention to the Legislature's 2009 revision of the Act, which, effective January 1, 2010, adopted section 494.079(3)'s definition for borrower, almost verbatim.2 Section 494.001(1), Florida Statutes (2010), now reads: “Borrower means a person obligated to repay a mortgage loan and includes, but is not limited to, a coborrower, cosignor, or guarantor.”

This court reviews de novo the trial court's legal interpretation of the MBMLA. See Major League Baseball v. Morsani, 790 So.2d 1071, 1074 (Fla.2001).

It is axiomatic that the plain meaning of a statute is the first rule of statutory construction. State, Dep't of Agric. & Consumer Servs. v. Quick Cash of Tallahassee, Inc., 609 So.2d 735, 738 (Fla. 1st DCA 1992). When the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous and conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no occasion for resorting to the rules of statutory interpretation and construction. Holly v. Auld, 450 So.2d 217, 219 (Fla.1984).

Black's Law Dictionary defines “borrower” and “guarantor” differently:

Borrower. A person or entity to whom money or something else is lent.

Guarantor. One who makes a guaranty or gives security for a debt.

Black's Law Dictionary 179, 711 (7th ed. 1999). These definitions are not the same and they usually play two different roles in a loan transaction. Yet, in a sister statute under chapter 494, a borrower includes a guarantor. Because the term borrower is susceptible of different meanings, it is ambiguous and the court must use principles of statutory construction to resolve the ambiguity. See Barco v. School Bd. of Pinellas County, 975 So.2d 1116, 1122 (Fla.2008).

Notably, the First District applied the Act to a corporate borrower in Carlton Palms Hotel, Inc. v. Fidelity Trust, Inc., 728 So.2d 358 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999). Although Byrd criticizes the holding in Carlton Palms as nothing more than a rejection of summary judgment, the factual dispute involved the Act's application in either case. Either the Act applied to disallow the mortgage brokerage fee if the requirements of section 494.0021 were not met or, if the defect was attributable to Carlton Palms, then the fee could not be charged unless the loan was funded. What remains unanswered in Carlton Palms is whether the Act applied because the undefined party described in the style of the case as “etc.” was, in fact, an individual borrower, cosignor, or guarantor. Nevertheless, the decision in Carlton Palms, as evidence of the state of the law, lends support to WPSC's argument that the statute is ambiguous.

Byrd, citing Ieracitano v. Shaw, 815 So.2d 787 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002), contends that the Act's definitional section applies to the exclusion of any other meaning. Ieracitano is inapposite because the court merely interpreted the definitional section to apply to section 494.0021 and held that the “notwithstanding” language only precluded the application of a contrary substantive provision. There was no statutory ambiguity and, more importantly, the case sheds no light on the definition of borrower, the issue...

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