Frazier v. Goszczynski
Decision Date | 10 October 2014 |
Docket Number | No. 5D14–265.,5D14–265. |
Citation | 161 So.3d 542 |
Parties | Luke Aaron FRAZIER and Connie C. Frazier, Appellants, v. Richard GOSZCZYNSKI, et al., Appellees. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Darryl W. Johnston, of Johnston & Sasser, Brooksville, for Appellants.
Roland D. Waller and Jaleh Piran–Vesseh, New Port Richey, for Appellees.
Luke Frazier and his mother, Connie Frazier, took real property owned by Richard Goszczynski without his consent. The scheme the Fraziers contrived to acquire the property is based on a twisted and distorted view of the law of adverse possession under color of title. After the Fraziers took possession of the property, the trial court ousted them by entering a judgment quieting title in Goszczynski. The Fraziers' scheme and their actions in implementing it are particularly brazen and mischievous. Equally brazen is their attempt to persuade this court to affix its imprimatur to their distorted view of the law. We are not persuaded.
Goszczynski owned real property in Hernando County. He deraigned title from Eugene Zielinski, who conveyed the property by warranty deed to himself and Goszczynski as joint tenants with right of survivorship. Zielinski subsequently died, leaving Goszczynski the sole owner of the property. From what we glean from the record, Goszczynski became delinquent in paying the ad valorem taxes. It is unknown whether this was lassitude caused by a physical or mental infirmity, a lackadaisical attitude toward management of his property, or whether Goszczynski did not know Zielinski had passed away and assumed Zielinski was paying the taxes. In any event, the delinquency did not go unnoticed by the Fraziers. They drew up a quitclaim deed and attempted to convey the property from Luke Frazier, as grantor, to himself and his mother as grantees. The stated consideration for the purported conveyance is “love and affection by the grantee, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged.” The Fraziers had never owned any interest in the property and became interlopers in the chain of title when they recorded their wild deed in the public records. A wild deed is a purported instrument of conveyance executed by the named grantor knowing that he or she has no title of any kind to the property described therein. See Hyland v. Kirkman, 204 N.J.Super. 345, 498 A.2d 1278 (1985). Luke Frazier admits in the pleadings that the deed is “wild” and that he executed it for the purpose of setting up a claim of adverse possession under color of title.
After the deed was recorded, the Fraziers took possession of the property, paid the delinquent taxes, and rented the property to others, keeping the rental payments for themselves. When this lucrative enterprise was discovered by Goszczynski, he filed suit to quiet title to his property. The Fraziers filed a counterclaim for quiet title, claiming that they adversely held possession of the property in excess of seven years under color of title (the wild deed) and that the property belonged to them pursuant to section 95.16, Florida Statutes (2003).
Goszczynski filed a motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted the motion and entered the final judgment we now review quieting title in Goszczynski. In the motion, Goszczynski alleged that the Fraziers did not have a legitimate claim to his property and that the quitclaim deed they contend constitutes color of title is invalid. The motion also alleged that The attached information charged Luke Frazier with organized fraud for filing a forged and fraudulent quitclaim deed misrepresenting himself as the owner of real property that belonged to Goszczynski. The judgment of conviction reflects that a jury found him guilty of that charge. In their briefs, the Fraziers present a very vague claim that the conviction may have involved Luke Frazier's dealings with a tenant, leaving the reader to conclude that this is a topic of unwelcome conversation. They are, however, far more assertive in their argument decrying the inequity of imputing Luke Frazier's crime to his mother, who has not been convicted of anything. They carry this argument through to the conclusion that even if the conviction taints Luke Frazier's claim to the property, it should not taint his mother's. We do not know whether the mother was a knowing participant in the scheme to take Goszczynski's property or an unwitting dupe used by Luke Frazier in an attempt to establish an air of legitimacy to the conveyance. No matter. The issue we must resolve is whether the Fraziers' quitclaim deed constitutes color of title under the law of adverse possession, and that issue does not depend on criminal convictions of Frazier or his mother. And we do not need a criminal conviction of either to reach the conclusion that the scheme they employed should not succeed.
Before we proceed further, we note that it is not necessary to examine the specific differences between adverse possession under color of title and without color of title other than to say that they are different statutory claims occupying separate sections in the Florida Statutes, distinguished mainly by the presence or absence of the color of title element. Compare § 95.16, Fla. Stat. (2003) ( ), with § 95.18, Fla. Stat. (2003) ( ). We also note that the law of adverse possession is wrapped in its own array of terminology utilized by the courts and the Legislature that must be deciphered—the terminology, for example, of notorious, adverse, hostile, and color of title. We focus on the latter because the Fraziers make their claim under section 95.16. Color of title is, therefore, an element they have the burden of establishing, see Bonifay v. Garner, 503 So.2d 389, 394 (Fla. 1st DCA 1987), and Goszczynski argues that they did not meet that burden.
There is no specific statutory definition of “color of title,” and there are few Florida cases that say what it is or what it means. From the text of section 95.16(1), we see that color of title references “a claim of title exclusive of any other right” founded on a written instrument of conveyance. § 95.16(1), Fla. Stat. (2003). A quitclaim deed may, depending on the circumstances, satisfy the color of title requirement. See Steputat & Co., Inc. v. Bidwell, 599 So.2d 762, 763 (Fla. 5th DCA 1992). But color of title means more than a purported instrument of conveyance: the circumstances surrounding its execution and delivery require consideration. We believe that color of title requires that the deed of conveyance be accepted by the grantee in good faith and with the belief that it constitutes a legitimate conveyance of title. See McLemore v. McLemore, 675 So.2d 202, 206 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (); Steputat, 599 So.2d at 763 (); Bonifay, 503 So.2d at 393 ( ; Simpson v. Lindgren, 133 So.2d 439 (Fla. 3d DCA 1961). Courts in other jurisdictions agree that adverse possession under color of title may not be established if the purported instrument of conveyance is accepted with knowledge that it is invalid or that the grantor had no title to convey.1 Although the concept of good faith is not pervasive throughout the statutory framework that is the law of adverse possession, it is a requirement to establish color of title.
The Fraziers actually assert they had a good faith belief that the wild...
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...the named grantor knowing that he or she has no title of any kind to the property described therein.” Frazier v. Goszczynski, 161 So.3d 542, 543, 2014 WL 5039679, 39 Fla. L. Weekly D2133, D2133 (Fla. 5th DCA Oct. 10, 2014) ; see also Lehmann v. Cocoanut Bayou Ass'n, 157 So.3d 289, 291, 39 F......
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...executed by the named grantor knowing that he or she has no title of any kind to the property described therein.” Frazier v. Goszczynski, 161 So.3d 542 (Fla. 5th DCA 2014) ; see also Lehmann v. Cocoanut Bayou Ass'n, 157 So.3d 289, 293 (Fla. 2d DCA 2014) (referring to a “wild deed” as a deed......
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