Pearson v. Friedman

Decision Date18 June 1959
Docket NumberNo. 58-491,58-491
Citation112 So.2d 894
PartiesEric PEARSON, Appellant, v. Milton FRIEDMAN, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Morton N. Greenwald, No. Miami Beach for appellant.

Jerry M. Lindzon, Miami, for appellee.

CARROLL, CHAS., Chief Judge.

This appeal brings on for our determination a question of the enforceability in Florida courts of a confession judgment rendered in Illinois, based on a warrant of attorney for confession of judgment which was signed and delivered in Florida incident to a promissory note made here but payable in Illinois.

Upon default the holder of the note obtained a judgment in Illinois without service of process. Thereafter an action was brought upon the Illinois judgment in the circuit court in Dade County, which entered judgment thereon. The defendant appealed.

The granting of powers of attorney for confession of judgment is contrary to the policy of this state, and by section 55.05, Fla.Stat., F.S.A., such contracts or provisions for confessing 'judgment to pass by default' which are made in Florida are declared to be null and void. 1

Where such a warrant of authority to confess judgment is made in a state other than Florida, under the laws of which state it is a valid contract, then a confession judgment obtained thereon in such other state will be given full faith and credit and enforced in Florida. Carroll v. Gore, 106 Fla. 582, 143 So. 633, 89 A.L.R. 1495; United Mercantile Agencies v. Bissonnette, 155 Fla. 22, 19 So.2d 466, 155 A.L.R. 916. But it was held in Markham v. Nisbet, Fla.1952, 60 So.2d 393, 394, that 'since in the case of a cognovit judgment, jurisdiction over the person to enter judgment rests squarely on the 'warrant of authority' to confess judgment, it would seem to be incumbent upon the plaintiff to make an affirmative showing that the 'warrant of authority' was a valid and subsisting one.'

In the instant case, on plaintiff's application for summary judgment, based on the Illinois judgment, it affirmatively appeared that although the cognovit note and warrant of authority to confess judgment was to be performed in Illinois, the contract was one which was made in Dade County, Florida. A showing to that effect on the instrument itself was supported by an affidavit establishing the fact of its execution in Florida.

The Florida Statute, quoted in footnote No. 1, expressly provides that such contracts for confession of judgment 'made or to be made by any person whatsoever within this state' shall be void. The wording of the statute makes it clear that it was the legislative police and intent that, as to stipulations of the character under discussion, which are made in this state, the law of Florida controls and provides that they are null and void. This pronouncement is more than a prohibition of the use of a procedural device; it concerns the validity of the contracts themselves.

The learned trial judge was in error in imparting validity to the Florida contract upon which the Illinois judgment was obtained without service of process, since that contract was one which Florida law declared void.

The prevailing conflict of laws rule is that the validity of such...

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2 cases
  • A.J. Spagnol Lumber Co., Inc. v. Trauger
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • December 1, 1982
    ...such a judgment by our own courts would be unlawful. See also Carroll v. Gore, 106 Fla. 582, 143 So. 633 (1932) and Pearson v. Friedman, 112 So.2d 894 (Fla. 3d DCA 1959). It also disregarded a number of governing decisions of the United States Supreme Court rendered prior thereto; 5 and its......
  • Vineberg v. Brunswick Corporation
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit
    • April 4, 1968
    ...111 A.L.R. 1407, 1411 and cases therein cited. We agree with the lower court and affirm as to this point. The case of Pearson v. Friedman, Fla. App.1959, 112 So.2d 894, is apparently the only Florida case construing Section 55.05 of the Florida Statutes, and is the only case relied on by th......

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