Rose v. Hansell, 3D05-1015.
Citation | 929 So.2d 22 |
Decision Date | 22 February 2006 |
Docket Number | No. 3D05-1015.,3D05-1015. |
Parties | Jonathan ROSE, Appellant, v. Elizabeth R. HANSELL, Appellee. |
Court | Court of Appeal of Florida (US) |
Jonathan Rose, in proper person.
Behar, Gutt & Glazer and Lee A. Watson and Ryan D. Gesten, Jacksonville, for appellee.
Before LEVY, RAMIREZ, and ROTHENBERG, JJ.
Jonathan Rose appeals a Final Summary Judgment on Plaintiff's Complaint for Partition of Real Property. The plaintiff, Elizabeth R. Hansell, and the defendant, Mr. Rose, are a brother and sister who became joint tenants of a condominium after the death of their mother. Ms. Hansell filed a complaint for partition of the property, and ultimately filed a motion for summary judgment on the partition complaint, requesting that the court order a sale of the property. The trial court granted the summary judgment, and appointed a special master to sell the property. Mr. Rose appeals. We affirm.
The general rule is that partition is a matter of right, but there are rare exceptions. Condrey v. Condrey, 92 So.2d 423, 426 (Fla.1957). In Condrey, an elderly couple conveyed their property, creating a tenancy in common between themselves and their son and daughter-in-law, because the son and daughter-in-law were living with them, contributing to their living expenses, and had invested money in the property. 92 So.2d at 425. The conveyance was made in order to protect the parents and the son and his wife, and the lower court found that there was an agreement not to partition the land during the life of any of the co-tenants. Id. at 426-27. Later, due to "family differences," the son and his wife moved out and filed a suit to partition the property. Id. at 424-25. The trial court denied the petition for partition. Id. at 425. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed, finding that equity would not be done by ordering the partition. Id. at 427. The Florida Supreme Court noted that the parents were "elderly citizens, neither completely whole in physical health nor able to support themselves," and found that it was not conceivable that they intended, by conveying their property into a joint-tenancy, to put themselves in a position to be forced from their home or to surrender the right to live there. Id. Therefore, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that the lower court had the discretion to refuse to grant partition, but noted that courts should exercise such discretion only in extreme cases or where manifest injustice, fraud or oppression will result if partition is granted. Id.
In the instant case, Mr. Rose argues that manifest injustice or oppression would result if the partition is allowed to stand without modification of the time, manner and conditions of partition. In an affidavit filed below in response to the motion for summary judgment, he explained that he has "congestive heart failure and diabetes with some kidney involvement," and that he "would like to be able to live out [his] days overlooking [his] mother's ocean." He also explained that, by working on two lawsuits, he helped his mother acquire money for "support in her old age," that he initially negotiated the sale of the condo for his mother, that he was with his mother for half of the last year that she lived, and that he helped with her medical problems.
Although this evidence portrays Mr. Rose in a sympathetic light, it does not support a finding that granting partition would result in a manifest injustice such as existed in Condrey. Unlike Condrey, this case does not involve parties opposing partition who were the original owners of the property before conveying it into a tenancy in common with the party seeking partition. Therefore, the Florida Supreme Court...
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Colorado Korean Ass'n v. Korean Sen. Ass'n., No. 05CA0145.
...v. Tuchman, 94 Conn. App. 364, 892 A.2d 1016 (2006) (the right to partition has long been regarded as absolute); Rose v. Hansell, 929 So.2d 22 (Fla. Dist.Ct.App.2006) (partition is a matter of right with rare exceptions); Westerdale v. Grossman, 312 Ill.App.3d 884, 245 Ill.Dec. 336, 728 N.E......
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...to prepare and transmit an adequate record to ensure meaningful appellate review, see Fla. R. App. P. 9.200(e) ; Rose v. Hansell, 929 So. 2d 22 (Fla. 3d DCA 2006), Joli failed to provide any record on appeal. The City's answer brief, however, was accompanied by an appendix of nearly 800 pag......
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Joli v. Hannon
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Partitioning real property in dissolution of marriage actions and suits between unmarried co-tenants: credits, setoffs, ouster, division, and sale.
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