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By Avery Searcy
Associate Attorney

In Belvant v. Cohen, 50 Fla. L. Weekly D 2503 (Fla. 3d DCA 2025), the appellate court clarified two practical points about replevin: (1) replevin is primarily about the right to immediate possession, and (2) co-ownership does not automatically make another co-owner an indispensable party when the replevin target is a third party.

This case involved a taxi decal co-owned by two individuals. One co-owner operated as a taxi driver; the other did not. Together they entered an agreement with third-party companies who possessed and used the decal for a term. When the term ended, the companies failed to return the decal.

One co-owner filed a petition for a prejudgment writ of replevin against the companies to recover possession. He also brought claims against the other co-owner (including civil theft-type allegations), but the replevin request itself was directed at the third-party companies holding the decal.

The non-filing co-owner moved to dismiss and obtained an attorney’s fee award on the theory that he was an indispensable party who had to be joined as a co-plaintiff in the replevin action. The trial court agreed. However, the appellate court did not.

The appellate court held that Florida law does not require all co-owners of the property to be joined in a replevin action brought against third parties. Because replevin is designed to resolve who is entitled to immediate possession as between the plaintiff and the party wrongfully holding the property, a co-owner is not automatically indispensable just because he also has an ownership interest.

The court also highlighted an adjacent rule: replevin generally is not appropriate against another owner who is legally entitled to possession because the possession element must be “wrongful.” If a party has lawful co-ownership rights and lawful entitlement to possess the property, that possession is not inherently wrongful in the way replevin requires.

The primary takeaway is to distinguish the target from the legal theory. If the property is held by a third party and the relief sought is immediate return, replevin can proceed without dragging in every co-owner as a party. It is also important not to mislabel a co-owner dispute as replevin. If the dispute is between rightful owners over competing rights to possess, replevin may fail because the possession may not be “wrongful.” Where an asset is being withheld after the end of a contract term, replevin can be an efficient tool if you focus on possession and wrongful detention.

Possession remedies like replevin can move quickly, but only if the right parties and the right theory are identified. At Boatman Ricci, we help clients choose the cleanest procedural path to recover property without creating avoidable joinder and fee problems.

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About the Author
Avery Searcy is an associate attorney admitted to practice law in Florida. Born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and raised in Celebration, Florida, Avery has always been guided by a strong sense of justice and compassion for others. Avery earned her Bachelor’s degree from the University of Florida and went on to receive her Juris Doctor from Stetson University College of Law. While at Stetson, Avery participated in Law Review, the Christian Legal Society, Child Advocates, and the Anti-Trafficking Coalition. After her first year of law school, Avery interned for the Honorable Judge Edward LaRose at the Second District Court of Appeal. She later served as a teaching assistant for Torts and as a research assistant focusing on writings related to higher education law. While in law school, Avery received book awards in Evidence, Consumer Law, Trusts and Estates, Professional Responsibility, and Advanced Legal Research. Outside of work, Avery enjoys spending quality time with friends and family and soaking up the Florida sunshine.