BOCA RATON, FL — A Boca Raton condominium association has filed a civil lawsuit in Palm Beach County Circuit Court seeking to foreclose on a unit at 906 Southwest 9th Street Circle over what the complaint describes as unpaid condominium assessments.
The case, Boca Terrace Condominium Association, Inc. v. Susann F. Ferreira, et al., Case No. 502026CA007071XXXAMB, was filed on June 24, 2026, in the 15th Judicial Circuit in and for Palm Beach County, according to the complaint. The case is assigned to Division AJ.
Boca Terrace Condominium Association, Inc., a Florida not-for-profit corporation, is represented by Tucker & Lokeinsky, P.A., based in Fort Lauderdale, the filing shows. Attorney Michelle Montekio, Esq., signed the complaint on the association's behalf.
The lawsuit names Susann F. Ferreira, listed as the unit owner, along with Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for NovaStar Mortgage Funding Trust, Series 2007-1; LVNV Funding, LLC; and unknown persons in possession of the subject property. The complaint states that the lender and the judgment creditor are named because they may claim an interest in the property by virtue of recorded mortgages or a default final judgment, according to court records.
The property at issue is identified in the filing as a Condominium Parcel in Building 906, Boca Terrace Condominium, Phase II, located at 906 Southwest 9th Street Circle, in Boca Raton. Boca Terrace is a 226-unit condominium community off Southwest 9th Street Circle in the 33486 ZIP code, near Sugar Sand Park.
The complaint alleges that the owner failed to make assessment payments owed to the association under the recorded Declaration of Condominium and Section 718.116 of the Florida Statutes. According to the complaint, the association recorded a Claim of Lien in March 2026 in the Palm Beach County Official Records at Book 36361, Page 1550.
That recorded Claim of Lien, attached to the complaint as an exhibit, states the association was asserting a total of $8,412.38 as of March 2026. The lien itemizes $7,422.34 in past due assessments, penalties or costs covering July 2024 through March 4, 2026; $945 in attorney's fees; $23.84 in postage; and $21.20 in recording costs. The lien also references continuing regular monthly assessments of $495 in 2025 and $524 in 2026, plus a $107.81 monthly special assessment.
The complaint includes two counts. Count I seeks lien foreclosure and a judicial sale of the unit. Count II is a separate claim for personal liability, citing a provision of the Declaration that the lawsuit alleges makes the unit owner personally responsible for assessments due to the association.
In plain terms, a lien foreclosure case is how a Florida condominium association can ask a court to force the sale of a unit to satisfy unpaid dues. The complaint asks the court to enter a judgment foreclosing the association's lien, order the property sold, and bar competing claims. If the sale proceeds are not enough to cover the association's claim, the complaint asks for a deficiency judgment. Under Count II, the association seeks a money judgment against the unit owner for unpaid assessments, costs, attorney's fees, and prejudgment interest.
The filing reviewed by Boca Post does not include a response from any of the defendants. The allegations have not been proven in court.
The case is newly filed and remains in its initial stages on the Palm Beach County Circuit Court docket. No hearings, answers, or rulings are listed in the complaint reviewed by Boca Post.
Learn more about foreclosure filings, including mortgage and association-related cases. Boca Post monitors civil filings submitted in Palm Beach County courts as part of its legal desk reporting. Readers can browse recent cases in our Boca Raton lawsuits coverage.



