Mendez v. West Flagler Family Ass'n, Inc.
Decision Date | 06 November 1974 |
Docket Number | No. 44845,44845 |
Citation | 303 So.2d 1 |
Parties | Irma MENDEZ, Petitioner, v. WEST FLAGLER FAMILY ASSOCIATION, INC., a Florida corporation, doing business in Dade County, Florida, and Seaboard Life Insurance Company of America, an insurance corporation, Respondents |
Court | Florida Supreme Court |
Leo M. Alpert and Jonathan L. Alpert, Miami, for petitioner.
Daniel Neal Heller, Heller & Kaplan, Miami, for respondents.
We review by writ of certiorari the per curiam, without opinion, decision of the District Court of Appeal, Third District (1973) 287 So.2d 748.
The question presented is whether an appeal may be taken to a district court of appeal from a summary final judgment of a trial court in favor of defendants dismissing a distinct and independent claim of fraud and illegality in the issuance of a policy of hospital insurance by a hospital association and an insurance company, the defendants, which claim was plead in one count of a complaint in a civil action. Two other counts of the complaint charged breach of contract under the issued policy of hospital insurance against the hospital association and the insurance company, respectively. In other words is the appeal from an interlocutory order or a final judgment dispositive of an independent cause of action at trial level?
The record proper discloses Petitioner brought suit against West Flagler Family Association (the hospital association) and Seaboard Life Insurance Company. The complaint contained three counts: Count I charged a breach of contract under a policy of hospital insurance against the defendant Family Association; Count II charged a breach of contract against the Seaboard Life Insurance Company, the company which Had issued the policy of hospital insurance sued on. Count III charged fraud, illegality, a conspiracy to engage in fraud, and so on, on the part of both of the defendants with respect to the issuance of the policy of hospital insurance, and the third count claimed punitive (as well as compensatory) damages on the basis of an independent tort, actually a series of independent torts amounting to a hospital insurance swindle committed by both defendants acting in concert.
With respect to this third count, involving the alleged fraud and claiming punitive damages, the trial court entered 'summary final judgment' in favor of the two defendants with costs to be taxed on motion and order so that the summary judgment is a summary final judgment in and of itself. The breach of contract counts remain standing.
The summary final judgment was entered on January 24, 1973 and on January 31, 1973 a motion for rehearing under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.530 was filed by plaintiff. The motion for rehearing was originally scheduled to be heard on March 9, 1973 but due to time conflicts of counsel and court the motion for rehearing was not actually heard until June 1, 1973. Under date of June 6, 1973 an order was entered denying plaintiff's motion for rehearing. Appeal was then taken to the District Court of Appeal, Third District.
On October 18, 1973 motion to dismiss was filed by Appellee Seaboard Life Insurance Company of America (in which Family Association joined). The basis for the motion to dismiss was the contention that review may not be had of a partial summary judgment as to partial liability prior to final judgment. The basis of appellant's position contra being that where two or more severable distinct causes of action are united in the same suit a summary judgment on one of the causes of action is a final appealable judgment even though the others are still pending.
The motion to dismiss was denied by order of the District Court dated November 8, 1973:
'This cause having come on for hearing before the court upon appellee's motions to dismiss appeal and the court having considered same, it is ordered that said motions be and they are hereby denied.
Thereafter appellee Seaboard Life (again joined by Family Association) filed a second motion to dismiss contending that since the court had ordered the appeal to be treated as an interlocutory appeal, it should be dismissed because the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure do not provide for a motion for rehearing as to an interlocutory order.
On December 13, 1973 the Third District Court dismissed the appeal (which is the decision that is the subject of this petition) by order reading:
'This cause having come on for hearing upon appellees' motion to dismiss appeal and the court having considered same, it is ordered that said motion is granted and this interlocutory appeal from the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida (# 70--18316) be and the same is hereby dismissed.'
The questions presented below and here for conflict certiorari consideration are:
I. Whether or not a motion for rehearing permitted by Rule 1.530 of the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure to an order granting a summary judgment is proper when such summary judgment is a so-called 'partial' or so-called 'interlocutory' order or judgment.
II. Whether or not where there are two or more severable distinct causes of action united in the same suit, a summary judgment disposing completely of one of the causes of action but leaving the others still pending, is a 'final' appealable judgment.
We answer both questions in the affirmative.
The Wagner case involved the denial of a summary judgment in which this Court said:
'In 1962 Rule 2.8 R.C.P. (now Rule 1.530) was amended to permit petitions for rehearing directed to trial court orders or decrees Granting summary judgment.' 263 So.2d 1, 3. (Emphasis supplied.)
In DeWitt the Lake County Circuit Court entered an order for partial summary judgment in favor of defendant Seaboard Coast Line Railroad on the issue of punitive damages and ordered that the cause be tried solely on the issue of compensatory damages. The plaintiff in DeWitt timely moved for a rehearing which was denied and thereafter appealed considering his 30 days to run from the date of the rendition of the order denying the rehearing and not from the date of the summary judgment. Appellee Seaboard Railroad moved to dismiss, presenting the question '(of) whether or not a motion for rehearing tolls the time for taking an appeal from a partial summary judgment.' 268 So.2d 177, 178.
The Second District Court in DeWitt answered the question affirmatively and denied the motion to dismiss, stating:
'Appellate Rule 4.2, 32 F.S.A., provides that interlocutory appeals may be prosecuted from orders granting partial summary judgment on liability in civil actions. While there is no provision for rehearings directed to interlocutory orders, Home News Publishing Company v. U--M Publishing, Inc., Fla.App.1971, 246 So.2d 117, Rule 1.530(a), R.C.P. does not limit the right to move for rehearing to summary judgments which conclude all the issues.
'The rule making authorities may have intended that a motion for rehearing should be directed only to final summary judgments which resolve all the issues between the parties. See Weisberg v. Perl, Fla.1954, 73 So.2d 56, and Kippy Corporation v. Colburn, Fla.1965, 177 So.2d 193. In Kippy, at page 198, Justice O'Connell said:
'But neither Rule 1.510 or Rule 1.530 R.C.P. makes a distinction between such Final summary judgment and a summary judgment which concludes only a part of the issues between the parties.
'(2) We must conclude, then, that a motion for rehearing tolls the time for taking an appeal from a summary judgment, whether it resolves all or only a part of the issues between the parties.' (...
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