Gregg v. Gray

Decision Date28 May 1965
Docket NumberNo. 5167,5167
Citation176 So.2d 520
PartiesJames GREGG, d/b/a Square G. Construction Company, Appellant, v. George GRAY, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Appeal from Circuit Court, Orange County; Parker Lee McDonald, Judge.

Walter Warren, Leesburg, for appellant.

David C. Clark, Jr., Orlando, and Lester S. Kafer, Winter Park, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

Affirmed.

See F. E. C. Railway v. Lewis, Fla.App.1964, 167 So.2d 104.

SMITH, C. J., and ANDREWS, J., concur.

BARNS, PAUL D., Associate Judge, concurs specially.

BARNS, PAUL D., Associate Judge (concurring specially).

In the prior action at trial in March 1963, the plaintiff timely moved for a nonsuit as shown by the record as follows:

'Counsel for the plaintiff moved the court to allow the plaintiff to take a nonsuit because of the absence of key witnesses. After argument of counsel the Court granted the motion.'

The judge in that case, on September 13, 1963, after recitals of the nonsuit allowed, stated in an order in the previous case that 'It was thereupon ordered, adjudged and decreed that this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed without prejudice.'

Appellant's grounds for reversal are that (1) under the present Rules of Civil Procedure nonsuits are no longer permissible, and (2) that the order of dismissal 'without prejudice' of the first suit was a nullity for the want of jurisdiction. This calls on us to examine the law of nonsuits and an examination of Rule 1.35, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, 30 F.S.A.

Nonsuits. Before the entry of the final judgment of dismissal 'without prejudice' in the first action, the allowance of the nonsuit was only a ruling at trial and the action was still pending until the order of dismissal was entered. Peaslee v. Michalski, Fla.App.1964, 167 So.2d 242. As stated in 1 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.), p. 40, 'But as indicated in the preceding section, to be final for purposes of appeal a nonsuit or dismissal must ordinarily be embodied in a judgment rather than a mere preliminary order or direction.'

Nonsuits are classified as voluntary and involuntary. As stated in Peaslee v. Michalski, supra, 'A voluntary nonsuit is one ordered against a party-plaintiff who has affirmatively sought it; and an involuntary nonsuit is one which is dordered against a defaulting party-plaintiff who has not affirmatively sought it.'

Under the classical common practice and procedure, a judgment of dismissal against a plaintiff was not used. In entering judgments against a plaintiff, it was then the practice to preliminarily recite the basis for the judgment and then adjudge that plaintiff 'take nothing by his writ' and that the defendant 'go hence without day.' 2 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.) p. 1580, states:

"At common law there is no form of an entry in the books of a judgment dismissing an action. Every judgment against a plaintiff is either upon a retraxit, non prosequitur, nonsuit, nolle prosequi, discontinuance, or a judgment of an issue found by jury in favor of defendant, or upon demurrer. The inducements or preliminary recitals in these several kinds of judgment are variant, but the conclusion in each is always the same; it is as follows: "Therefore it is considered by the court that plaintiff take nothing by his writ, and that the defendant go without day, and recover of plaintiff his costs." Of these several judgments, none but a retraxit or one on the merits will bar subsequent actions.' The mere form of the judgment is therefore not always determinative of whether it is one of dismissal or is on the merits even though it purports to be the latter. * * *'

Appeal after voluntary nonsuit. Generally, after the plaintiff has sought and obtained a voluntary nonsuit, it will be treated as a waiver of all previous errors. 1 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.) p. 41, states:

'* * * But a voluntary nonsuit or dismissal by a plaintiff, being a waiver of all previous errors, cannot form the basis of an appeal by him, unless perhaps, his action is practically forced and may for that reason be regarded as involuntary.'

In Anderson v. Presbyterian Church of Gainesville, 13 Fla. 592, the Supreme Court likewise ruled, in dismissing a writ of error for the want of a final judgment in the record based on a nonsuit, that an appellant 'cannot avail himself of his bill of exceptions or of other errors in the record to reverse the judgment of nonsuit, which was the necessary consequence of his own acts, 18 Wend. 172.' In Van Wormer v. Mayor, etc., of City of Albany, 18 Wend. 169, 172, the court held that the court in which the cause is pending may grant a new trial after the plaintiff submits to a voluntary nonsuit, but the appellate court would not reverse the judgment which had been produced by the voluntary act of the plaintiff. For new trial granted after nonsuit, see Seaboard Oil Co. v. Chalk, 118 Fla. 383, 159 So. 531, 161 So. 841.

To remedy the supposed evil of the foregoing holding so as to permit review cases wherein final judgments had been induced by voluntary nonsuits after adverse rulings at trial, which adverse rulings had provoked the voluntary nonsuit, the Legislature thereafter, in 1885, enacted Chapter 3583, now carried forward in Section 59.05, F.S.A., providing that:

'When, because of any decision or ruling of the court on the trial of a cause, it becomes necessary for the plaintiff to suffer a nonsuit, he may appeal therefrom, and the facts, points, rulings, and decisions may be preserved for review, by the appellate court, as in other cases.'

The purpose of the act was not to permit an appeal from a ruling at trial permitting a nonsuit, but the object, purpose and intent of the statute was to overcome the decisional law of review that a voluntary nonsuit was a waiver of all previous errors. A clause of the statute states 'he may appeal therefrom,' but this language means that the plaintiff, after having been coerced to take or suffer a nonsuit, has a right to have the rulings coercing a voluntary nonsuit reviewed in event of an appropriate appeal or judicial review, and that being so, a nonsuit would not be a waiver of antecedent errors inducing the nonsuit. The words of the clause of the statute 'he may appeal therefrom' are not to be taken to mean that an appeal would lie from a ruling at trial, according to their wooden literalness. 'There is no more likely way to misapprehend the meaning of language--be it in a constitution, a statute, a will or a contract--than to read the words literally, forgetting the object which the document as a whole is meant to secure.' Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co. v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, 159 F.2d 167, 169 (2d Cir.) (L. Hand, J.), cert. denied 331 U.S. 836, 67 S.Ct. 1518, 91 L.Ed. 1848 (1947). Cf. United States v. Fisher, 2 Cranch 358, 386, 6 U.S. 358, 386, 2 L.Ed. 304, 313 (1804).

Are nonsuits allowable since the 1962 revision of Rule 1.35, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure? The Florida Rules of Civil Procedure are not all comprehensive and...

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