Tarantola v. Henghold, CASE NO. 1D17–2367

Decision Date21 December 2017
Docket NumberCASE NO. 1D17–2367
Citation233 So.3d 508
Parties Cristina TARANTOLA, M.D., Petitioner, v. William B. HENGHOLD, M.D., P.A., Respondent.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Todd M. LaDouceur and Chris K. Ritchie of Galloway, Johnson, Tompkins, Burr & Smith, P.L.C., Pensacola, for Petitioner.

Daniel E. Harrell and Robert J. Powell of Clark Partington, Pensacola, for Respondent.

OSTERHAUS, J.

Dr. Cristina Tarantola seeks certiorari review of an order holding her in civil contempt for violating the terms of a preliminary injunction related to an employment, non-compete agreement entered into by the parties. We grant the petition and quash the order below.

I.

In 2012, Dr. Tarantola signed an employment agreement with Dr. Henghold that contained a covenant not to compete. Among other things, the covenant prohibited Dr. Tarantola, after leaving employment, from "[d]irectly or indirectly rendering medical services that include performing Mohs surgery in any capacity for [her] own account or for others" within a forty-mile radius of Dr. Henghold's office and from "[p]articipating in any advertising or marketing activity within the restricted area for the purpose of soliciting patients to obtain medical services that include or may include Mohs surgery."

When Dr. Tarantola's employment ended, Dr. Henghold sought to enforce the non-compete covenant in the trial court. He obtained a preliminary injunction enjoining Dr. Tarantola from practicing dermatological medicine within a forty-mile radius of the Henghold Practice. Dr. Tarantola appealed the injunction and this court reversed, finding the preliminary injunction to be overly broad. Tarantola v. Henghold , 214 So.3d 726, 726 (Fla. 1st DCA 2017). We directed specifically that the injunction should be narrowed because the covenant did not prohibit Dr. Tarantola from practicing general dermatology unrelated to Mohs surgery. Id. at 727.

After the opinion issued, Dr. Tarantola put up a billboard advertising her practice and activated a website for her business. Dr. Henghold believed that these actions violated the preliminary injunction's advertising ban and he moved for civil contempt sanctions. The trial court held a hearing and agreed with Dr. Henghold. It found a violation of the preliminary injunction and held Dr. Tarantola in civil contempt for advertising herself "as a doctor who could provide Mohs surgery related services" within the restricted area. The order threatened a $1,640 per day fine unless Dr. Tarantola complied with the following alternative conditions:

a. Take down and deactivate the current Tarantola Dermatology website.
b. Remove the current Tarantola Dermatology billboard that is located in either Pensacola or Escambia County, Florida.c. Place at her reception desk in both her Pensacola and Gulf Breeze offices the following notice in at least 20 point Times New Roman or Arial type: "Dr. Tarantola is currently prohibited from performing Mohs surgery and any preoperative or postoperative medical services associated with Mohs surgery in this office pursuant to the injunction entered in Case No: 15–1805 CA in and for Escambia County, Florida."
d. Do not notify patients in her Pensacola and Gulf Breeze offices that she can perform Mohs surgery related services in Alabama.

Dr. Tarantola complied with the conditions and avoided the fine. But then she filed a petition challenging the trial court's civil contempt order.

II.

A civil contempt order entered in an ongoing proceeding is subject to certiorari review. Sears v. Sears , 617 So.2d 807, 809 n.1 (Fla. 1st DCA 1993). To be entitled to certiorari review, the petitioner must show that the contested order departs from the essential requirements of the law and that it results in material injury for the remainder of the case that cannot be corrected on postjudgment appeal. Bd. of Trs. of the Internal Improvement Tr. Fund v. Am. Educ. Enters., LLC , 99 So.3d 450, 454 (Fla. 2012). The material injury element is jurisdictional and satisfied in this case because the order imposes conditions upon Dr. Tarantola's doctor-patient relationships, restricting her from informing her patients about available cancer-related treatment and provider options. See Baptist Health v. Murphy , 365 Ark. 115, 226 S.W.3d 800, 813 (2006) (finding irreparable harm based upon the disruption of doctor-patient relationships). These aren't injuries that can be made whole by monetary damages or otherwise corrected on appeal. See Laycock v. TMS Logistics, Inc. , 209 So.3d 627, 629 (Fla. 1st DCA 2017) (detailing the material harm showing required to invoke certiorari jurisdiction).*

The contempt order departed from the essential requirements of law because it sanctioned Dr. Tarantola in the absence of violations of clear and definite provisions of the preliminary injunction. We recognize, as a threshold matter, that courts have long possessed authority to enforce judgments by the exercise of their contempt powers. Johnson v. Bednar , 573 So.2d 822, 824 (Fla. 1991). But exercising contempt powers based on a party's noncompliance with a court order can only occur where a directive "clearly establish[es] for the record the standards of conduct required by the court." Carnival Corp. v. Beverly , 744 So.2d 489, 496–97 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999). An order that does not sufficiently identify the alleged prohibited conduct cannot support a conclusion that a party has intentionally disobeyed it. "[A] judge cannot base contempt upon noncompliance with something an order does not say." DeMello v. Buckman , 914 So.2d 1090, 1093 (Fla. 4th DCA 2005) (quoting Keitel v. Keitel , 716 So.2d 842, 845 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998) ).

The problem here arises because Dr. Tarantola did not violate clear and definite terms of the preliminary injunction's prohibition on advertising. First, the court found that Dr. Tarantola violated the injunction on the basis of a billboard that advertised Tarantola Dermatology Inc. as "The Skin Specialists." The trial court's order equated the words "The Skin Specialists" with advertising specific to Mohs surgery because they "could leave the impression ... that she can provide Mohs surgery services at her [Florida] offices." However, the record indicates that ...

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    ...appeal from a civil contempt order for failing to abide by a temporary injunction as a petition for certiorari); Tarantola v. Henghold , 233 So. 3d 508, 510 (Fla. 1st DCA 2017) ("A civil contempt order entered in an ongoing proceeding is subject to certiorari review."); Menke v. Wendell , 1......
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