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State v. Smith

Supreme Court of Florida
May 31, 1965
177 So. 2d 340 (Fla. 1965)

Opinion

No. 33873.

April 21, 1965. Rehearing Denied May 31, 1965.

Morgan, Carratt O'Connor, Fort Lauderdale, for relators.

Knight, Underwood, Peters Hoeveler, Miami, for respondents.


This case is here upon the suggestion of Russel Reichard and Marjorie Reichard for writ of prohibition against the honorable judges of the District Court of Appeal of the Second District.

The litigation originated in the Circuit Court of Broward County when Russel Reichard and Marjorie Reichard, his wife, instituted an action against Paul Dye each claiming damages for assault and battery. The complaint contained two counts, one for injury to the husband, the other for injury to the wife. There was one trial but two verdicts were returned, one in favor of each plaintiff, and two judgments were entered. No derivative claim was involved. The defendant then filed a single notice of appeal from both judgments whereupon the successful plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss.

The District Court of Appeal denied the motion, see opinion recorded in Dye v. Reichard, 169 So.2d 39, but did so conditionally. The court stated first that one notice of appeal is not sufficient to obtain review of these two judgments and then gave the appellant thirty days to amend his notice of appeal so that it is addressed to only one of the judgments. Failure to amend would result in dismissal.

We do not agree with the decision of the District Court of Appeal. This Court in Seaboard Air Line Railroad Co. v. Holt, 1955, 80 So.2d 354, said:

"We hold that if the notice of appeal gives to an adverse party and to the appellate court information by the use of which the order or judgment intended to be appealed can be discovered in the record with a reasonable degree of certainty, its purpose is accomplished and it should be held sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss predicated upon failure strictly to comply with the prescribed form."

The Court then looked at the record, in Seaboard, and finding only one appealable order, the final judgment, concluded that a notice directed to "the final judgment entered in this action in favor of Henry M. Holt" was sufficient even though it did not give the date and book and page number.

In the case at bar the notice was directed to two "final judgments" but an inspection of the record makes clear that the trial court had granted a new trial as to one of the judgments (the one in favor of Marjorie Reichard) unless within ten days thereafter plaintiff should file a remittitur in the sum of $4000. This, the record shows, was not done — thereby rendering this judgment nugatory.

See Means v. Douglas, Fla.App. 1st Dist. 1959, 110 So.2d 88.

Clearly these facts bring the notice filed within the doctrine of Seaboard and within the rule of construction that statutes giving a right of appeal should be liberally construed in the interest of manifest justice.

State ex rel. Dedmon v. Carroll, 1963, Fla., 151 So.2d 5; Rabinovitz v. Houk, 1930, 100 Fla. 44, 129 So. 501; Seaboard Air Line Railroad Co. v. Holt, supra.

Where a notice of appeal specifies two judgments, one appealable, and one not, it has been held by the Third District that this does not affect the validity of the notice: The specification of the non-appealable order is held to be surplusage and is disregarded. Under a liberal construction of the appeal statutes, this would seem to be the only tenable result.

Preston v. Grant Advertising, Inc. (Fla. App. 3rd District 1964) 166 So.2d 219.

Even if the two judgments specified in the notice of appeal were both appealable orders as the District Court assumed, the court would have jurisdiction under the notice filed. The three cases relied on by the District Court for its holding that one notice could not bring up the two judgments are clearly distinguishable on their facts. Orange Belt Packing Co. v. International Agricultural Corp., 1933, 112 Fla. 99, 150 So. 264, concerned judgments entered in two separate proceedings, suit on a note and supplementary proceeding after execution as to one of the endorsers. Vander Car v. Pitts (Fla.App. 2nd District 1964) 166 So.2d 837, involved separate cases instituted by two plaintiffs against the same defendant and consolidated for trial. Two judgments were entered for the defendant. An appeal notice was filed, captioned for the two cases, but only the judgment in one case was recited. Borland v. South Patrick Utility Corp. (Fla.App. 2nd District 1960) 122 So.2d 44, involved the filing of two complaints and their subsequent consolidation for convenience in trial. The court approved this rule stated in 4A C.J.S. Appeal and Error § 593(5):

"`* * * [a]nd but one notice is necessary where several suits have been consolidated, although several judgments were entered under separate titles, unless the consolidation was merely for the purpose of trial and the actions remain separate and distinct.' (Emphasis added.)"

and then held that its case came under the exception.

In this case the plaintiffs filed only one complaint with two counts. There was no consolidation for any purpose since none was necessary. Under these facts, the doctrine of Drummond Blow Title Corp. v. Blatnick (Fla.App. 3rd District 1963) 157 So.2d 711, should be applied. The court there denied the applicability of Orange Belt Packing Co. and Borland, supra, saying:

"Those authorities are not applicable and controlling here. In this instance only one case was involved and the two judgments were entered in the same case. * * * Assuming, without so deciding, that both were appealable, it was proper to include the two judgments in a single notice of appeal since they were entered in the one case in the trial court."

North American Co. v. Landahl (Fla.App. 2d District, 1958) 107 So.2d 749, reached the same result. The court stated:

"The view taken in First National Bank of Union v. White Pine Lumber Co., 1919, 94 Or. 318, 181 P. 990, 186 P. 41, seems both reasonable and applicable to the instant case. It was therein held:

"`We are of the opinion that the motion to dismiss in the Wright case is not well taken. There seems to have been a virtual, if not formal, consolidation of the cases for trial.

"`(1) It is very plain from the notice, that Wright intends to appeal and does appeal from both decrees, and indeed each decree is separately and fully described. It is impossible that the adverse party should have been in any way misled. * * *'

"And to demonstrate that the Florida Supreme Court has not inflexibly followed the general rule in the past, it is only necessary to cite Stewart v. Codrington, 1908, 55 Fla. 327, 45 So. 809, 813, wherein the plaintiff was allowed to bring two separate judgments in favor of several defendants up for review on a single writ of error. In that case the point was not raised until a petition for rehearing was filed, so the actual holding only had to go as far as determining that there was no jurisdictional defect in bringing the single writ. However, the following language in the opinion intimates that even if the question had been timely raised the court might not have dismissed the appeal:

"`In the instant case the two judgments disposed of the whole case of the plaintiff in his joint suit against the defendants. The effect of the two judgments was single as to him. As no direct attack was made on the writ of error, we are not disposed to regard the question presented as jurisdictional, but at most, an irregularity which has been waived.' (Emphasis added)."

An analogous Louisiana case, Vienne v. Chalona raises another point supporting the right to appeal both judgments by a single notice of appeal. Two sisters, who were driver and passenger, respectively, in a car struck by the defendant, brought a single suit for their damages. The jury brought in separate verdicts and separate judgments were entered. The plaintiffs appealed on the grounds of insufficiency of the verdicts and filed a single notice of appeal. Defendants complained that there should have been two notices. The Supreme Court upheld the notice and, on rehearing, said:

On rehearing, 1943, 203 La. 450, 14 So.2d 54. See also, in accord, Security Ins. Co. v. Couvillion (La. App. 1944) 16 So.2d 262.

"It is contended in the petition for a rehearing that each of the plaintiffs had a separate and independent cause of action. It is true that each plaintiff had a separate and independent right of action, which she might have refrained from asserting, without affecting the right of the other plaintiff to assert her right of action. We conclude therefore that our statement that there was only one cause of action is true only in the sense that only one accident gave the right of action to both of the plaintiffs. There was a difference in their causes of action in that the cause of action of one of them might have been subject to defenses not applicable to the cause of action of the other plaintiff. The importance of that, however, passed out of the case when the defendants failed to plead that there was a misjoinder — if in law there was a misjoinder — of parties plaintiff. It is sufficient to say now, for the purpose of passing upon the motion to dismiss the appeal, that there was only one lawsuit, — and that the defendants long ago waived whatever right they might have had to require two separate law suits."

The rule nisi is discharged and the District Court of Appeal, Second District, is directed to proceed with the disposition of this cause in accordance with this opinion.

It is so ordered.

ROBERTS, THORNAL, O'CONNELL and ERVIN, JJ., concur.

THOMAS, J., dissents with opinion.

CALDWELL, J., dissents and concurs in dissenting opinion of THOMAS, J.


This case is here upon the suggestion of Russel Reichard and Marjorie Reichard for writ of prohibition against the honorable judges of the District Court of Appeal of the Second District.

The litigation originated in the Circuit Court of Broward County when Russel Reichard and Marjorie Reichard, his wife, instituted an action against Paul Dye each claiming damages for assault and battery. The complaint contained two counts, one for injury to the husband, the other for injury to the wife. There was one trial but two verdicts were returned, one in favor of each plaintiff, and two judgments were entered. No derivative claim was involved. The defendant then filed a single notice of appeal from both judgments whereupon the successful plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss.

The District Court of Appeal denied the motion as will appear from an opinion recorded in Dye v. Reichard, 169 So.2d at page 39, but the court did so conditionally. The disposition of the motion to dismiss is not in the main challenged now, but upon granting it the court allowed the appellant, Dye, thirty days to amend by selecting the judgment he proposed to attack and imposed the condition that "[f]ailure to do so [would] result in both purported appeals being dismissed." (Italics supplied.)

The effect of the court's ruling in the first instance was that the notice of appeal was not so entirely invalid as to justify outright dismissal and in the second instance that it was not so bad that it could not be amended according to appellant's choice of the phase he wished to press, but that if he did not make such an election within an arbitrarily selected period, the notice would thereupon be so invalid as to require dismissal. And as I understand it the amendment was permitted after the time for appeal expired. The amendment was obviously material as is demonstrated by the action of the court in consigning the appeal to limbo in event no amendment was made.

I think the law is settled that a material change may not be made in a notice of appeal after expiration of the appeal period. Picot v. Picot, 127 Fla. 591, 173 So. 433. The notice of appeal must identify the judgment from which the appeal is taken and in the present situation definite identity of it could not have been known until the appellant exercised his choice — all after the period for appeal has expired. Brown v. Louisville Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Fla., 47 So.2d 862.

As Mr. Justice Thornal said in Counne v. Saffan, Fla., 87 So.2d 586, it is the "filing of the notice of appeal that gives this court jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties to the appeal. * * * The filing of the notice of appeal is jurisdictional and this court is without power to exercise its jurisdiction in the absence of the filing of such a notice within the time and manner prescribed by our rules." (Italics supplied.) In a later opinion, he reiterated the pronouncement. State ex rel. Diamond Berk Ins. Agency v. Carroll, Fla., 102 So.2d 129.

In State ex rel. Dedmon v. Carroll, Fla., 151 So.2d 5, Mr. Justice O'Connell wrote that "such notices [of appeal] are * * * by far the most important of all documents which are necessary in an appeal" although he recognized the liberality that had been indulged on occasion in the "`interest of manifest justice'" citing Seaboard Air. Line R.R. v. Holt, Fla., 80 So.2d 354.

But I cannot conclude that in this case counsel for the appellant can single out the judgment he belatedly prefers and thereby make any reference to the other one surplusage, as indicated by the District Court of Appeal in its opinion.

It is my view that the notice of appeal did not vest jurisdiction in the District Court of Appeal either to determine the cause or to permit amendment of the notice.

Therefore I dissent from the judgment discharging the rule nisi.

CALDWELL, J., concurs.


Summaries of

State v. Smith

Supreme Court of Florida
May 31, 1965
177 So. 2d 340 (Fla. 1965)
Case details for

State v. Smith

Case Details

Full title:STATE OF FLORIDA, EX REL. RUSSEL REICHARD AND MARJORIE REICHARD, HIS WIFE…

Court:Supreme Court of Florida

Date published: May 31, 1965

Citations

177 So. 2d 340 (Fla. 1965)

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