Court Opinion

ID: 9403608
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-21 15:06:27.112522+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:08.331703
License: Public Domain

Third District Court of Appeal
                               State of Florida

                         Opinion filed June 21, 2023.
       Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

                            ________________

                              No. 3D23-315
                       Lower Tribunal No. 20-149-M
                          ________________

                             James T. Nadell,
                                Petitioner,

                                     vs.

                           Apachula B. Hursey,
                              Respondent.

     A Case of Original Jurisdiction—Prohibition.

     Ronald I. Strauss, Esq., P.A., and Ronald I. Strauss, for petitioner.

     Philip D. Parrish, P.A., and Philip D. Parrish, for respondent.

Before EMAS, SCALES and BOKOR, JJ.

     SCALES, J.

     Petitioner James T. Nadell, the defendant below, seeks a writ of

prohibition to quash the trial court’s January 27, 2023 interlocutory order
denying Nadell’s motion to dismiss the civil battery complaint filed by the

plaintiff below, respondent Apachula Hursey. Claiming that he is entitled to

statutory immunity from this civil action under Florida’s Stand Your Ground

Law (“SYG”),1 Nadell argues that the trial court’s factual findings contained

in the challenged order, entered after an evidentiary hearing on Nadell’s SYG

motion, are not supported by competent, substantial evidence. While we

read existing precedent as allowing us to reach the merits of Nadell’s

petition, we do so with reluctance because we question whether prohibition

is an available remedy to a civil defendant who seeks to challenge a nonfinal

order denying SYG immunity. Thus, we certify this threshold procedural

question to the Florida Supreme Court as one of great public importance and

refer the issue to the Florida Bar’s Appellate Rules Committee. On the

merits, we deny Nadell’s petition because competent, substantial evidence

supports the trial court’s determination that Nadell is not entitled to SYG

immunity.

    I.   RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1
  Section 776.032(1) of the Florida Statutes (2018) provides, in relevant part,
that “[a] person who uses or threatens to use force as permitted in s.
776.012, s. 776.013, or s. 776.031 is justified in such conduct and is immune
from . . . civil action for the use or threatened use of such force by the person
. . . against whom the force was used or threatened, unless the person
against whom force was used or threatened is a law enforcement officer[.]”

                                       2
      Hursey’s amended complaint against Nadell seeks damages for

injuries Hursey sustained as a result of an alleged battery committed by

Nadell on October 16, 2018, on Nadell’s boat in Key West, Florida. In his

responsive pleading, Nadell alleges, as an affirmative defense, that he is

immune from civil liability under SYG. On April 14, 2022, Nadell filed his

Motion for Order Granting Statutory Civil Immunity Pursuant to F.S. 776.032

(“SYG Motion”) in which Nadell seeks dismissal of Hursey’s amended

complaint. Nadell’s SYG Motion asserts that Hursey attacked Nadell, and

that Nadell used “only necessary force to separate [Hursey] from [Nadell].”

Following a December 20, 2022 evidentiary hearing thereon, the trial court

entered the January 27, 2023 challenged order denying Nadell’s SYG

Motion. The challenged order concludes that Nadell failed to meet his burden

of establishing, by a preponderance of evidence, that he is entitled to

statutory civil immunity.

      Nadell then filed the instant prohibition petition in this Court. Nadell’s

principal argument here is that the trial court’s order is not supported by

competent, substantial evidence. We ordered the parties to submit

supplemental briefing on whether, in light of the Florida Supreme Court’s

recent decision in Mintz Truppman, P.A. v. Cozen O’Connor, PLC, 346 So.

                                       3
3d 577 (Fla. 2022), 2 prohibition is an available remedy to challenge a trial

court’s nonfinal order in a civil case denying SYG immunity. After receiving

the parties’ supplemental briefing, we deferred weighing in on this threshold

procedural question until the parties fully briefed the merits of the instant

petition.

    II.     ANALYSIS

    A. Whether Prohibition Lies and the Certified Question of Great Public
       Importance

          At the outset, we are faced with a difficult, procedural question:

whether the remedy of prohibition lies to review an interlocutory order in a

civil case denying, after an evidentiary hearing, a statutory immunity claim

brought under SYG. 3 The challenged order is not contained in Florida Rule

2
  In Mintz Truppman, the Florida Supreme Court quashed an opinion from
this Court granting a prohibition petition to a civil defendant being sued in the
Miami-Dade County circuit court for a claim that already had received a final
adjudication in federal court. The Mintz Truppman court held that the remedy
of prohibition is not available to a civil defendant wishing to challenge a trial
court order denying the defendant’s motion to dismiss based on collateral
estoppel. 345 So. 3d at 581.
3
  In his supplemental briefs, Nadell requests that, should we determine
prohibition does not lie as a remedy, we treat his prohibition petition as a
certiorari petition. Indeed, if Nadell’s petition challenged some procedural
aspect of the trial court’s disposition of his SYG Motion, then certiorari might
be an appropriate remedy. See Edwards v. State, 351 So. 3d 1142, 1146-47
(Fla. 1st DCA 2022); Corbett v. State, 348 So. 3d 645, 647-48 (Fla. 5th DCA
2022); see also Penalver v. State, 338 So. 3d 990, 990 (Fla. 3d DCA 2022)
(granting certiorari and quashing an order denying the petitioner’s SYG

                                       4
of Appellate Procedure 9.130’s schedule of appealable nonfinal orders. As

mentioned above, our Supreme Court has recently reinforced the very

limited circumstances in which the remedy of prohibition is available:

            Prohibition is an extraordinary writ, extremely narrow in
      scope, by which a superior court may prevent an inferior court
      from exceeding its jurisdiction. English v. McCrary, 348 So. 2d
      293, 296 (Fla. 1977).

            We have consistently said that the purpose of the writ is to
      prevent a court’s action beyond the scope of its jurisdiction, not
      to correct an erroneous exercise of jurisdiction. See McCrary,
      348 So. 2d at 296-97 (“It is preventive and not corrective in that
      it commands the one to whom it is directed not to do the thing
      which the supervisory court is informed the lower tribunal is about
      to do. Its purpose is to prevent the doing of something, not to
      compel the undoing of something already done.”).

            . . . [W]ere we to permit litigants to seek prohibition in every
      case in which a trial judge denies a motion to dismiss based on
      collateral estoppel, res judicata, or any other affirmative defense,
      the writ could be used to end-run our rules on appeals generally
      and interlocutory appeals in particular. . . .

             In the cases where we have found a writ of prohibition to
      be an appropriate remedy, it has not been deployed to reverse a
      trial court’s order on the merits of a case on the basis of an
      affirmative defense. We have found it properly issued where a

motion in a criminal case because the trial court erred in determining that the
petitioner’s SYG motion must be sworn and rely on record evidence);
Casanova v. State, 335 So. 3d 1231, 1232 (Fla. 3d DCA 2021) (same).
Because Nadell’s petition, though, raises no procedural issue regarding how
the trial court conducted the evidentiary hearing on his SYG Motion, and
contests only the trial court’s merits determination in the challenged order,
we decline Nadell’s invitation to treat the instant petition as a certiorari
petition.

                                        5
      court has proposed to act in excess of its subject matter
      jurisdiction.

Mintz Truppman, 346 So. 3d at 580-81 (citations omitted) (footnote omitted).

      We are not alone in struggling with the issue. See, e.g., Snow v. State,

352 So. 3d 529, 532-534 (Fla. 1st DCA 2022) (questioning the availability of

the prohibition remedy in the SYG immunity setting, especially with regard to

the fact that, unlike other interlocutory remedies, there is no time limit for

filing a prohibition petition); Edwards, 351 So. 3d at 1146, n.2 (noting that

nonfinal orders denying SYG immunity were not added when the Florida

Supreme Court expanded rule 9.130’s list of appealable nonfinal orders to

include nonfinal orders denying certain types of immunity claims, and

questioning    the   appropriateness       of   prohibition   as   a   remedy).

Notwithstanding the limitations on the remedy of prohibition, our sister courts

have recognized prohibition as the appropriate remedy for challenging the

trial court’s denial of a defendant’s assertion of SYG immunity:

      If the defendant asserts that on the merits he or she is entitled to
      immunity, is challenging the legal determinations and factual
      findings of immunity or lack of immunity, and the relief to be
      afforded is prohibition against further prosecution, then a petition
      for writ of prohibition is appropriate to review the claim.

Corbett, 348 So. 3d at 648; Edwards, 351 So. 3d at 1146 (“When raising a

substantive challenge to a trial court’s ruling on a self-defense immunity

claim, a defendant may seek relief by petitioning for a writ of prohibition.”).

                                       6
      Moreover, as recently as 2021, the Florida Supreme Court seems to

have suggested that prohibition will lie as a remedy:

       [A] defendant who avails him or herself to a pretrial immunity
       hearing and who believes legal error was committed at the
       pretrial immunity hearing may still seek relief by filing a petition
       for a writ of prohibition before invoking his or her right to a trial.

Boston v. State, 326 So. 3d 673, 677 (Fla. 2021) (footnote omitted)

(determining that a criminal defendant, whose pretrial SYG immunity hearing

was conducted using an incorrect burden of proof and who was later

convicted in a jury trial, was not entitled to have his conviction vacated

because the jury – employing a burden of proof more favorable to the

defendant – rejected the defendant’s self-defense claim).

      Although we find it difficult in this case to reconcile the availability of

prohibition as a remedy with the dictates of Mintz Truppman, existing

precedent compels us to adjudicate the merits of Nadell’s prohibition

petition. 4 Nevertheless, given (i) the lack of precedent in civil cases on this

issue, (ii) the Florida Supreme Court’s pronouncements in Mintz Truppman

4
  We note that all of the SYG immunity cases cited herein are criminal cases.
In Professional Roofing & Sales, Inc. v. Flemmings, 138 So. 3d 524 (Fla. 3d
DCA 2014), though, this Court treated the civil defendants’ petition for review
of an order summarily denying their motion to dismiss a civil action under
SYG as a petition for writ of prohibition. In reaching its decision, the
Flemmings court concluded that the appropriate procedure for determining
a civil immunity claim under section 776.032 is the same as that employed
by the courts in the criminal context. Id. at 530.

                                        7
regarding the limited availability of the prohibition remedy, (iii) both our and

our sister court’s questioning the availability of the prohibition remedy, and

(iv) the likelihood that this issue will recur, we certify to the Florida Supreme

Court the following question as one of great public importance:

      Is prohibition the appropriate remedy for a civil defendant to
      challenge a nonfinal order denying the defendant’s motion for
      statutory immunity under Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law?

We also refer to the Florida Bar’s Appellate Rules Committee the issue of

whether rule 9.130’s list of appealable nonfinal orders should be amended

to include appeals from nonfinal orders denying a civil defendant’s motion

for statutory immunity under SYG.

   B. The Merits of Nadell’s Prohibition Petition

      This Court applies a mixed standard of review to the trial court’s order

denying Nadell’s SYG Motion. To wit, we review the trial court’s factual

findings for competent, substantial evidence, and we review de novo the trial

court’s legal determination with respect to those factual findings. See State

v. Quevedo, 357 So. 3d 1249, 1252 (Fla. 3d DCA 2023). Importantly, Nadell

bore the burden below of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that

he is entitled to civil immunity under SYG. See Kumar v. Patel, 227 So. 3d

557, 559 (Fla. 2017).

                                       8
     At the evidentiary hearing on Nadell’s SYG Motion, the trial court heard

testimony from Nadell, Hursey, and two eyewitnesses who were on Nadell’s

boat the night of the altercation. Nadell and the two eyewitnesses testified

that Hursey was the aggressor and that Nadell acted only in self-defense.

Whereas, Hursey testified that Nadell was the aggressor:

     [NADELL’S ATTORNEY]: Okay. Tell me how this altercation
     occurred.

     [HURSEY]: Well, it all started with me getting on the telephone. .
     . . And I was sitting next to [Nadell] and [Nadell] was listening to
     the conversation and he said let – what is this all about? And I
     said I was trying to get them a date and he – I was blindsided
     and he took my arm and tried to take my phone away while
     yelling into the phone stay away from her, she’s F’ing mine. And
     he wouldn’t let go of my phone and my arm was being twisted.
     And from there, I remember my hair being pulled.

In the challenged order, the trial court determined that, based on the

evidence presented below, it “[could not] reach the conclusion that either

Hursey or Nadell became the ‘aggressor’ that evening” and, therefore, Nadell

had failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, “that Nadell was

defending himself from being battered by Hursey.”

      Nadell’s petition argues that because Nadell and the two

eyewitnesses testified that Hursey had instigated the physical encounter

between Nadell and Hursey, the trial court was required to find, as a factual

matter, that Hursey was the aggressor and that Nadell is therefore immune

                                      9
from Hursey’s lawsuit. Nadell’s argument, though, misapprehends this

Court’s review of a trial court’s factual findings.

      In conducting our competent, substantial evidence review, “[t]he trial

court’s factual findings are presumed correct” and this Court “must interpret

the evidence and reasonable inferences and deductions derived therefrom

in a manner most favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling.” Spires v.

State, 180 So. 3d 1175, 1177 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015) (quoting Viera v. State,

163 So. 3d 602, 604 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015)). We do not reweigh the evidence.

See Snow, 352 So. 3d at 536. Nor does it matter that Nadell’s version of

events is supported by evidence that conflicts with Hursey’s version of

events. Id. at 538. “It only matters that the version the trial court believed is

supported by competent, substantial evidence.” Id. Thus, while the bulk of

the testimonial evidence presented at the hearing may support Nadell’s claim

that Nadell was merely defending himself against Hursey’s attack, Hursey’s

testimony to the contrary constitutes competent, substantial evidence that

supports the trial court’s legal determination that Nadell is not entitled to SYG

immunity. Id. 5

5
  We note, as did the trial court, that (i) neither of the eyewitnesses testified
that they had seen Hursey strike Nadell, and (ii) both eyewitnesses candidly
admitted that, on the night of the altercation, they told the police that they
had not seen any part of the altercation between Nadell and Hursey. Also,
over Nadell’s objection, the trial court received evidence that Hursey’s

                                       10
      Ultimately, the trial court weighed the evidence and determined that

Nadell had not met his burden of proof. Based on our standard of review, we

find no error that would warrant granting Nadell’s petition, and therefore we

deny the petition.

      Petition denied; question certified; issue referred to Florida Bar’s

Appellate Rules Committee.

testimony was consistent with the version of events Hursey relayed to police
the night of the incident.

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