Court Opinion

ID: 6499608
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-13 15:03:10.596826+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:11:34.305423
License: Public Domain

Third District Court of Appeal
                               State of Florida

                          Opinion filed July 13, 2022.
       Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

                            ________________

                             No. 3D20-1524
                        Lower Tribunal No. 19-3917
                           ________________

                            Saul Sierra, etc.,
                                  Appellant,

                                     vs.

                              David Sierra,
                                  Appellee.

      An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Rosa C.
Figarola, Judge.

     Campbell Legal Group PLLC, and Debbie R. Campbell, for appellant.

      Weissman & Dervishi, P.A., and John R. Borgo and Brian S. Dervishi,
for appellee.

Before MILLER, GORDO and BOKOR, JJ.

     BOKOR, J.
      Saul Sierra appeals the trial court’s order granting David Sierra’s

motion to strike petition and denial of a motion for reconsideration of same.

The gravamen of the issue on appeal is that the trial court improvidently

excluded real property from the probate estate. Before we get to the orders

on appeal here, 1 we provide background relating to an abandoned and

dismissed prior appeal in this case.

      Prior to this appeal, Saul appealed to this court the trial court’s

December 2, 2019 order granting a motion for sanctions. In granting the

motion for sanctions, the trial court found “[t]hat the inclusion of the property

. . . was not supported by material facts necessary to establish the inclusion

of the real property in the Petition for Administration, is frivolous, has no merit

and is without any legal basis whatsoever . . . .” That December 2, 2019

order granting a motion for sanctions, and the January 23, 2020 order

denying reconsideration of same, were appealed to this court in Case No.

3D20-248. The appeal in 3D20-248 was dismissed on March 10, 2020 for

Appellant’s failure to comply with this court’s orders.

1
  Appellant’s notice of appeal seeks review of a December 2, 2019 order
granting a motion to strike reference to certain real property (excluded from
the probate estate pursuant to the order granting the motion for sanctions,
which is not on appeal here) and a October 7, 2020 order denying
reconsideration of same.

                                        2
      We take no position on the merits or jurisdictional basis for that

dismissed appeal. Specifically, we do not determine here whether such

appeal “determine[d] an estate’s interest in any property” pursuant to Florida

Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.170(b)(12). What is clear, however, is that

the instant appeal doesn’t appeal any order that determines an estate’s

interest in any property. Rather, the orders on appeal merely implement the

determination made in the order granting the motion for sanctions, which was

appealed through the prior, dismissed appeal. The instant appeal, therefore,

appears to be an impermissible attempt at a piecemeal, second bite at the

apple, seeking to litigate issues that should have been raised, if at all, in the

dismissed appeal. 2

      Accordingly, on the court’s own motion we dismiss the appeal as one

taken from a non-appealable, non-final order.

2
  Through our June 7, 2022 order, we directed Saul to show cause why this
appeal should not be dismissed as an appeal of a non-final order. Saul
responds that dismissal based on the abandonment of a prior appeal would
improperly give preclusive effect to a dismissal without prejudice. We
disagree. We emphasize that we find no preclusive effect or res judicata
based on the dismissal of the appeal in 3D20-248. We agree with Saul that
a dismissal without a mandate constituted under the circumstances present
a dismissal without prejudice. However, the fact remains that Saul declined
to prosecute that arguably timely appeal regarding the inclusion of the
property at issue in the estate. This appeal, therefore, constitutes an
impermissible attempt to appeal a later, non-appealable, non-final order in
lieu of the arguably proper and timely appeal in 3D20-248.

                                       3
Dismissed.

             4