Court Opinion

ID: 3133958
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-21 23:04:10.262008+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:53:57.195971
License: Public Domain

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
                                          FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA

NEW HAMPSHIRE INDEMNITY                   NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
COMPANY,                                  FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
                                          DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
      Appellant,
                                          CASE NO. 1D14-3348
v.

JOHN GRAY, DAMIL BELIZAIRE
& DALINE BELIZAIRE, jointly &
severally,

     Appellees.
_____________________________/

Opinion filed October 8, 2015.

An appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County.
W. Gregg McCaulie, Judge.

Shelley H. Leinicke of Wicker, Smith, O'Hara, McCoy & Ford, P.A.,
Ft. Lauderdale; Michael C. Clarke of Kubicki Draper, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant.

Brandon G. Cathey and Stephanie M. Miles of Swope, Rodante P.A., Tampa, for
Appellee John Gray.

THOMAS, J.

      Appellant, New Hampshire Indemnity Company (NHIC), appeals a final

judgment for costs imposed jointly and severally with its insured, Damil Belizaire.

NHIC raises both procedural and substantive arguments against being joined in this

judgment, contending: 1) NHIC was improperly joined because Appellee failed to
comply with the statutory service provision found within section 627.4136(4),

Florida Statutes; 2) the court failed to “articulate any basis” for adding NHIC to the

judgment or making any findings that the policy covered Appellee’s taxable costs;

and 3) the policy does not provide such coverage, rendering the judgment

“substantively improper.” As explained below, we reject each of these arguments

and affirm.

                                Factual Background

      Mr. Belizaire was involved in a motor vehicle collision resulting in a

catastrophic injury to Appellee, John Gray, who in turn sued Belizaire for

damages. NHIC provided a defense to Belizaire under the subject insurance policy

and the matter went to trial, resulting in a jury verdict of $2.3 million in damages,

in Appellee’s favor.

      The trial court entered a final judgment against Belizaire, reserving

jurisdiction to award costs. Appellee then moved to tax costs against Belizaire,

serving the motion on his attorneys, who represented him at the cost hearing. The

trial court granted the motion in December 2013, and awarded costs of more than

$127,000. Approximately one week later, Appellee filed a motion asking the court

to enter a final judgment for the taxable costs awarded and to join NHIC in the

judgment. Appellee served the motion, not on NHIC, but on Belizaire’s NHIC-

retained attorneys. Ten days later, Appellee filed another motion to tax costs

                                          2
related to litigation that ensued after Belizaire objected to aspects of Appellee’s

prior cost motion. This, too, he served on Belizaire’s attorneys.

      In June 2014, NHIC, through independent counsel, filed a “Memorandum in

Response and Opposition” to Appellee’s motion. NHIC asserted that Appellee

failed to comply with section 627.4136(4), Florida Statutes, by not serving NHIC

with the joinder motion by certified mail. NHIC also argued that it could not be

joined as a party because it was not responsible for Appellee’s costs under the

policy’s terms.

      Appellee filed a “Supplemental Certificate of Service” dated June 26, 2014

(the same day NHIC filed its memorandum in opposition to joinder), indicating

that a copy of Appellee’s motion was furnished by email to the attorneys who filed

the opposition memorandum, and by certified mail to “AIG Insurance.”1 Appellee

filed a copy of this supplemental certificate in the trial court on September 18,

2014. The court held a hearing on the matter four days later at which counsel for

NHIC, Belizaire, and Appellee appeared. NHIC argued against joinder on the

same grounds asserted in its memorandum in opposition.

      Appellee’s counsel expressed her appreciation for NHIC’s memorandum,

because it alerted her to the procedural defect and allowed her time to rectify it,

which she asserted was achieved by filing a copy of the motion and a supplemental

1
  AIG is the company listed on the cover page of the policy at issue and is
apparently NHIC’s parent company.
                                    3
certificate of service via certified mail before the hearing.   NHIC’s counsel

indicated that he had not received either document and asserted that it was

insufficient to serve a motion on a Thursday before a Monday hearing. Appellee

responded that the statute does not provide when a joinder motion must be served,

only how, and that the carrier was represented by counsel and had been for the

entirety of the litigation.   The court took the matter under advisement and

ultimately entered the judgment on appeal that adjudicated NHIC jointly and

severally liable for costs in excess of $135,000.

                                   Legal Analysis

                         I. NHIC’s Procedural Challenges

      NHIC asserts two procedural grounds against the trial court’s judgment:

1) NHIC was improperly joined in the judgment, because Appellee failed to

comply with the statutory service provision found within section 627.4136(4),

Florida Statutes; and 2) the court erred by failing to “articulate any basis” for

adding NHIC to the judgment and not making any finding that the policy covered

Appellee’s taxable costs.

      We address the second argument first, which we find unpreserved. NHIC

argues that the judgment is defective, because it does not contain sufficient

findings to support the court’s joinder of NHIC. Even if correct, any such defect

necessarily first appeared on the face of the judgment itself. Because NHIC did

                                          4
not file a motion for rehearing to alert the court to the alleged defect, NHIC’s

arguments in this regard are unpreserved for appellate review. See, e.g., Pensacola

Beach Pier, Inc. v. King, 66 So. 3d 321, 325-26 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011) (holding,

where “Appellants did not file a motion for rehearing asking the court to make a

finding regarding [certain] statements,” they failed to preserve the argument). See

also Williamson v. Cowan, 49 So. 3d 867 (Fla. 5th DCA 2010) (holding,

“[b]ecause Appellant never challenged the adequacy of the findings in a motion for

rehearing . . . the issue was not properly preserved for appellate review.”). We

state once again: When errors appear for the first time in a judgment, the party

harmed by the error must assert its grounds in a motion for rehearing to allow the

trial court an opportunity to rectify the error.

      Even if preserved, however, the judgment was not defective for failing to

include the findings NHIC asserts were necessary. First, there was no dispute

below that Appellee obtained a verdict against Belizaire, or that Belizaire was an

insured under the policy, something NHIC acknowledged in its reply brief.

Furthermore, both parties relied on diametrically opposed interpretations of the

same policy provision in support of their respective positions on the substantive

issue of joinder based, as discussed below, on conflicting district court opinions.

Therefore, by granting Appellee’s joinder motion, it is apparent that the court was

persuaded by the authority on which Appellee relied.

                                            5
      Turning to NHIC’s first procedural argument, section 627.4136(4) provides,

in relevant part:

      (4) At the time a judgment is entered . . . a liability insurer may be
      joined as a party defendant for the purposes of entering final judgment
      . . . by the motion of any party . . . . A copy of the motion to join the
      insurer shall be served on the insurer by certified mail. . . .

      In GEICO General Insurance Company v. Williams, 111 So. 3d 240, 246-47

(Fla. 4th DCA 2013), the court explained that a carrier is timely added as a party at

the time a final judgment for fees and costs is entered, citing Ulrich v. Eaton Vance

Distributors, Inc., 764 So. 2d 731, 733 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000), and section 627.4136,

Florida Statutes. We agree with the analysis of the Fourth District in Williams. A

judgment on the merits of a suit is not final for purposes of determining the

collateral issues of attorney’s fees and litigation costs until those issues are

resolved.

      Here, although it is undisputed that Appellee did not serve a copy of the

motion directly on NHIC at the time he first filed the motion in January 2014,

Appellee asserts that he complied with this provision by sending a supplemental

certificate in which he averred that he sent a copy of the motion via certified mail

on the same day NHIC filed its memorandum in opposition to the motion.

Appellee also argues that the statute requires the insurer to be joined by sending

the insurer a copy of the motion via certified mail at or before the time the final

judgment to which it is joined is entered, which he did. NHIC argues that
                                         6
Appellee’s last-minute amended certificate of service of the motion never reached

its attorneys before the hearing, and that there still is no evidence that the motion

was actually mailed by certified mail, because the card indicating as much is not in

the record.

      NHIC relies on ACE American Insurance Company v. HCP IIII of

Bradenton, Inc., 913 So. 2d 1280 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005), in support of its position

that failure to “timely” serve NHIC via certified mail is fatal to the judgment at

issue. This reliance is misplaced. In that case, ACE and two other carriers

tendered checks to satisfy a judgment against their insured, but the plaintiff filed a

motion asserting the amounts paid were deficient and sought an order directing

ACE pay the deficiency. Id. at 1281. The trial court entered such an order and the

appellate court reversed, holding that “[t]he trial court had no in personam

jurisdiction over ACE because it is undisputed that ACE was never served and was

never a party to the suit.” Id. Critically, the court explained: “Although, pursuant

to section 627.4136(4), Florida Statutes (2004), a liability carrier may be joined at

or before the time judgment is entered against its insured, there was no such

joinder in the present case.” Id.

      In ACE, therefore, unlike here, the plaintiff made no attempt to join the

carrier at or before the time the plaintiff asked the court for an order instructing the

carrier to pay the alleged deficiency at issue; thus, the carrier was not a party

                                           7
against whom the court could issue an order to enforce the judgment. It was for

that reason that the court lacked in personam jurisdiction.

      Here, however, Appellee did move to join NHIC, and did so before the

judgment on costs was entered.       Additionally, there is no dispute that NHIC

received a copy of Appellee’s joinder motion before the hearing, as indicated by

the fact that it retained separate counsel, who filed a memorandum in opposition to

joinder. NHIC was also represented by counsel at the hearing on that motion and

did not seek a continuance or otherwise indicate more time was needed to prepare

a defense to the legal question of whether NHIC could properly be joined under the

statute. Furthermore, the arguments made by counsel were identical to those raised

in the opposition memorandum. Under these circumstances, even if NHIC did not

receive the certified mail copy of the motion before the hearing, it did not suffer

any prejudice as a result, and the court did not abuse its discretion by not

dismissing the joinder motion and ruling on the merits.

      This leaves the substantive question of whether the insurance policy at issue

affords coverage for the taxable litigation costs included in the judgment at issue

and, thus, whether joining NHIC in the judgment was proper.

                          II. NHIC’s Coverage Challenge

      The “Supplementary Payments” section of the policy at issue provides that,

in addition to liability coverage, NHIC would “pay on behalf of an Insured funds

                                          8
toward the cost of a bail bond”; “[p]remiums on appeal bonds and bonds to release

attachments in any lawsuit we defend”; “[i]nterest accruing after a judgment is

entered in any lawsuit we defend” (with a proviso that this duty ends when the

carrier offers “to pay that part of the judgment that does not exceed our limit of

liability”); limited funds for an insured’s loss of wages or salary “because of

attendance at hearings or trials at our request”; and, finally, “Other reasonable

expenses incurred at our request.” (Emphasis in original.) Taken together, these

all fall under the category of “litigation expenses.” It is the “other reasonable

expenses” provision upon which both parties rely for their respective positions as

to whether NHIC can be added to a judgment for taxable costs awarded to a

prevailing plaintiff and taxed to NHIC’s insured defendant, with the phrase “at our

expense” being the critical language at issue. The parties’ mutual reliance on the

same provision to reach opposite outcomes is based on the conflicting opinions of

Florida Insurance Guaranty Association, Inc. v. Johnson, 654 So. 2d 239 (Fla. 4th

DCA 1995) (relied upon by Appellee), and Steele v. Kinsey, 801 So. 2d 297 (Fla.

2d DCA 2001) (relied upon by NHIC).

      In Johnson, Florida Insurance Guaranty Association, Inc. (FIGA), standing

in the place of the insolvent insurer, contested a cost award in favor of the

prevailing plaintiff as being in excess of the underlying insurance policy’s limits.

                                         9
654 So. 2d at 239. FIGA relied on that portion of the policy defining the limits of

liability coverage. Id. at 240. The plaintiff argued:

      the ‘costs’ which it seeks are, in fact, consistent with the terms of the
      existing policy. The [plaintiff] contends that the ‘costs’ are covered
      within the ‘Supplementary Payments’ provision of the insolvent
      insured's policy, which provides, in pertinent part: ‘[i]n addition to our
      limit of liability, we will pay on behalf of a covered person . . . [o]ther
      reasonable expenses incurred at our request.’

Id. (emphasis in original). The plaintiff argued that the “request” referred to in this

provision “took the form of [the insurer’s] election to litigate” the matter, and

contended that, “having thus chosen to litigate, the taxable costs entered against the

insured were, therefore, expenses covered under the terms of the policy. The

award of taxable costs in this case are reasonable expenses incurred by the

plaintiff, and charged to the defendant, as a result of the litigation of the action.”

Id. (emphasis in original).

      The Fourth District agreed, holding that FIGA “made the decision to defend

this action,” and, because the carrier “had sole discretion regarding the decision to

defend the lawsuit, it is obvious that the expenses incurred by the plaintiff in

litigating the action were as a result of the insurance company's choice not to settle

the action. Thus, those expenses were incurred at the insurer's request.”2 Id.

2
  The Johnson court also noted that the plaintiff argued that the policy provision at
issue was unambiguous but that, if the court disagreed and it was in fact
ambiguous, then long-standing Florida decisional law provided that “any
uncertainty must be construed against the insurer and in favor of the insured.
                                        10
      In Kinsey, the tortfeasor was insured under a policy that,

      in common with most auto liability policies, gave the insurer
      exclusive control over settling or litigating any claim against the
      insured for damages covered by the policy. The policy also had a
      supplementary payments provision stating that the insurer would pay
      certain costs relating to litigation, e.g., bail bonds and post-judgment
      interest, including ‘[o]ther reasonable expenses incurred at our
      request.’

801 So. 2d at 298. Kinsey, the insured, was involved in an accident causing injury

to Steele and, during the course of the litigation and pursuant to the offer of

judgment statute, Steele offered to settle the matter for the policy’s $10,000 limit.

This offer was refused. Id. at 299. At one point, Kinsey and the tortfeasor’s

insurer “entered into a joint stipulation and settlement agreement” pursuant to

which the trial court was to decide “the insurer's liability for bad faith before

adjudicating the underlying tort action. The parties' stipulation also contemplated

that the trial court would decide whether [the policy] covered, by virtue of the

above-quoted language from the supplementary payments provision, any section

789.79 attorney's fees and costs which she might owe Mr. Steele.” Id. The trial

court “concluded that the policy provided no such coverage,” and Kinsey appealed.

Id.

Thus, the ‘Supplementary Payments’ provisions obviously have the intent of
extending coverage and, therefore, must be construed liberally in favor of the
insured. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's judgment in this regard.” 654
So. 2d at 240 (citations omitted).
                                      11
      The Kinsey court held that “the language ‘expenses incurred at our request’

is clear on its face and should be applied according to its generally understood

meaning,” and recognized that its “resolution of this issue puts us in conflict with

the Fourth District's opinion in Johnson.” Id. The Kinsey court explained:

             The common meaning of “request” is “the act of asking, or
      expressing a desire, for something; solicitation or petition.” Webster's
      New World College Dictionary 1218 (4th ed. 2001). The legal
      meaning of the word is “[a]n asking or petition. The expression of a
      desire to some person for something to be granted or done,
      particularly for the payment of a debt or performance of a contract.”
      Black's Law Dictionary 1172 (5th ed. 1979). Both of these commonly
      understood definitions reinforce the clear use of the term within the
      context of the policy-that the insurer intended to pay for expenses that
      it had authorized and over which it had control, such as the selection
      of a service or product of known value and cost.

Id. The Kinsey court certified conflict with Johnson.

      Although the Florida Supreme Court accepted jurisdiction, it later decided:

“Upon reflection and further consideration, we now conclude that review was

improvidently granted. Accordingly, this review proceeding is dismissed.” Steele

v. Kinsey, 840 So. 2d 1023 (Fla. 2003).

      In an opinion issued two years later, however, the supreme court held that

FIGA was bound by the terms of an insolvent insurer’s supplementary payments

provisions and, thus, “liable for interest on judgments entered to the same extent as

[the insurer] would have been liable,” even if this resulted in payments in excess of

                                          12
the policy’s liability limits. Jones v. Fla. Ins. Guar. Ass’n, Inc., 908 So. 2d 435,

454 (Fla. 2005). The court explained:

              Indeed, courts in Florida have assessed costs in excess of limits
      of liability against FIGA through supplementary payment provisions.
      In Johnson, the district court held FIGA responsible for court costs in
      excess of the underlying policy's liability limits. The court applied the
      court costs through a supplementary payment provision that obligated
      the insolvent insurer to pay on behalf of a covered person reasonable
      expenses incurred in the litigation. The district court reasoned that the
      insurer had decided against settling the claim and that the resulting
      litigation expenses were therefore a responsibility to be covered.

Id. at 454-55 (citations omitted). The court then observed:

      In Steele v. Kinsey, the Second District reached the opposite
      conclusion, not on the basis that fees and costs in excess of policy
      limits could not be assessed against FIGA through supplementary
      payment provisions, but based on its conclusion that the language
      promising payment of expenses incurred at the insurer's request could
      not be reasonably interpreted to include litigation expenses.

Id. at 455 (citation omitted). The court noted in a footnote its prior acceptance of

Kinsey and subsequent decision to discharge jurisdiction. Id. at n.7.

      The remainder of Jones addressed the issue of FIGA’s responsibility for

judgment interest which, the court explained, existed due to the FIGA Act’s

purpose “to avoid financial loss to claimants or policyholders due to the insolvency

of the insurer. See § 631.51(1).”     Jones, 908 So. 2d at 454.      The court also

emphasized, however, that the insured’s predicament was due to “FIGA’s

abdication of its statutory and contractual duties, one of which was a

                                         13
supplementary payment coverage obligation to pay interest on judgments entered

against the insured.” Id. at 455.

      We cannot speculate why the supreme court opted to discharge its conflict

jurisdiction in Kinsey, but as we read Jones, Johnson is still good law and we agree

with the conclusion in that case. In our view, the court in Kinsey too narrowly

interpreted the word “request”: “The common meaning of ‘request’ is ‘the act of

asking, or expressing a desire, for something; solicitation or petition.’” Kinsey,

801 So. 2d at 299 (emphasis added). The court also noted the legal definition of

the word, explaining that it means “‘[t]he expression of a desire to some person for

something to be granted or done, . . . .’” Id.

      As both the Johnson and Kinsey courts acknowledge, under insurance

policies such as the one here, insurers enjoy the sole right to settle or litigate claims

against their insureds; therefore, choosing to litigate is no different than a request

or “expressing a desire” to do so. Any such expression, or request, necessarily

encompasses incurring litigation costs, which may mean not only the insurer’s

litigation costs, but also those incurred by the opposing party should that party

prevail. It is the insurer’s choice to litigate – a decision only it can make – that

results in these costs being incurred; thus, “those expenses [are] incurred at the

insurer's request.” Johnson, 654 So. 2d at 240.

                                           14
      Insurers have a statutory right not to be named as a defendant in an action

brought by a person claiming damages as a result of an insured’s negligence unless

“such person shall first obtain a settlement or verdict against a person who is an

insured . . . for a cause of action which is covered by such policy.” § 627.4136(1),

Fla. Stat. Insurers enjoy this right so as to avoid the prejudice likely to occur if a

jury is aware of an insurance company’s interest in the case. As interpreted by the

court in Kinsey, however, pursuant to policy language such as that here, when an

insurer opts to litigate “on behalf” of its insured defendant, it not only avoids being

named as a defendant, it is also cloaked with immunity from paying the prevailing

plaintiff’s costs resulting from the insurer’s choice to litigate. These costs are then

imposed on the insured, who had no say in the decision to litigate. In our view,

this is an abuse of an insurer’s right under section 627.4136(1). Indeed, under the

court’s interpretation in Kinsey, an insurer that chooses litigation over settlement

can be held liable for a prevailing plaintiff’s litigation costs only if the insurer had

specifically requested the plaintiff to incur those costs – an unlikely scenario, to

say the least.

      The Fourth District’s interpretation in Johnson is much more consistent with

the concern expressed by the supreme court in Jones, in which it noted that the

insured was in this predicament precisely because of the insurer’s actions, and not

the insured’s actions. It is also particularly compelling when, as in this case, the

                                          15
taxable costs incurred exceed by ten times the insured’s liability limits. Indeed, the

Kinsey interpretation of this common insurance policy provision runs counter to

the very purpose of buying insurance – to minimize liability exposure – and instead

results in an insured actually purchasing greater financial exposure than he may

have faced without insurance. This results in an absurd interpretation of the policy

provision, in our view, which we must avoid. See, e.g., King v. Bray, 867 So. 2d

1224 (Fla. 5th DCA 2004) (“The courts generally agree that where one

interpretation of a contract would be absurd and another would be consistent with

reason and probability, the contract should be interpreted in the rational manner.”).

We find it difficult to conceive that an insured who purchases an automobile

liability policy does so with the intent that he is granting the insurer not only the

right to decide whether to litigate a claim brought against him, but also to

potentially subject the insured to a cost judgment well in excess of his policy

limits, solely because the insurer elected to exercise the right to litigate for the

insured’s benefit.

      We note, too, that, given that the purpose of the offer of judgment statute,

section 768.69, Florida Statutes, which is to discourage excessive or frivolous

litigation, the Kinsey court’s interpretation of the policy language in question

undermines that statutory purpose, because it applies the adverse financial

                                         16
disincentives of the statute to the insured who had no choice in the matter, rather

than the insurer who engaged in the meritless litigation.

                                    Conclusion

      Based on the foregoing, we AFFIRM the trial court’s final judgment

adjudicating NHIC jointly and severally liable with its insured for Appellee’s

taxable litigation costs. We also certify conflict with Steele v. Kinsey, 801 So. 2d

297 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001).

      AFFIRMED; CONFLICT CERTIFIED.

WETHERELL and RAY, JJ., CONCUR.

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