Welcome To Abstract Appeal

Blog Pages

  Home Page
  About Abstract Appeal

  Terri Schiavo Info:
    Terri Schiavo Infopage
    2003 Schiavo Posts
    2004 Schiavo Posts
    2005 Schiavo Posts
    Pop Schiavo Posts

 

Contact



 

Subject Sources
  Florida Supreme Court
     First DCA
     Second DCA
     Third DCA
     Fourth DCA
     Fifth DCA
  11th Cir Ct of Appeals

 

Source Resources
  Fla Sup Ct Dockets
  Fla DCA Dockets
  Fla DCA Map
  11th Cir En Banc Issues

 

Useful Org Sites
  Fla Bar
  Fla Bar App Section
  Council of App Lawyers

 

Useful Law Sites
  Fla Constitution
  Fla Statutes
  Fla Admin Code
  Fla Att'y Gen Opinions
  Fla Legislature
  Fla Governor
  Fla Attorneys

 

Useful Docs

 Rules:
  Fla R Appellate Pro
  Fla R Civil Pro
  Fla R Criminal Pro
  Fla R Jud Admin
  Fla Fam Law R Pro
  Fla Probate R
  Fla Small Claims R
  Fla Traffic Ct R
  Fla Small Claims R
  R Reg Fla Bar

  11th Cir LR/FRCP/IOP

  ND Fla Local Rules
  MD Fla Local Rules
  SD Fla Local Rules

 Filing Instr/IOPs:
  Fla Sup Ct Filing Instr.
  Fla Sup Ct IOP
  First DCA Att'y Notice
  Second DCA Att'y Notice
  Second DCA IOP
  Third DCA Att'y Notice
  Fourth DCA Att'y Notice
  Fourth DCA IOP
  Fifth DCA Att'y Notice

  11th Cir LR/FRCP/IOP
  11th Cir Filing Instr
  11th Cir Civ App Stmt
  11th Cir Appearance

 Jury Instructions:
  11th Cir Civ Jury Instr
  11th Cir Crim Jury Instr


 
 









 
 

Any Remark Found On Abstract Appeal Should Be Attributed Solely To Its Author
 

 









 
 


Syndication
Options

Atom Feed



Subscribe through My Yahoo

Subscribe in NewsGator Online



 


Abstract Appeal
Thanks

Blog Somebody!










 



Friday, May 28, 2004
 
Friday Florida Law Trivia Answer
Well, a virus knocked out our computer system at work, so I've returned home early to post the answer to this week's question.

And the answer is... $40, as required by this statute. Notably, a defendant found to be indigent may not be refused counsel for failure to pay the application fee.

 
Fifth District: Seeking An Educated Citizenry
A little knowledge can be dangerous, so the saying goes. Judges can certainly attest to this, and sometimes they do. Take today, for instance, when the Fifth District released its decision in this case. The case involved a suit by a man who claimed that two municipally-owned Florida golf courses violated his constitutional rights by making him use a golf cart. The man preferred to walk. Exercise, you know.

The trial court dismissed the case as lacking any constitutional basis. The Fifth District affirmed, and ended its opinion with the following remark:

We conclude with the observation that our founding fathers must be wondering if anyone today even reads the Constitution, much less understands it.
It's one thing to know that the Constitution protects our rights to due process. It's another thing altogether to understand what centuries of case law have determined that protection to mean.

 
Friday Florida Law Trivia!
It's Friday again, but Hunter's off on some adventure, and as a result this week's trivial duties have fallen to me. So, dipping into my cache of Florida law trivialities...

In Florida, how much does it cost an indigent person accused of a crime to request representation by the public defender?

I will post the answer around 4:45 pm EDT today.

 
Curbing the Diet?
Nearly everyone I know has tried some form of the Atkins diet in the last few years. It's popular, to say the least, and that's something a Delray Beach man is trying to halt. Today's Palm Beach Post has this story on the man who yesterday filed a lawsuit against Dr. Atkins's estate and the company that markets the diet, claiming the high profile diet plan negligently fails to warn the public about the dangers of eating too many cholesterol-laden foods.

The article points out that the suit is being funded by a Washington-based vegan and animal rights group. Hmmm.

 
Sam Gerard Would Be Proud
I didn't do it, I didn't do it, the man convicted of first-degree murder kept shouting in court before his sentencing. So the judge taped his mouth shut. With duct tape. The jury then returned to the courtroom for closing arguments in the penalty phase. You can read about it all in this story from the AP.

By the way, the jury recommended death.

 
Supreme Court: Retroactivity and Finality
Yesterday, in this case, the Florida Supreme Court addressed the superficially simple question of whether that court's disagreement with an earlier district court decision on the meaning of a criminal statute amounts to a change in the law as it existed at the time of the earlier, now-rejected interpretation and before. A majority said no, that in the context of that case, overruling a prior district court decision constituted only a change in the law going forward, rather than a clarification of the law that, in effect, retroactively changed the law as it previously existed.

The court's decision was complemented by a three-justice concurrence authored by Justice Wells, who partook in a massive debate with dissenters Chief Justice Anstead and Justice Pariente over the retroactivity question and, interestingly enough, the concept of finality in Florida appellate jurisprudence.

The bottom line is that the 81 pages that contain the various opinions in this case offer some fascinating views of due process and finality under Florida law. I'm going to save an extended treatment of what was said for another day, but I encourage anyone with interest in these subjects to grab a snack, or maybe a meal, and sit down with this case for a bit. It will be worth your time.



Thursday, May 27, 2004
 
Schiavo News
Judge Greer held a hearing yesterday regarding the Schindlers' visitation concerns. You may recall that, for the last two months, Michael Schiavo has permitted them to visit Terri only if they are supervised, such as by a security officer paid for by them. The Schindlers have refused to agree to that condition and asked Judge Greer to overrule it.

According to this story in today's St. Pete Times, at the hearing, Judge Greer ruled that the Schindlers may have a 90-minute visit that "need not be supervised," and he will soon issue a full written order on the matter.

The story also indicates that the parties are now bickering over whether Judge Greer's temporary visitation order requires the 90-minute visit to be unsupervised or whether Michael could have someone else present to observe if he chooses.

 
Second District: Family Law Findings
In this case, the Second District reminds family law lawyers and judges that a trial court in a family law matter should announce its findings before inviting the parties to submit proposed final judgments. Otherwise, the court may appear not to have made its own independent decisions on the material facts.

 
Third District: Benlate Appeal
Yesterday, the Third District released this latest appellate decision in the ongoing Benlate saga. The court reversed large verdicts entered against DuPont, and the opinion is sure to receive a great deal of attention from the defense bar and the plaintiffs' bar. Look for it soon as "Case of the Month" at a bar meeting near you.

In short, the court addressed issues concerning Florida's civil RICO statute, FIFRA preemption, and adverse inference instructions. The court held that a civil RICO plaintiff must show damages directly caused by the underlying predicate acts, that FIFRA applied to preempt claims brought under Florida law for negligent labeling in another country, and that the trial court should not have given an adverse inference jury instruction where the plaintiffs failed to show an inability to proceed without evidence destroyed by the defendant.



Wednesday, May 26, 2004
 
We've Got Spam Laws
Yesterday, Governor Bush signed into law a bill that will become known as the "Florida Electronic Mail Communications Act." The law prohibits, in essence, sending unsolicited commercial email from a computer in Florida or to the email account of a Florida resident. The law also prohibits using a third party's domain name without permission and sending email with false routing information or "false or misleading information in the subject line."

The law directly provides remedies to the state's Attorney General and internet service providers, and the law indirectly provides remedies to the public through Florida's unfair trade practices law.

Legislation like this new Florida law raises a specter of potential constitutional issues: interstate commerce, due process, and freedom of speech come quickly to mind as likely bases for constitutional challenges. Expect some very interesting litigation in this area.

 
Elections Suit
The Tallahassee Democrat reports here that a federal judge has dismissed a suit by U.S. Representative Robert Wexler that sought to require Florida's electronic voting machines to utilize paper receipts. The suit was apparently dismissed on abstention grounds, the federal court not wanting to become embroiled in state elections procedures.

 
Execution Delayed
John Blackwelder's execution, scheduled for yesterday evening, was delayed after another inmate wrote a letter claiming someone else confessed to the murder Blackwelder was found to have committed. The AP has the story here. Interestingly, the other inmate works in a prison law library and apparently knows the legal lingo here. His letter said, "I understand what I am telling you is double hearsay and it was not the person ... who revealed or confessed to the crime.... However, in light of the circumstances and the immediacy of the situation ... I felt an obligation to notify the attorneys involved."



Tuesday, May 25, 2004
 
If At First You Don't Succeed
Overheard recently somewhere near Escambia County, Florida:

Prisoner A: I told Petey he needed to work on limiting his points. He just doesn't listen.

Prisoner B: Yeah, but I always loved that number 37. Always loved it. Can't believe they got that far. But I always loved it.

 
Questions, questions
If you like common law damages issues, then you will love this case pending before the Eleventh Circuit. The case involves MCI's fiber-optic telecommunications cable, which the defendant severed. The network was designed, though, to compensate for a break in the cable by rerouting signals along another path. The severed portion of the cable was valued by the defense at about $5000, and apparently MCI spent only $23,000 to repair it -- the whole process taking just a few days. MCI had no interruption in service and lost no profits, but MCI claimed nearly $900,000 in "loss of use" damages, valued at the cost of renting an equivalent line from another telecommunications company -- something MCI did not do.

Think about it. MCI built a network that could withstand a major cable being severed, but MCI argued that its well-built network should not inure to the defendant, who should have to pay the fair rental value of the line it rendered temporarily defunct. Very interesting.

Well, Florida law applies in the case, and the Eleventh Circuit was unsure how Florida would resolve the loss of use issue, so the federal court certified the following two questions to the Supreme Court of Florida:
IS A TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES CARRIER ENTITLED TO DAMAGES FOR THE LOSS OF USE OF A FIBER-OPTIC CABLE DAMAGED BY A DEFENDANT WHEN THE CARRIER INTENDED TO HAVE THE FULL CAPACITY OF THE DAMAGED CABLE AVAILABLE FOR ITS USE SHOULD THE NEED HAVE ARISEN, BUT THE CARRIER WAS ABLE TO ACCOMMODATE WITHIN ITS OWN NETWORK THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CARRIED BY THE DAMAGED CABLE AND THE CARRIER PRESENTED NO EVIDENCE THAT IT SUFFERED LOSS OF REVENUE OR OTHER DAMAGES DURING THE TIME THE CABLE WAS UNAVAILABLE?

IF THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS CARRIER IS ENTITLED TO LOSS OF USE DAMAGES, DOES THE PRE-INJURY VALUE OF THE DAMAGED CABLE ESTABLISH A LIMIT TO THOSE DAMAGES, OR SHOULD THE FAIR MARKET RENTAL VALUE OF AN EQUIVALENT REPLACEMENT CABLE FOR THE TIME REASONABLY NECESSARY TO MAKE REPAIRS SERVE AS THE MEASURE OF LOSS OF USE DAMAGES?
This will be a great case to watch.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Foster Care 1983 Suit
Yesterday, in this case, the Eleventh Circuit held that qualified immunity protected the conduct of three Department of Children and Families workers involved with a child who was abused and ultimately murdered in foster care. The decision includes a good description of the public policies underlying qualified immunity and how the doctrine's high standards apply in the context of foster care.



Monday, May 24, 2004
 
Amended Rules
Last week, in this very long order (long because of its attachment's length), the Florida Supreme Court amended the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar. The amendments include good news for construction lawyers -- you now have the ability to become board certified in construction law. Among other things, the amendments also extend the rules regarding excessive fees to excessive costs, lessen some advertising proscriptions, and modify the rules regarding the unauthorized practice of law.

Board certified lawyers may wish to take note of the amendments regarding certifications. The Supreme Court has now permitted lawyers to make limited references to certifications by other state bars and other organizations, and in doing so the court has changed the rule regarding references to Florida certifications: board certified attorneys must reference The Florida Bar as the certifying organization when referring to a Florida bar certification.

 
Fifth District: UM Coverage
If you are interested in uninsured motorist coverage stacking issues -- specifically, when an insured's selection to stack or not to stack has been clearly made -- check out this opinion from the Fifth District.

 
Second DIstrict: Vindictive Sentences
A vindictive sentencing argument is not cognizable in a Rule 3.800(a) proceeding, as explained by this decision from the Second District.

 
Fifth District: Prohibition in Family Law Case
In this case, the Fifth District rejected a petition for writ of prohibition on grounds the petition was "premature." The case was a family law case and involved a pending post-judgment hearing regarding the sale of a marital home.

Interestingly, the decision is likely to be miscontrued. The court spoke ("We cannot speculate as to the future action of the trial court.") as if a writ of prohibition is not appropriate where the trial court has not yet acted. But that's exactly what the writ of prohibition is for -- to prevent, in advance, a lower tribunal from exercising jurisdiction that it does not possess. What seems to have made prohibition inappropriate in this case was that the family law rules contemplate a procedure for post-judgment transfers of property and provide a method of review from such orders.

 
Back In Blog
'Twas a weekend away from the blog -- with the firm retreat, some unexpected research projects, and some around the home chores. I now have a bit of catching up to do.



Friday, May 21, 2004
 
Nontrivial...
Well, Hunter and I managed not to get a trivia question posted today. Sorry about that. We're not only working, we're also at the Carlton Fields biannual retreat, which this year is (coincidentally) being held at the beautiful Vinoy in downtown St. Pete. We'll make it up to the trivia lovers out there next week by making next week's question a doozy.

 
New Laws
The AP has this brief summary of a few bills Governor Bush recently signed into law.

 
Fourth District: Poison Appeal
Is it possible to commit the crime of attempted poisoning? Not according to this decision from the Fourth District.

 
Third District: Wrongfully Rejected Bids
If your company makes the low bid on a public project in Florida and you are arbitrarily denied the contract, can you sue to recover the profits you would have made on the job you lost? The answer -- which may seem counterintuitive, until you consider the purpose of bidding statutes -- is no. Read about it in this case of first impression from the Third District.

 
Fourth District: Deadly Bats?
Are you one of those people who keeps a small baseball bat in your car, just in case waiting at the light one night brings something more than a long wait at the light? If so, you might be interested in this case, where the Fourth District reversed a juvenile's conviction for carrying a concealed weapon between the driver's seat and door in his car -- a small baseball bat.

 
Fourth District: Administrative Appeals
Just an appellate reminder here from the Fourth District: that an organization has standing to appear in an adminstrative proceeding to argue against a particular result does not mean the organization has standing to appeal if the undesired result is reached.

 
Fourth District: Manifest Weight
When a trial court grants a new trial based on a determination that the jury's verdict was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, need the retrial be on the whole case? Nope. In fact, it may be error to grant a retrial on every issue. Check out this decision from the Fourth District.

 
Fourth District: Sanctioning Dismissals
Trying to get a complaint dismissed with prejudice for noncompliance with a discovery order? It's not easy, as this decision from the Fourth District shows.

 
Little's Success
Apparently his name really is Little Willie, and he's headed up on conflict.



Thursday, May 20, 2004
 
Schiavo Thoughts
Someone recently asked me if I had any insight into how someone came up with a statement that 19 judges had ruled in favor of Michael Schiavo's request to withdraw Terri's feeding tube. I thought I'd share the pertinent portion of my response. It's a bit long and rather informal:


I would not make any sort of statement regarding how many judges have ruled in someone's favor in this case. There have been so many cases, so many issues, and the question of "what does lack of jurisdiction mean?" is so complex, that it is very difficult to say anything meaningful here in a concise way.

I'll try to show you why:

Judge Greer ruled in Michael's favor in the original decision on whether Terri would choose to keep or remove her feeding tube under her present circumstances. That ruling was upheld by a three-judge panel of the Second District (Judges Altenbernd, Parker, and Blue), and the Florida Supreme Court denied review (Justices Harding, Lewis, Pariente, Anstead, and Quince) for lack of jurisdiction. The decision that the court lacks jurisdiction to take the case is not one on the merits of the case, so I wouldn't count these five if you're talking about the merits of the case.

Next, Judge Quesada ruled in favor of the Schindlers when they sought to enjoin the removal of Terri's feeding tube, but the Second District (Judges Altenbernd, Parker, and Blue) effectively reversed that decision by ordering the case transferred to the guardianship proceeding before Judge Greer. I'm not sure what category the Second District's decision goes in, but Judge Quesada did not rule in Michael's favor.

Separately, Judge Greer ruled against the Schindlers when they sought relief from the earlier judgment. That decision was affirmed in part and reversed in part by the Second District (Judges Altenbernd, Parker, and Blue) in the appellate case that ordered the Judge Quesada case transferred, so I'm still not sure what category this decision goes in.

Next, Judge Greer ruled against the Schindlers on their motion for relief from judgment. That decision was reversed on appeal by the Second District (Judges Altenbernd, Parker, and Blue).

Next, Judge Greer held a trial and ruled against the Schindlers on the merits of their motion for relief from judgment. The Second District (Judges Altenbernd, Fulmer, and Stringer -- FYI: by now, Judge Parker had passed away and Judge Blue had retired to private practice) affirmed that decision, and the Florida Supreme Court (Justices Anstead, Wells, Lewis, Pariente, Quince, Cantero, and Bell) again denied review based on a lack of jurisdiction.

The Schindlers also filed two federal cases, one before Judge Lazzara and one before Judge Merryday. Both cases were dismissed on procedural grounds. As with the Florida Supreme Court's decisions, I do not consider those to be rulings in favor of Michael Schiavo on the merits of the feeding tube issue.

After Terri's law was passed, Michael's constitutional challenge landed before Judge Baird. He recently ruled that the law is unconstitutional.

Governor Bush filed an appeal during the constitutional challenge regarding some procedural issues, and he lost before the Second District (Judges Davis, Fulmer, and Wallace), but I don't see how that could count here. It had nothing to do with the merits of the constitutional challenge. Governor Bush also filed an original proceeding in the Second District regarding some discovery issues in the constitutional case, and he won (Judges Wallace, Fulmer, and Davis) but that didn't have anything to do with the merits of anything either. Governor Bush also filed an original proceeding in the Second District to disqualify Judge Baird, and the Second District rejected that petition (Judges Wallace, Fulmer, and Davis). That was arguably a win for Michael but it had nothing to do with the merits of the feeding tube issues or the constitutional challenge.

Separately, Terri's parents sought to intervene in the constitutional challenge. That motion was denied by Judge Baird, but on appeal the Second District (Judges Davis, Fulmer, and Wallace) reversed that order on the basis that specific findings needed to be made. That was sort of a win for Terri's parents, but a weak one since Judge Baird could reach the same result with more specific findings (as he later did), and in any event this had nothing to do with the merits of the feeding tube issue.

By my count, 6 judges ruled in Michael Schiavo's favor on the merits of the "what would Terri do?" issue -- Judges Greer, Altenbernd, Parker, Blue, Fulmer, and Stringer. One judge has ruled in Michael's favor on the constitutional challenge -- Judge Baird. Let me put this carefully: That's 7 judges who have directly determined, or upheld the merits of the decision, that Terri Schiavo would not wish to continue receiving her feeding tube under the present circumstances. Eight Florida Supreme Court justices ruled against getting involved in the case because the earlier decisions did not create a conflict in Florida's case law, and two federal judges decided they could not get involved in the case because the federal district courts have no ability to overrule state court decisions. Judges Wallace and Davis were involved in decisions that went for and against Michael, but those decisions had nothing to do with the merits of the feeding tube decision or the constitutional challenge.

So, we have 19 judges who at some point made rulings Michael Schiavo supported, but that's a very empty statement ...

 
More Mess
Perhaps I'll just refer to the constitutional amendment battle between Florida's doctors and plaintiffs' lawyers as "the mess." It's a nice shorthand. Rather polite, too -- all things considered. At any rate, right on cue, Howard Troxler of the St. Pete Times has some interesting observations on the situation here.



Wednesday, May 19, 2004
 
Constitutional Mess
The Miami Herald has this excellent story today on the sordid battle between Florida's doctors and its plaintiffs' lawyers. Each group is advancing one or more constitutional amendments designed to cripple the other side.

As we head closer to election time, expect to see a lot of discussion about these proposals.

 
Confirmed
Today's Sun-Sentinel has this story on yesterday's Senate confirmation of Marcia Cook as the newest judge to be appointed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Judge Cook is the first black woman to sit on Florida's federal bench.

 
Supreme Sighting
Justice Clarence Thomas was in South Florida yesterday, helping honor scholarship winners in a presentation at the Miami Dolphins spring training facility, according to this story from the AP. From the Justice's quotes, it seems he appreciates both mental and physical competitions.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Open Primaries
My hat's off to the Eleventh Circuit for this wonderfully concise opinion in a case challenging Georgia's open primary system. The decision was written by Judge Susan Bucklew of Florida's Middle District, who sat by designation, and it tersely rejected the various constitutional and statutory theories advanced by a group of individual voters.

Perhaps the most interesting portion of the decision involved the court's conclusion that only a party, such as the Georgia Democratic Party, has standing to bring a freedom of association challenge to a law governing who may vote to select that party's electoral candidates. Indeed, the court suggested, to allow a suit by individuals to determine who should or should not be permitted to vote in a party's primary would itself be an unconstitutional infringement of the party's associational rights.



Monday, May 17, 2004
 
Word Sense
I finished that last post with a word that I just made up: aforelinked. I then checked the web's near-omniscient source for all things word-related and it seems I was no less than the two hundred and sixty-second person to use that word. (Look here.)

 
Gay Marriage
The AP also has this story on gay couples who today sought marriage licenses from the Hillsborough County clerk's office. Turning the couples down, the clerk's office employees followed Florida law, which, by statute, does not permit civil marriages between persons of the same sex. You can read that law here. You might also wish to read this prior Abstract Appeal post on a pending suit to declare the aforelinked statute unconstitutional.

 
More Schiavo News
The AP is reporting here that Michael Schiavo is continuing his policy of permitting the Schindlers to visit Terri only if they hire a guard to oversee their visits. According to the story, Michael believes the circumstances surrounding the marks found in Terri's arms back in March are suspicious enough, and the Schindlers prior conduct in videotaping Terri in violation of a court order was serious enough, to justify continuing the policy.

The Schindlers have filed a motion challenging Michael's visitation policies. That motion is scheduled to be heard by Judge Greer on May 26.

 
Schiavo News
While I was busying myself this weekend with non-blog activities, the Terri Schiavo saga took a couple more steps forward. There were two developments.

First, the Clearwater Police Department wrapped up its investigation of the needle-like marks found in March on Terri's arms, concluding that the marks were of an unknown origin and that the evidence did not suggest they were the result of a crime.

Second, the Second District issued an order directing Michael Schiavo and Governor Bush to explain why the appeal in the constitutional challenge should not be immediately certified to the Florida Supreme Court.

Each development is interesting. You can read about them in this story in the St. Pete Times and this story from the Tampa Tribune. You can also read the Clearwater Police Department's press release here.

As for the investigation, you may recall that, since the marks were discovered, Michael Schiavo has not allowed the Schindlers to visit Terri without a guard present and paid for by them, and that the visitation disagreement has resulted in a motion by the Schindlers in the guardianship case to permit unsupervised visitation. Judge Greer is scheduled to hear that motion later this month. It seems much if not all of the motion could be mooted if Michael would begin allowing visitation now, but this story suggests that he has not yet changed his position against unsupervised visitation. I do not know Michael's reasons for continuing to demand only supervised visitation.

Regarding the Second District's order, this is an unusual step, generally speaking, but not one that was totally unforeseeable in this case. Florida's district courts of appeal can certify appeals of trial court decisions for immediate resolution by the Florida Supreme Court where a district court believes that the issues in the case are either of great public importance or have a great effect on the proper administration of justice throughout the state. The Second District has not done that, though -- at least not yet. Instead, the court has simply asked the parties to offer, within 10 days, any reasons why the case should not be certified. Whether the court will actually certify the case still remains to be seen.

Also, if the Second District certifies the case, that does not mean that the Florida Supreme Court must immediately hear the case. The Florida Supreme Court has complete discretion to determine whether hear a certified case, and that court has previously turned back efforts by the district courts to certify cases for immediate resolution.

So, what's changed? Nothing yet. We will wait until the parties' responses are submitted to the Second District and then see if a certification results. I will not be surprised with the result no matter what it is. There is no argument that the Schiavo constitutional case has a great effect on the proper administration of justice throughout the state. Thus, the issue boils down to whether the case is seen by both the district court and the supreme court as one involving "great public importance." That characteristic, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.

 
Fifth District: Nursing Home Litigation
Fans of nursing home litigation may recall that the Fifth District and the Fourth District disagree over whether, under the pre-2001 versions of Chapter 400, a personal representative could bring a claim under that chapter for residents' rights violations not causing the decedent's death. (The conflict was previously discussed in this Abstract Appeal post.) The Fifth District holds that no such limitation existed. Now, if prior to that decision being released a trial court followed the Fourth District's case law and did not permit a non-fatal residents' rights claim to go to the jury, is that necessarily reversible error? No, according to this decision, where the jury found no liability under the plaintiff's negligence claim, and the negligence and residents' rights claims were "virtually identical."

 
Fifth District: Unsanctioned Sanctions
If you find yourself regularly involved in medical malpractice cases, you may wish to check out this decision from the Fifth District. The court issued a writ of certiorari quashing an order denying a motion to strike the defendants' pleadings. The defendants had supposedly failed to comply with various discovery and pre-suit requirements applicable to medical malpractice actions, and the Fifth District held that, in such cases, orders on motions for sanctions should indicate the factual basis for the trial court's decision, to allow appellate review.

 
Questions, questions
On Friday, in this case concerning a television station's efforts to obtain school bus videotapes and bus-related disclipinary records, the Fifth District held that the requested records were exempt from public records disclosure but certified the following to the Florida Supreme Court as a question of great public importance:

Do the provisions of section 238.093(3)(d) create an exemption from the Public Records Law for the entire contents of a student's record within which there is a student's personally identifiable information or does it create an exemption only for such personally identifiable information within that record so that upon a proper request, the custodian must redact the personally identifiable information and produce the balance of the record for inspection under section 119.08(2)(a)?
The district court's opinion consisted entirely of adopted portions of the trial judge's order -- a nice tip to the legal analysis of Judge Donna McIntosh.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Jury Instructions
Just a reminder, here, from the Eleventh Circuit: the circuit's Pattern Jury Instructions are not always correct.



Friday, May 14, 2004
 
Friday Florida Law Answer
The county directly south of Pinellas County is Hillsborough County, not Manatee County, as most people think. According to this statute defining county boundaries, Hillsborough County includes a sliver of Tampa Bay directly south of Pinellas County. That sliver extends westerly to the western boundary of the State of Florida. For that reason, a car driving south over the Skyway Bridge crosses three counties while on the bridge: Pinellas County, Hillsborough County, and then Manatee County.

 
Friday Florida Law Trivia!
What county lies directly to the south of Pinellas County?

The answer will be posted about 4:45 EDT today.

 
Fourth District: In Can't Be On?
Suppose a homeowners association's rules prohibit signs "on any lot" and allow parking in driveways only by vehicles without signs "thereon." Now suppose a homeowner intending to skirt the rules places signs in her car's windows and parks the car in her driveway. Has she broken the rules?

Yesterday, in this case, the Fourth District addressed just such a situation and held that neither rule had been violated: "on any lot" does not mean in a car, and "thereon" does not mean "therein."

Judge Klein dissented on the latter point, explaining that "thereon" and "therein" were not mutually exclusive terms and that a sign in an automobile window can reasonably be considered to be a sign "on" the vehicle.

Something tells me homeowners associations may want to revisit their bylaws. As President of our new condo association, I'll be doing the same.

 
Supreme Court: Reprimand
The next time you hear someone impugn a judge because he or she will not speak to the media about a case, tell whomever that, in Florida, that's not the way the judiciary operates. Comments on a case can lead to trouble, as seen by this reprimand issued yesterday by the Florida Supreme Court.

 
Constitutional Cafeteria
Yesterday, the Florida Supreme Court approved the ballot title and summary and the single-subject nature of this proposed constitutional amendment, which if approved would permit Miami-Dade and Broward counties to hold referenda on whether to allow slot machines in horse racing, dog racing, and jai-alai facilities. You can read the court's opinion here.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Torture
If you find yourself needing to avoid deportation, and you wish to assert that under the Convention Against Torture you should not be returned to another country because there you will be tortured, you may wish to check out this decision from the Eleventh Circuit. The court explained the role governmental acquiescence plays in the torture analysis.

 
Fourth District: Search and Seizure Conflict
When a police officer is running a check on you using your driver's license, which you voluntarily gave up, are you effectively seized, such that when the officer asks you if you consent to a search, any consent is invalid and the fruits of the search must be suppressed? The districts are in conflict over the answer, as certified by this decision Wednesday from the Fourth District.

Concurring specially, Judge Klein opined that the theory finding consent valid under these circumstances is a "charade," and he offered these additional thoughts:

Our sister court, which upheld a search under these circumstances, did so under the assumption that a person can "withdraw his consent at any time by, for example, asking that his license be immediately returned." Golphin v. State, 838 So. 2d 705, 707 (Fla. 5th DCA 2003). This, of course, presupposes that the person knows the law of search and seizure. I, for one, despite my law school education, had no idea there was such a thing as a consensual encounter until I became a judge. Because police officers are, in our society, charged with maintaining order and enforcing the law, it would never have occurred to me that I could insist on the return of my license before the officer was finished with it. Nor would it occur to any other person unversed in search and seizure law.
Frankly, I know the law on this, and I have no plans of ever asking any officer to give me my license back.

 
Questions, questions
The City of Hollywood has an ordinance that allows police to impound vehicles believed to be used to facilitate prostitution. In this October 2003 decision, the Fourth District held that ordinance invalid based on a state statute that preempts the field of criminal forfeitures or at least precludes contrary municipal regulations. On Wednesday, in this order denying rehearing, the court certified the following to the Supreme Court of Florida as a question of great public importance:

Does the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act preempt local governments from adopting ordinances imposing forfeiture of personal property for misdemeanor offenses?

 
Eleventh Circuit: En Banc on Commerce Clause
In November 2002, the Eleventh Circuit decided this criminal case, which held that Congress exceeded its authority under the Commerce Clause to the extent 18 U.S.C. ยง 247 applied to the defendant's actions in burning five rural Georgia churches. Those actions, the court held, did not substantially affect interstate commerce. Judge Cynthia Hall, of the Ninth Circuit, dissented. Yesterday, in this order, the Eleventh Circuit vacated the panel's decision and decided to rehear the case en banc.



Thursday, May 13, 2004
 
Second District: Fibromyalgia is Pure Opinion
Trial lawyers, especially personal injury lawyers, will want to take note of this decision released yesterday by the Second District. Addressing a doctor's expert testimony that a plaintiff developed fibromyalgia as a result of trauma from an automobile accident, the district court held that Frye v. United States was inapplicable to that testimony because it was based on pure opinion, not scientific principles.

 
Second District: Child Support Conflict
Is the husband of a mother at the time she gives birth an indispensable party to an action to recover support for the child from a third person who is allegedly the child's biological father? In this decision released yesterday, which involved collection actions by the Department of Revenue, the Second District said yes and approved the dismissal of the Department's cases.

The court also went further. It concluded not only that the husband is an indispensable party who must be joined, but that child support should first be sought from the husband, since the husband of a woman giving birth is legally presumed to be the child's father, and this presumption is difficult, and in some instances no longer possible, to overcome.

This case evokes some significant policy concerns on all sides of the child support equation. Surely the Department of Revenue is well intended when it seeks support from the person who may actually be a child's biological father. Florida case law, however, has long supported the interests of a child in not being declared, or effectively declared, illegitimate, and that is exactly the implication, if not the effect, of the state obtaining child support from a man other than the mother's husband at the time of the child's birth.

Most likely, this area could benefit from legislative attention. In any event, this case will surely receive attention from the Florida Supreme Court: the Second District's decision on the indispensability question squarely conflicts with a prior decision from the First District.

 
Second District: Gambling
If you would like a small sample of the detailed regulations that apply to slot machines in Florida, check out this decision from the Second District.

 
Second District: NICA Conflict
This fall, if the Florida Supreme Court would like to take a break from the procedural morass of the tobacco class action litigation, the court can turn its attention to the Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Act (NICA). In this clarified opinion issued yesterday by the Second District, which did not change the original opinion's result, the district court held that adminstrative proceedings under NICA may not concern whether a health care provider provided NICA's statutorily required notice or whether any such notice triggered the tort immunities offered by that act. The court certified that its decision conflicts with decisions by the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Districts.

 
First District: Service Time
This decision serves as a reminder from the First District that, as under the federal procedural rules, the 120-day period for service can be extended by a trial court even in the absence of good cause.

 
First District: Contracts and Injunctions
In this decision, the First District held that Leon County could not be liable for breach of a development agreement because a court-ordered injunction prevented the County from performing its contractual obligations. Though the case involved land use, the basic principles governing the court's decision were not limited to that context.



Wednesday, May 12, 2004
 
Tobacco Appeal
Oh my. The Florida Supreme Court has voted 4-2 to review the Third District's decision in the Engle tobacco class action. Last year, the Third District reversed the judgment in the case, a $145 billion judgment that exceeded, by many times, any judgment ever entered by any court in the world. The Third District also determined that the case could not proceed as a class action and ordered the class decertified.

You can read the Third District's decision here.

You can read the Supreme Court's order, which sets an ambitious briefing schedule and an October oral argument date, here. Also, Justice Cantero recused himself, based, I believe, on his tobacco defense work when he was in private practice.

 
Schiavo News
Today's St. Pete Times has this story on the Schindlers' latest motion in the guardianship case. The motion seeks to compel Michael Schiavo to permit the Schindlers visitation with Terri. Michael has agreed to visitation, but since the incident in March where needle-type marks were found on Terri's arms, Michael has required that Terri's parents be accompanied by a security officer paid for by them.

The Terri's Fight site has posted a copy of the Schindlers' motion. It's available here. You will notice it is labeled an "emergency" motion. You may also notice that the accompanying Terri's Fight press release indicates that Judge Greer has already determined he will not treat the motion as an emergency motion.

That seems appropriate. What constitutes an emergency is generally a judgment call made on a case-by-case basis, but my experience has been that most courts will not consider something to be an emergency unless some substantial harm will occur if action on the matter is delayed. Florida appellate attorneys are probably familiar with the Eleventh Circuit's published standard for what constitutes an "emergency":
Except in capital cases in which execution has been scheduled, a motion will be treated as an emergency motion only when both of the following conditions are present:
1. The motion will be moot unless a ruling is obtained within seven calendar days; and
2. If the order sought to be reviewed is a district court order or action, the motion is being filed within seven calendar days of the filing of the district court order or action sought to be reviewed.
In other words, circumstances must be such that a week's delay will moot the issue, and the moving party must not have merely waited to file the motion until the week before mootness is about to occur.

Regarding the Schindlers, who wish to visit Terri without complying with Michael's demand for paid security, Judge Greer has apparently determined that no "emergency" exists. He will therefore hear the Schindlers' motion in the ordinary course.

 
Schiavo Coverage Update
As you have no doubt noticed, my update of the Terri Schiavo Information Page to address both the guardianship proceeding and the constitutional challenge has been slow to arrive. I am still working on it.

Meanwhile, though, to help those looking for a bigger picture view of what's been going on, I have begun compiling my Terri Schiavo-related posts into separate Abstract Appeal pages. The first such page is now available here, and it includes the Schiavo-related Abstract Appeal posts from 2003.



Tuesday, May 11, 2004
 
Eleventh Circuit: They All Sue For Ice Cream
Quick: Does brown ice cream's color indicate that it's a particular flavor? How about white? Pink? They all do, of course, and that's partly why, in this case, the Eleventh Circuit concluded that the colors used in Dippin' Dots ice cream are functional, not just aesthetic. The court therefore upheld a summary judgment against Dippin' Dots on its trade dress claims against, wouldn't you know, rebel upstart Frosty Bites.

By the way, what are the odds the Eleventh Circuit visited the corporate sites linked in this post? They sure help show off the products.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Sentencing
If you are in the market for a concise primer on the federal law governing departure sentences, check out this decision from the Eleventh Circuit.

 
Eleventh Circuit: Right to Call Witnesses