JUSTINE G. GORDON v. GATLIN COMMONS PROPERTY OWNERS, etc. and NORTHSIDE NURSERY, INC. , 254 So. 3d 452 ( 2018 )


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  •         DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    JUSTINE G. GORDON,
    Appellant,
    v.
    GATLIN COMMONS PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. and
    NORTHSIDE NURSERY, INC.,
    Appellees.
    No. 4D17-1999
    [ July 18, 2018 ]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, St.
    Lucie County; Janet Croom, Judge; L.T. Case No. 562012CA002369.
    Steven M. Katzman and Craig A. Rubinstein of Katzman, Wasserman,
    Bennardini & Rubinstein, P.A., Boca Raton, and Lauri J. Goldstein of A
    Law Firm of Lauri J. Goldstein & Associates, PLLC, Stuart, for appellant.
    Hala Sandridge of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC, Tampa, for
    Appellee Northside Nursery, Inc.
    TAYLOR, J.
    For the second time, the plaintiff, Justine Gordon, appeals an order
    dismissing her personal injury complaint as a sanction for her attorneys’
    failure to comply with court orders. 1 In the prior appeal, we reversed the
    trial court’s order of dismissal and remanded the case for the trial court to
    make express findings under Kozel v. Ostendorf, 
    629 So. 2d 817
    (Fla.
    1993). See Gordon v. Gatlin Commons Prop. Owners Ass’n, Inc., 
    199 So. 3d
    1120 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016). On remand, the trial court held an
    evidentiary hearing and entered an order of dismissal that considered the
    Kozel factors. We again reverse, concluding that dismissal was too harsh
    a sanction.
    In June 2012, the plaintiff filed her personal injury complaint against
    1
    Steven M. Katzman and Craig A. Rubinstein of Katzman, Wasserman,
    Bennardini & Rubinstein. P.A. Boca Raton, represent Justine G. Gordon in this
    appeal; they were not trial counsel in the proceedings below.
    various defendants. After fifteen months of discovery, she amended the
    complaint in September 2013 to add Northside Nursery as a defendant.
    The plaintiff alleged that Northside owned, leased, operated, possessed,
    controlled, and/or maintained the premises where she had slipped and
    fallen into a hole.
    On December 9, 2014, the plaintiff filed a notice for jury trial, indicating
    that the case was at issue and ready for trial. On January 29, 2015, the
    trial court entered a pre-trial procedure order and set calendar call for
    non-jury trial on the March 24, 2015 – May 15, 2015 trial docket. On
    February 6, 2015, the trial court entered an amended order, which, among
    other things:
    • instructed the Parties: “if Plaintiff’s counsel fails to appear
    for calendar call, the complaint may be dismissed by the
    court”;
    • required the plaintiff’s expert disclosures no less than forty-
    five days before calendar call;
    • required all potential fact witnesses to be disclosed no less
    than thirty days before calendar call;
    • required all discovery to be completed five days before
    calendar call, absent an agreement;
    • warned that failure to comply with the pre-trial order must
    be reported by filing a “Suggestion of Noncompliance with Pre-
    Trial Order”;
    • warned that failure to appear at calendar call and failure to
    comply with the order may result in sanctions such as striking
    of pleadings, default, or case dismissal; and
    • required that any motion to continue comply with Florida
    Rule of Civil Procedure 1.460 and include the requesting
    party’s signature.
    On February 23, 2015, Northside filed an ex parte motion to compel the
    plaintiff to answer interrogatories that were served on November 24, 2014.
    Northside also filed a suggestion of non-compliance with the pre-trial
    order, a motion to strike, or in the alternative, a motion to continue.
    Northside alleged that the plaintiff had not disclosed any potential expert
    witnesses, as required, by February 9, 2015. It noted that the pre-trial
    2
    order required discovery to be concluded by March 16, 2015, that the
    plaintiff’s failure to disclose any experts rendered Northside unable to
    complete discovery as required by the pre-trial order, and that it was thus
    prejudiced by the plaintiff’s failure to comply with the terms of the order.
    On March 11, 2015, the trial court granted Northside’s motion to
    compel and gave the plaintiff ten days to respond to the interrogatories
    that were propounded in November 2014. The plaintiff’s counsel failed to
    respond, and on March 23, 2015, Northside filed an amended suggestion
    of non-compliance with the pre-trial order. Northside set a hearing for
    April 6, 2015. On March 26, 2015, an attorney for the plaintiff appeared
    at mediation, but she did not seem to know anything about the plaintiff’s
    file. On April 1, 2015, a different attorney from the plaintiff’s counsel’s
    firm filed a notice of non-objection to the amended suggestion of non-
    compliance and acknowledged the April 6 hearing.
    On April 6, 2015, when the trial court conducted the hearing on
    Northside’s amended suggestion of non-compliance, the plaintiff’s counsel
    did not appear. Northside’s counsel advised the court that the plaintiff’s
    counsel was experiencing some difficulties because an attorney from her
    law firm, who was handling the plaintiff’s case at the time of the pre-trial
    order, had left the firm. Northside’s counsel complained, however, that
    the plaintiff’s failure to file a witness or exhibit list prevented him from
    completing his preparation for trial. Northside moved to strike the
    plaintiff’s pleadings and enter a judgment in its favor.            Northside
    alternatively requested that the trial court strike the case from the trial
    docket.
    The trial court granted the motion to strike the pleadings, dismissed
    the case, and reserved ruling on sanctions. The court summarily denied
    the plaintiff’s motion for rehearing but entered a revised dismissal order,
    stating: “This Court, based on argument and a review of the record,
    concludes that Plaintiff’s multiple violations of the [Amended Pre-]Trial
    Order were willful or contumacious, and moreover, Plaintiff agreed with
    [the Defendant’s] motion to strike.”
    The plaintiff appealed the dismissal, and as mentioned above, we
    reversed and remanded to the trial court to make the requisite findings
    under Kozel. See Gordon, 
    199 So. 3d
    at 1124.
    On remand, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing. At the
    hearing, the plaintiff’s attorney testified that two other attorneys from her
    law firm were initially handling the plaintiff’s case, and that “literally in
    the middle of the night,” these attorneys, accompanied by two secretaries,
    3
    stole 170 files—including the plaintiff’s—from the firm. In addition, the
    attorneys stole the firm’s laptop, deleted dates and files on the computer,
    discarded papers in the garbage, and left her office in shambles.
    The plaintiff’s case was then reassigned to another attorney in the law
    firm, who, at the time of the Kozel hearing, no longer worked there and
    had wage litigation pending against the firm.
    Regarding the Kozel factors, the plaintiff’s counsel testified that the
    plaintiff was not personally involved in any of the failures to file documents
    or to appear for hearings. She noted that she attended a mediation on the
    plaintiff’s behalf in this case but was unaware of a calendar call scheduled
    three days before the mediation. She believed that the calendar call date
    was once on the computer system but that it had been deleted. She
    explained that a witness, exhibit, and/or expert witness list was prepared
    in this case but that it, too, was deleted. While working with her computer
    technician and a detective who was investigating the thefts from her office,
    she discovered that numerous other filings were deleted from the office
    computer system. She maintained that she did not fail to comply with any
    orders deliberately or willfully and explained that she and her clients were
    the victims of “[t]he atrocities that were done to [her] office.”
    On cross-examination, the plaintiff’s counsel testified that about eight
    attorneys from her firm, including herself, had been involved in the
    plaintiff’s case, but she did not know whether the firm had ever filed an
    email address designation. In response to the trial court’s questioning,
    the plaintiff’s counsel said she had never searched her name in the clerk’s
    electronic system to determine the status of any of her cases.
    After the hearing, the trial court entered an order weighing the Kozel
    factors and again found that dismissal was the proper sanction. The court
    concluded that dismissal was warranted because of the “long pattern of
    repeated neglect which amounts to a willful and contumacious
    disobedience to the Court’s orders by the multiple revolving attorneys who
    represented Plaintiff at various stages of the pretrial proceedings.”
    Before specifically addressing each of the Kozel factors in its written
    order, the trial court first criticized the law firm’s non-compliance with
    Rule of Judicial Administration 2.516, which requires all lawyers
    appearing in a case to designate a current email address, and the firm’s
    failure to file notices of the firm’s several name changes.
    As to the six Kozel factors, the court made findings that:
    4
    (1) the plaintiff’s counsel showed a clear history of continuing,
    deliberate, willful and contumacious disobedience of the
    court’s pretrial orders, evidenced by, inter alia, the violation of
    at least five court orders and a failure to appear for two
    hearings;
    (2) the “prior sanctions” factor likely did not apply because
    there was no previous sanction order in the instant case;
    (3) the client was not personally involved in any of the acts of
    disobedience;
    (4) Northside was prejudiced by, inter alia, having to waste
    time and resources to attend a calendar call and a hearing
    where the plaintiff’s counsel failed to appear, and further by
    having to prepare for trial without knowledge of the plaintiff’s
    witnesses or exhibits;
    (5) none of the non-complying attorneys involved were able to
    present a reasonable justification for their noncompliance,
    where the law firm representing the plaintiff failed to review
    the court file and keep its name and email designation
    current; and
    (6) the delay caused by the plaintiff’s counsel created
    significant problems of judicial administration by affecting the
    issuance of juror summons, sheriff’s deputy courtroom
    assignments, clerk’s office personnel assignments, and
    courtroom time reservations.
    Further, the trial court stated that it considered less severe sanctions,
    such as fines or a contempt finding, but determined that those options
    would not have cured the plaintiff’s counsel’s failure to comply with the
    court’s orders or the prejudice to the defendants.
    The plaintiff now argues on appeal that the trial court failed to properly
    analyze and weigh the Kozel factors, and that the totality of the
    circumstances militates against a dismissal with prejudice.
    A trial court’s decision to impose sanctions is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion. Kirkland’s Stores, Inc. v. Felicetty, 
    931 So. 2d 1013
    , 1015 (Fla.
    4th DCA 2006) (citing Boca Burger, Inc. v. Forum, 
    912 So. 2d 561
    , 573 (Fla.
    2005)). When deciding whether to dismiss a case with prejudice as a
    sanction, a court first must consider the following factors:
    5
    1)   whether the attorney’s disobedience was willful, deliberate, or
    contumacious, rather than an act of neglect or inexperience;
    2)   whether the attorney has been previously sanctioned;
    3)   whether the client was personally involved in the act of
    disobedience;
    4)   whether the delay prejudiced the opposing party through
    undue expense, loss of evidence, or in some other fashion;
    5)   whether the attorney offered reasonable justification for
    noncompliance; and
    6)   whether the delay created significant problems of judicial
    administration.
    
    Kozel, 629 So. 2d at 818
    . After considering these factors, if there is a viable
    alternative sanction that is less severe than a dismissal with prejudice, the
    trial court should employ that alternative. 
    Id. In Ham
    v. Dunmire, 
    891 So. 2d 492
    (Fla. 2004), the Florida Supreme
    Court reiterated that “the interests of justice in this state will not tolerate
    the imposition of sanctions that punish litigants too harshly for the
    failures of counsel.” 
    Id. at 497.
    While noting that a lack of client
    involvement in discovery violations will not preclude dismissal of the
    client’s case where the circumstances surrounding an attorney’s neglect
    demonstrate “a persistent refusal to comply with court orders” or
    otherwise warrant dismissal, the court nonetheless emphasized that the
    sanction of dismissal “must be a reasonable response to the discovery
    infractions committed.” 
    Id. at 498.
    In this case, we find that dismissal of the plaintiff’s suit was
    unwarranted and that a lesser sanction should have been imposed.
    The record shows that the plaintiff filed her complaint in June 2012,
    named Northside as a defendant in September 2013, and diligently
    prosecuted the case for almost two years before her counsel ultimately
    violated the court order setting pre-trial procedures in February 2015.
    This case bears some similarity to Clay v. City of Margate, 
    546 So. 2d 434
    (Fla. 4th DCA 1989). There, we reversed the dismissal of an action where
    the plaintiff’s discovery delay was not a deliberate and contumacious
    disregard of the court’s order and the plaintiff had litigated the case for
    6
    over a year and a half before the untimely discovery response.
    Here, the trial court expressly found that there were no facts showing
    that the plaintiff was personally involved in any of the discovery violations
    and that the plaintiff’s counsel had not been previously sanctioned in this
    case. The court nonetheless concluded that dismissal was appropriate,
    based in part on the plaintiff’s counsel’s “repetition of willful, deliberate
    and contumacious acts of disregard and disobedience to this Court’s
    orders.”    The record shows, however, that there were mitigating
    circumstances surrounding the plaintiff’s counsel’s non-compliance with
    portions of the pre-trial order. These circumstances were based on the
    apparent theft and deletion of files by former attorneys of the law firm,
    which caused considerable disruption and disarray of the law firm’s office
    and operations. Moreover, the record does not show a protracted history
    of discovery abuses, clear prejudice to Northside, evidence of significant
    problems of judicial administration, 2 or other circumstances to warrant
    the ultimate sanction of dismissal.
    Based on the circumstances, a less draconian sanction should have
    been imposed. Any prejudice to Northside could have been cured through
    an award of fees, a continuance of trial, and an enlargement of time for
    the plaintiff to file her witness and exhibit lists. Accordingly, we reverse
    the trial court’s order dismissing this case and remand for further
    proceedings.
    Reversed and Remanded.
    WARNER and GROSS, JJ., concur.
    *         *          *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    2Given that the action was dismissed five weeks prior to the trial week for which
    this action was set as the ninth trial, we disagree that a delay of the trial would
    have created any of the problems of judicial administration listed in the order of
    dismissal.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-1999

Citation Numbers: 254 So. 3d 452

Filed Date: 7/18/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/18/2018