Bituminous Casualty Corp. v. Clements

3 So. 2d 865, 148 Fla. 175, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 857
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 19, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 So. 2d 865 (Bituminous Casualty Corp. v. Clements) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bituminous Casualty Corp. v. Clements, 3 So. 2d 865, 148 Fla. 175, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 857 (Fla. 1941).

Opinion

*177 Buford, J.

This cause is before us on appeal from decree of Circuit Court reversing the award of the Florida Industrial Commission and making a different award.

Before discussing the merits of the case, we shall consider the contention of the appellee that the Circuit Court erred in denying the motion to dismiss filed therein. The sole ground of the motion to dismiss, as shown by the record, was:

“That the appeal entered herein on the 13th day of May, A.D. 1940, be dismissed because the same is frivolous and taken for the purpose of delay.”

It is now contended that the motion to dismiss should have been granted because the notice of appeal was filed with the Commission more than thirty (30) days after the entry of the order appealed from. It is true that the notice of appeal was marked “Filed in the Office of the Florida Industrial Commission on June 3, 1940,” but there is no allegation that the notice of appeal was not transmitted to, and received by, the Florida Industrial Commission on the 13th day of May, 1940. The motion of the appellees to dismiss identifies the appeal as having been entered on the 13th day of May, 1940, which, taken with the fact that the record shows that such motion was filed on the 8th day of June and that there was no contention in the lower court that the appeal was not timely entered, may be taken as an admission on the record that the notice of appeal was lodged with the Commission on the 13th day of May, 1940, and was within the time allowed by statute, Sec. 27, Chap. 17481, Acts of 1935 as amended by Sec. 12 of Chap 18413, Acts of 1937, and that the file mark was not placed thereon when it was lodged with the Commission.

*178 If the appellant lodged with the Commission its notice of appeal on the 13th day of May, 1940, it was the duty of the Commission to then file mark the same as of that date. The duty of appellant in this regard was performed when it in due course transmitted the notice of appeal so that the Commission received it in time for the same to be effective.

In 49 C.J. page 651, Sec. 919, it is said:

“Filing a pleading under the modern practice consists simply in placing it in the hands of the proper officer, to be preserved and kept by him in his official custody, as a public record. It is deemed filed when, for that purpose, it is delivered to, and received by, the proper officer who is ordinarily the clerk of court for the county in which the action was brought. But merely putting a paper into the files or leaving it in the clerk’s office without handing it to the clerk is not filing it; nor is it filed by placing it with the papers in the case, even though the other party had notice thereof, or by merely stating on another paper that it is filed “herewith.’ Handing a paper to the clerk outside his office and obtaining his indorsement of filing thereon does not constitute a filing in his office. When a pleading is mailed to the proper officer for filing, the date of its receipt and not the date of mailing is the date of filing and if he never receives it, there is no legal filing. A pleading may be filed by the attorney of a party to the action.”
“It is the duty of the officer receiving a pleading for filing to make the proper indorsement and entry; but this is merely evidence of the filing and is not essential to the validity thereof, except in some jurisdictions where statutes requiring such indorsement and entry have been held mandatory. Nor will the memo *179 randum or indorsement alone constitute conclusive evidence of the filing.”

In 21 R.C.L. page 590, Sec. 139, the text is:

“With reference to filing, it is a rule that if a complaint is delivered to and received by the proper officer to receive it for the purpose of being kept on file, it is deemed to be filed; and this although the officer is not at his office at the time of delivery.”

See also 18 Ann. Cas., note 250.

We recognize the rule to be as above stated in the case of In re: Switzer’s Estate, Darling v. Street as Administratrix, 115 Fla. 780, 156 Sou. 1. In that case the paper in question was delivered to the clerk in the County Judge’s Office, not at the County Judge’s Office, but at the home of the clerk. This was held not to be a filing but the converse is strongly intimated that if the paper had been left with the clerk in the County Judge’s Office, then the filing thereof would have been complete at that time, although the file mark was placed on it at a later date.

As hereinbefore stated, the question now presented was not presented to the lower court. Had it been presented there, the parties to the cause would have had the opportunity to show to the court the facts as they existed in regard to the filing of the notice of appeal. In the state of the record, the appellees have failed to show that the Circuit Court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause.

The facts of the case are stated by the deputy commissioner concisely and in accord with the record, as follows:

“It was stipulated and agreed by and between the parties that the Claimant, Horace Clements, Jr., while employed by the Page Baking Company, Panama City, *180 Bay County, Florida, on January 12, 1940, suffered an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. That while cleaning an electric molding machine, he became overbalanced and fell against the wheel which caught his right hand, causing total disability to the third and fourth fingers and Fifty (50%) Per cent disability to the second finger. That the Claimant, on this date, was seventeen (17) years old; that he had no dependents and his average weekly wage was Eight (8.00) Dollars per week.
“The controversy presented here arose not from the liability of the employer, but whether the Bituminous Casualty Corporation or the American Casualty Company was carrying the insurance of the employer on January 12, 1940. I find the following facts from the testimony:
“On November 6, 1939, the Bituminous Casualty Corporation issued its standard Workmen’s Compensation policy, through its agent F. A. Black, to the above employer, which policy would expire November 6, 1940. Soon thereafter, during the first of December, the agent of the Bituminous Casualty Corporation discovered that the rate extended the employer was erroneous and that an additional premium would have to be assessed against the employer and he issued an indorsement to the policy providing for this additional premium. There were several conferences between the agent for the Bituminous Casualty Corporation and the employer, during which the employer suggested that he was endeavoring to procure other insurance in which the rates would not carry the extra premium.
“The testimony reveals that on or before the 10th of January, 1940, the employer came to the office of *181

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Bluebook (online)
3 So. 2d 865, 148 Fla. 175, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bituminous-casualty-corp-v-clements-fla-1941.