Brenda Valyou v. Ronald Escudero Navedo

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 21, 2025
Docket6D2024-1407
StatusPublished

This text of Brenda Valyou v. Ronald Escudero Navedo (Brenda Valyou v. Ronald Escudero Navedo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brenda Valyou v. Ronald Escudero Navedo, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

SIXTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

Case No. 6D2024-1407 Lower Tribunal No. 2023-CA-002510 AN _____________________________

BRENDA VALYOU,

Petitioner,

v.

RONALD ESCUDERO NAVEDO,

Respondent. _____________________________

Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the Circuit Court for Osceola County. Christine E. Arendas, Judge.

March 21, 2025

PER CURIAM.

Brenda Valyou sued Ronald Navedo based on general allegations he caused

her “bodily injury” in an automobile accident. During discovery, Navedo served

Valyou with two notices under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.351 of his intent

to subpoena several non-parties for various records including Valyou’s medical

records. These non-parties included a hospital, a chiropractor, and a dentist.

Valyou timely objected to the issuance of these subpoenas, relevantly

asserting that production of the medical records would violate her privacy rights under the Florida Constitution. Valyou requested the trial court either limit the

breadth and scope of the subpoenas to documents that related to her “neck and back,”

or, in the alternative, conduct an in-camera review of the records. Following a

hearing, the court overruled Valyou’s objections. Because the trial court did not

depart from the law’s essential requirements given Valyou’s failure to demonstrate

the subpoenas had the high probability to result in the production of irrelevant

medical records, we deny her ensuing petition for writ of certiorari on its merits.

As this Court stated in CPPB, LLC v. Taurus Apopka City Center, LLC, 375

So. 3d 327 (Fla. 6th DCA 2023), “certiorari is an extraordinary remedy” that is

“available only in limited circumstances.” Id. at 329 (quotations omitted). As such,

a petition for writ of certiorari requires that the petitioner establish “(1) a departure

from the essential requirements of the law, (2) resulting in material injury for the

remainder of the case (3) that cannot be corrected on postjudgment appeal.” Id.

(quotations omitted). The last two prongs are related and “together are referred to as

irreparable harm.” Id. And, because a finding of irreparable harm is a “condition

precedent” to certiorari jurisdiction, appellate courts normally “should analyze

irreparable harm first to determine if jurisdiction exists before deciding whether the

trial court’s order departed from the essential requirements of law.” Id. Valyou has

asserted irreparable harm “because the improper disclosure of medical records

causes a material injury that cannot be remedied on appeal.” See Dominguez v.

2 Omana, 381 So. 3d 1271, 1273 (Fla. 6th DCA 2024). Thus, we have jurisdiction to

address the merits of her amended petition.

In this petition, Valyou frames her “procedural concerns” as follows: “that the

subpoenas had [1] no temporal limitation, [2] no limitation in scope, [3] no limitation

indicating that they were for one-time use, and [4] that they stated on their face that

they would disseminate Ms. Valyou’s date of birth.” As a preliminary matter,

Valyou did not raise the one-time use or date of birth arguments to the lower court,

so we do not consider them. Sunset Harbour Condo. Ass’n v. Robbins, 914 So. 2d

925, 928 (Fla. 2005) (“[I]n order to be preserved for further review by a higher court,

an issue must be presented to the lower court and the specific legal argument or

ground to be argued on appeal or review must be part of that presentation if it is to

be considered preserved.”) (quoting Tillman v. State, 471 So. 2d 32, 35 (Fla. 1985)).

We find Valyou’s temporal limitation argument, that the subpoenas should

have been limited to a ten-year timeframe, to be without merit. Valyou admits she is

alleging both neck and back injuries stemming from the auto accident which

happened in 2023. She concedes that she has been disabled from a back injury since

1987. Under these circumstances, Valyou’s request that production of medical

records be limited to ten years before the date of the subpoenas’ issuance was rightly

rejected by the trial court.

3 This brings us to Valyou’s last argument, that the subpoenas lacked proper

scope because they violated her constitutional right to privacy. Her objections to the

notices as well as her memorandum of law filed before the trial court’s hearing do

not clarify which institutions were at risk of producing supposedly irrelevant medical

records. At the hearing, Valyou generally claimed that the scope of all the subpoenas

should be limited to records relating to her “neck and back,” but only specifically

directed the court’s attention to dental records, arguing, “My client is not making a

claim for anything related to dental.” Navedo responded that “people will have

discussions with doctors about all of their aches and pains,” giving the example that

“dentists can also indicate . . . whether you’re having neck pain.” Valyou made no

effort to refute Navedo’s position.

Below and here, Valyou relies almost exclusively on this Court’s recent

decision in Dominguez. But Dominguez is entirely distinguishable. There, the

plaintiff pursued a medical malpractice claim related to damaged nerves resulting

from removal of a fatty tumor in her armpit. 381 So. 3d at 1272. Dominguez first

acknowledged that by suing the defendants, the plaintiff had waived her

constitutional right to privacy in medical records that were relevant to her claims,

but added that she still retained her right to privacy in those medical records that

were irrelevant to her claims. Id. (citing Weaver v. Myers, 229 So. 3d 1118, 1132

(Fla. 2017)). The defendants had attempted to serve numerous non-party subpoenas,

4 which the Dominguez court agreed were “highly probable” to result in the production

of irrelevant medical records because they “cast[] too wide a net.” Id. at 1273–4

(quoting Tanner v. Hart, 313 So. 3d 805, 808 (Fla. 2d DCA 2021). Dominguez thus

concluded that protection of the plaintiff’s right to privacy in her medical records

required the lower court to either conduct an in-camera review of the records or

appropriately narrow the subpoenas.

In this case, however, we are not faced with the same or even similar facts to

those in Dominguez. As noted, Dominguez involved a medical malpractice claim

relative to nerve damage in the plaintiff’s armpit, which was a localized injury or

condition, and not generalized neck and back injuries resultant from an automobile

accident. Valyou apparently reads Dominguez as standing for the proposition that

whenever a subpoena uses the phrase “any and all records” it per se “cast[s] too wide

a net, resulting in the highly probable inclusion of irrelevant medical records, which

violates an individual’s right to privacy as protected under the Florida Constitution.”

To be clear, though, that is not the holding of Dominguez, and it ignores a party’s

burden to show that the subpoenas were “highly probable” to result in the production

of irrelevant records. By contrast, Valyou relied on a boilerplate complaint asserting

generalized “bodily injury,” then sought without support to narrow her claims to

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471 So. 2d 32 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1985)
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