Funny Cide Ventures v. Miami Herald Pub.

955 So. 2d 1241, 2007 WL 1426986
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 16, 2007
Docket4D06-2347
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 955 So. 2d 1241 (Funny Cide Ventures v. Miami Herald Pub.) 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
Funny Cide Ventures v. Miami Herald Pub., 955 So. 2d 1241, 2007 WL 1426986 (Fla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

955 So.2d 1241 (2007)

FUNNY CIDE VENTURES, LLC., and Sackatoga Stable, Appellants,
v.
The MIAMI HERALD PUBLISHING CO., and Knight-Ridder, Inc., Appellees.

No. 4D06-2347.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

May 16, 2007.

Bruce S. Rogow and Cynthia E. Gunther of Bruce S. Rogow, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.

Sanford L. Bohrer and Scott D. Ponce of Holland & Knight, LLP., Miami, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

The elusiveness of horse racing's Triple Crown set the stage for this appeal, in which the plaintiffs argue the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for the defendants. The amended complaint alleged that the defendants' publication of an article that stated that the jockey had admitted having something in his hand during his ride of the horse Funny Cide in the Kentucky Derby ultimately led to significant *1242 financial losses for the plaintiffs. The trial court disagreed and granted summary judgment for the defendants. We affirm.

The plaintiffs' horse, Funny Cide, won the Kentucky Derby in 2003. Shortly thereafter, and before the running of the Preakness, the Miami Herald falsely reported that the jockey Jose Santos admitted carrying an object in his hand during the Kentucky Derby. The article implied that he had cheated in the race by using an illegal battery-operated device. The Herald published a "correction & clarification" after being served with a statutory demand for retraction. The Herald agreed that Santos had not admitted to holding the object and apologized for the error.

Jose Santos rode Funny Cide to victory in the Preakness, winning by several lengths. But, the Triple Crown eluded the jockey and the horse when they placed third in the Belmont.

The plaintiffs, Sackatoga Stable and Funny Cide Ventures, LLC, (FCV) filed an amended complaint against the Herald for injurious falsehood and claimed damages for lost marketing and horse racing revenue because of the article. Specifically, the amended complaint alleged:

Third persons were influenced by [the Herald]'s publications, and falsely made to believe that Sackatoga [and FCV] conducted its horse racing business unlawfully. Consequently, Sackatoga [and FCV] suffered in its business relationships, and the value of the Funny Cide brand was diminished by [the Herald]'s publications.

As discovery took place, the plaintiffs' claim took new shape. The plaintiffs claimed that the article caused the jockey to over-ride the horse in the Preakness in an attempt to vindicate himself and the horse, used up too much of the horse's strength, and resulted in a third-place finish in the Belmont. In answers to interrogatories, the plaintiffs claimed their damages took the form of the loss of the winner's purse in the Belmont and the bonus for the Triple Crown.

The defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on multiple grounds. One basis for the motion was that the claim was not legally supportable because the defendants did not cause the damages. The trial court granted the motion and entered summary judgment.

We review summary judgments de novo. L'Etoile Homeowners Ass'n. v. Fresolone, 940 So.2d 1170, 1170 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006).

The plaintiffs alleged the tort of injurious falsehood. In such actions, the pecuniary loss recoverable is "restricted to that which results directly and immediately from the falsehood's effect on the conduct of third persons and the expenses incurred to counteract the publication." Bothmann v. Harrington, 458 So.2d 1163, 1170 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). This requires the damages to "have been foreseeable and normal consequences of the alleged wrongful conduct, and the conduct must be a substantial factor in bringing about the losses." Id.

Here, despite the novelty and creativity of the allegations, it cannot be said that the loss of the Belmont and the Triple Crown was a direct and immediate result of the Herald article. Simply put, it was not legally foreseeable that the article would cause the jockey to over-ride the horse in the Preakness, sapping the horse of its strength, and resulting in a third-place finish in the Belmont. Those damages are too tenuous and this claim cannot be countenanced in the law. We agree *1243 that the trial court correctly entered summary judgment for the defendants.

Affirmed.

STONE and MAY, JJ., concur.

Opinion by Judge FARMER.

I. Foreword

Once there was a maverick law Professor who denounced all legal writing. He said there were two things wrong with it: its content and its style.[1] This was more than 70 years ago.

Judicial writing is still a prominent form of legal writing. Most of it is dreary and tedious. As he said, opinions are filled with "long, vague and fuzzy words." Another critic has described them as "wordy, unclear, pompous, and dull."[2] Their style comes from the law reviews, the very one the maverick professor found ponderous and obscure.

A surprising number are way too long. There is often a painstaking account of background and trial which turns out to be unnecessary to grasp the essential issues to be decided. Many have extended discussions of rules and principles no one really challenges, or few would dispute. Judges pile on needless details of date, time and place, modified by confusing identifying terms (appellant-cross appellee-defendant) without regard to clarity. Extended comparative quotations alternate with exposition of one sort or another. Legal issues are analyzed through mind-numbing, many-factored "tests". Each factor is unloaded nit by nit, as though the judges actually decided the dispute in precisely that way. Arcane legal terminology is woven in and out, even though simpler, plainer words could be used. Simplicity, tone, style, voice, personality, levity—all are shunned.

I admit that I too have made a generous contribution to this legal ennui all by myself. I can hardly deny my contributions—as this (with its footnotes) attests. My worst offenses came, I hope, when I was newer to this game. But now I wish to make a good act of contrition, do some penance, and offer an explanation for the opinion I prepared for the court in this case.

From the very moment of my appointment as a judge, I have chafed under this norm for appellate opinion writing. How did it become conventional? Who made it required? Why hasn't it been changed?

I struggled against it. There must be other styles, different tones, alternate voices. Not for every opinion. But for some.

One technique occurred to me. This idea would have an opinion in some of the forms, styles and characteristics associated with fiction. Good fiction is set in human experience. Good fiction illuminates. Fiction's style may yield questions, but the right questions can lead to discovery of truth.

A judge would use this style with restraint and propriety (of course). But in some cases such a style could be better suited to explain an outcome. A light fictional tone could express not ridicule but the heavy strain on logic or principle raised by some contentions in some contexts. In fact, this very case seemed appropriate to convey the essential idea. Although the argument is not frivolous, a *1244 lighter, story-like tone could better reveal the reasoning behind the result. This style would portray the inherent defect in the argument and in the process make legal reasoning vivid, law's result apt.

One prominent judge separates opinion writing into a "pure" form and an "impure" form.

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Related

Curry v. Bennett
301 S.W.3d 502 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2009)
Santos v. Knight-Ridder, Inc.
967 So. 2d 408 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2007)

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