Hibbard v. McGraw
This text of 862 So. 2d 816 (Hibbard v. McGraw) 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.
Opinion
Faith Carr HIBBARD, o/b/o Amanda K. Carr, Appellant,
v.
Michael McGRAW and Dual Incorporated, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*818 Stephen C. Bullock of Brannon, Brown, Haley, Robinson & Bullock, P.A., Lake City, for Appellants.
Francis J. Milon and Harris Brown of Harris Brown, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellees.
SHARP, W., J.
Amanda Carr, by her mother and guardian, Faith Carr Hibbard, appeals from a final judgment in favor of the defendants in a personal injury action and an award of attorney's fees to the defendants based on their unaccepted proposal to settle the case. Carr raises numerous issues on appeal, only two of which involve reversible error. We reverse the judgment awarding attorney's fees because the defendants' proposal for settlement was ambiguous and thus will not support an award of fees under the offer of judgment statute. We also reverse the judgment in favor of the defendants because damages were incorrectly calculated, as the defendants properly concede. In all other regards, we affirm.[1]
The ambiguity in the proposal for settlement arises because of Carr's age, the manner in which this lawsuit was pursued and the language of the proposal itself. In August 1997, then sixteen year old Carr was a passenger in a pickup truck driven by her friend, Mark Brock. Carr and Brock were driving behind McGraw on a two-lane road in Jacksonville. McGraw proceeded slowly, so Brock drove into the left lane to pass him. Unfortunately, McGraw was in the process of making a left turn. To avoid hitting McGraw, Brock swerved and his truck went off the road, overturned and hit a tree. Carr, who was not wearing a seatbelt or shoulder harness, fractured her pelvis.
In January 2000, Carr, through her mother, Faith Carr Hibbard, filed suit against McGraw and his employer, Dual Incorporated. By this time, Carr was eighteen years old.[2]
On March 5, 2001, the defendants tendered the following proposal to settle the case:
Defendants, MICHAEL McGRAW and DUAL INCORPORATED, by and through their undersigned counsel, hereby submit their proposal for settlement in favor of Plaintiff, AMANDA K. CARR, in the total sum of THIRTY FIVE THOUSAND AND ONE DOLLARS ($35,001.00), exclusive of attorneys' fees and costs, in exchange for an executed full release and voluntary dismissal with prejudice as to all claims against Defendants, MICHAEL McGRAW and DUAL INCORPORATED.
This Proposal for Settlement is for the alleged injuries and damages claimed by Plaintiff as a result of the accident which is the subject of this case.
About two weeks later, the defendants moved to amend the pleadings to show Carr as the "sole" plaintiff, since she was *819 more than eighteen years old.[3] The court did not rule on this motion until October 2001, about a month before trial. The court ordered that "Amanda Carr is an adult and shall appear on her own behalf as to her individual claims. Faith Carr Hibbard shall remain as a party Plaintiff as to her parental claim for general damages and claim for medical bills while Amanda Carr was a minor."
Prior to trial, Carr moved to strike the defendants' offer for settlement on the basis it did not specify the amount attributable to each plaintiff; i.e., to Carr and to her mother. The court rejected this argument ruling that the defendants were entitled to settle with one of the plaintiffs without regard to settling with the other.
At the November 13, 2001 trial, Brock and Carr, as well as McGraw and his passenger, testified to their recollections of the accident. Numerous experts testified for both sides.
The jury found Brock 70% negligent, Carr 25% negligent and McGraw 5% negligent and awarded the following damages.
Hibbard's economic damages for past medical expenses $ 104,766.44
Carr's economic damages for future medical expenses $ 100,000.00
Carr's past non-economic damages $ 100,000.00
Carr's future non-economic damages $ 50,000.00
Hibbard's loss of consortium $ 10,000.00
____________
Total $ 364,766.44
Both sides moved for entry of final judgment in their favor. The defendants also moved for attorney's fees and costs based on their proposal for settlement.
The trial court concluded the defendants were not jointly and severally liable since McGraw was found to be less than 10% at fault and less at fault than Carr. The court found the defendants' liability amounted to $18,238.32 (5% of the total award of $364,766.44) and they were entitled to a setoff for $72,966.09 from collateral sources, which far exceeded their liability. Thus the court entered judgment in favor of the defendants. Based on the unaccepted proposal for settlement, the court ordered Carr only (not her mother) to pay the defendants $18,460.60 in attorney's fees.
I. Offer of Judgment.
The requirements for a valid proposal for settlement are set forth in section 768.79[4] and Florida Rule of Civil Procedure *820 1.442.[5] The language in rule 1.442 must be strictly construed because the offer of judgment statute and rule are in derogation of the common law rule that each party pay its own attorney's fees. Willis Shaw Express, Inc. v. Hilyer Sod, Inc., 849 So.2d 276 (Fla.2003). In Loy v. Leone, 546 So.2d 1187 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989), this court noted the purpose of rule 1.442 is to sanction a party who does not timely accept a settlement offer made prior to trial by shifting payment and recovery of costs after the offer is made. In effect, it is a punitive measure and therefore should be construed in favor of the party to be sanctioned. But for the offer of judgment statute, the defense would have to pay its own attorney's fees.
Because the offer of judgment statute and related rule must be strictly construed, virtually any proposal that is ambiguous is not enforceable. Barnes v. The Kellogg Company, 846 So.2d 568 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003). For example, in Dudley v. McCormick, 799 So.2d 436 (Fla. 1st DCA 2001), the appellate court reversed the award of attorney's fees where the defendant offered to settle with the mother, individually and as best friend and next of kin of her minor son, and her son, in their personal injury action after the son was injured in an automobile accident. The proposal for settlement did not specify separate amounts for the mother and son or designate only one plaintiff as the offeree.
On appeal, the court noted the mother was the real party in interest insofar as her own individual claims were concerned. However, she was not the real party in interest insofar as her son's claims were concernedrather she was asserting his claims as his representative. Thus the case involved two plaintiffs, not one.
The court concluded that the defendant's offer did not comply with the offer of judgment statute or rule 1.442 because it did not state the amount attributable to each party. There were two distinct parties plaintiffthe mother individually and her son, whom she represented. The mother may have been willing to settle her *821 individual claims for all or part of the amount offered, if she had been able to do so without compromising her son's claims, or vise versa.
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862 So. 2d 816, 2003 WL 22867622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hibbard-v-mcgraw-fladistctapp-2003.