Miami-Dade Expressway Authority v. Tropical Trailer Leasing

250 So. 3d 751
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 27, 2018
Docket16-2851
StatusPublished

This text of 250 So. 3d 751 (Miami-Dade Expressway Authority v. Tropical Trailer Leasing) 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
Miami-Dade Expressway Authority v. Tropical Trailer Leasing, 250 So. 3d 751 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed June 27, 2018. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D16-2851 Lower Tribunal No. 14-26236 ________________

Miami-Dade Expressway Authority and Javier Rodriguez, P.E., etc., Appellants,

vs.

Tropical Trailer Leasing, L.L.C., et al., Appellees.

An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, John W. Thornton, Jr., Judge.

Johnson, Anselmo, Murdoch, Burke, Piper & Hochman and Jonathan H. Railey, Michael R. Piper and Christopher J. Stearns (Fort Lauderdale), for appellants.

Akerman LLP and A. Rodger Traynor, Jr., and Lawrence D. Silverman, for appellees.

Before ROTHENBERG, C.J., and SALTER and LUCK, JJ.

SALTER, J. Defendants/appellants, Miami-Dade Expressway Authority and Javier

Rodriguez, P.E., in his official capacity as Executive Director of Miami-Dade

Expressway Authority (collectively, “MDX”), appeal an order granting a motion

for class certification by Tropical Trailer Leasing, L.L.C. (“Tropical Trailer”), and

eight co-plaintiffs (collectively, the nine plaintiffs are referred to as “Plaintiffs”).

We affirm.

I. Facts; Proceedings in the Circuit Court

The Plaintiffs are in the business of leasing trailers. The trailers are not self-

propelled, and the Plaintiffs do not own the tractor trucks needed to transport the

trailers. The Plaintiffs lease the trailers to third parties, who in turn hire the owners

of tractor trucks to tow the leased trailers. Many times the tractor truck owners

hire independent drivers for a particular haul or group of hauls.

Implemented in 2010, MDX uses an electronic transponder system to charge

the motor vehicles and drivers on its roads a toll based on the number of axles on

the vehicle. If the tractor truck contains a working electronic transponder device (a

“SunPass transponder”), the entire toll amount for a five-axle vehicle (three axles

for the tractor and two for the trailer) is automatically deducted from the SunPass

transponder account of the tractor truck’s owner. If the vehicle has no SunPass

transponder, then the MDX toll system relies on a video “Toll by Plate” system,

2 capturing an image of the vehicle’s rear tag. In such cases, MDX charges the

entire per-axle toll to the rear tag’s registered owner.

This practice led MDX to charge the Plaintiffs a full five-axle toll. The

Plaintiffs alleged that, starting in 2013, some MDX systems had the capability to

photograph the front tag belonging to the driver, but MDX made no consistent

effort to identify the driver of the motorized vehicle. The Plaintiffs asserted that

MDX had no authority to impose a toll on their tractor-towed, non-motorized

trailers before a 2012 amendment to the statutory definition of “motor vehicle,”

and thereafter, no authority to impose a toll on the trailers for the separately-owned

and operated tractor trucks pulling the trailers.

The Plaintiffs sued MDX for declaratory, injunctive and monetary relief

based on allegations that MDX’s toll collection practices, through its video tolling

and “Toll by Plate” system, had unlawfully charged the Plaintiffs tolls on

occasions where third parties were towing their trailers. The Plaintiffs argued that

a trailer owner is not the owner of the “motor vehicle” incurring the toll. The

Plaintiffs sought to certify a class of all trailer owners who were charged a toll by

MDX because the driver of the motorized tractor truck did not pay the toll incurred

by the truck.

The operative Second Amended Class Action Complaint asserted that many

of the tractor truck drivers tow the trailers on MDX roads without paying tolls.

3 These drivers allegedly smudge or obscure the tractor plate to avoid MDX

detection. Plaintiffs argued that Florida statutes make a driver ultimately

responsible for the entire unpaid toll, not the trailer owner. See § 316.1001(2)(c),

Fla. Stat. (2017). MDX has been imposing the toll on the trailer tag owners

because the trailer tag was the only captured tag. The Plaintiffs have no practical

way of identifying the drivers towing their trailers. This makes it impossible for

the Plaintiffs to track down the toll violator to compel immediate payment of the

toll, or to avoid the toll by providing MDX a timely affidavit with the toll

violator’s information, as required in section 316.1001(2)(C)1., and 2., Florida

Statutes (2017). As a result, the Plaintiffs have been paying most of the violations

even though the tolls are unlawful.

The complaint also sought clarification of the trailer owners’ liability for

tolls after a 2012 statutory amendment. Prior to July 1, 2012, Plaintiffs allege that

MDX had no authority to assess tolls against Tropical Trailer’s non-self-propelled

vehicles. This is based on section 316.110(2)(c), which specifies that the “owner

of the motor vehicle involved in the violation is responsible and liable for payment

. . . .” The pre-2012 version of section 316.003 defined “motor vehicle” as “(21)

Motor vehicle.--Any self-propelled vehicle not operated upon rails or guideway,

but not including any bicycle, motorized scooter, electric personal assistive

4 mobility device, or moped.” As the trailers were not self-propelled, they could not

be assessed any toll under the pre-2012 statute.

In 2012, however, the legislature amended section 316.003(21), defining

“motor vehicle” as:

(21) Motor vehicle.--Except when used in s. 316.1001, any self- propelled vehicle not operated upon rails or guideway, but not including any bicycle, motorized scooter, electric personal assistive mobility device, or moped. For purposes of s. 316.1001, “motor vehicle” has the same meaning as in s. 320.01(1)(a).

§ 316.003(21), Fla. Stat. (2012) (emphasis added) (Ch. 2012-111, § 2, Laws of

Fla., eff. July 1, 2012, to Dec 31, 2012) (currently renumbered as § 316.003(40)).

Section 320.01(1)(a), in turn, provides:

(1) “Motor vehicle” means:

(a) An automobile, motorcycle, truck, trailer, semitrailer, truck tractor and semitrailer combination, or any other vehicle operated on the roads of this state . . . .

The 2012 amendment to the section 316.003(21) definition arguably created

an ambiguity between the requirements in section 316.1001, requiring payment

from the registered owner of the motor vehicle committing the toll violation, and

the now-undefined responsible party for the toll when there were several owners

involved in a “truck tractor and semitrailer combination,” as is the case in the

Plaintiffs’ operations.

5 The Plaintiffs moved for class certification. At the class certification

hearing, Tropical Trailer’s co-owner and general manager, Alberto Vara, testified

as the representative of all nine Plaintiffs. The second and only other witness was

Stephan Andriuk, the Deputy Executive Director and Director of Toll Operations

for MDX.

Vara testified that the two MDX toll violation databases he examined

included over 83,000 trailer owners who had paid tolls to MDX between October

14, 2010, and April 2016 as a result of the video-based billing of trailer license

plates. Vara described the methodology he used to analyze the data in the

databases, and to compile the numbers he used. Although Vara was not able to

state a precise number of other trailer owners that also owned the tractor truck

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