Rachel Stevick Quires v. Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Donna M. Dubois

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 18, 2025
Docket5D2023-2967
StatusPublished

This text of Rachel Stevick Quires v. Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Donna M. Dubois (Rachel Stevick Quires v. Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Donna M. Dubois) 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
Rachel Stevick Quires v. Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Donna M. Dubois, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

Case No. 5D2023-2967 LT Case No. 2020-CA-000389 _____________________________

RACHEL STEVICK QUIRES,

Appellant,

v.

COPPERSTONE EQUESTRIAN CENTER, LLC and DONNA M. DUBOIS,

Appellees. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Hernando County. Donald E. Scaglione, Judge.

David S. Romanik, of David S. Romanik, P.A., Ocala, for Appellant.

Avery S. Chapman, of Chapman Law Group, P.L.C., Wellington, for Appellee, Donna M. Dubois.

No Appearance for Remaining Appellee.

July 18, 2025

MACIVER, J.

Rachel Stevick Quires appeals the denial of her post-judgment motions for attorney’s fees and costs from a lawsuit brought by Donna M. Dubois. Quires argues the trial court erred by refusing to recognize her as a prevailing party entitled to fees and costs under Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (“FDUTPA”), Chapter 501, Florida Statutes. Because none of Quires’s arguments show reversible error, we affirm the Fees Final Judgment. The record shows that Dubois was properly deemed the prevailing party, and the trial court acted within its discretion in denying Quires’s attorney’s fees and costs motions.

I.

Dubois sued Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Quires (Copperstone’s sole owner) over Dubois’s purchase of a pleasure horse, alleging various contract and tort claims and seeking damages related to the horse’s sale. Dubois alleged that Copperstone was the “alter ego” of Quires and attempted to hold Quires personally liable on all counts. One count asserted a claim under FDUTPA against both defendants and sought attorney’s fees under FDUTPA’s prevailing-party fee provision. See § 501.2105(1), Fla. Stat. (2020).

Quires and Copperstone answered and asserted entitlement to attorney’s fees from Dubois under the FDUTPA’s fee-shifting provision should they prevail. Dubois did not allege or establish any special circumstances that would exempt her from FDUTPA’s reciprocity of attorney’s fees.

The case proceeded through litigation and was eventually referred to non-binding arbitration by court order on August 15, 2022. Later, following multiple hearings, the arbitrator issued a final arbitration decision. In that decision, the arbitrator found that Dubois met her burden of proof on only one of her eight claims: Count II for negligent misrepresentation against Copperstone. Dubois failed to prevail on all other counts, including all claims against Quires, either because the arbitrator found no wrongdoing by Quires or because Dubois failed to establish the alter ego theory. The arbitrator determined that Copperstone (through its agent Quires) had negligently misrepresented the horse’s condition and awarded Dubois $34,940 in damages. The arbitrator imposed no liability on Quires and denied Quires’s counterclaim, leaving her with no affirmative recovery.

2 No party requested a trial de novo within twenty days, so the trial court adopted the arbitrator’s decision as the final judgment on January 4, 2023, which confirmed and incorporated the arbitration award (“Damages Final Judgment”). See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.820(h). That judgment—entered with all parties’ consent— awarded Dubois $34,940 in damages against Copperstone alone, mirroring the arbitrator’s decision. The Damages Final Judgment stated that judgment was entered only against Copperstone and not against Quires, consistent with the arbitration outcome. Dubois, in other words, obtained a money judgment against Copperstone, and Quires was exonerated of personal liability.

Following the Damages Final Judgment, both sides pursued attorney’s fees and costs. Dubois sought an award of her fees and costs from Copperstone, primarily based on a pre-suit offer of settlement she had served on Copperstone which, given the outcome, entitled her to fees under Florida’s offer-of-judgment statute. See generally § 768.79, Fla. Stat. (2020). In turn, Quires timely filed her motions for attorney’s fees and costs as to Dubois, asserting that she was the prevailing party against Dubois (having defeated all claims against her) and was entitled to recover her attorney’s fees and costs under FDUTPA’s prevailing-party provision.

Quires timely filed her fee motion within the thirty-day period. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.525. 1 The trial court held the fee hearing on May 31, 2023, to resolve both Dubois’s motion for fees against Copperstone and Quires’s request for fees against Dubois—Quires’s counsel received notice of the hearing one day before it occurred. At the hearing, Dubois introduced billing records and supporting testimony to establish the reasonableness of her fees and costs against Copperstone. Quires did not present comparable evidence on the amount of the fees she sought from Dubois, citing the abbreviated notice period. The trial court permitted Quires’s counsel to address entitlement to fees despite

1 While the court originally struck the fee motion on procedural grounds, because it addressed Quires’s entitlement at the subsequent fee hearing we need not resolve whether the court erred by initially striking the motion.

3 the prior order declaring her motion moot. Quires’s counsel provided argument as to fees and cost entitlement but submitted no substantive evidence on the amounts. Each party was then asked to submit proposed orders addressing all issues. After argument, the trial court announced—and later memorialized in a written order—that Dubois was entitled to recover her attorney’s fees and costs from Copperstone, and that Quires would receive no fees or costs from Dubois.

In response, Quires requested a rehearing after the denial of her request for fees and costs under FDUTPA.

The trial court later entered a “Final Judgment on Attorney’s Fees and Costs” (“Fees Final Judgment”). In that judgment, the trial court awarded Dubois a specific sum in fees and costs against Copperstone and denied any award to Quires. The Fees Final Judgment recited the trial court’s earlier determination on Quires’s motion, concluding that Dubois was the prevailing party for purposes of fees and costs and that Quires was not entitled to fees. This final judgment disposed of all remaining issues. As a result, Quires filed a timely notice of appeal encompassing both the February 15th Order and the Fees Final Judgment.

II.

Standing to Appeal the Fee Denial

Before considering the merits of Quires’s appeal, Dubois contends that Quires lacks standing to appeal because the only final judgment on the merits was entered in Quires’s favor. Dubois points out that Quires is not a party against whom the Final Judgment was entered and thus was not aggrieved. In Dubois’s view, a party who obtains a judgment in their favor cannot be “aggrieved” by that judgment and therefore lacks standing to appeal it. Dubois relies on the general rule that one cannot appeal a judgment in their favor, citing Dep’t of Rev. ex rel Marquez v. Lopez, 252 So. 3d 823, 824 (Fla. 1st DCA 2018), for the proposition that an appeal should be dismissed if the appellant is not adversely affected by the order. See id. Dubois maintains that Quires, having prevailed by avoiding liability, has no standing to complain on

4 appeal. Dubois characterizes Quires’s appeal as an attempt to obtain an advisory opinion on a hypothetical fee entitlement.

Quires counters that she has standing to prosecute this appeal because she is aggrieved by the post-judgment orders denying her attorney’s fees and costs. Though the Damages Final Judgment on the merits was in her favor, Quires emphasizes that she is not appealing that favorable judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
Rachel Stevick Quires v. Copperstone Equestrian Center, LLC and Donna M. Dubois, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rachel-stevick-quires-v-copperstone-equestrian-center-llc-and-donna-m-fladistctapp-2025.