Rohlwing v. MYAKKA RIVER REAL PROPERTIES
This text of 884 So. 2d 402 (Rohlwing v. MYAKKA RIVER REAL PROPERTIES) 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
Phyllis ROHLWING, Susan Rohlwing Jones, Harvey Rohlwing and Cindy Rohlwing, Husband and Wife, and Richard Rohlwing, and Linda Rohlwing, Husband and Wife, Appellants,
v.
MYAKKA RIVER REAL PROPERTIES, INC., Principally and as Successor Trustee, Frederick Strammer, Individually and as Former Trustee, Doris Jean Strammer, Charles Koch, Betty Koch, Patricia Pratt, Susan Gale Palmer, as Executrix of Estate of Pamela Palmer, David B. Palmer, J. Michael Hartenstine, and Williams, Parker, Harrison, Dietz, & Getzen, P.A., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*403 Timothy W. Weber and Stephen J. Wein of Battaglia, Ross, Dicus & Wein, P.A., St. Petersburg, for Appellants.
Bonita Kneeland and James J. Evangelista of Fowler White Boggs Banker, P.A., Tampa, for Appellees Williams, Parker, Harrison, Dietz & Getzen, and J. Michael Hartenstine.
CASANUEVA, Judge.
Following the dismissal with prejudice of their fifth amended complaint, the plaintiffs (the Rohlwings) contend the dismissal is fatally defective because the trial court's orders lack the findings required by Kozel v. Ostendorf, 629 So.2d 817 (Fla.1993). We agree and reverse.
Procedural History
This lawsuit was first filed in January 2000, but the problems leading up to it date from the early 1990s. Appellants, the six Rohlwings, and Appellees Frederick Strammer, Doris Jean Strammer, Charles Koch, Betty Koch, Patricia Pratt, Susan Gale Palmer, and David B. Palmer (trustee and cobeneficiaries) are the current beneficiaries of a land trust formed in 1972. The Rohlwings commenced the suit because they opposed certain actions the former trustee, Frederick Strammer, and the current trustee, Myakka River Real Properties, Inc., have taken with the concurrence of the cobeneficiaries in developing the parcel of land that is the only asset of the trust.
Their initial six-count complaint consisted of twenty-one pages and contained eighty-seven pages of exhibits. The Williams, Parker firm appeared on behalf of the trustees and moved to dismiss the complaint on various grounds. The Rohlwings then served a nineteen-page amended complaint with sixty pages of exhibits, *404 causing another motion to dismiss to be filed, joined with a motion to compel separate statements of claim and a motion for more definite statement. These motions were denied and the defendants filed their answer and affirmative defenses. Late in 2000, counsel for the cobeneficiaries took on representation of the current and former trustees because the Rohlwings had moved to amend their complaint and to add as parties-defendant the Williams, Parker law firm and J. Michael Hartenstine.
With leave of court, the Rohlwings filed their second amended complaint that added counts of breach of fiduciary duty and negligence against the attorneys. All defendants answered this latest complaint and asserted their affirmative defenses. The cobeneficiaries also counterclaimed. Appropriate responses to the affirmative defenses were made, and a lengthy period of discovery commenced in late January 2001 and lasted most of that year. Lackluster compliance with discovery requests necessitated the filing of several motions to compel by the Rohlwings.
In December 2001, and based on what they had learned from discovery in the case, the Rohlwings successfully moved for leave to file their third amended complaint, a 93-page document consisting of 384 paragraphs alleging 38 causes of action. Each count incorporated by reference the first 172 paragraphs. On behalf of the cobeneficiaries, counsel moved to dismiss the relevant counts of the complaint alleging various grounds, including that it violated Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.110(b) by failing to contain a short and plain statement, that it failed to state causes of action, that it contained claims allegedly barred by the statute of limitations, and that it improperly incorporated by reference the general allegations of the complaint into each separate count. On behalf of the defendant-attorneys, counsel also moved to dismiss the counts against them, complaining that those counts failed to contain a short and plain statement and, especially the fraud count, failed to allege the claims with sufficient specificity. Counsel additionally moved to strike the counts as a sham.
At the hearing on these latest motions to dismiss, the trial court criticized the complaint saying that a complaint is not meant to be a trial on the merits and that this complaint did not make sense when the counts were read individually. The court granted the motions to dismiss the third amended complaint. The written order states that the motions were granted "due to the complexity of the third amended complaint and its failure to state with specificity in each count the ultimate facts upon which each count is based with further failure to allege with specificity the damages resulting from the breach of any particular cause of action."
The 79-page fourth amended complaint contained 38 counts and 133 pages of exhibits. Both groups of defendants, the trustees/cobeneficiaries and the attorneys, again filed motions to dismiss asserting that plaintiffs' counsel did not comply with the court's previous order on how to properly plead a complaint. There was much heated discussion at the hearing on these motions, with plaintiffs' counsel attempting to address each and every one of the court's perceived concerns in each and every paragraph. The court agreed with defense counsel that no defense party could deal with this complaint in terms of a motion practice. The court dismissed the fourth amended complaint and directed plaintiffs' counsel to file a fifth amended complaint that complied with Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.110(b). The court warned that failure to do so in the next *405 complaint would result in a dismissal with prejudice.
The thirty-five page fifth amended complaint contained eight counts. Count I alleged breach of fiduciary duty against the two trustees and the cobeneficiaries. Count II was against them as well and alleged constructive fraud. Count III alleged fraud against Frederick Strammer and the other cobeneficiaries. Count IV alleged unauthorized conflict of interest transactions against the present and former trustees. Counts V, VI, and VII contained claims against attorney Hartenstine and his firm for legal malpractice/breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and aiding and abetting, respectively. Count VIII named all defendants and alleged "concert of action." Predictably, motions to dismiss were filed; but it was a successor judge who held the hearing on these latest motions in March 2003. The court dismissed the complaint with prejudice as to the trustees and cobeneficiaries, stating that for a case to be still in the pleading stage at that late date was just too long and that the previous judge had given plaintiffs' counsel a fair opportunity to plead properly. At the subsequent hearing on the attorneys' motion to dismiss the four counts as to them, the court granted their motion and dismissed the remaining counts as to them with prejudice also. Separate appeals ensued as to the two groups of defendants and were consolidated in this court.
Analysis
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
884 So. 2d 402, 2004 WL 2112648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohlwing-v-myakka-river-real-properties-fladistctapp-2004.