Scotts Co. v. Hacienda Loma Linda

2 So. 3d 1013, 2008 Fla. App. LEXIS 19361, 2008 WL 5352221
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 24, 2008
Docket3D08-345
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 So. 3d 1013 (Scotts Co. v. Hacienda Loma Linda) 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
Scotts Co. v. Hacienda Loma Linda, 2 So. 3d 1013, 2008 Fla. App. LEXIS 19361, 2008 WL 5352221 (Fla. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

SALTER, J.

The Scotts Company, a subsidiary, and an employee (collectively, “Scotts”) appeal a circuit court order reinstating a lawsuit filed in that court by the appellee, Hacienda Loma Linda. The lawsuit was previously dismissed for forum non conveniens. 1 This second appeal requires attention to certain measures taken by foreign jurisdictions and foreign plaintiffs to counteract such dismissals in the United States. Concluding that our Florida Supreme Court’s watershed ruling in Kinney System, Inc. v. Continental Insurance Co., 674 So.2d 86 (Fla.1996), will be essentially abrogated if we give effect to such measures, we reverse the order below and direct that the Florida case be dismissed.

Scotts I

Hacienda, a Panama corporation with its principal place of business in Panama, cultivated orchids at nurseries located in Panama. Hacienda’s officers and employees were based in Panama, though its president also maintained a home and home office in Miami. Hacienda claimed that an employee of Scotts met with him at a trade show in Florida and told him about a product called “Osmocote Plus” that would benefit Hacienda’s orchids. Instead, Hacienda claimed, the product destroyed thousands of the orchids in Panama with resultant and catastrophic monetary damage to Hacienda.

Hacienda commenced its lawsuit in the circuit court in Miami in 2004. Scotts moved to dismiss the complaint for forum non conveniens, but the motion was denied after an evidentiary hearing. This Court reversed that ruling in Scotts I after re *1015 viewing the record under the analysis established in Kinney. Although we concluded then that “under the circumstances of this case, there is no preemption 2 and Panama will be an adequate alternate forum available to resolve this dispute,” we required the parties to “stipulate as a condition of dismissal that the court retain jurisdiction in the event the Panama court does not entertain the case based on preemption.” Scotts I, 942 So.2d at 902-03 (citations omitted).

The Blocking Statute and Hacienda’s Lawsuit in Panama

After this Court had granted dismissal for forum non conveniens, but while Hacienda unsuccessfully sought rehearing, rehearing en banc, and discretionary review in the Florida Supreme Court, Panama enacted a law titled “Special Procedure for Resolving International Disputes.” Article 1421-J of that law purported to block transfers based on forum non conveniens:

Suits brought in this country as a result of a foreign judgment of forum non con-veniens preclude domestic jurisdiction. Thus, they must be rejected ex officio for lack of jurisdiction for constitutional reasons or based on provisions of preventive jurisdiction. 3

Hacienda immediately cited the new statute in support of its then-pending motions for rehearing and rehearing en banc, but as noted, this Court denied the motions. Ultimately, proceedings to challenge the statute were brought in the Supreme Court of Panama, the Attorney General of Panama opined that the statute was unconstitutional, and the law was repealed in early 2008.

But in the interim, on November 21, 2007, Hacienda filed its complaint in a trial court in Panama. Instead of limiting the complaint to the critical facts and legal support for the claims and relief sought, however, Hacienda’s complaint also included: copies and certified translations of key pleadings and the order of dismissal in the Florida circuit court case; a copy and certified translation of this Court’s decision in Scotts I; and a copy of the blocking statute, including Article 1421-J. Three business days later, and without considering any pleading or response filed by Scotts, the Panamanian court entered a decision declining jurisdiction on two grounds. First, the court found that the 2006 blocking statute, Article 1421-J (which had not yet, at that date, been repealed), “requires Panamanian judges to reject outright any action arising from the application of forum non conveniens.” Second, that court applied the principle of “preventive jurisdiction,” relying on decisional law “ruling that a Panamanian Circuit Court Judge must ‘disqualify’ himself from hearing the case for lack of jurisdiction, since the foreign Court had been given jurisdiction over same.”

The Panamanian court noted at the outset, however, that jurisdiction was otherwise available and that “the complaint fully meets all the requirements indicated in *1016 article 665 of the Legal Code, with regard to the naming of the parties, the designation of the competent court, specification of the thing or judgment sought, etc.” In short, Hacienda’s complaint in Panama was rejected there because (a) Hacienda included allegations and exhibits sufficient to invite dismissal based on preemption and the blocking statute, and (b) Hacienda did not stipulate to jurisdiction or ask the Panamanian court not to dismiss on grounds of preemption or the blocking statute.

The Appeals in Panama

If Hacienda’s complaint in Panama led with its chin, its “appeal” from the order of dismissal there truly and literally took a dive. On behalf of the appellant, Hacienda’s attorneys in Panama included a statement asking the Panamanian appellate court to confirm the lower court’s ruling because it is “in our best legal and ethical opinion, in accordance with and strictly adheres to Panamanian law.” Counsel explained that Hacienda only took the appeal to avoid criticism in Florida “to the effect that we have not brought to bear all the recourses and remedies available to us.” Scotts also appealed the lower court of order of dismissal, and both appeals are pending.

Analysis

Federal courts paved the way for forum non conveniens analysis in international eases in Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 330 U.S. 501, 67 S.Ct. 839, 91 L.Ed. 1055 (1947). As globalization brought ever more international cases into state courts, Gulf Oil was extensively followed in the states by rule and decision. In Florida, Kinney cited and substantially followed Gulf Oil. See Kinney, 674 So.2d 86.

But the lure of U.S. tort laws, pretrial discovery, class actions, punitive damages, jury verdicts, and contingent legal fees assured that a kind of international legal chess game 4 would follow the early forum non conveniens rulings. In an effort to enhance their own citizens’ chances of avoiding a forum non conveniens dismissal in the U.S., a number of countries enacted laws or rendered judicial decisions intended to preclude their own courts from hearing the refiled cases. The plain intention of these measures was to assure that the foreign country would not be an “available adequate forum” for purposes of the U.S. court’s forum non conveniens analysis, with the hoped-for result that a plaintiff from that country would be able to keep its claims in the U.S. court.

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 3d 1013, 2008 Fla. App. LEXIS 19361, 2008 WL 5352221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scotts-co-v-hacienda-loma-linda-fladistctapp-2008.