Seaboard Surety Company v. Garrison, Webb & Stanaland, P.A., F/k/a Stanaland, Blackwell & Company, P.A. And William Stanaland

823 F.2d 434, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 10267
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1987
Docket86-3255
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 823 F.2d 434 (Seaboard Surety Company v. Garrison, Webb & Stanaland, P.A., F/k/a Stanaland, Blackwell & Company, P.A. And William Stanaland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaboard Surety Company v. Garrison, Webb & Stanaland, P.A., F/k/a Stanaland, Blackwell & Company, P.A. And William Stanaland, 823 F.2d 434, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 10267 (11th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case arises out of a financial audit of Advance Contractors, Inc. performed at its request by the defendant certified public accountants. This audit was relied upon by plaintiff Seaboard Surety Company, a bonding company, when it wrote three performance bonds for the contractor. When the contractor defaulted on its construction contract and went bankrupt, Seaboard allegedly lost over $1,400,000. The bonding company, claiming the audit failed to reveal a $500,000 indebtedness, sued the accountants (1) for gross negligence, (2) for fraud, and (3) as a third-party beneficiary of the audit performed by the accountants on behalf of the contractor. The district court entered a directed verdict for defendants on the gross negligence count, and Seaboard has not appealed from that ruling. The parties stipulated to a dismissal, without prejudice, of the fraud count. The case went to the jury on the third-party beneficiary count with instructions 1 and special *436 interrogatories 2 which reflected the district court’s view that any third-party liability must be premised on a breach of the underlying contract between the defendant accountants and Advanced Contractors, and that any defenses available against the contracting party were also available against a third-party beneficiary. The jury returned a verdict for defendants based on its finding that although plaintiff was a third-party beneficiary to the contract, defendants had not effectively breached the contract by failing to perform the audit with reasonable care. We affirm.

Plaintiffs appeal focuses on Florida law and the proper interpretation to be given to First American Title Ins. v. First Title Serv. Co., 457 So.2d 467 (Fla.1984). In that case, the Florida Supreme Court established for the first time that a title abstracter owes a duty of care to certain third parties who are not in privity with the abstracter. The parties do not contest the extension of First American Title to accountants, and it seems clear that the principle of law there announced would be extended to such audit contracts by the Florida courts. See Investment Corporation of Florida v. Buchman, 208 So.2d 291 (Fla.2d DCA 1968); Canaveral Capital Corporation v. Bruce, 214 So.2d 505 (Fla.3d DCA 1968).

Plaintiff Seaboard Surety claims that First American Title recognized a duty flowing from the accountants to third parties “independent” of the duty owed by defendants to the contractor. Consistent with this interpretation, Seaboard Surety objected to the instructions and special interrogatories which premised defendants’ liability to Seaboard Surety on a breach of its contract with Advanced Contractors, Inc., the bonded contractor who employed defendant accountants to do the audit. Seaboard Surety argues that although the Florida Supreme Court held that the plaintiffs in First American Title had “stated a cause of action as a third-party beneficiary of the contract,” 457 So.2d at 468, the true nature of the cause of action created sounds in tort rather than contract principles. Seaboard Surety points out that the Florida Supreme Court cited Ultramares Corp. v. Touche, 255 N.Y. 170, 174 N.E. 441 (1931) (per Cardozo, C.J.), and Glanzer v. Shepard, 233 N.Y. 236, 135 N.E. 275 (1922) (per Cardozo, C.J.), with approval in its First American Title opinion. Seaboard Surety argues that the court’s reliance upon these cases, which address tort actions for negligence, supports the conclusion that the cause of action created in First American Title has a tort basis.

The only reason the Florida Supreme Court couched its decision in contract terminology, Seaboard Surety argues, was in order to restrict the size of the potential plaintiff class, not the theory of recovery or the scope of the duty owed.

This argument fails for several reasons, all involving the essential contract *437 nature of the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in First American Title. First, Seaboard Surety’s arguments have, on appeal, essentially tracked the failed petitioner’s argumente in First American Title itself. Seaboard Surety basically contends that the proper test for liability is not the existence of a contractual relationship between the parties, but rather the foreseeability of the plaintiff’s reliance. But that argument was rejected by the Florida Supreme Court because all the cases cited in support of this erosion of contract theory involved bodily harm or injury caused by design defect. The privity doctrine had indeed been undermined in the area of products liability, the court explained, but not because reliance had now become the basic underpinning of contract law. The reason privity had lost its strength in the field of products liability was instead due to the need for the ultimate consumer to rely upon a distant manufacturer with whom no privity could ever be established for the safety and fitness of the product.

The Florida Supreme Court also distinguished its decision from the result reached in A.R. Moyer, Inc. v. Graham, 285 So.2d 397 (Fla.1973). In A.R. Moyer, the contractor was totally dependent upon the plans and specifications prepared by an architect or engineer and was unable to take steps independently to protect itself against the consequences of the negligence of the architect or engineer. First American Title, 457 So.2d at 471-72.

Second, the Court found the policy arguments put forward in the cases referred to above along with Williams v. Polgar, 391 Mich. 6, 215 N.W.2d 149 (1974), as helpful in its extension of privity, but expressly stated that these policy arguments “do not persuade us to adopt open-ended liability for negligence to any foreseeably relying persons.” First American Title, 457 So.2d at 472. The Court then proceeded to state the proposition of law it wished to establish in terms of a contractual duty:

When an abstract is prepared in the knowledge or under conditions in which an abstracter should reasonably expect that the employer is to provide it to third persons for purposes of inducing those persons to rely on the abstract as evidence of title, the abstracter’s contractual duty to perform the service skillfully and diligently runs to the benefit of such known third parties.

Id. at 472 (emphasis added).

Third, the law of Florida prior to First American Title had developed out of and continued to rely upon the contract theory of recovery. See Sickler, 195 So.2d at 197; Investment Corporation of Florida v. Buchman, supra, Canaveral Capital Corporation, supra; but see Kovaleski v. Tallahassee Title Co., 363 So.2d 1156, 1160 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978) (The Florida Supreme Court cast some doubt on Kovaleski in its opinion in First American Title. See 457 So.2d at 474).

Fourth, a Florida appellate court, subsequent to the decision in First American Title

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823 F.2d 434, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 10267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-surety-company-v-garrison-webb-stanaland-pa-fka-ca11-1987.