Southeast Grove Management Inc. v. McKiness
This text of 578 So. 2d 883 (Southeast Grove Management Inc. v. McKiness) 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
SOUTHEAST GROVE MANAGEMENT INC. and Florida Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co., Appellants,
v.
Joyce McKINESS, Donald R. Fox, Jr. and Delores W. Fox D/B/a Don Fox Groves, and Marcus D. Alston, D/B/a Alston Groves, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*884 Arthur J. England, Jr., of Fine, Jacobson, Schwartz, Nash, Block & England, Miami, for appellants.
Thomas R. Weller, Homestead, for appellees.
ERVIN, Judge.
This is a consolidated appeal in which Southeast Grove Management, Inc. (Southeast), and Florida Farm Bureau, Southeast's surety, appeal the final orders the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services entered against them in favor of Joyce McKiness, Marcus Alston, and Donald Fox (the producers or growers). We reverse the orders and remand for further proceedings.
Southeast is a dealer in agricultural products that picks fruit from individual groves, then takes it to the packing house where it is graded, sized, and shipped to be sold at prices according to size. In the cases at bar, Southeast picked limes for Don Fox Groves, Inc., and Joyce McKiness, and mangoes for Alston Groves. The appellees thereafter claimed that Southeast owed them additional monies over the amounts they were paid.
Each producer filed complaints against Southeast with the department pursuant to Section 604.21(1), Florida Statutes (1989).[1] The department notified Southeast and its insurer of the complaints, pursuant to section 604.21(2),[2] enclosed copies of the complaints, *885 and requested either an admission or a denial of the claims or satisfaction of the matters complained of within twenty-five days. Appellants were also given the opportunity to request a hearing on the complaint under Section 120.57, Florida Statutes (1989). Neither Southeast nor Florida Farm Bureau responded to the notice. Thereafter, the department entered a consolidated nonfinal order against Southeast for the full amount each appellee claimed: $39,167.58 to Alston, $5,560.08 to McKiness, and $999.40 to Fox.[3] Southeast then requested hearings pursuant to section 120.57(1).
None of the growers was represented by counsel at the hearings, although Southeast was. Each of the parties brought a variety of documentation for purposes of substantiating the amounts each claimed were due. It is clear from the record that when testifying, Southeast's witness relied in large part on computer-printout accounting summaries which listed information such as the number of bushels picked, the percentage each producer claimed were saleable, the percentage actually sold, the price each producer claimed per bushel, the price actually paid, picking and inspection fees, etc.[4]
We do not need to recount the details of the recommended orders, except to say that in each of the orders, the hearing officer stated, "The burden of proof is on the Petitioner [the producer] in this proceeding, and Petitioner has failed to meet that burden." The only amounts the hearing officer recommended that Southeast be ordered to pay were amounts Southeast admitted it owed: $6,986.17 to Alston, $393.36 to McKiness, and $187.06 to Fox.
In the final orders entered in each of the three cases, the department concluded that "the proceedings on which the Hearing Officer's findings were based do not comply with essential requirements of law within the meaning of Subparagraph 120.57(1)(b)10, Florida Statutes," and thus rejected the hearing officer's findings. The department found that Southeast failed to properly account to the producers pursuant to Section 604.22(1), Florida Statutes (1989),[5] that Southeast did not tender any accounting to the producers until the formal hearing, and that even these were incomplete. Contrary to the hearing officer's conclusion that the producers had the burden of proof and failed to meet it, the department found that because Southeast had breached its statutory and fiduciary duties to tender an accounting to the producers, *886 the burden had shifted to Southeast before the producers filed their complaints against Southeast. The department also concluded that such breach precluded Southeast as a matter of law from introducing the evidence it submitted at the final hearings. Therefore, because there was no competent, substantial evidence to refute the department's nonfinal order or the growers' sworn complaints, the department ordered appellants to pay the growers the full amounts they originally claimed they were owed.
We reverse the final orders entered, on the primary ground that the department improperly imposed a conclusive presumption of law upon appellants by holding that the producers were entitled to the amounts claimed in their complaints once Southeast had failed to furnish appellees an accounting within forty-eight hours of the sale, as required by section 604.22(1). In so holding, we first consider that the department was in error in concluding that, as a consequence of Southeast's alleged violation of section 604.22(1), the evidence it presented at the hearings should have been stricken. The department characterized Southeast's alleged violation as a waiver of its right to introduce evidence, or conduct that estopped it from producing evidence. We disagree. In the first place, waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a right, and is considered a question of fact. Davis v. Davis, 123 So.2d 377 (Fla. 1st DCA 1960). The record does not support, the hearing officer did not find, and even the department did not find as a fact that Southeast waived its right to present evidence. Instead, the department erroneously found waiver as a matter of law.
In addition, estoppel must be specifically pled and proved. Department of Revenue v. Hobbs, 368 So.2d 367 (Fla. 1st DCA), appeal dismissed, 378 So.2d 345 (Fla. 1979). The producers, however, neither pled this issue nor raised it as an issue at the hearings. Equitable estoppel generally consists of words or conduct which causes another person to believe a certain state of things exists, and to consequently change his or her position in an adverse way. Kuge v. Department of Admin., Div. of Retirement, 449 So.2d 389 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). Estoppel by silence or inaction will be found only when the other party is misled to his or her injury. Ennis v. Warm Mineral Springs, Inc., 203 So.2d 514 (Fla. 2d DCA 1967), cert. denied, 210 So.2d 870 (Fla. 1968). There is nothing in the record that indicates that the producers were misled or changed their positions in reliance upon the alleged statutory violation by Southeast. Facts supporting a finding of either estoppel or waiver simply were not proven.
Although we reverse the department's final orders, our reversal does not require acceptance of the hearing officer's recommended findings. Those findings were themselves flawed; consequently, the case must be remanded for further evidentiary proceedings. At the hearings, the hearing officer required the producers to prove the allegations of their complaints, whereas the burden should have been on Southeast to disprove the department's nonfinal order. According to section 604.21(2), once the department has notified a dealer of a complaint against that dealer, the dealer is afforded the opportunity to request a hearing on the complaint. Once Southeast did not respond to the department's notice within twenty-five days, as required by the statute, the department entered a nonfinal order granting the relief each producer sought.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
578 So. 2d 883, 1991 WL 70852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeast-grove-management-inc-v-mckiness-fladistctapp-1991.