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[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 22-10945
____________________
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES INSURANCE COMPANY,
GEICO INDEMNITY COMPANY,
GEICO GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiffs-Counter Defendants-Appellants,
versus
GLASSCO, INC.,
Defendant-Counter Claimant-Appellee,
JASON WILEMON,
JOHN BAILEY,
ANDREW VICTOR,
Defendants-Appellees.
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2 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
D.C. Docket No. 8:19-cv-01950-KKM-JSS
____________________
Before NEWSOM, LUCK, and TJOFLAT, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
We have appellate jurisdiction over “all final decisions of the
district courts of the United States.”
28 U.S.C. § 1291. The ques-
tion in this case is whether the district court made a “final decision.”
It did not. The district court denied summary judgment to the ex-
tent that Geico General Insurance Company alleged that Glassco,
Inc. made misrepresentations that amounted to fraud “independ-
ent of” Glassco’s violations of the Florida Motor Vehicle Repair
Act. 1 Geico tried to convert this nonfinal decision into a final deci-
sion by filing an amended complaint that removed the fraud alle-
gations that were independent of the Repair Act violations. But
Geico didn’t remove enough. The fraud allegations are still alleged
in the amended complaint. Because they are, and the district court
1
The three plaintiffs are Government Employees Insurance Co., GEICO In-
demnity Co., and Geico General Insurance Company. The defendants are
Glassco, Inc. and its three owners: Jason Wilemon, John Bailey, and Andrew
Victor. For ease of reference, we refer to the plaintiffs collectively as “Geico”
and to Glassco, Inc. and its owners collectively as “Glassco.”
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 3
denied summary judgment as to these fraud allegations, there is no
final decision for Geico to appeal. Thus, we must dismiss this ap-
peal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Complaint
Jason Wilemon, John Bailey, and Andrew Victor owned
Glassco, a windshield repair shop. Except Glassco didn’t have any
employees that repaired windshields. Instead, Glassco ran its busi-
ness almost entirely through independent contractors. Some of
those independent contractors were “safety inspectors,” who
would roam residential neighborhoods and parking lots looking for
broken windshields. The others were “installers,” who’d then ser-
vice the windshields.
Glassco offered quite a bargain. Under Florida law, an in-
surer isn’t allowed to charge its insureds a deductible for wind-
shield repairs. See
Fla. Stat. § 627.7288. An insurer has thirty days
after proof-of-loss statements have been completed to either pay
for the repairs or give a reasonable explanation for why it isn’t pay-
ing. See
id. § 626.9541(1)(i)(3)(e)–(f). If, within thirty days, the in-
surer doesn’t pay or fails to give a reasonable explanation for not
paying, a repair shop can sue the insurer. See id. §§ 624.04,
624.155(1)(a)(1). So Glassco didn’t charge its customers anything.
Glassco’s estimates and customer forms reflected that it charged
“zero dollars.” Glassco would instead bill its customers’ insurers.
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4 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
This arrangement has caused friction between Glassco and
its customers’ insurers. For years, Glassco didn’t make a profit—
and, in fact, operated at a loss—because it was buried in “legal ex-
penses.” Glassco has been engaged in litigation with its customers’
insurance companies. This case is another one of those disputes.
In this case, Geico sued Glassco and its three owners. The crux of
Geico’s case is that Glassco violated the Repair Act and that Glassco
committed fraud. Glassco has collected $700,000 or so from Geico.
Geico wants its money back.
In its complaint, Geico asserted eight claims: a declaratory
judgment claim seeking a declaration that Glassco violated the Re-
pair Act and that Geico had no duty to pay pending claims (count
one); a federal racketeering claim (count two); a federal racketeer-
ing conspiracy claim (count three); a Florida Deceptive and Unfair
Trade Practices Act claim (count four); a Florida racketeering claim
(count five); a common law fraud claim (count six); an unjust en-
richment claim (count seven); and a Repair Act claim (count eight).
Geico’s eight-count complaint can really be broken down
into two theories. Geico’s first theory was that it didn’t have to pay
for the windshield repairs because Glassco violated the Repair Act.
For example, the Repair Act generally requires repair shops: to get
a customer’s “consent” before using an independent contractor,
see id. § 559.920(14); to “present to the customer a written notice”
stating that the customer is “entitled to a written estimate” if the
“cost of repair work will exceed $100,” id. § 559.905(2); and to “pro-
vide each customer, upon completion of any repair, with . . . an
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 5
invoice,” id. § 559.911. According to Geico, Glassco didn’t do any
of these things.
Geico’s second theory was that it didn’t have to pay for the
windshield repairs, regardless of Glassco’s non-compliance with
the Repair Act, because Glassco engaged in what amounted to
fraud. For example, Geico alleged that Glassco inflated the hours
independent contractors worked, completed unnecessary wind-
shield repairs, charged for unperformed repairs, and forged in-
sureds’ signatures. Geico also alleged that Glassco’s assignments
were invalid and so Glassco’s insurance claims were fraudulent.
Glassco’s assignment agreements represented that the customers
were assigning their insurance benefits to Glassco “in consideration
of Glassco Inc. agreeing to repair and/or replace glass.” But, ac-
cording to Geico, Glassco never did the repairs—independent con-
tractors did—and so Glassco had no valid assignments. This con-
duct amounted to fraud, under Geico’s second theory, even put-
ting the Repair Act aside.
Motion to Dismiss
Glassco moved to dismiss Geico’s eight-count complaint.
The district court’s decision was split. First, the district court
granted the motion to dismiss as to Geico’s Repair Act claim (count
eight). The district court found that only a repair shop’s “cus-
tomer” can sue under the Repair Act, and that since Geico was an
insurer, not the repair shop’s customer, Geico didn’t have a cause
of action under the Repair Act. Second, the district court denied
the motion to dismiss as to the remaining seven counts. In doing
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6 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
so, the district court recognized that Geico’s claims rested on al-
leged misrepresentations that fell into two theories: “misrepresen-
tations constituting fraud regardless of Glassco’s non-compliance
with the Repair Act and misrepresentations that, according to
Geico, constitute fraud because of Glassco’s non-compliance with
the Repair Act.” Both theories survived Glassco’s motion to dis-
miss.
Summary Judgment
That takes us to summary judgment. Both sides moved for
summary judgment. What’s important for our purposes is that the
parties stuck to the two theories that they’d used to frame the case
to that point. Glassco, for instance, distinguished between (1) “vi-
olations of the” Repair Act and (2) “misrepresentations that
amounted to fraud unconnected with the violations of the” Repair
Act.
The district court’s order left the parties with “mixed re-
sults.” First, the district court entered summary judgment for
Glassco on four of Geico’s seven remaining claims: the declaratory
judgment claim (count one), the federal racketeering claim (count
two), the federal racketeering conspiracy claim (count three), and
the Florida racketeering claim (count five). Second, the district
court concluded that Geico’s other three claims would survive to
some extent. Those three claims were Geico’s Florida Deceptive
and Unfair Trade Practices Act claim (count four), its common law
fraud claim (count six), and its unjust enrichment claim (count
seven).
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 7
But to what extent did those claims survive? The district
court divided each claim into two to correspond to Geico’s two
theories: “Geico’s [theory] based on alleged violations of the Re-
pair Act” and “Geico’s [theory] of deceptive conduct apart from the
Repair Act.” The theory based on Repair Act violations included,
for example, Glassco’s failure to “provide[] written estimates to in-
sureds.” The theory based on wrongful conduct apart from the
Repair Act included, for example, “inflat[ing] the [contractors’]
hours,” performing “unnecessary windshield repairs,” “charg[ing]
for unperformed windshield repairs,” and “falsely represent[ing]
benefit assignments.” The district court entered summary judg-
ment as to the first theory (the Repair Act violations). But the dis-
trict court denied summary judgment as to this second theory
(fraud apart from the Repair Act). So those claims remained.
Motion to Amend
With the core of its case on the cutting room floor, Geico
moved to amend its complaint so that it could take an immediate
appeal. Geico explained that, after summary judgment, “only a
small portion of [its] claims remain[ed].” Geico recognized that its
claims “fell into two categories.” Its claims were dismissed “to the
extent that they were based on [Glassco’s] alleged failure to comply
with the Repair Act.” Its claims survived to the extent that they
were based on fraud apart from the Repair Act. Geico didn’t want
to “proceed to trial on this small portion of [its] case, and instead
[wanted] to seek immediate appellate review of the [district
court’s] decisions on the motions to dismiss and summary
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8 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
judgment motions.” And so Geico moved to amend so that it
could dismiss the portions of its case that remained at that point.
The district court granted that motion. The district court
said that it had resolved the “heart” of Geico’s case. The district
court noted that, at summary judgment, it held that Geico “could
not bring . . . legal claims premised on Repair Act violations” but
“could bring those claims based on ordinary fraudulent conduct
apart from the Repair Act.” The district court said that it “reviewed
[Geico’s] proposed amended complaint and concluded that [the
amended complaint] appropriately drop[ped] the portions of
[Geico’s] remaining claims.” The district court granted leave to
amend and “direct[ed] the clerk . . . to enter judgment in [Glassco’s]
favor based on [its] previous dismissal and summary judgment or-
ders.” So the clerk entered judgment for Glassco. And Geico
timely appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review de novo our appellate jurisdiction.” United
States v. Cody,
998 F.3d 912, 914 (11th Cir. 2021) (cleaned up).
DISCUSSION
We lack jurisdiction over this appeal. “As a court of limited
jurisdiction, we may exercise appellate jurisdiction only where ‘au-
thorized by Constitution and statute.’” Jenkins v. Prime Ins. Co.,
32 F.4th 1343, 1345 (11th Cir. 2022) (quoting Kokkonen v. Guard-
ian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
511 U.S. 375, 377 (1994)). By statute, Con-
gress has limited our jurisdiction to “final decisions of the district
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 9
courts.”
28 U.S.C. § 1291; see also Freyre v. Chronister,
910 F.3d
1371, 1377 (11th Cir. 2018) (“Generally speaking, our [c]ourt may
only hear appeals from a district court’s final order.”).
“To constitute a final decision, the district court’s order gen-
erally must adjudicate all claims against all parties[.]” Jenkins, 32
F.4th at 1345 (quoting Corsello v. Lincare, Inc.,
276 F.3d 1229, 1230
(11th Cir. 2001)). In this case, though, some of Geico’s claims—the
ones that alleged fraud apart from the Repair Act—survived sum-
mary judgment. The district court, in other words, did not adjudi-
cate all claims against all parties. So how could we have a final
order?
That takes us to Perry v. Schumacher Group of Louisiana,
891 F.3d 954 (11th Cir. 2018). In that case, we explained how a
plaintiff may take an appeal when some of the plaintiff’s claims re-
mained pending. There, the district court had disposed of seven of
the plaintiff’s eight claims, leaving just one claim for trial.
Id. at
955–56. The plaintiff “did not wish to proceed to trial on one single
claim” and instead wanted “immediate appellate review.”
Id. at
958. The plaintiff tried doing so by voluntarily dismissing her one
remaining claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1).
Id.
at 957. We explained that this didn’t cut it because rule 41(a)(1)
“permits voluntary dismissals only of entire actions, not claims.”
Id. at 956 (cleaned up).
The right way to appeal, we said, was to amend the com-
plaint under rule 15 to remove the surviving claim so that only the
claims that had been disposed of remained in the case.
Id. at 958.
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10 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
We explained, in other words, that the “easiest and most obvious”
way to appeal was to “seek and obtain leave to amend the com-
plaint to eliminate the remaining claim, pursuant to [r]ule 15.”
Id.
The plaintiff “wished to seek immediate appellate review of the
[d]istrict [c]ourt’s disposition of seven of her eight claims.”
Id.
“Had she amended her complaint to remove that [one remaining]
claim, the [d]istrict [c]ourt would have entered final judgment
against her and she could have appealed everything at once.”
Id.
“In short, [r]ule 15 was designed for situations like this.”
Id.
Geico tried to follow the process we set out in Perry but
came up short. Geico moved “to amend [its] [c]omplaint to drop
the small portion of [its] claims that remain[ed] to be tried, and
[sought] entry of final judgment based on the [district court’s] dis-
posal of [Geico’s] other claims.” This is the path to an immediate
appeal that we laid out in Perry. But, through no fault of the dis-
trict court, which had to slog through a 76-page, 152-paragraph,
shotgun complaint, Geico never actually dropped the portion of its
claims that remained to be tried following summary judgment.
That’s because Geico continued to allege that Glassco engaged in
fraud even putting its Repair Act violations to the side. These were
the same claims that survived summary judgment.
We’ll give a couple of examples. First, the district court de-
nied summary judgment to the extent that Geico’s claims rested on
“misrepresentations that [were] not based on Repair Act viola-
tions.” This included Geico’s allegations that Glassco “(1) inflate[d]
the hours expended by the independent contractor to repair the
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 11
windshield, (2) list[ed] unnecessary windshield repairs, (3)
charge[d] for unperformed windshield repairs, and (4) forge[d] in-
sureds’ signatures on work orders and on the assignment of bene-
fits.” Yet Geico continued to allege (in its amended complaint) that
Glassco sought reimbursement for “phony, unnecessary, unlawful,
and otherwise nonreimbursable windshield replacement services.”
D.E. 184 ¶ 1; see also id. ¶¶ 36, 48. And these allegations were in-
corporated into Geico’s remaining counts. In other words, after
summary judgment, Geico’s claims survived to the extent that they
relied on “unnecessary” repairs, “inflate[d]” hours, and “unper-
formed” work. And the amended complaint continued to allege
the same “unnecessary,” “illusory,” and “phony” services.
Second, the district court also denied summary judgment as
to Geico’s invalid assignment theory. In denying summary judg-
ment as to Geico’s common law fraud claim, for example, the dis-
trict court pointed to Geico’s allegation that “Glassco falsely repre-
sented benefit assignments.” But that same allegation also ap-
peared in the amended complaint. In its amended complaint,
Geico continued to allege that Glassco “never obtained valid as-
signments of insurance benefits.” Id. ¶ 2; see also id. ¶¶ 5, 64, 92,
95, 123, 137. Geico alleged that Glassco’s assignment agreements
represented that the customers were assigning their insurance ben-
efits “in consideration of Glassco Inc. agreeing to repair and/or re-
place glass.” But Glassco never did the repairs, Geico alleged, and
so Glassco had no valid assignments in the “first instance,” even
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12 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
putting the Repair Act to the side. Geico continues to defend this
claim—which withstood summary judgment—on appeal.
Because Geico failed to remove from its complaint the
claims that survived summary judgment, the summary judgment
“did not resolve all claims against all parties” and “issued no [ap-
pealable] final decision within the meaning of [section] 1291.” Jen-
kins, 32 F.4th at 1346–47 (dismissing the appeal for lack of appellate
jurisdiction); see also, e.g., Corsello,
276 F.3d at 1230 (“In this case,
the district court did not adjudicate [the plaintiff’s] claims against
[one of the defendants], and thus, there is no appealable final deci-
sion.”); Hood v. Plantation Gen. Med. Ctr., Ltd.,
251 F.3d 932, 934–
35 (11th Cir. 2001) (dismissing an appeal for lack of appellate juris-
diction where “one claim remained for one of the parties”).
There’s no final order, and so we lack jurisdiction.
In response, the parties make two arguments—both uncon-
vincing. First, the parties suggest that Geico’s allegations about
phony charges, unnecessary repairs, and invalid assignments really
go to Repair Act violations. But that’s not how the parties litigated
this case from the beginning. At the motion to dismiss stage, the
district court recognized that Geico’s claims fell into two theories:
one alleged “fraud because of Glassco’s non-compliance with the
Repair Act” and the other alleged “fraud regardless of Glassco’s
non-compliance with the Repair Act.” The district court explained
that this second category—fraud independent of the Repair Act—
included:
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Geico’s allegations (1) that [Glassco] submit[ted]
claims that inflate[d] the hours expended by the inde-
pendent contractor[s] to repair the windshield[s],
(2) that [Glassco] submit[ted] claims for unnecessary
windshield repair[s], (3) that [Glassco] submit[ted]
claims for unperformed windshield repair[s], and
(4) that [Glassco] forge[d] the insured’s signature[s]
on work orders and on the assignment of benefits.
The district court treated these claims separately from the claims
based on Repair Act violations.
At summary judgment, the parties also treated Geico’s two
theories separately. The district court’s summary judgment order
did the same, drawing a distinction between claims that relied on
Repair Act violations (like failing to provide written estimates) and
claims that stood apart from the Repair Act (like inflating hours,
performing unnecessary repairs, charging for unperformed repairs,
forging signatures, and obtaining invalid assignments).
And, in moving to amend, Geico acknowledged that the dis-
trict court had dismissed its claims “to the extent that they were
based on [Glassco’s] alleged failure to comply with the Repair Act.”
But this meant that Geico’s claims that didn’t rely on the Repair
Act survived. These remaining claims included, Geico explained,
its allegations about “inflated hours, unnecessary [and] illusory re-
pairs, or forged claims.” In granting Geico’s motion to amend, the
district court relied on this same division. The district court noted
that, at summary judgment, it concluded that Geico “could not
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14 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
bring other legal claims premised on Repair Act violations” but
“could bring those claims based on ordinary fraudulent conduct
apart from the Repair Act (e.g., misrepresentations regarding in-
flated hours, unnecessary repairs, forged claims, etc.).”
But now, for the first time on appeal, the parties say that this
division doesn’t really exist. The parties argue that Geico’s claims
about inflated hours, unnecessary repairs, fraudulent charges,
forged signatures, and invalid assignments actually also constitute
Repair Act violations. And so they argue that the presence of these
allegations in Geico’s amended complaint won’t get in the way of
our jurisdiction. They say that these allegations—which had pre-
viously gone toward the part of the case that survived (fraud apart
from the Repair Act)—now go to the part of the case that was dis-
missed (claims based on Repair Act violations). But the parties
can’t transform their theories at the eleventh hour to manufacture
appellate jurisdiction. See Gill ex rel. K.C.R. v. Judd,
941 F.3d 504,
513 (11th Cir. 2019) (explaining that a party “may not switch theo-
ries and transform [its] position on appeal”); Bryant v. Jones,
575
F.3d 1281, 1308 (11th Cir. 2009) (“It is well established in this circuit
that, absent extraordinary circumstances, legal theories and argu-
ments not raised squarely before the district court cannot be
broached for the first time on appeal.”).
Second, the parties argue that the district court directed the
entry of “judgment.” But that isn’t enough. “[I]n evaluating
whether a district court’s order is final and appealable, we look to
the substance of the order—not the label.” Young v. Prudential
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 15
Ins. Co. of Am.,
671 F.3d 1213, 1215 (11th Cir. 2012). In other
words, in assessing finality, we must look to “what the district court
has done.” Martinez v. Carnival Corp.,
744 F.3d 1240, 1243 (11th
Cir. 2014). Here, the district court “direct[ed] the clerk . . . to enter
judgment in [Glassco’s] favor based on [the district court’s] previ-
ous dismissal and summary judgment orders.” But the district
court didn’t direct “final judgment.” Nor did it direct judgment as
to “all claims.” Instead, it told us to look to its dismissal and sum-
mary judgment orders. And those orders never got rid of Geico’s
claims based on the second theory that Glassco committed fraud
apart from the Repair Act.
We have repeatedly held that the entry of judgment is not
enough to supply jurisdiction—even when that judgment is labeled
a “final” judgment—where a district court failed to dispose of all
claims. See, e.g., Fogade v. ENB Revocable Tr.,
263 F.3d 1274, 1297
(11th Cir. 2001) (finding that a document labeled “Final Judgment”
was not “a final judgment as to all of the claims and counterclaims
in the case”); Stillman v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
88 F.3d 911, 914 (11th
Cir. 1996) (holding that “[t]he entry of summary final judgment in
th[e] case” didn’t result in a final order because “[t]he summary
judgment did not even purport to adjudicate [the defendant’s]
other affirmative defenses”). Looking to the substance, there’s no
final order here. We lack jurisdiction.
CONCLUSION
Dismissing this appeal may not be a satisfying result. The
parties want us to resolve the Repair Act issues that are driving this
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16 Opinion of the Court 22-10945
case. So does the district court. And so do we. That will happen
soon enough. But we can’t exercise jurisdiction over this appeal
simply because the alternative—sending this case back to the dis-
trict court—may be inconvenient or inefficient. See Morrison v.
Allstate Indem. Co.,
228 F.3d 1255, 1261 (11th Cir. 2000) (jurisdic-
tion “is conferred and defined by statute” but it “cannot be created
by the consent of the parties nor supplanted by considerations of
convenience and efficiency” (cleaned up)).
And Congress’s decision to limit our jurisdiction to final de-
cisions of the district courts does not reflect “merely technical con-
ceptions of ‘finality.’” Catlin v. United States,
324 U.S. 229, 233
(1945). “Finality as a condition of review is an historic characteris-
tic of federal appellate procedure. It was written into the first Judi-
ciary Act and has been departed from only when observance of it
would practically defeat the right to any review at all.” Cobbledick
v. United States,
309 U.S. 323, 324–25 (1940).
Beyond its historical underpinnings, finality also “serves a
number of important purposes.” Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v.
Risjord,
449 U.S. 368, 374 (1981). It “further[s] . . . judicial effi-
ciency, for example, and the sensible policy of avoiding the obstruc-
tion to just claims that would come from permitting the harass-
ment and cost of a succession of separate appeals from the various
rulings to which a litigation may give rise.” Will v. Hallock,
546
U.S. 345, 350 (2006) (cleaned up). “Permitting piecemeal appeals”
also “undermine[s] the independence of the district judge, as well
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22-10945 Opinion of the Court 17
as the special role that individual plays in our judicial system.” Fire-
stone Tire,
449 U.S. at 374.
Indeed, in this case, Geico presses claims on appeal that the
district court never dismissed (and that remain in this case). Those
claims may give Geico all the relief that it’s after. By dismissing this
appeal today, we vindicate finality as the historic characteristic of
federal appellate procedure, serve the important interests of judi-
cial efficiency, and promote the sensible policy of avoiding piece-
meal appeals. Even if not in this case, then in the thousands of ap-
peals we decide each year.
APPEAL DISMISSED.