Samantha Elaine Tsuji v. H. Bart Fleet, etc. ( 2023 )


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  •           Supreme Court of Florida
    ____________
    No. SC2021-1255
    ____________
    SAMANTHA ELAINE TSUJI, et al.,
    Petitioners,
    vs.
    H. BART FLEET, etc., et al.,
    Respondents.
    June 29, 2023
    COURIEL, J.
    In the end—often a good place to start—this is a negligence
    case against a man that was filed more than three years after he
    died. Section 733.710(1), Florida Statutes (2013), tells us that is
    too late by over a year. The First District Court of Appeal affirmed
    the judgment of a trial court saying as much. Tsuji v. Fleet, 
    326 So. 3d 143
    , 145 (Fla. 1st DCA 2021). It did so notwithstanding a
    contrary decision of the Fourth District Court of Appeal that had
    found in another law, section 733.702(4)(b), Florida Statutes (1995),
    a reason to disregard section 733.710(1)’s prohibition where, as
    here, a plaintiff in a negligence action sought money damages from
    the decedent’s insurer rather than from the decedent himself (or
    from his estate, his personal representative, or his beneficiaries).
    Pezzi v. Brown, 
    697 So. 2d 883
    , 886 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997). 1
    The First District is correct. Section 733.710(1) extinguishes
    the claim at issue in this case. That statute is, as we have said
    before, a “jurisdictional statute of nonclaim” or “statute of repose.”
    That means it “bar[s] actions by setting a time limit within which an
    action must be filed as measured from a specified act, after which
    time the cause of action is extinguished.” Merkle v. Robinson, 
    737 So. 2d 540
    , 542 n.6 (Fla. 1999); see also Jones v. Golden, 
    176 So. 3d 242
    , 248 (Fla. 2015). It follows from this conclusion, the First
    District also correctly decided, that the decedent’s employer was
    exonerated from vicarious liability claims based on the decedent’s
    negligence. We therefore approve the First District’s decision below
    and disapprove the Fourth District’s decision in Pezzi.
    1. We have jurisdiction because the First District certified a
    direct conflict with the Fourth District’s decision in Pezzi. See art.
    V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const.
    -2-
    I
    On June 11, 2014, Thomas E. Morton Jr. injured the
    petitioners, Samantha Tsuji and Crystal Williams, in a car accident.
    At the time of the accident, Morton was working for the Lewis Bear
    Company (LBC) and driving a company-owned car within the course
    of his employment. More than three years later, on February 6,
    2018, the petitioners sought redress. They sued Morton for
    negligently operating the car and LBC for vicarious liability under
    the doctrines of respondeat superior and dangerous
    instrumentality. But the petitioners soon learned that Morton had
    died of unrelated causes only weeks after the accident, on June 28,
    2014. So the petitioners substituted the personal representative of
    Morton’s estate, H. Bart Fleet, for Morton himself, and reduced their
    request for damages against the estate to the limits of Morton’s
    casualty insurance coverage.2
    2. While the petitioners’ claims against LBC were not limited
    in the amended complaint, the petitioners now state that their
    claims against LBC are also capped by the limits of LBC’s casualty
    insurance coverage.
    -3-
    LBC moved for summary judgment. It argued that section
    733.710(1) barred the petitioners’ claims against the estate because
    the statute required the petitioners to bring claims within two years
    of the decedent’s death—something the petitioners failed to do.
    Additionally, LBC, citing Buettner v. Cellular One, Inc., 
    700 So. 2d 48
     (Fla. 1st DCA 1997), asserted that because section 733.710(1)
    exonerated the estate from liability, so too was LBC exonerated from
    vicarious liability for Morton’s negligence.
    In response, the petitioners cited Pezzi, 
    697 So. 2d at 886
    , and
    this Court’s statements approving that decision in May v. Illinois
    National Insurance Co., 
    771 So. 2d 1143
     (Fla. 2000). 3 The
    3. In May, we answered a fairly technical certified question
    from the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit:
    whether sections 733.702 and 733.710, alone or together, function
    as statutes of nonclaim (such that, absent an exception, claims not
    presented within the periods they designate would not be binding
    on an estate) or as statutes of limitation (such that a party seeking
    to invoke them would have to plead and prove its applicability as
    affirmative defenses to avoid waiver). 
    771 So. 2d at 1145
    . We said
    section 733.702 is a statute of limitations that cannot be waived in
    a probate proceeding by failure to object to a claim on timeliness
    grounds, and section 733.710 is a jurisdictional statute of nonclaim
    that is not subject to waiver or extension in a probate case. 
    Id.
     We
    also remarked that “it is well settled that the total failure to file a
    timely claim against an estate does not prevent a creditor from
    recovering up to the policy limits of a decedent’s casualty
    -4-
    petitioners argued that a plaintiff—under section 733.702(4)(b)—
    can bring claims against a decedent’s estate over two years after the
    decedent’s death if the plaintiff seeks recovery from only the
    decedent’s casualty insurance.
    The trial court agreed with LBC and ruled that section
    733.710(1) barred the petitioners’ action against the estate because
    the petitioners failed to file the claims within two years of Morton’s
    death. And because the petitioners could not file suit to hold the
    estate liable, LBC also could not be held vicariously liable. The
    petitioners moved for rehearing, arguing that the trial court
    overlooked section 733.702(4)(b)’s casualty insurance exception and
    this Court’s decision in May, 
    771 So. 2d at
    1157 n.13, 1159. The
    trial court denied that motion. Tsuji v. Fleet, No. 2018-CA-000218,
    
    2020 WL 3527555
     (Fla. 1st Cir. Ct. Feb. 21, 2020).
    insurance.” Id. at 1159; see also id. at 1157 n.13 (stating the
    same). These assertions were “not essential to the decision” in May,
    that is, the question certified to us by the Eleventh Circuit. State ex
    rel. Biscayne Kennel Club v. Bd. of Bus. Regul., 
    276 So. 2d 823
    , 826
    (Fla. 1973). They are therefore “without force as precedent” though
    we do of course note them. 
    Id.
    -5-
    On appeal, the First District affirmed, holding that section
    733.710(1) bars the petitioners from bringing claims based on
    Morton’s negligence against the estate beyond the two-year time
    limit, and because of this, the petitioners also could not hold LBC
    vicariously liable for Morton’s negligence. Tsuji, 326 So. 3d at 147-
    49.4 The petitioners then sought review from this Court.
    II
    We first address whether section 733.710, Florida Statutes,
    bars the petitioners’ claims against Fleet, the personal
    representative of Morton’s estate.5 It does. In reaching that
    conclusion, we consider the petitioners’ arguments about how
    section 733.702 informs our reading of section 733.710.
    4. The district court also concluded that section 627.4136(1),
    Florida Statutes—Florida’s nonjoinder insurance statute—prevents
    the petitioners from joining a casualty insurer before obtaining a
    settlement or verdict against Morton’s estate. Tsuji, 326 So. 3d at
    147.
    5. As this case requires us to construe statutes, our review of
    the First District’s analysis is de novo. Alachua Cnty. v. Watson,
    
    333 So. 3d 162
    , 169 (Fla. 2022).
    -6-
    A
    When we construe statutes, “our first (and often only) step . . .
    is to ask what the Legislature actually said in the statute, based
    upon the common meaning of the words used” when the statute
    was enacted. Shepard v. State, 
    259 So. 3d 701
    , 705 (Fla. 2018)
    (quoting Schoeff v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 
    232 So. 3d 294
    , 313
    (Fla. 2017) (Lawson, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)).
    To derive this common meaning, we must “be mindful of the
    ‘fundamental principle of statutory construction (and, indeed, of
    language itself) that the meaning of a word cannot be determined in
    isolation, but must be drawn from the context in which it is used.’ ”
    Lab’y Corp. of Am. v. Davis, 
    339 So. 3d 318
    , 324 (Fla. 2022)
    (quoting Deal v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 129
    , 132 (1993)). And in
    cases that task us with interpreting multiple provisions, where
    possible, we “must give full effect to all statutory provisions and
    construe related statutory provisions in harmony with one another.”
    Forsythe v. Longboat Key Beach Erosion Control Dist., 
    604 So. 2d 452
    , 455 (Fla. 1992).
    -7-
    B
    Part VII of chapter 733 of the Florida Probate Code has two
    sets of limits that, together, bring order to creditors’ claims against
    estates: one resides in section 733.702 and the other in section
    733.710.
    Section 733.702 “fixes the basic time frame for filing of claims
    in decedent’s estates being probated in Florida.” May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1155
     (quoting Comerica Bank & Tr., F.S.B. v. SDI Operating
    Partners, L.P., 
    673 So. 2d 163
    , 165 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996)). It says, at
    subsection (1):
    If not barred by s. 733.710, no claim or demand against
    the decedent’s estate that arose before the death of the
    decedent . . . and no claim for damages, including, but
    not limited to, an action founded on fraud or another
    wrongful act or omission of the decedent, is binding on
    the estate, on the personal representative, or on any
    beneficiary unless filed in the probate proceeding on or
    before the later of the date that is 3 months after the time
    of the first publication of the notice to creditors or, as to
    any creditor required to be served with a copy of the
    notice to creditors, 30 days after the date of service on
    the creditor . . . .
    § 733.702(1), Fla. Stat. We have described this as a statute of
    limitations, May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1150
    , and it bars untimely claims
    even if “no objection to the claim is filed.” § 733.702(3), Fla. Stat.
    -8-
    The statute of limitations can be extended only in three
    circumstances: “fraud, estoppel, or insufficient notice of the claims
    period.” Id.
    In subsection (2), the statute provides:
    No cause of action, including, but not limited to, an
    action founded upon fraud or other wrongful act or
    omission, shall survive the death of the person against
    whom the claim may be made, whether or not an action
    is pending at the death of the person, unless a claim is
    filed within the time periods set forth in this part.
    § 733.702(2), Fla. Stat. This provision sweeps more broadly than
    subsections (1) and (3), as it incorporates not only the periods
    outlined in section 733.702, but also those elsewhere in part VII of
    chapter 733 of the Florida Statutes, such as section 733.710(1).
    Subsection (4) then enumerates three exceptions to the
    limitations found in subsections (1), (2), and (3). Of relevance to
    this case, the Legislature provided that: “[n]othing in [section
    733.702] affects or prevents[,] . . . [t]o the limits of casualty
    insurance protection only, any proceeding to establish liability that
    is protected by the casualty insurance.” § 733.702(4)(b), Fla. Stat. 6
    6. The other two exceptions are: section 733.702(4)(a), Florida
    Statutes (“A proceeding to enforce any mortgage, security interest,
    -9-
    Importantly, however, subsection (5) makes clear that: “Nothing in
    [section 733.702] shall extend the limitations period set forth in
    s. 733.710.” § 733.702(5), Fla. Stat.
    So we come to subsection (1) of section 733.710, which
    provides:
    Notwithstanding any other provision of the code, 2 years
    after the death of a person, neither the decedent’s estate,
    the personal representative, if any, nor the beneficiaries
    shall be liable for any claim or cause of action against the
    decedent, whether or not letters of administration have
    been issued, except as provided in this section.
    § 733.710(1), Fla. Stat.
    There are only two exceptions to this statute of repose or
    nonclaim. Subsection (2) provides that section 733.710(1) “shall
    not apply to a creditor who has filed a claim pursuant to s. 733.702
    within 2 years after the person’s death, and whose claim has not
    been paid or otherwise disposed of pursuant to s. 733.705.” §
    733.710(2), Fla. Stat. And subsection (3) provides that section
    or other lien on property of the decedent.”), and section
    733.702(4)(c), Florida Statutes (“The filing of a cross-claim or
    counterclaim against the estate in an action instituted by the
    estate; however, no recovery on a cross-claim or counterclaim shall
    exceed the estate’s recovery in that action.”).
    - 10 -
    733.710(1) “shall not affect the lien of any duly recorded mortgage
    or security interest or the lien of any person in possession of
    personal property or the right to foreclose and enforce the mortgage
    or lien.” § 733.710(3), Fla. Stat. Neither of these exceptions
    addresses casualty insurance.
    When no exception applies, an untimely claim is
    “automatically barred.” Barnett Bank of Palm Beach Cnty. v. Estate
    of Read, 
    493 So. 2d 447
    , 448 (Fla. 1986). Section 733.710(1) is in
    that sense “a self-executing, absolute immunity to claims filed for
    the first time . . . more than 2 years after the death of the person
    whose estate is undergoing probate.” May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1156
    (quoting Comerica, 
    673 So. 2d at 167
    ).
    C
    The petitioners filed their claims more than two years after
    Morton’s death. If the petitioners’ claims seek to hold Fleet “liable”
    for claims against Morton, then they are barred under section
    733.710(1). So we have to decide: is Fleet “liable” under section
    733.710(1) given that the petitioners seek only payment from a
    casualty insurance provider? We decide he is, and that therefore
    petitioners’ claims are untimely.
    - 11 -
    The petitioners assert that “liable” in this context means only
    “[t]he state or condition of a person who is responsible for payment
    or who is under obligation to pay.” Initial Brief of Petitioners at 44
    (alteration in original) (quoting Liability, Ballentine’s Law Dictionary
    751 (2d ed. 1948)) (emphasis removed). They call this the “pay-
    money” sense of the word, as opposed to “[t]he state or condition of
    a person after he has breached his contract or violated any
    obligation resting upon him,” id. at 45 (quoting Liability,
    Ballentine’s Law Dictionary 751) (emphasis removed), which they
    describe as the “breach-of-duty” sense of the word. And here, the
    petitioners say, they seek only damages up to the limits of any
    casualty insurance coverage under section 733.702(4)(b), meaning
    they do not seek to hold Fleet “liable” for claims against Morton in
    the “pay-money” sense of the word. He may have been responsible
    for the decedent’s breach of a duty, but he does not have to pay; an
    insurer does. This, they say, means their claims are not barred
    even though they were filed more than two years after Morton’s
    death.
    In support of their reading, the petitioners rely on the context
    of section 733.710(1), the canon against surplusage, and the
    - 12 -
    Legislature’s inaction following the Fourth District’s decision in
    Pezzi and our approval of that decision in dicta in May. None of
    those arguments pan out.
    1
    The petitioners argue that their proposed reading of “liable”
    makes sense in the context of section 733.710(1). After all, section
    733.710(1) concerns claims against the decedent, not the estate,
    personal representative, or any beneficiary. A plaintiff must prove
    that the decedent—the decedent during his life, that is—breached a
    duty owed to the plaintiff. The most an estate, personal
    representative, or any other beneficiary could do would be to pay for
    the decedent’s injurious conduct; none of them could be liable for
    that conduct in the sense of being in “the state or condition of a
    person after he has breached his contract or violated any obligation
    resting upon him.” Liability, Ballentine’s Law Dictionary 751 (2d ed.
    1948).
    We do not read the context as the petitioners do. The word
    “liable” appears in section 733.710(1), which, as a statute of repose
    or nonclaim, “automatically bars untimely claims.” May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1157
    . Absent instruction from the Legislature, we will not
    - 13 -
    interpret a statute of repose or nonclaim, which “puts an outer limit
    on the right to bring a civil action,” Hess v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.,
    
    175 So. 3d 687
    , 696 (Fla. 2015) (quoting CTS Corp. v. Waldburger,
    
    573 U.S. 1
    , 8 (2014)), to do what the petitioners ask of this one: to
    give repose from some proceedings but not others. 7
    Nor did the Legislature give us, as it might have, an express
    indication that “liable” means what the petitioners say it does, here.
    Absent a legislatively supplied definition, we give the word “liable”
    its “plain and ordinary meaning” at the time of the statute’s
    enactment, and we often look to contemporaneous dictionaries for
    evidence of that meaning. See Sch. Bd. of Palm Beach Cnty. v.
    Survivors Charter Schs., Inc., 
    3 So. 3d 1220
    , 1233 (Fla. 2009).
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary defines “liable,” in
    part, as “bound or obligated according to law or equity.” Liable,
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1302 (1986). The sixth
    edition of Black’s, published only a year after section 733.710(1)
    was first enacted, defines “liable” as: “[b]ound or obliged in law or
    equity; responsible; chargeable; answerable; compellable to make
    7. The Legislature has provided such instruction in both
    section 733.710(2) and section 733.710(3), but neither applies here.
    - 14 -
    satisfaction, compensation, or restitution.” Liable, Black’s Law
    Dictionary 915 (6th ed. 1990). 8 And The American Heritage
    Dictionary defines the term, in part, as “[l]egally obligated;
    responsible.” Liable, The American Heritage Dictionary 1036 (3d ed.
    1992). The neighboring language in section 733.710 refers to
    liability “for any claim or cause of action against the decedent,” and
    not, for example, a money judgment, charge, or amount due—all of
    which would square more naturally with what the petitioners call
    the “pay-money” understanding of the word.
    All this makes clear that Fleet can be held “liable” under the
    meaning of the term in section 733.710(1) without a finding that he
    breached a duty owed to the petitioners. Because the petitioners
    seek to hold Fleet—a personal representative who “stands in [the]
    shoes” of Morton, Sullivan v. Sessions, 
    80 So. 2d 706
    , 707 (Fla.
    8. Black’s also defines “liable” as: “Obligated; accountable for
    or chargeable with. Condition of being bound to respond because a
    wrong has occurred. Condition out of which a legal liability might
    arise. . . . Justly or legally responsible or answerable. Exposed or
    subject to a given contingency, risk, or casualty, which is more or
    less probable. Exposed, as to damage, penalty, expense, burden, or
    anything unpleasant or dangerous.” Liable, Black’s Law Dictionary
    915 (6th ed. 1990).
    - 15 -
    1955)—responsible, accountable, answerable, and chargeable for a
    claim that they have against Morton, they effectively seek to hold
    Fleet “liable” for a claim they have against Morton under section
    733.710(1).
    There is also the fact that the Legislature uses “liable” and
    “liability” throughout the code in a way that is hard to square with
    the petitioners’ proposed understanding of the term. Take section
    733.702(4)(b) itself: the Legislature excepted “any proceeding to
    establish liability that is protected by the casualty insurance” from
    the timeliness bars set out elsewhere in section 733.702. Any
    recovery under subsection (4)(b), however, is cabined to “the limits
    of the casualty insurance protection only,” meaning a defendant in
    a proceeding under this subsection, like Fleet, would not be
    responsible for the payment of damages, and therefore would not be
    “liable” in the “pay-money” sense of the word. And yet, the
    Legislature still used the term “liability.” We see no reason to read
    “liable” and “liability” to mean different things across part VII of
    chapter 733.
    Other uses of “liability” and “liable” in the Florida Statutes also
    refute the petitioners’ proposed reading of section 733.710(1). On
    - 16 -
    at least some occasions when the Legislature has used “liability” in
    what the petitioners term the “pay-money” sense, it has done so
    explicitly. For example, as the petitioners recognize, Initial Brief of
    Petitioners at 45, the Legislature defined “liability” to mean “the
    obligation to pay a judgment, settlement, penalty, fine . . . or
    reasonable expenses incurred with respect to a proceeding” in
    chapter 607, the Florida Business Corporation Act. § 607.0850(5),
    Fla. Stat. (2022). In section 112.312, the Legislature defined
    “liability” in Florida’s code of ethics for public employees as “any
    monetary debt or obligation owed by the reporting person to
    another person, entity, or governmental entity,” with some
    exceptions not relevant here. § 112.312(14), Fla. Stat. (2022). And
    for part of the Insurance Code, the Legislature defined “liability” in
    part as “legal liability for damages.” § 627.942(4), Fla. Stat. (2022).
    There is no such definition in the statutes with which we are
    working here.
    Something else is missing: where the Legislature has specified
    that it is using “liable” exclusively in the “pay-money” sense, it often
    identifies which parties are, or are not, liable “for damages.” See,
    e.g., § 83.67(4), Fla. Stat. (2022) (“The landlord is not liable for
    - 17 -
    damages caused by a United States flag displayed by a tenant.”);
    § 394.459(10), Fla. Stat. (2022) (“Any person who violates or abuses
    any rights or privileges of patients provided by this part is liable for
    damages as determined by law.”); § 624.155(4), Fla. Stat. (2022)
    (“Upon adverse adjudication at trial or upon appeal, the authorized
    insurer shall be liable for damages, together with court costs and
    reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by the plaintiff.”). Here,
    however, the Legislature did not use “liable” in this narrow way: it
    did not provide in section 733.710(1) that the decedent’s estate, the
    personal representative, or the beneficiaries shall not be liable “for
    damages” for any claim or cause of action against the decedent
    brought more than two years after the decedent’s death. This
    absence suggests that we should not read “liable” in section
    733.710(1) narrowly to refer only to the obligation to pay.
    Given the context in which we find “liable,” the commonly
    understood meaning of the term, and the Legislature’s usage of
    “liable” and “liability” both in part VII of chapter 733 and elsewhere
    in the code, we conclude that section 733.710(1) bars the
    petitioners’ claims against Fleet.
    - 18 -
    2
    The petitioners also invoke the canon against surplusage, “an
    elementary principle of statutory construction that significance and
    effect must be given to every word, phrase, sentence, and part of the
    statute if possible.” Hechtman v. Nations Title Ins. of New York, 
    840 So. 2d 993
    , 996 (Fla. 2003). They say that the First District’s
    reading of section 733.710(1) renders duplicative section
    733.702(2), which extinguishes any cause of action not filed within
    the periods set forth in part VII of chapter 733, including section
    733.710(1)’s two-year time bar. If, according to the petitioners,
    section 733.710(1) bars their claims, then the Legislature would
    have had no reason to extend the reach of section 733.702(2) to
    also extinguish a cause of action filed beyond section 733.710(1)’s
    two-year time bar. 9 The petitioners also argue that the First
    9. The petitioners further argue that we should not read
    section 733.710(1) to protect unenumerated parties, as that would
    also result in overlap with section 733.702(2), which protects any
    defendant facing an untimely claim. But we do not read section
    733.710(1) to bar a proceeding against either LBC or a casualty
    insurer, both unenumerated parties. Instead, as a consequence of
    our conclusion that section 733.710(1) bars the petitioners’ claims
    against Fleet, the exoneration rule operates to bar the petitioners’
    claims against LBC. See infra Section III. And it would be Florida’s
    - 19 -
    District renders inoperative part of section 733.702(4)—the one that
    says nothing in section 733.702(2), including its extinguishment of
    causes of action filed outside the period provided in subsection
    733.710(1), affects or prevents exceptions listed in subsection (4).
    The canon against surplusage, which is in any event not “an
    absolute rule,” Marx v. Gen. Revenue Corp., 
    568 U.S. 371
    , 385
    (2013), is also not “a license for the judiciary to rewrite language
    enacted by the legislature,” United States v. Albertini, 
    472 U.S. 675
    ,
    680 (1985). Section 733.702(4)(b) provides an exception to the
    limits provided elsewhere in section 733.702, and section
    733.710(1) stands as the ultimate backstop that “automatically
    bars untimely claims” filed against the estate, its personal
    representative, or any beneficiaries more than two years after the
    decedent’s death absent the applicability of one of the exceptions
    outlined elsewhere in section 733.710. May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1157
    .
    nonjoinder insurance statute, not section 733.710(1), that then
    prevents the petitioners from reaching insurers absent a settlement.
    See § 627.4136(1), Fla. Stat. (providing that before a plaintiff can
    maintain a cause of action against a liability insurer they must
    “first obtain a settlement or verdict against a person who is an
    insured”).
    - 20 -
    Even informed by our consideration of the canon against
    surplusage, we read section 733.710 as an insurmountable obstacle
    to the petitioners’ claims against Fleet. See Heyman v. Cooper, 
    31 F.4th 1315
    , 1321-22 (11th Cir. 2022) (“[O]ur obligation is to the text
    and not the canons per se.”).
    The canon is also of no help because the petitioners’ proposed
    reading fails to give effect to every clause and word of the statutory
    provisions at issue. See Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Ltd. P’ship, 
    564 U.S. 91
    , 106 (2011) (“[T]he canon against superfluity assists only where
    a competing interpretation gives effect ‘to every clause and word of a
    statute.’ ”) (quoting Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
    , 174 (2001)).
    Under the petitioners’ proposed reading, the other two
    exceptions found in section 733.702(4) would also be exceptions to
    section 733.710(1). One of these exceptions provides “[n]othing in
    this section affects or prevents . . . [a] proceeding to enforce any
    mortgage, security interest, or other lien on property of the
    decedent.” § 733.702(4)(a), Fla. Stat. An exception found in section
    733.710, however, already provides that section 733.710(1) does
    not “affect the lien of any duly recorded mortgage or security
    interest or the lien of any person in possession of personal property
    - 21 -
    or the right to foreclose and enforce the mortgage or lien.”
    § 733.710(3), Fla. Stat. While the scope of the two exceptions is not
    identical, the petitioners’ proposed reading creates significant
    overlap, meaning it fails to give independent effect to every provision
    in both section 733.702 and section 733.710.
    In the end, the canon against surplusage does not tip the
    scales in the petitioners’ favor—especially since some degree of
    surplusage would result under either party’s reading.
    3
    Nor are we persuaded that the petitioners can infer their way
    to a win simply because Pezzi has not been expressly repudiated by
    the Legislature. “[W]e walk on quicksand when we try to find in the
    absence of corrective legislation a controlling legal principle.”
    Helvering v. Hallock, 
    309 U.S. 106
    , 121 (1940) (Frankfurter, J.). We
    walk on much firmer ground when we find controlling legal
    principles in legislation that stems from the processes outlined in
    our Constitution. See art. III, Fla. Const. This is because our job is
    to interpret statutes according to their meaning when enacted, not
    to search for some hidden meaning in the inaction of the
    Legislature between the decision in Pezzi and the present (especially
    - 22 -
    when we cannot identify one reason for this inaction). See Johnson
    v. Transp. Agency, Santa Clara Cnty., Cal., 
    480 U.S. 616
    , 672 (1987)
    (Scalia, J., dissenting).
    The story told by legislative inaction is also inconclusive
    because this Court has never declaratively weighed in on the
    question that now confronts us. Our statements in May supporting
    the result reached in Pezzi were not essential to our holding. 10 So
    these statements are “without force as precedent,” State ex rel.
    Biscayne Kennel Club, 
    276 So. 2d at 826
    , and to the point that
    legislative acquiescence is used to justify statutory stare decisis, see
    Johnson, 
    480 U.S. at
    629 n.7 (majority opinion), it is irrelevant
    here.
    If the Legislature truly favors the scheme outlined in Pezzi, it
    has the tools to make it the law. Silence, in the face of a clear
    statute that cuts the other way, will not do. See Rapanos v. United
    10. See supra note 3.
    - 23 -
    States, 
    547 U.S. 715
    , 750 (2006) (plurality opinion) (“Congress
    takes no governmental action except by legislation.”). 11
    D
    Given the clarity with which the Legislature spoke, this is a
    case in which our analysis begins and ends with the statutory
    language. See Comerica, 
    673 So. 2d at 168
     (“[T]here is no
    ambiguity in the words used in section 733.710.”). Section
    733.710(1) “sets an absolute deadline beyond which no claim may
    be entertained” absent the applicability of one of the exceptions
    outlined in sections 733.710(2) and 733.710(3). May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1155
     (quoting Comerica, 
    673 So. 2d at 165
    ). And the petitioners,
    despite seeking damages only up to the limits of any casualty
    11. We are also told that approving the First District’s opinion
    would upset settled expectations in probate law, place a heavy
    burden on trial lawyers, and cause increased expenses in probate
    court, with more parties filing claims in probate court to avoid
    section 733.710(1)’s two-year bar. See Amicus Brief of Probate
    Attorneys in Support of Neither Party at 5-9. This case, however,
    does “not turn on our view of the ‘better’ policy, but turns solely on
    statutory interpretation.” Survivors Charter Schs., Inc., 
    3 So. 3d at 1228
    . And because our interpretation of the statutory provisions at
    issue leads us to conclude section 733.710(1) bars the petitioners’
    claims, we have no license to say otherwise.
    - 24 -
    insurance policy, seek to hold Fleet “liable” for claims against
    Morton. Because the petitioners’ claims against Morton’s estate,
    through Fleet, were filed beyond section 733.710(1)’s two-year
    deadline and do not qualify under either exception, they are barred.
    III
    What about Morton’s employer, LBC? Again, the First District
    was right. When a statute of repose bars claims against an agent
    for negligence, the principal is exonerated from vicarious liability
    arising solely from that agent’s negligence.
    An employer may sometimes be liable for an employee’s
    negligent acts committed within the course and scope of
    employment—even if the employer is without fault. Mercury Motors
    Exp., Inc. v. Smith, 
    393 So. 2d 545
    , 549 (Fla. 1981). Similarly, an
    individual with an identifiable property interest in a vehicle, most
    often the titleholder, who gives authority to another to operate the
    vehicle will be liable for injuries to third persons arising from the
    vehicle’s negligent operation. Christensen v. Bowen, 
    140 So. 3d 498
    , 501-02 (Fla. 2014).
    But under either theory, LBC’s liability is vicarious—that is, it
    only answers for the liability of another. See Alexander v. Alterman
    - 25 -
    Transp. Lines, Inc., 
    350 So. 2d 1128
    , 1130 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977)
    (under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer is liable for
    its employee’s negligence undertaken within the scope of
    employment notwithstanding the employer’s conduct); Christensen,
    
    140 So. 3d at 501
     (the dangerous instrumentality doctrine imposes
    “strict vicarious liability” on those with an identifiable property
    ownership interest in the negligently driven vehicle). In other
    words, LBC’s liability depends on Morton’s liability. See Am. Home
    Assur. Co. v. Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp., 
    908 So. 2d 459
    , 471 (Fla.
    2005) (“[V]icarious liability allows for parties that are not at fault to
    be held liable for the actions of active tortfeasors.”); Williams v.
    Hines, 
    86 So. 695
    , 697 (Fla. 1920) (an alleged vicariously liable
    employer and an employee “are in no sense joint tort-feasors”).
    And because an alleged vicariously liable employer and its
    employee “are in no sense joint tort-feasors,” a party must establish
    an employee’s liability in a vicarious liability action against the
    employer. See Williams, 86 So. at 697. If a party fails to do so,
    thus exonerating the employee, “a principal cannot be held liable”
    either. Bankers Multiple Line Ins. Co. v. Farish, 
    464 So. 2d 530
    , 532
    (Fla. 1985).
    - 26 -
    Applying this common law rule—the “exoneration rule”—for
    vicarious liability claims against an employer has turned on
    whether the underlying claims against the employee have been
    “adjudicated on the merits.”12 Consequently, the pertinent question
    before us is whether section 733.710(1), a “jurisdictional statute of
    nonclaim that automatically bars untimely claims,” May, 
    771 So. 2d at 1157
    , constitutes such an adjudication where the provision
    bars the petitioners’ claims against Morton’s estate.
    12. Compare Mallory v. O’Neil, 
    69 So. 2d 313
    , 315 (Fla. 1954)
    (explaining that “if the employee is not liable[,] the employer is not
    liable”), Walsingham v. Browning, 
    525 So. 2d 996
    , 997-98 (Fla. 1st
    DCA 1988) (holding that the claimants’ voluntary dismissal with
    prejudice was sufficient for precluding a vicarious liability claim),
    Jones v. Gulf Coast Newspapers, Inc., 
    595 So. 2d 90
    , 91 (Fla. 2d
    DCA 1992) (holding that a settlement resulting in a joint motion to
    dismiss with prejudice exonerated the employer from vicarious
    liability), and Buettner, 
    700 So. 2d at 48
     (“[W]hen a principal’s
    liability rests solely on the doctrine of respondeat superior, a
    principal cannot be held liable if the agent is exonerated.”) (quoting
    Farish, 
    464 So. 2d at 532
    ), with JFK Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Price, 
    647 So. 2d 833
    , 834 (Fla. 1994) (holding that voluntary dismissal of active
    tortfeasor, with prejudice, entered by agreement of parties under a
    settlement, is not equivalent to an adjudication on merits that
    would bar continued litigation against passive tortfeasor), and Price
    v. Beker, 
    629 So. 2d 911
    , 912 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993) (rejecting
    Walsingham and Jones and noting that Florida Rule of Civil
    Procedure 1.420(a)(1) does not list a dismissal with prejudice as a
    decision on the merits), approved sub nom. JFK Med. Ctr., 
    647 So. 2d at 833
    .
    - 27 -
    We conclude that it does, meaning LBC is exonerated from
    vicarious liability. That is because statutes of nonclaim are
    “legislative determinations that there must be an outer limit beyond
    which claims may not be instituted.” Hess, 
    175 So. 3d at 695
    (quoting Kush v. Lloyd, 
    616 So. 2d 415
    , 421 (Fla. 1992)) (cleaned
    up). As a principal’s vicarious liability is dependent on that of the
    agent, allowing such a lawsuit to proceed against the principal
    when a statute of nonclaim bars the underlying claim against the
    agent would effectively permit a plaintiff to circumvent the statute.
    See Carr v. Broward Cnty., 
    541 So. 2d 92
    , 95 (Fla. 1989) (“[S]tatutes
    of repose are a valid legislative means to restrict or limit causes of
    action in order to achieve certain public interests.”).
    Concluding that section 733.710(1)’s time bar on the
    petitioners’ claims against LBC constitutes an “adjudication on the
    merits” finds support in our case law. Namely, in Allie v. Ionata, we
    held that a judgment dismissing a claim as time-barred was an
    “adjudication on the merits” for res judicata purposes. 
    503 So. 2d 1237
    , 1241-42 (Fla. 1987); see also Carnival Corp. v. Middleton, 
    941 So. 2d 421
    , 424 (Fla. 3d DCA 2006) (“[A] dismissal based on statute
    of limitations grounds constitutes an adjudication on the merits for
    - 28 -
    purposes of res judicata.”). We also stated in Allie that “[t]he
    expiration of a statute of limitations does not resolve the underlying
    merits of the consequently barred claim in favor of either party.”
    503 So. 2d. at 1239-40. Yet, as Allie’s holding makes plain, the
    dismissal of an untimely claim (like the one here) can amount to an
    “adjudication on the merits” even if the claim’s underlying merits
    were never actually “resolve[d].” Id. at 1240-42; cf. Elbadramany v.
    Bryson Crane Rental Servs., Inc., 
    630 So. 2d 214
    , 216 (Fla. 5th DCA
    1993) (“A default judgment bars any claims asserted therein and
    operates as res judicata on the issues.”).
    Other courts of this State have similarly concluded that a time
    bar on claims against an agent acts as an adjudication on the
    merits to exonerate the principal. Take Buettner, 
    700 So. 2d at 48
    ,
    a case that the First District below found dispositive as to LBC’s
    liability. There, the district court reviewed a final summary
    judgment dismissing as untimely the plaintiffs’ vicarious liability
    claim against an employer filed more than two years after the death
    of the deceased employee. 
    Id.
     “[B]ased on the two-year statute of
    limitations . . . in sections 733.702(5) and 733.710,” the trial court
    had entered judgments for both the employee and the employer. 
    Id.
    - 29 -
    at 48, 48 n.1. On appeal, the First District affirmed. After holding
    that the dismissal of the untimely liability action against the
    employee under sections 733.702(5) and 733.710(1) exonerated the
    employee, the district court concluded that the vicarious liability
    action against the employer was barred under the exoneration rule.
    
    Id.
     (citing Farish, 
    464 So. 2d at 532
    ).
    In the end, claims based on vicarious liability are unavailable
    against LBC because section 733.710(1)’s bar on untimely claims
    against Morton through his estate amounts to an “adjudication on
    the merits.” Accordingly, the First District correctly held that
    section 733.710(1)’s statute of nonclaim exonerates LBC from
    vicarious liability for Morton’s negligence.
    IV
    For the reasons stated above, we approve the First District’s
    decision and disapprove the Fourth District’s decision on the
    applicability of section 733.710(1). We also approve the decision of
    the First District as to the exoneration rule.
    It is so ordered.
    - 30 -
    MUÑIZ, C.J., and CANADY, GROSSHANS, and FRANCIS, JJ.,
    concur.
    LABARGA, J., dissents with an opinion.
    SASSO, J., did not participate.
    NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION
    AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED.
    LABARGA, J., dissenting.
    I agree with the majority that if the claims against the
    decedent’s estate are barred by the statute, then LBC cannot be
    vicariously liable. However, because I would hold that sections
    733.702 and 733.710, Florida Statutes, do not bar the claim
    against Morton’s estate, I dissent.
    To conclude that sections 733.702 and 733.710 bar suit, the
    majority pleads for exacting specificity where none is needed. It is
    correct that a word’s context guides us through linguistics’ murky
    waters. See majority op. at 7; Lab’y Corp. of Am. v. Davis, 
    339 So. 3d 318
    , 324 (Fla. 2022) (quoting Deal v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 129
    , 132 (1993)); Textron Lycoming Reciprocating Engine Div., Avco
    Corp. v. United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers of Am.,
    Int’l Union, 
    523 U.S. 653
    , 657 (1998) (where Justice Scalia explains
    that drawing upon a term’s context is a “fundamental principle” of
    interpretation). But contrary to the majority’s interpretation of the
    - 31 -
    term “liable,” that context actually provides the clarity the majority
    yearns for and compels a different result.
    In interpreting “liable,” the majority ignores the term’s context
    to hold that more precise language is required for the statute to say
    what it indeed already says. However, the context of the statute
    alone makes it apparent: the estate and its proxies can only be
    liable for claims against the decedent in a pay-money sense, and so
    in protecting those entities, the term “liable” in 733.710 can only
    refer to pay-money liability. See § 733.710, Fla. Stat. The words of
    the statute itself naturally lead to the pay-money interpretation.
    That alone should settle the issue. Rather than address this
    argument on its merits, the majority looks elsewhere to muddy the
    statute’s clear language, and then asks for clarity.
    For example, the majority notes the lack of a legislatively
    supplied definition of “liable” and seeks out the word’s “plain and
    ordinary meaning” at the time of the statute’s enactment. At the
    outset, when the term’s context compels the meaning, it is a step
    - 32 -
    too far to search for a specific definition from the Legislature. 13 See
    Nehme v. Smithkline Beecham Clinical Laboratories, Inc., 
    863 So. 2d 201
    , 204-05 (Fla. 2003) (“[w]e give statutory language its plain and
    ordinary meaning, unless words are defined in the statute or by the
    clear intent of the legislature. . . . When necessary, the plain and
    ordinary meaning of words can be ascertained by reference to a
    dictionary.”) (first quoting Green v. State, 
    604 So. 2d 471
    , 473 (Fla.
    1992); and then Seagrave v. State, 
    802 So. 2d 281
    , 286 (Fla. 2001))
    (emphasis added). Furthermore, use of a word’s “plain and
    ordinary meaning” to muddle a self-evident interpretation distorts
    an otherwise well-reasoned principle. See Hampton v. State, 
    103 So. 3d 98
    , 110 (Fla. 2012) (“Accordingly, the phrase should be
    afforded its plain and ordinary meaning, giving due regard to the
    context within which it is used.”) (emphasis added); Willens v.
    Garcia, 
    53 So. 3d 1113
    , 1116 (Fla. 3d DCA 2011) (“One of the
    fundamental tenets of statutory construction requires courts to give
    13. Even to the majority’s point, Black’s Law Dictionary
    included “compellable to make satisfaction, compensation, or
    restitution” as a definition of “liable.” Liable, Black’s Law Dictionary
    915 (6th ed. 1990). The pay-money understanding of liability is
    well within the word’s “plain and ordinary meaning.”
    - 33 -
    the words of a statute the plain and ordinary meaning usually
    attributed to them, unless a different meaning or connotation
    necessarily is implied from the manner or context in which the
    words are used.”).
    In support of its conclusion, the majority looks to other uses of
    “liability” in the pay-money sense throughout the Florida Statutes,
    noting that those instances have been accompanied by more precise
    language. See majority op. at 17. But again, such precise language
    is unnecessary when the context commands a certain
    interpretation.
    Nor does looking to the term “liability” in section 733.702(4)(b)
    refute the pay-money interpretation of liable in 733.710. Correctly,
    the majority interprets “liability” in section 733.702(4)(b) as
    meaning something different than pay-money liability but finds “no
    reason” why “liable” should be read differently between the statutes.
    Again, context is key. Section 733.710 focuses on liability of the
    estate and its proxies for claims against the decedent, implicating
    only pay-money liability. See § 733.710, Fla. Stat. (“[n]either the
    decedent’s estate, the personal representative . . . nor the
    beneficiaries shall be liable.”). On the other hand, section 733.702
    - 34 -
    focuses not on the liability of parties, but on causes of action. See
    § 733.702(1)-(3) (“no claim or demand . . . [n]o cause of action . . .
    [a]ny claim.”). A cause of action, of course, may implicate both
    breach-of-duty and pay-money liability; the term “liable” in section
    733.702(4)(b) reflects that context. The terms’ contexts provide the
    “reason” for the different meanings of the term “liable.”
    Where the majority does look specifically to section 733.710,
    the argument is unpersuasive. It argues that rather than using the
    phrase “for any claim or cause of action against the decedent,” the
    Legislature could have named specific examples that would “square
    more naturally” with pay-money liability. It is true that there are
    numerous ways the statute could better say what it says. But that
    notion should not be used to cloud the clear and logical conclusions
    of a word’s context.
    The estate and its proxies can only be liable for claims against
    the decedent in a pay-money sense, and so “liable” in section
    733.710 can only refer to one thing. To be clear, had the statute
    not been focused on the liability of the estate and its proxies, the
    majority’s myriad of arguments would likely prove persuasive.
    - 35 -
    However, when the statute’s own text so directly compels an
    interpretation, such indirect justifications must fail.
    At the end of the day, the majority makes much ado about
    what the Legislature could have done to better specify pay-money
    liability. In the same way that the majority takes issue with relying
    on legislative inaction, I take issue with relying so heavily on how
    the Legislature could have written a statute. See majority op. at
    22-24. When the words of the statute so obviate any need for
    clarification, it is easy to imagine that the Legislature felt that extra
    explanation was unnecessary. For these reasons, I would hold that
    the term “liable” in section 733.710 refers to pay-money liability,
    that sections 733.702 and 733.710 do not bar suit against Morton’s
    estate, and accordingly that suit may be brought against LBC under
    a theory of vicarious liability.
    Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal
    Certified Conflict of Decisions/Direct Conflict of Decisions
    First District – Case No. 1D20-901
    (Escambia County)
    Bryan S. Gowdy of Creed & Gowdy, P.A., Jacksonville, Florida; and
    Coy H. Browning of Browning Law Firm, P.A., Fort Walton Beach,
    Florida,
    - 36 -
    for Petitioners
    Charles Wiggins and Terrie L. Didier of Beggs & Lane, RLLP,
    Pensacola, Florida,
    for Respondents
    John S. Mills of Bishop & Mills, PLLC, Jacksonville, Florida, and
    Courtney Brewer of Bishop & Mills, PLLC, Tallahassee, Florida,
    for Amici Curiae Probate Attorneys, Sean F. Bogle, John P.
    Cole, Robert D. Hines, Matthew H. Hinson, Christopher D.
    Russo, and Kathryn E. Stanfill
    Philip M. Burlington of Burlington & Rockenbach, P.A., West Palm
    Beach, Florida,
    for Amicus Curiae Florida Justice Association
    - 37 -