TIMOTHY LENAHAN v. SHANNON LENAHAN ( 2021 )


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  •       Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed August 11, 2021.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D20-1436
    Lower Tribunal No. 16-8560
    ________________
    Timothy Lenahan,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Shannon Lenahan,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Lody Jean,
    Judge.
    Lavalle, Brown & Ronan, P.A., and Anthony D. Brown and Jeff M.
    Brown (Boca Raton), for appellant.
    Taylor Espino Vega & Touron, PLLC, and Francisco Touron, III, and
    Vanessa A. Van Cleaf, for appellee.
    Before SCALES, MILLER and GORDO, JJ.
    SCALES, J.
    In this breach of contract action, Timothy Lenahan (“the brother”), the
    plaintiff below, appeals a July 24, 2020 post‐judgment final order (“fee
    judgment”) that awarded $349,094.70 in prevailing party attorney’s fees and
    costs to the defendant below, Shannon Lenahan (“the sister”). The trial court
    entered the fee judgment following a jury trial and after it had entered a
    February 19, 2020 final judgment that, inter alia, determined the sister was
    entitled to prevailing party attorney’s fees pursuant to a fee provision
    contained in the parties’ contract underlying this litigation. 1 Because the
    sister failed to plead her entitlement to contractual attorney’s fees in any
    pleading, and because we conclude that the exception to the pleading
    1
    This Court affirmed the February 19, 2020 final judgment in a separate
    appellate proceeding, see Lenahan v. Lenahan, No. 3D20-522, 
    2021 WL 2944756
     (Fla. 3d DCA July 14, 2021), and, in that appeal, we granted the
    sister’s motion seeking appellate level attorney’s fees. Our granting of the
    sister’s motion for appellate level attorney’s fees in that appeal, however,
    neither controls nor informs our independent review in this case of whether
    trial level attorney’s fees were appropriately sought below. Florida Rule of
    Appellate Procedure 9.400 – rather than Stockman v. Downs, 
    573 So. 2d 835
     (Fla. 1991) and its progeny – governs the procedures applicable for
    parties seeking appellate fees. See Advanced Chiropractic & Rehab. Ctr.,
    Corp. v. United Auto. Ins. Co., 
    140 So. 3d 529
    , 535 (Fla. 2014). Further, the
    portion of the February 19, 2020 final judgment that merely determined the
    sister was entitled to fees, without affixing an amount, was not appealable
    and therefore was outside the scope of our jurisdiction and adjudication in
    3D20-522. See Acosta v. Tower Hill Signature Ins. Co., 
    245 So. 3d 882
    , 883
    (Fla. 3d DCA 2018).
    2
    requirement for seeking attorney’s fees set forth in Stockman v. Downs, 
    573 So. 2d 835
     (Fla. 1991) does not apply here, we reverse. 2
    I.     RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A. The Parties’ Pleadings
    This action involves a contentious dispute between siblings over the
    dispersal of their deceased father’s ashes and the sister’s ability to visit their
    ailing mother. In December 2014, the parties entered into an agreement
    whereby the sister agreed to turn over their father’s ashes to the brother’s
    attorney by January 15, 2015, and the brother agreed not to interfere
    unreasonably with the sister’s visitation of their mother. The agreement
    contained a prevailing party attorney’s fees provision. 3
    2
    Because there was no written fee agreement between the sister and her
    counsel, the brother also challenges the trial court’s determination that the
    sister’s counsel is entitled to a contingency fee multiplier. See R. Regulating
    Fla. Bar 4-1.5(f)(1),(2) (requiring all contingency fee agreements to be in
    writing); but see R. Regulating Fla. Bar 4-1.5(e)(1) (“The fact that a contract
    may not be in accord with these rules is an issue between the lawyer and
    client and a matter of professional ethics, but is not the proper basis for an
    action or defense by an opposing party when fee-shifting litigation is
    involved.”) Because of our disallowance of fees based on Stockman’s
    pleading requirement, we need not, and therefore do not, reach this issue.
    3
    The attorney’s fees provision provided, in relevant part, as follows:
    [T]he parties agree that any expenses, including but not limited
    to, counsel fees, court costs, and travel, incurred by a party in
    the successful enforcement of any of the provisions of this
    Agreement, whether through litigation or other action necessary
    3
    When the sister did not turn over the father’s ashes by January 15,
    2015, the brother, on January 16, 2015, filed the instant breach of contract
    action against the sister seeking to compel the sister to comply with their
    agreement (i.e., specific performance). The brother’s complaint pleaded
    entitlement to prevailing party attorney’s fees under the agreement’s fee
    provision.
    The sister responded by filing an answer, affirmative defenses, and
    several permissive counterclaims. In her pleading, the sister argued, as an
    affirmative defense, that the brother had breached their agreement by
    interfering with the sister’s attempts to visit their mother, thereby relieving the
    sister of her obligation to deliver the ashes. Another of the sister’s affirmative
    defenses argued that the agreement was unconscionable and therefore void.
    to compel compliance herewith, shall be borne by the defaulting
    party. . . . Any such costs incurred by a party in the successful
    defense of any action for enforcement of any such provision shall
    be borne by the party seeking to enforce compliance.
    If a party by action, proceeding, counterclaim, defense or
    otherwise, seeks to set aside this Agreement, or to declare any
    of its terms and conditions invalid, void, or against public policy
    for any reason . . ., said party shall reimburse the other party and
    be liable for any and all such party’s reasonable expenses, costs
    and attorney’s fees provided to the extent that such action,
    proceeding, counterclaim or defense results in a decision,
    judgment, decree or order dismissing or rejecting said claims[.]
    4
    It is undisputed that the sister’s pleading did not affirmatively plead her
    entitlement to prevailing party attorney’s fees under the agreement or
    otherwise.
    B. The Sister Retains New Legal Counsel
    More than two years into the litigation, the sister’s initial lawyer
    withdrew from the case. In May 2017, the sister’s current lawyer agreed to
    represent the sister with the purported understanding that the lawyer would
    not charge any fees to the sister, but, if the lawyer successfully defended the
    sister against the brother’s breach of contract action at trial, the sister would
    pursue prevailing party attorney’s fees under the parties’ agreement. The
    sister’s fee agreement with her new lawyer was never reduced to writing and
    the sister’s new lawyer did not seek to amend the sister’s pleadings to
    affirmatively plead entitlement to fees.
    C. The Trial, the Jury Verdict and the Sister’s Post‐trial Motions
    The lower court conducted a jury trial, and, on October 29, 2019, the
    jury rendered a verdict in the sister’s favor. Because the jury answered “Yes”
    to the question asking whether the brother had breached the agreement,
    consistent with the jury instructions, the jury did not go on to answer whether
    the sister had breached the agreement.
    5
    On November 6, 2019, the sister filed her “Motion for Entry of Final
    Judgment and to Award Attorney’s Fees and Costs as the Prevailing Party”
    (“November 6 motion”) seeking entry of final judgment consistent with the
    jury’s verdict. It is in this November 6 post-trial motion that the sister first filed
    a paper that claimed entitlement to attorney’s fees under the subject
    agreement’s fee provision. 4 The sister did not set this November 6 motion
    for hearing; rather, nearly two and half months later, the sister filed her
    January 16, 2020        “Motion for Entry of Final Judgment” (“January 16
    motion”). In her January 16 motion, the sister merely asked that the trial court
    “reserve jurisdiction to determine entitlement to attorney’s fees and costs, as
    well as the corresponding amount due.” Attached to her January 16 motion
    was a proposed final judgment that did not adjudicate the issue, but simply
    reserved jurisdiction to determine fees. The brother did not file a response to
    the sister’s January 16 motion and, as discussed below, did not file a
    response to the sister’s November 6 motion until March 18, 2020.
    On January 23, 2020, the sister noticed her January 16 motion for a
    five-minute hearing on the successor judge’s motion calendar. During the
    February 19, 2020 hearing before the successor judge, the sister’s attorney
    4
    The sister’s November 6 motion also sought to recover court costs under
    section 57.041 of the Florida Statutes.
    6
    argued that the sister was the prevailing party in the case but, consistent with
    the parties’ understanding regarding the scope of this hearing, requested
    that the trial court reserve jurisdiction on the issue of entitlement to fees
    because of the attorney’s understanding that the brother intended to seek
    prevailing party attorney’s fees. The brother’s counsel agreed that the court
    should reserve jurisdiction on the issue of entitlement, stating that the brother
    intended to seek attorney’s fees because the sister, at trial, had abandoned
    her affirmative defense that the agreement was void; ergo, the brother had
    “prevailed” on the affirmative defense.
    Notwithstanding the parties’ agreement that the court should simply
    enter a final judgment in the sister’s favor and reserve jurisdiction on both
    entitlement and amount of attorney’s fees, the trial court ruled at the hearing
    that the sister was entitled to prevailing party attorney’s fees, but also invited
    the brother’s counsel to file his own fee motion. Consistent with its oral
    rulings, the trial court entered the February 19, 2020 final judgment which, in
    relevant part, provides: “[The sister] is the prevailing party and is entitled to
    recover her reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. The court reserves
    jurisdiction to consider all post‐judgment motions.”5
    5
    The hearing transcript from the February 19, 2020 hearing reflects that the
    trial court signed a proposed final judgment prepared by the sister’s counsel
    that had not been attached to the sister’s January 16 motion that was noticed
    7
    Following the February 19th final judgment hearing, at which the trial
    court invited the brother’s counsel to file his own fee motion, the brother filed
    his motion for attorney’s fees and an incorporated response to the sister’s
    November 6 motion. On May 14, 2020, the brother filed an amended fee
    motion and response to the sister’s November 6 motion (“the brother’s
    amended motion/response”). In the brother’s amended motion/response, the
    brother argued that the sister was not entitled to contractual attorney’s fees
    because she had failed to seek prevailing party attorney’s fees in her
    pleading and that Stockman’s exception to the pleading requirement did not
    apply. The trial court, though, refused to revisit its earlier fee entitlement
    determination as to the sister and, after conducting a two-day evidentiary
    hearing on the amount of attorney’s fees to which the sister was entitled,
    entered the July 24, 2020 fee judgment 6 awarding the sister a total of
    for hearing. It is this February 19, 2020 final judgment that the brother
    separately appealed, and that we affirmed, in 3D20-522. As noted in footnote
    1, supra, that portion of the February 19, 2020 final judgment determining
    that the sister was entitled to attorney’s fees was non-final, subject to revision
    by the trial court, and non-appealable. Acosta, 245 So. 3d at 883.
    6
    It does not appear that the trial court ever entered an order denying that
    portion of the brother’s amended motion/response which argued that the
    brother had prevailed and was entitled to fees. The brother raises no issue
    as to his own entitlement to fees in this appeal, and we express no opinion
    on the issue.
    8
    $349,094.70 in fees and costs. 7 The brother timely appealed the fee
    judgment, challenging the fee award. 8
    II.      STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This Court reviews de novo whether a party is entitled to attorney’s
    fees pursuant to the provisions of a contract. See Burton Family P’ship v.
    Luani Plaza, Inc., 
    276 So. 3d 920
    , 922 (Fla. 3d DCA 2019). Similarly,
    application of Stockman’s exception to the pleading requirement for
    attorney’s fees is reviewed de novo. See Save on Cleaners of Pembroke II
    Inc. v. Verde Pines City Ctr. Plaza LLC, 
    14 So. 3d 295
    , 297 n.4 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2009).
    III.     ANALYSIS
    The Florida Supreme Court has determined that “a claim for attorney’s
    fees, whether based on statute or contract, must be pled.” Stockman, 
    573 So. 2d at 837
    . “Failure to do so constitutes a waiver of the claim.” 
    Id. at 838
    .
    While the Stockman court established a bright-line requirement that
    entitlement to fees must be pled, the Court recognized an exception to the
    pleading requirement where (i) a party has sufficient notice that the party
    7
    The trial court awarded $129,720 in lodestar fees, along with a 2.5
    contingency fee multiplier. The fee judgment also included $6,900 in expert
    fees, taxable costs of $8,548.74 and prejudgment interest of $9,345.96.
    8
    The brother does not challenge the $8,548.74 cost award.
    9
    opponent claims entitlement to contractual or statutory attorney’s fees
    (notice prong), and (ii) there is action or inaction on the part of the party that
    can be deemed to be either the party’s acquiescence to the fee claim or the
    party’s failure to object to the party opponent’s failure to plead entitlement to
    attorney’s fees (waiver prong):
    [W]e recognize an exception to the rule announced today. Where
    a party has notice that an opponent claims entitlement to
    attorney’s fees, and by its conduct recognizes or acquiesces to
    that claim or otherwise fails to object to the failure to plead
    entitlement, that party waives any objection to the failure to plead
    a claim for attorney’s fees.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added); see also Save on Cleaners of Pembroke II Inc., 
    14 So. 3d at 297
     (“An implicit rationale for Stockman’s exception – and its
    concomitant requirement of objecting to an unpled claim – is that under the
    Rules of Civil Procedure the failure to object to a claim not pleaded may
    operate as a consent to amendment of the pleading to include the claim.”);
    Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.190(b) (“When issues not raised by the pleadings are tried
    by express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all
    respects as if they had been raised in the pleadings.”).
    In this appeal, the sister concedes that she did not plead entitlement to
    attorney’s fees in her pleading. Nonetheless, the sister argues that
    Stockman’s exception to the pleading requirement applies here because (i)
    the brother was purportedly on notice both before and during trial that, if she
    10
    won at trial, the sister intended to seek prevailing party attorney’s fees, and
    (ii) the brother waived any objection to her failure to plead a claim for
    attorney’s fees.
    A. Waiver Prong of Stockman’s Exception to the Pleading Requirement9
    Under the particular facts and circumstances of this case, we conclude
    that the brother did not, through any action or inaction, recognize or
    acquiesce to the sister’s fee claim. Nor did the brother waive any objection
    to the sister’s failure to plead a claim for contractual attorney’s fees. To the
    contrary, the brother filed the brother’s amended motion/response expressly
    objecting to the sister’s failure to plead her fee claim.
    The timing of the parties’ respective filings is important. The sister first
    pleaded entitlement to fees post-trial in her November 6 motion. The sister,
    though, did not set this November 6 motion for hearing. Instead, recognizing
    that the fee claim was disputed, the sister noticed her January 16 motion for
    hearing on the trial court’s five-minute motion calendar. Unlike her November
    6 motion, the sister’s January 16 motion merely requested that the trial court
    enter final judgment in her favor and reserve jurisdiction on the issues of
    9
    Given our conclusion that the sister failed to establish the waiver prong of
    Stockman’s exception, we do not address the notice prong of Stockman’s
    exception and express no opinion on whether the brother had sufficient
    notice of the sister’s fee claim.
    11
    entitlement and amount of attorney’s fees. Similarly, the proposed final
    judgment attached to the January 16 motion merely reserved jurisdiction
    over the fee issues without adjudicating entitlement to fees.
    Hence, going into the five-minute motion hearing conducted on
    February 19, 2020, the brother had no reason to believe that the trial court –
    a successor judge who had not presided over the trial – would adjudicate the
    sister’s November 6 motion, or otherwise determine fee entitlement. At this
    February 19 hearing on the sister’s January 16 motion the brother’s counsel
    did not acquiesce to the sister’s fee claim or waive the sister’s failure to plead
    it; he merely agreed that the court should reserve jurisdiction on attorney’s
    fees, stating that the brother intended to file his own fee motion.
    The brother later did so, filing the brother’s amended motion/response
    in which the brother – extensively citing to Stockman’s pleading requirement
    – expressly and unequivocally asserted opposition to the sister’s November
    6 motion (and, more generally, the sister’s claim for fees).10 On this record,
    10
    While the brother’s amended motion/response specifically objected to the
    entitlement to fees asserted in the sister’s November 6 motion, we note that,
    even if the brother had not filed a response to the sister’s November 6
    motion, such omission, standing alone, would likely not have satisfied the
    waiver prong of Stockman’s exception. See Taylor v. T.R. Props., Inc. of
    Winter Park, 
    603 So. 2d 1380
    , 1381 (Fla. 5th DCA 1992) (determining that a
    party’s failure to file a response objecting to a demand for attorney’s fees
    made, for the first time, in a motion for summary judgment did not constitute
    a Stockman waiver because “there is no requirement in the Florida Rules of
    12
    we cannot conclude, as the sister urges, that the brother waived his objection
    to the sister’s failure to plead her fee claim simply because the trial court, in
    rendering its February 19, 2020 final judgment, adjudicated the sister’s
    unnoticed November 6 motion. The brother’s amended motion/response
    expressly raises the Stockman objection, and, under this case’s unusual
    procedural posture, was sufficient to preserve the objection.
    B. Distinguishing this Court’s Storob Decision
    The sister heavily relies on this Court’s decision in Storob v. Sphere
    Drake Insurance, 
    730 So. 2d 375
     (Fla. 3d DCA 1999), as support for her
    argument that Stockman’s exception to the pleading requirement is
    applicable in this case. Storob, though, is distinguishable. In Storob, an
    insurance carrier filed a declaratory judgment action against its insureds,
    seeking a coverage determination. Id. at 375. The insureds successfully
    defended the action and were therefore entitled to statutory attorney’s fees
    under section 627.428 of the Florida Statutes. 11 The trial court denied the
    Civil Procedure that would require [the party] to respond in any way to that
    demand prior to the hearing on the motion”).
    11
    The statute provides, in relevant part:
    Upon the rendition of a judgment or decree by any of the courts
    of this state against an insurer and in favor of any named or
    omnibus insured or the named beneficiary under a policy or
    contract executed by the insurer, the trial court or, in the event of
    13
    insureds’ fee claim, though, because the insureds had not pled entitlement
    to attorney’s fees in their pleadings. Id. at 375-76. Citing Stockman, this
    Court reversed “because when, at the end of the non-jury trial, the trial judge
    asked the carrier’s counsel to prepare the final judgment, he agreed with the
    insureds’ lawyer’s request to include a provision that ‘the court reserves
    jurisdiction as to attorneys fees . . . .’” Id. at 376.
    Although short on facts, we can readily infer from the opinion that the
    Storob court concluded the waiver prong of Stockman’s exception was met
    because the carrier’s counsel – i.e., the counsel for the party against whom
    fees would be awarded – agreed to include a provision in the final judgment
    reserving jurisdiction for fees. There was no indication in Storob that the
    carrier was also seeking fees against its insureds. Hence, unlike the instant
    case, there would be no reason for the carrier’s counsel in Storob to agree
    to include a reservation of jurisdiction for fees in the judgment other than to
    recognize and acquiesce to the insureds’ unpled fee claim.
    an appeal in which the insured or beneficiary prevails, the
    appellate court shall adjudge or decree against the insurer and
    in favor of the insured or beneficiary a reasonable sum as fees
    or compensation for the insured’s or beneficiary’s attorney
    prosecuting the suit in which the recovery is had.
    § 627.428(1), Fla. Stat. (2020).
    14
    Unlike the insurer in Storob, the brother pleaded his entitlement to
    prevailing party attorney’s fees. Thus, the brother had a very good reason –
    entirely unrelated to any purported acquiescence to the sister’s fee claim –
    at the February 19 hearing in which the trial court specifically invited the
    brother to file his own fee motion, to ask the court to reserve jurisdiction to
    determine his entitlement to fees. In short, unlike Storob, where the insurer’s
    counsel essentially acquiesced to the insureds’ entitlement to fees, leaving
    only a determination as to the amount of fees, here, the brother – who was
    pursuing his own, properly pleaded fee claim – merely agreed that the trial
    court should reserve jurisdiction on the issues of both entitlement and
    amount of fees. For these reasons, Storob is distinguishable and does not
    govern our determination in this appeal.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    A party’s failure to plead entitlement to contractual attorney’s fees
    results in a waiver of the party’s fee claim unless the party opponent has
    sufficient notice of the party’s fee claim, and the party opponent either
    acquiesces to the claim or fails to object to the party’s failure to plead
    entitlement to fees. Stockman, 
    573 So. 2d at 838
    . Because the sister failed
    to plead her entitlement to contractual attorney’s fees in her pleading, and
    because the brother did not, through any action or inaction, waive any
    15
    objection to the sister’s failure to plead a claim for contractual attorney’s fees,
    we conclude that the exception to Stockman is inapplicable. The sister,
    therefore, waived her right to seek contractual attorney’s fees in this case.
    Accordingly, we reverse all but the cost award in the July 24, 2020 fee
    judgment, and remand for the trial court to enter a new judgment consistent
    with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded with instructions.
    16