Paul J. BARCO, Petitioner,
v.
SCHOOL BOARD OF PINELLAS COUNTY, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*1117 Samuel R. Mandelbaum of Mandelbaum, Fitzsimmons, Hewitt, and Metzger, P.A., Tampa, FL, for Petitioner.
Matthew C. Lucas and Brian A. Bolves of Bricklemyer, Smolker, and Bolves, P.A., Tampa, FL, for Respondent.
PARIENTE, J.
Paul Barco seeks review of the decision of the Second District Court of Appeal in Barco v. School Board of Pinellas County,
BACKGROUND
Barco owned real property that was the subject of an eminent domain proceeding instituted by the School Board of Pinellas County ("School Board") pursuant to chapters 73 and 74, Florida Statutes. The property was needed for expansion of an elementary school. The issue of compensation for the property taken was resolved through mediation, with the agreement that the court would retain jurisdiction to resolve attorneys' fees and costs, although no final judgment was entered at that time. Disputes arose between the parties that resulted in Barco serving a "Motion to Enforce Settlement, with Request for Interest, Attorneys Fees & Costs." As its name indicates, in addition to seeking an order enforcing the settlement, the motion also set forth the attorney's fees and costs to which Barco asserted he was entitled.
At the hearing on Barco's motion to enforce settlement, the trial court ruled that the School Board should pay the agreed sums, including statutory attorneys' fees, and that the court would reserve jurisdiction on any contested costs and on the question of interest, which the School Board also contested. The trial court then entered a final judgment which required the School Board to pay both the compensation that had been agreed to in the Mediated Settlement Agreement and statutory attorneys' fees.[2] The judgment reserved jurisdiction to determine any and all issues regarding reasonable costs, interest and any additional attorneys' fees.
More than three months after the filing of the judgment, Barco filed and served a Motion to Tax Costs in the amount of $12,411.21 relating to costs of real estate appraisers, court reporters, plats, maps, express delivery, and document services. These were the same costs sought in the earlier motion, with the addition of a court reporting bill related to the motion to enforce the mediated settlement agreement. A hearing was held on the Motion to Tax Costs at which the School Board objected to the award of any costs on the ground that the motion to tax costs was served more than thirty days after the judgment. Barco countered with the explanation that his first motion for costs had been included *1119 in the Motion to Enforce Settlement, which was served November 9, 2004 twenty-three days prior to entry of the final judgment on December 2, 2004. The School Board then contended that the early motion was not timely under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.525. The trial court agreed with the School Board and followed Second District precedent holding that rule 1.525 creates a bright-line requirement that, to be timely, the motion for fees and costs must be served within the thirty-day window after a judgment, not preceding it. Barco appealed to the Second District, resulting in the decision now before the Court, in which the district court adhered to its precedent in Swann v. Dinan,
We first discuss the impetus for the adoption of the rule at issue setting a time requirement for service of motions for attorneys' fees or costs. We then discuss how the conflict cases have interpreted and applied the rule at issue. Finally, we analyze the language and intent of the rule, applying it to the instant case and concluding that the rule does not create a limited thirty-day window following the judgment in which the motion for attorneys' fees or costs must be served in order to be timely.
ANALYSIS
The version of rule 1.525 at issue in this case states:
Rule 1.525. Motions for Costs and Attorneys' fees
Any party seeking a judgment taxing costs, attorneys' fees, or both shall serve a motion within 30 days after filing of the judgment, including a judgment of dismissal, or the service of a notice of voluntary dismissal.
The 2004 version of the rule is identical in its text to the 2001 rule. Prior to the adoption of rule 1.525 in 2001, "Florida case law permitted motions for attorney's fees to be filed within a reasonable time of the plaintiff's abandonment of the claim or within a reasonable time after final judgment is entered." E & A Produce Corp. v. Superior Garlic Int'l, Inc.,
Rule 1.525 was adopted to establish an explicit time requirement for service of fee and cost motions in order to resolve the uncertainties caused by the "reasonable time" standard. See Saia Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Reid,
THE CONFLICT CASES
The Second District held in Barco that a motion served before entry of the judgment was not timely under rule 1.525, based on the premise that the rule sets forth only a thirty-day window following the judgment in which the motion may be served. In so doing, the Second District certified conflict with decisions of the First District in Norris, the Fourth District in Swift, the Third District in Byrne-Henry, and the Fifth District in Martin Daytona. Each of these decisions involves the service of a motion for fees and costs before the filing of the judgment in the case. Importantly, each court found the early motion to be timely according to its interpretation of the intent of the rule.
In Norris, the First District held that a motion for fees and costs served after the jury verdict but before the personal injury judgment was timely under the 2004 version of rule 1.525, reasoning:
In our view, the primary evil to be addressed by the supreme court's adoption of Rule 1.525 was the uncertainty created by excessive tardiness in the filing of motions for fees and costs [under the pre-2001 "reasonable time" requirement]. Decisions in which the courts found a motion untimely under the "reasonable time" standard generally note prejudice or unfair surprise.
In contrast, we have found no cases where an appellate court applied the "reasonable time" standard to a motion served before entry of judgment, and found prejudice or unfair surprise to a party, so as to conclude the motion was untimely. In fact, it is hard to imagine a situation where a motion for fees and costs, filed after an adverse jury verdict, but before filing the judgment, could ever be prejudicial or cause unfair surprise to the losing party.
. . . .
We conclude the purpose of Rule 1.525 is fully accomplished by an interpretation that establishes the latest point at which a prevailing party may serve a motion for fees and costs. The party seeking fees may serve a motion as soon as entitlement is established. The motion, however, must be served no later than 30 days after filing of the judgment.
Norris,
In the year following the First District's decision in Norris, the Fourth District in Swift, a breach of contract action, held that a motion for fees and costs served before judgment was timely under rule 1.525. The Swift court cited Norris and reasoned that the rule does not specify the earliest time when a motion for costs and fees may be served but instead "establishes the latest point at which a prevailing party may serve a motion for fees and costs."
This interpretation is consistent with the language of the rule, which provides that the motion must be served "within 30 days after filing of the judgment." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.525 ([Emphasis] supplied). "When used relative to time," *1121 the preposition "within" has been defined as meaning "any time before; at or before; at the end of; before the expiration of; not beyond; not exceeding; not later than."
Shortly after the Fourth District's decision in Swift, the Third District decided Byrne-Henry, which also held that a motion served before the filing of a notice of voluntary dismissal was timely under the 2004 version of rule 1.525. Byrne-Henry,
In Martin Daytona, the issues were whether rule 1.525 applies to motions filed in the circuit court based on awards emanating from arbitration and, if so, whether a motion served before entry of the judgment is timely under the rule.
The conflict cases all generally hold that the 2001 enactment of rule 1.525 (which contains the same language as the 2004 version) was intended only to create a final deadline for service of the motion, in order to avoid the tardiness that occurred in filing a motion under the preexisting "reasonable time" filing requirement. The conflict courts generally agree that the "reasonable time" requirement created the potential for prejudice to the opposing party, which is not present under the rule because it eliminates tardy motions. Several of the conflict courts also opine that the intent of the 2006 amendment in removing the word "within" from the rule was to effect the original intent of the 2001 amendment that being elimination of tardy motions. None of the conflict decisions identify any possible prejudice in an early prejudgment filing, as opposed to a late postjudgment filing.
INTERPRETATION OF THE RULE
As this Court explained in Saia, appellate courts apply a de novo standard of review when the construction of a procedural rule, such as rule 1.525, is at issue.
The word "within" as used in rule 1.525 appears to be the critical term in interpreting the time deadline in the rule. It is appropriate to refer to dictionary definitions when construing statutes or rules. See Reform Party of Fla. v. Black,
The word "within" has also been variously defined by different courts. See, e.g., Taxpayers Against Congestion v. Regional Transp. Dist.,
The Supreme Court of Iowa summarized the differing meanings of the word "within" when it explained:
In fixing time, this word is fairly susceptible of different meanings. . . . It may be taken to fix both the beginning and end of the period of time in which a specified act must be done. In this sense "within" means "during."
However, "within" frequently means "not beyond, not later than, any time before, before the expiration of." In this sense "within" fixes the end but not the beginning of the period of time.
Iowa State Dept. of Health v. Hertko,
This Court has also had occasion to construe the word "within," albeit in a statutory context, stating:
"Within" means "during the time of." Black's Law Dictionary 1602 (6th ed.1991). In common usage, "within" simply is not synonymous with "no later than." The term "within" implies a *1123 measurement fixed both at its beginning and its end, whereas "no later than" implies only a fixed end.
Jeffries v. State,
Because the word "within" is clearly susceptible of several different and somewhat contrary meanings, we look to the purpose of the rules of civil procedure as well as the purpose behind the enactment of rule 1.525. See Fla. Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Ass'n v. Fla. Div. of Admin. Hearings,
Further, regarding the purpose, rule 1.525 was created to replace the "reasonable time" requirement established by prior case law with a "within 30 days after" requirement primarily to accomplish two goals: first, to cure the "evil" of uncertainty created by tardy motions for fees and costs, see Norris,
In fact, as the Court explained in Stockman, "[t]he existence or nonexistence of a motion for attorney's fees may play an important role in decisions affecting a case. For example, the potential that one may be required to pay an opposing party's attorney's fees may often be determinative in a decision on whether to pursue a claim, dismiss it, or settle."
Because the word "within" in the 2004 version of the rule is ambiguous and because procedural rules are to be construed to effect a speedy and just determination of the cause on the merits, we construe the word "within" in accord with *1124 those courts that have found it to mean "not later than" thirty days after the filing of the judgment, as the current rule now provides. The 2006 amendment to the rule clarifies that the intent of the rule is to establish only an outside deadline for service of the motion, by substituting the words "no later than" for the more ambiguous word "within." The rule, effective January 1, 2006, now reads: "Any party seeking a judgment taxing costs, attorneys' fees, or both shall serve a motion no later than 30 days after the filing of the judgment. . . ." See In re Amendments to the Fla. Rules of Civil Pro. (Two Year Cycle),
Therefore, we conclude that the prior version of rule 1.525 in effect in 2004 was not intended to create a limited thirty-day window for service of a motion for attorneys' fees or costs or both. The rule in effect in 2004, just like the rule amended effective 2006, requires only that the motion be served no later than thirty days following the filing of the judgment.[4]
CONCLUSION
For all the reasons stated, we agree with the conclusions reached by the First, Third, Fourth and Fifth Districts, which hold that rule 1.525 does not mandate service of a motion for attorneys' fees or costs only within a thirty-day window following the filing of the judgment. We also conclude that the timely service requirement of rule 1.525 in effect in 2004, which established only an outside deadline for service of Barco's motion for attorneys' fees and costs, was met when Barco served his first motion for attorney's fees and costs prior to the filing of the judgment. Accordingly, we quash the decision of the Second District in Barco, disapprove the decision in Swann, and approve the decisions in Norris, Byrne-Henry, Swift, and Martin Daytona. We remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
LEWIS, C.J., and WELLS, ANSTEAD, QUINCE, CANTERO, and BELL, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Rule 1.525 has been amended, effective January 1, 2006, to make clear that the motion must now be served no later than thirty days after judgment. Thus, effective 2006, the question of whether a motion for attorneys' fees or costs served prior to judgment is untimely has been eliminated by the 2006 amendment clarifying that the rule dictates only the latest date for service of the motion and did not intend for there to be only a narrow window of thirty days following the judgment.
[2] These fees are not at issue here. Under section 73.091(1), Florida Statutes (2004), the condemning authority was required to pay attorneys' fees and reasonable costs incurred in the circuit court eminent domain proceedings. Section 73.092(1), Florida Statutes (2004), provides for calculation of statutory attorneys' fees on the basis of the benefits achieved for the client, except under certain circumstances set forth in the chapter that are not pertinent here.
[3] Similar to the change in rule 1.525, the current rule 1.530 providing for motions for new trial, rehearing and amendment of judgments now requires those motions to be served "not later than 10 days" after the verdict or the filing of the judgment in a nonjury action.
[4] This decision does not alter the pleading requirements for claims for attorneys' fees that have been established by prior case law. See Stockman,
