The BETTER GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION OF SARASOTA COUNTY, INC., a Florida corporation not for profit; Citizens for an Elected Airport Authority, a Political Action Committee; Jeanne McElmurray and Donna Gailey Hayes, Appellants,
v.
STATE of Florida, Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General for the State, and The Sarasota Manatee Airport Authority, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
Daniel J. Lobeck of The Law Offices of Lobeck & Hanson, P.A., Sarasota, for Appellants.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Sara E. Genzel-Steffen, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee, State of Florida.
Steven D. Hutton of Steven D. Hutton, P.L., Sarasota; and Charles D. Bailey, Jr., of Williams, Parker, Harrison, Dietz & Getzen, Sarasota, for Appellee, Sarasota Manatee Airport Authority.
BLUE, Chief Judge.
ORDER ON APPELLEE'S MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL
The Sarasota Manatee Airport Authority, defendant in the circuit court, has *415 moved to dismiss this appeal contending that the orders appealed, one granting the defendant's motion for summary judgment and one denying the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, are nonfinal and non-appealable. We grant the motion in part because orders denying summary judgment are not appealable. See Hudson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The order that grants a motion for summary judgment is likewise not appealable, as it lacks the finality of an order entering judgment in favor of a party and against the party opponent. Moore Int'l Trucks, Inc. v. Foothill Capital Corp.,
Two Florida district courts[2] disfavor the approach we are taking on this motion and routinely dismiss appeals brought to them in this posture, whether they be appeals from orders merely granting summary judgment or those merely granting motions to dismiss.[3] Before the adoption of Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.110(m), which codified a procedure for retaining premature, inchoate appeals, the First District grounded its understandable objection to directing circuit courts to enter belated appealable orders upon its conviction that the appellate court, having determined that it is without jurisdiction, lacks the authority to enter any orders except of course one dismissing the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. See Johnson v. First City Bank of Gainesville,
The Fifth District's disinclination to permit appellants belatedly to obtain appealable orders originates from its desire to promote judicial economy. See Arcangeli v. Albertson's, Inc.,
Not all of these deficient orders are discovered by opposing counsel, as occurred here, or by this court's clerk at the inception of the appeal; many are detected by the panels assigned to consider appeals. By that point the case has been fully briefed and the circuit court clerk has transmitted the record to this court, as has occurred in this case which has recently been perfected but not yet assigned to a panel to consider. The judicial labor required to obtain an appealable order is insignificant; a form order is generated and the appeal rests dormant for a short time awaiting the submission of the proper, final order from the circuit court.
On the other hand, dismissing the appeal without providing counsel an opportunity to rescue it invariably results in a second appeal once the circuit court enters a final, appealable order. The judicial labor that the district court spends on this exercise can be substantial. While we decline to delineate all the steps that commonly follow if dismissal is the cure for this jurisdictional defect when it is discovered at its latest hour, by the merits panel considering the appeal, we note that the following general categories of effort must be expended.
After generating and distributing the order of dismissal, the court may have to contend with a motion for rehearing; once the dismissal order becomes final, the clerk sends copies to the trial court clerk and the publishers and returns the record some time later to the circuit court clerk.
The new appeal is invariably filed, and this court's clerk's staff sets it up, dockets and files two or more briefs and perhaps a request for oral argument, and may have to docket motions and send them to the court for consideration. The circuit court clerk again transmits the record to this court, and the clerk's staff then assigns the perfected appeal to a panel.
We believe that this taxation of the resources of the clerk's staff constitutes an expenditure of judicial labor that is more usefully employed setting up, perfecting, and closing out appeals that make only one visit to the court, and we disagree with the conclusion in Arcangeli that judicial economy is always served by dismissing premature appeals. We are mindful of Judge Farmer's impatience with trial judges and attorneys who fail to appreciate the need for words of finality to render final orders appealable, see Dobrick v. Discovery Cruises, Inc.,
By allowing appellants to obtain an appealable order in this case, we are promoting judicial economy and accommodating the parties' expectations to have their appeal considered as expeditiously and inexpensively as possible.
*417 Motion to dismiss granted in part and denied in part; appeal dismissed in part; and the appellants are directed to obtain an appealable order.
FULMER and COVINGTON, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In a series of certified questions, the First District in Johnson v. First City Bank of Gainesville,
[2] The Fourth District joined the First and Fifth Districts in condemning this practice in Russell v. Russell,
[3] Orders granting motions to dismiss that fail to dismiss the cause itself are subject to the same jurisdictional infirmities as are those that simply grant motions for summary judgment. See Bd. of County Comm'rs of Madison County v. Grice,
