This appeal arises from an order dismissing with prejudice an action by Butler University (Butler) to recover certain ballet costumes from Jennifer Bahssin and dissolving a temporary injunction preventing Bahssin from selling or disposing of the costumes. We conclude that the face of Butler’s complaint and proposed amended complaint did not conclusively show that Butler was not entitled to relief. Accordingly, we reverse.
The procedural history of this case is rather straightforward. Butler, a university located in Indiana, sued Bahssin, a Florida art dealer, for return of ballet costumes and other items it alleged belonged to Butler. Butler also moved for temporary injunctive relief, which the trial court granted, seeking to inspect and inventory the costumes and to prevent Bahssin from selling or otherwise disposing of the costumes. After the inspection, the parties stipulated to a stay of the lawsuit until the resolution of another lawsuit pending in Indiana, which involved similar or identical parties and issues. Bahssin then changed her mind about the stipulation when she had a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity to sell the costumes and filed an emergency motion to dismiss the complaint with prejudice and to dissolve the injunction, providing Butler one day’s notice before the hearing on her motion. Stating that it did so for the reasons set forth in Bahssin’s motion, the trial court dismissed the complaint with prejudice and dissolved the temporary injunction. Butler filed a motion for rehearing and a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. It attached to the motion a proposed amended complaint. The trial court denied the motion, and this appeal followed.
Generally, leave to amend a complaint “shall be given freely when justice so requires.” Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.190(a). When a complaint fails to state a cause of action, the proper approach is for the trial court to allow leave to amend, not to dismiss the complaint with prejudice. Fla. Nat’l Org. for Women, Inc. v. State,
The pleadings revealed that in the 1970s, Butler’s dance department was headed up by a man named George Ver-dak. During Verdak’s tenure as chairman of the dance department, Butler received a gift of costumes, sets, musical scores, and other artifacts that had once belonged to the world-famous Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo (Ballet Russe). Verdak was supposed to have inventoried these artifacts, but he failed to do so. Thus Butler did not have a record of all the items in the collection.
Verdak left Butler in 1978 and went to work for the Indianapolis Ballet Theatre. When he left, he was asked to return to Butler any items he might have that be
Around 1980, Butler learned that some of the Ballet Russe items were in the possession of the Indianapolis Ballet The-atre where Verdak was then employed. After this discovery, Butler attempted to compile a list of items that it was missing, but because Verdak had failed to prepare a proper inventory of the original donated items, Butler was unable to prepare a complete list. Nevertheless, it circulated this partial list to members of the dance community, including Verdak and its own dance faculty. As a result, some items were located and returned to Butler, including some items that had been in Ver-dak’s possession. Again, Verdak fraudulently represented that he had no more of Butler’s items.
When Verdak died in 1983, his sole heir, life partner, and the personal representative of his estate, William Glenn, was tasked with preparing an inventory of Ver-dak’s estate. The inventory Glenn prepared contained no references to any Ballet Russe items. When Glenn died, the personal representative of Glenn’s estate filed a false certificate with the probate court stating she had prepared an inventory of Glenn’s estate when in fact she had not; when she died, the personal representative of her estate did the same thing. Butler alleged that the effect of these failures was to continue the fraudulent concealment of the Ballet Russe items.
In 2002, Butler learned that art dealers were at the house formerly owned by Verdak (and Glenn) and that they were selling ballet costumes and music scores. Some Butler dance faculty members went to investigate, including one who had been a member of the Ballet Russe. They discovered among the items for sale a box of musical scores that Butler had identified as missing in the list it had compiled. They also discovered that some ballet costumes had been sold to a Florida art dealer named Jennifer Bahss-in. Upon obtaining a temporary injunction permitting inspection of the costumes Bahssin had bought, Butler discovered that some of the costumes completed partial ballet sets that Butler had in its possession; in some instances, Butler had part of a complete costume and Bahssin had the other part. Additionally, many of the costumes had the names of former Butler ballet students written inside them.
If the facts as alleged in this proposed amended complaint and the original complaint conclusively showed Butler could not state a cause of action, the trial court was correct in denying leave to amend and dismissing the complaint with prejudice. Stated conversely, if the facts as alleged could support a cause of action, the trial court should have permitted Butler to amend its complaint and allowed the lawsuit to proceed.
Bahssin argues that dismissal was proper because the face of Butler’s complaint revealed that the action was time barred.
Under Indiana law, the statute of limitations for an action to recover personal property action is six years. Ind.Code § 34-11-2-7 (2002). However, Indiana follows the “discovery rule,” meaning that a cause of action accrues only when the plaintiff knows or in the exercise of ordinary diligence could have discovered that the basis for the claim has occurred. Doe v. United Methodist Church,
Like Indiana, Florida follows the discovery rule, known in Florida as the “delayed discovery doctrine.” Keller v. Reed,
The facts contained in Butler’s proposed amended complaint are that it was prevented from discovering the loss of its property through the active concealment of Verdak’s original misappropriation by his successors in interest until Bahssin purchased the costumes in 2002. In contrast, Bahssin argues that the pleadings conclusively show that Butler knew the cause of action had accrued in 1978 when Verdak left Butler’s employ because Butler asked Verdak to return the Ballet Russe items and thus impliedly knew Verdak had the items. The first problem with this argument is that it ignores the allegation that Verdak fraudulently told Butler he had returned the items. Additionally, it assumes that Butler was aware of all the items Verdak had taken, when in fact the complaint states that Butler never had a complete inventory of the items — because Verdak failed to perform this duty — and therefore could not have known Verdak still had them.
As to Butler’s due diligence to discover the injury against it, the proposed amended complaint states that Butler took the following steps to ascertain whether any of the Ballet Russe items were missing: (a) it asked Verdak to complete an inventory of the items, which he failed to do; (b) it requested that Verdak return any items he had when he left Butler, which he failed to do; and (c) upon discovering the Indianapolis Ballet Theatre had some Ballet Russe items, it attempted to compile a list of items in the original collection, circulated this list to members of the ballet community, and received some of the items back, along with Verdak’s assurances that he was returning all of the items. These allegations were sufficient to invoke the discovery rule, or delayed discovery doctrine, and therefore to withstand Bahssin’s motion to dismiss with prejudice based on the statute of limitations.
Accordingly, the trial court erred when it dismissed Butler’s complaint with prejudice without first allowing it to amend its complaint. We therefore reverse and remand with directions to the trial court to allow Butler to amend its complaint and to reinstate the temporary injunction preventing Bahssin from selling or otherwise disposing of the costumes.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
Notes
. We have considered Bahssin’s other arguments in support of dismissal and find them without merit.
. Florida uses the "significant relationship” test for determining what state’s statute of limitations applies to a lawsuit. Merkle v. Robinson,
. The viability of Keller and other cases recognizing the delayed discovery was called into question by the First District in Hearndon v. Graham,
