ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION
The Department of Corrections (DOC) has asked us to reconsider our order dismissing the appeal it took from an order deciding that five DOC employees were entitled to reinstatement and back pay. The Public Employees Relations Commission (PERC) entered a single order on June 3, 2011, in five cases that PERC had consolidated for disposition, Nos. CS-2010-255, CS-2010-265, CS-2010-266, CS-2010-267 and CS-2010-269. In the June 3, 2011 order, PERC ordered reinstatement and back pay for all five without determining the amount of back pay due any of them.
We entered the order dismissing the appeal from PERC’s June 3, 2011 order on overwhelming (if not wholly consistent) authority. See Mathis v. Fla. Dep’t of Corr.,
We were, however, unaware that — as DOC now advises us in the present motion for reconsideration — PERC had “issued orders regarding the exact amount of back pay due to each of the employees.” PERC entered five separate orders in new administrative dockets
We now hold that the notice of appeal filed on June 20, 2011, purportedly as to the June 3, 2011 order, should be deemed to have been filed prematurely, but effectively, as to each of the final orders determining the amounts of back pay DOC owes its employees.
Notes
. PERC read State, Department of Corrections v. Smith,
. The failure of a notice of appeal to name the "correct” appealable order need not be fatal to perfecting the appeal. The Third District, in Puga v. Suave Shoe Corp.,
Under the present circumstances, in which the only appealable orders are the existing final judgments — and the ones stated in the notice are not appealable at all — the only way in which the intent to appeal, that is, to secure appellate review, may be effectuated is to treat the notice as referring to those judgments. Put somewhat differently, so long as a notice is (a) timely filed in the correct court — thus satisfying the only discernible jurisdictional prerequisites, (b) has sufficient information to identify the appealing and opposing parties and (c) states a desire to appeal, it must be deemed directed to the reviewable order, so that that desire may be satisfied. This view is in full accord with the essential basis of the supreme court's decision in [State ex rel. Poe v. Allen,196 So.2d 745 , 746 (Fla.1967)] that [t]he significant factors fully delineated in the earlier cited opinions and present in the case sub judice are proper identification of the litigation in the notice, a clear intent to prosecute an effective appeal, specification of errors reviewable only upon appeal from the final judgment, presentation of a record sustaining such an appeal, and the absence of any record basis for genuine prejudice as a result of the defective notice....
Id. at 680-81 (footnotes omitted).
. Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.110(Z) provides, in its entirety: If a notice of appeal is filed before rendition of a final order, the appeal shall be subject to dismissal as premature. However, if a final order is rendered before dismissal of the premature appeal, the premature notice of appeal shall be considered effective to vest jurisdiction in the court to review the final order. Before dismissal, the court in its discretion may permit the lower tribunal to render a final order.
. We have relinquished jurisdiction under Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.110(1) "when it appears that the jurisdictional defect in the order on appeal is technical in nature and merely requires an amended order clarifying that all of the issues between the parties had been finally resolved.” Demont v. Demont,
