FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Petitioner,
v.
Angelo JULIANO, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*103 Dirk M. Smits and H. Joseph Calmbach of Vernis & Bowling of the Florida Keys, P.A., Islamorada, FL, for Petitioner.
L. Barry Keyfetz of Keyfetz, Asnis & Srebnick, P.A., Miami, FL, for Respondent.
Joseph H. Williams of Troutman, Williams, Irvin, Green & Helms, P.A., Winter Park, FL, for The Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers, Amicus Curiae.
PARIENTE, J.
We have for review Florida Department of Transportation v. Juliano,
FACTS
The underlying facts are recited in the Third District's opinion:
Angelo Juliano, a former correctional officer, employed by the Florida Department of Corrections ("DOC"),[note 1] was injured when he tripped on a large bump in the floor of a mobile weigh station operated by the DOT [Florida Department of Transportation]. At the time of Juliano's accident, the DOT had a contract with the DOC for the use of its inmates to clean the DOT's weigh station under the supervision of the DOC correctional officers. Juliano was supervising the inmates at the weigh station when he tripped and injured himself.
[Note 1: As a result of his injuries, Juliano was terminated as a correctional officer.]
Juliano II,
Juliano received workers' compensation benefits from DOC for his injuries and subsequently filed a third-party tort action for personal injuries against DOT for negligence in maintaining the weigh station. DOT moved for summary judgment on the grounds that it was entitled to workers' compensation immunity because the "unrelated works" exception under section 440.11(1), Florida Statutes (1997),[1] did not apply. DOT contended that the exception did not apply because Juliano failed to name any specific employee of DOT whom Juliano alleged to be negligent. In addition, DOT argued that Juliano had neither alleged nor shown any specific actions on the part of DOT's employees that were negligent. In response, Juliano argued that it was unnecessary to name a particular employee for the "unrelated works" exception to apply. Moreover, in Juliano's written response to DOT's summary judgment motion, he identified two specific DOT supervisors who Juliano alleged had been negligent: a safety specialist named Mary Lou and Sergeant Wyse. Juliano also argued that DOT was not entitled to summary judgment because a disputed genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether Sergeant Wyse was negligent. The trial court denied the motion for summary judgment, concluding that disputed genuine issues of material fact existed and *104 that the jury was entitled to decide whether there was negligence on the part of the DOT employees.
DOT filed an interlocutory appeal of this order[2] and it framed the issue on appeal as whether a "claimant who has accepted workers' compensation benefits and has also brought suit in personal injury against his employer must identify the fellow employee accused of negligence." Juliano asserted that under this Court's opinion in Holmes County School Board v. Duffell,
On remand, DOT filed a second motion for summary judgment. This time, DOT argued that an employee could not sue a supervisor under the "unrelated works" exception unless the employee could demonstrate that the supervisor engaged in conduct that amounted to culpable negligence. The trial court denied DOT's second summary judgment motion as "a mere relitigation of the first motion for summary judgment." Juliano II,
DOT appealed the final judgment. Among the issues raised on appeal, DOT argued that the trial court erred in denying its second motion for summary judgment. See id. In rejecting this argument, the Third District concluded that
the doctrine of res judicata precluded the DOT from raising or reraising any aspect of its workers' compensation defense on remand after the first appeal of this cause. See Thomas v. Perkins,723 So.2d 293 , 294 (Fla. 3d DCA 1998) (under the doctrine of res judicata, appellant is precluded from raising any issues *105 which were or should have been raised on first appeal).
Id. This appeal follows.
THE DOCTRINES OF RES JUDICATA AND THE LAW OF THE CASE
In this case, we must determine whether the Third District properly applied the doctrine of res judicata to preclude DOT from raising a distinct aspect of its defense that it did not raise in the first non-final appeal. In analyzing this issue, it is incumbent upon this Court to first review the important differences regarding the doctrine of res judicata and the related doctrine of the law of the case.
This Court has explained that under the doctrine of res judicata:
A judgment on the merits rendered in a former suit between the same parties or their privies, upon the same cause of action, by a court of competent jurisdiction, is conclusive not only as to every matter which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim, but as to every other matter which might with propriety have been litigated and determined in that action.
Kimbrell v. Paige,
As explained more fully in McGregor v. Provident Trust Company,
Inhering in all courts of civilized nations and, as is said in one case, an obvious rule of expediency and justice, res adjudicata is a fundamental doctrine universally recognized. No better enunciation of it, perhaps, can be found than that given by Black in his work on Judgments. He states it in two main rules, as follows: First, a point which was actually and directly in issue in a former suit, and was there judicially passed upon and determined by a domestic court of competent jurisdiction, cannot again be drawn in question in any future action between the same parties or their privies, whether the causes of action in the two suits be identical or different; and, Second, a judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, on the merits, is a bar to any future suit between the same parties or their privies upon the same cause of action, so long as it remains unreversed. Black on Judgments (2d Ed.) vol. 2, § 504.
Thus, the doctrine of res judicata provides finality to judgments, predictability to litigants, and stability to judicial decisions.
Where successive appeals are taken in the same case there is no question of res judicata, because the same suit, and not a new and different one, is involved. See Beverly Beach Props., Inc. v. Nelson,
As to the scope of the law of the case doctrine, this Court in U.S. Concrete,
A corollary of the law of the case doctrine is that a lower court is not precluded from passing on issues that "have not necessarily been determined and become law of the case." Greene,
Although the scope of the law of the case doctrine would appear to be settled by this Court, several district courts have cited in dicta to this Court's prior decision in Airvac, Inc. v. Ranger Insurance Co.,
*107 Although this Court's decision in Airvac may have caused some confusion over the scope of the law of the case doctrine, an understanding of the procedural posture of Airvac explains the result reached in that case. In Airvac, the trial court had initially denied a request by the defendant to amend his answer to include a fraudulent conveyance defense eighteen months after answering and four days before trial.
The record sub judice clearly shows that [defendant] had full knowledge of the purported "fraudulent conveyance" prior to the initial trial; that it sought by amendment to submit that issue to the court; that it had full opportunity to perfect an appeal, assign as error or otherwise present the issue of the denial of its motion to the appellate court on the initial appeal but did not, thereby waiving any objection to the trial court's rejection of its amendment of the issue.
Id. (emphasis supplied).
Despite the fact that the Court enunciated the law of the case doctrine in concluding that on remand the defendant could not amend its complaint to include a fraudulent conveyance defense, see id. at 469, this Court decided Airvac on principles of waiver; i.e., the failure of a party to raise an issue on appeal that was the subject of the trial court's ruling. To the extent that Airvac has been construed broadly to stand for the proposition that the law of the case doctrine bars consideration of issues that were neither raised by the parties nor decided by the appellate court in the prior appeal, it is in conflict with our subsequently decided case of U.S. Concrete, which restricts application of law of the case to issues that were decided in a prior appeal. Therefore, we recede from Airvac to the extent it is inconsistent with U.S. Concrete.
In summary, the doctrines of the law of the case and res judicata differ in two important ways. First, law of the case applies only to proceedings within the same case, see Beverly Beach,
THIS CASE
Because this case involves the issue of what preclusive effect the prior appeal affirming the denial of summary judgment should have on the trial court in the same case and in a subsequent appeal in the same case, the doctrine of res judicata *108 is inapplicable under these circumstances. Accordingly, the Third District erred as a matter of law when it relied on the doctrine of res judicata to preclude DOT from raising any aspect of its workers' compensation defense on remand after the first appeal.
Juliano argues, however, that the related doctrine of the law of the case nevertheless precludes reconsideration of the standard of negligence. Although DOT did not actually argue the appropriate standard of negligence under the "unrelated works" exception in its first motion for summary judgment, Juliano asserts that the Third District impliedly or necessarily decided the issue in the first appeal of DOT's motion for summary judgment.
We disagree. In this case, the scope of the issues in the first motion for summary judgment and the non-final appeal of the denial of that motion were limited to whether Juliano was required to specifically identify the names of the negligent employees in order to be entitled to invoke the "unrelated works" exception to section 440.11(1). Neither DOT's first summary judgment motion, the trial court's order denying the summary judgment motion, nor the issues raised or briefed by the parties on the first appeal addressed the appropriate standard of negligence applicable to supervisory employees who are sued under the "unrelated works" exception. The issue regarding the appropriate standard of negligence was not before the Third District when it affirmed the trial court's order denying summary judgment.[6] Therefore, the matter of the appropriate standard of negligence was neither necessarily nor implicitly decided in the first interlocutory appeal. Compare Bakker v. First Federal Sav. & Loan Ass'n,
Further, where a previous appellate court has given no explanation for its decision, a subsequent appellate court is not bound by the law of the case unless a determination concerning the propriety of the trial court's order is necessarily inconsistent with every possible correct basis for the earlier rulings of the appellate court. In Juliano I,
For all these reasons, on remand from the non-final appeal affirming the denial of the motion for summary judgment on the ground that Juliano failed to name specific employees under section 440.11(1), the law of the case doctrine did not preclude either the trial court or the Third District from considering whether section 440.11(1) requires that an employee demonstrate that his or her supervisor was culpably negligent in order to be entitled to relief pursuant to that section. Accordingly, we quash the decision of the Third District and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.[7]
It is so ordered.
WELLS, C.J., and SHAW, HARDING, ANSTEAD, LEWIS, and QUINCE, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The "unrelated works" exception under section 440.11(1), Florida Statutes (1997), provides that workers' compensation immunity is not "applicable to employees of the same employer when each is operating in the furtherance of the employer's business but they are assigned primarily to unrelated works within private or public employment."
[2] Although prior case law allowed interlocutory appeals of denials of summary judgment based on workers' compensation immunity where disputed issues of material fact existed, see Breakers Palm Beach, Inc. v. Gloger,
[3] In Holmes, this Court considered the interrelationship of the sovereign immunity statute, section 768.28(9), Florida Statutes (1991), and the "unrelated works" exception to workers' compensation immunity under section 440.11(1) as applied to a public employer.
[4] See, e.g., Ciffo v. Public Storage Mgmt., Inc.,
[5] In a subsequent article, Elligett and Schopp elaborate on the continuing confusion with the law of the case doctrine in the appellate courts. See Raymond T. Elligett, Jr., & Charles P. Schropp, Law of the Case Revisited, Fla. B.J. Mar. 1994, at 48.
[6] Indeed, there is a question as to whether the Third District in Juliano I would have entertained an argument from DOT urging reversal of the trial court's order denying summary judgment based on a ground not raised or argued below, i.e., that culpable negligence governed. Moreover, in this case, the Airvac principle of waiver is inapplicable because the standard of negligence under the unrelated works doctrine was not the subject of the initial motion for summary judgment.
[7] Although both DOT and Juliano raise as an issue before this Court whether culpable negligence is the proper standard under section 440.11(1), because the Third District erroneously concluded that it was precluded from addressing this issue based upon the doctrine of res judicata, the better approach is for the Third District to consider this issue on remand.
