Robert J. FRIEDMAN, Appellant,
v.
LAUDERDALE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SERVICE, INC., etc., et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Robert J. Friedman of Friedman, Oshinsky & Krulewitz, P.A., Hallandale, for appellant.
Elaine M. Gatsos of Law Office of Elaine M. Gatsos, Boca Raton, for appellee-Lauderdale Medical Equipment Service, Inc.
WARNER, Judge.
The appellant challenges an order of the trial court refusing to award him attorney's fees under section 812.035, Florida Statutes (1989). We reverse.
*329 Appellant, an individual, and a corporation were sued for conversion, civil theft, and conspiracy. At trial the court directed a verdict in favor of appellant on the conversion count, finding appellant did not wrongfully take property of appellee. The court also directed a verdict on the civil theft claim, determining that there was no evidence of criminal intent, a necessary element of proof. See Lewis v. Heartsong, Inc.,
The appellant moved to assess attorney's fees pursuant to section 812.035(7) on the ground that, based on the directed verdicts, appellee's civil theft claim was "without substantial fact or legal support." The trial court denied the award, finding that because there was an award on one other claim (the conspiracy count) which arose out of the same facts, appellant was not entitled to an award even though the court made a finding that the plaintiff had not proved criminal intent.
In construing a similar attorney's fee provision in section 772.104, Florida Statutes (1989), the Third District in Foreman v. E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc.,
The legislative's clear intent in wording section 772.104 as it did was to discourage RICO claims lacking either legal or factual substance by setting a less stringent standard for a fee award than the bad faith standard of section 57.105 (citations omitted).
... .
[S]ection 772.104 is obviously drawn in the disjunctive in its reference to claims lacking "substantial fact or legal support" so as to discourage both claims of insufficient legal substance and, in the alternative, those lacking an evidentiary foundation.
Id. at 532 (emphasis added). See also Ciaramello v. D'Ambra,
If this were an award under section 57.105, the trial court's ruling would be appropriate because that statute requires that the entire action show a complete absence of any justiciable issue. Here, of course, there were justiciable issues. But sections 772.11 and 812.035 are claim specific. Thus, we reverse and remand for a determination of attorney's fees expended on the civil theft counts.
POLEN and GARRETT, JJ., concur.
