Daniel S. HAVENS and Cynthia Havens, Individually and as Husband and Wife, Appellants,
v.
Hendry CHAMBLISS, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*319 Peter J. Sweeney, Jr. of Clem, Vocelle & Berg, LLP, Vero Beach, for appellants.
Garrison M. Dundas of Brennan, Hayskar, Walker, Schwerer, Dundas & McCain, P.A., Fort Pierce, for appellee.
STONE, J.
We affirm this dismissal for failure to prosecute. The case languished in court, without record activity, for more than one year.
The plaintiffs seek relief on the grounds that their attorney, Edwin Drake, had falsely, and repeatedly, advised them that the "case was proceeding" and that "there was `nothing to worry about'." They further state that Drake misrepresented to them that he had reached a settlement with the defendant's insurance company. Adding insult to injury, the statute of limitations has run.
The plaintiffs' new counsel advised the trial court that a bar complaint has been lodged against Drake. Notwithstanding the plaintiffs' compelling explanation, the trial court correctly recognized that the plaintiffs lacked the requisite showing of "good cause."
"`Good cause' has repeatedly been defined as requiring two prongs: [1] some contact with the opposing party and [2] some form of excusable conduct or occurrence which arose other than through negligence or inattention to the pleading deadline." Blythe v. James Lock & Co.,
The rule is mandatory; "[u]nless a party can satisfy the exceptions provided for in the rule, it specifically states `shall dismiss,' and there is no discretion on the trial court's part if it is demonstrated to the trial court that no action toward prosecution has been taken within a year." CPI Mfg. Co. v. Industrias St. Jack's,
The long list of conduct unsuccessfully proffered to show good cause in this context includes: office errors, inadvertence, uncooperative plaintiffs, lengthy absences of a plaintiff, "misimpressions and erroneous assumptions" by plaintiff's attorney, misunderstandings between attorneys, busy litigants inconvenienced by their causes of action, parties in mid-negotiation without resolution, misfilings by secretaries, plaintiff's change of counsel, and prior attorney refusal to surrender files to subsequent attorney. Paedae v. Voltaggio,
We recognize the harsh result here, but just as we concluded in F.M.C. Corp. v. Chatman,
We recognize that the rule, in this context, is inconsistent with the conflicting public policy that litigation should be resolved on the merits and that clients should not lose their day in court for the faults of counsel. Nevertheless, as to the application of this rule, our hands, like the trial court's, are tied.
MAY, J. and DAMOORGIAN, DORIAN, Associate Judge, concur.
