JoAnn HAZEN, individually and as Trustee of the JoAnn Hazen Revocable Trust, Appellant,
v.
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*533 Rafael J. Nobo, III, and John Wesley Frost, II, of Frost Tamayo Sessums & Aranda, P.A., Bartow, for Appellant.
William B. Bracken, Jr. of Sidney M. Crawford, P.A., Lakeland, for Appellee.
WALLACE, Judge.
JoAnn Hazen, individually and as Trustee of the JoAnn Hazen Revocable Trust (Hazen), appeals the circuit court's final judgment that dismissed her action against Allstate Insurance Company (Allstate) with prejudice for noncompliance with section 627.4136, Florida Statutes (2002), commonly referred to as the "nonjoinder statute," and for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Hazen sued Allstate for the breach of an alleged oral agreement to repair Hazen's vehicle. Hazen alleged that her vehicle was damaged as the result of the negligent operation of another vehicle that was insured by Allstate. Because Hazen failed to plead sufficient facts in her amended complaint to allege either compliance with the nonjoinder statute or that the statute was inapplicable, we affirm the circuit court's dismissal of Hazen's action.[1]
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Hazen sued Allstate in the Polk County Circuit Court. Allstate was the sole defendant named in Hazen's action. The circuit court granted Allstate's motion to dismiss Hazen's amended complaint without prejudice and gave Hazen ten days to amend. The order dismissing the amended complaint recited that Allstate's motion was granted "based upon Florida's Non-Joinder Statute and a lack of subject matter jurisdiction." After Hazen declined to amend, the circuit court entered a final judgment dismissing the action. This appeal followed.
The facts pertinent to our review of this case are alleged in Hazen's amended complaint. For purposes of our review, we must assume the factual allegations of the amended complaint to be true, and we construe them in the light most favorable to Hazen as the nonmoving party. See Williams v. Howard,
Hazen is a resident of Polk County, Florida. Allstate is a foreign insurance company that maintains an office or offices in Polk County. On March 9, 2003, Hazen's 2001 Cadillac DeVille was involved in an accident with another vehicle in Mississippi. The owner of the other vehicle was insured by Allstate. The permissive user who drove the other vehicle was negligent. Allstate agreed that its insured was liable for the accident and the resulting property damage.
After Hazen returned to Florida, Allstate contacted her. Allstate agreed to have the Cadillac repaired and to provide Hazen with a rental vehicle. Hazen agreed, and Allstate authorized and paid for the repair of the Cadillac in Louisiana. When the Cadillac was returned to Florida, Hazen discovered that the attempted repairs were inadequate and incomplete. Hazen alleged that the repair effort authorized and paid for by Allstate was so *534 deficient that the Cadillac was not safe to drive and that it was significantly diminished in value. Hazen asked Allstate to reimburse her for the diminished value of the Cadillac, but Allstate refused. Hazen initially stored the Cadillac, asserting that it was not safe to drive. She ultimately sold the Cadillac at what she claimed was a substantial loss.
In her amended complaint, Hazen alleged that Allstate had entered into an oral contract with her for the repair of the Cadillac and to pay such other benefits as were available under the Allstate policy. Hazen alleged further that Allstate had breached the oral contract. She claimed damages in excess of $15,000 for (1) the diminution in the value of the Cadillac, (2) loss of use/rental car costs, and (3) storage fees. Notably, Hazen did not allege that she had obtained a settlement or verdict against either Allstate's insured or the permissive user of the other vehicle.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Issue
Under the nonjoinder statute, an injured third party may not file a direct action against a liability insurer for a cause of action covered by a liability insurance policy without first satisfying either one of two conditions precedent: (1) obtaining a settlement against the insured or (2) obtaining a verdict against the insured. In this regard, subsection (1) of the nonjoinder statute provides:
It shall be a condition precedent to the accrual or maintenance of a cause of action against a liability insurer by a person not an insured under the terms of the liability insurance contract that such person shall first obtain a settlement or verdict against a person who is an insured under the terms of such policy for a cause of action which is covered by such policy.
§ 627.4136(1) (emphasis supplied). Hazen argues that her acceptance of Allstate's oral offer to provide her with a rental car and to repair her Cadillac was a "settlement" that satisfied one of the two alternative conditions precedent of the statute. Hazen also arguessomewhat inconsistentlythat the settlement agreement with Allstate "ma[de] the Florida Non-Joinder Statute inapplicable." In response, Allstate contends that Hazen did not meet either of the conditions precedent of the statute because Hazen has not obtained a settlement or a verdict against its insured. According to Allstate, the "settlement" referred to in the statute must be against the insured, not with the insurance company.
These arguments raise a question of apparent first impression in Florida concerning whether a presuit undertaking by an automobile insurance carrier with a third party for the repair of property damage and the payment of incidental costs caused by the negligence of the carrier's insured is sufficient either to satisfy one of the conditions precedent described in the subsection (1) of the nonjoinder statute or to render the statute itself inapplicable.[2] To *535 answer this question, we will begin with a brief look at the history of the nonjoinder statute.
B. A Brief History
Florida's first nonjoinder statute was enacted as section 627.7262 in 1976. See ch. 76-266, § 12, at 726, Laws of Fla. This statute was a legislative response to the decisions in Shingleton v. Bussey,
In 1982, the legislature enacted another version of the nonjoinder statute that was also numbered as section 627.7262, Florida Statutes. See ch. 82-243, § 542, at 1553, Laws of Fla. This version of the nonjoinder statute survived a constitutional challenge. See VanBibber v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Ins. Co.,
It shall be a condition precedent to the accrual or maintenance of a cause of action against a liability insurer by a person not an insured under the terms of the liability insurance contract, that such person shall first obtain a judgment against a person who is an insured under the terms of such policy for a cause of action which is covered by such policy.
§ 627.7262 (emphasis supplied). Thus, under the 1982 version of the nonjoinder statute, the condition precedent to an injured third party's right to file a direct action against an insurer differed significantly from the version of the statute under review in this case. The 1982 version of the statute required the obtaining of a judgment against the insured as the condition precedent for a direct action against the liability insurer.
In 1990, the legislature amended subsection (1) of the nonjoinder statute by deleting the word "judgment" and substituting in its place the words "settlement or verdict." See ch. 90-119, § 38, at 393, Laws of Fla. At the same time, the legislature further amended the nonjoinder statute by adding a new subsection (4) that addresses the procedure for the joinder of a liability insurer in existing litigation with the insured once either of the conditions precedent of subsection (1) has been satisfied. This new subsection (4) provides:
At the time a judgment is entered or a settlement is reached during the pendency of litigation, a liability insurer may be joined as a party defendant for the purposes of entering final judgment or enforcing the settlement by the motion of any party, unless the insurer denied coverage under the provisions of s. 627.426(2) or defended under a reservation of rights pursuant to s. 627.426(2). A copy of the motion to join the insurer shall be served on the insurer by certified mail. If a judgment is reversed or remanded on appeal, the insurer's presence shall not be disclosed to the jury in a subsequent trial.
*536 Id. at 393-94. In 1992, section 627.7262 was transferred and renumbered as section 627.4136. See ch. 92-318, § 37, at 3110, Laws of Fla.[3]
C. Two Lessons From History
At this point, we pause to note two lessons that we glean from this brief history of the nonjoinder statute. First, the 1982 version of the statute required the entry of a judgment against the insured as a condition precedent to joinder of the insurer in an action on a liability policy brought by a third party. Second, the 1990 amendmentchanging the condition precedent to the joinder of the insurer as a party from a judgment to a settlement or verdictwas made in conjunction with the addition of a new subsection (4) to the statute. The new subsection (4) addressed the procedural aspects of joining the insurer as a party in the context of litigation that is already pending, not a new lawsuit. With these lessons in mind, we turn now to an examination of the procedural aspects of the joinder of the insurer under the 1982 version of the statute and the significance of the changes made by the 1990 amendments.
D. Joining the Insurer: Old and New
Under the 1982 version of the nonjoinder statute, the injured third party had no right of action against the insurer under a liability policy before obtaining a judgment against the insured.[4]See Hett v. Madison Mut. Ins. Co.,
In the 1990 amendment to the nonjoinder statute, the legislature addressed these difficulties by adopting new procedures for the joinder of insurers in pending litigation. These new procedures eliminated the need for the two-step process that was required under the earlier legislation. With certain exceptions not material here, the new subsection (4) of the statute provides for the joinder of a liability insurer when a judgment is entered or a settlement is reached during the pendency of litigation. § 627.4136(4). The joinder of the liability insurer under these circumstances *537 is for the purposes of entering final judgment or enforcing a settlement. Id. Joinder may be made on the motion of any party. Id. A copy of the motion to join the insurer must be served on the insurer by certified mail. Id. Thus, under the streamlined procedure adopted in the 1990 amendments, an independent action against the insurer after the entry of judgment against the insured is no longer required.
The addition of subsection (4) to the nonjoinder statute required a conforming amendment to subsection (1). Under the 1982 version of the statute, the condition precedent for joining the insurer in an action was the obtaining of a judgment against the insured. By the time an injured third party obtained a judgment against the insured, it was generally too late to add the insurer as a party in the existing action, and the filing of a new action against the insurer was required.[5] Subsection (4) of the nonjoinder statute eliminates this procedural inefficiency. Under the provisions of subsection (4) in the 1990 version of the statute, the injured third party may move to add the insurer as a party before or at the time of the entry of judgment against the insured. C.A. Seguros Catatumbo v. Herrera,
E. Analysis of Hazen's Claim that a "Settlement" Occurred
Our review of the history of the nonjoinder statute and the purpose of the 1990 amendments to it provides an appropriate background for the analysis of Hazen's argument that she satisfied one of the alternative conditions precedent of the statute when she reached a "settlement" with Allstate for the repair of her Cadillac. The flaw in Hazen's argument is that it reads the term "settlement" as it is used in subsection (1) of the statute in isolation from the use of the same term in subsection (4). The changes in the critical language describing the operative conditions precedent in subsection (1) and the addition of subsection (4) concerning the joinder of insurers address the same subject matter; they were also enacted as part of a single legislative enactment. Accordingly, they must be read in pari materia. See Major v. State,
For these reasons, Hazen's argument that she satisfied one of the alternative conditions precedent of the nonjoinder statute by reaching an oral agreement with Allstate for the repair of her Cadillac fails. Hazen did not allege that her "settlement" with Allstate occurred within the course of pending litigation in which the insured was already a party. Furthermore, Hazen did not allege that she had obtained a verdict against Allstate's insured. It follows that Hazen's amended complaint did not allege sufficient facts to satisfy either of the alternative conditions precedent of the nonjoinder statute.
However, our conclusion that Hazen did not satisfy either of the alternative conditions precedent of the nonjoinder statute that would allow her to file a direct action against Allstate does not end our analysis. There is another theory which could arguably support Hazen's attempt at a direct action against Allstate. We turn now to an examination of this other theory.
F. The Insurer's "Agreement" as a New and Independent Obligation
By its terms, the nonjoinder statute applies only to a cause of action which is covered by a liability insurance contract, i.e., a tort action. § 627.4136(1). It follows that the nonjoinder statute does not bar a direct action against an insurer by a third party on an obligation that is independent of the insurance contract. See, e.g., Cresci v. The Yacht, "Billfisher",
Our independent research disclosed one case that allowed an injured third party's direct action against an insurer to go forward based on the insurer's presuit efforts to negotiate the settlement of claims against its insured. In Howton v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
[T]he rule prohibiting direct actions against the insurer has no application where the insurer undertakes a new and independent obligation directly with a nonparty to the insurance contract in its efforts to negotiate a settlement of the third party's claim. Indeed, an insurance carrier is no less liable under the law for the breach of it own contract obligations or for its own tortious conduct than is any other party.
Id. at 450-51. The Alabama court concluded by overruling its prior decision on which the trial court had relied and by reversing the summary judgment in favor of the insurer. Id. at 451. In a later decision, the Alabama court quoted from its opinion in Howton to explain that "[a] `new and independent obligation' exists when `the insurer, acting independently of its insured, enters into a contract with, or commits a tort against, a third-party claimant.'" Williams v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In Hazen's case, as in Howton, the basis of the claim is the breach by an insurer of an alleged agreement for the repair of a motor vehicle. Upon an initial reading, the Howton decision might appear to support a direct action by Hazen on a "new and independent obligation"the alleged agreement with Allstate. We have already noted that the principles barring direct actions by injured third parties against insurers do not apply to actions against insurers that are not based on liability insurance contracts. Nevertheless, we think the reasoning on this point in Howton is unsound. As another court has observed, the Howton opinion does not explain the source of the "new and independent obligation" to which the Alabama court refers. See McWhirter v. Fire Ins. Exch., Inc.,
G. Two Additional Considerations
Two additional considerations add weight to our conclusion that Hazen's arguments are based on a misreading of the nonjoinder statute. First, the intent of the *540 nonjoinder statute "is to ensure that the availability of insurance has no influence on the jury's determination of . . . damages." Gen. Star Indem. Co. v. Boran Craig Barber Engel Constr. Co.,
Second, we believe that the adoption of the view of the nonjoinder statute proposed by Hazen would discourage insurers from undertaking the prompt adjustment and settlement of meritorious claims. Under Hazen's interpretation of the statute, an injured third party could file a direct action against an insurer simply by alleging the breach of a presuit "settlement" arising from an insurer's undertaking to have a vehicle repaired or from some other effort to adjust a claim. Granted, it might be convenient for Hazen and other claimants to be able to sue the insurer directly on a claim of this type without having to join and serve the insured. However, we think that insurers would be reluctant to attempt to settle property damage claims such as Hazen's claim if a mere allegation of the insurer's breach of an oral "agreement" to adjust a claim could lead to a direct action against the insurer. The general reluctance or refusal of insurers to adjust and settle meritorious claims before suit that would likely result from such a procedure would ultimately be detrimental to the motoring public. Although this factor is by no means determinative, it does constitute an additional reason for rejecting as unsound Hazen's interpretation of the nonjoinder statute.
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, Allstate's undertaking to repair the property damage to Hazen's Cadillac and to pay incidental costs for which its insured was liable was not sufficient either to satisfy one of the alternative conditions precedent of the nonjoinder statute or to render the statute inapplicable. Accordingly, the circuit court properly dismissed Hazen's action with prejudice after she declined to amend her complaint, and we affirm the final judgment entered by the circuit court.
Affirmed.
WHATLEY, J., Concurs.
CANADY, J., Dissents with opinion.
CANADY, Judge, Dissenting.
The majority adopts a rule requiring that suit be brought by a third party claimant against an insured before an insurer can enter a legally enforceable agreement with the third party to settle the third party's claim. Because I conclude that Florida's nonjoinder statute cannot reasonably be interpreted as establishing such a rule, I dissent.
The core of the majority's holding in this case is that "a presuit undertaking or agreement between an injured third party and an insurer about the adjustment of a claim [fails to] satisfy the alternative condition *541 precedent of settlement described in [section 627.4136(1)]" because "[s]uch a presuit undertaking or agreement does not qualify as a `settlement' within the meaning of the nonjoinder statute." According to the majority's reading of the statute, a settlement must "occur within the course of pending litigation in which the insured [is] already a party."
The majority's understanding of the term "settlement" in section 627.4136 is at odds with both the plain meaning of the statutory text and the statutory purpose which the courts have previously identified as the basis for the statute. And the majority's foray into the statutory history of the nonjoinder statute falls short of providing a persuasive basis for the restrictive reading of the term "settlement" on which its decision relies.
A settlement is "[a]n agreement ending a dispute or lawsuit." Black's Law Dictionary 1404 (8th ed.2004). A settlement may be entered after litigation has been instituted with respect to the claim which is settled. A settlement may also be entered prior to the initiation of litigation. See Global Travel Mktg., Inc. v. Shea,
In considering the motion to dismiss for violation of the nonjoinder statute, the circuit court was required to accept the allegations of the complaint as true. See Koehler v. Merrill Lynch & Co.,
When an insurer acting as the agent of its insured enters a settlement agreement, the insured is bound by the agreement. See Pregony v. Custer,
Since Hazenaccording to the allegations of the complainthad "obtain[ed] a settlement . . . against a person who is an insured," the condition precedent for the accrual of a cause of action by Hazen, as a third party, against Allstate, as an insurer, was satisfied and the bar of the nonjoinder statute was not applicable. § 627.4136(1), (2). Based on the plain language of the statute, I conclude that the nonjoinder statute does not protect an insurer from a suit for breach of contract arising from its failure to perform under a settlement agreement the insurer has entered into with a third party on behalf of an insured.
"The cardinal rule of statutory construction is that courts will give a statute its plain and ordinary meaning." Weber v. Dobbins,
When the statute is clear and unambiguous, courts will not look behind the statute's plain language for legislative intent or resort to rules of statutory construction to ascertain intent. In such instance, the statute's plain and ordinary *542 meaning must control, unless this leads to an unreasonable result or a result clearly contrary to legislative intent. When the statutory language is clear, "courts have no occasion to resort to rules of constructionthey must read the statute as written, for to do otherwise would constitute an abrogation of legislative power."
Daniels v. Fla. Dep't of Health,
The majority does notand could not reasonablycontend that the common, ordinary meaning of settlement is limited to settlements entered after suit has been filed. Instead, the majority concludes that settlement in subsection (1) should be read restrictively because such a reading is supported by the use of the term in subsection (4) as well as the statutory history.
In my view, the majorityby failing to give effect to the plain meaning of settlement in subsection (1)departs from the cardinal rule of statutory construction. In doing so, the majority does not assert that subsection (1) is ambiguous. Nor does the majority assert that the plain meaning of subsection (1) leads to "an unreasonable result or a result clearly contrary to legislative intent." Without first determining that the statute is ambiguous or that enforcement of its plain language is manifestly problematic, the majority embarks on an exercise in "imaginative reconstruction"[6] of the legislature's intent. If such an exercise is ever justified, it certainly is not justified in this case.
Interpreting settlement in subsection (1) in its common and ordinary sense does not create a conflict between subsection (1) and subsection (4). Subsection (4) is most reasonably understood in context as a provision setting forth the particular procedure to be followed when a settlement is reached after suit has been brought. There is no conflict, inconsistency, or tension between a statutory provision providing an exception for all settlements from the operation of the nonjoinder statute and a provision specifying the particular procedure to be followed when a settlement is agreed to during litigation. Full effect can be given to subsection (4) without imposing a restrictive reading in the unambiguous text of subsection (1). Cf. Lareau v. State,
The majority's reading of the statute cannot be persuasively defended on the basis of the purpose of the statute. As the court recognized in VanBibber,
The claim at issue here is a contract claim against an insurer based on the insurer's alleged agreement to settle a tort claim against its insured. Adjudication of the action will not require a determination of the insured's liability and damages. Instead, it will involve determining the existence and scope of the alleged settlement agreement and measuring the damages for the alleged breach of the agreement by Allstate. The insured's liability and damages on the underlying tort claim are irrelevant to the action for breach of the settlement agreement.
Where there is a settlement agreement between an insurer and a third party, the third party has a right of action against the insurer based on the third party's interest in the promise of the insurer made in the settlement agreement. Since there is a direct contractual relationship arising from the settlement agreement, the third party's right of action need not be based on the assertion of a beneficial interest of the third party in the tortfeasor's liability insurance policy. See Philip J. Padovano, Florida Civil Practice § 11.6, at 437 (2007 ed.) ("A settlement agreement creates new contractual rights and duties which may be enforced in place of the underlying claims and defenses.").
The purpose of the nonjoinder statute has no more application to Hazen's claim against Allstate than it would to a claim brought for breach of a settlement agreement that was entered by Allstate after a tort suit had been instituted. Although the tort claim no doubt provides the background for Hazen's contract claim, the tort claim would also provide the background for a suit to enforce a settlement agreement entered during litigationwhich unquestionably is enforceable. It is thus nonsensical to contend thatsimply because a tort claim lurks in the backgroundthe purpose of the nonjoinder statute comes into play.
The statutory history which the majority recounts serves ultimately as nothing more than the springboard for the majority's speculation about the legislature's purpose in adopting and amending the nonjoinder statute. The majority's speculation is based on the unsupported premise that the 1982 version of the nonjoinder statute precluded the enforcement of presuit settlements entered by insurers with third-party claimants. There is no Florida authority to support that understanding of the 1982 version of the statute. And there is significant authority from other jurisdictions to support the conclusion that nonjoinder statutes have no application to settlement agreements between insurers and third-party claimants. See Howton,
But even if the majority's view concerning the meaning of the 1982 version of the statute is accepted, it does not justify departing from the plain meaning of the current *544 version of the statute which came into force in 1990.
The majority thus departs from the unambiguous meaning of the statutory text to reach a result that is inconsistent with the purpose that the supreme court and this courtamong othershave identified as the basis for the legislature's adoption of the nonjoinder statute. In doing so, the majority also sets aside the principle that "settlements are highly favored and will be enforced whenever possible." Robbie v. City of Miami,
In justifying its decision, the majority makes reference to the "additional circumstance" that Hazen's claim involves "a mere allegation of the insurer's breach of an oral `agreement' to adjust a claim." (Emphasis added.) It is clear from the majority's reasoning, however, that the holding in this case does not turn on the fact that the agreement alleged by Hazen is an oral agreement. Nothing in either the text of the statute or the statutory history recounted in the majority opinion suggests that the nonjoinder statute prohibits the enforcement of oral settlement agreements. Nowhere does the majority state that the nonjoinder statute requires that settlement agreements be in writing. Nothing in the statute suggests any distinction between oral and written settlements.
The majority's policy concerns regarding oral settlement agreements with respect to third-party insurance claims may well have merit. A strong argument might be made for requiring that settlement agreements with respect to third-party claims be in writing. See 7A Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla, Couch on Insurance 3d § 105.18 ("Typically, a condition precedent to direct action involving either a judgment or agreement requires that the agreement be in writing, and that it be between the insured, the insurer, and the injured claimant."). But it is the legislature's prerogative to consider and act on such policy concerns; such policy matters are not within this court's province.
In the statute of frauds, section 725.01, Florida Statutes (2002), the legislature has addressed the policy issues regarding the enforcement of certain oral promises. The agreement between Hazen and Allstate, however, does not fall within the scope of the statute of frauds. Although a superficial view of the matter might lead to the conclusion that Hazen's action seeks "to charge the defendant upon [a] special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person," § 725.01, a liability insurer's agreement with a third party to settle a claim against an insured does not constitute such a "special promise."
This is so because "the consideration for the promise is in fact . . . desired by the promisor [the insurer] mainly for [its] own economic advantage, rather than in order to benefit the third person [the insured]." Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 116 (1981). See Klag v. Home Ins. Co.,
I have three final observations to offer concerning the impact of the rule adopted by the majority. The first point relates to the majority's expressed concern for the "motoring public." The second observation relates to the potential undesirable impact on insurers. The third point concerns the trap created for settling third-party claimants.
With all due respect to the majority which I believe to be acting sincerely and in good faithI must say that I find some irony in the suggestion that allowing the enforcement of presuit settlement agreements "would discourage insurers from undertaking the prompt adjustment and settlement of meritorious claims." What the majority's decision contemplates is that insurers should be allowed to "promptly" settle third-party claims without having any liability for breaching the promises the insurers make to the third-party claimants. According to the majority, requiring insurers to be held accountable for breaching the promises they make "would ultimately be detrimental to the motoring public." In my view, this line of reasoning inverts reality.
The decision the majority makes in this case benefits Allstate, but the rule adopted by the majority is a double-edged sword. If a presuit settlement agreement is unenforceable by a third party against an insurer, can such a presuit agreement be enforced against the third party by the insurer? Under the principle of mutuality of obligation, an agreement that is unenforceable against the insurer cannot be enforced by the insurer. "[M]utuality of obligation is essential to the formation of a bilateral contract." Balter v. Pan Am. Bank of Hialeah,
As a consequence of the majority's decision, an unwary third-party claimant who enters a presuit settlement agreement with an insurer prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations on the tort claim may well be foreclosed by the statute of limitations from pursuing its tort claim by the time that the third-party claimant learns that the settlement agreement is unenforceable. Such a harsh result is particularly troubling when it flows from a judge-created rule that is inconsistent with the plain meaning of the governing statutory text.
Finally, as the majority notes, the trial court also based the dismissal of Hazen's *546 claim on the ground that subject matter jurisdiction was lacking. It is therefore necessary to offer a brief explanation of why we should not affirm the dismissal on this ground.
It is not clear why the circuit court dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The circuit court's order simply states that the motion to dismiss is "GRANTED based upon Florida's Non-Joinder Statute and a lack of subject matter jurisdiction." In addition, Allstate's motion to dismiss only alleges that "[t]he Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction," without supporting argument.
"[S]ubject-matter jurisdiction concerns the power of the trial court to deal with a class of cases to which a particular case belongs." Cunningham v. Standard Guar. Ins. Co.,
Hazen alleged in her complaint that her damages exceed $15,000. There is no indication in the record that Allstate claimed that Hazen alleged this amount in bad faith. Therefore, the circuit court had subject matter jurisdiction over Hazen's claim. See Allen,
Because I conclude that the trial court was not justified in relying on either the nonjoinder statute or a lack of subject matter jurisdiction to dismiss Hazen's action, I would reverse the trial court's decision and remand for further proceedings.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Our affirmance of the circuit court's dismissal of Hazen's action on the basis of the nonjoinder statute makes it unnecessary to address the circuit court's conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter of Hazen's action.
[2] Subsection (3) of the nonjoinder statute specifically authorizes liability insurers to insert in their policies provisions that preclude injured third parties "from joining a liability insurer as a party defendant with its insured prior to the rendition of a verdict." § 627.4136(3). Such provisions are generally referred to as "no-action" clauses. See 7 Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla, Couch on Insurance 3d § 105:4 (1997). The statute declares that such provisions "shall be fully enforceable." § 627.4136(3). Hazen did not attach to her amended complaint a copy of the liability policy issued by Allstate to its insured. Since our consideration of this case is limited by the allegations of Hazen's amended complaint, we need not consider the effect of any no-action clause in Allstate's policy on Hazen's action against Allstate. See Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Michigan v. Halifax Ins. Plan, Inc.,
[3] For additional information on the history of the nonjoinder statute in Florida, see generally The Florida Bar. In re Rules of Civil Procedure (Deletion of Rule 1.450(e)),
[4] The rule adopted in the nonjoinder statute was consistent with the rule that prevailed in Florida before this state's relatively short-lived experiment with direct actions against insurers under Shingleton and Beta Eta House. See Artille v. Davidson,
[5] Adding the insurer after the entry of final judgment might have been possibleat least theoreticallyif a motion to add the insurer as a party had been filed within the time for filing a motion for rehearing under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.530. Cf. C.A. Seguros Catatumbo v. Herrera,
[6] See Richard A. Posner, Statutory InterpretationIn the Classroom and in the Courtroom, 50 U. Chi. L.Rev. 800, 817 (1983).
