HULL & COMPANY, INC., Appellant,
v.
Clair THOMAS, The Equitable Financial Company, and Prudential Insurance Company of America, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*905 Darlene M. Lidondici of Fertig and Gramling, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
Nancy W. Gregoire, and W. Edward McIntyre of Bunnell, Woulfe, Kirschbaum, Keller, McIntyre & Gregoire, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellee Prudential Insurance Company of America.
GROSS, J.
The main issue in this case is whether a plaintiff may assert a contract implied in law to circumvent a statutory rеquirement that a person be licensed to perform services as a life insurance agent. We hold that such an implied contract is unavailable under these circumstances.
This case began in 1989. Appellant, Hull & Company, Inc. sued Prudential Insurance *906 Company, Inc. and another defendant. The claim against Prudential was for quantum meruit. The complaint alleged that Hull's employee provided certain services to Prudential which Prudential used in underwriting and issuing an insurance policy.
Prudential filed a motion for summary judgment, which was denied in 1992. Litigation continued and the case was transferred to a different judge. In 2000, Prudential filed a second motion for summary judgment. The motion relied on facts developed since 1992, as well as on the pretrial stipulation between the parties. The court granted the motion.
Hull first raises a procedural argumеnt. It contends that the second judge was precluded from granting summary judgment based on the same legal theories rejected by the first judge in the earlier motiоn for summary judgment.
There was no legal error. As a matter of "comity and courtesy," a judge should hesitate to undo the work of another judge who presided еarlier in the case. Tingle v. Dade County Bd. of County Comm'rs,
Hull next argues that the order granting summary judgment was wrong on the merits. The trial court found that section 626.794(1), Florida Statutes (1989) precluded any payments by Prudential to Hull. That statute provides:
No life insurer or licensed life agent shall pay directly or indirectly any commission or other valuable consideration to any person for services as a life insurance agеnt within this state, unless such person holds a currently valid license to act as a life insurance agent as required by the laws of this state; except that a life insurer may pay such commission or other valuable consideration to, and a licensed life insurance agent may share any commission or other valuable consideration with, an incorpоrated insurance agency in which all employees, stockholders, directors, or officers who solicit, negotiate, or effectuate life insurаnce contracts are qualified life insurance agents holding currently valid licenses as required by the laws of this state.
§ 626.794(1), Fla. Stat. (1989) (emphasis added). Concеding that it was not licensed, Hull argues that its quantum meruit claim is not precluded by the statute.
By its use of the term "quantum meruit," we understand Hull to have brought a claim for a cоntract implied in law. As we wrote in Commerce Partnership 8098 Ltd. Partnership v. Equity Contracting Co.,
A contract implied in law, or quasi contract, is not based upon the finding, by a process of implication from the facts, of an agreement between the parties. A contract implied in law is a legal fiction, an оbligation created by the law without regard to the parties' expression of assent by their words or conduct. The fiction was adopted to provide a *907 remedy where one party was unjustly enriched, where that party received a benefit under circumstances that made it unjust to retain it without giving compensation.
The elements of a cause of action for a quasi contract are that: (1) the plaintiff has conferred a benefit on the defеndant; (2) the defendant has knowledge of the benefit; (3) the defendant has accepted or retained the benefit conferred and (4) the circumstances are such that it would be inequitable for the defendant to retain the benefit without paying fair value for it.
(Citations omitted).
Through section 626.794(1), the legislature has determined thаt a "valid license" is required in order to be entitled to "any commission or other valuable consideration" in return for "services as a life insurance agent." The statute is broadly phrased; it bars payment "directly or indirectly." To allow Hull to recover on a contract implied in law is to circumvent the liсense requirement of the statute. Under the fourth element of the quasi-contract cause of action described above, it is not "inequitable" to preclude Hull's recovery, because the legislature has imposed a license requirement as a condition of doing the type of business involved in this сase.
In Osteen v. Morris,
This consumer protection statute must necessarily be construed to be a limitation on the common law principle of quantum meruit because the recognition of a quasi-cоntractual obligation by the law in this situation would necessarily circumvent the very dictates of the statute by enabling a motor vehicle repair shop to ignore the statutory requirements of providing a written estimate or obtaining a written waiver.
Id. at 1290 (emphasis in original).
Hull cites to Wood v. Black,60 So.2d 15 (Fla.1952) and Duncan v. Kasim, Inc.,810 So.2d 968 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002), but they are distinguishable.
In Wood, a building contractor filed suit to foreclose a mechanics' lien on a residence for the cost of labor, materials, and services he furnished to the homeowner. The trial court dismissed the case, ruling that Wood "could not recover because he had not secured a general contractor's license from the city."
*908 Duncan involved a six-count complaint by a bar manager against a motel property owner. The bar manager was a convicted felon; section 562.13(3)(a), Florida Statutes (2001) prohibited some convicted felons from being employed as a bartender, person in charge, or manager of a liquor lounge. The fifth district held that this statute did not bar some unjust enrichment claims that werе independent of the illegal contract. The implied contract in this case did not involve services performed or materials provided outsidе of "services as a life insurance agent" within the meaning of section 626.794(1).
We agree with Hull that the attorney's fee award under section 768.79 must be reversed. The 1989 version of section 768.79 applies to this case since the cause of action accrued in 1989. See Metro. Dade County v. Jones Boatyard, Inc.,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
STONE, J., and STERN, KENNETH D., Associate Judge, concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Section 559.905, Florida Statutes (1985).
