JEMCO, INC., а Foreign Corporation, and United States Fire Insurance Company, a Foreign Insurance Company, Appellants,
v.
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE, INC., a Foreign Corporation, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Wicker, Smith, Blomqvist, Davant, Tutan, O'Hara & McCoy and Richard A. Sherman, Miami, for appellants.
Magill & Reid and Edward L. Magill, Miami, for appellees.
Before SCHWARTZ and DANIEL S. PEARSON, JJ., and VANN, HAROLD R. (Ret.), Associate Judge.
*500 DANIEL S. PEARSON, Judge.
United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS), an Ohio corporation with its principal place of business in Connecticut,[1] contracted with Jemco, Inc., a Texas corporation, for the purpose of having Jemco install a conveyor system in a building UPS was having built in Miami.[2]
Harold McKinney, a Jemco employee, was injured installing the conveyor. McKinney sued UPS, which, in turn, filed a third-party complaint against Jemco for contractual and common law indemnity. UPS settled with McKinney, and the case proceeded to trial on the indemnity claims, resulting in judgment for UPS. Later, the trial court entered orders awarding costs and attorneys' fees to UPS, and Jemco appealed. We affirm the final judgment, and consequent order taxing costs, upon a holding that UPS was entitled to be indemnified under its contract with Jemco.[3] We reverse, in part, the order awarding attorneys' fees by reducing the amount awarded.
The indemnity provision of the contrаct between Jemco and UPS provided, in pertinent part:
"Contractor [Jemco] hereby assumes the entire responsibility and liability for any and all damage or injury of any kind or nature caused by or resulting from the execution of the work occurring in connection therewith and agrees to indemnify and save harmless UPS ... against any and all claims, liabilities, loss and expenses... . Such indemnity shall include the defense of all claims made against UPS... ."
Jemco contends that this indemnity рrovision is void and unenforceable under Section 725.06, Florida Statutes (1975).[4] UPS, although not conceding invalidity under Florida law, contends, and we agree, that Connecticut law, under which, UPS argues, the indemnity provision is valid and enforceable, аpplies.
The contract negotiations between Jemco and UPS took place in New York and Texas. After agreement was reached, a Jemco representative signed the contract in Texas and forwarded it to UPS at its headquarters in Connecticut, where it was executed by UPS. Jemco does not dispute that the last act necessary to complete the contract, the signing by UPS, was done in Connecticut.
The forum court applies its own conflict of law rule respecting the contract to make the initial determination of the law to be applied. Under the law of Florida, the forum, that conflict of law rule is that a contract is made at the place where the last act necessary to complete the contract is done. See Goodman v. Olsen,
Moreover, the indemnity provision of the contract between UPS and Jemco is valid and enforceable under Connecticut law. In Laudano v. General Motors Corporation,
On appeal, the Connecticut Superior Court reversed. Noting that Connecticut had not adopted the apparent majority rule that an indemnity contract must contain an express stipulation relieving the indemnitee *502 from liability for loss resulting from his own negligence,[9] the court held:
"[b]y using the language that appears in the indemnity clause in this contract, Boyle agreed to indemnify and protect GMC against all liabilities, no mаtter how such liabilities were caused, provided that they grew out of the performance of the contract." Laudano v. General Motors Corporation, supra at 845.
The jury here, as in Laudano, made a finding that the injury occurred during the performance of the contract. That finding, under Connecticut law, entitled UPS to recover under the indemnity contract unless there exists in Florida some strong public policy which would require us to avoid the application of Connecticut law in this case. We find none. No Florida public policy bars a business entity from contracting to indemnify another for its wrongdoing. Indeed, Florida law specifically authorizes such indemnity agreements, provided only that the intent to indemnify is clearly and unequivocally expressed. Charles Poe Masonry, Inc. v. Spring Lock Scaffolding Rental Equipment Co.,
Lastly, we turn to the award of attorneys' fees. The trial court awarded UPS attorneys' fees of $71,562.50. This amount consisted of two awards: (1) $11,750.00 paid by UPS to their attorneys pursuant to two interim bills, which award Jemсo does not contest and which we affirm. (2) $60,812.50 which the trial court awarded to UPS for 695 unbilled hours at $87.50 per hour. Jemco contests the latter award. It claims only that the trial court was not free to award fees of $87.50 per hour, as a "reasonable per hour fee," because UPS had a prior agreement to pay its attorneys $50.00 per hour. We agree.
Under Florida law,[10] a party entitled to indemnity may recover as damages "... reasonable attorneys fees and ... costs[11] ... which he is compelled to pay as a result of suits by him or against him in reference to [the indemnity action]." Fontainebleau Hotel Corporation v. Postol,
In Trustees of Cameron-Brown Investment Group v. Tavormina,
Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.
NOTES
Notes
[1] UPS relocated its offices from New York to Connecticut during the negotiations.
[2] Reference to Jemco and UPS includes their respective insurers, United States Fire Insurance Company and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, parties to this appeal.
[3] Our holding affirming the entire indemnity award based on contractual indemnity makes it unnecessary to decide the validity of UPS's commоn law indemnity claim.
[4] Section 725.06, Florida Statutes (1975), provides:
"Construction contracts; limitation on indemnification. Any portion of any agreement or contract for, or in connection with, any construction, alteration, repair, or demolition of a building, structure, appurtenance, or appliance, including moving and excavating connected with it, or any guarantee of, or in connection with, any of them, between an owner of real property and an architect, engineer, gеneral contractor, subcontractor, sub-subcontractor, or materialman, or between any combination thereof, wherein any party referred to herein obtains indemnification from liability for damages to persons оr property caused in whole or in part by any act, omission, or default of that party arising from the contract or its performance shall be void and unenforceable unless:
"(1) The contract contains a monetary limitation on the extent of the indemnification and shall be a part of the project specifications or bid documents, if any, or
"(2) The person indemnified by the contract gives a specific consideration to the indemnitor fоr the indemnification that shall be provided for in his contract and section of the project specifications or bid documents, if any."
[5] In Bishop v. Florida Specialty Paint Co.,
[6] Jemco correctly says that questions of remedy are detеrmined by the laws of the forum (lex fori), but incorrectly asserts that a determination of whether Jemco is obligated to indemnify UPS under the terms of the contract involves a question of remedy. See Stuart v. Hertz Corporation,
[7] The trial court incorrectly ruled that Florida law applied, but held that the monetary limitation rеquirements of Section 725.06, Florida Statutes (1975), were satisfied by the minimum insurance called for by the contract. Our holding makes it unnecessary to consider whether that ruling was correct.
[8] In Laudano, the indemnity clause read: "If this order covers the perfоrmance of labor for Buyer, Seller [the party performing the labor] agrees to indemnify and protect Buyer against all liabilities, claims or demands for injuries or damages to any person or property growing out of the pеrformance of this contract by Seller... ."
[9] Florida has adopted the majority rule. See Charles Poe Masonry Inc. v. Spring Lock Scaffolding Rental Equipment Company,
[10] Although UPS's entitlement to damages pursuant to its contractual indemnity claim is governed by Connecticut law, the amount of damages is a question of remedy, see Zim v. Western Publishing Company,
[11] Jemco does not separately contest the cost award.
