MICHAEL KOVACH, P.A., а Florida Corporation, Michael Kovach, Individually, and Lawyers Professional Liability Insurance Company, Appellants,
v.
Robert PEARCE, As Personal Represеntative of the Estate of Alvada Pearce, Deceased, and Robert L. Pearce, Individually, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Andrew G. Pattillo, Jr. and Russell W. LaPeer of Pattillo & McKeever, P.A., Ocala, for appellants.
William A. Dooley of Thorp, Reed, Conley & Dooley, Sarasota, and Charles J. Cheves of Cheves & Rapkin, Venice, for appellees.
COWART, Judge.
This case involves the use of a sрecial verdict in a malpractice suit.
Appellee Pearce, while operating his mother's automobile, negligently injured one Albert Todter. Todter sued Pearce and his mother and Pearce hired appellant Kovach, an attorney, to defend the Todter-Pearce action. Undеr circumstances possibly attributable, at least in part, to the negligence of Kovach, a judgment was entered in favor of Todter against Pearсe for $600,000. Pearce then sued Kovach and his professional liability insurer, appellant Lawyers Professional Liability Insurance Company, in this malpractice action. The jury in this case returned a verdict in favor of Pearce and against Kovach and his insurer for $717,690. This appeal is from a final judgment based on that verdict as adjusted by the court for comparative negligence.
The Pearce-Kovach malpractice case involved a double comparative negligence situation. Pearce sued Kovach on the theory that Todter was either totally responsible for his own injury or that Todter was guilty of some negligence that combined with negligence of Pearce in producing Todter's injuries *1129 but that, in either event, the $600,000 judgment resulted in whole, or in large part, because of the negligence of Kovach in failing to assert, as a defense in the Todter-Pearce action, Todter's сontributory (comparative) negligence and certain other matters. Accordingly it was necessary for the jury in the malpractice action to literally "re-try" the Todter v. Pearce case to correctly determine Todter's negligence, if any, and Pearce's negligence, if any, causing Todter's injuries and, if both were negligent, to compare their negligence, in order to determine how much of the $600,000 verdict was properly chargeable to Pearce's negligence in injuring Todter, how much was chargeable to Todter's own negligence, and how much resulted from the alleged negligent failure to properly defend. In the malpractice action, Kovach asserted as a comparative negligence defense that Pearce was contributivеly negligent in the defense of the Todter action. Therefore, if the jury found that both Pearce and Kovach were negligent as to the defense of the Todter-Pearce action, it was also necessary for the jury to compare the negligence of Pearce and Kovach involved in the failure to see that the Todter-Pearce action was properly defended. This "double" comparative negligence aspect оf the malpractice action caused several difficulties, two of which we discuss.
The first problem relates to the admissibility of one item of evidenсe (an accident report showing that Pearce had not been charged with a traffic violation as a result of the Todter-Pearce aсcident). This would have been inadmissible as evidence as to the Todter-Pearce comparative negligence issue but was admissible in the Pearce-Kovach malpractice action because the accident report was part of the file of attorney Kovach and arguably something, the use and effect of which, an attorney might properly consider and evaluate in defending the Todter-Pearce action. Since it was inadmissible for one purpose but admissible for another, it was admissible but necessitated a cautionary, limiting instruction. Such an instruction was requested but the judicial action taken was insufficient to explain to the jury for what purpose this evidence could, and for what purpose it could not, be considered.
The second difficulty caused by the two-in-one comparative negligence aspect of the malpractice action related to the special verdict used. The Florida Supreme Court's decision in Lawrence v. Florida East Coast Railway Co.,
For these reasons we reverse and remand for a new trial. In view of this disposition we do not address the other points argued in the briefs.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
COBB, J., and JOHNSON, CLARENCE T., Jr., A.J., concur.
