ORANGE MOTORS OF CORAL GABLES, INC., a Florida Corporation, Appellant,
v.
RUEBEN H. DONNELLEY CORPORATION and Fritchman Associates, Inc., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*894 Shalle Stephen Fine, Miami, for appellant.
Shutts & Bowen and Gregory P. Borgognoni and Eric B. Meyers, Miami, for appellees.
Before SCHWARTZ, NESBITT and JORGENSON, JJ.
NESBITT, Judge.
The plaintiff, Orange Motors of Coral Gables, Inc. (Orange Motors), commenced an action agаinst Rueben H. Donnelley Corporation for negligence in failing to print Orange Motor's listing in the yellow pages of Southern Bell's directory. In August of 1977, Orange Motors obtained leave of the court to join Fritchman Associates, Inc. (Fritchman), a Connecticut corporation, for its participation in the negligent act. When Fritchman failed to timely file an answer or other responsive pleading to the amended complaint, Orange Motors procured a default judgment as to liability pursuant to Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.500.
Fritchman filed а motion for relief from the default judgment, pursuant to Florida Rules of Civil Procedure 1.500(d) and 1.540(b)(4), upon the grounds that: (a) service of procеss was invalid in that plaintiff, in attempting to utilize the method of substituted service, failed to file the requisite affidavit of compliance in aсcordance with Section 48.161, Florida Statutes (1977); and (b) insufficient facts were alleged in the complaint to justify the use of substituted service оver a nonresident doing business in Florida. § 48.181, Fla. Stat. (1977).
Ultimately, the trial court vacated the default, quashed service of process, and dismissed the complaint for failure to allege sufficient facts to justify personal jurisdiction. By agreed order, Orange Motors was given leаve to file an amended complaint and did so.
Orange Motor's first argument on appeal is the impropriety of the court's order vacating the default. We entirely agree with the trial court's determination that the default judgment was void. In Rever v. Lapidus,
We reject appellant's argument that the defendant's motion for a continuаnce filed after the motion to set aside the default constituted a waiver of defendant's claim of lack of jurisdiction. While it is cеrtainly true that a defendant may not make a general appearance and later repudiate it by attacking the cоurt's jurisdiction over him, where the defendant first challenges the court's jurisdiction and then makes a general appearance,[2] no waiver has *895 occurred. White v. Nicholson,
After the second amended complaint was filеd by Orange Motors, Fritchman filed a motion to dismiss. The court granted the motion and dismissed the complaint, thus rendering the order final for purposes of appellate review. Gries Investment Company v. Chelton,
Two distinct issues as to the amenability of the defendant to the jurisdiction of the court were raised in the defendant's motion to dismiss. The first objection challenged the sufficiency of the service of process inasmuch as the complaint was mailed to the counsel for the defendant, but not to the defendant. Because plaintiff's previous service of process was quashed, plaintiff was required to treat the second amended complaint as the original pleading and serve the defendant. Drake v. Scharlau,
Defendant's second contention in its motion to dismiss was that the plaintiff failed to allege sufficient facts to justify jurisdiction under the substituted service of process statute, Section 48.181, supra, оr the long-arm statute, Section 48.193, Florida Statutes (1979). The proper method by which to raise such an issue is by motion to abate. Elmex Corpоration v. Atlantic Federal Savings and Loan Association of Fort Lauderdale,
The motion, in essence, must be treated as admitting all facts properly pleaded pertinent to the conduct and activities of the defendant in the forum state and constitutes an аssertion that as a matter of law such facts are nevertheless legally insufficient to demonstrate the applicability of the lоng-arm statute.
Our detеrmination of this case would be complete at this point, but for Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.070(i), effective January 1, 1981, under which the second amended complaint would sufficiently allege jurisdiction (see n. 1). In light of this rule, we see no reason for dismissing the second amended сomplaint, and causing the plaintiff to file the same pleading under the caption, third amended complaint.[4]
Consequently, we find that whilе the trial judge was correct in dismissing the complaint under the then applicable law, we reverse the order dismissing the complaint. *896 We affirm as to the quashal of service of process.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
NOTES
Notes
[1] At thе time the complaint was filed, Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.070(i) was not yet in effect. That rule provides:
When service of process is to be made under statutes authorizing service on nonresidents of Florida, it is sufficient to plead the basis for service in the language of the statute without pleading the facts supporting service.
[2] We recognize that the Supreme Court, in Public Gas Company v. Weatherhead Company,
[3] Decisions concerning what constituted doing business under Section 48.181 should apply to Section 48.193(1)(a). See Trawick's Florida Practice and Procedure § 8-16.1 (1981).
[4] Of course, if leave to amend had been properly denied, the plaintiff would be unable to benefit from the new rule which became effective after the filing of the second amended complaint.
