Ela Barbara SAN PEDRO, Appellant,
v.
John Lazaro SAN PEDRO, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*427 Meah Rothman Tell of Meah Rothman Tell, P.A., Coral Springs, for appellant.
No appearance for appellee.
FARMER, J.
A wife appeals a pre-trial order dismissing her tort claims against her husband in a pending dissolution of marriage action. The order concluded that the statute of limitations had run on the tort сlaim. We disagree and reverse for consistent proceedings.
The husband filed the action for dissolution of marriage in 2004. She has since filed an amended counter petition for dissolution, asserting separate counts for negligence, fraud and deceit, intеntional infliction of emotional distress, and battery, including a battery committed in May 2001. All of these counts were based on her allegations that in 1991 he had knowingly infected her with genital herpes simplex. She further alleged that when she confronted him with her discovery of the infеction during the marriage, he asked her not to do anything about it because he would lose his job as a police officer if she told anyone. As for the battery claims, she alleged that he struck her in the face each of the five times they had intercourse in the year 2001.
*428 He denied the allegations and asserted the affirmative defense that the tort counts were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. Later, he moved for summary judgment on that basis. She sought to avoid the limitations defense by the doctrine оf equitable estoppel. She opposed the motion for summary judgment with an affidavit in which she swore that she was first diagnosed with genital herpes in February 1991, that she then confronted her husband, that and he convinced her to remain in the marriage and refrain from doing anything about his conduct because "if she said anything he would lose his job with the ... Police Department and we would lose everything." She further testified that at least once a month over a period of nearly twelve years she told her husband she wanted a divorce, аnd he told her he would lose his job and she would have nothing. She also swore that she relied on his representations to her detriment by not filing for divorce or filing suit against him. She did not learn her husband would not be fired for having herpes until after he filed for divorce.
The trial court сoncluded that the evidence was undisputed that she had knowledge of the infection in 1991 and that the statutes of limitations barred her tort claims. The trial court did not appear to address her attempt to avoid the limitations defense by reason of his conduct in inducing her to refrain from asserting her claims earlier. This appeal followed.
Although the husband has not appeared in this appeal to support the order of the trial judge, we ourselves raised the question as to whether the order of dismissal was final fоr purposes of jurisdiction. We wondered whether the tort claims are "distinct and severable causes of action [and] not interrelated with remaining claims pending in the trial court." S.L.T. Warehouse Co. v. Webb,
In Waite v. Waite,
*429 Turning to the merits, we conclude that the record fails to show that his motion for summary judgment conclusively disproves her attempt to avoid the limitations defense. For one thing, she clearly alleged that one of the battery claims accrued within four years of the attempt to plead them. A reversal on that ground alone is necessary.
The claims involving the infection of genital herpes arose from events occurring in 1991. In her avoidance of the limitations defense, she pleaded that he convinced her not to raise any complaints about that matter then because thе revelation would lead to the loss of his job. She alleges that she forbore from bringing the claim because of his representations and urging. Barring her from raising the claim would not be fair, she argues, because it would allow him to benefit from her subjugation to his plea of forbearance while she suffers from complying with it. That, she contends, is an equitable estoppel.
In Major League Baseball v. Morsani,
"Equitable estoppel presupposes a legal shortcoming in a party's case that is directly attributable to the opposing party's misconduct. The doctrine bars the wrongdoer from asserting that shortcoming and profiting from his or her own misconduct. Equitable estoppel thus functions as a shield, not a sword, and operates against the wrongdoer, not the victim. This Court has applied the doctrinе for more than a century and a half."
"equitable estoppel is a deeply rooted, centuries old tenet of the common law. On the other hand, fixed time limitаtions for filing suit, i.e., statutes of limitation, were unknown at common law and are a creature of modern statute. This Court has held that a statute enacted in derogation of the common law must be strictly construed and that, even where the Legislature acts in a particular area, the common law remains in effect in that area unless the statute specifically says otherwise.... In the present case, not only does the plain language of section 95.051 not expressly change the common law doctrine of equitable estoppel, it does not mention or allude to that doctrine."
"a main purpose of the statute of limitations is to protect defendаnts from unfair surprise and stale claims. A prime purpose of the doctrine of equitable estoppel, on the other hand, is to prevent a party from profiting from his or her wrongdoing. Logic dictates that a defendant cannot be taken by surprise by the late filing of a suit when the defendant's own actions are responsible for *430 the tardiness of the filing. The two concepts, i.e., the statute of limitations and equitable estoppel, thus work hand in hand to achieve a common goal, the prevention of injustice."
"Equitable estoppel, however, is a different matter. It is not concerned with the running and suspension of the limitations period, but rather comes into play only after the limitations period has run and addresses itself to thе circumstances in which a party will be estopped from asserting the statute of limitations as a defense to an admittedly untimely action because his conduct has induced another into forbearing suit within the applicable limitations period. Its application is wholly independent of the limitations period itself and takes its life, not from the language of the statute, but from the equitable principle that no man will be permitted to profit from his own wrongdoing in a court of justice. Thus, because equitable estoppel operates directly on the defendant without abrogating the running of the limitations period as provided by statute, it might apply no matter how unequivocally the applicable limitations period is expressed."
In granting a summary judgment of dismissal on the statute of limitations, the trial court gave no voice to the wife's *431 attempt to avoid the statute by the husband's conduct earlier in the marriage. We do not see any deficiency in her attempt to plead the avoidance, but if there were any pleading defect she should first be given a chance to cure it. As for evidence to support it, her affidavit states facts which if believed by a finder of fact would support a finding that in equity the husband ought not to be heard to assert the statute. We recall that dissolution of marriage proceedings in Florida are in chancery where the principles of equity govern the ultimate resolution. See Rosen v. Rosen,
It was thus error for the trial court to fail to consider the wife's equitable avoidance of the limitations defense. We now return the case to that forum for that purpose and for further consistent proceedings.
Reversed.
KLEIN, J., and MILLER, KAREN M., Associate Judge, concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In Cerniglia v. Cerniglia,
[2] See e.g. Baptist Hosp. of Miami Inc. v. Carter,
