Margaret Randall (“Appellant”) appeals the trial court’s orders that: (1) dismissed her late husband, Barry Randall’s (“Randall”) personal injury action against Walt Disney World Co. and Walt Disney Imagineering Research & Development, Inc. (“Appellees”); and (2) dismissed with prejudice Appellant’s loss-of-consortium claim. In this appeal, we address only whether a surviving spouse’s loss-of-consortium claim can survive the death of the deceased spouse. Although we have previously addressed this issue in Taylor v. Orlando Clinic,
In 2006, Randall and Appellant visited Appellees’ theme park and rode a roller coaster, which allegedly caused injuries to Randall’s neck and head. In 2008, Randall and Appellant jointly filed a personal injury action with a loss-of-consortium claim against Appellees. In 2010, during the pendency of the personal injury action, Randall died. The parties dispute the cause of his death, as a result of either injuries sustained on the roller coaster or an unrelated cause. In 2011, Appellant filed a suggestion of death, but she failed to move under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.260 to substitute herself as personal representative within 90 days after filing the suggestion of death to maintain Randall’s personal injury action. The trial court then dismissed the personal injury action and the loss-of-consortium claim.
We review a denial of a motion for rehearing under an abuse of discretion standard. Karimi v. Karimi,
This court has previously held that “[t]he wife’s cause of action for loss-of-consortium, while derived from the personal injury to the husband, survives the death of her husband-patient, whose own personal injury action did not survive his death.” Taylor,
We first address the supreme court’s recent holding in Capone and its impact on Taylor. In Capone, the supreme court addressed whether, after a party plaintiffs death, a personal injury action can be amended to add a wrongful death claim and substitute the personal representative of the estate as the party.
We turn our attention to the third district’s conflict and reaffirm our holding in Taylor. In ACandS, Inc. v. Redd,
By the term “separate and distinct,” these courts do not mean that a derivative cause of action can exist in the absence of a primary cause of action. Instead, the term “separate and distinct” means that a spouse can maintain a consortium claim in situations where there has not been joinder of the injured spouse, Busby v. Winn & Lovett Miami, Inc.,80 So.2d 675 , 676 (Fla.1955), or where the injured spouse has executed a consent judgment or a release as to his or her claim. Ryter v. Brennan,291 So.2d 55 (Fla. 1st DCA 1974); Resmondo v. Int’l Builders of Fla., Inc.,265 So.2d 72 , 73 (Fla. 1st DCA 1972). Accordingly, we decline to follow Taylorand certify conflict with the Fifth District.
Id.
We disagree with the third district’s analysis to the extent that it suggests Res-mondo, Ryter, and Busby do not support a derivative cause of action’s existence in the absence of a primary cause of action. In Gates v. Foley,
As another basis for its conflict with Taylor, the third district continued by noting it was persuaded that the Legislature did not want the loss-of-eonsortium claim to continue past death because the Legislature made recovery for a surviving spouse a part of the Wrongful Death Act. ACandS,
We affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the personal injury action. We reaffirm our holding in Taylor that a loss-of-consortium claim survives the death of a deceased spouse. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal of Appellant’s loss-of-consortium claim and remand for the trial court to reinstate the claim. We also maintain the preexisting conflict with the third district in ACandS, Inc. v. Redd,
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part; REMANDED with instructions; CONFLICT CERTIFIED.
Notes
. Taylor v. Orlando Clinic,
. We affirm without discussion the trial court’s finding that Appellant failed to demonstrate excusable neglect.
. The supreme court also addressed a jurisdictional issue not relevant here.
