Appellants/defendants below appeal the trial court's orders denying their respective motions for determination of entitlement to attorney's fees against the Appellee/plaintiff below pursuant to section 768.79, Florida Statutes (2015), and Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.442. Because: (1) all three of the $3,500 offers of judgment, respectively, complied with both the statute and the rule; (2) a final judgment of no liability was entered in favor of one defendant; (3) the plaintiff was awarded zero damages as to the other defendants; and, (4) the trial court made no finding that the defendants' offers of judgment were not made in good faith, we reverse and remand with instructions to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine reasonable attorney's fees.
I. BACKGROUND
Medex Trading, LLC ("Medex") filed the underlying lawsuit on July 15, 2011. The operative complaint is the fourth amended complaint, filed by Medex and Policlinica Metropolitana, C.A. ("Policlinica"). Policlinica, Premium Medical Group, Inc. ("Premium"), Ivett Corvaia ("Corvaia"), and Luis A. Ruiz ("Ruiz") were not parties to the initial lawsuit. However, the trial court entered an order on the motions to dismiss the second amended complaint, wherein the court determined that Policlinica is an indispensable party and should be joined in the controversy. As such, Medex added Policlinica as an additional plaintiff and also added Premium and Corvaia as additional defendants in the pleading that became the third amended complaint. Medex and Policlinica subsequently added Ruiz as a defendant in the fourth amended complaint.
Prior to trial, Ruiz, Corvaia, and Premium had each presented Policlinica with separate offers of judgment/proposals for *1084settlement in the amount of $3,500 (the "offers"). Policlinica did not accept any of the offers. Following a multi-day bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment wherein it found in favor of Ruiz and against Medex and Policlinica. The trial court also entered judgment for damages in favor of Medex and Policlinica and against Corvaia and Premium. However, the trial court awarded all of the damages to Medex and none to Policlinica.
A. Ruiz's Entitlement Order - 3D17-1535
Thereafter, Ruiz filed the following: (i) a motion for determination of entitlement to attorney's fees against Policlinica pursuant to section 768.69 and rule 1.442, and predicated upon Ruiz's offer; (ii) a motion for determination of entitlement to attorney's fees against Medex; and (iii) a motion to tax costs against Medex and Policlinica. The trial court granted Ruiz's motion for attorney's fees against Medex and his motion to tax costs against Medex and Policlinica. However, the trial court denied Ruiz's motion for attorney's fees against Policlinica.
In its order denying Ruiz's motion for attorney's fees against Policlinica, the trial court found Ruiz's proposal was not ambiguous and properly stated that it included attorney's fees, that it was a nominal offer, and that Policlinica did not accept it and is thereby deemed to have rejected it. In addition, the trial court expressly found that Ruiz's offer "was made in good faith."
The trial court further found that the "judgment was entered in favor of Ruiz and against Policlinica and therefore Policlinica did not obtain a judgment that was at least 25 percent less than the amount of the offer."
awarding attorneys' fees and costs would lead to an absurd result, including because Policlinica was forced into this litigation against its will based on the Court's finding that it was an indispensable party and that ... Policlinica ... did not assert any claims separate or beyond those pleaded by Plaintiff Medex and did not ask for damages in addition to or beyond those sought by Medex, and under the circumstances of this case, it was not unreasonable for Policlinica to reject the offer.
The trial court further found that:
the purposes of the offer of judgment statute would not be furthered by enforcing the Offer against Policlinica given that settling Policlinica's claims would not have resulted in eliminating any of the claims to be considered by the Court and therefore would not have resulted in any of the efficiencies the offer of judgment statutes are designed to promote.
And, the trial court ruled in the alternative that:
even had this Court determined that Ruiz was entitled to an award of attorneys' fees and costs pursuant to his Offer, the Court would nonetheless have reduced any award of attorneys' fees and costs to zero because, consistent with [the trial court's other findings in Ruiz's Entitlement Order] and pursuant to [ rule] 1.442(h)(2), including because the Court finds that Policlinica's rejection of the Offer did not cause additional delay cost and expense, did not prolong the litigation, and it was not unreasonable under the circumstances of this case for Policlinica to reject the Offer.
Ruiz's timely appeal follows.
B. Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order - 3D17-1523
Similarly, Premium and Corvaia filed their separate motions for determination *1085of entitlement to attorney's fees against Policlinica pursuant to section 768.69 and rule 1.442, and predicated upon their respective offers. The trial court found that Premium's and Corvaia's respective offers were not ambiguous and properly stated they included attorney's fees, they were nominal offers, and that Policlinica did not accept them and was thereby deemed to have rejected them. The trial court made no finding with respect to the faith of the offers, whether made in bad faith or not in good faith. Rather, the trial court found that the only reason the final judgment, "as a technical matter, does not award damages to Policlinica is to avoid a double recovery and because the [predecessor judge] found that as between the two of them, Medex suffered the damages more directly."
The trial court concluded that "[a]bsent Medex, however, Policlinica would have been awarded all of the damages awarded to Medex." In addition, the trial court, despite awarding zero damages to Policlinica, expressly stated in its order that Policlinica suffered damages and that it disagreed with Premium and Corvaia's argument that Policlinica did not obtain a judgment that was at least 25 percent less than the amount of the offers. As such the trial court declined to award attorney's fees to Premium and Corvaia. The trial court based this decision on its finding that:
awarding attorneys' fees and costs would lead to an absurd result, including because Policlinica was forced into this litigation against its will based on the Court's finding that it was an indispensable party and that when Policlinica was added as an indispensable party it did not assert any claims separate or beyond those pleaded by Plaintiff Medex and did not ask for any damages in addition to or beyond those sought by Medex, and under the circumstances of this case, it was not unreasonable for Policlinica to reject the Offer[s].
The trial court ruled in the alternative:
even had this Court determined that [Premium and Corvaia] were entitled to an award of attorneys' fees and costs pursuant to their offers, the Court would nonetheless have reduced any award of attorneys' fees and costs to zero because, consistent with [the trial court's other findings in Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order] and pursuant to [ rule] 1.442(h)(2), including because the Court finds that Policlinica's rejection of the offers did not cause any additional delay cost and expense, did not prolong the litigation, and it was not unreasonable under the circumstances of this case for Policlinica to reject the offers.
Premium and Corvaia's timely appeal follows.
II. JURISDICTION
Ruiz's Entitlement Order and Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order are final orders denying post-judgment motions for attorney's fees.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
"This Court reviews de novo a trial court's ruling on a motion to award attorney's fees and costs pursuant to the offer of judgment statute and rule." Key West Seaside, LLC v. Certified Lower Keys Plumbing, Inc.,
IV. ANALYSIS
The issue before us is whether the trial court erred in denying the motions of Ruiz, Corvaia, and Premium for attorney's fees pursuant to section 768.79 and rule 1.442. In applying the statute and rule to the offers Ruiz, Corvaia, and Premium made to Policlinica and the judgment entered by the trial court in the underlying action, we are compelled to find that it did.
A. Section 768.79 and Rule 1.442
Section 768.79 governs offers of judgment and demands for judgment, and provides in relevant part:
(1) In any civil action for damages filed in the courts of this state, if a defendant files an offer of judgment which is not accepted by the plaintiff within 30 days, the defendant shall be entitled to recover reasonable costs and attorney's fees incurred by her or him ... from the date of filing of the offer if the judgment is one of no liability or the judgment obtained by the plaintiff is at least 25 percent less than such offer, and the court shall set off such costs and attorney's fees against the award.
....
[ (6) ](a) If a defendant serves an offer which is not accepted by the plaintiff, and if the judgment obtained by the plaintiff is at least 25 percent less than the amount of the offer, the defendant shall be awarded reasonable costs, including investigative expenses, and attorney's fees, calculated in accordance with the guidelines promulgated by the Supreme Court, incurred from the date the offer was served....
§ 768.79 (1), (6)(a) (emphasis added).
Rule 1.442(a) provides that "[t]his rule applies to all proposals for settlement authorized by Florida law, regardless of the terms used to refer to such offers, demands, or proposals, and supersedes all other provisions of the rules and statutes that may be inconsistent with this rule." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.442(a). This rule sets forth the requirements for a proposal including content, timing and conditions of acceptance or rejection.
The law in Florida requires section 768.79 and rule 1.442 to be strictly construed because they are in derogation of the common law rule that each party should pay its own fees. Kuhajda,
*1087Anderson,
In TGI Friday's, the Florida Supreme Court approved the decision in Dvorak v. TGI Friday's, Inc.,
Turning to the substance of section 768.79 itself, we conclude that the legislature has created a mandatory right to attorney's fees, if the statutory prerequisites have been met. The statute begins by creating an "entitlement" to fees. That entitlement may then lead to an "award" of fees. That award may then be lost by a finding that the entitlement was created "not in good faith," or the amount of the award may be adjusted upward or downward by a consideration of statutory factors. That, in outline form, is how we read this statute.
TGI Friday's,
*1088"[A] no liability judgment activates the offer of judgment statute because a verdict awarding ... nothing is certainly 25 percent less than the offer." Jackson,
B. The Offers Made by Ruiz, Premium and Corvaia
Here, the final judgment was one of no liability as to Ruiz. Therefore, as the trial court correctly found in Ruiz's Entitlement Order, the judgment obtained by Policlinica was, on its face, at least 25 percent less than the amount of Ruiz's offer. In the same final judgment, the trial court entered judgment in favor of Policlinica and against Premium and Corvaia, but awarded Policlinica no damages and ordered that Medex would recover all damages. Because Policlinica was awarded no damages, on its face, the judgment obtained was at least 25 percent less than the amount of Premium's and Corvaia's offers. The Florida Supreme Court's reasoning in Anderson, as set forth above, that "entitlement to attorneys' fees hinges on the 'judgment obtained,' as opposed to a verdict form returned by the jury" is equally applicable to a situation such as here where a trial court finds in a bench trial that the plaintiff suffered damages yet enters a judgment for that plaintiff in the amount of zero dollars.
C. The Not in Good Faith/Bad Faith Exception
There is an exception to the requirement that entitlement to attorney's fees is mandatory where an offer that otherwise meets all of the requirements of section 768.79 and rule 1.442 was not made in good faith or was made in bad faith.
(7)(a) If a party is entitled to costs and fees pursuant to the provisions of this section, the court may, in its discretion, determine that an offer was not made in good faith. In such case, the court may disallow an award of costs and attorney's fees.
§ 768.79(7)(a) (emphasis added). Rule 1.442(h)(1) similarly provides that "[i]f a party is entitled to costs and fees pursuant to applicable Florida law, the court may, in its discretion, determine that a proposal was not made in good faith. In such case, the court may disallow an award of costs and attorneys' fees." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.442(h)(1) (emphasis added).
*1089The offeree bears the burden of proving the offeror's proposal was not made in good faith. Schmidt,
Thus, "absent a finding that a party's offer of judgment was not made in good faith, the trial court cannot disallow an entitlement to an award of fees." Downs v. Coastal Sys. Int'l, Inc.,
Here, because all of the requirements of section 768.79 and rule 1.442 were met, Ruiz, Premium, and Corvaia were entitled to an award of attorney's fees unless the trial court made an affirmative finding that their offers were not made in good faith or that they were made in bad faith. It did neither. Rather, the trial court expressly found in Ruiz's Entitlement Order that Ruiz's offer was made in good faith. Additionally, at the hearing on entitlement, the trial court stated that the basis for Ruiz's Entitlement Order "is the basis that was asserted by him, which is, [the predecessor judge] forced Policlinica to be in this case. They [Medex and Policlinica] are pled as plaintiffs both in every single wherefore clause they were alleged for damages. I do not find that there were no damages as against [Policlinica]." The trial court further found that "it was not unreasonable for Policlinica to reject the offer."
Similarly, the trial court found that "it was not unreasonable for Policlinica to reject the offer[s] made by Premium and Corvaia." However, in Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order, the trial court did not make a finding as to the faith of either Premium's offer or Corvaia's offer, whether good or bad. Instead, the trial court provided several other reasons in support of its ruling in Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order including that sanctioning Policlinica by awarding fees "would lead to an absurd result and not further the purposes of the offer of judgment statute." The trial court further concluded that "the purposes of the offer of judgment statute would not be furthered by enforcing the Offer against Policlinica" and "would not have resulted in any of the *1090efficiencies the offer of judgment statutes are designed to promote."
Because Florida law requires strict construction of section 768.79 and rule 1.442, it is the plain language of the statute and the rule that must be applied in determining whether a party is entitled to an award of fees thereunder. See Kuhajda,
Here, all of the requirements of both the statute and the rule governing proposals for settlement were met. The only basis for denying entitlement to attorney's fees is a finding by the trial court that Ruiz, Premium, or Corvaia did not make their offers in good faith or that they made them in bad faith. Because the trial court made neither a finding of bad faith nor a finding that the offers were not made in good faith, its denial of attorney's fees to Ruiz, Premium, and Corvaia was error. See Key West Seaside,
In declining to find Ruiz, Premium, and Corvaia entitled to fees, the trial court relied on Central Motor Co. v. Shaw,
First, in Shaw, the plaintiff, Shaw, sued two defendants, Central Motor Company and Hyundai Motor Finance Company.
D. The "tipsy coachman" rule
Under the tipsy coachman rule, "if a trial court reaches the right result, but for the wrong reasons, it will be upheld if there is any basis which would support judgment in the record."
*1091Dade County Sch. Bd. v. Radio Station WQBA,
The trial court's finding in both orders on appeal that it was not unreasonable for Policlinica to reject the offers "is irrelevant to the question of entitlement." TGI Friday's,
1. The then apparent merit or lack of merit in the claim.
2. The number and nature of offers made by the parties.
3. The closeness of questions of fact and law at issue.
4. Whether the person making the offer had unreasonably refused to furnish information necessary to evaluate the reasonableness of such offer.
5. Whether the suit was in the nature of a test case presenting questions of far-reaching importance affecting nonparties.
6. The amount of the additional delay cost and expense that the person making the offer reasonably would be expected to incur if the litigation should be prolonged.
§ 768.79(7)(b) (emphasis added).
The trial court ruled in the alternative that, even in the event its ruling on entitlement as to all three offers was erroneous, and even if it were to consider amount, the amount of fees awarded would be zero. However, the issue of amount was not before the trial court. The orders on appeal pertain to Ruiz's, Premium's, and Corvaia's entitlement to attorney's fees and were issued after a hearing on entitlement only. Pursuant to the trial court's standing order, the trial court would determine the amount of attorney's fees, if any, at a later hearing.
V. CONCLUSION
Because all of the legal requirements were met and because the trial court did not find that the offers were not made in good faith, we reverse the trial court's orders denying the motions filed by Ruiz, *1092Premium, and Corvaia for a determination of entitlement to attorney's fees and remand with instructions to enter orders awarding entitlement to attorney's fees in favor of Ruiz, Corvaia, and Premium and against Policlinica and to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine the amount.
Reversed and Remanded.
Notes
It appears the trial court meant to write "25 percent more."
On February 1, 2018, this Court consolidated Case No. 3D17-1735, the appeal of Ruiz's Entitlement Order, and Case No. 3D17-1523, the appeal of Premium and Corvaia's Entitlement Order, for oral argument. The two cases are likewise consolidated for purposes of this opinion.
Throughout the case law and, thus, in this opinion, the terms "offer of judgment" and "proposal for settlement" are used interchangeably. See Auto-Owners Ins. v. Se. Floating Docks, Inc.,
This Court has cited with approval the Florida Supreme Court's adoption of the Fourth District's analysis in Schmidt,
We note that Ruiz, Premium and Corvaia cited only to TGI Friday's,
Although section 768.79(7)(a) and rule 1.442(h)(1) use the phrase "not in good faith" to describe an offer, the case law interchangeably also uses the phrase "in bad faith."
"Any party seeking sanctions pursuant to applicable Florida law, based on the failure of the proposal's recipient to accept a proposal, shall do so by serving a motion in accordance with rule 1.525." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.442(h). Rule 1.525 provides that "[a]ny party seeking a judgment taxing costs, attorneys' fees, or both shall serve a motion no later than 30 days after filing of the judgment, including a judgment of dismissal, or the service of a notice of voluntary dismissal, which judgment or notice concludes the action as to that party." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.525. The Court Commentary to Rule 1.525 explains that it "establishes time requirements for serving motions for costs, attorneys' fees, or both, and in no way affects or overrules the pleading requirements outlined by this Court in Stockman v. Downs,
We are unpersuaded by Policlinica's argument on appeal that the trial court's finding that Ruiz's offer was made in good faith, which was not raised by way of a cross-appeal, is not supported by competent substantial evidence and that the trial court erred in so finding. The amount of the offer was $3500. The trial court entered a judgment in favor of Ruiz on Policlinica's claims against him and awarded zero damages to Policlinica and costs in favor of Ruiz. We find no error. Similarly, with respect to Premium's and Corvaia's $3500 offers, while the trial court found that Policlinica suffered damages, it awarded Policlinca zero dollars for those damages.
On January 5, 2017, the trial court entered the standing order, which provided that the trial court would hear argument and decide entitlement to fees before scheduling a hearing to resolve any issues as to the proper amount of any fees or costs. Pursuant thereto, the trial court set forth its timeline of procedures for determining amount "[w]ithin ten (20) [sic] days of the order determining entitlement or from the entry of [the standing order], whichever is later ...." (emphasis in original). The hearing on entitlement was set for February 13, 2017. The trial court's orders on the motions of Ruiz, Premium, and Corvaia for were entered on June 4, 2017.
