Safari Tours, Inc., Appellant, vs. Juan E. Pasco, et al., Appellees.
No. 3D17-2336
Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
August 22, 2018
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
Lower Tribunal No. 14-11996
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Rodney Smith, Judge.
Lorenzen Law, P.A., and Dirk Lorenzen, for appellant.
Richard Lorenzo, for appellees.
Before ROTHENBERG, C.J., and SUAREZ and SCALES, JJ.
Appellant, plaintiff and counter-defendant below, Safari Tours, Inc. (“Safari“), appeals the trial court‘s denial of Safari‘s post-trial motions directed toward a jury verdict and the resulting final judgment that awarded appellees, defendants and counter-plaintiffs below, Juan E. Pasco, Louis Pasco, Phoenix Automotive, Inc. and Phoenix Automotive Services, Inc. (collectively, “Phoenix“) the amount of $50,375 in damages on Phoenix‘s counterclaim. We reverse only the portion of the final judgment that awarded Phoenix $27,375 in storage fees because Phoenix‘s repair estimate failed to substantially comply with
I. Relevant Facts and Procedural Background
After Safari‘s tour bus was damaged in a collision, Safari took the bus to Phoenix‘s repair shop to have the bus repaired. Phoenix provided Safari with a written repair estimate, which estimated the cost to repair the damage at $25,173.47. Phoenix‘s written repair estimate, however, did not inform Safari that there would be any daily charge for storing the bus after Phoenix had notified Safari that the repairs had been completed.
A dispute between the parties arose as to payment for the repairs Phoenix had performed, and Safari ultimately sued Phoenix for the return of the bus. In its three-count counterclaim against Safari, Phoenix sought $18,000 in uncompensated repair costs, an unspecified amount for storage fees, and non-economic damages for a tort claim. The jury returned a verdict for Phoenix on Safari‘s claims and, on Phoenix‘s counterclaims against Safari, awarded Phoenix the $18,000 Phoenix had sought for repair costs, $5,000 on its tort claim, and $27,375 for storage fees. The jury‘s verdict form contains a handwritten notation that the storage fees were calculated by awarding Phoenix twenty-five dollars per day for three years of storage.1
Safari did not (and does not) challenge the $18,000 awarded by the jury for repair costs, but challenged the verdict on the tort claim and storage fees by filing post-trial motions seeking a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, a rehearing, a new trial and a remittitur. In unelaborated orders, the trial court denied all of Safari‘s post-trial motions, and entered the final
II. Analysis
We affirm the trial court‘s rulings on all of Safari‘s post-trial motions, except for its denial of Safari‘s motions directed toward the storage fees. A motor vehicle repair shop, such as Phoenix, may not collect fees due from a customer if the repair shop does not substantially comply with the written repair estimate provisions of
By leaving the form‘s line blank, Phoenix failed to comply with
While not entirely clear, Phoenix seems to argue that, notwithstanding the repair estimate‘s failure to inform Safari of storage fees, Phoenix should nevertheless prevail on this issue because Safari failed to provide this Court with a copy of the trial transcript which, presumably, could establish that Phoenix otherwise substantially complied with
III. Conclusion
We reverse the portion of the final judgment that included $27,375 in storage fees and remand to the trial court to enter a revised judgment for Phoenix consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.
