SCOTT ANTHONY MITCHELL, Appellant, v. TAYLOR N. BROGDEN, Appellee.
No. 1D16-5849
FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA
July 16, 2018
Elizabeth A. Senterfitt, Judge.
On appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County.
PER CURIAM.
Scott Mitchell appeals the stalking injunction entered against him. The injunction has now expired on its own terms, so it no longer has effect. Nonetheless, we cannot dismiss the appeal as moot because “collateral legal consequences flowing from such an injunction outlast the injunction itself.” Murphy v. Reynolds, 55 So. 3d 716, 716 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011).
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Appellee, we conclude that the evidence did not support a finding that Mitchell‘s conduct was sufficient to “cause[] substantial emotional distress” under the reasonable-person standard we must apply. See
REVERSED.
B.L. THOMAS, C.J., and WINSOR, J., concur; OSTERHAUS, J., dissents with opinion.
Not final until disposition of any timely and authorized motion under
OSTERHAUS, J., dissenting.
I think we should affirm because competent, substantial evidence supports the trial court‘s conclusion that Mr. Mitchell violated the stalking statute.
Seth Schwartz and Albert J. Tasker, The Schwartz Law Group, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellant.
Taylor Nicole Brogden, pro se, Appellee.
ORDER ON MOTION FOR HEARING EN BANC
A judge of this Court requested that this cause be heard en banc in accordance with
B.L. THOMAS, C.J., and LEWIS, ROBERTS, WETHERELL, ROWE, RAY, OSTERHAUS, KELSEY, WINOKUR, JAY, WINSOR, and M.K. THOMAS, JJ., concur.
WOLF and BILBREY, JJ., dissent.
MAKAR, J., dissents with opinion.
MAKAR, J., dissenting from the denial of hearing en banc.
Due to a large caseload, our fifteen-member appellate court—like the other four district courts in Florida—assigns each case randomly to a three-judge panel for disposition, raising the trivia question: How many different three-judge panels are possible? If you said 455, you‘re correct.1 Most people guess a far smaller number. What isn‘t trivial is the jurisprudential impact that so many different panels have on similar or related cases, making the need for intra-court decisional uniformity important, which was the basis upon which en banc review was sought as to the proposed disposition of this case by a divided panel.2
Decisional uniformity is so important that it is one of only two grounds for en banc review, the other involving cases of exceptional importance.
Without en banc review for uniformity, we‘d not be one court attempting to dispense uniform justice, but an assemblage of 455 randomly-assigned and autonomous three-judge panels each doing as it sees fit. That is not our jurisprudential system. As our supreme court said when it established the en banc rule: “Under our appellate structural scheme, each three-judge panel of a district court of appeal should not consider itself an independent court unto itself, with no responsibility to the district court as a whole.” See In re Rule 9.331, Determination of Causes by a Dist. Court of Appeal En Banc, Fla. Rules of Appellate Procedure, 416 So. 2d 1127, 1128 (Fla. 1982) (emphasis added). The court long ago held that language in
The en banc process now authorized for the district courts is designed to help the district courts avoid conflict, assure harmonious decisions within the courts’ geographic boundaries, and develop predictability of the law within their jurisdiction. Consistency of decisions within each district is essential to the credibility of the district courts. There has been criticism of intermediate appellate courts for their failure to speak with “a single voice of the law.” Meador, An Appellate Court Dilemma and A Solution Through Subject Matter Organization, 16 U. Mich. J.L. Ref. 471, 474 (1983). As judges are added to Florida‘s district courts to meet expanding caseloads, the resulting increased number of three-judge panels cannot help but increase the number of inconsistent and conflicting decisions. When there is a general rotation of Florida‘s district court judges among three-judge panels, the increased number of panel combinations compounds the problem. With a five-member court, the number of different panel combinations is ten. With a twelve-member court, however, the number of panel combinations is 220. The en banc process provides a means for Florida‘s district courts to avoid the perception that each court consists of independent panels speaking with multiple voices with no apparent responsibility to the court as a whole. The process provides an important forum for each court to work as a unified collegial body to achieve the objectives of both finality and uniformity of the law within each court‘s jurisdiction.
Schreiber II, 479 So. 2d at 93-94 (emphasis added). Uniformity review, perhaps a bit like a cranky hall monitor, helps to keep order by requiring three-judge panels to be open-minded as to the views of their colleagues and responsible to the court as a whole in their decisions, particularly written ones that become binding precedent. Our supreme court—with its limited jurisdiction—does not perform this function; instead, each district court must do so, making enthusiasm and dedication to the task important.
And what standard should apply in deciding when uniformity review is justified? As noted in Jones, the “district courts are free to adopt their own standards for determining whether en banc consideration is required to maintain uniformity of decisions. An intra-district conflict may justify en banc review even if it does not meet the more exacting definition of ‘express and direct conflict’ in the context of the supreme court‘s discretionary jurisdiction.” 790 So. 2d at 1196 (citing Schreiber II, 479 So. 2d 90). Our court lacks a standard for uniformity review, saying only that it is a discretionary decision, Internal Operating Procedures, 6.4. (“A decision to grant or deny en banc review on either of these [two] grounds is within the discretion of the court.“), but we ought to have one, as should any large multi-member appellate court.3 For example, Judge Schwartz proposed that “an appropriate standard or rule-of-thumb is the rather practical one that decisions lack uniformity whenever it appears that they are so inconsistent and disharmonious that they would not have been rendered by the same panel of the court.” Schreiber I, 422 So. 2d at 912 n.1, (Schwartz, J.), decision quashed, 479 So. 2d 90 (Fla. 1985) (adopting Judge Schwartz‘s viewpoint that uniformity review is not limited to direct conflict). This standard is workable, and others exist, but what matters most is that there exists a standard that reflects commitment to the goal of uniformity. After all, even a uniform standard can be applied in a non-uniform manner, making institutional devotion to decisional uniformity a key factor.
In this regard, an oft-heard comment against uniformity review is: “If I were on the panel, I‘d decide the case differently, but it is not en-banc-worthy.” By this reasoning, uniformity will never occur; panel decisions become immunized from internal review even if a majority of the court may disagree with them. Uniformity review, of course, cannot be undertaken in every case where a judge disagrees with a panel decision; we don‘t have the ability to oversee each other‘s daily work to that degree; indeed, the largest slice of our caseload results in per curiam affirmed decisions, which escape uniformity review entirely because no written opinion is produced and non-panel members typically are unaware of the issues raised and the basis for their resolution. In any event, although perfect decisional uniformity is impossible, striving for and encouraging en banc review on this basis is a worthy goal.
Given this backdrop, it is respectfully submitted that a substantial likelihood exists, if not a certainty, that the “luck of the
