In entering the amended final judgment in the underlying wrongful death action, the trial court determined that when the amount of the judgment is modified on appeal, Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.340(c) requires post-trial interest to accrue from the date of the verdict, rather than from the date of the original judgment. For the reasons discussed below, we disagree and reverse.
On October 11, 2011, a jury rendered a verdict of $7,509,510 in the underlying medical malpractice action, finding Dr. James R. Shoemaker
On February 29, 2012, after a series of hearings on the post-trial motions, the trial court entered a final judgment against Appellant in the amount of $1,386,260, representing Appellant’s portion of fault in the medical malpractice action and applying section 766.118’s cap on the noneconomic damages.
After the final judgment was rendered, both parties appealed to this Court, with Appellee challenging the trial court’s reduction of the noneconomic damages. This Court issued a per curiam affirmance in November 2013. See Shoemaker v. Sliger,
In May 2014, following the McCall decision, this Court withdrew its prior opinion and “reverse[d] that part of the judgment under review that reduced the award of wrongful death non-economic damages to Sliger pursuant, to section 766.118.” Shoe
Appellee then moved the trial court for entry of an amended final judgment without the section 766.118 reduction. Attached to Appellee’s motion was a proposed amended final judgment that contained a paragraph awarding Appellee interest from the date of the jury verdict, October 11, 2011. Appellant filed a response in opposition contending that the amended final judgment proposed by Ap-pellee was incorrect, and asserting that Appellee was entitled to interest on the entire amount from the date of the original judgment, but was not entitled to post-verdict, pre-judgment interest. The trial court entered an amended final judgment on remand, awarding Appellee interest from the date of the jury verdict. Appellant timely appealed the amended final judgment.
Ordinarily, • interest on a money judgment in a tortease begins to accrue on the date that the trial court enters the judgment fixing the amount of the monetary award. See Amerace Corp. v. Stallings,
If a judgment of reversal is entered that requires the entry of a money judgment on a verdict, the mandate shall be deemed to require such money judgment to be entered as of the date of the verdict.
Fla. R.App. P. 9.340(c); But for the rule, in a case where a money judgment was not entered below, interest would only begin to accrue after the court of appeal ruled, after the appellate motions for rehearing were resolved, after the mandate issued, and once the judgment for money damages was finally entered, regardless1 of how many months intervened between the verdict and entry of the money judgment. Delaying interest in that fashion would financially punish the successful appellant by depriving post-trial interest for a considerable time. The rule avoids this unfair result.'
However, where the trial court originally entered a money judgment and only the amount of the award is modified after an appeal,, there is no logical reason to employ the rule. .Under those circumstances, there is already a starting point for the accrual of interest, namely the date on which the original judgment was entered. Amerace,
In Amerace, the jury found the defendant sixty percent' at fault for the plaintiffs’ personal injury and awarded them $1 million.
In reaching this conclusion, the supreme court discussed Green v. Rety,
We acknowledge* that the Fourth District-Court of Appeal reached a different conclusion in Hyundai v. Ferayorni,
We note that the Ferayomi opinion does not mention an earlier Fourth District opinion, St. Cloud Utilities v. Moore,
• The Fourth District reversed, finding "that rule 3.15(a) did not apply, “because our previous reversal in this case did not require the entry of a money judgment for the simple reason that one for the exact same sum had already been entered and, in effect, only a modification of that existing judgment was required.” Id. at 448.
The position urged by Appellee in the instant case would likewise unjustly punish Appellant. We will apply the rule as written; therefore, we decline to .adopt an illogical, unjust interpretation of rule 9.340(c). We disagree with the Fourth District’s Femyomi opinion, but agree with its previous opinion in Moore, .
Accordingly, we reverse the amended final judgment and remand for entry of an amended money judgment that awards post-trial interest from the date of the original judgment, rather than from the date of the verdict.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Ormond Medical Arts Family Practice, PL was a co-defendant, below, and is an appellant here. Appellant refers to both appellants as Dr. Shoemaker, as will we.
