Tiеrra Holdings, Ltd. (“Tierra”) appeals a trial court order which (1) awarded Tier-ra its costs and attorney’s fees incurred after December 1, 2006, the date of its valid proposal for settlement pursuant to section 768.79, Florida Statutes (2006), in the breach of contract claim filed against Tierra by Mercantile Bank (“Mercantile”), and (2) awarded Mercantile all of its costs
Factual and Procedural Background
In May 2004, Mercantile and Tierra, through its sole general partner Diamond “S” Development Corporation (“Diamond”), entered into a contract under which Mercantile agreed tо sell two parcels of real estate to Tierra. The contract provided that Parcel 2 would not be used for a bank or a banking related business for a period of five years. The contract also provided that the “prevailing party” in any litigation in connection with the contract would be entitled to all costs and expenses including attorney’s fees. 1
The sale was closed in June 2004, at which point the parties executed a special warranty deed which provided for a six-month restriсtion against bank-related use of Parcel 2, rather than the five-year restriction provided by the contract. In March 2005, after the expiration of the six-month restriction, Tierra sold Parcel 2 to Pilot Bank, which subsequently operated a bank on the property.
After discovering the sale of Parcel 2 to Pilot Bank, Mercantile filed a two-count complaint against Tierra and Diamond, alleging breach of contract and unjust enrichment. Tierra and Diamond served Mercantile with a proposal for settlement on December 1, 2006, pursuant to rule 1.442, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, and section 768.79, Florida Statutes. Tier-ra and Diamond offered to pay Mercantile $178,200 2 in resolution of all claims, including Mercantile’s claim for attorney’s fees and court costs under the contract. Mercantile did not accept the offer.
The case proceeded to trial on August 13, 2007. As the trial court found: “Tierra and Diamond continued to dispute damages for the breach of contract claim even after they admitted they breached the contract shortly before trial and after they knew that Mercantile was only going to claim $16,232.00 in damages for Count I.” The jury returned a verdict in favor of Mercantile awarding damages in the amount of $16,232 for the breach of contract claim and, after a bench trial, the court awarded an additional $725,000 in damages for the unjust enrichment claim. Tierra moved to set aside the jury verdict, arguing that the evidence of damages was speculative and that a reasonable fact-finder could not determine what, if any, damages Mercantile suffered. The trial court
On appeal before this court, Tierra and Diamond challenged the award of damages on the unjust enrichment claim, arguing that the claim was precluded by the existence of an express contract. In
Diamond ‘S” Development Corp. v. Mercantile Bank,
On December 30, 2008, Tierra and Mercantile moved for attorney’s fees and costs. Mercantile, relying on the attorney’s fees and costs provision of the contract, sought fees and costs incurred in regard to its breach of contract claim. Tierra moved for attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to rules 1.442 and 1.525, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, and section 768.79, Florida Statutes. At the hearing on the parties’ motions, Mercantile conceded that Ti-erra was entitled to recоver some fees and costs under section 768.79, and Tierra conceded that Mercantile was the prevailing party in regard to the breach of contract claim and thus entitled to recover some fees and costs under the contract. Tierra argued, however, that Mercantile could recover only those fees and costs incurred up to the date of Tierra’s proposal for settlement.
In its order, the trial court rejected Tierra’s argument that its proposal for settlement сut off Mercantile’s contractual right to fees as of the date of the proposal, reasoning that the language of section 768.79 does not expressly authorize the sort of modification of a contractual attorney’s fees provision that Tierra proposed. Accordingly, the trial court awarded Mercantile the full amount of costs and fees incurred with respect to its breach of contract claim in the amount of $232,381.62. Tierra does not contend on appeal that this amount was unreasonable for the services provided. Further, the trial court found that Tierra’s December 1, 2006 proposal for settlement conformed with the requirements of rule 1.442 and section 768.79, that the proposal was made in good faith, and that the verdict obtained by Mercantile combined with the $22,256.50 in fees and $684.00 in costs incurred before the date of Tierra’s proposal was at least 25% less than Tierra’s offer. Therefore, the court awarded Tierra fees and costs in the amount of $208,627.95. Accordingly, in the final judgment for attorney’s fees and costs, the trial court awarded Mercantile $23,753.67, the difference between the award of Mercantile’s fees and costs, and the award of Tierra’s fees costs and costs.
Tierra appeals, raising an issue of first impression, arguing that a valid proposal for settlement under section 768.79, Florida Statutes, cuts off a prevailing party’s claim for contractual attorney’s fees and costs incurred after the date of the proposal.
Standard of Review
A trial court’s ruling on a motion to tаx attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to section 768.79 is reviewed de novo.
Jacksonville Golfair, Inc. v. Grover,
Statutory Background
The original offer of judgment rule of procedure, adopted by the Florida Supreme Court in 1972, was modeled after its federal counterpart, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 68.
In re the Florida Bar,
In 1986, the Florida Legislature enacted the original version of section 768.79, Florida Statutes, authorizing the award of attorney’s fees.
In 1990, the Legislature amended section 768.79, Florida Statutes, adopting its current language. Ch. 90-119, § 48, at 400, Laws of Fla. Subsection (1) of section 768.79 provides:
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 or on the defendant’s behalf pursuant to a policy of liability insurance or other contract from thе 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. Where such costs and attorney’s fees total more than the judgment, the court shall enter judgment for the defendant against the plaintiff for the amount of the costs and fees, less the amount of the plaintiffs award. If a plaintiff files a demand for judgment which is not accepted by the defendant within 30 days and the plaintiff recovers a judgment in an amount at least 25 percent greater than the offer, she or he shall be entitled to recover reasonable costs and attorney’s fees incurred from the date of the filing of the demand. If rejected, neither an offer nor demand is admissible in subsequent litigation, except for pursuing the penalties of this section.
Because the Supreme Court subsequently found that section 768.79 also contained procedural aspects which were the subject of the Court’s rule-making аuthority, the Court withdrew rule 1.442 again and adopted the procedural portions of section 768.79.
Timmons v. Combs,
In 1996, the Court adopted the current version of rule 1.442.
In re Amendments to Florida Rules of Civil Procedure,
Analysis
The Florida Supreme Court has held that the language of section 768.79, as well as rule 1.442 which implements it, “must be strictly construed because [they] are in derogation of the common law rule that each party pay its own fees.”
Willis Shaw Express, Inc. v. Hilyer Sod, Inc.,
The contract between Tierra and Mercantile contains a broad attorney’s fees provision. The purpose of such a provision is “to ‘protect and indemnify’ the interests of the parties, not to enrich the prevailing party.”
Lashkajani v. Lashkajani,
In the case before us, nothing in the language of the contract limited a prevailing party’s entitlement to an award of fees based upon the opposing party’s offer to settle. Further, nothing in the language of section 768.79 authorizes the modification of a contractual right to attorney’s fees. Reading an implicit cut-off into the offer of judgment statute, as advocated by Tierra, would deny Mercantile complete reimbursement for its litigation expenses and, thus, the contractual indemnification for which the parties bargained. Such a reading would also be contrary to the rules of construction set forth by the Florida Supreme Court.
See Wills Shaw Express, Inc.,
We find these cases distinguishable and unpersuasive.
In
Giglio,
the plaintiff sought to enforce a promissory note that contained a provision requiring the payment of attorney’s fees incurred in enforcing payment of the nоte.
In
Fixel Enterprises, Inc. v. Theis,
Fixel Enterprises, a building contractor, had entered into a construction contract with Theis in which it agreed to build a home.
The Florida Supreme Court answered this question in the negative and approved this court’s decision.
Fixel Enterprises, Inc. v. Theis,
In
Goode,
the appellee had failed to obtain a judgment greater than 75% of the offer made by appellant pursuant to section 768.79, yet the trial court denied the appellant’s motion for fees and costs and awarded costs to appellee pursuant to section 57.041, Florida Statutes (1991). After concluding that appellant should have bеen awarded fees and costs under section 768.79, unless the offer was not made in good faith, the Fourth District reversed the trial court’s award of costs incurred after the appellant’s offer was filed, concluding that section 768.79 controlled over section 57.041.
Goode
involved an apparent tension between two statutory provisions, and the
Goode
court resolved this tension in favor of a result that it concluded made “the best sense out of [the] legislative entanglements.”
Id.
(quoting
Moore v. State,
In
Danis,
the Florida Supreme Court addressed a certified question regarding whether the “prevailing party” test of
Moritz v. Hoyt Enterprises, Inc.,
We agree with the trial court that Danis is distinguishable because it did not involve competing claims for attorney’s fees based upon two separate and distinct grounds. We adopt the following reasoning of the trial court:
While the approach in Danis to deny the ability to recover post-offer attorney’s fees and costs was in harmony with the statutory purposes behind § 627.428, Fla. Stat., that same rationale does not strike the proper balance between the purpose behind contractual provisions that provide for prevailing party attorney’s fees and the purpose behind § 768.79, Fla. Stat. As explained above, thе prevailing party continues to have incentive to avoid further litigation in the face of a reasonable offer because any attorney’s fees awarded to the opposing party will diminish the overall recovery for the prevailing party at the conclusion of litigation or, quite possibly, even result in a final judgment against the prevailing party. The sanction under § 768.79, Fla. Stat., still has teeth regardless of whether a prevailing party can recover their post-offer fees and costs. On the other hand, to “cut-off’ all attorney’s fees and costs under the contract provision after a proposal for settlement would severely undermine the prevailing party’s ability to obtain complete indemnification as contemplated by the terms of the contract.
Finally, turning to Tierra’s reliance on
White v. Steak and, Ale of Florida, Inc.,
[T]he court in White relied on Danis only for the proposition that any offer should include attorney’s fees and сosts up to the point and time the offer was made. The portion of the Danis decision stating that an insurer or surety can relieve itself from any further obligation to pay attorney’s fees and costs by offering the full amount of settlement did not, in any way, factor into the White decision. The statement in White approving of the reasoning in Danis does not extend to every aspect of the Danis opinion, nor does it mean that Danis should control in every situation that calls for an interpretation of § 768.79.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The contract specifically provided as follows:
Attorney’s Fees. In the event of litigation in connection with this Contract, die prevailing party shall be entitled to reimbursement from the other for all costs and expenses incurred in connection thеrewith, including reasonable attorney’s fees at trial, including without limitation any appeal, and in connection with any bankruptcy.
. Of the $178,200, Tierra would pay $178,100, and Diamond would pay $100.
.
See Price v. Tyler,
. Section 45.061, a similar offer-of-judgment statute, was repealed with respect to actions accruing after October 1, 1990. Ch. 90-119, § 22 at 381, Laws of Fla.
. In concurrence, Justice Grimes noted "that at least some of the policy considerations behind
C.U. Associates
[were] also applicable” in the сase before the court, but he supported the majority decision because he was "somewhat apprehensive over the wisdom of the rule adopted in
C.U. Associates,
and [he did] not wish to see it extended to cases involving contractual provisions for attorneys’ fees.”
Fixel,
