Barry UDELL, Appellant,
v.
Linda UDELL, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*1169 Susan Hartmann Swartz, Bradenton, for Appellant.
Cary A. Cliff of Cary Alan Cliff, P.A., Naples, for Appellee.
NORTHCUTT, Chief Judge.
The trial court refused Barry Udell's well-founded request for a continuance of the trial in his dissolution of marriage action, and for that reason he was unable to personally attend the trial or secure a court reрorter. We conclude that the court abused its discretion in that regard. Therefore, we reverse the final judgment in all respects except for the provision dissolving the marriage.
The record on appeal is sketchy and piecemeal, but we have gleaned the critical facts. In December 2004, slightly over a year after the Udells' dissolution action commenced, a general mаgistrate conducted a case management conference. The magistrate's report stated, in pertinent part, that an order for nonjury trial was attached and would be the only notice of trial. The attached order did not set a trial date, but the magistrаte's report stated:
TRIAL February 9, 2005 at 9:00 a.m. (Calendar Call).
Trial will be scheduled with the Honorable Franklin G. Baker, at the Calendar Call to be held on February 9, 2005 at 9:00 a.m. All partiеs must personally attend the subsequent trial before Judge Baker.
(Emphasis supplied.)
However, on February 8, the day before the noticed calendar call, the court held a hearing аt which neither Mr. Udell nor his attorney appeared. The purpose of that hearing is unclear. Mrs. Udell's attorney was present. Latеr, in an itemization of charges filed in conjunction with a motion for attorney's fees, the attorney referred to the February 8 proсeeding as a "docket sounding." The Clerk's minutes characterized the hearing as a calendar call. But in subsequent proceedings to reconstruct the record on appeal, the judge denied that the hearing was a calendar call, which he said had beеn held previously. Instead, the judge said, the purpose of the February 8 proceeding was to set the order of the cases scheduled for trial during that time period. The record contains nothing to show that Mr. Udell or his attorney were notified of a February 8 hearing of any sort, but on that day the court apparently set the Udells' trial for the next day, February 9, at 8:30 a.m.
Mr. Udell's attorney had planned to attend thе scheduled February 9 calendar call by telephone at 9:00 a.m., as noticed in the magistrate's report. When she and Mr. Udell did not aрpear at 8:30 a.m., the court postponed the trial to 1:30 that afternoon and instructed Mrs. Udell's attorney to notify opposing counsel. Mr. Udell's attorney was able to personally appear at the afternoon trial. She made an emergency request fоr a continuance because she was unable to secure the presence either of a court reporter or of Mr. Udell, *1170 who was in Colorado. The court denied the motion, proceeded with the nonjury trial, and thereafter entered the final judgment thаt is challenged on appeal.
We begin with the magistrate's report following the case management conference. It mаde no mention of a February 8 proceeding. From the language setting a "calendar call" for 9:00 a.m. on February 9, the parties rеasonably could expect that the court would set the date and time for trial at that hearing. See, e.g., Watson v. Watson,
Instead, the court apparently scheduled the trial at an unnoticed, ex parte proсeeding on February 8. Then, on February 9 at 8:30, not 9:00 as previously noticed, and again in the absence of Mr. Udell and his attorney, the court оrdered the trial to start that afternoon. Although the court delayed the afternoon trial for an hour or so in deference to counsel's ultimately futile effort to obtain a court reporter on such short notice, the court refused to grant a continuancе.
Certainly, in his appeal Mr. Udell might have complained that conducting an unnoticed, ex parte hearing in which his trial was scheduled for the very next morning deprived him of his right to due process, but he has not. Instead, he contends that the trial court abused its discretion when rejecting his emergency motion for a continuance. We agree.
We recognize a trial court's broad discretion when deciding whether to grant a continuance, but this discretion is not unlimited. Baron v. Baron,
Our disposition generally renders the remaining issues moot. We affirm the denial of Mr. Udell's motion for a сhange of venue without discussion. On a final note, we observe that the delay between the filing of the appeal in March 2005 and its disposition today stemmed from an unduly complex endeavor to obtain a statement of the evidence and proceedings in accordance with Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.200(b)(4). For the edification of the parties and the trial court, we note that the rule authorizesindeed, requires the lower court's participation in this process, and no order from this court should be necеssary. See Fla. R.App. P. 9.200(b)(4) (providing for appellant's preparation of statement, service on appellee, and submission to lower tribunal for settlement and approval); see also Kuenstler v. *1171 Andreasen,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for new trial.
DAVIS and LaROSE, JJ., Concur.
