Edward C. VINING, Jr., Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
v.
Eva MARTYN, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Edward C. Vining, Jr., pro se.
*1082 Stephen Gellman, Miami, Elton H. Schwarz, Stuart, and Douglas H. Stein of Douglas H. Stein, P.A., Coral Gables, for appellant/cross-appellee.
Lauri Waldman Ross of Maland & Ross, Miami, for appellee/cross-appellant.
POLEN, Judge.
This appeal stems from an attorney-client dispute which grew out of Edward J. Vining's representation of Eva Martyn in a 1980 dissolution of marriage proceeding in Martin County. As a result of this dispute, Martyn filed a complaint against Vining, which included counts for conversion, civil theft, and fraud on the court. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Martyn on these counts, and Vining raised five points on appeal challenging the judgment. We affirm on all of appellant's points, but reverse based on a consideration of both points regarding damages that Martyn raised on her cross-appeal.
As to Martyn's first point on cross-appeal, we agree that the trial court should have awarded prejudgment interest from the date the theft occurred. See Florida Steel Corp. v. Adaptable Dev., Inc.,
With regard to Martyn's second point on cross-appeal, we also agree that the trial court erred in its computation of treble damages. The trial court calculated the damages due and owing Eva Martyn by deducting as an off-set the settlement Eva received from codefendant Florida National Bank before trebling the damages. While there is no Florida case law directly on point, Martyn has cited numerous federal cases which support her argument that the verdict should have been trebled before deducting the off-set. See Flintkote v. Lysfjord,
GUNTHER, C.J., concurs.
FARMER, J., concurs specially with opinion.
*1083 FARMER, Judge, concurring specially.
I write separately only to make clear that our decision today is not inconsistent with Christenson & Associates, Mtg. Co. v. Palumbo-Tucker,
In today's case, we hold that prejudgment interest should be awarded only on the actual amount of the loss before any statutory trebling of compensatory damages. That is certainly agreeable with the Christenson & Associates holding, in which prejudgment interest was added to the amount of the actual loss, and the combined sum was then trebled to calculate the punitive damages.
With that understanding, I concur in today's decision.
