Stephen WATSON, Appellant,
v.
INTERNET BILLING COMPANY, LTD., a Florida Limited partnership, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*534 Gary D. Weinfeld of Gary D. Weinfeld, P.A., Miami, for appellant.
Craig J. Trigoboff of Waldman, Feluren, Hildebrandt & Trigoboff, P.A., Weston, for appellee.
FARMER, C.J.
A defendant appeals from a trial court's denial of his motion to vacate a clerk's default and his companion motion for relief from the consequent final judgment. We affirm the denial as to the clerk's default but reverse as to the final judgment, upon a holding that the claim in question did not involve liquidated damages and therefore the defaulted defendant was entitled to notice of any trial on damages.
Plaintiff alleged that it had been retained under an oral contract to develop and place certain advertising for a firm with which defendant was a principal. It further claimed that all the defendants fraudulently induced plaintiff to "entrust" unspecified funds to the advertising firm for that purpose. It claimed that defendant, among others, converted such funds or unjustly enriched himself by failing to pay media in which such advertising was published, or unlawfully retained such funds. In an affidavit after the clerk's default was entered, the advertising firm "quantified" the total amount by stating the damages sustained "as a result of Defendant's misconduct" at $465,702.60 and that it had incurred attorneys fees of $10,194.95. The trial court entered a default judgment in that total sum.
The issue whether defendant was entitled to notice and a trial on damages depends on whether the damages were liquidated. Liquidated damages are specific and precise sums of money immediately apparent from the express terms of the contract itself, or determinable therefrom by mathematical calculation, or fixed by a specific rule of law. Hill v. Murphy,
Moreover, attorneys fees are not liquidated where only a "reasonable" sum may be recovered. See Bowman,
Even though a default was entered against defendant, he was entitled to an *535 evidentiary hearing on the amount of damages, because they were unliquidated. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.440(c) ("In actions in which the damages are not liquidated, the order setting an action for trial shall be served on parties who are in default in accordance with rule 1.080(a)."); Hill,
DEFAULT AFFIRMED; DEFAULT JUDGMENT REVERSED.
KLEIN, J., and BERGER, WILLIAM J., Associate Judge, concur.
