WELLS FARGO ARMORED SERVICES CORPORATION, Petitioner,
v.
SUNSHINE SECURITY AND DETECTIVE AGENCY, INC., еt al., Respondents.
Supreme Court of Florida.
Rex B. Guthrie, Miami, James V. Johnstone, Fort Pierce, and Louise H. McMurray of Louise H. McMurray, P.A., Miami, for petitioner.
Mallory H. Horton, Coral Gables, for respondents.
PER CURIAM.
We have for review Wells Fargo Armored Services Corp. v. Sunshine Security & Detective Agency,
On December 13, 1983, employees of Wells Fargo Armored Servicеs Corporation were robbed while making a pickup at the Hialeah branch of the Intercontinental Bank. The next day an employee of Sunshine Security and Detective Agency, which provided guard services at the bank, confessed to participatiоn in the robbery. After covering Intercontinental's losses, plus interest, Wells Fargo received an assignment of the right to proceed against Sunshine Security.
On April 13, 1984, Wells Fargo filed suit against Sunshine Security. The complaint essentially alleged that Sunshine Security was liable for the guard's аctions under the doctrine of respondeat superior. A default judgment was entered against Sunshine Security on October 30, 1984, after Sunshine Security failed to serve or file any paper in the cause. Later, Sunshine Security alleged that it had never received proрer *180 service of process prior to entry of the default judgment.
After a good deal of intervening motion practice, Sunshine Security appealed to the Third District. The district court ignored thе issues surrounding the default judgment and found that the original complaint had failed to state a cause of action. As grounds, the Third District concluded that the guard who had participated in the robbery was acting beyond the scope of his agency relationship with Sunshine Security. The Third District rejected all remaining grounds for reversal and remanded the cause for further proceedings. Sunshine Sec. & Detective Agency v. Wells Fargo Armored Servs. Corp.,
After receiving the mandаte, the trial court dismissed the original complaint on January 8, 1987. Subsequently, Wells Fargo filed an amended complaint and a motion to add new parties and theories of recovery. Sunshine Security then filed a motion to dismiss on grounds that the statute of limitations precluded rеcovery. Later, the trial court granted this motion.
On appeal, the Third District affirmed the result but did so based on the law-of-the-case dоctrine. Reviewing the record, the Third District concluded that the amended complaint "contain[ed] the same causes of aсtion ruled upon in the prior appeal and add[ed] new, different theories of recovery not previously asserted." Wells Fargo,
We reject this conclusion. The law-of-the-case doctrine was meant to apply to matters litigated to finаlity, not to matters that remain essentially unresolved due to the erroneous ruling of a lower court. Normandy Beach Properties Corp. v. Adams,
In Brumby, we confronted a situation in which a complaint was dismissed for failure to state a cause of action. We then nоted that
unless the complainant can within a near date to be fixed by the Circuit Court so amend his bill of complaint ... [to state a cause], the bill of complaint should be dismissed.
Brumby,
The court below erred in saying that "plaintiff is precluded by the doctrine of law of the case from reopening the case and filing an amended complaint upon remand containing the same causes of action ruled upon in the prior apрeal and adding new, different theories of recovery not previously asserted." Wells Fargo,
In this case, plaintiff did file an amended complaint in which it added new counts embodying thе theories of bailment and negligent employment against the defendant Sunshine Security and Detective Agency. The amended comрlaint also added *181 a count against Jacinto Alfonso and Margaret Alfonso as surviving trustees of Sunshine Security and sought punitive damages аgainst the above named defendants. Finally, the amended complaint alleged that Sunshine Security and Jacinto and Margaret Alfonsо fraudulently conveyed assets of Sunshine Security to Sunrise Security Polygraph and Detective Bureau Corporation. The defendants аppropriately tested the sufficiency of the new counts by a motion to dismiss.
Apparently, the trial court did not pass on the sufficiеncy of the new theories but dismissed on the statute-of-limitations ground. We are not confronted with the correctness of that conclusion. We infer that the court below did not agree with such a conclusion but approved the trial court's action on the law-of-the-сase theory. Accordingly, we quash the decision of the district court and remand to the trial court for a determination of the sufficiеncy of the amended complaint.
It is so ordered.
SHAW, C.J., OVERTON, BARKETT and KOGAN, JJ., and EHRLICH, Senior Justice, concur.
GRIMES, J., concurs with an opinion.
McDONALD, J., dissents.
GRIMES, Justice, concurring.
Leave to amend a complaint should not be denied unlеss the privilege has been abused or the complaint is clearly not amendable. Wiggins v. Tart,
