Background
Michael G. McFall brought suit against Auto Owners Insurance Company, a foreign for-profit corporation, in the Circuit Court for Alachua County, Florida, before Judge Gloria R. Walker. Following an adverse result, McFall filed an appeal with the Florida First District Court of Appeal.
Auto Owners Insurance Company did not enter an appearance in the appellate proceeding. The appeal was considered by a three-judge panel consisting of Judges Roberts, M.K. Thomas, and Long.
The Court’s Holding
The First District Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal per curiam, citing Pensacola Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. v. Costa, 195 So. 2d 250 (Fla. 1st DCA 1967). The dismissal indicates the court found it lacked jurisdiction or that the appeal was otherwise not properly before it.
The decision is not yet final and remains subject to any timely and authorized motion filed under Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure 9.330 or 9.331.
Key Takeaways
- The First DCA dismissed the appeal without reaching the merits, citing a 1967 precedent addressing appellate jurisdiction or procedural prerequisites.
- Auto Owners Insurance Company made no appearance in the appellate court, suggesting the dismissal was resolved on threshold grounds rather than contested briefing.
- The order is not final until the window for motions for rehearing or certification under Rules 9.330 and 9.331 has passed.
Why It Matters
While this dismissal resolves no substantive insurance law question, it serves as a reminder that appellate courts rigorously police their own jurisdiction. Practitioners appealing from circuit court judgments in Florida must ensure the order on appeal is final or otherwise independently appealable before investing in appellate briefing.
The citation to Pensacola Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. v. Costa signals that the jurisdictional defect here is not novel — the First DCA has long applied this gatekeeping principle, and attorneys must carefully evaluate appealability at the outset of any appeal.