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September 16, 2016 by admin

Workers’ compensation — Judge of compensation claims lacked subject matter jurisdiction to grant employer/servicing agent’s motion to compel claimant to file a verified motion for attorney’s fees and costs where all petitions for benefits had been voluntarily dismissed with no reservation of jurisdiction

41
Fla. L. Weekly D2104a
Top of Form

Workers’
compensation — Judge of compensation claims lacked subject matter jurisdiction
to grant employer/servicing agent’s motion to compel claimant to file a
verified motion for attorney’s fees and costs where all petitions for benefits
had been voluntarily dismissed with no reservation of jurisdiction

LAW
OFFICES OF WILLIAM F. SOUZA, Appellant, v. TRULY NOLEN, INC./CRAWFORD AND
COMPANY AND MILENA SOLIDAD, Appellees. 1st District. Case No. 1D16-118. Opinion
filed September 9, 2016. An appeal from an order of the Judge of Compensation
Claims. Gerardo Castiello, Judge. Dates of Accident: April 2, 2003, May 18,
2003, May 19, 2003. Counsel: William F. Souza, North Miami Beach, for
Appellant. Janet M. Greene, Tampa, for Appellees.

(PER
CURIAM.) In this workers’ compensation case, Claimant’s former attorney,
William Souza, challenges the Judge of Compensation Claims’ (JCC’s) order
compelling him to file a verified motion for attorneys’ fees and costs in
accordance with a motion filed by the Employer/Servicing Agent (E/SA). Because
the JCC lacked subject matter jurisdiction to grant the E/SA’s motion to compel,
we reverse.

Factual
Background

In
2008, the JCC entered a final order finding Claimant had settled his workers’
compensation cases and dismissing all of Claimant’s pending petitions for
benefits (PFBs). Claimant filed an appeal, but this court subsequently affirmed
per curiam. See Soledad v. Truly Nolen of N. Am., 3 So. 3d
323 (Fla. 1st DCA 2009) (table). While the appeal was pending, Souza withdrew a
pending claim under section 440.34, Florida Statutes (2002), for attorney’s
fees based on past medical benefits secured for Claimant. Jurisdiction was not
reserved on any claim.

In
July 2015, the E/SA filed a motion to dismiss all pending claims. The JCC found
that there were no outstanding claims to dismiss and denied the motion. In
December 2015, the E/SA filed a motion to compel Souza to file a verified
petition for attorney’s fees and costs “pursuant to W.C. Rule 60Q-6.124(3)(5).”
On December 30, 2015, the JCC entered an order granting the E/SA’s motion and
ordering Souza to file a verified motion within ninety days. Souza filed a
motion for rehearing which asserted, among other things, that the JCC had no
authority to compel the filing of a verified motion for attorney’s fees in the
absence of a pending PFB. The JCC entered an order summarily denying Souza’s
motion for rehearing and this appeal followed.

Legal
Analysis

Our
review of subject matter jurisdiction is de novo. See Jacobsen
v. Ross Stores
, 882 So. 2d 431, 432 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004).

This
court has previously held that the dismissal of all PFBs divests the JCC of
jurisdiction. See Cova v. Ostfeld, 994 So. 2d 1162 (Fla. 1st DCA
2008) (“When all claims asserted through a petition for benefits are dismissed,
the JCC loses jurisdiction to address those claims. ‘Such dismissal divests a
JCC of jurisdiction to take any further action in the case.’ ” (quoting Perez
v. Winn-Dixie
, 639 So. 2d 109, 111 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994)). The JCC loses
jurisdiction even when the dismissal of the PFB is without prejudice. See
Perez, 639 So. 2d at 112. “The effect [of a voluntary dismissal] is to
remove completely from the court’s consideration the power to enter an order,
equivalent in all respects to a deprivation of ‘jurisdiction.’ ” Randle-E.
Ambulance Serv., Inc. v. Vasta
, 360 So. 2d 68, 69 (Fla. 1978). Here, the
JCC had no jurisdiction over any particular claim, including a claim for
entitlement to attorney’s fees, because all PFBs were dismissed with no
reservation of jurisdiction.

The
E/SA points out that this court recently acknowledged that there are cases “in
which the JCC’s jurisdiction exists or continues in the absence of a pending
PFB.” See Vasquez v. Romero, 179 So. 3d 402, 404 (Fla. 1st DCA
2015). However, the E/SA ignores that this continuing jurisdiction exists in a
limited number of cases involving discovery requests or disputes. Id. In
fact, Vasquez involved a discovery request, but this Court still held
that the voluntary dismissal of the PFBs divested the JCC of jurisdiction. Id.
In reaching this conclusion, we emphasized that the claimant had no pending
claims, that compensability remained disputed, and that no liability had been
established. Id. at 403. Similar conditions exist in this case — all of
the PFBs have been voluntarily dismissed and there are no pending claims. Thus,
as in Vasquez, there is no justiciable controversy before the JCC about
the parties’ rights or obligations under the Workers’ Compensation Act.

We
also reject the E/SA’s argument that the JCC had jurisdiction to compel the
filing of a verified fee motion by virtue of Florida Administrative Code Rule
60Q-6.124(5), which states:

Upon motion by any party:

(a) The judge shall require
the filing of a verified motion for attorney’s fees and costs as to any [PFB]
which has no pending claims other than entitlement to attorney’s fees and
costs.

(b) The judge may require the
party or attorney entitled to attorney’s fees and costs to file a verified
motion for attorney’s fees and costs as to the amount.

By
its plain language, paragraph (a) cannot apply here because there is no pending
claim for attorney’s fees via a PFB: in particular, jurisdiction was not
reserved over any attorney’s fee claim made in a previously filed PFB.

Nevertheless,
the E/SA argues that the JCC had discretionary jurisdiction to compel a
verified fee motion under paragraph (b). This argument fails for several
reasons. First, “[a] JCC has no authority or jurisdiction beyond what is
specifically conferred by statute.” Farhangi v. Dunkin Donuts,
728 So. 2d 772, 773 (Fla. 1st DCA) (emphasis added). Second, paragraph (b)
permits the JCC to require the filing of a verified fee motion from “the party
or attorney entitled to attorney’s fees.” Because there is no pending
PFB and no reservation of jurisdiction, there is no outstanding claim for fees
in this case. Third, paragraph (b) applies to determine the amount of a
fee where entitlement is due. This requirement necessarily precludes the
compelled filing of a verified fee motion where entitlement is in dispute.
Here, neither Claimant nor Souza has even made a claim of entitlement to any
attorney’s fee.

In
short, Souza cannot be forced to make a claim, under either the statute or the
rule, if he does not wish to do so. The JCC, therefore, had no jurisdiction to
compel Souza to file a verified motion for attorney’s fees. We add that a PFB
which is dismissed without reservation of jurisdiction over an unresolved claim
will not toll the statute of limitations (SOL). Sanchez v. Am. Airlines,
169 So. 3d 1197, 1197-98 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015) (holding that previously filed and
dismissed PFB had no bearing on the running of the SOL, because ‘“when an
action is dismissed, the statute of limitation is not tolled during the period
that the dismissed action was pending; rather, the statute will run as if the
dismissed action had never been filed’ ”) (quoting McBride v. Pratt &
Whitney
, 909 So. 2d 386, 388 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005)).

Because
the JCC lacked subject matter jurisdiction to compel Souza to file a verified
motion for attorney’s fees and costs, we REVERSE. (ROBERTS, C.J., ROWE, and
MAKAR, JJ., CONCUR.)

* *
*

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