Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed September 16, 2015.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D14-3137
Lower Tribunal No. 11-18732
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Celebrity Cruises, Inc.,
Appellant,
vs.
Jerry Rankin, M.D., et al.,
Appellees
An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade
County, Jorge E. Cueto, Judge.
Mase, Lara, P.A., and Richard D. Lara, Cameron W. Eubanks, and Lauren
DeFabio, for appellant.
Meister Law, LLC, and Michael F. Guilford, P.A.; Russo Appellate Firm,
P.A., and Elizabeth K. Russo and Christopher J. Bailey, for appellees.
Before SALTER, FERNANDEZ, and LOGUE, JJ.
LOGUE, J.,
Celebrity Cruises, Inc. (“Cruise Line”), appeals an order certifying a class of
doctors who worked under contract with the Cruise Line. For the reasons explained
below, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
According to the complaint, the Cruise Line contracted with the Doctors to
pay them a commission on “total medical revenues.” When paying commissions,
however, the Cruise Line excluded revenues generated by the sale of medications.
The underlying dispute, therefore, is whether the Doctors were contractually
entitled to commissions on medication sales.
In internal emails, the Cruise Line’s management team discussed whether
doctors subject to the contract were entitled to commissions on medication sales:
According to the signed contracts, physicians’ commission should be
on total medical revenue (procedure and medication sales) as opposed
to commission on procedure only. Since current medical settlement
pays commission on procedure only, the difference needs to be
calculated based on what is stated in the contract (commission on total
revenue) for the contract period stated in the contract.
Please prepare retro pay amount as lump sum payment, and this needs
to take place as soon as possible.
The Doctors filed suit, alleging a breach of contract and seeking class
certification under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.220(b)(3). In opposition to
class certification, the Cruise Line argued that common issues would not
predominate over individual ones: “[A]n analysis of each individual physician’s
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understanding of the terms of their agreement with [the Cruise Line] . . . will
necessarily overwhelm any issues that could be deemed common to this class.”
The Cruise Line submitted depositions of several class members in an
attempt to support its contention. The depositions reflected that one physician was
unaware of the relevant contract term until recently, another physician was aware
of the term but assumed the Cruise Line did not pay a commission on medication
sales, and yet another physician claimed that every physician knew he or she was
contractually entitled to a commission on medication sales. An additional point
raised by the Cruise Line concerned the timing of each physician’s objections to
the alleged failure to pay commissions on medication sales, as some voiced
concerns shortly after signing their contracts, while others did not object until the
filing of the lawsuit.
After a hearing on the motion for class certification, the trial court granted
the motion and certified the following class definition:
All ship physicians of [the Cruise Line] who worked during the time
period of September 17, 2004, to December 31, 2009, and had
contracts that provided for payment based upon a commission on total
medical revenue without a specific exclusion for medication/medicine
that were not paid a percentage of the medication/medicine sales.
This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
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“[A]n appellate court reviews a trial court’s grant of class certification for an
abuse of discretion.” Sosa v. Safeway Premium Fin. Co., 73 So. 3d 91, 102 (Fla.
2011). Of course, that discretion is to be applied within the structure of rule 1.220.
Id. at 103. At the class certification stage, the inquiry does not focus on whether
the class representatives will prevail at trial. Id. at 105. “Instead, the focus is on
whether a litigant’s claim is suited for class certification and whether the proposed
class provides a superior method for the fair and efficient adjudication of the
controversy.” Porsche Cars N. Am., Inc. v. Diamond, 140 So. 3d 1090, 1095 (Fla.
3d DCA 2014) (quotations and citation omitted). “However, if consequential to its
consideration of whether to certify a class, a trial court may consider evidence on
the merits of the case as it applies to the class certification requirements.” Sosa, 73
So. 3d at 105.
The prerequisites to class certification are well known: numerosity;
commonality; typicality; and adequate representation. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.220(a). In
addition to meeting these threshold requirements, the class must fall within one of
the three different types of class actions established in rule 1.220(b). Sosa, 73 So.
3d at 106; Diamond, 140 So. 3d at 1095.
This case was plead as a (b)(3) class action. “In a (b)(3) class action, not all
issues of fact and law are common, but common issues predominate over
individual issues.” Id. at 1095-96 (citing Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.220(b)(3)). This occurs
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“when, considering both the rights and duties of the class members, the proof
offered by the class representatives will necessarily prove or disprove the cases of
the absent class members.” Id. at 1096. As the Florida Supreme Court explained in
Sosa:
[A] class representative establishes predominance if he or she
demonstrates a reasonable methodology for generalized proof of
class-wide impact. A class representative accomplishes this if he or
she, by proving his or her own individual case, necessarily proves the
cases of the other class members.
73 So. 3d at 112 (internal citation omitted). The Court added that the class
representative’s case must not merely raise a common question; the proof of the
class representative’s case must also “answer the question.” Diamond, 140 So. 3d
at 1096 (citing Sosa, 73 So. 3d at 111). The United States Supreme Court has
echoed this sentiment:
What matters to class certification . . . is not the raising of common
‘questions’—even in droves—but, rather the capacity of a classwide
proceeding to generate common answers apt to drive the resolution of
the litigation. Dissimilarities within the proposed class are what have
the potential to impede the generation of common answers.
Wal–Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 131 S. Ct. 2541, 2551 (2011) (citation omitted).
In this case, common issues predominate over individual ones. This is not a
case where the class members seek commissions or bonuses based upon unwritten
contracts with potentially different terms for different class members. See, e.g.,
InPhyNet Contracting Servs., Inc. v. Soria, 33 So. 3d 766, 773 (Fla. 4th DCA
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2010) (holding common issues did not predominate over individual issues in an
action against a staffing agency for failure to pay bonuses, where no written
statement of obligation existed). Nor is this a case where the class members failed
to allege the existence of a common contract under which the company employed
all class members. See, e.g., Vega v. T-Mobile USA, Inc., 564 F.3d 1256, 1272
(11th Cir. 2009).
Instead, here, the breach of contract claim is based on the Cruise Line’s
refusal to pay the class members who were the beneficiaries of the identical written
contractual provision. The case poses the same basic legal question for all class
members: whether, according to the signed contracts, the Doctors’ commissions
should be based on total medical revenue, or whether the revenue from the sale of
mediations should be excluded. The answer to this question will essentially resolve
the core dispute between the Cruise Line and the class members.
Of course, individual issues remain. The damage calculation, for example,
will be different for each class member, although it appears the same, mechanical
method can be used to calculate the class member’s damages. In these
circumstances, individual damage calculations do not predominate over the
common issue of liability under the contract. See Morgan v. Coats, 33 So. 3d 59,
66 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010) (“[A]lthough there will be some factual variations among
the claims of each class member, those variations go to the determination of each
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class member’s damages rather than to the elements of the claims. The actual
claims are based on the same legal theories and are based on the same course of
conduct by the sheriff.”). Likewise, if questions of waiver and awareness of the
existence of their contractual right to the commission exist for individual class
members (and we are not clear how those issues serve in this case to defeat a
contractual claim), those issues can be resolved expeditiously within the context of
the class action in the same manner that individual damages are resolved. Those
individual issues do not stop the interpretation of the core contractual provision
from predominating here. See Sosa, 73 So. 3d at 111 (“Florida courts have held
that common questions of fact predominate when the defendant acts toward the
class members in a similar or common way.”).
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s decision to certify the class.
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