DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
FOURTH DISTRICT
SAFECO INSURANCE COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, an Illinois corporation,
Appellant,
v.
REBECCA L. HEIKKA and JOSEPH ANTHONY HERNANDEZ,
Appellees.
No. 4D18-2971
[March 4, 2020]
Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit,
Broward County; Carlos A. Rodriguez, Judge; L.T. Case No. 09-39965 14.
Anthony J. Russo of Butler Weihmuller Katz Craig LLP, Tampa, for
appellant.
Kenneth D. Cooper, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee Rebecca Heikka.
GERBER, J.
The insurer appeals from the circuit court’s final order awarding the
plaintiff $300,000 as a second sanction under section 57.105, Florida
Statutes (2017) (“the second fees order”), following an earlier section
57.105 order awarding the plaintiff’s reasonable attorney’s fees of
$341,775 (“the first fees order”). The insurer argues the circuit court’s
first fees order already compensated the plaintiff for her reasonable
attorney’s fees incurred in litigating the insurer’s declaratory judgment
action. However, the insurer argues, the circuit court’s second fees order
awards the plaintiff not only for her $341,775 in reasonable attorney’s
fees, but an additional punitive amount of $300,000 based on the insurer’s
attorneys’ hours expended, which section 57.105 does not authorize.
We agree with the insurer’s argument. While authority exists for a
court to consider the non-movant’s attorneys’ hours expended in
determining the reasonableness of the movant’s attorney’s fees, no
authority exists under section 57.105 for a court to award the movant not
only for the movant’s reasonable attorneys’ fees, but an additional punitive
amount, such as an amount equivalent to the non-movant’s attorneys’
hours expended, as occurred here.
Thus, we reverse those portions of the second fees order which awarded
the plaintiff the additional $300,000 as a sanction under section 57.105.
We present this opinion in the following sections:
1. The underlying negligence action;
2. The separate declaratory judgment action;
3. The plaintiff’s first motion for attorney’s fees;
4. The first fees order;
5. The insurer’s appeal of the first fees order;
6. The insurer’s post-mandate motions;
7. The circuit court’s hearing on the insurer’s post-mandate motion;
8. The second fees order;
9. The parties’ arguments on appeal of the second fees order; and
10. Our review of the second fees order.
1. The Underlying Negligence Action
The plaintiff was involved in a car accident with Joseph Anthony
Hernandez (“the defendant”). The plaintiff sued the defendant for the
injuries she sustained in the car accident. The insurer was not named as
a party in the negligence action, but the insurer provided legal
representation for the defendant.
Shortly after the plaintiff sued the defendant, the parties engaged in
settlement discussions. The defendant and the insurer believed they
reached a settlement with the plaintiff. However, the plaintiff disagreed.
The defendant filed a motion to enforce the purported settlement
agreement. The defendant also moved for summary judgment, arguing
that all claims for compensatory damages had been settled. Following an
evidentiary hearing, the circuit court denied both motions.
2. The Separate Declaratory Judgment Action
The defendant and the insurer then filed a separate declaratory
judgment action against the plaintiff before a different circuit court judge.
The defendant and the insurer sought a declaration of their rights as to
the purported settlement agreement.
The plaintiff moved to dismiss the complaint with prejudice. The
plaintiff argued that the defendant and the insurer were forum shopping
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before a different circuit court judge to get a second bite of the apple to
enforce the purported settlement agreement.
The plaintiff later moved for summary judgment in the declaratory
judgment action, seeking a ruling that no settlement agreement was
reached. The defendant and the insurer cross-moved for summary
judgment, seeking a ruling that the plaintiff had settled all claims against
the defendant and the insurer.
Following a hearing on the competing motions, the circuit court entered
an order granting the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment in the
declaratory judgment action, finding that no settlement agreement was
reached. In that order, the circuit court reserved jurisdiction to award the
plaintiff’s attorney’s fees.
3. The Plaintiff’s First Motion for Attorney’s Fees
The plaintiff filed a motion to recover her attorney’s fees from the
insurer pursuant to sections 627.428 and 57.105, Florida Statutes (2017).
The insurer responded that the plaintiff was not entitled to fees under
either section 627.428 or section 57.105. Regarding section 627.428, the
insurer argued that because the plaintiff was not a party to the insurance
contract, she had no right to fees under section 627.428. Regarding
section 57.105, the insurer argued the plaintiff failed to provide the
required 21-day safe harbor letter which that statute requires.
The circuit court held a non-evidentiary hearing on the motion.
Regarding section 627.428, the circuit court found the plaintiff was
entitled to recover her attorney’s fees from the insurer despite the lack of
privity. Regarding section 57.105, the circuit court found the insurer’s
decision to relitigate the settlement issue was frivolous. However, the
circuit court also found the plaintiff failed to comply with section 57.105’s
safe harbor requirements. To circumvent the safe harbor defect, the
circuit court held, on its own motion, it would award the plaintiff attorney’s
fees under section 57.105, in addition to section 627.428.
4. The First Fees Order
The circuit court held an evidentiary hearing on the plaintiff’s attorney’s
fees amount. The plaintiff’s attorney ultimately claimed $341,775 in
attorney’s fees (683.51 hours billed at $500 per hour). The plaintiff also
requested $24,750 in expert witness fees.
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Following the hearing, the circuit court entered the first fees order,
finding that the plaintiff’s attorney had reasonably expended 683.51 hours
at a reasonable hourly rate of $500 for a total of $341,775, plus $20,000
in expert witness fees, for a total of $361,775. In the order, the circuit
court noted “the fees awarded are warranted both by Florida Statute
627.428 and 57.105.” At the end of the order, the circuit court also stated:
The Court reserves jurisdiction to award an additional
sanction of 600 hours which corresponds to the additional
attorney hours that [the insurer] expended on this Rambo type
litigation of the settlement issue in the 2009 case.
(emphasis added). At a later hearing, the circuit court clarified that the
reservation of jurisdiction “didn’t say in there that . . . [the plaintiff’s
attorney] is entitled to [the additional sanction].”
5. The Insurer’s Appeal of the First Fees Order
The insurer appealed the circuit court’s first fees order to this court.
The insurer argued, in pertinent part: (1) the circuit court erred in
awarding the plaintiff attorney’s fees under section 627.428 because the
plaintiff was not a party to the insurance contract; (2) the circuit court
erred in awarding the plaintiff attorney’s fees under section 57.105
because the plaintiff failed to provide the required 21-day safe harbor letter
which section 57.105 requires; (3) the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to
award attorney’s fees on its own motion under section 57.105; and (4) the
circuit court’s award of $361,775 was excessive and not supported by
competent substantial evidence.
We affirmed the first fees order, but only under section 57.105.
Hernandez v. Heikka, 240 So. 3d 33 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018). Specifically, our
one-paragraph opinion stated:
[The insurer] appeals from a final judgment awarding [the
plaintiff] $361,775 in attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to
section 627.428, Florida Statutes (2017), and as a sanction
under section 57.105, Florida Statutes (2017). Although we
agree with [the insurer] that the trial court erred in awarding
fees under section 627.428, the error was harmless because
the trial court properly awarded fees under section 57.105.
We accordingly affirm without further comment.
Id. at 33.
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6. The Insurer’s Post-Mandate Motions
After our mandate issued, the insurer mailed the plaintiff’s attorney a
check for $384,551.90. The amount represented the first fees order’s
$361,775 principal plus the insurer’s calculation of post-judgment
interest.
The plaintiff’s attorney did not accept the insurer’s check. Instead, the
plaintiff’s attorney demanded that the insurer pay not only the $361,775
and post-judgment interest, but also the additional $300,000 arising from
the first fees order’s reservation of jurisdiction based on the 600 hours
which the insurer’s attorneys expended.
In response, the insurer filed a motion for an order determining amount
due to satisfy the first fees order. The insurer also filed in this court a
motion to enforce our mandate, arguing that the circuit court was without
power to add to the first fees order. We issued an order denying the
insurer’s motion “without prejudice to file a direct appeal.”
7. The Circuit Court Hearing on the Insurer’s Post-Mandate Motion
At the circuit court hearing on the insurer’s post-mandate motion, the
following discussion occurred:
[COURT] (to the plaintiff’s two attorneys): [G]iven the
appellate opinion that the only entitlement here was based on
57.105, I think it renders that 600 hours, additional hours moot
at this point because they already imposed the sanction based
on the award of fees. In other words, if they award more than
600 hours, the only possibilities of that amount is as a
sanction. I can’t go and sanction them again. I mean, there
was no entitlement pursuant to 627.428. . . .
....
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #1]: . . . It seemed to me that what
you were saying in [the first fees order] is under 57.105, you
have the authority to grant sanctions.
[COURT]: In addition to the hours.
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #1]: Now, you did do that in what I
would suggest is a very clear fashion. You said the Court
reserved jurisdiction to award, not consider, but to award and
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then that additional sanctions, 600 hours. You laid it out in
a clear and finite way. You established the hourly rate and
then you established the additional sanctions, which you
reserved jurisdiction to award. The defendant didn’t move to
clarify that at any time prior to appealing it. If they were
confused, if they thought it was ambiguous, if they were
unsure, they had the opportunity to do that. They didn’t do
that. Instead, they appealed [the first fees order] in toto. In
fact, they argued in their reply brief, they argued that the
Court erred in reserving jurisdiction to award this amount of
money. That was before the appellate court. The appellate
court affirmed in all respects, the amount of the sanctions
under 57.105. I think it would be wholly unfair to [the
plaintiff’s attorneys] at this point now to say even though [the
insurer] appealed and you were affirmed in awarding this, that
you’re not going to award it now and I think that your order is
clear and it was appealed and we have the ruling and you’ve
read it.
[COURT]: For the record, 600 hours at $500-per-hour would
be $300,000. Is my math right?
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #1]: Yes Judge. It’s simple math.
Even I can do that in my head, but the 4th said here that they
agreed that 627.428 wasn’t the appropriate location to find for
the justification to award sanctions, but it was harmless
because the trial court properly awarded fees under Section
57.105. . . . I don’t think there’s anything more to discuss.
[The insurer] had the opportunity to raise it, to clarify it, to
argue it more in their brief. For whatever reason they didn’t.
The 4th considered it and they’ve affirmed you. So I don’t
think, Judge, it would be fair at this point or legally
appropriate to say even though I’ve reserved jurisdiction to
award it, now I’m not going to. . . . [W]hen you read [the first
fees order], the plain meaning of it I think is clear. Obviously
you’re the drafter.
[COURT]: To reserve jurisdiction to award, that doesn’t
necessarily mean that I award it. It means that I found that
to be a reasonable sanction and that I reserve jurisdiction to
impose it at a later hearing. However, that was based upon
my finding that he was entitled to more than 600 hours based
on 627.428 and 57.105. . . . I was thinking hey, he had these
numbers of hours which are recoverable at the hourly rate of
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$500-per-hour and this is his actual time and I’m going to find
he’s entitled to both under 627.428 and 57.105. Well, the
appellate court said no, he’s not entitled. So the only way he
could be entitled to the money he received or will shortly
receive plus the interest he’s going to receive is going to be
pursuant to the sanctions statute. So it would be unfair for
me to come back now and say you know what, the sanctions
have been imposed of his actual time spent. Now let me just
throw another 600 hours on top of it and say, you know, there’s
another $300,000 because the only basis for the fees he’s
gotten is as a sanction.
....
So I’m not going to go back and double up on the sanctions at
this point. I’m just not going to do it. I think the way that the
appellate court decided the case basically nullified the sanction
of it because the sanction has already been awarded.
....
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #2]: Well wait. You’re guessing at
what the 4th District did. You’re guessing. [The insurer’s
attorney is] guessing. He’s arguing what the 4th District did.
[COURT]: So how [does the plaintiff] get it up on appeal? I
know [the plaintiff’s] position. Award the $300,000 [to the
plaintiff] and let [the insurer] appeal.
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #1]: And we would argue that it was
appealed [by the insurer as part of the first fees order].
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY #2]: It’s the law of the case.
....
[COURT]: Let me mull it over some more.
(emphasis added).
8. The Second Fees Order
Despite the circuit court’s trepidation expressed during the hearing, the
circuit court ultimately entered the second fees order in the plaintiff’s favor
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for not only the $361,775 and post-judgment interest, but also the
additional $300,000 arising from the first fees order’s reservation of
jurisdiction based on the 600 hours which the insurer’s attorneys
expended. Specifically, the order stated, in pertinent part:
1. The history of this case as reflected in the [first fees order]
as affirmed, states that the law of the case is that [the insurer]
for years has conducted itself through counsel in raising
unsupported, frivolous defenses ad nauseam.
2. Apparently, [the insurer] has not conceded that it has been
engaged in Rambo style litigation and the conduct continues
through multiple post judgment hearings. . . . The hearing
today and others since the judgment continue to involve
incredibly disingenuous, litigious conduct. The Court is not
going to impose any additional sanctions but is simply going
to resolve the issue today based on the prior final judgment,
the evidence received today on the interest calculation from
Plaintiff’s CPA expert . . . and after full consideration of all
counsels’ argument and the case law presented.
....
4. The $341,775.00 amount plus pre and post judgment
interest to date is $430,397.52. The $1,863.01 costs plus
interest is $2,346.09. The $20,000 expert fee plus post
judgment is $21,703.63. The Sec. 57.105 Florida Statutes
sanctions found reasonable by the Court in the final judgment,
600 hours at the hourly rate found by the Court of $500.00, is
the amount of $300,000.00. . . .
(emphasis added).
9. The Parties’ Arguments on Appeal of the Second Fees Order
This appeal of the second fees order followed. The insurer primarily
argues the circuit court’s first fees order already compensated the plaintiff
for the reasonable attorney’s fees which she incurred litigating the
insurer’s declaratory judgment action. However, the insurer argues, the
circuit court’s second fees order awards the plaintiff not only for her
reasonable attorney’s fees, but for an additional punitive amount
equivalent to the insurer’s attorneys’ hours expended, which section
57.105 does not authorize.
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The insurer also argues the circuit court’s reservation of jurisdiction in
the first fees order was not a final appealable order. Thus, the insurer
argues, it did not waive its right to challenge the second fees order by not
challenging the reservation of jurisdiction in its appeal from the first fees
order.
The plaintiff responds that the second fees order was permissible under
section 57.105. The plaintiff also responds that the circuit court’s
reservation of jurisdiction in the first fees order was an appealable order,
which the insurer waived by not challenging the reservation of jurisdiction
in its appeal from the first fees order. The plaintiff further responds that
the first fees order, having been affirmed in Hernandez, now controls this
case under the law of the case doctrine.
10. Our Review of the Second Fees Order
Our review is de novo. See Watson v. Stewart Tilghman Fox & Bianchi,
P.A., 195 So. 3d 1163, 1166 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (“Generally, the standard
of review of a trial court’s order awarding section 57.105(1) attorney’s fees
is abuse of discretion. However, to the extent a trial court’s order on fees
is based on an issue of law, this court applies de novo review.”) (citation
omitted); Kelly v. Bankunited, FSB, 159 So. 3d 403, 405 (Fla. 4th DCA
2015) (“Generally, a trial court’s ruling on a motion for attorneys’ fees is
reviewed for abuse of discretion; [h]owever, where entitlement depends on
the interpretation of a statute or contract the ruling is reviewed de novo.”)
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
The issue of law presented is whether, under section 57.105, a court
can award the movant not only for the movant’s reasonable attorneys’ fees,
but also an additional punitive amount, such as an amount equivalent to
the non-movant’s attorneys’ fees, as occurred here.
Our answer is no. The circuit court’s initial instinct as expressed
during the hearing, to not award the additional punitive amount under
section 57.105, would have been the correct decision. The circuit court’s
ultimate written decision to award the plaintiff not only her reasonable
attorneys’ fees, but also an additional punitive amount, here being the
equivalent to the insurer’s attorneys’ hours expended, was error.
Section 57.105(1), Florida Statutes (2017), provides in pertinent part:
Upon the court’s initiative or motion of any party, the court
shall award a reasonable attorney’s fee, including
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prejudgment interest, to be paid to the prevailing party in
equal amounts by the losing party and the losing party’s
attorney on any claim or defense at any time during a civil
proceeding or action in which the court finds that the losing
party or the losing party’s attorney knew or should have
known that a claim or defense when initially presented to the
court or at any time before trial:
(a) Was not supported by the material facts necessary to
establish the claim or defense; or
(b) Would not be supported by the application of then-
existing law to those material facts.
§ 57.105(1), Fla. Stat. (2017) (emphasis added).
As emphasized in the quoted statute above, this case turns on what is
a “reasonable attorney’s fee” as stated in section 57.105.
We are bound to follow our supreme court’s longstanding definition of
a “reasonable attorney’s fee” as set forth in Florida Patient’s Compensation
Fund v. Rowe, 472 So. 2d 1145 (Fla. 1985).
In Rowe, our supreme court adopted “the federal lodestar approach for
computing reasonable attorney fees.” Id. at 1146. The court held, in
pertinent part:
The first step in the lodestar process requires the court to
determine the number of hours reasonably expended on the
litigation. . . . To accurately assess the labor involved, the
attorney fee applicant should present records detailing the
amount of work performed. Counsel is expected, of course,
to claim only those hours that [counsel] could properly bill to
[the] client. . . .
The second half of the equation, which encompasses many
aspects of the representation, requires the court to determine
a reasonable hourly rate for the services. . . .
The number of hours reasonably expended, determined in
the first step, multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate,
determined in the second step, produces the lodestar, which
is an objective basis for the award of attorney fees. Once the
court arrives at the lodestar figure, it may add or subtract
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from the fee based upon [the contingent nature of the litigation
or the failure to prevail on a claim or claims].
....
In determining the hourly rate, the number of hours
reasonably expended, and the appropriateness of the
reduction or enhancement factors, the trial court must set
forth specific findings. If the court decides to adjust the
lodestar, it must state the grounds on which it justifies the
enhancement or reduction. In summary, in computing an
attorney fee, the trial judge should (1) determine the number
of hours reasonably expended on the litigation; (2) determine
the reasonable hourly rate for this type of litigation; (3)
multiply the result of (1) and (2); and, when appropriate, (4)
adjust the fee on the basis of the contingent nature of the
litigation or the failure to prevail on a claim or claims.
Id. at 1150-52 (emphasis added).
To be sure, our supreme court adopted the lodestar approach for
computing reasonable attorney’s fees in the context of a different statute
(former section 768.56 which provided for an award of a “reasonable
attorney’s fee” to the prevailing party in a medical malpractice action). Id.
at 1146. However, we are not aware of any authority restricting Rowe’s
lodestar approach for computing a “reasonable attorney’s fee” to any one
statute or subset of statutes.
Rather, we apply Rowe’s lodestar approach to section 57.105’s
reference to a “reasonable attorney’s fee” pursuant to the prior
construction canon. See Fla. Hwy. Patrol v. Jackson, 2020 WL 370366
(Fla. Jan. 23, 2020) (“The prior construction canon teaches that, when
judicial interpretations have settled the meaning of an existing statutory
provision, repetition of the same language in a new statute indicates, as a
general matter, the intent to incorporate its judicial interpretations as
well.”) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted); Antonin Scalia
and Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, 322
(2012) (under the prior construction canon, “[i]f a statute uses words or
phrases that have already received authoritative construction by the
jurisdiction’s court of last resort . . . they are to be understood according
to that construction.”).
Here, the first fees order properly applied Rowe’s lodestar approach to
compute the plaintiff’s reasonable attorney’s fee under section 57.105.
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The circuit court found the plaintiff’s attorney reasonably expended
683.51 hours at a reasonable hourly rate of $500 for a total of $341,775.
However, the circuit court’s second fees order, though ostensibly
applying a lodestar approach, multiplied the insurer’s attorney’s hours
expended (600 hours) times the plaintiff’s attorney’s reasonable hourly rate
($500 per hour) to award the plaintiff an additional $300,000 as a sanction
against the insurer under section 57.105. Neither section 57.105’s plain
language, nor any case interpreting section 57.105’s plain language,
provides for any such additional sanction.
It would have been permissible for the circuit court to have considered
the insurer’s attorneys’ hours expended in determining the
reasonableness of the plaintiff’s attorney’s fees in the first fees order. See
Paton v. GEICO Gen. Ins. Co., 190 So. 3d 1047, 1053 (Fla. 2016) (“We hold
that the hours expended by counsel for the defendant insurance company
in a contested claim for attorney’s fees . . . is relevant to the issue of the
reasonableness of time expended by counsel for the plaintiff . . . .”).
However, we know of no authority which would have permitted the circuit
court to have awarded the plaintiff not only her reasonable attorneys’ fees,
but also an additional punitive amount equivalent to the insurer’s
attorneys’ hours expended, as a sanction under section 57.105.
We also conclude the insurer did not waive its right to appeal the
second fees order by not challenging the reservation of jurisdiction in its
appeal from the first fees order. The law of the case doctrine does not
preclude the insurer’s appeal of the second fees order.
“The law-of-the-case doctrine is the long-established principle that the
questions of law decided on appeal to a court of ultimate resort must
govern the case in the same court and the trial court, through all
subsequent stages of the proceedings.” Delta Prop. Mgmt. v. Profile Invs.,
Inc., 87 So. 3d 765, 770 (Fla. 2012) (emphasis added; citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). “The law of the case doctrine applies only if the
defendant is raising the same legal issue and the issue was actually
decided on appeal.” Betty v. State, 7 So. 3d 586, 587 n.1 (Fla. 4th DCA
2009) (emphasis added).
The insurer’s challenge to the circuit court’s first fees order did not
identify the reservation of jurisdiction to award an additional amount as
an issue on appeal, and we did not decide the reservation of jurisdiction
issue in that appeal. Nor could we, as that portion of the first fees order
reserving jurisdiction to award an additional amount was not appealable
at that time. See Alexopoulos v. Gordon Hargrove & James, P.A., 109 So.
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3d 248, 250 (Fla. 4th DCA 2013) (“[O]rders awarding attorneys’ fees are
only final and therefore appealable once the trial court has set the amount
of those fees. An order merely finding entitlement to attorneys’ fees is a
non-final, non-appealable order.”) (emphasis in original). Only when the
plaintiff sought to invoke the court’s reservation of jurisdiction, leading to
the circuit court’s second fees order awarding the additional $300,000 to
the plaintiff, did the insurer have a basis to appeal from first fees order’s
reservation of jurisdiction.
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we reverse those portions of the second fees
order which awarded the plaintiff the additional $300,000 as a sanction
under section 57.105. We remand for the circuit court to enter an
amended second fees order which: (1) in paragraph 4, deletes the fourth
sentence which reads, “The Sec. 57.105 Florida Statutes sanctions found
reasonable by the Court in the final judgment, 600 hours at the hourly
rate found by the Court of $500.00, is the amount of $300,000.”; (2) deletes
the entire paragraph which reads, “CHECK NUMBER TWO: Safeco
Insurance Company of Illinois, aka Safeco Insurance Company of
Illinois, Inc., within 10 days shall tender payment to the Ken Cooper
Trust account in the amount of $301,500.00 [Remaining 57.105 sanction
plus the reasonable expert fee of $1,500 for CPA Michael Borkowski]”; and
(3) replaces that paragraph with “CHECK NUMBER TWO: Safeco
Insurance Company of Illinois, aka Safeco Insurance Company of
Illinois, Inc., within 10 days shall tender $1,500.00 to the Ken Cooper
Trust account as the reasonable expert fee for CPA Michael Borkowski.”
Other than the foregoing, and the date on which the amended second fees
order is entered, the remainder of the original second fees order shall not
be further amended.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
LEVINE, C.J., and MAY, J., concur.
* * *
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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