Case File
efta-efta01187978DOJ Data Set 9OtherHaddad, Tonja 1/1212013
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 9
Reference
efta-efta01187978
Pages
3
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available
Extracted Text (OCR)
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Haddad, Tonja 1/1212013
For Educational Use Only
Donahue v. Hebert, 355 So.2d 1264 (1978)
355 So.2d 1264
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Richard V. DONAHUE, Appellant,
v.
Howard N. HEBERT, Appellee.
No. m888. I March 14, 1978.
Defendant in libel suit objected to interrogatories directed
to him. The Circuit Court for Brevard County, Virgil B.
Conkling, J., denied defendant's
objections, and
defendant sought review by interlocutory appeal. The
District Court of Appeal, Downey, J., held that: (I) order
denying objections to interrogatories was not reviewable
by interlocutory appeal, but would be treated as petition
for writ of certiorari, and (2) petition for writ of certiorari
filed by defendant seeking review of order denying his
objections to ten interrogatories relating to his interest in
any partnerships, joint ventures, or single proprietorships
during previous five years, his income, bank accounts,
safety depositories and transfers of property, all within
previous three years, and present ownership of real and
personal property and value thereof, would be denied.
Petition denied.
West Headnotes (4)
Itl
Appeal and Error
4-Relating to Witnesses, Depositions, Evidence,
or Discovery
Order denying objections to interrogatories in
action formerly cognizable at law is not
reviewable by interlocutory appeal.
I Cases that cite this headnote
Pretrial Procedure
4-Objections and Protective Orders
As regards discovery of financial resources of
defendant in libel suit when punitive damages
are properly sought, trial court should always be
sensitive to protection of party from harassment
and from overly burdensome inquiry.
2 Cases that cite this headnote
111
Pretrial Procedure
4-Particular Subjects of Disclosure
In libel suit in which punitive damages were
sought, discovery pertaining to the defendant's
financial affairs for the three previous years was
a reasonable period and allowing inquiry for the
previous five years as to business relationships
such as sole proprietorships, partnerships and
joint ventures was not an abuse of discretion.
2 Cases that cite this headnote
Pretrial Procedure
4-Particular Subjects of Disclosure
Discovery of financial affairs of a defendant
against whom punitive damage] is sought may
not be restricted to the furnishing of a financial
statement sworn to by the party furnishing it;
receding from Gamer v. Keen, 347 So.2d 663.
3 Cases that cite this headnote
Attorneys and Law Firms
*1264 William H. Harrell, of Reinman, Harrell &
Silberhorn, Melbourne, for appellant.
William C. Potter, of Nabors, Potter, McClelland &
Griffith, Melbourne, for appellee.
WestlawNext © 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
1
EFTA01187978
Haddad, Tonja 1/12/2013
For Educational Use Only
Donahue v. Hebert, 355 So.2d 1264 (1978)
Opinion
DOWNEY, Judge.
In Appellant seeks review by interlocutory appeal of an
order denying his objections to interrogatories directed to
him in a libel suit. Such an order in an action formerly
cognizable at law is not reviewable by interlocutory
appeal, but we will treat the matter as a Petition for Writ
of Certiorari. Obviously, if Donahue answers the
interrogatories,
the
departure
from
the
essential
requirements of law, if such there be, cannot be rectified
upon plenary appeal from the final judgment. Therefore,
common law certiorari is the appropriate remedy.
Appellee Hebert sued appellant Donahue for libel. After
the cause was at issue Hebert directed sixteen
interrogatories to Donahue, who answered six of them
and objected to the other ten. The interrogatories to which
Donahue objected related to the discovery of his financial
resources, particularly to his 1) interests in any
partnerships, joint ventures, or single proprietorships
during the previous five years; 2) his income, bank
accounts, safety depositories and transfers of property, all
within the previous three years, and 3) present ownership
of real and personal property and the value thereof.
*1265 Donahue concedes that the financial resources of a
defendant in a libel suit are an appropriate subject of
discovery when punitive damages are properly sought.
He also recognizes the broad discretion that inheres in the
trial court in determining the perimeters of discovery, and
that the exercise of that discretion will not be disturbed
absent a clear abuse thereof. But Donahue seems to
contend that when a defendant states his net worth under
oath, or verifies a statement of his assets and liabilities,
the inquiry into his finances must end. He phrases this
contention in his brief as follows:
. . . The Appellant would argue that by providing a
financial statement executed under oath he has provided a
'properly authenticated financial statement' in accordance
with the principles as set forth in Tallahassee Democrat,
Inc., supra. It should be presumed that when a citizen of
the United States files with a court a sworn statement that
he is telling the truth. It should not be a requirement that
the Appellant not only provide a sworn financial
statement, but, in addition, disclose all of his business
activities so that the Appellee can investigate him and
determine whether or not he is telling the truth. Such a
procedure may be entirely appropriate in a post-judgment
discovery proceeding. However, prior to judgment, the
liability, if any, of the defendant has not even been
established. The burden of proving any liability is, of
course, on the Appellee and the Appellant carries with
him, therefore, a presumption that he is not guilty of libel.
The Appellee is seeking information to verify the
Appellant's statement of financial net worth prior to even
establishing liability on the part of the Appellant, and is,
therefore, 'placing the cart before the horse.' "
We suggest the foregoing statement misses the mark.
However, there seems to be some confusion as to the
proper direction and scope of discovery in determining
the financial resources of a party in a law suit. Some
authorities seem to suggest that a party can simply furnish
a sworn statement of his current assets and liabilities to
his opponent and thereby cut off any further aggressive
inquiry into his true financial capacity to respond. We
know from experience that one party frequently
minimizes his financial ability to respond when it is an
issue in a law suit, while the other party often has a
tendency to inflate that same financial ability. Even under
oath a party often seems to view another party's financial
resources as great or small in direct proportion to the
benefit which will accrue to that party. Thus, it is the
height of naivete to suggest that a sworn statement of
one's net worth must be accepted as the final word on that
important subject. The search for forgotten or hidden
assets is of the essence of the discovery process. The
whereabouts of assets disclosed by a recent income tax
return, or shown on a recent financial statement furnished
in another situation when the current litigation was not
envisioned is very definitely appropriate inquiry as is the
bona fides of the recent disposition of assets. These are
routine inquiries for every knowledgeable trial lawyer in
cases in which the financial resources of a party is a
relevant issue. One must be afforded reasonable latitude
in double and cross checking a party's statements about
his current net worth. This, of course, can be done by
reviewing income tax returns, recent financial statements,
and the myriad of other sources of financial information.
As Judge Walden put it, speaking for this court in
International Union of Operating Engineers v. Lassiter.
295 So.2d 634 (Fla. 4th DCA 1974); rev'd on other
grounds 314 So.2d 761 (FIa.1975):
"And now back to the term 'financial
resources'
contained
in
the
instruction. As stated, it is the broader
concept and, depending upon the
circumstances, there may well be
WestlawNext © 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S Government Works.
2
EFTA01187979
Haddad, Tonja 1/12/2013
For Educational Use Only
Donahue v. Hebert, 355 So.2d 1264 (1978)
additional proofs which would be
helpful to the jury and court, which
proofs would not be necessarily
included in a defendant's balance
sheet. Thus, the term gives the trial
judge a more liberal standard to
determine whether a given proffer of
evidence is relevant and material. For
instance, there could well be, and
properly so, proof *1266 as to
income,
cash
flow,
expenses,
anticipated
income,
anticipated
diminutions of income, anticipated
casualties and, as in the instant case,
proofs as to assessments of the
membership
possibilities.
These
items, among other of like moment,
would be receivable in addition to net
worth figures under the scope of
financial
resources. All of this
material, including the reflection of
net worth, goes to make up a
defendant's financial resources which
the jury is entitled to consider in
assessing
_tt ive
damages
as
commanded in Florida Standard Jury
Instruction 6.12."
121
131 Among the various sources available to the
discoverer are those which Hebert inquired about: bank
accounts, depositories, present and recent ownership of
property and its value, and any interests in various
business arrangements. Inquiry pertaining to the three
previous years is certainly a reasonable period and we
cannot say that allowing inquiry for the previous five
years as to the business relationships such as sole
proprietorships, partnerships and joint ventures is an
abuse of discretion. On the other hand, the trial court
should always be sensitive to the protection of a party
from harassment and from an overly burdensome inquiry.
19 In view of the foregoing, if the case of Tallahassee
Democrat, Inc. v. Pogue, 280 So.2d 512 (Fla. 1st DCA
1973), can be read to restrict discovery in cases of this
nature to the furnishing of a financial statement sworn to
by the party furnishing it, we strongly disagree. Likewise,
to the extent that our case of Gamer v. Keen, 347 So.2d
663 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977), conflicts with what is said here,
we recede therefrom.
Accordingly, the Petition for Writ of Certiorari is denied.
ANSTEAD and DAUKSCH, JJ., concur.
End of Document
C 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
WestlawNext © 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
3
EFTA01187980
Technical Artifacts (1)
View in Artifacts BrowserEmail addresses, URLs, phone numbers, and other technical indicators extracted from this document.
Wire Ref
reflectionForum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.