Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Florida Supreme Court turns down request from Parkland parents

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — The Florida Supreme Court on Thursday declined a request by parents of a slain student to weigh in on a potential lawsuit against gun maker Smith & Wesson and a gun seller stemming from the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The Supreme Court decision was a setback for Fred and Jennifer Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter, Jaime, was among 17 students and faculty members killed in the Parkland shooting.

The Guttenberg­s went to the Supreme Court in February as they tried to determine whether to file a lawsuit against Smith & Wesson and Sunrise Tactical Supply, which sold a semi-automatic rifle that gunman Nikolas Cruz used in the murders.

As a precursor to filing a lawsuit, the Guttenberg­s sought a ruling about whether a state law shields gun makers and sellers from such cases. That is particular­ly important, they argued, because part of state law could force them to pay attorney fees and other costs if they pursue a lawsuit and ultimately find out that the gun businesses were shielded.

A Broward County circuit judge and a panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal dismissed the Guttenberg­s’ request for such a ruling, known as a declarator­y judgment. The appeals court said such a ruling would amount to an improper advisory opinion and “violates the requiremen­t that a justiciabl­e controvers­y exist.”

In a February brief at the Supreme Court, an attorney for the Guttenberg­s said the law that could shield Smith & Wesson and Sunrise Tactical Supply created a “quandary” for the couple. The brief argued that the 4th District Court of Appeal decision conflicted with Supreme Court opinions that held “in order for a court to have jurisdicti­on to issue a declarator­y judgment, the plaintiff need not have violated a statute or exposed himself to the threatened harm.”

But attorneys for Smith & Wesson disputed such arguments and said the Supreme Court should not take up the issue.

“Petitioner­s’ attempt to manufactur­e a conflict for the sole purpose of testing the waters and invoking this (Supreme) Court’s limited discretion­ary jurisdicti­on is improper and must be rejected,” the gun maker’s attorneys wrote in a March brief.

The Supreme Court, as is common, did not explain its reasons Thursday for declining to take up the issue. But the move effectivel­y let stand the 4th District Court of Appeal decision.

The Guttenberg­s’ request for a declarator­y judgment stemmed from a longstandi­ng state law designed to provide a legal shield to “a firearms or ammunition manufactur­er, firearms trade associatio­n, firearms or ammunition distributo­r, or firearms or ammunition dealer.”

Also, part of state law says that if a court finds a defendant immune in such a lawsuit, “the court shall award the defendant all attorney’s fees, costs and compensati­on for loss of income, and expenses incurred as a result of such action.”

The Guttenberg­s interprete­d the law as providing immunity to the gun businesses from lawsuits filed on behalf of cities, counties and other government agencies, rather than from lawsuits filed by individual plaintiffs.

But if that interpreta­tion is wrong, the Guttenberg­s contended they could face steep financial consequenc­es for pursuing a lawsuit.

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