Please E-mail suggested additions, comments and/or corrections to Kent@MoreLaw.Com.

Help support the publication of case reports on MoreLaw

Date: 10-25-2018

Case Style:

Garcia-Mathies Interiors, Inc. vs. Antonio Peré and Elizabeth Peré

Case Number: 3D17-882

Judge: Before LOGUE, LUCK and LINDSEY, JJ. PER CURIAM

Court: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Plaintiff's Attorney: Alejandro Brito
Mikhael Bortz

Defendant's Attorney: W. Steven Adams, Matthew L. Jones, and Jorge E. Porro

Description:



Sooner Cannabis Consultants
Click Here For Expert Help

918-960-5038




The Peres hired GM Interiors to design and decorate their new home. But
when GM Interiors did not complete the job in three months as promised, and
inflated their bills, the Peres sued for fraudulent inducement, fraud, unjust
enrichment, accounting, civil theft, and breach of contract.
In their first request for production, the Peres requested that GM Interiors
“[p]roduce any and all accounting spreadsheets, in native format of whatever
electronic software was utilized” relating to the design and decoration of their
home. GM Interiors responded to the request, but the Peres, believing they did not
receive the accounting spreadsheets in native format, filed a motion to compel.
The trial court held a hearing on the motion, and ordered the Peres to “have their
expert accountant identify the necessary accounting documents within the next 60
days.” Any “[n]on objected [to] documents [were to] be produced within the 60
days.”
The Peres’ expert accountant requested GM Interiors’ “[a]ccounting records
in native format of whichever electronic software was utilized (e.g. Quickbooks).”
But after the sixty days came and went, the Peres again moved to compel and
2
sought sanctions (the motion was amended twice and supplemented), alleging that
they did not receive the accounting records in native format and GM Interiors had
altered the records. The trial court heard the amended and supplemented motion to
compel, and ordered that GM Interiors had “24 hours to produce a copy of
everything – all that raw data that’s on that server for [the Peres’] inspection.”
Still believing after the twenty four hours that they did not receive all the
accounting records, and that GM Interiors had altered the records, the Peres moved
for sanctions based on spoliation (the motion was later supplemented). The trial
court held a three-day evidentiary hearing on the various sanctions motions. On
the first day, the Peres had their accounting expert testify. On the second day, GM
Interiors continued its cross-examination of the Peres’ expert. The hearing was
reset for a third day so that GM Interiors could put on its case.
Between the second and third day of hearings, GM Interiors sent the Peres
an e-mail attachment with what it said was “previously produced” documents. The
Peres believed that new, never produced documents were in the attachment. At the
beginning of the third day of the evidentiary hearing, the Peres raised the issue of
the new documents with the trial court, and this is what happened:
The court: ….I don’t understand what the problem is here, and I don’t understand why you would have to give somebody a new PDF or an old PDF production for today’s hearing if you had previously done that. Why would you need to do that? Why didn’t you say, here, I’m going to give
3
you everything I gave you before? Why did you pick this and then use the curious – to me curious – phrase, that was previously given to you. You know what that sounds like to me? I didn’t give it to you. I’m going to cover my derriere by saying that I gave it to you before.
[GM Interiors]: In August, I may have missed one.
The court: Oh.
[GM Interiors]: But I gave the hard – the native versions is here, Judge.
The court: Listen –
[The Peres]: I was –
The court: – don’t dig yourself deeper. Do yourself a favor. Now it’s starting to change. I’m going to grant your motion.
[The Peres]: Thank you, Your Honor.
[GM Interiors]: Judge, please, for the record. I need to put evidence on the record.
The court: You can have access to the record. John, take what he says down.
[The Peres]: Your Honor, we’ll submit an order for your consideration.
The court: Okay.
(The [judge] exited the courtroom)
After the hearing, the trial court entered its order concluding that GM
Interiors engaged in “bad faith, constant, deliberate, and willful disregard or gross
4
indifference to [the] Court’s Orders, the several discovery violations, and [the]
intentional destruction, alteration, and/or concealment of evidence.” Based on
“governing case law, Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.380(b)(2)(C), and [the]
Court’s inherent authority,” the trial court struck GM Interiors’ pleadings and
entered judgment for the Peres.
Discussion
GM Interiors contends on appeal that the trial court erred in striking its
pleadings without giving it the opportunity to present rebuttal evidence. We agree.
A party must be afforded an opportunity to be heard before a trial court
strikes the party’s pleadings as a sanction for a discovery violation.1 “This
opportunity to be heard must include the opportunity to present evidence of
extenuating and/or mitigating circumstances, which might explain the failure to
comply with the court’s discovery order or the opposing party’s discovery
1 The Florida Supreme Court rejected the argument that a trial court abuses its discretion “by not conducting an evidentiary hearing prior to dismissing the case” as a sanction for a discovery violation. Ham v. Dunmire, 891 So. 2d 492, 500 (Fla. 2004). Its prior cases, the Court said, did not require “a complete formal evidentiary hearing.” Id. But the sanctioned party must be given notice that its pleadings may be stricken, and an opportunity to be heard before they are. See Franchi v. Shapiro, 650 So. 2d 161, 162 (Fla. 3d DCA 1995) (“Before this ultimate sanction can be entered, however, a party must be given notice and an opportunity to be heard.”); cf. Ham, 891 So. 2d at 500 (“As a threshold matter, the trial court did conduct a telephonic hearing on All American’s motion for sanctions. According to the trial court, both parties ‘elected’ to attend the hearing by telephone.”). While the trial court has discretion in how it gives the sanctioned party an opportunity to be heard, the opportunity must be given. Here, the trial court chose to have an evidentiary hearing.
5
request.” Franchi, 650 So. 2d at 162; see also Celebrity Cruises, Inc. v. Fernandes,
149 So. 3d 744, 752 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014) (reversing, in part, because party lacked
an opportunity to present evidence on the issue before sanctions were imposed).
GM Interiors was deprived of the opportunity to be heard. The trial court set
an evidentiary hearing to decide whether to impose sanctions. As the trial court
explained at the end of the first day, “the sanction that you’re asking me to impose
is the most severe sanction . . . that I can impose. So therefore, I am going to try to
bend backwards so that [GM Interiors] is satisfied that [it] has been heard here.”
At the end of the second day, when the trial court had to turn to another matter on
its docket, it instructed GM Interiors to set aside a full day to present its case. But
when the day came, and before GM Interiors could present its case, the trial court
granted the sanctions motions, struck GM Interiors’ pleadings, and entered
judgment against it. GM Interiors was not even allowed to proffer to the trial court
what it would have proven because the trial court walked off the bench.
We find Martinez v. Bank of New York Mellon, 198 So. 3d 911 (Fla. 3d
DCA 2016) factually similar and instructive here. Martinez was a foreclosure
case. During the bank’s case in chief at the bench trial, the trial court struck the
borrower’s pleadings and entered judgment for the bank as a sanction because the
borrower lied and committed perjury. Id. at 912-13. The borrower “objected and
requested an opportunity to proffer for the record his objections and position in the
6
case,” but the trial court “cut him off and would not allow counsel to finish his
proffer.” Id. at 913 We reversed, in part, because “the trial court’s refusal to allow
[the borrower’s] counsel to call [the borrower] or any other witnesses to the stand
regarding the ‘lies and perjury’ his client allegedly committed, or even to allow
counsel to make a complete proffer to the court, was a denial of due process.” Id.
at 914; see also Kilnapp v. Kilnapp, 140 So. 3d 1051, 1054 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014)
(reversing because party was denied the opportunity to be heard where “trial court
ended the hearing before the husband had the opportunity to call the wife or his
forensic certified public accountant, who had already been sworn in by the court to
testify”).

Outcome: GM Interiors was given the same treatment as the borrower in Martinez, and
we reach the same result. The order striking its pleadings and entering judgment
against it is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings on the
sanctions motions to give GM Interiors an opportunity to be heard. Sanctions
(including the striking of GM Interiors’ pleadings) may be appropriate – we
express no opinion one way or the other – but they can only be imposed after both
parties have been given the opportunity to present their case.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.

Plaintiff's Experts:

Defendant's Experts:

Comments:



Find a Lawyer

Subject:
City:
State:
 

Find a Case

Subject:
County:
State: