A&A Electric Services, Inc. v. Jurado

198 So. 3d 37
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 26, 2015
Docket2D14-905
StatusPublished

This text of 198 So. 3d 37 (A&A Electric Services, Inc. v. Jurado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A&A Electric Services, Inc. v. Jurado, 198 So. 3d 37 (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

A&A ELECTRIC SERVICES, INC., a ) Florida corporation, ) ) Appellant/Cross-Appellee, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D14-905 ) JAIME JURADO, ) ) Appellee/Cross-Appellant. ) )

Opinion filed August 26, 2015.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Herbert J. Baumann, Jr., Judge.

Brett D. Divers of Mills Paskert Divers, Tampa; and Luis Martinez-Monfort and Moein Marashi of Gardner Brewer Martinez- Monfort, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant/Cross- Appellee.

Laura H. Howard of Addison & Howard, P.A., Tampa, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

VILLANTI, Chief Judge.

A&A Electric Services, Inc., appeals the final judgment entered against it

and in favor of Jaime Jurado in this action arising out of an alleged joint venture

agreement. Jurado cross-appeals certain aspects of the final judgment. Because Jurado failed to introduce competent, substantial evidence to prove that a joint venture

existed between himself and A&A Electric, we reverse and remand for entry of final

judgment in favor of A&A Electric. This decision renders moot the remainder of the

arguments raised in both the appeal and cross-appeal.

The facts leading up to the dispute at hand are not directly relevant to the

issues presented but are necessary to an understanding of the relationships between

the parties and how the dispute between them arose. Jurado has been in the electrical

contracting business since 1967. After some time working as an employee of Electric

Machinery Enterprises, Inc. (EME), he eventually became its principal owner. In that

capacity, he became friends with Angel DeLaParte, who was the sole owner of A&A

Electric. Angel's son Andrew DeLaParte (DeLaParte) later took over as sole owner and

principal of A&A Electric.

In 2001, EME became embroiled in a dispute over certain work it

performed in Orlando, and this dispute led EME to incur serious financial problems.1

Ultimately, in 2003, EME declared bankruptcy. Because of the bankruptcy, EME lost its

ability to obtain the performance bonds necessary to engage in large commercial

construction projects. In an effort to keep EME in business, all of its stockholders,

including Jurado, sold their stock to Earth First Technologies, Inc. (EFTI), with the

expectation that EFTI would obtain the necessary bonds on behalf of EME to allow EME

to return to performing large commercial jobs. The practical result of the sale, however,

was that EME became a wholly owned subsidiary of EFTI, Jurado no longer had any

1 The work leading to EME's bankruptcy is completely unrelated to any of the contracts at issue in this case.

-2- ownership interest in or direct control over EME, and EME's ability to bid on jobs hinged

on the cooperation of EFTI.

However, contrary to Jurado's expectations, EFTI did not always

cooperate in getting the necessary bonds for EME to bid on jobs after the change in

ownership. Consequently, in an effort to continue to secure larger jobs for EME, Jurado

approached DeLaParte to see whether A&A Electric would be willing to assist EME in

obtaining bonds for jobs. A&A Electric agreed, and between 2004 and early 2006, A&A

Electric and EME worked together on several jobs, with A&A Electric securing the

necessary bonds and entering into the contracts in its name, but with EME actually

preparing the bids and performing the work. Under this informal working agreement,

A&A Electric retained a portion of the job payments in exchange for its services in

obtaining the bonds, and the remainder of the funds were paid to EME.

In mid-2006, a general contractor for which EME had previously

performed work approached Jurado and told him that the City of Cape Coral was

soliciting bids for the electrical work for two water treatment plants. The general

contractor suggested that EME bid on the project. Jurado knew that EME could not

successfully bid on the projects on its own because of its inability to obtain the

necessary bonds. In addition, the work apparently was required to be performed by

union electricians, and EME was not unionized. So Jurado approached A&A Electric,

which was unionized, about bidding on the jobs. EME employees and A&A Electric

employees jointly prepared the bid documents and submitted them to the general

contractor. A&A Electric was subsequently awarded the contracts for both jobs. All of

the contract documents list A&A Electric as the sole electrical contractor, and the

-3- performance bonds are solely in A&A Electric's name and are guaranteed only by

DeLaParte individually. A&A Electric subsequently paid EME $193,488 for the

expenses EME had incurred in the bidding process.

In January 2007, A&A Electric began work on the Cape Coral projects.

A&A Electric hired several EME employees to oversee the projects, and it placed those

employees on its own payroll. EME initially assisted A&A Electric with getting various

materials to the job site. However, EME itself never performed any actual work on the

Cape Coral jobs, it never had any legal or financial interest in the jobs, and it could not

legally have performed any of the work at either of the job sites. A&A Electric

subsequently paid EME for its assistance in getting the job started.

At approximately the same time that work at the Cape Coral projects was

getting underway, Jurado sent a letter to DeLaParte, the complete text of which was:

"This is to acknowledge receipt of $200,000.00 from Jaime Jurado for his 49% share of

the Cape Coral Jobs." The letter was not on EME letterhead but rather was on the

personal letterhead of Jurado and his wife. Jurado did not address the letter to A&A

Electric, nor did he send it to A&A Electric's corporate office. Instead, Jurado addressed

the letter to DeLaParte individually, and he mailed it to DeLaParte's home address.

Jurado signed the letter personally, and DeLaParte signed his name under the word

"Accepted." Nothing in the document indicates that DeLaParte signed the letter as an

officer, director, or owner of A&A Electric, and DeLaParte did not include his title or any

reference to A&A Electric anywhere in the letter. Nevertheless, according to Jurado,

this one-line letter created a joint venture agreement between Jurado individually and

-4- A&A Electric concerning the Cape Coral projects that entitled Jurado personally to 49%

of the profits that A&A Electric made on the Cape Coral projects.

There is no dispute that Jurado gave DeLaParte $200,000 at around the

time the January 29, 2007, letter was signed. There is also no dispute that these funds

were deposited into DeLaParte's personal bank account. In addition, there is no dispute

that A&A Electric subsequently paid Jurado $200,000 as a "loan repayment." However,

when Jurado demanded that A&A Electric pay him 49% of the profits from the Cape

Coral jobs, A&A Electric refused. Jurado then sued A&A Electric, claiming that the

January 29, 2007, letter between Jurado and DeLaParte constituted a valid joint venture

agreement between Jurado and A&A Electric such that A&A Electric owed Jurado 49%

of the profits from the Cape Coral jobs.

The bench trial on Jurado's claims is not a model of clarity. The parties

spent an inordinate amount of time introducing evidence relating to the past practices

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