Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC v. Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 23, 2025
Docket4D2024-0504
StatusPublished

This text of Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC v. Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP (Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC v. Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP) 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
Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC v. Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

AVIATION PERFORMANCE SOLUTIONS, LLC, Appellant,

v.

HINSHAW & CULBERTSON, LLP, a foreign limited liability company, and TIMOTHY I. MCCULLOCH, Appellees.

No. 4D2024-0504

[July 23, 2025]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; G. Joseph Curley Jr., Judge; L.T. Case No. 502022CA003523.

William G. Wolk of Eaton & Wolk, PL, Miami, for appellant.

Elizabeth A. Izquierdo and D. David Keller of Akerman LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP.

WARNER, J.

Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC, appeals a final summary judgment in favor of its former lawyers, Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP, (Hinshaw), Timothy McCulloch, and Dickinson Wright PLLC, on its complaint for legal malpractice. The trial court ruled that appellant had abandoned any malpractice action, because appellant had settled the underlying action where the alleged malpractice occurred and had dismissed an appeal of a fee judgment against it resulting from the attorney’s malpractice. We reverse, because the record does not show that pursuing the claims would have cured the malpractice or that all of appellant’s damages would have been cured through further judicial proceedings.

Background

The underlying dispute in this proceeding arose from the sale of an aircraft to appellant by Global Aviation Management, Inc., whose principal was Douglas G. Matthews. The purchase agreement contained a mandatory arbitration clause and a Florida choice of law provision. One section of the agreement provided that each party would bear its own expenses in connection with arbitration. Another section provided that the prevailing party in a suit to enforce the agreement shall be entitled to attorney’s fees.

Global filed a demand for arbitration, seeking $150,000. Appellant then hired McCulloch and Hinshaw to represent it in the arbitration. McCulloch was not admitted to the Florida Bar and did not file an application for pro hac vice admission to represent appellant in the arbitration. On behalf of appellant, McCulloch filed an answer and counterclaim against Global, alleging Global had breached the purchase agreement because several of the aircraft’s components were not airworthy. The counterclaim did not name Matthews, nor did it assert claims to pierce the corporate veil or allege alter ego liability. Still, McCulloch claimed that Matthews could and should be held individually liable. Global’s counsel objected, arguing that Matthews was not named in the counterclaim and therefore was not a party.

Arbitration commenced, during which time McCulloch left appellee Hinshaw and moved to Dickinson Wright. After McCulloch’s move, the arbitrator entered an award in appellant’s favor and against both Global and Matthews in the amount of $156,434.39, plus over $80,000 in attorneys’ fees and costs.

Global and Matthews filed a complaint to vacate the arbitration award in circuit court. McCulloch and Dickinson Wright represented appellant in that action. Global and Matthews asserted: (1) because appellant’s attorney, McCulloch, was not licensed to practice law in Florida and did not seek pro hac vice admission, a fee award to appellant violated public policy; (2) Matthews was not a party to the arbitration, rendering any award against him void; and (3) the purchase agreement provided for prevailing party fees only in litigation, not arbitration.

During the circuit court action, Matthews served a proposal for settlement, offering to pay appellant $1,000 if it agreed to vacate the arbitration award and drop its claims against Matthews individually. McCulloch advised appellant to reject the proposal for settlement, because “it was next to impossible to vacate an arbitration in the State of Florida.” Thus, appellant did not accept the proposal for settlement.

Global and Matthews subsequently moved for summary judgment. The circuit court granted the motion, vacating the arbitration award in its entirety as to Matthews. The court found that the arbitrator exceeded his

2 jurisdiction and authority, because Matthews was never a party to the arbitration proceedings and was not afforded proper notice. As to Global, the trial court vacated only the award of attorneys’ fees to appellant, on the ground that it was “improper to award attorneys’ fees to someone not authorized to practice law in Florida.”

Subsequently, a successor circuit court vacated the remaining arbitration award against Global and ordered a new arbitration hearing before a new arbitrator, stating: “There is no way to know what result a proper arbitration would have reached when the underlying reasoning is flawed in law and fact. The arbitrator failed [to] follow Florida law, contract law and the Florida Bar rules in the handling of this matter.” Final judgment was entered, and appellant appealed.

We affirmed the final summary judgment in 2020. Aviation Performance Solutions, L.L.C. v. Matthews, 298 So. 3d 619 (Fla. 4th DCA 2020). We also awarded attorney’s fees to Matthews, conditioned on the trial court determining he was entitled to fees based on section 682.15, Florida Statutes (2019).

At a subsequent hearing, the trial court determined that Matthews was entitled to fees for the appeal as well as fees in the circuit court action pursuant to section 682.15 as well as his offer of settlement. The court assessed $421,505.84 in attorney’s fees and costs, plus $42,132.64 in pre- judgment interest. Appellant timely appealed the fee award.

In the new arbitration proceeding appellant replaced McCulloch and Dickinson Wright with a new law firm, Clarke Silverglate, P.A. Appellant then filed an amended statement of counterclaim with the American Arbitration Association, seeking the new arbitration hearing that the circuit court had ordered. Appellant sought damages against both Global and Matthews in excess of $300,000, plus attorney’s fees, interest, and arbitration costs. This time appellant included allegations in its counterclaim supporting Matthews’ inclusion as a party.

Appellant’s new attorneys advised appellant that an appeal of the fee award had little chance of success, as multiple bases supported the award and expert attorney testimony supported the amount. Pursuing the new arbitration would not make appellant whole, even if appellant obtained another award in its favor, because it had already expended $700,000 in fees for its own attorneys, and interest on the fee judgment continued to run, none of which was recoverable in arbitration. Appellant tendered the prosecution of the fee award appeal to McCulloch and Dickinson Wright, who refused.

3 Thereafter, appellant filed its legal malpractice action against Hinshaw, McCulloch, and Dickinson Wright, alleging they had acted with negligence and gross negligence. Appellant sought to recover “damages, including the loss of its Arbitration award, the expenses, costs and attorney’s fees incurred in defending against the [circuit court action].” Appellant also sought all fees incurred while defendants had been representing it in the arbitration, plus costs, and pre-judgment interest.

Shortly thereafter, appellant settled both the fee judgment appeal and the arbitration proceeding with Global and Matthews. All defendants answered the malpractice action, alleging in one affirmative defense that appellant’s claims were barred, in whole or in part, when appellant abandoned the appeal and arbitration or by its decision to voluntarily settle the underlying proceedings instead of seeking appellate review. 1

Dickinson Wright moved for summary judgment, which Hinshaw and McCulloch expressly joined.

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Aviation Performance Solutions, LLC v. Hinshaw & Culbertson, LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aviation-performance-solutions-llc-v-hinshaw-culbertson-llp-fladistctapp-2025.