Banco De Los Trabajadores v. Cortez Moreno

237 So. 3d 1127
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 24, 2018
Docket17-0730
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 237 So. 3d 1127 (Banco De Los Trabajadores v. Cortez Moreno) 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
Banco De Los Trabajadores v. Cortez Moreno, 237 So. 3d 1127 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed January 24, 2018. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D17-730 Lower Tribunal No. 15-27321 ________________

Banco de los Trabajadores, Appellant,

vs.

Ricardo Rene Cortez Moreno, Appellee.

An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, William Thomas, Judge.

Dorta & Ortega, P.A., and Omar Ortega, Rey Dorta and Rosdaisy Rodriguez; Williams & Connolly LLP, and Peter J. Kahn, Jonathan M. Landy and Matthew H. Jasilli (Washington, D.C.), for appellant.

Brill & Rinaldi, The Law Firm, and David W. Brill, Joseph J. Rinaldi and Michelle Y. Medina-Fonseca (Weston); The McKee Law Group, LLC, and Robert J. McKee (Davie); Joel S. Perwin, P.A., and Joel S. Perwin, for appellee.

Before EMAS, LOGUE and SCALES, JJ.

PER CURIAM. I. Introduction

Appellant Banco de los Trabajadores (“Bantrab”), the defendant below, was

sued by Appellee Ricardo Rene Cortez Moreno (“Cortez”). In this non-final

appeal, Bantrab seeks review of the trial court’s order denying its motion to

dismiss two counts of Cortez’s complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. For the

reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s order denying Bantrab’s motion to

dismiss.

In November of 2015, Cortez filed a complaint against Bantrab, a

Guatemalan bank, and against seven individual directors of Bantrab (the

“Directors”). Cortez later filed an amended (and second amended) complaint that

alleged the following twenty claims:

Counts I-VII: Assault and Battery (against the Directors);

Count VIII: Assault and Battery (against Bantrab);

Counts IX-XV: Florida RICO (against the Directors);

Count XVI: Florida RICO (against Bantrab);

Count XVII: Breach of Contract (against Bantrab);

Counts XVIII-XX: Tortious Interference with Contract (against three of the Directors)

(The counts relevant to this appeal are in bold.)

2 This appeal addresses only the portion of the trial court’s March 14, 2017

order that found personal jurisdiction as to Bantrab,1 and only as to Counts VIII

(assault and battery) and XVI (Florida RICO violations).2

II. Background Facts

The second amended complaint contains the following allegations:

Bantrab is a Guatemalan corporation, with its principal place of business in

Guatemala. Cortez was a citizen of Guatemala but has been a resident of Miami-

Dade County since 2008, and is now a United States citizen.

In 2008, Bantrab entered into a written professional services agreement with

Cortez, under which Cortez would assist in promoting and increasing Bantrab’s

business and business presence in Florida and the United States. Both parties

further agreed to submit any type of dispute relating to the contract to the

jurisdiction of the courts of Miami-Dade County.

The complaint alleges that Bantrab launched a “Bancarization project” that

sought the business of Guatemalan residents who worked and lived in Florida and

who sent money to their families in Guatemala. To help create and operate this

business, Bantrab entered into a contract with Cortez’s company, Union Expresso.

1 The Directors were later dismissed on the basis of improper service, and therefore, only Bantrab has appealed the trial court’s order. 2 Bantrab did not appeal that portion of the trial court’s order finding that Florida’s long-arm statute conferred specific jurisdiction over Bantrab to adjudicate Cortez’s claim for breach of contract (Count XVII).

3 To promote the Bancarization project, Bantrab sent officers and staff to Florida, set

up small banking facilities (“mini-consulates”) in Florida, advertised in Florida,

contracted with money transfer companies based in Florida, and worked with

several associate banks in Florida. Cortez acknowledged in his complaint that

Bantrab’s formal banking activities take place in Guatemala.

At some point, the President of the Republic of Guatemala became aware

that Bantrab was allegedly involved in money laundering. He contacted Cortez

and asked Cortez to investigate Bantrab’s suspected money-laundering activities in

Florida and elsewhere in the United States. From this point onward, as he acted

upon the President’s request, Cortez allegedly became a target of Bantrab and the

Directors. Cortez alleges he discovered evidence that Bantrab and the Directors

were participating in a large-scale conspiracy. Relevant to the jurisdictional issue

presented, Cortez alleges he discovered that Bantrab and the Directors were aiding

and abetting drug traffickers by laundering the proceeds of narcotics trafficking

and transferring these proceeds to Florida through Bantrab. Further, Cortez alleges

that the Directors were traveling to Florida to meet with members and

representatives of drug cartels in furtherance of this unlawful activity.

When the Directors learned of Cortez’s investigation, the Directors

threatened Cortez that if he did not stop his investigation, leave Florida and come

to Guatemala, they would ruin his substantial business in Guatemala. The

4 Directors went to Florida to meet with Cortez in a further attempt to convince

Cortez to halt his investigation and to bury his findings. When Cortez refused,

Bantrab canceled its contract with Cortez’s company, Union Expresso.

At that point, Cortez decided to travel to Guatemala in an attempt to reach

some acceptable resolution with Bantrab. On August 20, 2009, Cortez met with

the Directors but no real progress was made at that meeting. Two days later, while

still in Guatemala and on his way to the airport to return to Florida, the vehicle

Cortez was riding in was fired upon forty-two times, and Cortez was struck by two

of the bullets. One bullet traveled through Cortez’s right arm and into his chest

and torso. The second bullet entered his lower back. Cortez alleges that the

Directors, as agents or employees of Bantrab, hired a hitman to carry out this

attack on Cortez because of Cortez’s investigation into Bantrab’s (and the

Directors’) conspiracy and money-laundering activities allegedly occurring in

Florida. This attempted murder formed the basis for Cortez’s assault and battery

claims.

III. Procedural Background

In addition to pleading these case-specific facts, Cortez’s second amended

complaint also tracked the statutory language of the relevant portions of Florida’s

long-arm jurisdiction statute (section 48.193 of the Florida Statutes (2015)). Cortez

alleged that Bantrab was subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of Florida for

5 causes of action arising from Bantrab’s alleged: (i) operating, conducting,

engaging in, or carrying on a business or business venture in this state or having an

office or agency in this state; (ii) committing a tortious act within this state; or (iii)

engaging in substantial and not isolated activity within this state.

After the second amended complaint was filed, Bantrab filed a motion to

dismiss, contending that, even accepting all of the complaint’s allegations as true,

those allegations, as a matter of law, fail to establish personal jurisdiction over

Bantrab for the assault and battery claim and the Florida RICO claim. Bantrab

opposed all jurisdictional discovery and the trial court permitted no discovery on

this issue.

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