Carbone v. Nueva Constr. Group, L.L.C.

2017 Ohio 382
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 2017
Docket103942 & 104147
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 382 (Carbone v. Nueva Constr. Group, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carbone v. Nueva Constr. Group, L.L.C., 2017 Ohio 382 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

[Cite as Carbone v. Nueva Constr. Group, L.L.C., 2017-Ohio-382.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION Nos. 103942 and 104147

ROSS P. CARBONE

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT CROSS-APPELLEE

vs.

NUEVA CONSTRUCTION GROUP, L.L.C., ET AL. DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES CROSS-APPELLANTS

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CV-13-805622

BEFORE: S. Gallagher, J., Stewart, P.J., and Celebrezze, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: February 2, 2017 ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT, CROSS-APPELLEE

John R. Christie Lewis, Brisbois, Bisgaard & Smith, L.L.P. 1375 East Ninth Street, Suite 1600 Cleveland, Ohio 44114

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES, CROSS-APPELLANTS

David G. Phillips The Brown Hoist Building 4403 St. Clair Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 44103 SEAN C. GALLAGHER, J.:

{¶1} There are two distinct issues presented in this appeal. Scaparotti

Construction Group (“SCG”) claims the trial court erred in granting judgment in favor of

Nueva Construction Group, L.L.C., Bertha Villanueva, B-Resource Management, L.L.C.,

and Paul Gosden (collectively “Nueva”). SCG claims that it substantiated every element

of each of its claims through unanswered requests for admissions and by a single witness

presented at a bench trial. Nueva, in turn, claims that the trial court erred in denying a

request to deem the complaint frivolous. Finding no merit to either argument, we affirm.

{¶2} None of the defendants appeared for trial after having two written motions

for continuance denied. SCG presented one witness, and Nueva’s trial counsel

cross-examined him. At trial, the trial court acknowledged that Nueva had not answered

discovery, which included several requests for admissions that supplemented the trial

record. The parties also agreed to submit closing arguments through post-trial briefing.

Nueva filed a post-trial brief that contained 20 documentary exhibits that were not

introduced during trial and were not otherwise authenticated. SCG objected to the

unauthenticated documents and also claimed to have never received those documents

through the discovery process.

{¶3} In this appeal, Nueva’s recitation of the facts entirely relies on the

unauthenticated evidence attached to a post-trial brief and a motion for sanctions filed

after the trial court entered a verdict in their favor. The documents attached to the

motion for sanctions, however, were supposedly the same as those attached to the post-trial brief, which were not included in the appellate record. SCG timely objected to

the belated attempt to introduce unauthenticated evidence through the post-trial brief, but

the trial court denied the motion. The failure to include the post-trial brief exhibits in the

appellate record is irrelevant because even if those records were included, none were

authenticated for the purposes of trial as required prior to admission under Evid.R. 901.

“It is a long-standing principle of the common law that most types of demonstrative or

physical evidence must be authenticated or identified before such evidence may be

deemed to be admissible at trial.” Id. Staff Notes. We are precluded from considering

Nueva’s version of the facts, which entirely relies on evidence that should have been

excluded from consideration at trial for the lack of authentication and for the failure to

timely admit the evidence into the trial record through witness testimony or stipulations.

{¶4} Our rendition of the facts is based on admissions to the allegations in the

complaint, trial testimony (the transcript was requested by SCG in its praecipe and

thereafter filed on March 18, 2016), and the unanswered requests for admissions deemed

admitted for trial (at trial, and after SCG called its sole witness, the trial court indicated

that SCG need not introduce testimony duplicating the admissions from the unanswered

requests for admissions; the admissions themselves were deemed admitted for the

purposes of trial under Civ.R. 36(B). Tr. 40:10-24). SCG hired Nueva as a

subcontractor for a project in Xenia, Ohio, because Nueva had obtained EDGE

certification that SCG wanted credit for with the Ohio School Facilities Commission.

Nueva and SCG entered into a “Professional Services Certification of Intent,” dubbed the “Xenia Subcontract” by the parties, so that Nueva would provide approximately $200,000

in services for SCG on the project.1

{¶5} Nueva admitted, in its answer, that it not only entered the Xenia Subcontract

with SCG, under which Nueva had obligations to perform, but also that SCG had

conferred a benefit on Nueva by making an unspecified amount of payments that Nueva

acknowledged it received. Nueva denied, however, that it had received any payments for

services that were not performed and denied that Nueva had received $85,000 in

connection with the Xenia, Ohio project under the terms of the Xenia Subcontract. If a

written agreement memorializing the terms of the Xenia Subcontract exists, it was not

introduced into evidence.

{¶6} SCG and Nueva also entered a second contract (“Johnson Hotel Agreement”)

pertaining to the proposed development of a hotel somewhere in the country. Nueva was

basically an investor, and SCG provided services in connection with the acquisition and

development. According to the terms of the Johnson Hotel Agreement, SCG was

responsible for all its expenses related to the project, but would periodically bill Nueva

for consulting services. SCG and Nueva amended the Johnson Hotel Agreement in

September 2010 to specifically define the project as the “Johnson Court Building in

1 Nueva failed to answer paragraphs 13 and 24 of the complaint. Those paragraphs are deemed admitted. Civ.R. 8(D) provides that “[a]verments in a pleading to which a responsive pleading is required, other than those as to the amount of damage, are admitted when not denied in the responsive pleading.” Nueva was required to file a responsive pleading, and thus any allegations not denied or not answered for the lack of knowledge or information are deemed admitted. Cleveland, Ohio.” In March 2011, that agreement was again amended to update the

budget and compensation for the hotel project.

{¶7} According to the unanswered fourth request for admissions, SCG paid Nueva

$85,000 — the request asked for Nueva to admit “that [Nueva] was paid approximately

$85,000.” Nueva also admitted, through the fifth unanswered request for admissions,

that it “did not perform services relative to the agreements and to earn the monies paid”

by SCG. (Emphasis added.) It is unclear which agreements or services were being

referenced in the requests for admissions, and no trial evidence specifically connected the

admissions to the Xenia Subcontract.

{¶8} At trial and with respect to the Johnson Hotel Agreement, SCG’s

representative testified that the company had spent exactly $400,000 on “pre-development

costs,” exactly $9,500 on “survey costs,” approximately $70,000 representing 10 percent

of the $700,000 “historic tax credit assistance” cost, exactly $50,000 on the

“appraisal/market study,” and approximately $300,000 representing 15 percent of the $2

million “architect/engineering fee,” all as demonstrated by a development-budget

spreadsheet attached to the market study performed in March 2011. In addition to those

expenses, deemed fees by the witness, SCG was entitled to an additional 5 percent under

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