Cheryl Anne Hey Ahmed, as Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey v. Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., Edward Staudt, Michelle Anne Thomas and Michelle Hey Thomas

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 16, 2025
Docket5D2024-0452
StatusPublished

This text of Cheryl Anne Hey Ahmed, as Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey v. Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., Edward Staudt, Michelle Anne Thomas and Michelle Hey Thomas (Cheryl Anne Hey Ahmed, as Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey v. Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., Edward Staudt, Michelle Anne Thomas and Michelle Hey Thomas) 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
Cheryl Anne Hey Ahmed, as Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey v. Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., Edward Staudt, Michelle Anne Thomas and Michelle Hey Thomas, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA __________________________________

Case No. 5D2024-0452 LT Case No. 2011-30599-CICI __________________________________

CHERYL ANNE HEY AHMED, As Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey

Appellant,

v.

MID FLORIDA DEVELOPMENT, LLC, SHERIFF GUINDI, E. JOSEPH LECOMPTE, JR., EDWARD STAUDT, and MICHELLE HEY THOMAS

Appellees. _______________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Volusia County. Dennis Craig, Judge.

John S. Norton, Jr., of John S. Norton, Jr., P.A., Daytona Beach, for Appellant.

Christopher V. Carlyle, of The Carlyle Appellate Law Firm, Orlando, for Appellees, Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., and Edward Staudt.

No Appearance for Remaining Appellee.

May 16, 2025 BOATWRIGHT, J.

Cheryl Ann Ahmed (Ahmed), as personal representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey, timely appeals the final summary judgment entered in favor of Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph Lecompte, Jr., and Edward Staudt (collectively, “Appellees”). Ahmed contends that summary judgment was improperly entered because disputed issues of material fact remain. We agree and find that because there are remaining questions of material fact, the trial court erred in entering summary judgment, and we therefore reverse.

I.

In June 2003, Robert Hey (“Hey”) entered into an agreement (the “June Agreement”) with Mid Florida Development, LLC (“MFD”) 1, wherein MFD agreed to pay Hey a total of $950,000.00 to purchase property in Volusia County (the “Eastgate Property”) so that MFD could develop the land and build condominiums or townhouses. Pursuant to the June Agreement, in addition to the purchase price for the Eastgate Property, Hey was to receive 20 percent of any net proceeds from the sale of the townhouses or condominiums. Paragraph 11.12(b) of the June Agreement specifically provides as follows:

[A]fter deduction and payment for any and all charges as set forth in paragraph 11.12(a), the parties agree that any net proceeds from the sale of the condominium and/or townhouse residential units shall be divided on an 80/20 basis, with eighty percent credited to [MFD], and twenty percent credited to [Hey]. It is understood and agreed that [MFD] shall be reimbursed for any and all expenses as allowed pursuant to paragraph 11.12(a) prior to the division of any net proceeds herein between [MFD] and [Hey].

1 MFD is a Florida limited liability company which is taxed as

a partnership for federal income tax purposes.

2 Hey and MFD entered into a supplemental agreement in August 2003 (the “August Agreement”), which incorporated the June Agreement and clarified the terms of the June Agreement. Paragraph 4 of the August Agreement states, in relevant part, that:

[MFD] shall establish and shall maintain as part of its financial information an earnings account for the Project with appropriate allocation of estimated earnings for [Hey] and [MFD]. Such earning accounts shall allocate earning [MFD] and [Hey] at a level that is not less than taxable earnings for federal income tax purposes. Parties agree that [MFD] shall be entitled to eighty (80) percent of net income and [Hey] shall be entitled to twenty (20) percent of net income from the entire Project from all sources. Once sales of the units, whether townhouses, condominium units or other residential units, and any other facilities commences, so that income is derived from the Project, then [MFD] shall make distributions to [Hey] at least annually within sixty (60) days of the end of the Project's fiscal year in an amount of at least sixty (60) percent of [Hey's] share of the net profits for that proceeding [sic] year. At the conclusion of the fiscal year in which at least ninety (90) percent [of] the units have been sold [MFD] shall render its preliminary final accounting, and when all units held for sale have been sold, then its final accounting shall be rendered, and [MFD] shall distribute to [Hey] the entire balance of the net income due [Hey] pursuant to this Agreement.

(emphasis added). According to the August Agreement, Hey was now entitled to a percentage of net income from the sale of the townhouses on an annual basis and at the end of the project. Pursuant to the agreements, MFD completed construction of townhouses on the Eastgate Property and began selling them in September 2006. The project concluded in 2008. Hey died in March 2010. Thereafter, in March 2011, Ahmed, as personal representative of Hey’s estate, filed suit against MFD for: (1) breach of contract; (2) request for accounting; and (3) constructive trust. Specifically, she alleged that MFD had sold townhouses in

3 the Eastgate Property and had made a considerable profit, but it failed to pay Hey a percentage of profits to which he was entitled under the agreements.

Thereafter, in 2020, MFD filed its first motion for summary judgment, arguing that it did not breach the June and August agreements because no profit was ever derived from the sale of the townhouses in the Eastgate Property. The trial court granted MFD’s motion. The court’s final order was timely and successfully appealed by Ahmed, and our Court reversed. This Court held that summary judgment was improper because MFD’s expert’s affidavit was insufficient to identify whether MFD had “net proceeds” during the relevant timeframe; and therefore, MFD failed to meet their burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact existed. Ahmed v. Mid Fla. Dev., LLC, 347 So. 3d 455, 457-58 (Fla. 5th DCA 2022).

Upon remand, MFD filed a second motion for summary judgment. In its second motion, MFD again argued that it did not breach the agreement because it never derived any profit from the sale of the townhouses related to the Eastgate Property. MFD further alleged that it actually suffered losses in excess of $900,000.00, as evidenced by its federal income tax returns. It further noted that it was no longer in business as it had ceased business operations at the end of 2008.

As support for its argument that it did not breach the June and August agreements, MFD relied on its federal tax returns for the years it was in business to show that it had no profits. In particular, MFD pointed to its 2006 federal tax return, which showed no taxable income attributable to the Eastgate Property in 2006. As part of its tax return, MFD reported gross sales on line one of its Form 1065 in the amount $3,736,297.00, and on line two, costs in the amount of $3,488,183.00. The tax return also indicated deductions totaling $202,786.00 and a section 179 depreciation deduction in the amount of $36,709.00. See I.R.C. § 179. This led to a total of zero net taxable income for the year. The tax return also indicated there was an additional $9,262,016.00 long term capital gain for the year.

4 MFD filed an affidavit in support of its motion for summary judgment from Brandon Perry (“Perry”), a certified public accountant. Perry attested that he provided accounting services for MFD from 2003 through 2008. He explained that MFD was only actively engaged in business related to the Eastgate Property and, therefore, the income or losses shown on the tax returns all related to the Eastgate Property. Perry also attested that the Eastgate Property never showed any taxable earnings for federal income tax purposes at the end of the fiscal years between 2003 and 2008 and thus, had no net proceeds. Accordingly, the members in MFD never received a distribution of taxable income related to the Eastgate Property.

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Bluebook (online)
Cheryl Anne Hey Ahmed, as Personal Representative of the Estate of W. Robert Hey v. Mid Florida Development, LLC, Sheriff Guindi, E. Joseph LeCompte, Jr., Edward Staudt, Michelle Anne Thomas and Michelle Hey Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheryl-anne-hey-ahmed-as-personal-representative-of-the-estate-of-w-fladistctapp-2025.