Jana Maradona, Etc. v. Claudia Rosana Villafane

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 10, 2025
Docket3D2023-2085
StatusPublished

This text of Jana Maradona, Etc. v. Claudia Rosana Villafane (Jana Maradona, Etc. v. Claudia Rosana Villafane) 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
Jana Maradona, Etc. v. Claudia Rosana Villafane, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed September 10, 2025. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

Nos. 3D23-2085 & 3D24-0585 Lower Tribunal No. 15-29014-CA-01 ________________

Jana Maradona, etc., et al., Appellants,

vs.

Claudia Rosana Villafañe, et al., Appellees.

Appeals from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Carlos Lopez and Spencer Eig, Judges.

EFR Law Firm, and Eduardo F. Rodriguez, for appellants.

MPA Law, and M. Paula Aguila and Monica Amador, for appellees.

Before EMAS, LOBREE and GOODEN, JJ.

EMAS, J. INTRODUCTION

In 2015, Diego Maradona initiated an action in the trial court against

his ex-wife Claudia Villafañe. In the operative complaint, Maradona alleged

that Villafañe, both during and after their marriage, fraudulently concealed

her purchases of several pieces of real property in Miami-Dade County,

breaching her fiduciary duty to Maradona, and that Maradona was unaware

of these actions by Villafañe when the parties executed their Marital

Settlement Agreement in 2013. In 2020, Maradona passed away, and the

lawsuit continued through the personal representatives of his estate. 1

In these consolidated appeals, Maradona appeals 1) the trial court’s

final summary judgment in favor of Villafañe; 2) the trial court’s order holding

Maradona in indirect criminal contempt and imposing sanctions; and 3) final

judgment awarding monetary sanctions (attorney’s fees and costs) totaling

$85,480.79.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm the final summary judgment in

favor of Villafañe. However, we reverse the order holding Maradona in

contempt and, because the order awarding monetary sanctions was the

result (at least in part) of the order of indirect criminal contempt, we reverse

1 For ease of reference, we refer collectively to appellants as “Maradona.”

2 that order as well, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Maradona and Villafañe were married in 1989 in Argentina. They had

two children before they separated, and were eventually divorced in

Argentina in 2003. The parties entered into the Marital Settlement

Agreement (“MSA”) in August 2013. According to the allegations of the

complaint, Maradona’s attorney performed an “audit of [his] finances” in

2014, and that is when Maradona first discovered that Villafañe had

fraudulently purchased, between 1999 and 2008, several properties located

in Miami-Dade County with Maradona’s money.

Villafañe moved to dismiss the action for forum non conveniens, noting

that Maradona had filed the same lawsuit in Argentina. The trial court denied

the motion, and on appeal, this court affirmed the order denying the motion

to dismiss for forum non conveniens. See Villafañe v. Maradona, 253 So. 3d

708 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018).

Thereafter, Maradona amended his complaint, asserting claims of

unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, constructive fraud,

constructive trust, and equitable accounting. Villafañe again moved to

dismiss the complaint based on the “parallel proceeding” in Argentina, but

3 the motion was denied. Villafañe filed an answer and affirmative defenses,

asserting, inter alia, that Maradona was aware of Villafañe’s real estate

purchases, and that Maradona’s claims were all barred by the applicable

statutes of limitation and by the terms of the MSA. She also asserted

counterclaims for abuse of process, malicious prosecution, and defamation.

These counterclaims were later dismissed by the court.

Villafañe later filed a motion for an order to show cause why Maradona

should not be held in contempt, and sanctions imposed against him, based

on the fact that, despite discovery requests and an order compelling

production, Maradona had failed to produce the records, documents or other

items related to the “audit of [his] finances” which he alleged uncovered the

misconduct and led to the filing of this action. Maradona, in defense of his

failure to produce documents, contended that the use of the word “audit” was

inadvertent, that in fact no audit of his finances had been performed, and that

his discovery of the alleged fraudulent misconduct by his former wife was the

result of a paper review of records in Miami-Dade County. 2

2 Indeed, Maradona eventually admitted that “the audit that is referenced in . . . the Amended Complaint was performed by Matias Morla, Esq. All responsive documents obtained from the public records searches and relied on in the audit, as well as the reports obtained from Florida counsel have already been produced.” Villafañe deposed Mr. Morla, who testified that he did conduct an audit of Maradona’s finances, and that the report was located

4 Following a hearing, the trial court granted Villafañe’s motion, found

Maradona in contempt for violation of the trial court’s order compelling the

production of the audit of his finances, struck from the operative complaint

any references to an “audit,” and determined Villafañe was entitled to

attorney’s fees and costs. Maradona moved for reconsideration, which was

denied.

Villafañe later moved for final summary judgment and, following a

hearing, the trial court granted Villafañe’s motion and entered final judgment

in her favor on October 20, 2023. Thereafter, the trial court held a hearing on

the amount of attorney’s fees and costs to be awarded as a sanction for

Maradona’s conduct and the resulting contempt order. Following that

in Argentina, but Mardona’s counsel later contradicted this testimony at a hearing, stating that Morla did not prepare a report.

In addition, after the court had ordered Maradona to correct an earlier response to request for production by reproducing the documents with Bates stamps for proper identification, and specifically identifying by Bates numbers those documents that comprised the audit of his finances, Maradona identified a total of 61 pages which had already been produced, but further explained that “Plaintiff’s counsel accidentally deleted the totality of the documents that Plaintiff has produced to Defendants in this case and cannot rule [out] that additional documents that are responsive are not also responsive to this request.”

Eventually, Maradona acknowledged that the “audit” was merely a review of online documents conducted in 2014, allegedly revealing purchases of Miami-Dade properties by Villafañe.

5 hearing, the trial court entered an order awarding $76,934.25 in attorneys'

fees and $8 ,546.54 in costs, for a total sum of $85,480.79.

These consolidated appeals followed.

DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

The Final Summary Judgment

Maradona contends there are genuine issues of material fact which

preclude summary judgment; the statutes of limitation did not bar his action

because they were tolled by Villafañe’s concealment of her fraudulent

scheme; and Maradona’s claims were not barred by the parties’ MSA.

In its order granting final summary judgment, the trial court found in

Villafañe’s favor on all three of these bases. We review this issue de novo.

See Fernandez v. Old Republic Nat’l Title Ins. Co., 406 So. 3d 299 (Fla. 3d

DCA 2025) (noting we review orders granting summary judgment and pure

legal issues de novo). We need address only the latter of the three issues,

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