JOSHUA MCMILLAN v. ANDREW RODRIGUEZ

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 2, 2025
DocketA25A0571
StatusPublished

This text of JOSHUA MCMILLAN v. ANDREW RODRIGUEZ (JOSHUA MCMILLAN v. ANDREW RODRIGUEZ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOSHUA MCMILLAN v. ANDREW RODRIGUEZ, (Ga. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., HODGES and PIPKIN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

July 2, 2025

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A0571. MCMILLAN v. RODRIGUEZ et al.

PIPKIN, Judge.

In this case involving an agreement between a millionaire seeking an elaborate

doomsday bunker and an unlicensed contractor ready to complete the work in mere

weeks, Appellant Joshua McMillan challenges the trial court’s application of OCGA

§ 43-41-17 (b)1 to grant summary judgment to Appellees Andrew Rodriguez, Angelica

1 “As a matter of public policy, any contract entered into on or after July 1, 2008, for the performance of work for which a residential contractor or general contractor license is required by this chapter and not otherwise exempted under this chapter and which is between an owner and a contractor who does not have a valid and current license required for such work in accordance with this chapter shall be unenforceable in law or in equity by the unlicensed contractor.” This provision, as well as others included in Chapter 41 of Title 43, were amended effective July 1, 2024; all such references, cites, and quotes in this opinion are from the version of the statutes in effect at the time of the agreements giving rise to this action. Rodriguez, and AAR Ventures, LLC. As discussed below, we conclude that McMillan

has failed to demonstrate reversible error; consequently, we affirm

Generally speaking, the relevant facts and procedural history underlying this

matter are undisputed, and only questions of law are presented for us to consider on

appeal; nevertheless, we are mindful of the appropriate standard governing the appeal

of the grant of summary judgment.2 See Baja Properties v. Mattera, 345 Ga. App. 101,

102 (1) (812 SE2d 358) (2018).3

When construed appropriately, the record evidence shows that, in October

2023, Andrew Rodriguez (“Rodriguez”) -- a self-described multi-millionaire --

believed “that a mass casualty event was imminent and that [a foreign government]

was going to cause the release of fentanyl through an airborne distribution system

across the United States.” Consequently, in mid-October 2023, Rodriguez reached

out to McMillan to construct a “large-scale bunker” on a parcel of commercial

property that he owned through his company, AAR Ventures, in Dallas, Georgia.

2 Most, if not all, of the facts included in this opinion are found in McMillan’s affidavit, statement of material facts, or his own filings. 3 Our de novo review of the record renders moot McMillan’s claim that the trial court misinterpreted, misapprehended, and misapplied various facts in the record. 2 Rodriguez told McMillan that he was prepared to spend over one-million dollars on

the project and that, to adequately protect himself and his family, it needed to be

completed in a matter of weeks. Undeterred by the fact that neither McMillan nor his

company, Hancock Diversified, LLC, held a contractor license,4 Rodriguez reached

an oral agreement with McMillan for the completion of the bunker; Rodriguez wired

McMillan a total of $270,000 for the project, but this amount proved insufficient to

fund the project to completion.

Apparently lacking the liquidity to self-finance the completion of the project --

and unable to secure a traditional bank loan -- Rodriguez agreed that McMillan

would loan money in the form of advancements to fund the Bunker Project on the following basic terms: (1) [The Rodriguezes] would sign a promissory note to be due within 45 days and payable to McMillan in the amount of $1,500,000.00 which [the parties] agreed would be an amount sufficient to cover the total amount of monies McMillan would need to advance to completely fund the Bunker Project; (2) AAR Ventures, LLC would provide a corporate Guaranty for the Promissory Note; and (3) AAR Ventures, LLC would provide security for the

4 While Hancock Diversified is a named defendant and, apparently, was subject to the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, the company is not seeking review of the decision and is not a party to this appeal. 3 Promissory Note by granting McMillan a second priority deed to secure debt against the [p]roperty [on which the bunker was being constructed].

Shortly thereafter, the relevant documents -- a promissory note, guaranty, and

security deed -- were drawn up by an attorney and executed by the relevant parties.

McMillan has explained that, pursuant to these agreements, he “loaned monies in the

form of advancements to fund the Bunker Project in the amount of over half a million

dollars, which paid for labor, services, and materials on the project.”

In late October 2023, with the bunker “substantially complete,” work was

halted by the City of Dallas; unbeknownst to McMillan, there was a pre-existing “stop

work” order on the property dating from February 2022 and no permits had been

issued for the bunker construction. There is little dispute that the bunker was not, in

fact, completed, and the record evidence suggests that subsequent inspections of the

construction revealed numerous code and building violations. On November 1, 2023,

Hancock Diversified sent AAR Ventures an invoice “for the building of a non-

permitted bunker” seeking payment in the amount of $1,143,171.62.

After the Rodriguezes refused to pay on the promissory note and AAR Ventures

failed to make any payments under the guaranty, McMillan sent a demand letter for

4 payment in full -- for an amount then totaling approximately $1,158,048.24 -- and

threatened to foreclose on the subject property. In response, Appellees filed suit

against McMillan, seeking, as relevant to this appeal, declaratory and injunctive relief.

Appellees asserted that the construction agreement was void because it was not in

writing and that, in any event, the agreements were all unenforceable in accordance

with OCGA § 43-47-17 (b) because McMillan was not a licensed contractor. McMillan

answered -- asserting various defenses and denying the material allegations in the

complaint -- and counterclaimed, asserting that he was entitled to recover under both

the promissory note signed by the Rodriguezes and the guaranty executed by AAR

Ventures.

Following discovery the parties subsequently filed competing motions for

summary judgment. In their motion for partial summary judgment, Appellees asserted

that they were entitled to a declaration that McMillan was “statutorily barred from

enforcing any payment provision under the [p]arties’ construction contract, and by

failure of consideration and liberal construction of the applicable licensure statute, the

promissory note, deed to secure debt, and personal guarantees at issue are void as a

matter of law.” Relying on OCGA § 43-41-17 (b), Appellees asserted that McMillan

5 could only enforce the contracts if he was appropriately licensed, that McMillan was

not appropriately licensed for the job, and, consequently, McMillan could not

“enforce the construction contract or the underlying note, guarantees, and DSD [deed

to secure debt].”

Under McMillan’s theory of the case -- as articulated both in his own motion

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