Kirk Taboada v. Rodrigo Chapur Duarte
This text of Kirk Taboada v. Rodrigo Chapur Duarte (Kirk Taboada v. Rodrigo Chapur Duarte) 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.
Opinion
Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida
Opinion filed August 14, 2024. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D23-2234 Lower Tribunal No. 18-32780 ________________
Kirk Taboada, Appellant,
vs.
Rodrigo Chapur Duarte, Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Carlos Guzman, Judge.
Dinsmore & Shohl LLP, and Kathryn L. Ender and Audriana A. Rodriguez, for appellant.
TA PLLC, and Alexander A. Salinas and Brady L. Taylor, for appellee.
Before SCALES, MILLER and BOKOR, JJ.
BOKOR, J. Kirk Taboada, the defendant below, appeals a grant of summary
judgment in favor of Rodrigo Chapur Duarte (Chapur), the plaintiff, in an
action for breach of a promissory note. The uncontested facts reveal that, in
a prior action between the parties, Taboada sought and received a judgment
for fees and costs under a prevailing party provision of the promissory note.
The trial court concluded that because Taboada received a benefit under the
contract, the principle of judicial estoppel barred him from asserting in this
action that Florida law renders the note void and unenforceable. For the
reasons explained below, judicial estoppel doesn’t apply, and Florida law
renders the note void and unenforceable.
FACTS
Chapur brought the initial action against Taboada in March 2018,
asserting claims for breach of promissory note and civil theft. Chapur later
voluntarily dismissed the 2018 action without prejudice. Taboada sought,
and the trial court granted, prevailing party attorney’s fees and costs under
the promissory note resulting from Chapur’s dismissal of the 2018 action
without prejudice.1
1 This fee judgment was never appealed, and accordingly, we do not disturb it on this appeal.
2 Subsequently, Chapur filed the underlying action, asserting only a
breach of promissory note claim. Taboada responded by asserting
affirmative defenses and counterclaims, including that section 849.26,
Florida Statutes, rendered the note void and unenforceable because the note
secured repayment of gambling debts incurred from a sports betting website.
Chapur moved for summary judgment, arguing that Taboada
conceded enforceability of the note by seeking costs and fees based on the
dismissal from the 2018 action, estopping Taboada from now asserting
unenforceability of the note. The trial court agreed and granted judgment in
Chapur’s favor, finding that Taboada did not deny breaching the note and
that judicial estoppel bars Taboada from raising the defense of
unenforceability. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
We review de novo a trial court’s order granting a motion for summary
judgment. See, e.g., The Fla. Bar v. Greene, 926 So. 2d 1195, 1200 (Fla.
2006). Similarly, we review de novo the interpretation of a contract or statute.
See Lazzari v. Guzman, 314 So. 3d 374, 376 (Fla. 3d DCA 2020). Summary
judgment is appropriate only when the movant shows that there is no
genuine issue of material fact and that they are entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.510(a).
3 We agree with Taboada that the undisputed record indicates that the
note is void and unenforceable under Florida law. Section 849.26 provides
that “[a]ll promises, agreements, notes, bills, bonds or other contracts,
mortgages or other securities . . . for the repayment of money lent or
advanced at the time of a gambling transaction for the purpose of being laid,
betted, staked or wagered, are void and of no effect.” “This statute bars
enforcement of gambling debts even if the debt was incurred in another state
where the gambling was legal.” Wallisville Corp., Inc. v. McGuinness, 154
So. 3d 501, 503 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015). “A contract which violates a provision
of the constitution or a statute is void and illegal, and, will not be enforced in
our courts.” Harris v. Gonzalez, 789 So. 2d 405, 409 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001);
see also Atl. Coast Line R. Co. v. Beazley, 45 So. 761, 798 (Fla. 1907)
(Whitfield, J., concurring) (“When a statute declares that no contract that
accomplishes a stated purpose shall be legal or binding, any contract that
indirectly accomplishes such purpose is included within the declaration of the
statute, and is not legal or binding.”). Any attempt by the parties to ratify an
illegal contract is also futile. See City of Stuart v. Green, 23 So. 2d 831, 835
(Fla. 1945).
While the promissory note itself does not indicate the basis for the loan,
the summary judgment record reflects, and Chapur concedes, that the note
4 concerned repayment of gambling debts incurred by Taboada and others
through a shared account on a sports betting website. Thus, as this note was
“for the repayment of money lent or advanced at the time of a gambling
transaction for the purpose of being laid, betted, staked or wagered,” §
849.26, Fla. Stat., the note was void and unenforceable.
However, in granting summary judgment for Chapur, the trial court
accepted Chapur’s argument that Taboada’s seeking of attorneys’ fees
under the prevailing party fee provision of the promissory note in the 2018
action constituted a benefit under the contract, invoking judicial estoppel on
the issue of the enforceability of the contract. But there was never a
determination of the enforceability of the contract. And the conclusion
reached below misapplies both the facts of this case and the law on judicial
estoppel. Per the supreme court:
In order to work an estoppel, the position assumed in the former trial must have been successfully maintained. In proceedings terminating in a judgment, the positions must be clearly inconsistent, the parties must be the same and the same questions must be involved. So, the party claiming the estoppel must have been misled and have changed his position; and an estoppel is not raised by conduct of one party to a suit, unless by reason thereof the other party has been so placed as to make it to act in reliance upon it unjust to him to allow that first party to subsequently change his position. There can be no estoppel where both parties are equally in possession of all the facts pertaining to the matter relied on as an estoppel; where the conduct relied on to create the estoppel was
5 caused by the act of the party claiming the estoppel, or where the positions taken involved solely a question of law.
Blumberg v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co., 790 So. 2d 1061, 1066 (Fla. 2001)
(emphasis added) (quoting Chase & Co. v. Little, 156 So. 609, 610–11 (Fla.
1934)).
Here, the record reveals no such determination of the validity or
enforceability of the promissory note under section 849.26, so the “same
questions” weren’t involved. Additionally, the “conduct relied on to create the
estoppel” was caused by the act of the party claiming estoppel—here,
Chapur’s initiation and subsequent dismissal of a lawsuit—and “the positions
taken involved solely a question of law.” Id. Accordingly, the principle of
judicial estoppel doesn’t apply to the pertinent question of law, namely,
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