ORACLE ELEVATOR COMPANY, etc. v. 8660 BUILDING, LLC, etc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 4, 2023
Docket22-0630
StatusPublished

This text of ORACLE ELEVATOR COMPANY, etc. v. 8660 BUILDING, LLC, etc. (ORACLE ELEVATOR COMPANY, etc. v. 8660 BUILDING, LLC, etc.) 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
ORACLE ELEVATOR COMPANY, etc. v. 8660 BUILDING, LLC, etc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed January 4, 2023. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D22-630 Lower Tribunal No. 19-32573 ________________

Oracle Elevator Company, etc., Appellant,

vs.

8660 Building, LLC, etc., Appellee.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Maria D. Ortiz, Judge.

Sheldon R. Rosenthal, for appellant.

Neil Rose (Hollywood); Law Office of Christopher F. Zacarias, and Christopher F. Zacarias; and Jose M. Francisco, P.A., and Jose M. Francisco, for appellee.

Before EMAS, HENDON, and MILLER, JJ.

HENDON, J. The plaintiff below, Oracle Elevator Company, a Florida corporation,

f/k/a Mowrey Elevator Service (“Oracle”), appeals from the trial court’s

“Order Granting 8660 Building LLC’s Motion to Strike Oracle’s Complaint

for Pervasive Fraud on the Court and for Attorney’s Fees/Costs,” and from

the order denying Oracle’s motion for rehearing. We affirm.

In August 2017, 8660 Building, LLC (“8660”) purchased property, and

as part of the transaction, it assumed an elevator maintenance contract that

the previous owner and Oracle had entered into. Oracle emailed 8660 a

copy of the contract, and invited 8660 to renegotiate the contract for a

lower price. 8660 notified Oracle that it was cancelling the contract

because Oracle had not been able to provide “an even slightly legible copy

of the contract, and its terms and conditions are a mystery,” and requested

that Oracle send a new proposed contract, as it had previously offered.

In November 14, 2018, Oracle filed suit against 8660 in Miami-Dade

County Court, alleging 8660 breached the elevator maintenance contract

by failing to pay the monthly maintenance and repair charges due under

the contract. Oracle attached a copy of the alleged contract between

Oracle and the previous owner of the property.

8660 filed an answer, affirmative defenses, and a counterclaim. In its

affirmative defenses, 8660 asserted, among other things, that if there is a

2 valid contract, Oracle failed to fulfill its obligations under the contract, and

that Oracle failed to state a cause of action because the “alleged contract is

illegible and therefore has failed to comply with Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.130(a).” In

its counterclaim, 8660 asserted Oracle was negligent by failing to properly

maintain the elevator, seeking damages for the replacement of the

elevator. The action was then transferred to the Circuit Court in October

2019.

During the proceedings, 8660 continued to request a legible copy of

the contract, but Oracle submitted copies that that were not completely

legible. Moreover, in a request for production relevant to its counterclaim,

8660 requested that Oracle produce the personnel file of its elevator

mechanic who primarily serviced the elevator. Following motions to

compel, the trial court ordered Oracle to produce portions of the elevator

mechanic’s personnel file, relating to his training, experience, and adverse

disciplinary action.

On August 5, 2020, Oracle filed the affidavit of its Regional Vice

President, in which he averred that the majority of Oracle’s business

records are located in its main office in Tampa, Florida. Although the office

was temporarily closed during COVID and no documents were being

provided to any requests made for documents, the office is now open, and

3 Oracle provided the requested documents for the years 2015, 2016, and

2017.

On August 24, 2020, 8660 took the deposition duces tecum of

Oracle’s Regional Vice President, who is also Oracle’s records custodian.

During the deposition, he acknowledged that Oracle had not produced a

legible copy of the contract. He also acknowledged that Oracle’s personnel

files and contracts are kept electronically, and therefore, despite the

closure of Oracle’s Tampa office during COVID, the documents could have

been accessed electronically. Three days later, on August 27, 2020,

Oracle filed a “Notice of Filing Legible Copy of Elevator Maintenance

Agreement.” The filed “legible copy” was allegedly the contract at issue in

the instant case.

A deposition of Oracle’s Regional Vice President was conducted on

January 27, 2021. During that deposition, he acknowledged that the legible

contract eventually filed on August 27, 2020, was in Oracle’s possession

the entire time at Oracle’s Tampa office, and that it was a “true and correct

copy of the elevator maintenance agreement that Oracle is suing upon.”

In May 2021, 8660 filed a Motion to Strike Oracle’s Complaint for

Pervasive Fraud on the Court and for Attorney’s Fees/Costs (“Motion to

Strike for Fraud”). 8660 asserted that (1) Oracle withheld a legible copy of

4 the contract at issue for the first two years of litigation; (2) in an effort to

defeat 8660’s defense that the alleged contract was not legible, on August

27, 2020, Oracle served a fabricated copy of the alleged contract by

“past[ing] the first and last page of the contract that it sued upon onto the

legible body of a completely different contract with an entirely different

party, and misrepresented the contract to be the one at issue in this

lawsuit”; (3) Oracle’s corporate representative falsely swore in a deposition

that the copy of the contract filed by Oracle on August 27, 2020, was a true

and correct copy of the contract at issue in the case; (4) Oracle violated

three court orders; and (5) Oracle submitted two false affidavits—one to

avoid sanctions, and the other to “artificially defeat” 8660’s motion for

summary judgment and to “subvert a decision based on the merits.”

Further, in its Motion to Strike for Fraud, 8660 submitted side-by-side

images of the contract attached to the complaint and the legible contract

submitted three years later on August 27, 2020. Oracle did not file a

response to 8660’s Motion to Strike for Fraud.

The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on 8660’s Motion to

Strike for Fraud in September 2021, during which, 8660 presented live

testimony and evidence. Oracle, however, did not present any evidence in

opposition and presented no live rebuttal witness. There is no transcript of

5 the hearing in the record. The following month, the trial court held a status

conference where it announced its ruling after hearing closing argument.

There is no transcript of the status conference hearing in the record on

appeal.

On February 10, 2022, the trial court entered an order granting

8660’s Motion to Strike for Fraud with prejudice. First, the trial court noted

that it conducted a side-by-side comparison of the contract attached to the

complaint and the contract filed on August 27, 2020, and it is “clear” that at

“least one contract is a fabrication,” and that “upon examination, the

contracts discernably differ in substantive provisions and formatting.”

Moreover, the trial court found that Oracle “fabricated and submitted the

contrived contract as a legible copy of the Contract at issue,” and that “the

fabricated contract is a material misrepresentation and that fabrication of

evidence is on the central liability issue in the lawsuit: the legibility, and

thus enforceability, of the elevator maintenance agreement Plaintiff Oracle

sued upon.” Second, the trial court found that Oracle’s Regional Vice

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