Oscar Barbara and Alexdex P1, LLC v. Graham Rahal Performance, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 16, 2026
Docket1:25-cv-20061
StatusUnknown

This text of Oscar Barbara and Alexdex P1, LLC v. Graham Rahal Performance, LLC (Oscar Barbara and Alexdex P1, LLC v. Graham Rahal Performance, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oscar Barbara and Alexdex P1, LLC v. Graham Rahal Performance, LLC, (S.D. Fla. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

Case No. 25-20061-CIV-BECERRA/TORRES

OSCAR BARBARA and ALEXDEX P1, LLC,

Plaintiffs,

v.

GRAHAM RAHAL PERFORMANCE, LLC,

Defendant. __________________________________________/

ORDER ON THE PARTIES’ CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (as to Count I of Defendant’s counterclaims) [D.E. 68] and Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment (as to Count III of its counterclaims and on Plaintiffs’ request for declaratory judgment) [D.E. 71]. The parties timely responded ([D.E. 79], [D.E. 82]) and replied ([D.E. 80], [D.E. 85]), and the motions are now ripe for disposition.1 The ultimate issue framed by the parties’ competing motions boils down to a matter of contract interpretation. When a purchase agreement is ambiguous as to

1 On November 19, 2025, the Honorable Jacqueline Becerra referred [D.E. 71] and [D.E. 68] to the undersigned. [D.E. 95]. The motions are adjudicated here by Order for administrative reasons. But the parties have leave to seek de novo view of any aspect of this Order if warranted, under Local Rule 4, and the Court will treat the Order as a Report and Recommendation. 1 both the profit it promises and the remedy it provides for non-performance, neither party is entitled to resolve that ambiguity as a matter of law. This case, a failed and haphazardly entered transaction for two rare Mercedes-Benz automobiles, presents

precisely that situation. Both parties seek summary judgment, but neither party has met the requisite standard necessary to obtain one. Thus Plaintiffs/Counter- Defendants’ motion is DENIED and Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff’s motion is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND This case arises from a purchase agreement for two rare Mercedes-Benz

vehicles—the AMG Hyper Car Project One (“Project One”) and an AMG Black Series GT (“Black Series”)—that ultimately failed as to delivery of the Project One but succeeded as to the Black Series. That parties agree on that score, but disagree on pretty much everything else. According to Plaintiff Barbara (whose holding company for the Project One Car, Alexdex P1, LLC, is the co-plaintiff), his status as a longtime buyer of Mercedes- Benz vehicles caused him to attain VIP status with the brand and allowed him to be

in the running to purchase rare and limited-run vehicles from the brand, such as the Project One. [D.E. 1-1 at 3]. Plaintiff Barbara, by way of Plaintiff Alexdex P1, went ahead with securing an allocation for the Project One car in 2017. Id. at 4. At the time, Plaintiff Barbara intended to keep the car. [D.E. 72-2 at 2, 34:7–23].

2 The building process for the Project One, however, stretched on for years due to manufacturing and other delays. [D.E. 1-1 at 4]. Mercedes eventually offered the buyers holding allocations for a project one car the ability to also purchase a

limited edition “black series” of the Mercedes GT AMG. Id. Plaintiff Barbara agreed to also purchase what would become, as to this lawsuit, the Black Series. Id. But by 2020 to 2021, Plaintiff Barbara changed his mind: he was looking to sell the Project One and the Black Series—neither of which, at that point and four years in, had been manufactured or delivered. Because both cars were such rare, special- order vehicles, the manufacturing process was highly customizable. So, an inherent

part of procuring a buyer—and one that would play out over the next few years of the transaction that would come to follow between Plaintiffs and Defendant—was working with the eventual buyer to obtain specifications for the build of the car. Plaintiff Barbara’s first overtures in finding a buyer were with an intermediate car broker who happened to know Mr. Rahal, of Defendant Graham Rahal Performance, LLC. [D.E. 72-5]; [D.E. 71 at 3]. The record reflects some initial back- and-forth in late 2020 regarding specifications for the Black Series, which appears to

be the first instance of Defendant’s interest in that specific car. [D.E. 72-5 at 2–9, 12]. This is further reflected in Defendant’s initial, direct contact with Plaintiff Barbara via an early 2021 email from Mr. Scott Svarney, an agent of Defendant who worked closely with Mr. Rahal. [D.E. 72-8 at 2].

3 The parties then, by mid-March 2021, agreed on a deal for both the Project One and the Black Series—a bargain that would prove ill-fated in the fullness of time. [D.E. 1-1 at 13–14]. For several years (through Fall 2024), communications in the

record reflect a regular back-and-forth between, largely, Plaintiff Barbara and Mr. Svarney. [D.E. 72-9]. Their discussion contains, among other communications, contract revision updates; notifications of wired payments; requests for calls; updates as to the Black Series and Project One; and renderings of requested specifications for the car. Id. The text message chain, among other evidence, also reflects that the Black Series was, during this period, successfully built and delivered to Defendant by

December 2021 [D.E. 72-9 at 22, 27]. By then only the Project One remained outstanding. Due to the highly customizable nature of the Project One, Mercedes required updates on the specifications for the build (as it had with the Black Series). Mercedes sent emails to Plaintiff Barbara urging him to provide these specifications by various deadlines. Similar messages were also delivered at meetings with some of the Mercedes AMG Project One team. See, e.g., [D.E. 72-13 at 2]. And the

conversation with Mr. Svarney reflects, at least to some degree, communication regarding specifications, and Plaintiff Barbara indicating that he needs specifications from Defendant. [D.E. 72-9 at 32, 40]. But the build specifications were never finalized, and Mercedes ultimately cancelled the allocation for Plaintiff Barbara’s Project One, with a full refund of the downpayment. [D.E. 72-15 at 2].

4 As analyzed below, the parties each place the blame for this with the other: Plaintiffs allege Defendant was told time and again the need for the specifications and never finalized; while Defendant claims Plaintiffs never conveyed the urgency or

timing of finalizing the specifications and did not properly inform Defendant, as required under the contract, of any threat to the Project One allocation. Now, after the breakdown of the Project One portion of the transaction, the parties have nearly antithetical views on various elements of the underlying purchase agreement, including as to Plaintiffs’ profit and any remedies Defendant has under the circumstances. Additionally, Plaintiffs have to date retained $400,000 in profit

under section 1(a) of the purchase agreement, along with the refunded downpayment of $587,000 from Mercedes. After several demand letters from Defendant, Plaintiffs filed suit in Florida state court, seeking a declaratory judgment on the terms of the contract. Defendant removed the action to this Court and filed numerous counterclaims, two of which are before us at summary judgment, seeking rescission damages and recovery of the “stolen” downpayment.

At summary judgment, Plaintiffs are seeking resolution as a matter of law on Defendant’s claim of theft under the Indiana Crime Victims Relief Act (Count I of Defendant’s amended counterclaims). [D.E. 68]. Defendant is seeking the same as to Plaintiff’s request for declaratory judgment and Count III of Defendant’s amended counterclaims, for breach of contract. [D.E. 71].

5 II. APPLICABLE PRINCIPLES AND LAW Pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

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Oscar Barbara and Alexdex P1, LLC v. Graham Rahal Performance, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oscar-barbara-and-alexdex-p1-llc-v-graham-rahal-performance-llc-flsd-2026.