Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI v. Zachary Rocca

CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 17, 2025
DocketSC-2025-0173
StatusPublished

This text of Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI v. Zachary Rocca (Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI v. Zachary Rocca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI v. Zachary Rocca, (Ala. 2025).

Opinion

Rel: October 17, 2025

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.

SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA OCTOBER TERM, 2025-2026

_________________________

SC-2025-0173 _________________________

Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI

v.

Zachary Rocca

Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court (CV-22-903793)

PER CURIAM.

Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI ("Apex"),

appeals from the denial by operation of law of its motion to vacate a

judgment on an arbitration award entered in favor of Zachary Rocca. We

affirm. SC-2025-0173

Facts and Procedural History

In 2021, Rocca's house and barn were damaged by a downed tree

and hail. Through his insurance company, Rocca hired Apex to repair his

property. The agreement between Rocca and Apex included an

arbitration provision that required the parties to submit any claims to

the American Arbitration Association ("the AAA").

In August 2021, Rocca "signed a contract with Pack2Normal to pack

up, move out, and store the Rocca family's household contents during the

reconstruction work and to return or 'pack back,' the contents at the end

of the work." Apex asserted that Pack2Normal was a separate company.

Rocca testified that, when he went to Apex's office in Tullahoma, "he saw

that both companies had offices in the same building, and they shared

senior management."

Pack2Normal " 'packed out' " Rocca's household contents on

September 18, 2021. It was scheduled to return those contents on

October 16, 2021. Apex's contractor started work on Rocca's property on

or about September 28, 2021. After experiencing continued problems

with Apex's contractor, which included defective work, Rocca told Apex

to stop working. On October 15, 2021, Rocca subsequently met with

2 SC-2025-0173

Apex's representatives in Huntsville. During that meeting, the parties

agreed to terminate the contract and Rocca stated that he would finish

the work on his own. Korby Holcomb, Apex's regional manager, prepared

a letter agreement to memorialize the agreements made during the

meeting. Rocca ultimately signed the letter agreement.

Paragraph 7 of the letter agreement referenced three checks that

Rocca had endorsed for payment to Apex "for the work that has been

completed." The letter agreement provided that those three checks would

be sent to Rocca's mortgage company for reissuance to Apex and that, if

the reissued checks were mailed to Rocca, he would immediately provide

those checks to Apex. 1 It also provided that certain additional checks

Rocca was expected to receive would be endorsed and submitted to Apex.

The letter agreement further provided that Apex would purchase metal

"to replace barn metal that was initially installed incorrectly." It also

provided that Apex would submit a supplemental request for funds from

Rocca's insurer.

1The arbitrator concluded that the third check referenced in paragraph 7 "was not issued for Apex reconstruction work. It was issued for Rocca's pack out/storage/and pack back costs." 3 SC-2025-0173

Pack2Normal did not return the contents on October 16, 2021.

Rocca subsequently contacted Pack2Normal to ask where his property

was. An individual employed by Pack2Normal told Rocca to contact

Holcomb. When Rocca telephoned Holcomb, Holcomb told him that he

could not have his contents back until Apex was paid in full. Rocca stated

that Apex did not disclose that condition during their meeting.

Additionally, the letter agreement did not refer to that condition.

Evidence was also presented indicating that Holcomb had directed Rocca

to have the cashier's check for Pack2Normal's charges made payable to

Apex and that Rocca had personally delivered that check to Apex.

In April 2022, Apex filed a demand for arbitration with the AAA,

asserting a breach-of-contract claim. The breach-of-contract claim was

based on Apex's assertion that Rocca's mortgage company had reissued

the three checks referenced in paragraph 7 of the letter agreement to

Rocca and that Rocca had deposited that money into his own account.

Rocca, then representing himself, filed an answer and a counterclaim

alleging breach of contract, fraud, extortion, and conversion.

The AAA provided both parties with a list of 10 arbitrators and

asked each party to strike any arbitrators to whom they objected and

4 SC-2025-0173

then rank the remaining ones in order of preference. Rocca submitted a

ranked list, placing Walter J. Sears III at the top. 2 Apex, meanwhile,

indicated that it had "no preference" on arbitrators. Consequently, the

AAA appointed Sears ("the arbitrator") and gave the parties his conflict-

of-interest disclosure form. That form indicated, among other things,

that the arbitrator had never represented a party to the arbitration, that

he had no connections to any of the parties, and that he was unaware of

any information that would cast doubt on his partiality. After neither

party objected to the arbitrator's appointment or his disclosure form, the

AAA confirmed his appointment.

The arbitrator then distributed a scheduling order and set an

evidentiary hearing for October 2022. In his order, the arbitrator noted

that all deadlines would be "strictly enforced." Just over a month before

the hearing, Apex's new counsel filed a notice of appearance. In an email,

new counsel requested a "brief continuance" so that he could adequately

prepare for the hearing. Rocca filed an objection to a continuance. The

2Rocca indicated that he had selected Sears, a partner at a Birmingham-based law-firm, because he was the closest geographic option. Rocca's brief at 11. 5 SC-2025-0173

arbitrator denied the request for a continuance, adhering to the original

deadlines set forth in the scheduling order.

After the hearing, the arbitrator entered his final award ("the

arbitration award") in which he concluded that Rocca had overpaid Apex,

that Apex had breached the letter agreement by failing to purchase the

metal for the barn, and that Apex -- through its control of Pack2Normal

-- had converted Rocca's property. Accordingly, the arbitrator awarded

Rocca $160,928.35, which included punitive damages due to Apex's

"willful and unlawful retention of Rocca's household goods." He also

stated that 100% of the administration fees of the AAA and the

compensation of the of the arbitrator shall be borne by Apex and that

Apex "shall reimburse the sum of $12,510.00 representing that portion of

said fees and expenses of the apportioned costs previously incurred by

Rocca."

Apex filed a notice of appeal in the Jefferson Circuit Court. Rocca

then filed a motion to enter the arbitration award as a final judgment.

On September 19, 2023, the circuit court entered a purported "Order of

Final Judgment," which it amended on September 21, 2023.

6 SC-2025-0173

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Restore with Apex, Inc., d/b/a Apex Restoration DKI v. Zachary Rocca, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/restore-with-apex-inc-dba-apex-restoration-dki-v-zachary-rocca-ala-2025.