ROGELIO CORDERO, etc. v. ROLANDO A. CORDERO

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 16, 2023
Docket23-0503
StatusPublished

This text of ROGELIO CORDERO, etc. v. ROLANDO A. CORDERO (ROGELIO CORDERO, etc. v. ROLANDO A. CORDERO) 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
ROGELIO CORDERO, etc. v. ROLANDO A. CORDERO, (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed August 16, 2023. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D23-0503 Lower Tribunal No. 21-1637 ________________

Rogelio Cordero, etc., Appellant,

vs.

Rolando A. Cordero, Appellee.

An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami- Dade County, Bertila Soto, Judge.

The Billbrough Firm, and G. Bart Billbrough, for appellant.

Rosenthal Law Group, and Alex P. Rosenthal and Amanda Jassem Jones (Weston), for appellee.

Before LOGUE, C.J., and HENDON, and GORDO, JJ.

HENDON, J.

1 Rogelio Cordero (“Appellant”), pursuant to Florida Rule of Appellate

Procedure 9.130(a)(3)(E), seeks to reverse a non-final order granting his

brother’s, Rolando Cordero (“Rolando Jr.”), motion to disqualify the

Appellant’s attorney, Gustavo Gutierrez (“Gutierrez”), in the underlying

probate dispute. We affirm.

Facts

The Decedent had two sons – the Appellant and Rolando Jr. The

Appellant was appointed personal representative of his father’s estate. The

Decedent’s 2018 Will left the entire estate to the Appellant, with no

provision made for the Appellant’s brother, Rolando Jr. Rolando Jr. filed an

adversary proceeding in probate seeking to revoke the Decedent’s 2018

Will, alleging lack of capacity and the Appellant’s undue influence.

Rolando Jr. asserted that a 2012 Will that split the estate equally

between the two brothers was the true will of the Decedent. The attorney

who prepared the 2012 Will was Gutierrez. In 2012, Gutierrez assisted the

Decedent by also transferring two real properties from the Decedent to the

Decedent as a life estate with the remainder interests in Appellant and

Rolando Jr., allegedly evidencing the Decedent’s intent to divide the estate

equally between the two siblings. Rolando Jr. asserted that after 2012, the

Decedent’s mental capacity declined so that by 2018, he was of such

2 diminished capacity that he did not understand the nature of his assets.

Further, Gutierrez had been counsel for Rolando Jr. in several business

and personal transactions, and thus had a conflict of interest by

representing the Appellant in this estate dispute. Rolando Jr. invoked Rule

4-1.7 (Conflict of Interest, Current Clients), Rule 4-1.9 (Conflict of Interest,

Former Client), Rule 4-1.10 (Imputation of Conflicts of Interest; General

Rule), and Rule 4-1.13 (Organization as Client), of the Rules Regulating

the Florida Bar.

In the Appellant’s response to the motion to disqualify he asserted,

among other issues, the following affirmative defenses: diminution in value

of the Estate; an assertion that the 2018 Will represents the uninfluenced

desires of the Decedent with reference to the disposition of his Estate; his

assertion that the Decedent had reasons to disinherit Rolando Jr.; denial

that the Decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute the 2018

Will; and denial that the Decedent was under the undue influence of the

Appellant, who did nothing more than perform the duties of a dutiful son.

The Appellant’s answer also asserted misconduct on the part of Rolando

Jr. following a buyout of the family business from former business partners.

Appellant alleged that Rolando Jr.’s conduct in the business, as well as his

conduct concerning property owned by the Decedent in Costa Rica,

3 disenchanted the Decedent regarding Rolando Jr.’s motivations, resulting

in his exclusion from the 2018 Will.

Gutierrez responded that although he had represented the Decedent

and Rolando Jr. in various business matters since 2012, he was not

involved in the preparation of the 2018 Will and had no knowledge of its

contents. Further, Gutierrez asserted that at the time he undertook to

represent the Appellant, he was not representing Rolando Jr. in any matter.

In July 2021, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the

Appellant’s motion to disqualify Gutierrez. The parties and Gutierrez

testified, and, at the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court denied

Rolando Jr’s. motion to disqualify Gutierrez. In its order, the trial court

stated there was no evidence to support a finding that Gutierrez’s prior

representations would preclude him from currently representing the

Appellant in the will contest litigation.

In November 2021, Rolando Jr. filed an amended complaint, once

again alleging the Decedent’s lack of capacity and the Appellant’s undue

influence, and adding a claim to recover assets allegedly misappropriated

by the Appellant. The Appellant denied the allegations. Over a year later,

Rolando Jr. filed a renewed motion to disqualify Gutierrez, asserting that,

through his prior representations in business and personal transactions for

4 the Decedent, and in mediating disputes between the brothers and their

father, Gutierrez obtained confidential information that was now being used

against him in the probate dispute. Further, he asserted that Gutierrez had

earlier failed to disclose that he would be the Appellant’s fact witness in the

probate dispute.

On February 15, 2023, the trial court held a non-evidentiary hearing

on Rolando Jr.’s renewed motion to disqualify. At that hearing, the

Appellant acknowledged that Gutierrez would be called as a necessary

witness in the litigation and conceded that Gutierrez could not be the

Appellant’s trial counsel. The Appellant’s other attorney, Mr. Barreto,

conceded that under the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar, Gutierrez could

not be trial counsel, but argued that Gutierrez should not be disqualified

from participating in the litigation as a whole, as he “can prepare and he

can work post. The rules are clear. He can sit at the table, but he can't be

trial counsel.”

After hearing from all the involved parties, the trial court issued its

order granting Rolando Jr.’s motion to disqualify. The trial court found that

the new information presented to the trial court, that the Appellant would

call Gutierrez as a fact witness, precluded Gutierrez’s participation in the

litigation. The trial court found, in pertinent part:

5 The Court finds that Mr. Gutierrez is likely to be a necessary fact witness in this case because he was an integral part of Decedent’s estate planning and intimately involved in lawsuits by and against [Corporation] Nema, which are highly relevant issues in this case. During the hearing, Defendant Rogelio [Appellant] conceded that Mr. Gutierrez is a necessary fact witness that [Appellant] intends on calling to testify at trial. The exceptions to Rule 4-3.7(a) do not apply because (1) the testimony would relate to highly contested issues, (2) the testimony will not relate solely to a matter of formality, (3) the testify [sic] will not relate to services rendered in this case, and (4) even though disqualifying Mr. Gutierrez may be a hardship on [Appellant], it is not a substantial hardship because Defendant Rogelio has already had other counsel involved in the case who is more than competent to represent Defendant Rogelio at trial and the trial is being continued for another 6 months. The Court also notes that any hardship to Defendant Rogelio is outweighed by the prejudice to Plaintiff Rolando if Mr. Gutierrez were permitted to continue representing [Appellant].

This appeal ensued. 1

The Court’s standard of review for orders entered on motions to

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ROGELIO CORDERO, etc. v. ROLANDO A. CORDERO, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogelio-cordero-etc-v-rolando-a-cordero-fladistctapp-2023.