VILLA BELLINI RISTORANTE & LOUNGE, INC. v. CIRO MANCINI

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 15, 2019
Docket18-2249
StatusPublished

This text of VILLA BELLINI RISTORANTE & LOUNGE, INC. v. CIRO MANCINI (VILLA BELLINI RISTORANTE & LOUNGE, INC. v. CIRO MANCINI) 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
VILLA BELLINI RISTORANTE & LOUNGE, INC. v. CIRO MANCINI, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

OF FLORIDA

SECOND DISTRICT

VILLA BELLINI RISTORANTE & LOUNGE, ) INC., ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D18-2249 ) CIRO MANCINI, and QAMM ) PROPERTIES, INC., a Florida corporation, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Opinion filed November 15, 2019.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pinellas County; George M. Jirotka, Judge.

Stacy D. Blank of Holland & Knight LLP, Tampa, for Appellant.

Brandon S. Vesely and Shannon T. Sinai (withdrew after briefing) of Albertelli Law, Tampa; Brandon S. Vesely of The Florida Appellate Firm, P.A., St. Petersburg (substituted as counsel of record), for Appellee Ciro Mancini.

No appearance for Appellee QAMM Properties, Inc.

LUCAS, Judge. On the surface, this is a business dispute over the right of a shareholder to

inspect his corporation's records; but the real controversy here is whether Ciro Mancini,

an executive chef, is in fact a shareholder of Villa Bellini Ristorante & Lounge, Inc. (Villa

Bellini). Following an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court issued its "Final Order

Granting Petitioner's Writ of Mandamus and Motion for Summary Relief" in favor of Mr.

Mancini and determined that Mr. Mancini was indeed a Villa Bellini shareholder and

that, as such, he was entitled to access and review of Villa Bellini's corporate records.

Villa Bellini appeals from that order.

I.

In the interest of brevity, we will relate several of the circuit court's factual

findings to provide some of the factual background of this appeal:

On or about January 27, 2014, Ciro Mancini ("Mancini"), an Italian chef working at a restaurant in Dunedin . . . spoke with a man by the name of Marco Marzocca ("Marzocca") about opening an Italian restaurant called Villa Bellini Ristorante, LLC. . . .

....

On or about July 24, 2014, Villa Bellini [Ristorante] and Lounge, Inc. ("VBRL") was established and incorporated and Villa Bellini Ristorante, LLC ceased operations.

Amongst other things, Mancini, as general manager and executive chef of VBRL, was responsible for overseeing the buildout, the hiring of employees, and the menu to the new restaurant, VBRL.

In his position as Executive Chef of VBRL, Mancini was paid a salary.

On or about September 20, 2016, Mancini was terminated as the Executive Chef of VBRL. . . .

-2- After September 20, 2016, Mancini, through counsel, made requests for inspection of books and records of VBRL pursuant to a statutory demand for inspection Chapter § 607.1602, Florida Statutes (2016 as amended) but said requests were denied because VBRL, Inc. did not recognize Mancini as a shareholder.

What followed Mr. Mancini's termination and unsuccessful demand to

review Villa Bellini's records was Mr. Mancini's filing of a verified petition for writ of

mandamus against Villa Bellini. Mr. Mancini also filed a "Motion for Summary Relief

and Expedited Relief Pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 607.1604(1) and Expedited Relief

Pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 607.1604(2)" in which Mr. Mancini, quite candidly, alleged that

the underlying purpose for the requested documents was to "determine the existence

and merits" of potential legal and equitable claims Mr. Mancini would pursue against

Villa Bellini and its shareholders. However, as Mr. Mancini conceded (in a subsequent

motion to consolidate and stay), the determination of Mr. Mancini's status as a

shareholder of Villa Bellini—that is, whether he was one—was an important preliminary

issue that "must be made in the first instance" by the circuit court.

Perhaps not surprisingly, that issue was both somewhat convoluted and

hotly contested. We need not detail all the bank records, tax returns, amended tax

returns, and corporate records that were brought to the circuit court's attention. Suffice

it to say, there were discrepancies—early corporate filings reflected Mr. Mancini owning

60,000 of Villa Bellini's 240,000 authorized shares; amended records later deleted that

ownership interest.1

1The record does not reflect that Villa Bellini issued physical certificates of shares to any of its shareholders.

-3- On April 6 and 12, 2018, the circuit court convened an evidentiary hearing

on Mr. Mancini's motion for summary relief and considered the merits of his mandamus

petition. At the outset of the proceeding, the court announced that the hearing was "a

show-cause hearing whether this Court should not immediately issue a writ of

mandamus," which raised another preliminary issue: who had the burden of

persuasion? Villa Bellini's counsel maintained that the burden remained on the

petitioner, while Mr. Mancini argued that the burden would be on the respondent to

show good cause why Mr. Mancini was not entitled to the corporate records he sought.

The court agreed with Mr. Mancini and indicated that Villa Bellini bore the burden of

showing "why this Court should not issue a writ of mandamus," and the parties then

proceeded to present their respective cases.

From our review of the evidentiary hearing, the underlying issue of Mr.

Mancini's status as a shareholder was anything but clear. The current president (and

partial owner) of Villa Bellini, Vincent Addonisio, testified that Mr. Mancini never became

a shareholder of Villa Bellini because Mr. Mancini never contributed the $60,000 that

Mr. Addonisio believed was required under a purported "operating agreement" of the

corporation.2 Mr. Mancini could not recall the total amount he had paid for his shares in

Villa Bellini, but he testified that he provided a $15,000 check, an unknown number of

"deposits," remodeling construction work for the restaurant, and that he then worked for

the restaurant as a chef and manager. All of this, Mr. Mancini stated, covered the

2The operating agreement Mr. Addonisio was referring to was a record of Villa Bellini Ristorante, LLC's, which stopped operating in 2014 when Villa Bellini was established.

-4- entirety of his required initial investment. Mr. Mancini was of the view that this was

verbally agreed to among Villa Bellini's shareholders. Although early corporate records

and tax returns reflected that Mr. Mancini was the president and a one-fourth owner of

Villa Bellini, the gentleman who prepared those early records3 testified that Mr. Mancini

had been his only source of financial information for the corporation at the time they

were made. He further recalled:

Well, in the beginning I was trying to come up with the balance sheet to show the shareholders' contribution and I could see all the deposits being made from all the different shareholders, and I asked Mr. Mancini where his was and where they were, where they were coming from, and he mentioned that he gave – he paid with credit cards some expenses for – during the construction [of the restaurant], and then he gave liquor, wine – more wine to the company for his share.

And I also asked for proof of all that meaning statements from the credit card accounts, and inventory, and never got it. Actually, to this day I never saw any evidence.

As Mr. Mancini's counsel expressed in his concluding remarks to the trial court, "this

company was run very loosely.

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