WILLIAM HERNANDEZ v. CGI WINDOWS AND DOORS, INC.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 2, 2022
Docket20-1318
StatusPublished

This text of WILLIAM HERNANDEZ v. CGI WINDOWS AND DOORS, INC. (WILLIAM HERNANDEZ v. CGI WINDOWS AND DOORS, INC.) 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
WILLIAM HERNANDEZ v. CGI WINDOWS AND DOORS, INC., (Fla. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed March 2, 2022. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D20-1318 Lower Tribunal No. 17-9387 ________________

William Hernandez, et al., Appellants,

vs.

CGI Windows and Doors, Inc., Appellee.

An appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Alan Fine, Judge.

Carlton Fields, P.A., and Matthew J. Conigliaro, (Tampa); Taylor Espino Vega & Touron, PLLC, and Vanessa A. Van Cleaf, and Daniel R. Vega, for appellants.

Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick, LLP, and Duane A. Daiker, and Daniel J. DeLeo, and Andrew J. Oppenheim (Sarasota), for appellee.

Before SCALES, HENDON, and MILLER, JJ.

MILLER, J. This is an appeal from a final judgment rendered in favor of appellee,

CGI Windows and Doors, Inc., following a jury verdict in a negligence action

brought by appellants, William and Rita Hernandez. On appeal, appellants

contend the trial court erred in allowing the admission of an unsworn

pleading and a myriad of other evidence relating to dismissed and settled

defendants. 1 For the reasons articulated below, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Appellants purchased a multi-million dollar vacant, waterfront lot in

Coral Gables, Florida, upon which they planned to build their dream home.

Acting as their own general contractor through their company, Epic

Construction, Inc., appellants constructed the residence and purchased

$220,653.68 in custom windows and doors from a dealer-installer, the

Companies of R&S, Inc. Forty-two of the windows were manufactured by

CGI.

R&S positioned the windows, while NCJD, a stucco contractor,

performed stucco work in the adjacent areas. After the windows were

1 CGI contends that many of the objections to the challenged evidence were not preserved. We disagree, in large part because the record establishes the trial court issued a definitive pretrial ruling, rendering the propriety of admissibility ripe for review. See § 90.104(1)(b), Fla. Stat. (2021) (“If the court has made a definitive ruling on the record admitting . . . evidence, either at or before trial, a party need not renew an objection or offer of proof to preserve a claim of error for appeal.”).

2 installed, multiple leaks were discovered. Construction was halted and

remedial efforts, including the installation of a replacement lock bar by CGI,

proved unsuccessful.

Epic filed suit in the lower tribunal against NCJD for performing

defective stucco work and damaging certain windows in the process. The

complaint then proceeded through several different iterations until it reached

the operative pleading, a third amended complaint.

In the amended complaint, NCJD remained a defendant, but

appellants were added as plaintiffs and negligent installation claims were

asserted against R&S. Appellants then moved to add a claim for treble

damages against NCJD on the ground it was not properly licensed. That

motion was never adjudicated.

Shortly thereafter, Epic voluntarily dismissed its claims against R&S

and, along with appellants, filed a second amended complaint removing

R&S, leaving NCJD, and adding CGI. 2 CGI moved to dismiss, and the trial

court granted the motion without prejudice.

Epic and appellants subsequently filed the operative pleading, a third

amended complaint, against NCJD and CGI. CGI filed, but later voluntarily

2 Appellants did not file a first amended complaint, but rather proceeded directly to a second amended complaint.

3 dismissed, a counterclaim against Epic, and the trial court dismissed the

claim against NCJD pursuant to a stipulation for settlement. This left only

appellants’ negligence claim against CGI ripe for adjudication.

Before trial, CGI requested the trial court judicially notice “the

pleadings filed by each of the current and former parties to the instant

action.” Appellants opposed the request and filed two pretrial motions. The

first sought to exclude any reference to previous claims, while the second

requested to amend the case style to reflect only appellants and CGI as

parties. In furtherance of the latter motion, appellants contended that “CGI

[was] attempting to keep non-parties on the case style to improperly

influence the jury.”

The trial court convened a hearing. At the hearing, CGI argued that

the prior pleadings constituted admissions by appellants and were relevant

to demonstrate that the former defendants were responsible for the claimed

damages. The trial judge ruled the previous claims could not be used to

demonstrate litigiousness, but CGI would be “permitted to introduce

evidence that Epic and [appellants] sued the now dropped defendant[s].” 3

3 The court, however, excluded evidence of a separate suit filed by appellants against JLU, a subcontractor.

4 Consistent with this ruling, the trial court granted the motion for judicial notice

and denied appellants’ pretrial motions.

The court conducted a seven-day jury trial. During the trial, appellants

presented evidence that the lock bar CGI initially used with the windows was

too short to produce a tight seal, precipitating the later leaks, and that the

replacement lock bar installed by CGI was insufficient and unsightly. In

furtherance of their theory, appellants established that while CGI was

attempting to remedy the window leaks, it issued a document entitled

“Engineering Change Notice,” which required the installation of a longer lock

bar for the particular model of windows installed in appellants’ home. CGI

did not, however, use the longer bar on appellants’ windows or disclose the

document until litigation commenced. Further, CGI purportedly experienced

a trend in leaking with similar windows at other properties, and a

representative indicated that the problems with appellants’ windows were

“the last straw,” prompting the change notice and a different lock bar design.

To counter appellants’ claims, CGI asserted that only five of the most

exposed windows leaked and its efforts to replace those windows were

unreasonably rebuffed. Despite these defenses, two inextricably intertwined

themes dominated CGI’s case: (1) appellants were seeking the same relief

5 from CGI they had previously sought to recover from R&S and NCJD; and

(2) as demonstrated from the prior pleadings, appellants lacked any veracity.

These themes were developed at the outset of the trial. In opening

statement, CGI framed the dispute in the following manner:

You know, I was thinking about this case last night, probably 2:00 in the morning, and I said how do I explain to these people what this case is about. And it’s the triple dip. That’s what this case is about. Okay. Triple dip. They’re blaming three separate parties for the same damages. CGI now, here. Previously, it was R&S and NCJD. Okay. The triple dip. 4

CGI next informed the jury the prior pleadings constituted admissions under

oath, stating:

In fact, you’re not going to have to believe one of the witnesses in our case[-]in[-]chief to get there. You only have to accept that from the plaintiffs, what they said, under oath in a court filing, what they said in their pleadings. Admitting that it was NCJD. ... You can believe them when they say in a court filing that NCJD caused those damages to the windows . . . . ... [T]hey stated, admitted, that R&S negligently installed the windows and damaged them by doing so.

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