SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
PAUL R. WALLACE NEW CASTLE COUNTY COURTHOUSE
JUDGE 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 10400
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801
(302) 255-0660
Date Submitted: May 15, 2020
Date Decided: July 2, 2020
Stephen B. Brauerman, Esquire Kelly A. Green, Esquire
Elizabeth A. Powers, Esquire Smith, Katzenstein & Jenkins LLP
600 North King Street, Suite 400 1000 West Street, Suite 1501
Wilmington, Delaware 19801 Wilmington, Delaware 19801
Robert Mahoney Jeffrey Gans, Esquire
Saleem Mawji Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
Norris Mclaughlin, P.A. 1200 Seventeenth Street NW
400 Crossing Boulevard, 8th Floor Washington, DC 20036-3006
Bridgewater, New Jersey 08807
RE: Facchina Construction Litigations
Civil Action No. N17C-09-163 PRW CCLD (Consolidated)
Dear Counsel:
This Letter Order addresses the Defendants’ ICATech and Empresas’
(together “ICATech”) pending Motion to Strike and for Further Relief (D.I. 170).
For the reasons set forth briefly below, that Motion is GRANTED IN PART, and
DENIED IN PART.
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FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This matter is in the post-trial, pre-verdict phase and is the consolidation of
two separate litigations. The current motion to strike is truly centered around an
exhibit relevant to the first of those two cases. So the Court will not recount the
entirety of the pending claims, counterclaims, defenses, affirmative defenses, etc.,
in this consolidated matter.
- THE FIRST ACTION - BROUGHT BY PAUL V. FACCHINA, SR.
The first case, Paul V. Facchina, Sr. v. ICATech Corporation and Empresas
ICA, S.A.B. DE C.V., was filed in September 2017. It involves Paul V. Facchina,
Sr.’s (“Mr. Facchina”) sale of his (various construction companies (“Facchina
Companies”) to ICATech with Empresas as ICATech’s guarantor. ICATech is a
Florida-based subsidiary of Empresas, a Mexican company.
Mr. Facchina has alleged that the subject June 2013 Purchase Agreement
projected that he would earn $35-40 million over the ensuing three to five years.1
This figure represents about 40% of the consideration Mr. Facchina would receive
from the sale.2 Additionally, ICATech would fund an Escrow Account with Wells
1
Seller Representative Facchina’s Complaint (D.I. 1) ¶ 1.
2
Id.
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Fargo, N.A. with $3.5 million for “payment of any outstanding indemnifications
claims.”3 Both Mr. Facchina and ICATech have requested the escrow funds;
however, Wells Fargo will not release the funds without a court judgment or the
parties’ consent.4 Furthermore, $2.25 million was withheld “as part of the final
working capital adjustments from the case that [Mr. Facchina] received at closing.”5
Finally, Mr. Facchina alleges that ICATech has only paid $4,352,491, $3.5
million of which went to the Escrow Account and $852,491 went to Mr. Facchina,
as opposed to the $35-40 anticipated in the Purchase Agreement.6 Mr. Facchina
claims to have contacted ICATech multiple times between 2015-2017 about the
status of the Facchina Companies and the Earn-Out Payments, but has received no
response.7 After not receiving a response, Mr. Facchina demanded an Acceleration
3
Id. at ¶ 2 and 28.
4
Id. at ¶ 35.
5
Id. at ¶ 30.
6
Id. at ¶ 40-41.
7
Id. at ¶ 44-45.
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Payment of $30,647,509 by September 5, 2017.8 ICATech did not respond to the
request.9
Mr. Facchina’s claims include: (1) a Breach of Contract claim against
ICATech;10 (2) a Legal Fraud claim against both ICATech and Empresas;11 (3) an
Equitable Fraud claim against both ICATech and Empresas;12 (4) a claim that
ICATech and Empresas violated the Delaware Fraudulent Conveyance Act;13 (5) a
Breach of Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing claim against ICATech
and Empresas;14 and (6) an Enforcement of Guaranty claim against Empresas, as the
parental guarantor.15
8
Id. at ¶ 50.
9
Id. at ¶ 51.
10
Id. at ¶ 55-56.
11
Id. at ¶ 57 (citing Id. at ¶ 40-51).
12
Id. at ¶ 59-60.
13
Id. at ¶ 61, 68.
14
Id. at ¶ 70-73.
15
Id. at ¶ 74-76.
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In addition to rights to the $3.5 million Escrow Account and $30,647,509
payment, Mr. Facchina requests compensatory and punitive damages against
ICATech and Empresas, pre-judgment interest, attorney fees and costs, and any
other relief as the court deems just and proper.16
In Answer, Defendants raised several affirmative defenses and brought a
counterclaim accusing Mr. Facchina of fraud. They say he made fraudulent
statements as to the projected value of upcoming projects of the Facchina Companies
to induce Defendants to agree to the Purchase Agreements. Specifically, the
counterclaim points to The Grove at Grand Bay project (a large Florida construction
project) as one that Mr. Facchina allegedly had knowledge would face challenges,
but did not disclose those challenges to Defendants. Among other judgments,
Defendants are seeking an amount of $26 million from Mr. Facchina.17
At issue here is the Mr. Facchina’s citation to an April 4, 2019 affidavit of
Witness Jesus Vazquez in his post-trial reply brief.18 That affidavit’s contents and
alleged relevance go to activity related The Grove project.
16
Id. at ¶ E-I.
17
Def. Answer and Counterclaim (D.I. 7) at 8-11.
18
D.I. 166, at 9.
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Mr. Vazquez’s affidavit was, during summary judgment proceedings,
attached to Defendants ICATech and Empresas’ Brief in Opposition to Mr.
Facchiana’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.19 And pretrial ICATech
suggested it be designated as Joint Exhibit 507.
As ordered, each party lodged its pretrial objections to the exhibits proffered
by the others. Mr. Facchina objected to ICATech’s trial use of Joint Exhibit 507 by
asserting that it was inadmissible hearsay. ICATech conceded that Joint Exhibit 507
was inadmissible hearsay. And so ICATech did not introduce Joint Exhibit 507 at
trial, understood it could not use it in post-trial briefing, and did not use it in any way
thereafter.
Yet, notwithstanding his earlier objection to its admission, Mr. Facchina cited
to the Vazquez affidavit in Section II (A)(1) of his own post-trial reply brief. That
reference reads as follows:
There is no credible evidence that Facchina of Florida (“FOF”) had
an operational policy that it would not – without exception –
subcontract concrete work to more than one entity or that Vazquez
violated a directive regarding subcontracting concrete in packages.
(See SR PostTrial Ans. Br. ¶¶ 13, 14.) In fact, ICATech/Empresas’
ever evolving fraud theory directly contradicts Vazquez’s affidavit
previously submitted to the Court by ICATech/Empresas, which
states that he never deliberately disobeyed any instruction given to
19
D.I. 81
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him by Mr. Facchina or Charles McPherson. (See 4/4/19 Affidavit
of Jesus R. Vazquez [Trans. ID 63136243].)20
ICATech has filed the present motion to strike asking the Court “to enter an order
striking section II (A)(1) of Mr. Facchina’s reply brief and granting ICATech five
business days to file a short (not more than 750 words) surreply responding to the
argument based on evidence not admitted at trial.”21
Mr. Facchina counters that “[t]he Affidavit was not referenced for the truth of
the matter asserted therein, nor as a trial exhibit, nor as part of the trial record. It
was referenced only to demonstrate how the allegations underlying ICATech’s fraud
theory have changed.”22 He says he “reference[d] the Affidavit simply to highlight
the difference between ICATech’s summary judgment and post-trial arguments.”23
And he complains that “in no fewer than twenty instances throughout its three sets
of post-trial briefs, ICATech cites directly from [Mr. Facchina]’s summary judgment
briefs (using the docket transaction numbers), as if they were evidence and part of
20
D.I. 166, at 9.
21
D.I. 166, at 9.
22
D.I. 174, at ¶3.
23
Id. at ¶5.
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the trial record.”24 Thus, he has objected to what he believes are the numerous errant
citations in ICATech’s post-trial briefing that reference the summary judgment
pleadings.25
LEGAL ANALYSIS
No doubt, the parties well understood when the trial recessed that the main
purpose of the post-trial briefing here was to act as the parties’ closing arguments.
And, no doubt, the rules of engagement for closing arguments and post-trial briefing
in Delaware trial courts are expected to be honored by counsel and enforced by the
judge without fail.26
Under those rules, evidence that is not part of the trial record should not be
argued in closing or cited in post-trial briefing.27 Mr. Facchina posits that he referred
24
Id. at ¶6.
25
Id. at ¶7 (“As argued in [Mr. Facchina]’s Post-Trial Answering Brief, statements made in
summary judgment briefs are not evidentiary admissions. (See Seller Representative’s
Answering Post-Trial Brief at 38-40).”).
26
See, e.g., Baker v. State, 906 A.2d 139, 151 (Del. 2006) (During closing argument in a
criminal trial “judges have a continuing duty to intervene sua sponte, even in the absence
of defense counsel’s objection, when a trial prosecutor steps out of bounds.”).
27
See generally Joseph v. Monroe, 419 A.2d 927, 930 (Del. 1980) (“[W]e agree, of course,
that it is improper for counsel to comment on the credibility of witnesses from personal
knowledge or from evidence not on the record.) (emphasis added); Spence v. State, 129
A.3d 212, 223 (Del. 2015) (“While prosecutors are given latitude in making closing
arguments, his or her comments must be limited to properly admitted evidence and any
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to Mr. Vasquez’s affidavit that had been submitted only earlier in the case during
summary judgment proceedings “not for the truth of the matter asserted therein” but
merely to demonstrate the evolution of ICATech’s arguments throughout the
lawsuits. But in doing so, he expressly asks the Court to examine the substance of
affirmative statements in a now unadmitted affidavit, i.e., he, in closing argument,
expressly references the statements of a witness that are not in the trial record and
urges the Court to consider their substance. The Court finds this any easy call under
Delaware’s well-established rules. That reference in Mr. Facchina’s argument is
improper and properly cured by excision.
Undaunted though, Mr. Facchina—by complaining that he does no worse than
ICATech in its brief—seems to urge Court to apply the “invited response” or “invited
reply” rule. That rule suggests that improper closing argument by one party may “open
the door” to an otherwise impermissable rebuttal by the other.28 But the invited
response doctrine has been strongly criticized, if not outright rejected, by the Delaware
reasonable inferences or conclusions that can be drawn therefrom.”); TruePosition Inc. v.
Andrew Corp., 2008 WL 205305, at *2 (D. Del. Jan. 23, 2008) (striking evidence cited in
a post-trial brief “because it was not part of ‘the factual record created at trial,’” and thus
“was not permissibly included in defendant’s post-trial briefing”).
28
Miller v. State, 2000 WL 313484, at *3-4 (Del. Feb. 16, 2000).
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Supreme Court.29 And the Court could rest its rejection of Mr. Facchina’s invitation
to excuse him on by invocation of the United States Supreme Court’s simple statement
on invited responset: “Clearly, two improper arguments-two apparent wrongs-do not
make for a right result.”30 However, even where our high court has indulged some
resort to the invited reply rule, it has made clear that the rebutting arguments may not
be otherwise “improper” comments.31 To be sure, Mr. Facchina’s citation to a
witness’s statement that he affirmatively objected to and that was never admitted in the
trial is improper argument.
It is well-accepted in Delaware that a party must object to an improper closing
argument; it must not take such argument as license to respond improperly. 32 Of
course, such objections are only as effective as the trial judge’s willingness to take
appropriate corrective action. And most often that corrective action is striking of the
29
Id.
30
United State v. Young, 470 U.s. 1, 11 (1985).
31
See, e.g., Hooks v. State, 416 A.2d 189, 205 (Del. 1980); Dorman v. State, 608 A.2d 726
(Del. 1992).
32
Michael v. State, 529 A.2d 752, 763 (Del. 1987).
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offending argument—which normally takes the form of an instruction to the factfinder
to disregard such.33
Here, Mr. Facchina did violate the well-established rule that only evidence
admitted at trial should be used in closing arguments. So the Court will disregard just
so much of Mr. Facchina’s argument as will cure that wrong. So too, the Court will
consider the like objection Mr. Facchina has properly raised to IcaTech’s citation to
the summary judgment briefing.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the Court GRANTS, in part, ICATech’s Motion. The Court
shall strike only the offending portion of Section II (A)(1) of Mr. Facchina’s post-
trial reply brief,34 reading such section now as follows:
There is no credible evidence that Facchina of Florida (“FOF”) had
an operational policy that it would not – without exception –
subcontract concrete work to more than one entity or that Vazquez
violated a directive regarding subcontracting concrete in packages.
(See SR PostTrial Ans. Br. ¶¶ 13, 14.) In fact, ICATech/Empresas’
ever evolving fraud theory directly contradicts Vazquez’s affidavit
33
See Sammons v. Doctors for Emergency Services, P.A., 913 A.2d 519, 538-39 (Del. 2006);
Tilson v. Luthern Senior Services, Inc., 2010 WL 6596959, at *4-5 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec.
12, 2010); see also Chavin v. Cope, 243 A.2d 694, 696 (Del. 1968) (“Ordinarily, an
appropriate instruction to disregard the statement is sufficient to avoid prejudice to the
defendant . . . .”).
34
D.I. 166, at 9.
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previously submitted to the Court by ICATech/Empresas, which
states that he never deliberately disobeyed any instruction given to
him by Mr. Facchina or Charles McPherson. (See 4/4/19 Affidavit
of Jesus R. Vazquez [Trans. ID 63136243].)
And the Court will not consider the contents of the Mr. Vazquez’s affidavit for any
purpose in rendering its verdict.
During its deliberation, the Court will also remain mindful of Mr. Facchina’s
objection to ICATech’s alleged misuse of excerpts from or statements made in the
summary judgment briefing as if they were admissible trial evidence or evidentiary
admissions made at trial.
The Court finds, therefore, that there is no reason for a further written post-
trial submission “responding to [Mr. Facchina’s] argument based on evidence not
admitted at trial.” So ICATech’s request for leave file a surreply is DENIED.
The matter is now considered fully submitted for deliberation and verdict on
the evidence and arguments properly presented by the parties.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Paul R. Wallace
Paul R. Wallace, Judge
Original to Prothonotary
cc: All Counsel via File and Serve