Court Opinion

ID: 3063949
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-14 21:19:03.233356+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:49:38.135591
License: Public Domain

[DO NOT PUBLISH]

             IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                     FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                       ________________________                 FILED
                                                       U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
                             No. 08-11192                ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                       ________________________          FEBRUARY 17, 2009
                                                          THOMAS K. KAHN
                                                               CLERK
                    D. C. Docket No. 06-20682-CV-JAL

TAMBOURINE COMERCIO INTERNACIONAL SA,
a Portuguese corporation,
HAWKSBAY LTD.,
an Isle of Man corporation,

                                                         Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                  versus

JAY H. SOLOWSKY, ESQ.,
an individual residing in Florida,
PERTNOY, SOLOWSKY & ALLEN, P.A.,
a Florida professional association,

                                                        Defendants-Appellees.

                       ________________________

                Appeal from the United States District Court
                    for the Southern District of Florida
                      _________________________

                            (February 17, 2009)

Before DUBINA, BLACK, and FAY, Circuit Judges.
FAY, Circuit Judge:

      This appeal arises out of the allegedly unlawful conduct of an attorney and

his law firm with respect to a sum of money they held in trust. Plaintiffs

Hawksbay Ltd. (“Hawksbay”) and Tambourine Comércio International, S.A.

(“Tambourine”) sued Defendants Jay Solowsky and his law firm Pertnoy,

Solowsky & Allen, P.A.(collectively “Solowsky” or “Defendants”), claiming they

unlawfully held Hawksbay’s money in trust and also unlawfully dispersed it. At

the close of Plaintiffs’ case at trial Defendants made a Rule 50 Motion on all

claims, which the district court granted. Plaintiffs raise the following issues on

appeal: (1) the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Hawksbay’s

conversion and civil theft claims; (2) the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule

50 Motion on Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim; (3) the district court’s

exclusion of David Turner’s documentary and testimonial evidence; (4) the district

court’s exclusion of the outcome of a related case; and (5) the district court’s

exclusion of several other pieces of evidence. For the reasons set out below, we

reverse on the first and third issues, as well as some of the evidentiary issues.

                                      I. FACTS

A. Background

      1. Sitindustries: Tambourine and Hawksbay

                                           2
       Tambourine and Hawksbay are two subsidiaries of the Italian entity

Sitindustrie, S.P.A. (“Sitindustrie”). Sitindustrie manufactures tubes in stainless

steel, copper, and nickel alloys. The founder of Sitindustrie, German Bocciolone

(“German”), was the CEO until he died in 1993. After German’s death, his

daughter Antonella Bocciolone (“Antonella”) took over as the CEO. In 1997 at the

direction of Antonella, Sitindustrie’s holding company, Kobarid Holdings, S.A.

(“Kobarid”) acquired Hawksbay and Tambourine to control Sitindustrie’s

investments.

       Antonella served on the board of both Hawksbay and Tambourine with

David Brenman, Tambourine’s chief operating officer through 2002. Antonella

and Brenman later married in 2000. At their direction, Tambourine lent twenty

million dollars to Lionheart International Ltd. (“Lionheart”) to be invested.

Several months later Tambourine asked for the money back, but only received ten

million dollars. Tambourine briefly retained Defendant Pertnoy, Solowsky, &

Allen (“PSA”) in 1999 to locate the missing ten million dollars - this sum of

money was known as the “Lionheart ten million.” The Lionheart ten million,

however, is not part of this litigation.

       In 1998, Tambourine entered into a Management Agreement with Edward

Reizen, a self proclaimed fund management expert. Tambourine agreed to pay

                                           3
Reizen four hundred thousand dollars annually to manage Tambourine’s assets.

The Management Agreement gave Reizen full authority to act for Tambourine.

      In March 1999, Antonella and Brenman appointed Reizen to the Hawksbay

board. Reizen was designated as the manager of Hawksbay’s bank accounts and

given the authority to transfer and invest Hawksbay’s funds. At Antonella and

Brenman’s direction, Tambourine also lent the ten million dollars it did receive

back from Lionheart to Hawksbay - this sum of money was known as the

“Hawksbay ten million.” From 1999 to 2002 Reizen allegedly interacted with

numerous financial institutions as Hawksbay’s representative. He was later

removed as a board member in November 2002.

      In 2000, after learning from the Sitindustrie financial manager that there was

financial stress, Antonella’s younger brother Fausto Bocciolone (“Fausto”) began

to look for the twenty million dollars managed by Tambourine and Hawksbay.

After getting the cold shoulder from Antonella and Brenman, Fausto secretly

copied documents concerning the money from Brenman’s office. Fausto brought

his concerns to the rest of the Bocciolone family and Antonella subsequently

resigned as CEO in 2001. She was replaced by Fausto. Antonella and Brenman

were later removed as Hawksbay directors in November 2002 and Fausto was

appointed as a director of both Hawksbay and Tambourine. Fausto is currently the

                                          4
CEO of Sitindustrie.

       In December 2002 the Hawksbay loan matured, but was never repaid.

Sitindustries created a team to look for the missing money in January 2003,

including a Swiss lawyer, Yves Auberson. Auberson was able to trace the money

for a while, but ultimately could not locate it. Sitindustries subsequently sued

Antonella and Brenman in Switzerland and Canada to recover the Hawksbay ten

million. That suit is not part of this case.

       2. The Hawksbay Ten Million

       In their brief, Defendants lay out the transfers of the Hawksbay ten million

from 1998-2002. In 1999 the entire sum was transferred to IHAG Bank in Zurich.

In 2000 the funds were combined with monies in which Reizen had an interest and

used to purchase Powell Portfolio, Inc., BVI (“Powell”) bearer shares. These

shares were held in a UBS account and then transferred to the Avenin Group Ltd.,

BVI (“Avenin”) where they were pooled in a one hundred million dollar

investment.1 The proceeds from the sale of the Avenin Note were sent to the

Canadian Brokerage Firm, Pentstone Investment, and then to Walter Schumacher’s

client account in Switzerland in 2001. Hawksbay’s lawyer, Auberson, was able to

       1
        These transactions were facilitated by a Swiss lawyer, Walter Schumacher.
Schumacher pooled Hawksbay’s funds with the resources of a number of his clients to invest in
Avenin.

                                               5
trace the funds to the Avenin account, but subsequently lost the trail. Auberson

looked, but did not find any funds in the Swiss banks, Schumacher’s account, or in

Canada.

      The parties dispute what happened to the money next. Hawksbay asserts

that the funds in Schumacher’s client account were then transferred by Reizen to

Solowsky’s Interest on Trust Account in October 2006 - the funds transferred to

Solowsky’s trust account are discussed in detail below. Defendants, however,

claim that after the funds were moved to Schumacher’s account the trail goes cold

and that there is no evidence to link the funds in Switzerland with the funds Reizen

transferred to Solowsky’s IOTA account.

      3. Reizen’s Transfer to Solowsky

      On October 16, 2003, Reizen transferred six million dollars from a Deming

Finance Ltd. account to a PSA client trust account known throughout this litigation

as the “IOTA Account.” “Hawksbay/Brenman” was written on the transfer

documentation.

      Reizen testified that he told Solowsky he had full authority over the funds

and signed an engagement letter representing and warranting that he had:

             full and complete authority over and to the funds which
             we are holding in escrow, including the right to pay for
             legal defense in the above-referenced actions and any
             related actions which may be filed, and that, to your

                                          6
                  knowledge, your authority has not been revoked,
                  suspended or repudiated in any way.

(Jt. Ex. 6.) Reizen further testified that he told Solowsky the transfer was intended

to facilitate a settlement of the Bocciolone family dispute and that he (Reizen)

believed he was entitled to over two million dollars of the funds under the

Management Agreement. Reizen testified that Solowsky read the Management

Agreement before he agreed to accept the funds.

         On October 21, 2003 Reizen sent Solowsky the first authorization for

disbursal of the funds from the IOTA account. The authorization identified the

funds to be disbursed as the funds from the Sitindustrie/Brenman Settlement. As

per Reizen’s instructions, Solowsky distributed over three hundred and fifty

thousand dollars. The money went to two companies, which Reizen testified that

he used to make payments to himself, and to PSA as a retainer. On October 24,

2003 Solowsky transferred $5.5 million from the IOTA account to an interest

bearing account at Gibraltar Bank.2 Over the next three years, upon Reizen’s

written request, Solowsky disbursed over four million dollars from the trust

accounts. These disbursals were all either made for Reizen’s benefit or to PSA.

Reizen’s written requests all referred to the funds in connection with one or all of

         2
             We refer to this money, as well as the money in the IOTA account, as being held in
trust.

                                                   7
the following: Sitindustries, Hawksbay, Brenman, Kobarid, and Tambourine.

      4. The Solowsky-Weiss Discussions

      In 2003, Fausto hired Joel Weiss, a lawyer in New York, to try and locate

the Hawksbay ten million. Weiss contacted Solowsky in Spring 2003 because

Solowsky had represented Tambourine in its 1999 attempt to locate the Lionheart

ten million. Solowsky told Weiss that he was owed money by Antonella and

Brenman. Hawksbay paid Solowsky the money owed and Solowsky sent Weiss

his file on the Lionheart ten million.

      On October 23, 2003, at Reizen’s request, Solowsky called Weiss. Weiss

testified that Solowsky told him that in exchange for indemnification and releases,

his clients could assist Hawksbay in finding a substantial amount of Hawksbay’s

missing money. Solowsky did not tell Weiss that Reizen had transferred six

million dollars into his account a few days earlier.

      After discussions with his clients, Weiss called Solowsky on October 31,

2003 and secretly taped the phone conversation. A transcript of the recording was

introduced into evidence as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 7. Weiss began by telling Solowsky

that Hawksbay wanted to recover its missing money and asked Solowsky what he

had in mind. Solowsky explained to Weiss that the ten million dollars had been

whittled down to five million dollars and change. Solowsky then offered that in

                                           8
exchange for indemnification and releases his clients could obtain the five million

and change for Hawksbay in ninety to one hundred and twenty days. Solowsky

also asked Plaintiffs to stop looking for the money in the meantime. Weiss then

asked Solowsky if he knew where the five million dollars was currently. Solowsky

told Weiss three times that he did not know. Weiss ended the conversation by

saying that he would convey Solowsky’s offer to his clients. Solowsky and Weiss

also communicated by letter on November 21, 2003 and December 10, 2003.

Fausto declined Solowsky’s offer.

      Fausto testified that he did not find out Reizen had transferred six million

dollars into the IOTA account in October 2003 until December 2005.

      5. The Kobarid Litigation

      What became of the Hawksbay ten million and whether Reizen

misappropriated it was the subject of another Southern District of Florida case,

Kobarid Holding, S.A., et al. v. Reizen, Case No. 03-23269 (“Kobarid”). In that

case, the following entities sued Reizen to recover the Hawksbay ten million:

Kobarid, Sitindustries, Tambourine, and Hawksbay. The defendants in this case

served as defense counsel for Reizen in Kobarid until they were disqualified, based

on their previous representation of Tambourine in 1999. Kobarid was decided on

June 14, 2006, when the jury in that case found Reizen liable to Hawksbay for

                                          9
breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, fraudulent concealment, conversion, civil theft, and

aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, all on account of his management of

the Hawksbay ten million. After a jury verdict in Hawksbay’s favor, the court

entered final judgment for Hawksbay for over thirty-nine million dollars on June

16, 2006. The jury did not find in favor of any of the other plaintiffs.

       On August 9, 2006, Solowsky transferred the remaining $1,456,775.78 in

the Gibraltar account to Hawksbay.

       6. The Instant Case

       On March 17, 2006, Plaintiffs Tambourine and Hawksbay filed suit against

Defendants Solowsky and PSA over their alleged role in concealing the six million

dollars in their trust accounts. In the most recent version of the complaint,

Plaintiffs brought the following claims against Defendants: Count I, for civil theft;

Count II, for conversion; Count III, for breach of fiduciary duty; and Count IV, for

negligent supervision. Plaintiffs also brought a claim for punitive damages.

       These claims were eventually whittled down by Defendants’ Motion to

Dismiss and Motion for Summary Judgment. At trial the only claims remaining

were those for civil theft and conversion by Hawksbay, and a breach of fiduciary

duty claim by Tambourine.3 Hawksbay’s civil theft and conversion claims allege

       3
          The court dismissed Hawksbay’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty because Hawksbay
did not claim to have or to have had an attorney-client relationship with Defendants, whereas

                                             10
that Solowsky misappropriated Hawksbay’s funds for his and Reizen’s benefit. At

issue in Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim was whether Defendants

breached their fiduciary duty to Tambourine, a former client, in representing

Reizen in related litigation.

B. Procedural History

       At the close of trial in this case, the district court granted Defendants’ Rule

50 Motion and dismissed Hawksbay’s civil theft and conversion claims, stating

that Hawksbay failed to establish its burden of proof. The court held that

Hawksbay did not prove that Solowsky knowingly obtained or used Hawksbay’s

funds; that Solowsky had a felonious intent to deprive Hawksbay of its right to the

funds; that Hawksbay had an undisputed right to immediate possession of the six

million held in trust; and that the funds in question were specific and identifiable.

On this basis, the court entered Judgment as a Matter of Law on Hawksbay’s

conversion and civil theft claims.

       The court also granted Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Tambourine’s breach

of fiduciary duty claim based on the two-year statute of limitations for professional

malpractice actions. The court stated that Tambourine should have known by

Tambourine did claim to have established such a relationship when Defendants represented it in
1999 to locate the Lionheart ten million dollars. The court also dismissed Tambourine’s claims
for civil theft and conversion because Tambourine did not have any interest in the Hawksbay ten
million, as it was merely Hawksbay’s creditor.

                                              11
December 2003 that a professional malpractice claim might exist based on a breach

of fiduciary duty, but that the claim was time-barred because Tambourine did not

file its action until March 17, 2006. As an additional basis for granting

Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Count III, the district court found that Defendants’

representation of Reizen in the Kobarid litigation (which the district court called

the “second engagement” of PSA in December 2003) was not substantially related

or materially adverse to Tambourine - in other words, the court held substantively

that Tambourine did not make out a breach of fiduciary duty claim insofar as it was

based on Defendants’ representation of Reizen in the Kobarid litigation.

                             II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       We review the grant of a Rule 50 motion for judgment as a matter of law de

novo. Abel v. Dubberly, 210 F.3d 1334, 1337 (11th Cir. 2000).

       “Rulings on the admission of evidence are reviewed for abuse of discretion.”

U.S. Steel, LLC, v. Tieco, Inc., 261 F.3d 1275, 1286 (11th Cir. 2001) (citation

omitted).4 “An abuse of discretion arises when the district court’s decision rests

upon a clearly erroneous finding of fact, an errant conclusion of law, or an

       4
          Inherent in this standard “is the firm recognition that there are difficult evidentiary
rulings that turn on matters uniquely within the purview of the district court, which has
first-hand access to documentary evidence and is physically proximate to testifying witnesses
and the jury.” Tran v. Toyota Motor Corp., 420 F.3d 1310, 1315 (11th Cir. 2005) (quotation and
citation omitted).

                                               12
improper application of law to fact.” U.S. v. Smith, 459 F.3d 1276, 1295 (11th

Cir. 2006) (quotation and citation omitted). Further, we “will not reverse [the

district court’s evidentiary rulings] unless an erroneous ruling resulted in a

substantial prejudicial effect.” Wright v. CSX Transp., Inc., 375 F.3d 1252, 1260

(11th Cir. 2004) (quotation and citation omitted).

                                   III. ANALYSIS

A. Rule 50 Motion: Conversion and Civil Theft Claims

      On February 19, 2008 the district court granted Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion

for Judgment as a Matter of Law against Hawksbay’s conversion and civil theft

claims. Hawksbay contends that this ruling was fundamentally flawed.

      Rule 50 requires a court to render a judgment as a matter of law when “a

party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and the court finds that a

reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the

party on that issue.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1) (2007). In reviewing a motion for

judgment as a matter of law, “we consider all the evidence in the light most

favorable to the non-moving party, and independently determine whether the facts

and inferences point so overwhelmingly in favor of the movant that reasonable

people could not arrive at a contrary verdict.” Webb-Edwards v. Orange County

Sheriff’s Office, 525 F.3d 1013, 1029 (11th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted).

                                           13
      1. Conversion

      Hawksbay contends the district court erred when it entered Judgment as a

Matter of Law against its conversion claim. We agree.

      “[C]onversion is an unauthorized act which deprives another of his property

permanently or for an indefinite time.” Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pa. v. Carib.

Aviation, Inc., 759 F.2d 873, 878 (11th Cir. 1985) (quoting Senfeld v. Bank of

N.S. Trust Co. (Cayman), 450 So. 2d 1157, 1160-61 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984)).

Conversion must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence.         Small Bus.

Admin. v. Echevarria, 864 F. Supp. 1254, 1264 (S.D. Fla. 1994). Under Florida

law, the claimant must further establish “possession or an immediate right to

possession of the converted property at the time of conversion.” U.S. v. Bailey,

419 F.3d 1208, 1212 (11th Cir. 2005). While demand by the rightful owner serves

as actual notice of the rights of the bereaved party to the recipient, demand and

refusal are not required elements for a conversion claim. Senfeld, 450 So. 2d at

1161. “The generally accepted rule is that demand and refusal are unnecessary

where the act complained of amounts to a conversion regardless of whether a

demand is made.” Goodrich v. Malowney, 157 So. 2d 829, 832 (Fla. 2d DCA

1963) (citation omitted).

      A conversion claim for money also requires proof that the funds are specific

                                      -14-
and identifiable. Navid v. Uiterwyk Corp., 130 B.R. 594, 595 (M.D. Fla. 1991)

(citing Allen v. Gordon, 429 So. 2d 369 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). “Money is capable

of identification where it is delivered at one time, by one act and in one mass, or

where the deposit is special and the identical money is to be kept for the party

making the deposit, or where the wrongful possession of such property is

obtained.” Belford Trucking Co. v. Zagar, 243 So. 2d 646, 648 (Fla. 4th DCA

1970) (citation omitted). This identification requirement ensures that a fund of

money actually exists to pay a specific debt owed and the claimant is not merely

transforming a contract dispute into a conversion claim. Allen, 429 So. 2d at 371;

see also Gasparini v. Pordomingo, 972 So. 2d 1053, 1056 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008)

(citation omitted) (“For money to be the object of conversion ‘there must be an

obligation to keep intact or deliver the specific money in question, so that money

can be identified.’”); Fla. Desk, Inc. v. Mitchell Int’l, Inc., 817 So. 2d 1059, 1061

(Fla. 5th DCA 2002) (“[T]here is no evidence that there was any obligation on [the

defendant’s] part to keep intact or hold a specific fund to deliver to [the

plaintiff].”); Gambolati v. Sarkisian, 622 So. 2d 47, 49 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993) (funds

not identifiable because defendant “was seeking to enforce an obligation to pay

money and nothing more . . . . [the defendant] was not required to pay to [the

plaintiff] the identical monies he collected”); Rosen v. Marlin, 486 So. 2d 623,

                                        -15-
625 (Fla. 3d DCA 1986) (“This is not a case where a party intentionally received a

specifically identifiable sum of money knowing that he had no right to take it and

who refused to give it back”); Russell v. The Praetorians, 28 So. 2d 786, 789 (Ala.

1947) (citation omitted) (“It seems to be well settled, that trover lies for the

conversion of money, where there is an obligation on the part of the defendant to

return specific coin or notes intrusted to him.”).

      Here, the court held that Hawksbay failed to establish a sufficient

evidentiary basis to find Solowsky liable for conversion. The court found that

Hawksbay did not establish by a preponderance of the evidence (1) “that the funds

in question were specifically and identifiably the funds of Hawksbay”; and (2) “an

undisputed right to immediate possession of the property in question.” (Trial Tr. at

828-29.) We disagree.

             a. Specific and Identifiable Funds

      Hawksbay produced sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that the

six million dollars in trust was specific and identifiable. The funds were delivered

by Reizen to Solowsky at one time, on October 16, 2003; by one act, a wire

transfer; and in one mass, six million dollars. Unlike the plaintiffs in cases such as

Gambolati and Florida Desk, Hawksbay’s suit was not brought to enforce a general

obligation to pay money, but to recover the actual ten million dollars that Reizen

                                          -16-
allegedly stole from it. See 622 So.2d at 49; 817 So. 2d at 1061. Here, Reizen was

under an obligation to keep intact or hold the ten million dollars Hawksbay gave

him to invest. A jury could find the fund was a specifically identifiable sum of

money.

        Further, Reizen’s testimony and the transfer documents specifically identify

the money as Hawksbay’s. Reizen put “Hawksbay/Brenman” on the bottom of the

October 16, 2003 transfer documentation (Jt. Ex. 3) and Reizen testified that he

labeled the transaction Hawksbay/Brenman because “[t]he funds belonged to either

Hawksbay or one of their related companies through Mr. Brenman” (Trial Tr. at

340).       Reizen further testified that he told Solowsky the funds belonged to

Hawksbay5 and that Reizen had control over the funds based on his Management

Agreement with Tambourine.6 In fact, Reizen testified that Solowsky would not

        5
            Mr. Garnett:      Okay. Now did you tell [Solowsky] that you personally owned
                              these funds before they came into his account?
            Mr. Reizen:       No.
            Mr. Garnett:      Did you tell [Solowsky] that they belonged to Hawksbay or one of
                              the Plaintiffs?
            Mr. Reizen:       Yes.

(Trial Tr. at 344.) Mr. Garnett is Hawksbay’s attorney in this case.
        6
            Mr. Garnett:      And did you tell [Solowsky] that you believed that whatever
                              control you had over the funds was related to either your being on
                              the board of directors or to this management agreement?
            Mr. Reizen:       Yes.

(Trial Tr. at 350.) The Management Agreement was between Reizen and Tambourine, not
Hawksbay. Nevertheless, Reizen alleged that this Agreement authorized him to possess

                                               -17-
move the funds into the IOTA account until he saw Reizen’s Management

Agreement.7 Further, Reizen’s written authorizations to disburse the money held

in trust routinely referred to the funds as belonging to Sitindustrie, Brenman,

Tambourine, Hawksbay and/or Kobarid. (See, e.g., Jt. Ex. 7; Jt. Ex. 8; Defs.’ Ex.

9; Defs.’ Ex. 12; Defs.’ Ex. 21; Defs.’ Ex. 22.) On this basis, a jury could find that

the six million in trust was a specific fund of money that rightfully belonged to

Hawksbay.

        The district court held that the aforementioned evidence was insufficient

because Hawksbay did not trace the funds “from the start of a paper trail to its

deposit in the Defendant’s account.” (Trial Tr. at 829.) Defendants also cite to

Hawksbay’s failure to accurately trace the funds in their Appellate brief. However,

to establish that funds are “specific and identifiable,” a detailed tracing of the

money is not required. As discussed above, funds are “specific and identifiable” if

the claimant can prove that the defendant had an obligation to deliver a fund of

money and that fund of money actually exists to pay a specific debt owed. See,

e.g., Allen, 429 So. 2d at 371; Gasparini, 972 So. 2d at 1056.

Hawksbay’s funds.
        7
            Mr. Garnett:   And when did you give [Solowsky] a copy of the management
                           agreement?
            Mr. Reizen:    I believe it was in the first discussions we had before the funds –
                           before he agreed to accept the funds to his account.
(Trial Tr. at 351.)

                                           -18-
       Here, Hawksbay has presented sufficient evidence that Reizen had an

obligation to deliver ten million dollars to Hawksbay and that the six million

dollars transferred to the IOTA account was part of that ten million. The fact that

the ten million dollars were co-mingled with other investments does not make the

funds unidentifiable or unspecific.8 As far as Hawksbay is concerned, Hawksbay

gave Reizen ten million dollars to invest and through numerous investment

strategies Reizen lost $4.5 million. Reizen still had an obligation to keep intact the

remaining $5.5 million and return it to Hawksbay. Hawksbay presented sufficient

evidence that Reizen put the remaining money from the Hawskbay ten million into

Solowsky’s IOTA account. As discussed above, Reizen identified the money in

trust as belonging to Hawskbay both in testimony and on all the transfer

documentation. Defendants’ evidence that the trail of the Hawksbay ten million

was lost once the Avenin Note was sold and the proceeds were transferred to

Schumacher’s client account in Switzerland can be considered by a jury.                  It is

possible that the jury will find there is insufficient evidence to link the funds in

Switzerland with the funds transferred to the IOTA account. However, viewing the

       8
         Defendants presented evidence that the Hawksbay ten million was pooled with other
money into a one hundred million dollar investment in Avenin. Defendants contend that once
the Hawksbay ten million was co-mingled with the rest of the Avenin one hundred million dollar
investment, Reizen’s indebtedness to Hawksbay became nothing more then general
indebtedness. We find no merit in this argument.

                                            -19-
evidence in the light most favorable to Hawksbay, we find that Hawksbay

presented sufficient evidence for a jury to find that the funds held in trust were

specifically and identifiably Hawksbay’s as part of the ten million given to Reizen

to invest.

             b. Undisputed Right to Immediate Possession of the Funds

       Hawksbay presented sufficient evidence for a jury to find that Hawksbay

had an undisputed right to immediate possession of the money in trust.              As

discussed above, Reizen identified the funds as belonging to Hawksbay on the

transfer documentation and Reizen testified that he told Solowsky the funds did not

belong to him, but “belonged to Hawksbay or one of the Plaintiffs.” (Trial Tr. at

344.) Defendants, however, did present evidence asserting that Hawksbay did not

have an undisputed right to all of the money held in trust. Reizen testified that

“there was a family dispute going on between members of the Bocciolone family.”

as to who the funds belonged to. (Id. at 343.) The transfer authorization slips also

refer to the money in trust as belonging to all the various parties connected with

Sitindustrie: Sitindustrie, Brenman, Hawksbay, Tambourine, and Kobarid. (See,

e.g., Jt. Ex. 7; Jt. Ex. 8; Defs.’ Ex. 9; Defs.’ Ex. 12; Defs.’ Ex. 21; Defs.’ Ex. 22.)

Further, Reizen testified that he thought Hawksbay owed him around two million

                                         -20-
dollars under the Management Agreement.9 Nevertheless, whether Hawksbay had

an undisputed right to the money in trust is a question that should be left to the

jury. A jury may find that Hawksbay did not have an undisputed right to those two

million dollars and modify their award accordingly or that Hawksbay did not have

an undisputed right to any of the money in trust. Viewing the evidence in the light

most favorable to Hawksbay, however, the evidence does not point so

overwhelmingly in favor of Defendants that reasonable people could not find that

Hawksbay had an undisputed right to immediate possession of the entire six

million in trust.

                  c. An Unauthorized Act Which Deprives Another of His
                     Property 10

        Hawksbay presented sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude

that Solowsky’s control over the funds and his disbursal of those funds were

        9
             Mr. Garnett:     All right. Now, it’s true, isn’t it, Mr. Reizen, that you didn’t
                              believe that you were entitled to all 6 million; isn’t that true?
             Mr. Reizen:      That’s true. . . .
             Mr Garnett:      Okay. And, in fact, you believed that the right to this – to these
                              funds – the right to be paid these fees pursuant to the management
                              agreement was, at most, maybe a little bit more than 2 million,
                              correct?
             Mr. Reizen:      Correct.

(Trial Tr. at 352.)
        10
         The district court did not rule on the sufficiency of Hawksbay’s evidence on this issue.
However, as we review a Rule 50 motion de novo, we must consider all aspects of Hawksbay’s
conversion claim. See Abel, 210 F.3d at 1337.

                                              -21-
unauthorized       acts   which     deprived    Hawksbay      of   its   funds.       Solowsky

communicated with Hawksbay’s attorney, Joel Weiss, by phone on October 23,

2003 and October 31, 2003 about Hawksbay’s missing funds. On October 31,

2003 Weiss told Solowsky that his “clients want to recover their missing money.

So there is no dispute about that.” (Pls.’ Ex. 7 at 2.) In response, Solowsky told

Weiss that he could help Hawksbay recoup over five million of the missing ten

million dollars. (Id. at 5.) Yet, after this phone call, instead of returning the $5.5

million in Solowsky’s possession, Solowsky disbursed over four million dollars

without Hawksbay’s approval, leaving only $1,456,775 in trust to return to

Hawksbay. These dispersals were made per Reizen’s instructions and were solely

for Solowsky’s and Reizen’s benefit,11 depriving Hawksbay of over four million

       11
            The dispersals were as follows:

        01/21/2004: $7,500 to David M. Turner, III
        02/12/2004: $83,750 to Klein, Walker & Associates
                    $51,560 to Bland Payne Holdings USA, Inc.
                    $85,000 to The Carolina Trading Company
                    $100,000 to PSA’s operating account
        04/07/2004: $145,920 to Klein, Walker & Associates
        05/24/2004: $550,000 to J.P. Morgan Chase Bank
                    $275,000 to The Carolina Trading Company
        09/20/2004: $1,400,000 to The Carolina Trading Company
                    $200,000 to PSA’s operating account
        11/03/2004: $1,040,000 to Reizen
        09/06/2005: $20,000 to PSA
                    $65,000 to Reizen

(Jt. Ex. 10, Uncontested Facts at 5-6.) Reizen testified that the payment to J.P. Morgan Chase
was for his benefit (Trial Tr. at 360) and that Carolina Trading Company; Klein, Walker &

                                               -22-
dollars. Further, Solowsky did not transfer the remaining funds to Hawksbay until

August 9, 2006. (Jt. Ex. 10, at 8-9.) Thus, a jury could conclude that Solowsky

deprived Hawksbay of the entire six million dollars from October 16, 2003 until

August 9, 2006.

       We therefore reverse the district court’s Judgement as a Matter of Law on

Hawksbay’s conversion claim. Our holding does not suggest that a jury should

find Solowsky liable of conversion.          We merely hold that Hawksbay provided

sufficient evidence for this issue to be resolved by a jury.

       2. Civil Theft

       Hawksbay contends the district court also erred when it entered Judgment as

a Matter of Law against Hawksbay’s civil theft claim. We agree.

       “To establish a claim for civil theft, a party must prove that a conversion has

taken place and that the accused party acted with criminal intent.” Gasparini, 972

So. 2d at 1056. Florida Statute § 812.014 defines a civil theft:

              (1)     A person commits theft if he or she knowingly
                      obtains or uses, or endeavors to obtain or to use,
                      the property of another with intent to, either
                      temporarily or permanently:

Associates and Bland Payne Holdings USA, Inc. were companies that he (Reizen) used to make
payments to himself (id. at 361). David M. Turner, III was hired by Defendants as a consulting
expert for the Kobarid litigation. (Jt. Ex. 10, Uncontested Facts at 5.) The payment to Turner
was therefore also for Reizen’s benefit. (Id.)

                                             -23-
                    (a)    Deprive the other person of a right to the
                           property or a benefit from the property.
                    (b)    Appropriate the property to his or her own
                           use or to the use of any person not entitled to
                           the use of the property.

Fla. Stat. § 812.014(1) (2007).

      Under Florida law, the elements of civil theft must be proven by clear and

convincing evidence. Fla. Stat. § 772.104 (2007). “Clear and convincing evidence

is an intermediate standard between the preponderance of the evidence standard

and the criminal beyond a reasonable doubt standard.” Echevarria, 864 F. Supp. at

1265 (citation omitted).       “Clear and convincing evidence does not mean

‘unequivocal,’ or ‘proof that admits of no doubt.’” U.S. v. Owens, 854 F.2d 432,

436 (11th Cir. 1988) (quoting Addington v. Texas, 441 U.S. 418, 432 (1979).

“[A] party who has the burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence must

persuade the jury that his or her claim is highly probable.” Id. at n.8.

      Here, the district court held that Hawksbay did not establish a legally

sufficient basis to find that Solowsky committed civil theft. In addition to the

deficiencies the court found in Hawksbay’s conversion claim, the court found that

Hawksbay failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Solowsky (1)

knowingly obtained or used property of Hawksbay; and (2) “acted with felonious

intent to deprive Hawksbay of . . . its right to the property or a benefit thereof.”

                                         -24-
(Trial Tr. at 830.) We disagree.

             a. Clear and Convincing Evidence Standard

      Hawksbay rightly contends that the district court used the wrong standard of

review for civil theft. The district court incorrectly defined clear and convincing

evidence as requiring “proof which leaves no reasonable doubt” and as evidence

that is “certain . . . unambiguous . . . and . . . unequivocal.” (Id. at 828.) This

standard is too high. As discussed above, clear and convincing evidence merely

requires proof that the claim is highly probable. See Owens, 854 F.2d at 436.

Certain, unambiguous, and unequivocal evidence is explicitly not required. Id. at

n.8. Nevertheless, as we review Rule 50 Motions de novo, we do not consider

whether the district court’s error affected the outcome of the Rule 50 Motion. See

Abel, 210 F.3d at 1337.     Rather, we look at all of the evidence to determine

whether a reasonable jury could find Hawksbay’s civil theft claim highly probable.

             b. Knowledge Requirement

      Hawksbay presented enough evidence for a reasonable jury to find that

Solowsky knew the money in trust belonged to Hawksbay. When Solowsky first

obtained the funds from Reizen on October 19, 2003 he could have concluded that

Reizen had a legitimate interest in those funds. Reizen signed an engagement letter

warranting that he had full and complete authority over the funds. (Supra p. 6-7,

                                       -25-
Jt. Ex. 6.) Reizen also testified that he thought he had control over the funds

because of his Management Agreement and that he communicated this to

Solowsky. (Supra p. 17, Trial Tr. at 350.) Further, Reizen testified that Solowsky

refused to accept the funds until he saw the Management Agreement. (Supra p. 18,

Trial Tr. at 351.) However, Reizen also testified that he told Solowsky the money

belonged to Hawksbay (supra p. 17, Trial Tr. at 344) and that he thought he was

personally only entitled to a little bit more then two of the six million dollars

transferred.12 A reasonable person could therefore find that Solowsky knew that at

least four of the six million dollars belonged to Hawksbay.

       Additionally, as soon as Solowsky read the Kobarid complaint,13 Solowsky

       12
            Mr. Garnett:      All right. Now, it’s true, isn’t it, Mr. Reizen, that you didn’t
                              believe that you were entitled to all 6 million; isn’t that true?
            Mr. Reizen:       That’s true. . . .
            Mr. Garnett:      Okay. And, in fact, you believed that the right to this – to these
                              funds – the right to be paid these fees pursuant to the management
                              agreement was, at most, maybe a little bit more than 2 million,
                              correct?
            Mr. Reizen:       Correct. . . .
            Mr. Garnett:      Okay. Did you – and I’ve been through various things here. Did
                              you tell [Solowsky] all of the things that you’ve testified to here
                              this morning about your belief to entitlement of some of the funds,
                              who the owner of the funds were, et cetera?
            Mr. Reizen:       Yeah, everything came up, pretty much.
            Mr. Garnett:      Okay. And did he ask you questions to make sure that he
                              understood the situation?
            Mr. Reizen:       Yeah, we – we went pretty much in depth to understand what was
                              going on. It was a lot of money.

(Trial Tr. at 350-55.)
       13
            This complaint was filed on December 8, 2003.

                                              -26-
was put on notice that Hawksbay did not want Reizen in possession of any of its

money.      Solowsky, the lawyer initially representing Reizen in the Kobarid

litigation, surely read and studied the complaint. The Kobarid complaint alleged

that “Defendant Reizen . . . conspired in a series of financial transactions to

wrongfully transfer over $10,000,000.00 from Plaintiff Hawksbay to accounts

controlled by Reizen and others for their personal use.” (Kobarid, Dec. 8, 2003

Compl. at 2.) The complaint further alleged that Reizen committed a breach of

fiduciary duty, fraud, fraudulent concealment, trespass, conversion, unjust

enrichment, and RICO violations. (Id.)

       After learning of the Kobarid litigation, Solowsky continued his dominion

over the funds. Once Solowsky read the Kobarid complaint he could not have

relied on the Management Agreement or anything else Reizen told him to disburse

the money held in trust for Reizen’s benefit. At this point, Solowsky knew Reizen

was probably not entitled to the money he was holding in trust and should not have

disbursed any of the funds.14 Solowsky, however, continued to disburse the money

in trust for his and Reizen’s benefit. On this basis, a jury could find that Solowsky

was liable for civil theft.

       We find guidance for this point in Joseph v. Chanin. 940 So. 2d 483 (Fla.

       14
           Several alternatives were available to Solowsky including depositing the funds with
the court or holding it in trust but immediately notifying all the parties of such.

                                              -27-
4th DCA 2006). In that case, one of the joint tenants of a bank account wrongfully

appropriated more than his share of the money. Id. at 485. When he died that

money went to a third party. Id. After the third party was informed she possessed

more then her equal share, the third party refused to return the misappropriated

money to the rightful owner. Id. The court held that the third party was liable for

conversion because she kept the identifiable funds after she knew they did not

belong to her and refused a demand to restore the funds to the rightful owner.15 Id.

at 485-87. Like the defendant in Joseph, Solowsky may be held liable for civil

theft because he kept the funds after he knew that they did not belong to Reizen.16

               c. Felonious Intent Requirement

       Evidence that Solowsky lied to Joel Weiss about the location of the funds

and disbursed a majority of the funds to or on behalf of Reizen is a sufficient basis

for a reasonable jury to find that Solowsky acted with felonious intent to deprive

Hawksbay of its funds. Hawksbay presented evidence that Solowsky lied to Weiss

about the location of the almost six million dollars in trust that Reizen had labeled

       15
            While this case addresses conversion, the same principle is applicable to a claim for
civil theft. The civil theft statute does not require that a party acquired the stolen property. The
statute specifies that it punishes any party that “knowingly obtains or uses, or endeavors to
obtain or to use the property of another.” Fla. Stat. § 812.014(1). Thus, even if a party
innocently obtained stolen property, once a party knows the property belongs to another and still
“uses” the property that party may be liable for civil theft.
       16
          Even knowing of Reizen’s claim to some of the money, Solowsky knew that most of
the funds belonged to Hawksbay.

                                                -28-
as Hawksbay/Brenman. During their October 31, 2003 conversation, Weiss asked

Solowsky “Do you know where the 5 Million is currently?” and Solowsky

responded “I can’t say. I do not know at this point.” (Pls.’ Ex. 7 at 5.) Weiss then

asked again “Is it in the possession of your clients do you believe?”                       (Id.)

Solowsky again responded “I do not know. I think that it may be, but I don’t

know, Joel.” (Id.) Solowsky then attempted to induce Hawksbay to stop looking

for the money.17 After this conversation, instead of returning the money in trust to

Hawksbay or notifying Weiss that the money was in his account, Solowsky

continued to disburse the funds for his and Reizen’s benefit.

       Defendants argue that Solowsky had a duty to his client, Reizen, to comply

with Reizen’s instructions. It is true that a lawyer does not have an obligation to

“take affirmative steps to discover client fraud or future crimes.”                 U.S. v. Del

Carpio-Cotrina, 733 F. Supp. 95, 99 n.9 (S.D. Fla. 1990). In this case, however,

affirmative steps were not required for Solowsky to discover that he should not

comply with Reizen’s instructions. As discussed above, the Kobarid complaint,

which Solowsky was required to read as Reizen’s lawyer, put him on notice that

       17
           Solowsky said, “And, in the meantime, because Swiss bankers get to be a little bit
skittish, we would want whatever you guys are doing over there to stand still so as not to make it
more difficult.” (Pls.’ Ex. 7 at 8.) Defendants assert in their Appellate Brief that Solowsky
sought a stand still because he did not believe the $5.5 million in the IOTA account would be
sufficient to settle the case.

                                               -29-
Reizen was no longer entrusted to manage Hawksbay’s money.                              Hawksbay

presented evidence that even after reading the Kobarid complaint, Solowsky did

not stop disbursing the money in trust for his and Reizen’s benefit or tell

Hawksbay (Weiss) that he (Solowsky) was in possession of six million dollars

transferred to him by Reizen. Hawksbay presented evidence that Solowsky kept

the location of the funds secret for over two years. Fausto Bocciolone, a director

of Hawskbay and the CEO of Hawksbay’s parent company, testified that he did not

learn the money was in Solowsky’s account until December 2005; after Solowsky

had transferred over four million dollars out of the trust accounts for Reizen or

Solowsky’s benefit. (Trial Tr. at 62.)

       Solowsky’s secrecy about the location of the funds and his continual

disbursements of money to himself and Reizen without Hawksbay’s consent

support the felonious intent requirement of a civil theft claim.

               d. Deprivation of Entitled Party’s Right to Property and
               Appropriation of Property for Benefit of Unentitled Party 18

       On October 31, 2003 Weiss informed Solowsky that Hawksbay wanted to

recover its lost money.         (Pls.’ Ex. 7 at 2.)       The Kobarid Complaint, filed on

December 8, 2003, clearly informed Solowsky that Hawksbay thought Reizen stole

       18
            The district court did not rule on the sufficiency of Hawksbay’s evidence on this issue.
However, as we review a Rule 50 motion de novo, we must consider all aspects of Hawksbay’s
civil theft claim. (See p. 21, n.10.)

                                               -30-
the funds and that Hawksbay wanted the money back.           It certainly informed

Solowsky that Hawksbay did not want the money in trust transferred for Reizen’s

benefit.   Yet after December 8, 2003, without Hawksbay’s consent, Solowsky

transferred over four million dollars from the funds in trust for Reizen’s, not

Hawksbay’s, benefit. Only $1,456,775 was left in the trust accounts to return to

Hawksbay. These actions support an inference that Solowsky deprived Hawksbay

of its money and appropriated the property for Solowsky and Reizen’s use; two

parties not entitled to the funds.

       We therefore reverse the district court’s Judgment as a Matter of Law on

Hawksbay’s civil theft claim. Our holding does not suggest that a jury must find

Solowsky liable of civil theft. We merely hold that Hawksbay provided enough

proof at trial for this issue to be resolved by a jury.

B. Rule 50 Motion: Breach of Fiduciary Duty Claim

       Tambourine has appealed the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50

Motion on its breach of fiduciary duty claim, arguing that the court applied the

wrong statute of limitations. We affirm the district court on this point. Before

laying out our analysis, we first explain the grounds for and procedural history of

Tambourine’s claim.

       1. Background and Procedural History of Tambourine’s Breach of
          Fiduciary Duty Claim

                                           -31-
       Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim was originally based on two

alleged breaches. The first was based on Defendants’ alleged mishandling of the

six million dollars held in trust. The second was based on Defendants’ duty of

loyalty to Tambourine as a former client19 - specifically, Tambourine claimed that

Defendants breached their duty of loyalty by representing Reizen in litigation

adverse to Tambourine.20

       When the district court ruled on Defendants’ Motion for Summary

Judgment, it limited Tambourine’s claim so that it was only based on the latter

breach - that is, Tambourine’s claim was limited to one based solely on

Defendants’ duty of loyalty to Tambourine as its former client. (See D.E. #154 at

22 n.5.)21 The court found genuine issues of material fact existed as to Defendants’

breach of their duty of loyalty through their subsequent representation of Reizen in

       19
          As explained above, Tambourine briefly retained Defendants in 1999 to locate the
missing Lionheart ten million.
       20
           According to Rule 4-1.9(a) of the Florida Bar Rules of Professional Conduct, “[a]
lawyer who has formerly represented a client in a matter” shall not later “represent another
person in the same or a substantially related matter in which that person's interests are materially
adverse to the interests of the former client unless the former client gives informed consent.”
       21
            The court also disposed of Tambourine’s claim insofar as it was based on
Defendants’ mishandling of the money in trust. This was because it ruled that Tambourine did
not have any interest in the Hawksbay ten million, as Tambourine was merely Hawksbay's
creditor. (See D.Es. #75, 85.)

                                                -32-
the Kobarid case and the related 2003 settlement negotiations with Joel Weiss,22

and in their representation of Reizen in the 2000 Power Trading case.23

       At the close of Plaintiffs’ case at trial, the court granted Defendants’ Rule 50

Motion on Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim. The court found

Tambourine’s claim was barred by the two-year statute of limitations applicable to

professional malpractice claims. See Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a). Tambourine now

appeals, arguing that the court should have applied the four-year statute of

limitations applicable to intentional torts found at section 95.11(3)(o). Defendants,

in turn, argue that the court was correct in treating Tambourine’s breach of

fiduciary duty claim as an action for professional malpractice subject to the

two-year statute of limitations. They also argue that the court was correct in

disposing of Tambourine’s claim as untimely. We agree with both of Defendants’

arguments for the reasons articulated below.

       2. Applicable Statute of Limitations

       Tambourine argues that the district court should have applied the four-year

       22
          The court found evidence supporting the argument that Defendants’ 2003 settlement
negotiations with Joel Weiss were related to the recovery of the Lionheart ten million (the sum
of money Tambourine hired Defendants to find in 1999).
       23
          The Power Trading case was a suit filed by investors against Reizen and others in
2000. PSA and Solowsky represented the defendants in that case, which settled later that year.
The court found record evidence to suggest that Power Trading involved funds that were co-
mingled with the Lionheart ten million.

                                              -33-
statute of limitations applicable to intentional torts, rather than the two-year statute

of limitations applicable to professional malpractice claims. We do not agree.

       Section 95.11(3)(o) states that a four-year statute of limitations shall apply to

“[a]n action for assault, battery, false arrest, malicious prosecution, malicious

interference, false imprisonment, or any other intentional tort, except as provided

in subsections (4), (5), and (7).” (Emphasis added). By its plain text, section

95.11(3)(o) carves out exceptions for the actions listed in subsections (4), (5), and

(7) - and subsection (4)(a) contains the two-year statute of limitations for

professional malpractice claims. Thus, it appears that the statute explicitly excepts

professional malpractice claims from the four-year statute of limitations applicable

to other intentional torts.

       Tambourine argues that a breach of fiduciary duty claim based on the

attorney-client relationship can give rise to a claim for professional malpractice

subject to the two-year statute of limitations, as well as an intentional tort subject

to the four-year statute of limitations. However, Florida case law indicates that a

claim styled as one for “breach of fiduciary duty” claim, when brought against a

law firm or attorney for actions relating to the attorney-client relationship, is

treated as a malpractice claim subject to the two-year statute of limitations. One

example is Mizrahi v. Valdes-Fauli, Cobb & Petrey, P.A., 671 So. 2d 805 (Fla. 3d

                                          -34-
DCA 1996). There, the plaintiffs brought fraud and breach of fiduciary duty

claims against attorneys who acted both as attorneys and escrow agents for the

corporation from which the plaintiffs purchased land. Id. The trial court granted

summary judgment to the defendants because it found the claims barred by the

two-year professional malpractice statute of limitations in section 95.11(4)(a). Id.

The Third District reversed, finding that the vocation of escrow agent did not

qualify as a profession, and stated that “[r]egardless of the benefits defendants

derived from their knowledge of the law in the fulfillment of their duties as escrow

agent, they were not acting as plaintiff’ attorneys. Therefore, the four-year statute

of limitations, rather than the two-year professional malpractice limit, applies to

this action.” Id. at 806 (emphasis added).

      In another case, the plaintiff brought an action for fraud and breach of

fiduciary duty against the defendant, and the question on appeal was whether the

two-year malpractice statute of limitations applied to those claims. Beach Higher

Power Corp. v. Rekant, 832 So. 2d 831 (Fla. 3d DCA 2002). The court held that

the defendant “could not be considered [the plaintiff’s] attorney for the purposes of

the instant suit, and accordingly, the two year limitations period did not control.”

Id. at 833-34.

      In Green v. Bartel, the plaintiff filed claims for negligence, breach of

                                         -35-
contract, and breach of fiduciary duty against her attorneys for their wrongful acts

in disbursing her funds without permission. 365 So. 2d 785 (Fla. 3d DCA 1978).

The court applied the two-year malpractice statute of limitations to the plaintiff’s

claims, without considering the fact that the plaintiff did not technically style her

claims as malpractice claims. Id. at 787-88.

      Further, in Palafrugell Holdings, Inc. v. Cassel, the court made the following

observation in a footnote:

             A claim for breach of fiduciary duty, coupled with a
             claim for legal malpractice, does not necessarily combine
             to form one claim for legal malpractice. Rather, a
             complaint containing each of these claims can be one in
             which the plaintiff is pleading in the alternative, a
             perfectly acceptable practice under Florida law. Fla. R.
             Civ. P. 1.110(g). If the plaintiff is unable to establish that
             there existed an attorney-client relationship, there is the
             possibility that some other form of fiduciary relationship
             existed, for example, that of escrow agent.

825 So. 2d 937, 940 n.2 (Fla. 3d DCA 2001) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).

This footnote, along with the preceding caselaw, all indicate that if a breach of

fiduciary duty claim does involve an attorney-client relationship, it is considered a

malpractice action. See also Wilder v. Meyer, 779 F. Supp. 164, 169 (S.D. Fla.

1991) (where the plaintiff brought an action for, among other claims, breach of

fiduciary duty against his attorney, the court stated without comment that the claim

was “governed by a two-year statute of limitations applicable to professional

                                          -36-
malpractice claims,” citing to Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a)).

      Based on the plain text of sections 95.11(3)(o) and 95.11(4)(a) and also the

guidance provided by Florida courts, we hold the district court was correct in

treating Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim against its former counsel as

a professional malpractice claim subject to the two-year statute of limitations.

      3. Disposal of Tambourine’s Claim

      We also hold that the district court was correct in granting Defendants’ Rule

50 Motion on Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim. Before explaining our

conclusion, we first explain the basis for Tambourine’s appeal. The district court

disposed of Tambourine’s claim on two separate grounds. The first was the

applicable two-year statute of limitations, discussed above. The second was a

substantive ruling wherein the court found Defendants’ representation of Reizen in

Kobarid was not substantially related or materially adverse to Tambourine, and so

could not form the basis of a breach of fiduciary duty claim. As Defendants point

out, Tambourine did not appeal this substantive ruling. It is a well-established rule

in this Circuit that “[i]ssues not clearly raised in the briefs are considered

abandoned.” Marek v. Singletary, 62 F.3d 1295, 1298 n.2 (11th Cir. 1995)

(citation omitted). Thus, it is irrelevant whether the court properly disposed of

Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim insofar as that claim is based on

                                          -37-
Defendants’ representation of Reizen in Kobarid, because Tambourine did not

appeal the court’s substantive ruling disposing of it.

       That said, there are two remaining bases for Tambourine’s breach of

fiduciary duty claim: Defendants’ representation of Reizen in the 2000 Power

Trading case, and Defendants’ settlement negotiations with Joel Weiss in October

2003. However, we have already ruled that the two-year statute of limitations

applies to Tambourine’s claim. Thus, whether Tambourine’s claim is based on

Defendants’ representation of Reizen in the 2000 Power Trading case or on the

2003 settlement negotiations, Tambourine missed the two-year deadline by waiting

until 2006 to file its claim.

       In sum, we affirm the court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on

Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim. That claim was untimely, as it was

not filed within the two-year statute of limitations applicable to professional

malpractice actions.

C. Turner Evidence24

       Hawksbay appeals the district court’s exclusion of documentary and

       24
           The remaining issues deal with the district court’s exclusion of some of Hawksbay’s
evidence. These issues are essentially moot because the jury never got to consider Hawksbay’s
case. However, because we are reversing the court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion
insofar as it disposed of Hawksbay’s conversion and civil theft claims and sending those claims
back to be retried, we will address and provide guidance on these evidentiary questions.

                                              -38-
testimonial evidence from witness David Turner (“the Turner evidence”). We

ultimately reverse the district court, dealing with Turner’s documents and trial

testimony separately. Before beginning our analysis, we first explain Turner’s

identity and the procedural history behind these two questions.

       1. Background and Procedural History of the Turner Evidence

       David Turner was a certified public accountant hired to provide forensic

accounting services on Reizen’s behalf in the Kobarid lawsuit. Solowsky himself

hired Turner as a consultant in 2004, before Solowsky and his firm were

disqualified from defending Reizen in that case.25 Although Turner was vague

about the reason for his being hired,26 Reizen testified that Turner was hired to

determine the amount of money Reizen was owed under the Management

Agreement with Hawksbay. (Trial Tr. at 362.) Turner did not testify in Kobarid.

       Hawksbay subpoenaed Turner for trial on September 17, 2007, and again in

December of 2007 after the case was transferred to Judge Gonzales and

rescheduled for trial. On January 30, 2008 Defendants moved to quash Turner’s

       25
         As explained above in Footnote 11, Defendants paid Turner for his services in the
Kobarid case out of the money Reizen gave them to hold in trust.
       26
           When asked what he was hired to do in the Kobarid case, he stated he was “asked to
prepare a schedule that would be used as a settlement in a lawsuit with Mr. Reizen that Mr.
Solowsky was helping Mr. Reizen with. . . . I was doing a damage calculation and trying to put
together a schedule that could be used in those settlement negotiations. . . . I started off with a
ten million dollars amount and worked through a series of deductions that was told related to that
10 million.” (Trial Transcript at 442-43.)

                                               -39-
trial subpoena and also to exclude the Turner evidence. (See D.E. #186.) One of

Defendants’ arguments was that the evidence was protected work product. On

February 8, 2008 the court denied those Motions, ruling that the Turner evidence

was “relevant and material” and that the work product privilege did not apply.

       During Reizen’s direct examination at trial Hawksbay began inquiring into

Reizen’s relationship with Turner, and attempted to introduce documents from

Turner’s files related to his accounting work on Reizen’s behalf. At this point

Defendants objected on the basis of the work product doctrine and renewed their

Motion to exclude the Turner evidence. (Trial Tr. at 372.) This time the court

granted the Motion, finding that “the crime fraud exception does not apply here”

but that “the work product exception does apply here.” (Id. at 378.) Hawksbay

called Turner to provide an offer of proof, after which the court excluded his

testimony and documents on the basis of the work product doctrine. (Id. at 446.)

       2. Turner’s Documents27

       27
           It is important to note at the outset that the only Turner documents at issue are those
Hawksbay proffered at trial. According to Federal Rule of Evidence 103(a)(2), “[e]rror may not
be predicated upon a ruling which . . . excludes evidence unless a substantial right of the party is
affected,” and “the substance of the evidence was made known to the court by offer or was
apparent from the context within which questions were asked,” although nothing in Rule 103(d)
“precludes taking notice of plain errors affecting substantial rights although they were not
brought to the attention of the court.” Here, Hawksbay only proffered four documents. (See
Trial Tr. at 441.) These documents were referred to as P31-01, P31-02, P31-04, and P31-05,
which is how we refer to them here.

                                                -40-
       In its initial brief Hawksbay claims that Rule 26(b)(4)(B)28 governs whether

the Turner evidence should have been excluded, not the work product rule at Rule

26(b)(3). Essentially, Hawksbay is arguing that where Rule 26(b)(4)(B) applies, it

overrides the work product rule at Rule 26(b)(3).29 However, as Defendants point

out, Hawksbay never made this argument to the district court. “As a general rule,

we do not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal.” Walton v.

Johnson & Johnson Servs., Inc., 347 F.3d 1272, 1292 (11th Cir. 2003) (citation

omitted). Accordingly, we will not address whether Rule 26(b)(4)(B) governing

non-testifying expert witnesses overrides Rule 26(b)(3) governing work product.

Instead, we will address the question posed to the district court - that is, the

admissibility of Turner’s documents under Rule 26(b)(3).

        The federal work product doctrine is codified in Federal Rule of Civil

Procedure 26(b)(3). The rule states, in pertinent part:

               (A)     Ordinarily, a party may not discover documents
                       and tangible things that are prepared in
                       anticipation of litigation or for trial by or for

       28
           According to Rule 26(b)(4)(B) a party ordinarily may not discover facts known or
opinions held by a non-testifying expert retained by another party in anticipation of litigation or
to prepare for trial. However, a party may do so “on showing exceptional circumstances under
which it is impracticable for the party to obtain facts or opinions on the same subject by other
means.” Rule 26(b)(4)(B)(ii).
       29
            Specifically, Hawksbay argues that “the work product doctrine does not govern expert
information. Rather, the disclosure of expert information is governed by [Rule] 26(b)(4).”
(Initial Br. at 43.)

                                                -41-
                    another party or its representative (including the
                    other party’s attorney, consultant, surety,
                    indemnitor, insurer, or agent). But, subject to Rule
                    26(b)(4), those materials may be discovered if:

                    (I)    they are otherwise discoverable under Rule
                           26(b)(1); and
                    (ii)   the party shows that it has substantial need
                           for the materials to prepare its case and
                           cannot, without undue hardship, obtain their
                           substantial equivalent by other means.

             (B)    Protection Against Disclosure. If the court orders
                    discovery of those materials, it must protect
                    against disclosure of the mental impressions,
                    conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of a party’s
                    attorney or other representative concerning the
                    litigation.

      In analyzing the exclusion of Turner’s documents under Rule 26(b)(3), we

must determine whether that Rule applies to this particular situation. Rule 26(b)(3)

explicitly covers documents or things “prepared in anticipation of litigation or for

trial by or for another party or its representative.” (Emphasis added).

      We hold that the work product doctrine does not apply to the Turner

documents. By its plain text, Rule 26(b)(3) applies to documents or things

prepared by or for another party or its representative. Turner prepared the

documents at issue here in anticipation of the Kobarid litigation for Reizen. Reizen

is not a party to this case. Defendants were not parties to the Kobarid case, but

rather served as Reizen’s defense counsel for a time. Thus, the Rule’s protection

                                         -42-
applies to Reizen, not to Defendants. Indeed, the Supreme Court itself has stated,

albeit in dicta, that “the literal language of [Rule 26(b)(3)] protects materials

prepared for any litigation or trial as long as they were prepared by or for a party

to the subsequent litigation.” FTC v. Grolier Inc., 462 U.S. 19, 25 (1983) (citing 8

J. W RIGHT & A. M ILLER, F EDERAL P RACTICE AND P ROCEDURE § 2024, at 201

(1970)) (emphasis added).30 According to the Wright & Miller article,

“[d]ocuments prepared for one who is not a party to the present suit are wholly

unprotected by Rule 26(b)(3) even though the person may be a party to a closely

related lawsuit in which he will be disadvantaged if he must disclose in the present

suit.” We also note that the Ninth Circuit has cited Grolier in “conclud[ing] that

[Rule 26(b)(3)], on its face, limits its protection to one who is a party (or a party’s

representative) to the litigation in which discovery is sought.” In re Cal. Pub.

Utils. Comm’n, 892 F.2d 778, 781 (9th Cir. 1989); accord Arkwright Mut. Ins.

Co. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., No. 93-3084, 1994 WL 58999,

at *4 (6th Cir. 1994) (unpublished).

       We acknowledge that this result is somewhat unsettling. While the Turner

documents were prepared on Reizen’s behalf in the Kobarid litigation, Solowsky

       30
           “We have previously recognized that ‘dicta from the Supreme Court is not something
to be lightly cast aside.’” Schwab v. Crosby, 451 F.3d 1308, 1325 (11th Cir. 2006) (quoting
Peterson v. BMI Refractories, 124 F.3d 1386, 1392 n.4 (11th Cir. 1997)) (citations omitted).

                                             -43-
was Reizen’s attorney at that time. Solowsky actually hired Turner and

commissioned the documents at issue here - which are now being sought to prove

Hawksbay’s claims against Solowsky himself. Nevertheless, we must abide by the

plain text and meaning of the Rule.

       Having determined that the work product doctrine does not apply to Turner’s

documents, we must analyze whether the district court abused its discretion in

excluding them. In general, based on Hawksbay’s arguments in response to

Defendants’ Motion to Quash and its arguments at the pretrial conference, during

trial, and in its appellate briefs, this is the crux of what Hawksbay wanted the

Turner evidence to establish: that Turner told Solowsky the funds held in trust

rightfully belonged to Hawksbay, and that Reizen was only entitled to a small

portion of it, if any.31 Indeed, in Hawksbay’s opposition to Defendants’ Motion to

Quash, it stated that “in early 2004, Turner learned the underlying fact that the [six

million dollars] transferred into the Solowsky Defendants’ trust accounts in

October 2003 originated from Hawksbay, and Turner then informed the Solowsky

Defendants of the Hawksbay origins of this money.” (D.E. #190 at 9.) If true, such

       31
            (See, e.g., Pretrial Conf. Tr. at 20) (Hawksbay’s attorney: “The information that was
gathered by Mr. Turner from Mr. Reisen [sic], which appears to be fully consistent with what
Mr. Reisen’s [sic] testimony is, plus, whatever it is Mr. Turner told Mr. Solowsky, is very
important for us to be able to establish Mr. Solowsky’s mindset with regard to this money, going
forward.”); (Trial Tr. at 378) (Hawksbay’s attorney: “The . . . Defendants continue at each stage
to try to break apart the pieces into pieces what happened in this case. . . . And we have to – to be
able to establish what Mr. Solowsky was aware of, . . . of what it was that he was told.”).

                                                -44-
evidence would bolster the knowledge and intent prongs of Hawksbay’s civil theft

claim, and would also support Reizen’s testimony that he told Defendants the six

million dollars in trust was not his (which would weaken Defendants’ charge that

Reizen recently fabricated that testimony).32

       Regarding Turner’s documents specifically, Hawksbay claims that Turner’s

documents “directly trace the Hawksbay funds from the ‘Initial Deposit from

Hawksbay LTD’ to the ‘Actual balances on Solowsky’s accounts’” and that “[t]hey

are the smoking gun that flatly contradicts Solowsky’s professed ignorance that the

funds belonged to Hawksbay.” (Initial Br. at 53.) The Turner documents generally

concern the history of the Hawksbay ten million - deposits to and debits from the

original sum. It appears that P31-01 is a memorandum from Turner to Reizen

asking for information Turner needed to trace the Hawksbay ten million. P31-02 is

a spreadsheet put together by Turner that lists a ten million dollar “[i]nitial deposit

from Hawksbay” and traces various withdrawals and deposits until it concludes by

listing around five million dollars as the “[a]ctual balances on Solowsky accounts.”

P31-04 appears to be another version of the same spreadsheet as P31-02. P31-05 is

       32
           (See, e.g., Hawksbay Resp. to Mot. to Quash, D.E. #190 at 14) (“The Turner evidence
provides substantial support to Plaintiffs’ allegations of the Solowsky Defendants’ wrongful
mental state in early 2004 and the key elements of Hawksbay’s civil theft claim and Plaintiffs’
punitive damages claim, namely the Solowsky Defendants’ knowledge that the money in their
trust account originated from Hawksbay, and criminal intent to deprive Hawksbay of that money
by disbursing it to themselves and others while concealing its location.” (Emphasis in original).

                                              -45-
a letter from Reizen to Turner providing information to Turner regarding the

history of the Hawksbay ten million, and appears to be a response to P31-01.

      These documents certainly appear relevant to Hawksbay’s claims against

Defendants, and specifically to Hawksbay’s argument that Solowsky knew the

funds held in trust were connected to Hawksbay. We have already held that the

documents are not protected by Rule 26(b)(3), and we see no other reason for their

exclusion. Thus, we hold that the court abused its discretion in preventing

Hawksbay from introducing them at trial.

      3. Turner’s Testimony

      The district court and the parties consistently refer to the “work product

doctrine” when analyzing the Turner evidence, both testimonial and documentary.

Invoking the work product rule makes sense when referring to Turner’s Reizen file

because Rule 26(b)(3) explicitly applies to “documents and tangible things,” but

based on the rule’s plain text it does not apply to Turner’s testimony. Instead, it

would appear that question is governed by Rule 26(b)(4)(B), which covers facts

known to or opinions held by non-testifying expert witnesses.

      Rule 26(b)(4)(B) states that a party cannot “discover facts known or

opinions held by an expert who has been retained or specifically employed by

another party in anticipation of litigation or to prepare for trial and who is not

                                          -46-
expected to be called as a witness at trial.”33 (Emphasis added). As Hawksbay

points out, Turner was a non-testifying expert retained by a party to the Kobarid

case (Reizen), not by a party to this case. Thus, we apply the same logic here as

above with respect to the work product doctrine: Rule 26(b)(4)(B) does not apply

to Turner because he was retained by a party to a different litigation, not by a party

to this case.

       Having determined that Rule 26(b)(4)(B) does not apply to Turner’s

testimony, we must analyze whether the district court abused its discretion in

excluding such testimony at trial. Hawksbay claims it wanted to ask Turner what

he knew about the origin of the funds held in trust, and what facts he had regarding

the amount of money that Reizen thought was owed to him. It appears from

Turner’s proffer at trial that he would not have given such testimony. When asked

whether Solowsky knew that the funds in trust were at all connected to Hawksbay

or Tambourine, Turner said no. (Trial Tr. at 439.) Turner testified that Reizen did

not tell him (Turner) that the funds in the trust account had initially come from a

deposit from Hawksbay. (Id. at 438.) However, Turner’s documents linking the

original Hawksbay ten million to the contents of Defendants’ trust account appear

       33
          However, a party may do so “on showing exceptional circumstances under which it is
impracticable for the party to obtain facts or opinions on the same subject by other means.” Rule
26(b)(4)(B)(ii).

                                              -47-
to belie this testimony at least in part. Hawksbay should have been able to

question Turner about those documents and about his investigation in general.

      In sum, because we find Rule 26(b)(4)(B) inapplicable to Turner’s

testimony, and we see no other reason to exclude such testimony, we hold that the

court abused its discretion in excluding it.

E. The Kobarid Outcome

      Hawksbay argues that the district court erred in excluding any mention of

the verdict and judgment in the Kobarid case. For the reasons articulated below,

we affirm the district court on this point. Before analyzing Hawksbay’s arguments,

we first recount the procedural history of this issue.

      1. Background and Procedural History of the Parties’ Attempts to
         Introduce the Kobarid Outcome

      It appears that both parties initially sought to bring the Kobarid outcome into

the case. On June 20, 2006 Hawksbay asked the court to take judicial notice of the

final judgment in Kobarid pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 201. (See D.E.

#25.) This Motion was never ruled upon. For Defendants’ part, in their Motion to

Dismiss the Amended Complaint they argued that Tambourine’s various claims

should be dismissed based on Kobarid, because Tambourine did not obtain a

favorable verdict in that case. (See D.E. #66.) Defendants also invoked Kobarid in

their answer to the Amended Complaint. (See D.E. #88.) On September 21, 2007

                                          -48-
the parties submitted a joint pretrial stipulation. (See D.E. #130.) Defendants

listed the Kobarid verdict and final judgment in their exhibit list, as well as other

Kobarid documents. (See id.) The parties’ uncontested facts referenced “the

verdict and judgment against Reizen in the Kobarid Litigation.” (See id.)

       On February 2, 2008, six days before trial, Defendants filed a motion in

limine seeking to exclude the verdict and judgment. (See D.E. #191.) At a hearing

on that Motion Defendants argued that the verdict and judgment should be

excluded under Federal Rule of Evidence 403 because they were highly prejudicial

and because the jury would be confused and give them undue weight. Defendants

argued that Hawksbay would not be prejudiced by their exclusion because

Hawksbay never listed the verdict and judgment as exhibits, and also because

every witness and exhibit presented in Kobarid had been listed in the instant case.

Hawksbay argued that Defendants waived their right to exclude the verdict and

judgment, and also that Kobarid was so intertwined with the instant case that

Hawksbay had to reference the verdict and judgment to fully explain its claims to

the jury. The court granted Defendants’ Motion without comment on February 8,

2008, (see D.E. #198), and trial began on February 11, 2008.34

       34
          We note that while the district court did not elaborate on its reasons for granting
Defendants’ Motion, we “may affirm the district court’s judgment on any ground that appears in
the record, whether or not that ground was relied upon or even considered by the court below.”
Powers v. U.S., 996 F.2d 1121, 1123-24 (11th Cir. 1993).

                                             -49-
       2. Federal Rule of Evidence 403 35

       According to Rule 403, relevant evidence may be excluded if “its probative

value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of

the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of

time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” However, “‘Rule 403 is an

extraordinary remedy which the district court should invoke sparingly,’ and ‘[t]he

balance . . . should be struck in favor of admissibility.’” U.S. v. Tinoco, 304 F.3d

1088, 1120 (11th Cir. 2002) (quoting U.S. v. Elkins, 885 F.2d 775, 784 (11th Cir.

1989)). “In reviewing issues under Rule 403, we ‘look at the evidence in a light

most favorable to its admission, maximizing its probative value and minimizing its

undue prejudicial impact.’” Id. (quoting Elkins, 885 F.2d at 784).

       We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the

Kobarid verdict and judgment, based on Rule 403. In Kobarid Hawksbay sued

Reizen over his alleged mishandling of the Hawksbay ten million. Hawksbay

ultimately obtained a jury verdict and final judgment in its favor: the jury found

that Reizen stole ten million dollars from Hawksbay. We can see the danger of the

jury here learning of the Kobarid outcome and inappropriately assuming that since

       35
          In its briefs Hawksbay does not substantively deal with Rule 403. However, it was
one of Defendants’ major arguments in their Motion and at the Motion hearing, and the Court
deems it worthy of analyzing first.

                                             -50-
Solowsky received six million dollars from Reizen, that sum was part of the stolen

Hawksbay ten million and that Solowsky too must have stolen it from Hawksbay.

      Further, the district court’s order only precluded Hawksbay from mentioning

the Kobarid verdict and judgment - it did not prevent Hawksbay from introducing

any evidence from that case. Indeed, in its appellate briefs Hawksbay does not

point to any instance where the court barred them from mentioning or submitting

anything related to Kobarid except for the verdict and judgment. Finally, we find it

relevant that Kobarid was under appeal at the time Defendants sought to exclude it

from trial. It may have seriously complicated the trial if Hawksbay revealed the

outcome in Kobarid, but that outcome was subsequently overturned on appeal.

      We recognize that the exclusion came at an unfortunate time for Hawksbay:

on the eve of trial, and after months of Defendants maintaining that they

themselves would use the Kobarid verdict and judgment at trial. However, we are

dealing with a high standard: abuse of discretion. Given this high standard, we do

not see reversible error in the court’s decision to find the Kobarid verdict and

judgment so prejudicial or potentially confusing as to warrant their exclusion.

Accordingly, we find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding

the Kobarid verdict and final judgment.

      3. Waiver

                                          -51-
       Hawksbay also claims that Defendants waived any objection to the

admission of the Kobarid verdict and judgment by referencing them in the Joint

Pretrial Stipulation. Defendants did list the verdict and final judgment as trial

exhibits, and the parties also mentioned “the verdict and judgment against Reizen

in the Kobarid litigation” in the uncontested facts. (D.E. #130 at 14.) However,

because we have already held it was within the district court’s sound discretion to

exclude the verdict and judgment based on Rule 403, we need not address whether

Defendants waived their right to object. The district court had a right to exclude

the evidence on its own, as “[i]t is not only the trial judge’s right but his duty to see

that only proper and relevant evidence was admitted.” Weaver v. U.S., 374 F.2d

878, 882 (5th Cir. 1967).36

       4. Judicial Notice

       Hawksbay further argues that the Kobarid verdict and judgment should have

been judicially noticed by the district court. Federal Rule of Evidence 201 governs

judicial notice of adjudicative facts, and Rule 201(b) states that “[a] judicially

noticed fact must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1)

generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of

accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot

       36
          Under Bonner v. City of Pritchard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), we
are bound by cases decided by the former Fifth Circuit before October 1, 1981.

                                             -52-
reasonably be questioned.” Rule 201(d) states that “[a] court shall take judicial

notice if requested by a party and supplied with the necessary information.”

      On June 20, 2006 Hawksbay asked the district court to take judicial notice of

the final judgment in Kobarid pursuant to Rule 201. (See D.E. #25.) This Motion

was never ruled upon. We have stated that “a court may take notice of another

court’s order only for the limited purpose of recognizing the ‘judicial act’ that the

order represents or the subject matter of the litigation.” U.S. v. Jones, 29 F.3d

1549, 1553 (11th Cir. 1994) (citations omitted). However, merely because a fact

may be subject to judicial notice, it is not insulated from other rules of evidence

such as Rule 403. We have already held it was within the district court’s sound

discretion to exclude the verdict and judgment based on Rule 403, and Hawksbay’s

“judicial notice” argument does not change that result.

      5. “Opening the Door”

      Hawksbay also claims that it should have been allowed to reference the

Kobarid outcome in rebuttal when Defendants “opened the door” to that topic.

This Circuit does recognize the concept of “curative admissibility,” also called

“opening the door.” See, e.g., Bearint ex rel. Bearint v. Dorell Juvenile Group,

Inc., 389 F.3d 1339, 1349 (11th Cir. 2004). “Under that doctrine, when a party

offers inadmissible evidence before a jury, the court may in its discretion allow the

                                         -53-
opposing party to offer otherwise inadmissible evidence on the same matter to

rebut any unfair prejudice created.” Id. (citations omitted). Thus, “the extent to

which otherwise inadmissible evidence is permitted must correspond to the unfair

prejudice created. Further, the trial court must also weigh the need for and value of

the rebuttal evidence against the potential for undue delay, confusion, and

prejudice.” Id. (citations omitted).

      Based on Hawksbay’s references to the trial transcript in its appellate brief,

we believe that this is the basis for its “opening the door” argument: during cross

examination the defense asked Reizen, “Did you steal the money in the trust

account?” and Reizen replied, “Absolutely not.” (Trial Tr. at 400.) Defense

counsel also made similar comments in his opening argument - he told the jury

they would hear testimony from Reizen that he owned the money in the trust

account and had authority to give it to Defendants. On Reizen’s redirect

Hawksbay’s counsel tried to ask about the outcome of Kobarid, arguing that the

door had been opened, but the court would not allow it. (Id. at 530.)

      We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in preventing

Hawksbay from asking about the Kobarid outcome in this instance. As stated

earlier, the Kobarid judgment had not been finalized and the fact that one jury had

found Reizen liable would not bind this jury in any way insofar as Reizen’s

                                         -54-
credibility. Reizen did not contest the fact that the court had ruled against him in

Kobarid, he simply continued to deny that he had done anything wrong.

F. Remaining Evidentiary Issues

      Hawksbay makes several other arguments regarding the district court’s

exclusion of evidence. We review these arguments below, mindful that “[b]ecause

a trial court has broad discretion to determine the admissibility of evidence, we do

not disturb evidentiary rulings absent a clear abuse of discretion.” U.S. v. Ellisor,

522 F.3d 1255, 1266 n.12 (11th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted).

      1. Peterson’s Testimony

      Hawksbay claims that the district court erred in excluding the testimony of

Connie Peterson, Hawksbay’s former counsel during the Kobarid litigation. (Trial

Tr. at 247.) According to Hawksbay, Peterson would have testified that Hawksbay

first learned Reizen hid its money in Solowsky’s trust account in December 2005.

She would have also testified that Solowsky “went ballistic” when she asked him

about his conversation with Joel Weiss in 2003 during his Kobarid deposition. (Id.

at 245.) Hawksbay claims this testimony would have shown that Solowsky kept

the six million dollars secret for two years during the Kobarid litigation, which in

turn suggests he had a felonious state of mind.

      There are two issues here. First is Peterson’s proposed testimony that she

                                         -55-
did not learn of the six million dollars in Defendants’ trust account until December

2005. We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding such

testimony, because it clearly would have been cumulative. “District courts are well

within their discretion to exclude even relevant evidence for undue delay, waste of

time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” U.S. v. Dohan, 508 F.3d

989, 993 (11th Cir. 2007) (citing Fed. R. Evid. 403). Indeed, “[d]istrict courts have

broad authority over the management of trials. Part of this authority is the power

to exclude cumulative testimony.” Tran, 420 F.3d at 1315 (citations omitted).

Here, Fausto himself had already testified he became aware that six million dollars

had been transferred into Defendants’ trust account in December 2005. (Trial Tr.

at 61-62.) Peterson’s testimony would have been cumulative and from a less direct

source than Fausto, who was Peterson’s client (Peterson was a “second chair”

attorney for the plaintiffs in Kobarid).

      The second issue is Peterson’s proposed testimony regarding Solowsky’s

angry reaction to being asked about his conversation with Joel Weiss in 2003,

when Peterson took Solowsky’s deposition in Kobarid. During her proffer

Peterson testified that Solowsky and his attorney were “hysterical” when she

brought up Solowsky’s 2003 conversation with Joel Weiss and the location of

Hawksbay’s missing money. Peterson stated: “I have never been in a deposition

                                           -56-
where counsel or a witness got so angry, red in the face, screaming.” (Id. at 229.)

Apparently Solowsky did not answer Peterson’s questions on this topic and

threatened Peterson with sanctions. (Id. at 226, 229.) Hawksbay’s attorney argued

to the district court that “[h]ow [Solowsky and his attorney] reacted to that was

absolutely evidence that they knew they were hiding something that they weren’t

supposed to be.” (Id. at 239.)

      We hold that the district court abused its discretion in excluding this

evidence. The district court seemed to consider Peterson’s testimony on this point

irrelevant. However, in our view, testimony about Solowsky’s extreme and angry

reaction to Peterson’s questioning and his refusal to answer are clearly relevant to

Solowsky’s state of mind - to whether he had a felonious intent with regard to the

six million dollars held in trust. We see no other reason to exclude such testimony,

and thus we reverse the district court on this point.

      2. Solowsky Reputation Evidence

      Hawksbay also argues that the district court erred in excluding evidence

pertaining to Solowsky’s reputation. This is the background of Hawksbay’s

argument: before trial the parties agreed not to discuss certain evidence of claims

or complaints against Defendants, which stemmed from other cases. (See D.E.

#127.) During defense counsel’s opening statement he stated that Solowsky was a

                                          -57-
“well-respected lawyer” who was “held in high regard by his peers.” (Trial Tr. at

166.) He also claimed that Solowsky had no motive to steal six million dollars

because such a theft would have put “[Solowsky’s] reputation at risk.” (Id. at 166-

67.) Hawksbay objected after defense counsel finished its opening argument,

claiming that Solowsky had put his own reputation at issue and that he thus

“opened the door” to the introduction of rebuttal reputation evidence. (Id. at 265-

66.) The district court did acknowledge that defense counsel referenced

Solowsky’s reputation during his opening (id. at 266-68), and warned that “if the

defendant is going to put the character and reputation of the defendant before the

jury, the plaintiff has every right in the world to respond to that,” (id. at 266). The

court also noted it had instructed the jury that attorneys’ opening statements were

not to be considered evidence. (Id. at 267.) Ultimately the court stated that if

defense counsel introduced evidence of Solowsky’s reputation during his case in

chief, he would essentially be “opening the door” to rebuttal reputation evidence.

(Id. at 267.)

       Hawksbay argues that it should have been allowed introduce rebuttal

evidence of Solowsky’s reputation. We do recognize the concept of “curative

admissibility” - also called “opening the door” or “fighting fire with fire.” Here,

however, it is difficult to issue a ruling because Plaintiffs did not proffer specific

                                          -58-
rebuttal evidence on this topic, and Defendants never put on a case-in-chief.

However, because we are sending Hawksbay’s claims back to district court to be

retried, we will state that we share the district court’s concern on this topic. We

agree that if defense counsel actually introduced the sort of reputation evidence to

which he alluded in his opening, Plaintiffs would be able to rebut with reputation

evidence of their own. It also may well be that defense counsel did “open the

door” to such evidence with his statements during opening argument. However,

these issues are best resolved in the context of the second trial.

      3. The Parties’ Attempts to Settle Kobarid

      Hawksbay claims that the district court erred in precluding it from

“rebutting” or “impeach[ing]” defense counsel’s statement in his opening that

Solowsky attempted to settle Kobarid but his pleas “fell on deaf ears.” (Id. at 186,

302, 303.) According to Hawksbay, before trial Defendants moved to exclude all

evidence related to “any attempt to settle Kobarid” and the district court granted

this motion. (Initial Br. at 15.) This is not accurate, however - what Defendants

moved to exclude was evidence related to the parties’ attempts to settle the

Kobarid disqualification dispute. (See D.E. #126.) The court did grant this

request. (See D.E. #166.)

      At trial during Fausto’s redirect examination, Hawksbay’s counsel attempted

                                          -59-
to question Fausto about a letter he told his lawyer to send to Solowsky which

addressed the topic of settling Kobarid. (Trial Tr. at 206-08, 303-04.) Defense

counsel spoke up and stated that in his view Hawksbay was “opening the door” to

a “privileged communication,” and that “[i]f it does [open the door], fine; and we’ll

go through it. If it doesn’t, then I object to the question.” (Id. at 206.) The court

“sustained” the objection. (Id. at 207.)

       There appears to be some confusion on this topic. Prior to trial, the court did

not exclude all evidence related to the parties’ attempts to settle Kobarid - only

their attempts to settle a very specific issue within the Kobarid litigation:

Defendants’ disqualification as Reizen’s counsel. Thus, Hawksbay’s counsel

should have been free to question Fausto on his instructions to his attorney insofar

as they pertained to settling the Kobarid lawsuit. We see no other reason to keep

out such testimony, and thus we find the district court abused its discretion in

excluding it.37

       4. Evidence related to Kobarid

       37
           It appears that the district court did not fully understand the basis for defense counsel’s
objection. Defense counsel could not have been objecting on the basis that Hawksbay was
inquiring into a “privileged communication” Fausto had with his attorney. That privilege would
have belonged to Fausto, and in testifying on this topic he was clearly waiving it. See, e.g., Cox
v. Adm’r U.S. Steel & Carnegie, 17 F.3d 1386, 1417 (11th Cir. 1994) (“The attorney-client
privilege ‘belongs solely to the client,’ and the client may waive it, either expressly or by
implication.”) (quoting In re Von Bulow, 828 F.2d 94, 100-01 (2d Cir. 1987)). It appears that
defense counsel was merely making it clear that if Fausto waived his privilege on this point,
defense counsel intended to question him on it as well.

                                                -60-
      Hawksbay takes issue with the district court’s excluding evidence of

Hawkbsay’s inability to collect the vast majority of the Kobarid judgment against

Reizen. (See D.E. #166.) Hawksbay claims that “[b]ecause the jury was aware

that Hawksbay had sued Reizen in another matter, yet was called as a witness by

Hawksbay, the jury might have suspected that Reizen had a motive to give such

testimony.” (Initial Br. at 60) (citations omitted). Hawksbay claims that “[t]o

dispense that notion, Hawksbay could have showed that it attempted to collect the

Kobarid judgment, but Reizen had essentially no locatable assets from which to

draw.” (Id.) (citations omitted). We do not believe the district court abused its

discretion in excluding such evidence. As we explained above, the district court

did not abuse its discretion in preventing Hawksbay from mentioning the outcome

of Kobarid, because of the serious potential for confusion and also because that

outcome was still under appeal at the time of the trial in this case. Clearly,

allowing Hawksbay to reference its inability to collect the judgment would have

necessitated an explanation of the result itself. Further, if the jury did not know the

outcome in Kobarid, we cannot see how it would assume anything one way or the

other about Reizen’s motive for testifying on Hawksbay’s behalf.

      Finally, Hawksbay argues that the district court erred in refusing to allow

any reference to Defendants’ disqualification as Reizen’s attorneys in Kobarid.

                                         -61-
(See D.E. #166.) Hawksbay made clear at a pretrial conference that it did not seek

to introduce the substance of the magistrate’s disqualification order or the trial

court’s order adopting it. Instead, Hawkbsay wanted to introduce the mere fact

that Defendants were disqualified from representing Reizen in Kobarid.38

Hawksbay claimed that it needed to explain to the jury that Defendants originally

represented Reizen until they were disqualified and different counsel took over,

and that it was the new counsel who informed Hawksbay of the six million dollars

in trust. In response Defendants argued that any reference to the fact of

disqualification, without its context, would be highly prejudicial because it would

suggest to the jury that they had engaged in wrongdoing. As Defendants pointed

out, the orders themselves explained that Defendants were disqualified based on

their prior representation of Tambourine (a plaintiff in Kobarid).39

       The district court did not abuse its discretion here. The court could have

reasonably determined, based on Rule 403, that the danger of unfair prejudice in

allowing evidence of the disqualification - without its context - substantially

       38
           Hawksbay’s attorney stated at the November 30, 2007 Pretrial Conference: “we do not
intend to present the substance of the [disqualification] orders. There were two orders. . . . And
they certainly detail very carefully the various bases for disqualifying the firm. All we’re asking,
your Honor, is to be able to reference the fact that it occurred . . . .”
       39
          The magistrate’s order explicitly stated that the disqualification should not be read to
imply any ethical misconduct on Defendants’ parts. (See Kobarid, April 1, 2005 Order Granting
Motion to Disqualify Counsel at 2.)

                                               -62-
outweighed its probative value. We especially note that the court only prevented

Hawksbay from mentioning the fact of disqualification. The court did not prevent

Hawksbay from mentioning that it was Reizen’s new counsel, not Defendants, who

disclosed the existence and location of the six million dollars in trust.

                                 III. CONCLUSION

      In sum, we reverse the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion

on Hawksbay’s conversion and civil theft claims; we affirm the court’s grant of

Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim; we

find the court abused its discretion in excluding the Turner evidence; we find the

court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the outcome in Kobarid; we find the

court abused its discretion in excluding Peterson’s testimony regarding Solowsky’s

reaction during his deposition, as well as evidence of the parties’ attempts to settle

Kobarid; and we affirm on the remaining evidentiary issues.

REVERSED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART; AND REMANDED.

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