Court Opinion

ID: 4531346
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-05-04 12:05:43.120827+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:30:12.352290
License: Public Domain

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19-P-503                                              Appeals Court

    CUSTOM KITS COMPANY, INC.      vs.   SHAWN TESSIER & others.   1

                              No. 19-P-503.

           Worcester.       January 10, 2020. - May 1, 2020.

           Present:     Desmond, Wendlandt, & McDonough, JJ.

Joint Tortfeasors. Joint and Several Obligation. Damages,
     Mitigation. Practice, Civil, Findings by judge.

     Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
November 24, 2010.

     Following review by this court, 83 Mass. App. Ct. 1125
(2013), a motion for assessment of damages was heard by Daniel
M. Wrenn, J., and entry of judgment was ordered by him.

     Scott Sinrich for the plaintiff.

     DESMOND, J.      In this case we consider whether, following a

hearing to assess damages, a Superior Court judge properly

dismissed the plaintiff's claims against two defendants, Phillip

J. Ryznal and Professional Tax Services of Oxford, Inc.

     1 Phillip J. Ryznal and Professional Tax Services of Oxford,
Inc. Neither of these defendants has participated in this
appeal.
                                                                     2

(collectively, Ryznal defendants), because, although the judge

found that the defendants' negligence caused the plaintiff a

loss of $289,866, the plaintiff had been "made whole" by a joint

tortfeasor.    For the reasons that follow, we vacate the judgment

of dismissal as to these two defendants and remand for a

reassessment of damages.

     Background.    We draw the facts from the judge's findings,

the prior decision of a panel of this court in Custom Kits Co.

v. Tessier, 83 Mass. App. Ct. 1125 (2013) (Custom Kits I), and

the undisputed record.     See Marshall v. Stratus Pharms., Inc.,

51 Mass. App. Ct. 667, 670 (2001) ("on the questions relating to

damages, the judge's findings, if not clearly erroneous,

control").

     Custom Kits Company, Inc. (Custom Kits), is a closely held

corporation originally formed by Michael and Shawn Tessier,2 when

they were husband and wife.     Custom Kits I, 83 Mass. App. Ct.
1125.    Michael was president and Shawn was treasurer and

secretary, and each held fifty percent of the shares of Custom

Kits. Id.   The Tessiers divorced on June 21, 2010, and each

retained their fifty percent interest in Custom Kits. Id.

     On November 24, 2010, Custom Kits commenced this action in

the Superior Court alleging that Shawn had breached her

     2 As the Tessiers share a common last name, we refer to them
individually by their first names. For clarity, we also refer
to Phillip J. Ryznal individually by his first name.
                                                                    3

fiduciary duties to Custom Kits as a shareholder and officer of

the corporation by misappropriating or converting corporate

funds for her personal benefit and fraudulently concealing her

conduct from Michael, as president of Custom Kits.    The

complaint further alleged that the Ryznal defendants

fraudulently filed inaccurate and incomplete tax returns on

behalf of Custom Kits and committed professional negligence,

which prevented Michael from discovering the misappropriations.3

     After the judgment of divorce was entered, and

approximately nine months after this action was commenced, Shawn

sought modification of the divorce judgment.4   Shawn and Michael

agreed to a "stipulation on modification judgment," which was

     3 Initially, summary judgment was granted to the defendants
on the ground that the doctrine of res judicata barred the suit
because Michael could have litigated the corporation's claims in
the divorce action. See Custom Kits I, 83 Mass. App. Ct. 1125.
A panel of this court reversed, holding that the corporation's
claims were separate and distinct from the divorce action, and
the corporation's claims of fraud, negligence, and
misappropriation were not "actually litigated" in the divorce
action. Id., citing TLT Constr. Corp. v. A. Anthony Tappe &
Assocs., 48 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 5 (1999).

     4 Shawn asserted that she had been wrongfully terminated
from a corporation of which she was a fifty percent owner, she
was making substantially less money in her current employment,
and expenses had increased because Shawn and Michael's youngest
child had been accepted to college. She requested that Michael
be ordered to pay child support and share post high school
educational expenses. Michael answered and asserted a
counterclaim requesting that due to Shawn's misappropriation of
$286,000, Michael, among other things, be awarded full ownership
of the corporation and their joint real estate and personalty,
and that Shawn be required to pay Michael $286,000.
                                                                   4

approved as fair and reasonable by a judge of the Probate and

Family Court and entered as a modification judgment.   The

modification judgment provided that Michael would pay Shawn

$58,000 "as a full and final satisfaction of all claims

including but not limited to past present and future child

support, 'lost wages,' wrongful discharge, attorney's fees,

[and] compensation to [Shawn] for [Michael's] purchase of her

fifty percent (50%) interest in the [p]arties' jointly owned

company, Custom Kits . . . ."   The modification judgment

allocated $39,780.01 for redemption of Shawn's interest in

Custom Kits.5   It also provided that the instant action against

Shawn would be dismissed with prejudice, but that Shawn would

execute a statement under oath detailing her communications with

Phillip.   Although Custom Kits dismissed its claims against

Shawn, Shawn's motion for entry of separate and final judgment,

opposed by Phillip, was denied.   When Custom Kits executed a

stipulation of dismissal of its claims against Shawn, it

expressly provided that Custom Kits's claims against the Ryznal

defendants "remain[ed] in full force and effect."

     On remand to the Superior Court, Custom Kits's case

resumed; after a number of delays and failures to appear, the

court entered a judgment as to liability on November 21, 2017,

     5 The remaining allocations were $8,600 for child support;
$14,622 for current and future college tuition and expenses; and
$6,998 for wrongful discharge and lost wages.
                                                                   5

defaulting the Ryznal defendants.   Thereafter, the judge

conducted an assessment of damages hearing on November 30, 2017,

which concluded on December 13, 2017.   The judge found that

Phillip reasonably should have known that there were errors and

omissions being made in the information provided by Shawn on

behalf of the plaintiff corporation.6   In addition, the judge

found that Phillip had a professional obligation to report that

information to Michael, the president of the corporation, and

had he done so, the corporation would have avoided losing

$289,866.   The judge found that the testimony of Shawn, denying

misappropriating any funds, was not credible.

     Ultimately, however, the judge concluded that because,

through modification of their divorce judgment, Michael had

acquired Shawn's shares of the corporation and had agreed to pay

her $50,000 and to dismiss all claims against her, the company

had been made whole.   Thus, although Phillip had been negligent,

the judge concluded that there were no outstanding damages to

the plaintiff corporation in view of the settlement with Shawn.

The judge reasoned that pursuant to G. L. c. 231B, § 4, an award

of damages against one tortfeasor must be reduced by any amount

that has been paid by another tortfeasor for the same injury.

     6 The judge noted that Phillip's testimony "generally was an
attempt to try and mitigate his role in providing tax services
and/or financial advice to the plaintiff corporation and/or the
Tessiers generally."
                                                                    6

The judge found that "in buying out the 50% interest of Shawn

Tessier [and giving] Ms. Tessier a full release for any and all

liability in this present action, . . . the full value of her

misappropriation was reimbursed to the plaintiff corporation

since thereafter the corporation paid out an additional sum of

money representing the excess owed to Ms. Tessier above and

beyond the monies misappropriated.   Accordingly . . . there is

no money owed at this time since the plaintiff corporation has

been paid in full."

     Custom Kits filed a timely notice of appeal on June 15,

2018.7

     Discussion.   The judge correctly concluded that Custom Kits

may have only one satisfaction of its damages.   Whether or not

Shawn and the Ryznal defendants are joint tortfeasors in the

"strict sense, . . . [c]ommon damages stemming from an

indivisible harm constitute the bedrock basis of the rule, long

recognized in this and other jurisdictions, that a party can

'have but one satisfaction for the same injury.'"   Short v.

     7 Custom Kits's motion for reconsideration was docketed on
July 16, 2018; that motion was denied on July 23, 2018, with the
notation that the "[p]laintiff does not raise any new evidence
and/or law, but only re-argues issues." Custom Kits did not
file a new notice of appeal from the denial of its motion for
reconsideration. Issues regarding the motion for
reconsideration are therefore not before us, and we do not
consider the submissions related to the motion for
reconsideration, which were not otherwise before the Superior
Court judge.
                                                                     7

Marinas USA Ltd. Partnership, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 848, 858 (2011),

quoting Murray v. Lovejoy, 17 F. Cas. 1052, 1055 (D. Mass.

1863).    See G. L. c. 231B, § 4 (a).8   Thus, "[i]n mitigation of

damages, a defendant is entitled to show in evidence the amount

of money paid or promised to the plaintiff by a joint tortfeasor

on account of the same injury."    Tritsch v. Boston Edison Co.,

363 Mass. 179, 182 (1973).    While it is true that a plaintiff

may recover only a single damages award, an equally well-settled

principle is that a plaintiff may settle with one tortfeasor and

continue claims against another.    General Laws c. 231B "permits

a plaintiff to settle with one joint tortfeasor and still have

recourse against remaining tortfeasors . . . ."     Slocum v.

Donahue, 44 Mass. App. Ct. 937, 939 (1998), quoting Elias v.

Unisys Corp., 410 Mass. 479, 482 (1991).     Indeed, "a plaintiff

injured by more than one tortfeasor may sue any or all of them

    8    General Laws c. 231B, § 4 (a), provides:

    "When a release or covenant not to sue or not to enforce
    judgment is given in good faith to one of two or more
    persons liable in tort for the same injury:

    "(a) It shall not discharge any of the other tortfeasors
    from liability for the injury unless its terms so provide;
    but it shall reduce the claim against the others to the
    extent of any amount stipulated by the release or the
    covenant, or in the amount of the consideration paid for
    it, whichever is the greater."

The statute serves the dual purposes of encouraging settlements
and preventing collusion amongst the settling parties. Noyes v.
Raymond, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 186, 189 (1990).
                                                                    8

for her full damages."   Shantigar Found. v. Bear Mountain

Bldrs., 441 Mass. 131, 141 (2004).

    Settlements are motivated by a wide range of factors, some

nonmonetary, and may involve significant payments or no payment

at all.   In the context of considering whether a settlement had

been made in good faith for purposes G. L. c. 231B, § 4, or

whether a tortfeasor also was liable to a joint tortfeasor for

contribution, we have said that "[t]he fact that the amount of a

settlement is low in comparison to the plaintiff's estimate of

[his] own damages, by itself, is . . . not material.     A

relatively low settlement might well reflect uncertainty whether

the settling party would be found liable, uncertainty whether

the damages would be proved, or the general unpredictability of

juries on both liability and damage issues.    Even where a

claimant receives nothing in exchange for releasing a defendant,

the statute may preclude a claim by a codefendant for

contribution" (emphasis added).   Noyes v. Raymond, 28 Mass. App.

Ct. 186, 190 (1990).   We add to those considerations, that

whether a judgment obtained against a particular tortfeasor

would be collectible may be a consideration.    "A rule whereby a

determination of lack of good faith could be based only on the

amount of a settlement would 'require trial courts to apply an

unworkable standard to every settlement.   It [would] clog our

trial courts with unnecessary hearings, discourage the
                                                                   9

settlement of legitimate claims, and severely strain the

resources of the parties and the trial and appellate courts of

this state.'" Id. at 190, quoting Tech-Bilt, Inc. v. Woodward-

Clyde & Assocs., 38 Cal. 3d 488, 502 (1985) (Bird, C.J.,

dissenting).

    Here, the Probate Court modification judgment, on its face,

allocated no amount for the dismissal of Custom Kits's claims

against Shawn in this Superior Court action.   The burden of

coming forward with some showing of lack of good faith in

allocating no financial sum for the dismissal of Custom Kits's

claims against Shawn was on the Ryznal defendants.   Noyes, 28
Mass. App. Ct. at 191.   Custom Kits contends that the Ryznal

defendants did not even offer the modification judgment into

evidence at the assessment of damages hearing, but concedes that

it was in the record, having been attached to the Ryznal

defendants' opposition to Shawn's earlier motion for entry of a

separate and final judgment dismissing the claims against her.

Assuming without deciding that it was proper for the judge to

consider the modification judgment, that judgment allocated

$39,780 for Michael's purchase of Shawn's shares of Custom Kits

and made no mention of a discount in exchange for the dismissal

of Custom Kits's claims against Shawn.   Both Michael and Shawn

testified at the assessment of damages hearing, and the issue of

the modification judgment and its connection to the dismissal of
                                                                     10

Custom Kits's claims against Shawn was barely explored.     Shawn

was asked whether, as part of the modification judgment, she was

required to pay any of the "missing" $288,000,9 and she replied

that she was not.     While the judge was not required to believe

Shawn, evidence that Michael received a $288,000 discount was

exceedingly thin.     To the extent that circumstances of the

settlement were suggestive of a "discount" of some amount, it

was certainly open to counsel to delve into that issue at the

assessment of damages hearing.     Counsel chose not to do so.

     Moreover, the judge made no finding as to the value of

Custom Kits.   We are thus unable to make a determination whether

the judge's inference -- that the $39,780 allocation in the

modification judgment for Michael's purchase of Shawn's interest

in Custom Kits must have included a nearly $288,000 credit --

was reasonable.     We have found no evidence in the record of the

company's value, aside from an affidavit that was not properly

part of this record, and which, in any event, does not warrant a

conclusion that the purchase price was discounted.10

     9 The questioning at the assessment of damages hearing
indicated the damages were understood to be in the amount of
$288,000; the judge ultimately concluded that the defendants'
negligence caused damages in the amount of $289,866. The
difference is not material to this appeal.

     10We decline to consider Custom Kits's expert's affidavit
submitted with Custom Kits's motion for reconsideration as, in
the absence of an appeal from the denial of that motion, it is
                                                                   11

       On the record presented, we conclude that the judge's

inference that there must have been a nearly $290,000 credit for

the purchase of Shawn's shares is based at least in part on an

unsupported assumption that Michael's decision, on behalf of

Custom Kits, to dismiss the claims against Shawn had to have

been supported by such consideration.     Here, however, in the

context of addressing the issues related to the financial and

emotional aspects of their divorce, there are many reasons

Michael could have agreed on behalf of Custom Kits to dismiss

the complaint against Shawn.     To name just one, having in-depth

knowledge of Shawn's financial status, Michael may well have

concluded that Shawn would be unable to pay any judgment against

her.    In any event, it was clearly erroneous to conclude that

the plaintiff had been made whole based on no more than (i) the

mere existence of a settlement with Shawn of multiple legal

claims and (ii) hearsay assertions that a discount had been

given on the costs of acquiring Shawn's interest in Custom Kits

that might support an offset in this case.11

       Conclusion.   So much of the judgment as dismissed Custom

Kits's claims against Phillip J. Ryznal and Professional Tax

Services of Oxford, Inc., is vacated, and the matter is remanded

not properly before us and the judge did not have the benefit of
it.

       Given the result we reach, we need not address the other
       11

issues raised by Custom Kits on appeal.
                                                                 12

for a new assessment of damages.   On remand, the only issue for

consideration shall be whether the $39,780.01 paid for Shawn

Tessier's share of Custom Kits reflected a discount attributable

to Custom Kits's dismissal of its claims against Shawn in this

action.   In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.

                                         So ordered.