Court Opinion

ID: 4154519
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-03-22 00:09:04.118238+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:34:38.866894
License: Public Domain

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16-P-165                                                 Appeals Court

   COPLEY PLACE ASSOCIATES, LLC       vs.     CARLOS TÉLLEZ-BORTONI.

                              No. 16-P-165.

           Suffolk.       December 9, 2016. - March 16, 2017.

               Present:    Milkey, Massing, & Sacks, JJ.

Fraud. Deceit. Real Property, Lease. Contract, Lease of real
     estate. Practice, Civil, Summary judgment, Judgment
     notwithstanding verdict.

     Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
April 24, 2012.

     A motion for summary judgment was heard by Peter M.
Lauriat, J.; the case was tried before Robert B. Gordon, J., and
a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was heard by
him.

     Robert E. Curtis, Jr., for the defendant.
     Martin M. Fantozzi (David M. Zucker also present) for the
plaintiff.

    SACKS, J.     The defendant, Carlos Téllez-Bortoni, appeals

from a judgment entered against him in favor of the plaintiff,

Copley Place Associates, LLC (Copley), on claims for fraud and

violation of G. L. c. 93A.      He argues that a judge of the
                                                                    2

Superior Court erred in awarding Copley partial summary judgment

against him on liability.   We conclude that Copley's motion

failed to establish as undisputed fact that Copley relied to its

detriment on false representations made by Téllez-Bortoni.     We

therefore vacate the judgment and remand for further

proceedings.

    Background.    Copley's claims arose out of a failed venture

in which Irish Pub Group, Inc. (IPG), was to have operated a

restaurant in space leased from Copley in its mall located in

Boston.   Téllez-Bortoni signed the lease on IPG's behalf.

Section 24.11 of the lease stated, "If Tenant is or will be a

corporation, the persons executing this Lease on behalf of

Tenant hereby covenant and warrant that . . . the person signing

this Lease on behalf of the corporation is an officer of Tenant,

and is duly authorized to sign and execute this Lease."

Sometime after the lease was signed, Téllez-Bortoni informed

Copley that one Raymond Houle was "a part of [IPG]," causing

Copley to inform a bank that Houle could negotiate a large check

Copley had issued to IPG as a portion of a "Landlord's

Contribution" provided for in the lease.   Houle deposited the

check in IPG's account.

    IPG did not use the funds to further the project as

required by the lease, the restaurant never opened, and Copley

sued IPG, Téllez-Bortoni, Houle, and others on a variety of
                                                                    3

theories, seeking to recover amounts due under the lease and

other damages.   IPG never denied that Téllez-Bortoni's signature

sufficed to bind IPG to the lease; instead, IPG failed to appear

and was defaulted.     After obtaining default judgments against

IPG and all other defendants except Téllez-Bortoni, the judge

awarded Copley partial summary judgment against Téllez-Bortoni

on liability for fraud and violation of G. L. c. 93A, premised

on Copley's claimed detrimental reliance on his assertedly (1)

false representations that he was an officer of IPG, duly

authorized to sign the lease, and (2) misleadingly incomplete

statement concerning Houle's role with IPG.     After a trial on

damages presided over by a different judge, a jury returned a

verdict of $865,060.44, to which the judge added $126,440.09 in

attorney's fees and costs.     Téllez-Bortoni moved for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and, upon the trial judge's

denial of that motion, Téllez-Bortoni filed this appeal, in

which he challenges the partial summary judgment ruling.

     Discussion.     After briefly reviewing the law of fraud or

deceit,1 we discuss in turn the summary judgment record regarding

Téllez-Bortoni's representations to Copley (1) as to his status

     1
       For present purposes we may treat the terms "deceit" and
"fraud" as interchangeable. See Graphic Arts Finishers, Inc. v.
Boston Redev. Authy., 357 Mass. 40, 44 (1970); Brown v.
Gerstein, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 558, 567 n.14 (1984).
                                                                    4

as an IPG officer with authority to sign the lease, and (2) as

to Houle's status vis-à-vis IPG.

    "In a deceit action, the plaintiff must prove 'that the

defendant made a false representation of a material fact with

knowledge of its falsity for the purpose of inducing the

plaintiff to act thereon, and that the plaintiff relied upon the

representation as true and acted upon it to his damage.'"     Danca

v. Taunton Sav. Bank, 385 Mass. 1, 8 (1982), quoting from

Barrett Assocs. v. Aronson, 346 Mass. 150, 152 (1963).     "Such

reliance by the plaintiff must be reasonable."   Masingill v. EMC

Corp., 449 Mass. 532, 540 (2007).   Further, "[i]f a statement of

fact which is susceptible of actual knowledge is made as of

one's own knowledge and is false, it may be the basis for an

action of deceit without proof of an actual intent to deceive."

Pietrazak v. McDermott, 341 Mass. 107, 110 (1960).    See Snyder

v. Sperry & Hutchinson Co., 368 Mass. 433, 444 (1975).     Finally,

incomplete statements may in some circumstances amount to

actionable fraud.   Greenleaf Arms Realty Trust I, LLC v. New

Boston Fund, Inc., 81 Mass. App. Ct. 282, 291-292 (2012).

    1.   Representations of officer status and authority.     On

Copley's motion for partial summary judgment, the judge

correctly ruled it undisputed that Téllez-Bortoni's

representations and warranties that he was an officer of IPG,
                                                                     5

and duly authorized to execute the lease, were false.2    Based on

Pietrazak v. McDermott, 341 Mass. at 110, the judge did not find

it necessary to address whether Téllez-Bortoni made the

representations with an actual intent to deceive.3   The judge

then concluded, "On the basis of those representations, Copley

. . . did lease premises to [IPG], and it consequently suffered

financial losses."   In short, the judge viewed as undisputed

that Copley had relied to its detriment on Téllez-Bortoni's

representations in the lease.4

     The summary judgment record did not support these

conclusions.   Although Copley's memorandum in support of its

motion recognized that it needed to establish detrimental

     2
       Téllez-Bortoni's affidavit stated that he had instructed
an associate to file incorporation papers for IPG listing him as
an officer, that he had believed he was an officer, and that he
had invested a substantial sum in IPG, but he ultimately
acknowledged that he in fact was never an officer of IPG.
     3
       Téllez-Bortoni argues, for the first time on appeal, (1)
that his scienter in making these representations presented a
genuine issue of material fact; and (2) that Copley failed to
plead with particularity, as required by Mass.R.Civ.P. 9(b), 365
Mass. 751 (1974), that its fraud claim was based on these
representations. These arguments are waived. It is
nevertheless telling that, although Copley's complaint alleged
detrimental reliance on several other specific false statements
by the defendants, Copley did not think to include in this list
Téllez-Bortoni's representations and warranties in the lease.
     4
       The judge also did not address two other essential
elements of Copley's fraud claim: whether Téllez-Bortoni's
representations were "material" and whether Copley's reliance on
them was "reasonable."
                                                                    6

reliance, its supporting statement of undisputed facts failed to

do so.

     The closest Copley came to addressing reliance was the

statement in its memorandum in support of the motion that "it is

obvious that Copley . . . would never have signed the Lease and

issued a check for the first installment of Landlord's

Contribution if it had known that [Téllez-Bortoni] was not

authorized to enter into the Lease on behalf of [IPG]."   But

this assertion was not supported by any citation to the

statement of undisputed material facts or to any of the

underlying materials that may be considered on a motion for

summary judgment.   Téllez-Bortoni argued that Copley had failed

to establish such reliance.   Although it is plausible that

Copley actually relied on the representations when entering the

lease, particularly where the lease contained a "covenant and

warrant" by Téllez-Bortoni as to the truth of the

representations, we find no evidence to that effect in the

record.5   Moreover, it is also plausible that Copley's principal

     5
       We do not agree with Copley's argument that the
incorporation of Téllez-Bortoni's representations and warranties
into the lease was itself sufficient to establish reliance in
view of the principle that "no part of the contract is to be
disregarded." Starr v. Fordham, 420 Mass. 178, 190 1995),
quoting from Boston Elevated Ry. v. Metropolitan Transit Authy.,
323 Mass. 562, 569 (1949). That is a principle of contract
interpretation, not of tort law. To be sure, Copley could also
have brought a claim in contract for breach of warranty. See
Carolet Corp. v. Garfield, 339 Mass. 75, 79 (1959). This might
                                                                   7

interest was in the lease being signed and then the lessee

recognizing and performing its obligations thereunder, rather

than in any formal defects in the signer's authority.   "In

reviewing an order granting summary judgment . . . we of course

apply our traditional test and consider the facts in their light

most favorable to the nonmoving party, drawing all reasonable

inferences in [that party's] favor."   Sullivan v. Liberty Mut.

Ins. Co., 444 Mass. 34, 38 (2005).6

     Nor did Copley establish that it suffered any detriment as

a result of the falsity of Téllez-Bortoni's assertion of officer

status and authority to sign the lease.   It offered no evidence

have avoided the need to prove reliance, but Copley still would
have had to prove, as on any contract claim, that it suffered
harm as a result of the breach, see Singarella v. Boston, 342
Mass. 385, 387 (1961), much as Copley was required to show on
its fraud claim that its reliance caused it detriment. See
infra at        .
     6
       This hole in the summary judgment record is not filled by
Copley's introduction of evidence, at the subsequent trial on
damages, that it routinely insists upon the inclusion of a
provision like the one at issue here in all of its commercial
leases, and that it will not sign a lease unless the prospective
tenant has signed first, thus warranting his or her authority to
do so. As the trial judge stated in his JNOV decision, the jury
were instructed to determine only damages -- not the question
whether Copley had relied on Téllez-Bortoni's
misrepresentations, which the trial judge viewed as already
having been decided by the partial summary judgment.
Accordingly, and because the parties have not included the trial
record in the materials submitted on appeal, we can have no
confidence that Téllez-Bortoni had a fair opportunity at trial
to meet Copley's evidence of reliance. We also note the trial
judge's observation in his JNOV decision that the evidence of
Copley's reliance was "by no means overwhelming."
                                                                     8

of such detriment, and IPG has never asserted that Téllez-

Bortoni lacked authority to bind it to the lease with Copley, or

otherwise disavowed anything he might have done in IPG's name.

IPG did not defend against Copley's suit on the ground that the

lease was invalid; rather, IPG defaulted and had a multi-million

dollar default judgment entered against it.    Put differently,

although Copley may have suffered detriment caused by Téllez-

Bortoni's bare signing of the lease (because, without a signed

lease, Copley might not have allowed IPG onto the premises), we

cannot discern on this record how Copley suffered detriment

caused by the falsity of Téllez-Bortoni's representations in the

course of signing the lease.   Rather, the detriment to Copley

appears to have been caused by IPG's breach of its lease

obligations.7

     2.   Representations as to Houle.   Although the motion judge

did not rest his ruling on the point, Copley suggests that its

reliance on Téllez-Bortoni's representation that Houle was a

part of IPG, is another ground on which it was entitled to

summary judgment on liability.   We are not persuaded.

     7
       "Proof of damages flowing from misrepresentations is
essential to recovery. Cardullo v. Landau, 329 Mass. 5, 7
(1952)." Poly v. Moylan, 423 Mass. 141, 149 (1996), cert.
denied, 519 U.S. 1114 (1997). In Massachusetts, a broader rule
of causation has been applied in fraud cases involving the
purchase or retention of stock. See Reisman v. KPMG Peat
Marwick LLP, 57 Mass. App. Ct. 100, 111-120 & n.22 (2003). We
are aware of no decision extending this broader approach beyond
that context.
                                                                      9

    The summary judgment record shows that, as required by the

lease, Copley issued a check for $452,450 to IPG as a portion of

the "Landlord's Contribution" to assist in the build-out of the

leased premises, and Houle attempted to negotiate the check.

Copley's bank and a second bank questioned whether this was

proper.    Copley asserted that its bank raised the question

directly with IPG, although there is no record support for this

assertion.    The record does show that one Elizabeth Hazan, who

had worked with Téllez-Bortoni on IPG matters, sent an

electronic mail message (e-mail) to him requesting, without

reference to the check or other explanation, that he in turn

send an e-mail to Copley confirming that Houle was "part of

[IPG]."    Téllez-Bortoni did so.8   Copley forwarded the e-mail to

the bank, which then accepted the check for deposit into IPG's

account.

    Copley has not asserted that Téllez-Bortoni's statement

that Houle was a part of IPG was itself false.     To the contrary,

the record shows Copley's position, based on public corporate

filings, that Houle was in fact the sole officer and director of

    8
       Téllez-Bortoni stated at his deposition that he sent the
e-mail at Hazan's request but without her ever having explained
why she wanted him to do so. He had never met Houle and did not
know who Houle was, but Hazan had told him that Houle was "one
of the new investors at [IPG]," that they were "buying [Téllez-
Bortoni] out," and that Houle "needed to be . . . part of
[IPG]." He understood that the e-mail to Copley was necessary
because Houle was "a new character, a new partner" in IPG.
                                                                    10

IPG at that time.    Nor has Copley asserted that its reliance on

Téllez-Bortoni's statement about Houle led to any direct

detriment or harm.   The "Landlord Contribution" check, made out

to IPG and endorsed by Houle, was deposited in IPG's account,

just as Copley intended.

     Rather, the harm Copley asserts is that once the check was

deposited, IPG did not use the money to build out the leased

premises as required by the lease.9   Further, Hazan had told

Téllez-Bortoni that she expected to receive some money soon from

Copley and that once she did so, she could loan him $15,000,

which he had the "impression" would come from the Copley

payment.   When the check was deposited, Hazan paid him $15,000.10

     Copley asserted that the "Landlord Contribution" would not

have been made, and thus could not have been misused, but for

Téllez-Bortoni's failure to disclose, in his e-mail to Copley,

that (1) he had never met and did not know Houle, (2) he did not

know what position Houle held with IPG, and (3) he had agreed to

sell his interest in IPG to Hazan.    Copley pointed to the rule

     9
       Copley obtained a default judgment against Houle for
$6,682,975.60 in damages, presumably based not only on the use
of the "Landlord Contribution" but on Houle's other acts and
omissions with regard to IPG's relationship with Copley.
     10
       Téllez-Bortoni's   deposition testimony is unclear on
whether this was a loan   or part of the payment to buy out his
interest in IPG. Also,    the summary judgment record does not
establish as undisputed   fact that the $15,000 was paid using
funds IPG received from   Copley.
                                                                  11

that misleadingly incomplete statements may amount to actionable

fraud:

     "[E]ven in an arms-length transaction, though there may be
     no duty otherwise imposed, if a party does speak 'to a
     given point of information, voluntarily or [otherwise], he
     is bound to speak honestly and to divulge all the material
     facts bearing upon the point that lie within his [or her]
     knowledge. Fragmentary information may be as misleading
     . . . as active misrepresentation, and half-truths may be
     as actionable as whole lies.' Kannavos v. Annino, 356
     Mass. 42, 48 (1969)."

Greenleaf Arms Realty Trust I, LLC v. New Boston Fund, Inc., 81

Mass. App. Ct. at 291-292.

     Although this theory has some appeal, at this stage of the

case it is not a ground for affirmance of the judgment against

Téllez-Bortoni.    The theory depends both on facts that may

remain in dispute and on drawing inferences in favor of Copley,

whereas we must draw them in favor of Téllez-Bortoni as the

nonmoving party.    See Sullivan v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 444

Mass. at 38.   For example, Copley has not established as

undisputed that Téllez-Bortoni knew he was being asked to inform

Copley of Houle's role in order to clear the way for Houle to

deposit the check; thus it remains unclear what additional

information about Houle, if any, Téllez-Bortoni had a duty to

convey to Copley.11   Nor is it evident how Copley's damages from

     11
       Nor has Copley established as undisputed that, had it
been told of the additional information it asserts Téllez-
Bortoni misleadingly omitted, it would have stopped Houle from
                                                                 12

its reliance on Téllez-Bortoni's statement about Houle could

exceed the misused $452,460 "Landlord's Contribution" and thus

justify the entire verdict of $865,060.44 returned by the jury.

In sum, whether Téllez-Bortoni's statement to Copley about Houle

constituted fraud and justified the judgment requires further

development on remand.12

     Conclusion.   The order granting partial summary judgment on

liability against Téllez-Bortoni is vacated.   The judgment

against Téllez-Bortoni entered September 24, 2015, Paragraph 3

of the Consolidated Final Judgment entered October 16, 2015, and

the order denying the motion for JNOV are vacated.   The jury

verdict on damages is set aside, and the case is remanded for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                   So ordered.

negotiating the check and then altered its relationship with
IPG.
     12
       Although reliance is not a necessary element of a G. L.
c. 93A claim, see Giuffrida v. High Country Investor, Inc., 73
Mass. App. Ct. 225, 240–241 & n.16 (2008) (adding that causation
remains an essential element), the parties' arguments on appeal
treat Copley's G. L. c. 93A claim as dependent on the success of
its fraud claim, or at least on a claim of negligent
misrepresentation. Both fraud and negligent misrepresentation
claims require proof of detrimental reliance. See Masingill v.
EMC Corp., 449 Mass. at 540; DeWolfe v. Hingham Centre, Ltd.,
464 Mass. 795, 799-800 (2013). Because that has not been shown
on this record, and because Copley has not argued that its G. L.
c. 93A claim is separately viable (an issue on which we express
no view), we vacate the G. L. c. 93A liability ruling as well.