Labarre v. Shepard ( 1996 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion











    United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 95-2095

    GEORGE LABARRE AND CHERLINE LABARRE,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

    v.

    MERRILL J. SHEPARD AND THOMAS M. PARKS,

    Defendants, Appellants.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Charles S. Swartwood, III, U.S. Magistrate Judge] _____________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Timothy G. Kerrigan with whom Hamblett & Kerrigan, P.A. was on ____________________ ___________________________
    brief for appellants.
    David V. Shablin with whom Raymond J. Reed and Reed & Reed were ________________ ________________ ___________
    on brief for appellees.


    ____________________

    May 28, 1996
    ____________________




















    STAHL, Circuit Judge. Merrill J. Shepard and STAHL, Circuit Judge. ______________

    Thomas M. Parks appeal from the judgment against them in

    favor of George LaBarre and Cherline LaBarre. A jury found

    that Shepard and Parks: (1) improperly and unfairly

    foreclosed the mortgage they held on the LaBarres' residence;

    (2) breached an agreement to avert the foreclosure; committed

    (3) misrepresentation and (4) fraud; and (5) engaged in an

    unfair trade practice in violation of New Hampshire's

    Consumer Protection Act. On appeal, Shepard and Parks raise

    two narrow issues: first, that admission of evidence of an

    alleged oral agreement, whereby the LaBarres would deliver a

    deed in lieu of foreclosure, violated the Statute of Frauds;

    and, second, that the damages awarded were improperly

    duplicative. Disagreeing with the appellants' first

    contention, but agreeing as to the second, we affirm in part,

    reverse in part, and remand for correction of the damages

    award.

    I. I. __

    Background Background __________

    On October 20, 1989, the LaBarres purchased a newly

    erected house and surrounding land in Weare, New Hampshire,

    from Shepard and Parks, the builders.1 The purchase price

    ____________________

    1. This is a unusual case. The record reveals a number of
    anomalies in the underlying real estate transaction, the
    foreclosure process, and the litigation in the state and
    federal trial courts. Because none of these irregularities
    is material to the narrow issues on appeal, we merely point

    -2- 2













    was $229,000; the LaBarres paid $11,450 cash and gave Shepard

    and Parks a promissory note in the amount of $217,550,

    secured by a first mortgage on the premises. No payments of

    principal or interest were due on the note until either the

    LaBarres sold certain other real estate or the passage of two

    years from the date of the note's execution.2

    In October 1990, the LaBarres sued Shepard and

    Parks in New Hampshire state court for defective

    construction, seeking recision and money damages. Shepard

    and Parks counterclaimed for principal and interest allegedly

    due on the mortgage note. After a bench trial, the court

    denied recision, but found defective construction that would

    cost $38,000 to repair. Accordingly, on June 7, 1993, the
















    ____________________

    them out in footnotes to help the reader understand the odd
    posture of this case.

    2. The promissory note, while providing for a deferral of
    payments for up to two years, did not provide for any
    installment payments thereafter nor for a balloon payment.
    The parties, however, do not raise any issues concerning the
    note and agree on the amount due thereunder.

    -3- 3













    court entered judgment,3 deducting the cost of repairs from

    the mortgage balance.4

    In the summer of 1993, Shepard and Parks initiated

    foreclosure proceedings against the LaBarres for the balance

    then due on the mortgage note.5 A foreclosure sale was

    ____________________

    3. This judgment is impossible to decipher. The state trial
    judge found that the LaBarres had "sustained their burden of
    proof on their claim of damages" and "assessed" those damages
    at $38,000. The judge then stated that "[d]efendants'
    counterclaim is DENIED without prejudice to assert a separate
    action, if necessary." In spite of denying the counterclaim
    for the mortgage balance due, the judge did not make an award
    of money damages, but rather deducted the $38,000 damage
    award from the balance due on the note. The judge went on to
    present "the correct methodology for recalculation of the
    promissory note," arriving at a "[t]otal due under terms of
    promissory note" of $239,729. The decree ended: "Judgment
    entered in accordance with the foregoing."
    Inexplicably, both parties and the magistrate judge
    consider this to be a judgment for Shepard and Parks for
    $239,729, when the state court judge expressly denied their ______
    counterclaim. We ignore this problem, though, because the
    magistrate judge ultimately used the state court "judgment"
    to measure the proper award on the mortgage deficiency
    counterclaim brought by Shepard and Parks; hence, there was
    no award on the state judgment itself. Neither party raises
    any question about the state court judgment on appeal. Given
    this posture, we too shall refer to the state court mortgage
    balance calculation as a "judgment," though it seems at best
    to be a finding of fact.

    4. The balance was recalculated as follows:

    Original Principal balance on mortgage note $217,500
    less: Cost to repair defects 38,000 ______
    Net principal due on mortgage note $179,500
    plus: Interest due on net principal as of 5/20/93 59,609 ______
    TOTAL DUE AS OF 5/20/93 $239,109
    Interest Per Diem: $34.32
    TOTAL DUE AS OF JUDGMENT DATE 6/7/93 $239,729

    5. The record does not reveal whether Shepard and Parks
    initiated the foreclosure proceedings before or after the
    entry of the state court judgment recalculating the mortgage

    -4- 4













    scheduled for September 22, 1993. At some point prior to the

    foreclosure sale, Shepard and Parks obtained a "drive-by"

    appraisal that indicated a fair market value of $150,000, and

    the LaBarres were informed of that appraisal.

    According to the LaBarres, their lawyer orally

    agreed with the lawyer for Shepard and Parks that the

    LaBarres would deliver a deed in lieu of foreclosure, and in

    return, Shepard and Parks would credit the full $150,000

    appraised value of the property in determining the deficiency

    owed under the state court judgment. In consideration for

    the agreement, the LaBarres allegedly offered Shepard and

    Parks access to their home for a more thorough appraisal.

    Shepard and Parks assert that no such agreement was made.

    There is no written agreement, nor any other writing or notes

    concerning the alleged oral agreement between the lawyers.

    The LaBarres claim to have been seeking financing

    to facilitate a bid on the property at the foreclosure sale,

    but say that they abandoned those efforts when the agreement

    to deliver the deed in lieu of foreclosure was reached. One

    day before the scheduled foreclosure sale, however, the

    LaBarres received a faxed appraisal from Shepard and Parks

    indicating that the property was worth only $125,000, and

    that they would give the LaBarres credit for 70% of that

    ____________________

    balance. Thus, it is unclear whether the foreclosure was an
    attempt to collect on the judgment or the note; we will treat
    it as a mortgage foreclosure on the note.

    -5- 5













    amount, i.e., $87,500 against the amount due.6 The LaBarres

    apparently rejected that offer, and the foreclosure sale went

    ahead as scheduled. The only bidders were Shepard and Parks,

    who, upon the advice of counsel, jointly purchased the

    property for $87,500.

    Sometime later, the LaBarres paid Shepard and Parks

    $17,500 to obtain the release of an attachment on the

    Labarres' property in Massachusetts; this was the only

    payment made by the LaBarres other than their initial down

    payment.

    II. II. ___

    Proceedings Below Proceedings Below _________________

    The LaBarres brought this diversity action in

    federal district court in Massachusetts, seeking redress for

    the refusal of Shepard and Parks to honor their promise to

    accept, on terms acceptable to the LaBarres, a deed in lieu

    of foreclosure. The LaBarres' complaint, as amended, was

    framed in five counts: (I) unfair and improper foreclosure,

    (II) breach of contract, (III) intentional misrepresentation,

    (IV) fraud, and (V) unfair and deceptive trade practice under

    New Hampshire's Consumer Protection Act, N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.

    ____________________

    6. It is unclear from the record, and neither party has
    explained, whether the credit was to be applied to the
    outstanding balance on the mortgage note or to the state
    court judgment. Given the cryptic nature of that judgment,
    see supra note 3, this lack of precision is not surprising. ___ _____
    For simplicity, we will speak in terms of credit toward the
    balance on the mortgage note.

    -6- 6













    ch. 358-A ("RSA 358-A"). Shepard and Parks brought

    counterclaims for (I) the deficiency on the foreclosed

    mortgage and (II) the judgment debt on the earlier New

    Hampshire state court judgment.

    The parties consented to a jury trial with the

    magistrate judge presiding. The magistrate judge determined

    that the case was governed by New Hampshire law. Prior to

    trial, Shepard and Parks moved in limine to exclude all __ ______

    evidence of the alleged oral agreement, which they claimed

    was barred by New Hampshire's Statute of Frauds, N.H. Rev.

    Stat. Ann. 506:1 ("RSA 506:1") (precluding actions to

    enforce oral contracts for the conveyance of land). The

    magistrate judge ruled that the statute did not bar the

    LaBarres' breach of contract claim. After the trial, the

    magistrate judge explained that, under New Hampshire law, the

    Statute of Frauds did not bar a cause of action for breach of

    an oral settlement agreement between attorneys.

    After a three-day trial in March of 1995, the jury

    found for the LaBarres on all five counts. Through special

    interrogatories, the jury specifically found that the fair

    market value of the property at the time of foreclosure was

    $170,000, and that Shepard and Parks breached an agreement to

    accept a deed in return for credit of $150,000 toward the

    LaBarre's mortgage obligation. The jury also found that

    Shepard and Parks committed an unfair trade practice in



    -7- 7













    violation of the Consumer Protection Act, RSA 358-A, and that

    the LaBarres suffered actual damages of $82,500 as a result.

    Although the jury was not asked how it arrived at that actual

    damages figure, $82,500 is the difference between the

    property's fair market value of $170,000 and the $87,500 that

    Shepard and Parks bid at the foreclosure sale. The jury also

    answered that the Consumer Protection Act damages should be

    trebled.7

    The magistrate judge directed a verdict for Shepard

    and Parks on their counterclaims, and then ruled, in essence,

    that the mortgage balance due, as calculated in the state

    court judgment, was the proper measure for a single, non-

    duplicative recovery, satisfying both counterclaims.8

    ____________________

    7. In his memorandum of decision dated September 5, 1995,
    the magistrate judge explained that, although he should have
    decided whether to double or treble the Consumer Protection
    Act damages rather than the jury, Shepard and Parks had
    waived the issue. Shepard and Parks raised no objection at
    trial, and they now concede that the error has not been
    preserved for appeal. We express no opinion whether the
    multiplication of damages under New Hampshire's Consumer
    Protection Act is for the jury or the judge.

    8. The special interrogatory form indicated that Shepard and
    Parks were entitled to recover on the state court judgment,
    specifying that amount as $239,109; the actual calculation in
    that judgment was $239,729. See supra note 4. The ___ _____
    difference between the two figures is the interest applied
    for the period from May 20, 1993 (apparently the date of a
    stipulated interest calculation) through June 7, 1993 (the
    date of the state court judgment). Neither figure includes
    interest from mid-1993 through the March 1995 judgment in
    this case.
    The parties, however, do not assert any error in
    the calculation of the counterclaim recovery by Shepard and
    Parks.

    -8- 8













    Recognizing that the claims for breach of contract,

    misrepresentation, and fraud were, in essence, alternative

    theories of improper foreclosure, the magistrate judge

    treated Counts II, III, and IV as subsumed in Count I, the

    improper foreclosure count. Rather than awarding damages

    outright on Count I, the magistrate judge implemented the

    jury's findings on Counts I through IV by crediting the

    LaBarres with the full fair market value of the property,

    $170,000, in calculating the amount due to Shepard and Parks

    on their counterclaims.

    The magistrate judge then awarded treble damages of

    $247,500 to the LaBarres on Count V, the Consumer Protection

    Act count, in accordance with the jury's special

    interrogatory answers. The judge ruled that although Count V

    was "based on the same factual allegations as were alleged in

    each of the other four counts of the LaBarres' Complaint,

    they are entitled to an independent recovery under Count V

    for violation of the New Hampshire Consumer Protection

    statute." The magistrate judge also awarded costs and

    reasonable attorney fees to the LaBarres, as provided in the

    Consumer Protection Act.

    Shepard and Parks moved for a new trial under

    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(a), to no avail. On

    appeal, Shepard and Parks raise two of the issues they

    asserted in their Rule 59(a) motion. First, they argue that



    -9- 9













    evidence of the alleged oral agreement should have been

    excluded from trial under the Statute of Frauds. Second,

    they maintain that the award of damages under the Consumer

    Protection Act must be reduced by $82,500. They assert that

    the award of full market value credit against the balance

    owed on the mortgage note, in addition to trebled Consumer

    Protection Act damages, constituted an improperly duplicative

    recovery because all the counts were based on the same

    factual allegations. In effect, they point out, the LaBarres

    received a quadruple recovery, but were entitled only to the

    damages under the largest single count, i.e., the trebled

    Consumer Protection Act damages.

    III. III. ____

    Discussion Discussion __________

    1. The Statute of Frauds _________________________

    The same factual allegation underlies all five

    counts: Shepard and Parks orally promised to accept a deed in

    lieu of foreclosure on terms acceptable to the LaBarres, but

    then reneged on that agreement the day before the foreclosure

    sale. Shepard and Parks assert that New Hampshire's Statute

    of Frauds barred all testimony and evidence of the alleged

    oral agreement. The statute, RSA 506:1, provides: "No

    action shall be maintained upon a contract for the sale of

    land unless the agreement upon which it is brought, or some





    -10- 10













    memorandum thereof, is in writing and signed by the party to

    be charged, or by some person authorized by him in writing."

    Because the magistrate judge awarded damages only

    on Count I (improper foreclosure) and Count V (Consumer

    Protection Act), Shepard and Parks recognize that the

    judgment was not based on enforcement of the contract. They

    argue, rather, that the "entire trial proceeding was tainted"

    by the introduction of evidence of the oral agreement,

    requiring reversal.

    The parties agree that the Statute of Frauds is

    applicable on its face to the oral agreement in question

    here. They expend much energy, however, disagreeing about

    whether one or more exceptions to the statute apply in these

    factual circumstances. In doing so, the parties miss the

    real issue and misunderstand the operation of the Statutes of

    Frauds.

    There is no need here to decide the existence,

    scope, or applicability of the asserted common-law exceptions

    to the Statute of Frauds (the so-called "oral settlement

    agreement between attorneys" exception and the part-

    performance exception). We hold instead that, under New

    Hampshire law, the Statute of Frauds is only a bar to the

    enforcement of certain oral contracts; it is not a rule of

    evidence. Evidence of the oral agreement in this case was

    relevant to the counts alleging improper foreclosure,



    -11- 11













    misrepresentation, fraud, and unfair trade practice in

    violation of the Consumer Protection Act. Shepard and Parks

    raise no claim that the Federal Rules of Evidence barred its

    admission. Thus, we find no reversible error.

    We find clear guidance in New Hampshire caselaw.

    The New Hampshire Supreme Court held in Munson v. Raudonis, ______ ________

    387 A.2d 1174, 1176 (N.H. 1978), that the Statute of Frauds,

    RSA 506:1, did not bar an action for deceit even though the

    oral promise that was breached could not be enforced because

    of the lack of a writing. In reaching that holding, the

    Munson court expressly rejected the argument pressed here by ______

    Shepard and Parks, i.e., that evidence of the oral agreement

    should have been excluded because the four non-contract

    counts were merely a back-door attempt to circumvent the

    Statute of Frauds. The court in Munson reasoned as follows: ______

    "Barring an action in deceit because of the Statute of

    Frauds, however, would not further the policy of the statute.

    Quite the contrary, it would foster an injustice." Id. In ___

    our view, Munson embodies New Hampshire law on the question, ______

    and the argument raised by Shepard and Parks must fail. See ___

    also Morgan v. Morgan, 47 A.2d 569, 571 (N.H. 1946) (Statute ____ ______ ______

    of Frauds did not bar action for misrepresentation even if

    agreement was unenforceable as a contract).

    The Restatement (Second) of Contracts, a source

    often relied upon by the New Hampshire Supreme Court,



    -12- 12













    provides additional support for this result. See, e.g., ___ ____

    Tsiatsios v. Tsiatsios, 663 A.2d 1335, 1339 (N.H. 1995) _________ _________

    (following the Restatement); Patch v. Arsenault, 653 A.2d _____ _________

    1079, 1082 (N.H. 1995) (same); Simpson v. Calivas, 650 A.2d _______ _______

    318, 327 (N.H. 1994) (same). Section 143 of the Restatement

    provides that "[t]he Statute of Frauds does not make an

    unenforceable contract inadmissible in evidence for any

    purpose other than its enforcement in violation of the

    statute." Restatement (Second) of Contracts 143 (1981). __________________________________

    The Comment to Section 143 explains that "the Statute,

    despite occasional statements to the contrary, does not lay

    down a rule of evidence, and an unenforceable contract may be

    proved for any legitimate purpose." Id. 143 cmt. a. ___

    It does not matter that the magistrate judge's

    reason for admitting evidence of the alleged oral agreement

    was his conclusion that a purported "lawyer's settlement

    agreement" exception (or alternatively, the part-performance

    exception) put the agreement outside the Statute of Frauds.

    While we are skeptical whether that conclusion was correct,

    we can affirm the admission of evidence on any proper basis,

    even if the trial judge relied on a different ground. See ___

    United States v. Nivica, 887 F.2d 1110, 1127 (1st Cir. 1989) ______________ ______

    (no reversal where trial court admits evidence on an

    incorrect basis, if properly admissible for same purpose

    under different rule of evidence), cert. denied, 494 U.S. _____ ______



    -13- 13













    1005 (1990); cf. Ticketmaster-New York, Inc. v. Alioto, 26 ___ ____________________________ ______

    F.3d 201, 204 (1st Cir. 1994) (appellate court free to affirm

    the district court's judgment on any independently sufficient

    ground manifest in the record).

    Because the evidence of the alleged oral agreement

    was admissible for purposes other than enforcing that

    agreement, i.e., to prove the four non-contract counts, and

    because the breach of contract count did not affect the

    judgment, there is no reversible error in the magistrate

    judge's ruling on the applicability of the Statute of Frauds.

    2. Duplicative Damages ______________________

    The jury found that the fair market value of the

    LaBarres' property was $170,000 at the time of foreclosure.

    As damages for Counts I through IV, the magistrate judge gave

    the LaBarres credit for the full $170,000 as an offset

    against the judgment for Shepard and Parks on the mortgage

    balance. This placed the LaBarres in an even better position

    than if they had delivered a deed in lieu of foreclosure for

    $150,000 credit, as the parties had allegedly agreed.

    Shepard and Parks have not appealed the award of the $170,000

    credit for Counts I through IV.

    Because Shepard and Parks had bid only $87,500 at

    the foreclosure sale, the $170,000 credit is the equivalent

    of a damages award of $82,500, placing the LaBarres in the

    position they would have been in if Shepard and Parks had bid



    -14- 14













    fair market value at the foreclosure. There is no doubt that

    this award made the LaBarres whole, or better, for the

    improper foreclosure.

    The jury also found that the violation of the

    Consumer Protection Act by Shepard and Parks caused the

    LaBarres actual damages of $82,500, which the jury trebled

    for an award of $247,500. See RSA 358-A:10. Because the net ___

    effect of the credit toward the mortgage was to award $82,500

    above the amount bid by Shepard and Parks, and because the

    Consumer Protection Act award was for three times $82,500,

    the LaBarres effectively enjoyed a quadruple recovery. The

    magistrate judge opined that the Consumer Protection Act

    provided an independent recovery, and thus there was no

    improper duplication. Shepard and Parks assert that this was

    error, and that the Consumer Protection Act award should be

    reduced by $82,500 to limit the net award to treble damages.

    We agree.

    It is evident from the record, and the LaBarres

    appear to concede, that the damages under Count I (improper

    foreclosure) are based on the same factual allegations as the

    damages under Count V (Consumer Protection Act). The award

    on Count I (in which all the four common-law counts were

    subsumed) was based on the $82,500 difference between the

    fair value and the bid price; the same amount, $82,500,

    obviously reflecting the same difference between the fair



    -15- 15













    value and the bid, was awarded and trebled (to $247,500)

    under the RSA 358-A count. Nonetheless, the LaBarres argue

    that this quadruple award was proper because they are

    entitled to an "independent recovery" under New Hampshire's

    Consumer Protection Act.

    The LaBarres, however, point to nothing in the

    statute or in any New Hampshire case that supports their

    contention that the Consumer Protection Act provides an

    "independent recovery." We have found no New Hampshire

    authority directly on point, but we are confident that New

    Hampshire's Supreme Court would follow its general rule

    against duplicative recoveries and would find the award in

    this case erroneous. See Phillips v. Verax Corp., 637 A.2d ___ ________ ___________

    906, 912 (N.H. 1994) ("[T]he plaintiff is not entitled to

    multiple recoveries for the same loss merely because he

    alleged alternative theories of recovery."); Clancy v. State, ______ _____

    185 A.2d 261, 263 (N.H. 1962) ("Duplication of damages should

    be avoided."); Burke v. Burnham, 84 A.2d 918, 922 (N.H. 1951) _____ _______

    (recovery of same damages under two causes of action

    impermissible). We hold that the award in this case was

    duplicative, and that the LaBarres' recovery may not exceed

    the treble damages allowable under the Consumer Protection

    Act.

    The LaBarres argue that a Massachusetts decision

    affirming a damage award under the Massachusetts Consumer



    -16- 16













    Protection Act, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 93A, supports by analogy

    the magistrate judge's award in this case. The cited case,

    Multi Technology, Inc. v. Mitchell Management Sys., Inc., 518 ______________________ ______________________________

    N.E.2d 854, 857 (Mass. App. Ct.), review denied, 521 N.E.2d ______ ______

    398 (Mass. 1988), does not, however, provide any support.

    The plaintiffs in Multi Technology received Consumer _________________

    Protection Act damages in addition to contract damages

    because the separate counts entailed factually separate items

    of damage. Id. The plaintiff had agreed to a reduced fee ___

    based on the defendant's misrepresentations. Accordingly, the

    court awarded the agreed amount as contract damages, and also

    awarded the difference between the plaintiff's standard fee

    and the agreed-upon reduced fee as Consumer Protection Act

    damages. Id. Here, there are no factually separate items of ___

    damage, and the holding in Multi Technology is inapplicable. ________________

    Contrary to the LaBarres' assertions and their

    misleading citation of Multi Technology, the quadruple _________________

    recovery in this case is clearly improper under Massachusetts

    law, as well as New Hampshire law. In Calimlim v. Foreign ________ _______

    Car Ctr., Inc., 467 N.E.2d 443, 448 (Mass. 1984), the Supreme ______________

    Judicial Court held that "[w]here injury is incurred because

    of conduct which comprises the elements of any common law,

    statutory, or regulatory cause of action, and which is also a

    violation of the Consumer Protection Act, recovery of

    cumulative damages under multiple counts may not be allowed."



    -17- 17













    The reasoning and holding in Calimlim would unquestionably ________

    bar the cumulative recovery in this case, where the factual

    allegations and the items of actual damages are identical

    under the common law and Consumer Protection Act counts.

    Id.; see also Lexton-Ancira Real Estate Fund, 1972 v. Heller, ___ ___ ____ ____________________________________ ______

    826 P.2d 819, 822-24 (Colo. 1992) (en banc) (no double

    recovery for violation of Colorado Consumer Protection Act

    and common law misappropriation arising out of same set of

    facts,and collectingcaseswith similarholdingsin otherstates).

    To recapitulate, we hold that the LaBarres were

    improperly awarded quadruple damages, when they were entitled

    to no more than treble damages.

    IV. IV. ___

    Conclusion Conclusion __________

    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is affirmed ________

    in part, and reversed in part. The damages awarded to the ______________________________

    LaBarres shall be reduced by $82,500, and any interest

    awarded on the judgment shall be adjusted accordingly. The

    case is remanded to the magistrate judge for entry of a

    corrected damages award consistent with this opinion.













    -18- 18






Document Info

Docket Number: 95-2095

Filed Date: 5/28/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015