Donna Deitrick v. Mark Costa ( 2021 )


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  •                                                        NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 20-1028, 20-1034 and 20-1038
    DONNA DEITRICK
    v.
    MARK A. COSTA;
    WILLIAM MINER; RICHARD NICHOLS;
    WILLIAM ZELINSKI; SHAMOKIN POLICE DEPARTMENT;
    JEFF ADAMS; MARIANNE ADAMS; THOMAS YONCUSKI;
    ROBERT YONCUSKI; VANESSA LONG; LINDA L. LONG; KEVIN BALASCIK;
    JAMES BROWN; DENNIS MOORE; ROBERT SEARLS; JANE M. ACRI;
    CITY OF SHAMOKIN, Pennsylvania,
    Thomas Yoncuski,
    Appellant (No. 20-1028)
    Jeff Adams, Marianne Adams,
    Appellants (No. 20-1034)
    Robert Yoncuski, Vanessa Long Yoncuski,
    Appellants (No. 20-1038)
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civil Action No. 4-06-cv-01556)
    Magistrate Judge: Honorable William I. Arbuckle
    Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a)
    September 21, 2020
    Before: AMBRO, PORTER, and ROTH, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: March 4, 2021)
    OPINION *
    AMBRO, Circuit Judge
    A jury awarded Appellee Donna Deitrick approximately $3.2 million on her
    claims for civil conspiracy, trespass to chattels, and conversion. The crux of her claims is
    that her now-ex-husband, Appellant Robert Yoncuski, and several of his relatives (also
    Appellants), conspired to steal a safe containing Deitrick’s jewelry from the couple’s
    marital home. Appellants argue, among other things, that the District Court erroneously
    instructed the jury on damages and improperly admitted testimony about the jewelry’s
    value that should have been collaterally estopped by the distribution of property made
    during the divorce proceedings. Discerning no error calling for reversal, we affirm.
    I.
    After 29 years of marriage, Deitrick filed for divorce from her husband Robert
    Yoncuski (“Robert”) in July 2004. The next month, on August 13, 2004, Robert decided
    to remove items from the couple’s marital home. He asked his sister and her husband,
    Appellants Marianne and Jeff Adams, to meet him there. The home’s locks had been
    changed, so Robert knocked the door down. Once inside, he and Mr. Adams removed a
    safe that contained jewelry belonging to Deitrick, as well as cash, loading it into Robert’s
    *
    This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not
    constitute binding precedent.
    2
    truck. They stored the safe on the Adams’ property for the night, but the next day Robert
    reclaimed it. He cut a hole in the bottom of the safe and removed its contents. He then
    returned the empty safe to the Adams property, burying it there.
    The safe was unearthed months later, in February 2005. Thereafter, some of its
    contents were returned to Deitrick, but she maintains that much of the jewelry was not.
    Accordingly, she brought this suit against Robert and the Adamses, as well as Robert’s
    then-girlfriend (now wife) Vanessa Long Yoncuski (“Vanessa”), and Thomas Yoncuski
    (“Thomas”), who, according to Deitrick, were also part of the conspiracy to steal the safe.
    In addition to the theft, Deitrick alleged that Vanessa physically attacked her when
    the two encountered each other at a police station a few days after the taking of the safe,
    and that she suffered injuries from the attack.
    In 2007, while this suit was pending, the Court of Common Pleas of
    Northumberland County (the “CP Court”) issued an order dividing the marital property
    (the “equitable-distribution order”) along with findings of fact supporting that order. As
    to the contents of the safe, the CP Court noted that, while Deitrick maintained that “she
    had approximately $5 million worth of jewelry . . . and $500,000.00 in cash in the safe,”
    she “produced little, if any, credible evidence/corroborating evidence” that would enable
    the Court “to place an actual value on the jewelry.” App. 142. However, the CP Court
    noted it “believe[d] that there was significantly valued jewelry in the safe,” and as a result
    decided to “take [this] into account . . . when determining equitable distribution.” App.
    142–43. The equitable-distribution order provided Deitrick with approximately 66% of
    3
    the marital assets, leaving the remaining 34% for Robert. Deitrick appealed the
    equitable-distribution order, but the Pennsylvania Superior Court affirmed in 2010.
    Nearly a decade later, in September 2019, this matter came to trial in the District
    Court. Appellants—Robert, the Adamses, Vanessa, and Thomas—moved to preclude
    any testimony as to the value of the safe’s contents, arguing that the issue was collaterally
    estopped by the equitable-distribution order. The District Court denied the motion; as a
    result, Deitrick and a friend of hers testified at trial as to the value of the jewelry in the
    safe.
    Following trial, the jury found in favor of Deitrick, awarding her $3,200,530. This
    award included $825,000 “for contents of the safe not recovered,” and $350,000 “for
    damages to contents of the safe that were recovered.” App. 11. It also included “non-
    economic” and punitive damages. Id.
    Appellants moved to alter or amend the judgment, or alternatively for a new trial,
    under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59. Among other things, they reasserted their
    argument for collateral estoppel and argued that several of the District Court’s jury
    instructions as to damages were improper. The Court rejected each argument and these
    appeals followed.
    4
    II. 1
    We begin with the argument—asserted by each of the Appellants—that the
    District Court erred in concluding that the equitable-distribution order did not collaterally
    estop the jury from considering the value of the safe’s contents.
    Under Pennsylvania law, 2 collateral estoppel “forecloses re-litigation in a later
    action . . . of an issue of fact or law which was actually litigated and which was
    necessary to the original judgment.” City of Pittsburgh v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of
    City of Pittsburgh, 
    559 A.2d 896
    , 901 (Pa. 1989) (emphases added). The doctrine applies
    only if, among other things, (1) “the issue decided in the prior case is identical to one
    presented in the later case,” and (2) “the determination in the prior proceeding was
    essential to the judgment.” 
    Id.
     (emphases added). 3
    We agree with the District Court that the issue of fact Appellants maintain is
    barred here—the value of the safe’s contents—does not meet these two requirements. As
    1
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    , the District Court had supplemental jurisdiction over
    the state-law claims at issue in this appeal, as they form part of the same case or
    controversy as federal-law claims not at issue here. We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    2
    The preclusive effect of a state court judgment, such as the equitable-distribution
    order at issue here, is governed by state law. See Greenleaf v. Garlock, Inc., 
    174 F.3d 352
    , 357 (3d Cir. 1999).
    3
    Robert similarly argues that res judicata (claim preclusion) bars re-litigation of
    the value of the safe. But claim preclusion only “precludes further action . . . on the same
    cause of action.” Malone v. W. Marlborough Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    603 A.2d 708
    , 711
    (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1992). The causes of action at issue here—civil conspiracy,
    conversion, and trespass to chattels, all of which seek recovery of stolen non-marital
    property—are different from the cause of action presented to the CP Court, an equitable
    distribution of marital property. Hence this requirement for claim preclusion was not met.
    5
    that Court explained, the CP Court did not actually decide the value of the safe’s
    contents. Instead, noting that Deitrick had “produced little, if any, credible evidence . . .
    for th[e] court to place an actual value on the jewelry,” it found only that “there was a
    significant amount of jewelry in the safe[.]” App. 142–43. And while it noted that it
    would “take into account the fact that there was significant jewelry in the safe and that it
    is missing, when determining equitable distribution[,]” App. 143, we cannot conclude, as
    Appellants urge, that the value of the jewelry was actually decided. Nor was the exact
    value of the safe’s contents “essential” to the CP Court’s equitable-distribution order;
    rather, the CP Court merely took into account the fact that there was a significant amount
    of missing jewelry in making its equitable-distribution determination. 4 Accordingly, the
    District Court did not err in denying Appellants’ motion in limine. 5
    4
    Appellants rely on Chada v. Chada, 
    756 A.2d 39
     (Pa. Super. Ct. 2000), and
    Kadel v. McMonigle, 
    624 A.2d 1059
     (Pa. Super. Ct. 1993). We agree with the District
    Court that Chada is distinguishable, as that case involved “re-litigat[ing] ownership of a
    parcel of real estate,” which—unlike the value of the jewelry at issue here—had been
    conclusively decided in the divorce proceedings. 
    756 A.2d at 43
    . Kadle too is
    distinguishable, as it involved a dispute between former spouses about which of them
    owned certain real estate, a dispute that was “part of and dependent upon the marital
    relationship.” 
    624 A.2d at 1062
    . Here the issue is not ownership of the jewelry or
    whether it was marital or non-marital property, but rather its value.
    5
    The District Court concluded, alternatively, that Appellants forfeited any
    collateral-estoppel defense by failing to raise it timely following entry of the equitable-
    distribution order. Because we agree with the District Court on the merits, we need not
    reach the issue of forfeiture.
    6
    III.
    We next consider whether the District Court properly instructed the jury as to
    damages. We review a claim that jury instructions were inadequate or misleading for
    abuse of discretion, reversing only where the instructions, taken as a whole, “fail[] to
    ‘fairly and adequately’ present the issues in the case without confusing or misleading the
    jury.” Donlin v. Philips Lighting N. Am. Corp., 
    581 F.3d 73
    , 79 (3d Cir. 2009) (quoting
    United States v. Ellis, 
    156 F.3d 493
    , 498 n.7 (3d Cir. 1998)). But “[w]e exercise plenary
    review over jury instructions for misstatements of applicable law.” DiFiore v. CSL
    Behring, LLC, 
    879 F.3d 71
    , 79 (3d Cir. 2018) (emphasis added).
    Appellants contend that it was incorrect to instruct the jury it could consider, in
    calculating damages, that their wrongful conduct had made calculating damages more
    difficult. The instruction, in its entirety, was as follows:
    A defendant whose wrongful conduct has rendered difficult the
    ascertainment of the precise damages suffered by the plaintiff, is not entitled
    to complain that damages cannot be measured with the same exactness and
    precision as would otherwise be possible. It would be a perversion of
    fundamental principles of justice to deny all relief to the injured person, and
    thereby relieve the wrongdoer from making any amend for his acts. In such
    case, while damages may not be determined by mere speculation or guess, it
    will be enough if the evidence shows the extent of the damages as a matter
    of just and reasonable inference, although the result only be approximate.
    The wrongdoer is not entitled to complain that damages cannot be measured
    with exactness and precision that would be possible if the case, which he
    alone is responsible for making, were otherwise. The risk of the uncertainty
    should be thrown upon the wrongdoer instead of upon the injured party. The
    precise amount cannot be ascertained by a fixed rule but must be [a] matter
    of opinion and probable estimate.
    App. 241–42.
    7
    Appellants contend that this instruction likely “misled the jury regarding [Deitrick]’s
    burden of proof” as to the amount of damages, effectively allowing it to be shifted to
    Appellants due to their wrongful conduct. Adams Br. 14; see also Robert & Vanessa Br.
    12 (arguing that the instruction “shift[ed] the burden of proof” as to damages); Thomas
    Br. 40 (same).
    We disagree. As a whole, the jury instructions made clear that Deitrick—as the
    plaintiff—maintains the burden of proving damages. The District Court instructed the
    jury that “Deitrick must prove . . . damages by a preponderance of the evidence.” App.
    239. And the Court specifically instructed the jury that “mere speculation or guess” is
    insufficient to meet that burden. App. 241. The instruction at issue here merely provides
    that the degree of certainty in the amount of damages ordinarily required is relaxed when
    a defendant’s conduct has made it more difficult to ascertain the amount. Accordingly,
    we cannot conclude that the instruction misled the jury as to the burden of proof.
    Nor is the instruction a misstatement of Pennsylvania law. The District Court
    drew the language for the instruction from the Pennsylvania Superior Court’s decision in
    Judge Technical Servs., Inc. v. Clancy, 
    813 A.2d 879
    , 885–86 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2002).
    Appellants maintain that the District Court improperly applied this case outside the
    context in which it arose. The defendants there had repeatedly and intentionally violated
    the trial court’s discovery orders, thereby frustrating the plaintiff’s efforts to prove
    damages. 
    Id. at 886
    . But nothing in Judge Technical Services suggests its holding is
    limited to a defendant’s misconduct in discovery—as opposed to the misconduct creating
    the plaintiff’s claim. Indeed, the Court relied on Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson
    8
    Parchment Paper Co., 
    282 U.S. 555
    , 563 (1931), which involved uncertainty in the
    amount damages created by the misconduct that spawned the claim—not misconduct in
    the course of discovery. See Judge Tech. Servs., 
    813 A.2d at 886
    . Thus we cannot
    conclude that the District Court’s instruction misstated the law.
    Appellants also argue that the District Court erred in instructing the jury that it
    could award non-economic damages, specifically damages for pain and suffering,
    embarrassment and humiliation, and loss of ability to enjoy the pleasures of life. They
    maintain those damages are not available for claims of conversion and trespass to
    chattels. We conclude that this is a question of Pennsylvania law that has not yet been
    squarely addressed. Still, because there exists sufficient authority to justify the position
    that non-economic damages are available, we cannot conclude that the District Court’s
    instruction misstated the law.
    Historically, “[m]ental suffering has not generally been recognized as an element
    of damages for which compensation can be allowed” in Pennsylvania. Linn v. Duquesne
    Borough, 
    54 A. 341
    , 341 (Pa. 1903). Nonetheless, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
    Linn recognized two general exceptions: non-economic damages for mental suffering
    may be awarded when “directly connected with a physical injury [or] the direct and
    natural result of a wanton and intentional wrong.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). In the century
    since Linn, the Commonwealth has gradually moved in the direction of recognizing
    further exceptions to its general rule to permit recovery of non-economic damages,
    though primarily with respect to situations involving physical harm or fear of it. See, e.g.,
    Sinn v. Burd, 
    404 A.2d 672
    , 686 (Pa. 1979) (holding that a mother’s claim to emotional
    9
    distress from being a bystander to her daughter’s death “is not to be denied solely
    because the plaintiff was beyond the zone of physical danger . . . .”); Niederman v.
    Brodsky, 
    261 A.2d 84
    , 90 (Pa. 1970) (deciding to “abandon the requirement of a physical
    impact . . . where the plaintiff was in personal danger of physical impact . . . .”).
    Perhaps the strongest argument that could be made in support of Appellants’
    position is that Linn was effectively overruled by Gefter v. Rosenthal, 
    119 A.2d 250
    , 251
    (Pa. 1956), which stated generally that “[t]here can be no recovery for humiliation,
    disappointment, anxiety, or mental suffering, or emotional distress when unconnected
    with physical injury or physical impact.” A plausible reading of Gefter, therefore, would
    be to abrogate completely Linn’s second exception to the rule against non-economic
    damages (wanton and intentional wrongs), leaving only its first exception (physical
    injury) as good law. Indeed, the Court in Gefter explicitly rejected the plaintiff’s claims
    that he was owed damages for mental suffering arising from a “wanton and intentional
    violation of [a] written agreement” involving caterers charging his guests for checking
    their coats. 
    Id.
    Gefter, however, dealt with emotional distress involving a broken contract in what
    were obviously farcical facts (the violation of an agreement not to charge 15 cents for
    coat checking). 
    Id.
     Moreover, Gefter could just as easily be read more narrowly.
    Indeed, it explicitly left open whether “damages can be recovered for mental suffering
    arising out of a wanton and reckless breach of contract for the carriage or proper
    disposition of dead bodies or for breach of a contract for the delivery of death messages
    and similar contracts, since these cases can have no application or relevancy to the case at
    10
    issue.” This language implies that the Gefter Court did not believe itself to be barring
    non-economic damages in all breach-of-contract cases, let alone non-contract cases
    involving wanton and intentional conduct. This reading would leave Linn’s exception for
    wanton and intentional conduct intact in cases far afield of the breach of contract at-issue
    in Gefter. See Kahle v. Glosser Brothers, Inc., 
    326 F. Supp. 985
    , 987–88 (W.D. Pa.
    1971) (recognizing, years after Gefter, that “there is another exception to the requirement
    of ‘impact’, when emotional injuries ensue, where the defendant is guilty of a wanton and
    intentional act” (citing Papieves v. Lawrence, 
    263 A.2d 118
     (Pa. 1970))). And further,
    we note that many of the historical cases grappling with the boundaries of non-economic
    damages dealt with mental distress “independent of any other cause of action.” Papieves,
    263 A.2d at 121. Those cases do not speak directly to whether non-economic damages
    can be maintained in conjunction with a separate well-recognized cause of action such as
    trespass to chattels or conversion.
    In the absence of clear guidance from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, we prefer
    the narrower reading of Gefter, which better aligns with the Commonwealth’s general
    trend toward expanding the availability of non-economic damages and the overall state of
    the law as described in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 911 cmt. e. (noting that while
    “[c]ompensatory damages are not given for emotional distress caused merely by the loss
    of the things, . . . in unusual circumstances damages may be awarded for humiliation
    caused by deprivation, as when one is deprived of essential articles of clothing”).
    Here, Deitrick alleged an intentional and wanton theft of property that would
    naturally cause emotional distress. Indeed, she contends Appellants forcibly broke into
    11
    her home and took property known to have substantial value to her and then attempted to
    conceal their conduct in the face of court orders. App. 24–25; see, e.g., Harris v. Del., L.
    & W.R. Co., 
    72 A. 50
    , 51 (N.J. 1909) (permitting recovery of mental-distress damages
    caused by the willful and public taking of a railroad passenger’s ticket where “the
    indignity [was] the natural and proximate result of the conduct of the defendant”). 6
    Hence Pennsylvania law is not so clear for us to hold that the District Court erred in
    instructing the jury as to damages for emotional distress.
    IV.
    Finally, we consider two arguments related to Deitrick’s use at trial of a recorded
    telephone conversation between Robert and a representative of ADT Security. When
    Robert broke down the door, ADT Security called the home. Robert answered and ADT
    asked for the alarm code. As heard on the recording of this conversation, Robert
    answered, “Let me ask my girlfriend,” suggesting that Vanessa was present at the break-
    in. App. 35. But when Robert was asked on cross-examination whether Vanessa was
    present, he denied it. And when asked what he told ADT when asked for the alarm code,
    he answered, “Let me ask my wife.” 
    Id.
     Only when the recording was played for him
    did he admit what he had actually said.
    6
    Robert and Vanessa further argue that the District Court erred by submitting to
    the jury Deitrick’s “claim for wage loss and emotional distress for the events that
    occurred at the [p]olice [s]tation.” Robert & Vanessa Br. 20–21. But they make this
    argument without citing the record or any authority whatsoever. United States v. Shaw,
    
    891 F.3d 441
    , 445 n.17 (3d Cir. 2018) (“Arguments raised in such a cursory fashion,
    without adequate citation to the record and authority, are deemed waived.” (citing, inter
    alia, Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(A)).
    12
    First, Robert contends that the District Court erred in permitting Deitrick to cross-
    examine Robert using the recording, as Deitrick did not identify the recording as an
    exhibit in her pre-trial disclosures under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26. But Rule 26
    does not require disclosure of material that a party intends to offer at trial “solely for
    impeachment.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(3)(A). Deitrick introduced the recording during her
    cross-examination of Robert, using it to impeach his testimony that Vanessa was not
    present during the break-in. Thus Deitrick’s use of the recording did not violate Rule 26.
    Second, Vanessa submits the recording was the only evidence she was present at
    Deitrick’s home during the break-in, and that, because it was admitted only for
    impeachment purposes, the evidence is insufficient to establish her liability. But as the
    District Court explained in rejecting this argument, Vanessa need not have been present
    to be liable as a conspirator. Deitrick testified that she saw Vanessa wearing her jewelry,
    and Thomas testified that he found jewelry in his yard and gave it to Vanessa to turn over
    to the authorities. This evidence is sufficient to establish Vanessa’s involvement in the
    conspiracy—regardless whether she was present at the home during the incident.
    *****
    For these reasons, we affirm the judgment and order of the District Court.
    ______________________________
    13