Great Woods, Inc. v. Clemmey , 89 Mass. App. Ct. 788 ( 2016 )


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    15-P-657                                               Appeals Court
    GREAT WOODS, INC., & another 1   vs.   KARL D. CLEMMEY.
    No. 15-P-657.
    Middlesex.       January 15, 2016. - July 26, 2016.
    Present:    Green, Wolohojian, & Henry, JJ.
    Injunction. Judgment, Relief from judgment, Consent
    judgment. Practice, Civil, Relief from judgment, Judicial
    discretion.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    November 21, 1994.
    After review by this court, 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 1115
    (2014),
    a motion for clarification or for modification or dissolution of
    a permanent injunction was heard by Kathe M. Tuttman, J.
    Nicholas P. Shapiro (Robert K. Hopkins with him) for the
    defendant.
    Jeffrey S. King for the intervener.
    WOLOHOJIAN, J.      After a series of disruptive and
    threatening incidents, Great Woods, Inc. (Great Woods), brought
    1
    On appeal, Live Nation Worldwide, Inc., filed a motion to
    intervene as successor in interest to Great Woods, Inc. That
    motion was allowed by the court.
    2
    suit to enjoin Karl Clemmey from entering its property, a large
    entertainment venue in Mansfield.   The suit was resolved when,
    in 1996, Clemmey agreed to the entry of a permanent injunction
    that provided:
    "Clemmey, whether acting personally or through any other
    person acting under his direction or control, is hereby
    strictly and permanently ORDERED to desist and refrain (1)
    from entering upon or crossing over the property in
    Mansfield, Massachusetts, under the control of Great Woods,
    Inc. (owned by Time Trust, or Sherman Wolfe,) for any
    reason whatsoever without the express written consent of
    Great Woods, Inc. and (2) from accosting, harassing,
    intimidating or threatening any owner, manager, employee or
    agent of Great Woods, Inc."
    Seventeen years later, in 2013, Clemmey moved to "clarify" that
    Great Woods's successor in interest, Live Nation Worldwide, Inc.
    (Live Nation), had no right to enforce the permanent injunction.
    In the alternative, Clemmey moved, pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P.
    60(b)(5), 
    365 Mass. 828
    (1974), to modify or dissolve the
    injunction based on changed circumstances. 2   A judge of the
    Superior Court (who was not the judge who entered the original
    injunction) denied Clemmey's motion and modified the injunction
    to, in essence, substitute Live Nation for Great Woods.    Clemmey
    appealed, and in an unpublished memorandum and order issued
    pursuant to our rule 1:28, we vacated the modification order and
    remanded for findings of fact on the ground that the
    2
    Clemmey also invoked Mass.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6); however, the
    nature of his claim and the relief he sought indicate the motion
    was properly grounded in subsection (5), not (6).
    3
    modification was essentially a new injunction requiring explicit
    findings.     Great Woods, Inc. v. Clemmey, 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 1115
    (2014).     On remand, the judge made findings based on materials
    and affidavits submitted by the parties, and again extended the
    permanent injunction to Live Nation. 3    Clemmey appeals, and we
    now affirm.
    Background.    Great Woods sued Clemmey in 1994.   Although
    the record does not contain the original complaint, it does
    include Great Woods's amended complaint, which was filed in
    November 1994.     The amended complaint sought to enjoin Clemmey,
    who owned adjacent property, from coming onto Great Woods's
    property and from harassing its employees.     The amended
    complaint alleged that:
    •   on December 3, 1993, Clemmey had driven onto Great Woods's
    property, had repeatedly threatened Bruce Montgomery, Great
    Woods's general manager, with physical harm in a loud and
    aggressive way while using obscenities, and had interfered
    with Montgomery's ability to perform his job;
    3
    As modified, the injunction reads:
    "By order of the Superior Court, the defendant, Karl D.
    Clemmey, whether acting personally or through any other
    person acting under his direction or control, is hereby
    strictly and permanently ORDERED to desist and refrain (1)
    from entering upon or crossing over property in Mansfield,
    Massachusetts, under the control of Live Nation Worldwide,
    Inc., the successor-in-interest to Great Woods, Inc., and
    being operated as the Xfinity Center, for any reason
    whatsoever without the express written consent of Live
    Nation Worldwide, Inc., and (2) from accosting, harassing,
    intimidating or threatening any owner, manager, employee or
    agent of Live Nation Worldwide, Inc."
    4
    •   during the fall and winter of 1993-1994, Clemmey had
    accosted, threatened, and harassed Montgomery on a
    "regular" basis, always using obscene and aggressive
    language;
    •   on June 7, 1994, Clemmey threatened Montgomery by stating
    that he would use heavy construction equipment to frighten
    Montgomery's wife at home while Montgomery was at work;
    •   on June 11, 1994, Clemmey physically assaulted Montgomery;
    •   on June 11, 1994, Clemmey drove a front-end loader across
    the Great Woods property in order to deliberately damage a
    stone wall and silt fence;
    •   on August 19, 1994, Clemmey twice trespassed on the Great
    Woods property and created disruption; and
    •   on several occasions during 1993-1994, Clemmey drove his
    front-end loader in a reckless and dangerous manner,
    intentionally putting construction workers near the Great
    Woods property in fear.
    Based on these allegations, the amended complaint sought
    that Clemmey be enjoined
    •   "from entering upon or crossing over the Property more
    particularly described in . . . this complaint,[4] for any
    reason whatsoever without the express written consent of
    Great Woods, Inc. or the Time Trust, except that Karl D.
    Clemmey may enter the Property as a patron or licensee of
    Great Woods, Inc."
    and
    •   "from accosting, harassing, intimidating, threatening,
    touching, physically or verbally abusing, or in any way
    interfering with employees of Great Woods, Inc."
    4
    The complaint described the property as being in
    Mansfield, and gave the book and page of the transfer
    certificate of title and of the deed for the property. These
    documents were attached as exhibits to the complaint.
    5
    Great Woods then moved for a preliminary injunction.    Its
    motion was supported by, among other things, an affidavit from
    attorney Haskell Kassler, who related an incident during which
    Clemmey threatened Montgomery in Kassler's presence.   On that
    occasion, Clemmey stated,
    "One of these nights when you have a full house [at a Great
    Woods performance] I'm going to take a couple of my dump
    trucks up to your house, and you know, Bruce, I know where
    you live. And I'm going to pull up to the house and flash
    the lights, blow the whistles, and bang the rear doors on
    the trucks. Your wife's going to be scared; she's going to
    try and get you on the phone and you're not going to be
    able to leave, and you're going to have to tell her that
    there's nothing you can do. And if you do leave, you're
    going to get fired."
    In addition to the Haskell affidavit, Great Woods's preliminary
    injunction motion was also supported by an affidavit from
    Montgomery that essentially mirrored the allegations of the
    amended complaint.
    Clemmey opposed the motion for preliminary injunction, but
    because the record does not contain his papers, we do not know
    the bases for his opposition.   Regardless, no action was taken
    on the motion and the litigation appears to have gone into
    quiescence until November, 1996, when the permanent injunction
    set forth at the outset of this opinion was entered by agreement
    of the parties.
    Although the permanent injunction entered with Clemmey's
    agreement, things did not go smoothly thereafter -- at least at
    6
    first.   In 1997, Clemmey was found in contempt of the permanent
    injunction after he trespassed onto the Great Woods property.
    On that occasion, Clemmey -- carrying a baseball bat in the
    manner of a club -- threatened a security guard and Montgomery.
    The police were called, and Clemmey returned the bat to his
    truck.   But he returned and challenged, "You tell me where to
    meet you tonight, anywhere you want.    Bring the fucking gloves
    or we'll do it bare handed.    I'll tell you; I'm 55 years old and
    I got a thousand dollars that says I can kick your fucking ass.
    . . . Go fuck yourself."    Clemmey's manner throughout this
    episode was hostile, aggressive, and threatening.    The security
    guard's version of events was confirmed by the affidavit of
    Richard McQuade, another security guard. 5
    Nothing further occurred in the litigation for the next
    sixteen years, when Clemmey filed his motion for clarification
    or, in the alternative, for relief under rule 60(b)(5).    As we
    have noted above, the judge ruled that Live Nation, Great
    Woods's successor in interest, was entitled to the benefit of
    the permanent injunction.    Clemmey appealed, and we vacated the
    judge's order and remanded for findings.     In the memorandum and
    order pursuant to rule 1:28, the panel stated that the judge on
    5
    The judge found Clemmey in contempt and allowed Great
    Woods's application for attorney's fees. Clemmey's appeal
    ultimately was dismissed with prejudice by agreement of the
    parties.
    7
    remand was not foreclosed from modifying the permanent
    injunction, provided that "any resulting order shall be
    unambiguously worded to apply to the property's current owner,
    and its employees" and that explicit findings be made based on
    sufficient evidence showing that injunctive relief was
    appropriate. 6
    On remand, the judge made the following findings, which we
    accept since they have not been shown to be clearly erroneous.
    Live Nation, as the subsequent purchaser and operator of the
    property, has retained many of the operational staff employed by
    Great Woods, including several employees who were the victims of
    Clemmey's threatening and harassing conduct during the 1990's.
    One of those employees is Montgomery, who remains employed by
    Live Nation.     Based on Clemmey's prior conduct, Live Nation's
    employees remain justifiably fearful of Clemmey and of the risk
    of abusive behavior toward them in the future.     Although Clemmey
    no longer owns the adjacent property, he continues to hold a
    beneficial interest in it.     Even after having been held in
    contempt for violating the permanent injunction, Clemmey did not
    comply with the injunction.     Specifically, in 2004, he erected a
    fence on Live Nation's property.     All that said, whenever
    6
    Given this language in the memorandum and order pursuant
    to rule 1:28, we disagree with Clemmey's argument that the judge
    acted outside the scope of the remand when she again ruled that
    the injunction extended to Live Nation as Great Woods's
    successor.
    8
    Clemmey has requested permission to attend an event at the
    property, as provided by the permanent injunction, Live Nation
    has granted it.
    Discussion.   Clemmey argues that Live Nation is not
    entitled to the benefit of the permanent injunction or, in the
    alternative, that the judge abused her discretion in denying his
    request to be relieved of its terms.   See Murphy
    v. Administrator of the Div. of Personnel Admin., 
    377 Mass. 217
    ,
    227 (1979) (rule 60[b] decision "will be set aside only on a
    clear showing of an abuse of discretion"); Paternity of Cheryl,
    
    434 Mass. 23
    , 30 (2001) (decision under Mass.R.Dom.Rel.P.
    60[b][5] reviewed for abuse of discretion).
    We begin by noting that the two components of the
    injunction must be analyzed separately because one sounds in rem
    and the other in personam.   The first component (or clause) was
    designed to protect particular land from invasion by Clemmey:
    "Clemmey . . . is hereby strictly and permanently ORDERED
    to desist and refrain (1) from entering upon or crossing
    over the property in Mansfield, Massachusetts, under the
    control of Great Woods, Inc."
    Under Lyon v. Bloomfield, 
    355 Mass. 738
    , 743 (1969), a successor
    in interest to land is entitled to enforce the prospective
    provisions of an injunction designed to protect that land from
    invasion by another.   As the court stated in Lyon,
    "we see no merit in a rule which would require each
    subsequent transferee of land which is protected by
    9
    injunction from invasion by another to renew the injunction
    against the same defendant in order to protect his rights
    in the land. The party enjoined by court order from use of
    land should not be permitted to flout the order merely
    because the land has been transferred."
    
    Ibid. Here, the first
    clause of the permanent injunction
    affected rights in land and, as a result, Live Nation as the
    successor in interest to that land was entitled to enforce that
    portion of the injunction.
    By contrast, the second clause of the permanent injunction
    was designed to protect certain people:
    "Clemmey . . . is hereby strictly and permanently ORDERED
    to desist and refrain . . . (2) from accosting, harassing,
    intimidating or threatening any owner, manager, employee or
    agent of Great Woods, Inc."
    We have found no case applying the reasoning of Lyon to
    injunctions designed to protect people rather than land.
    That said, we see both appeal and logic in applying a Lyon-like
    rule where, as here, the prospective provisions of an injunction
    were clearly designed to protect a class of people identified in
    relationship to a business whose ongoing operations have not
    meaningfully changed, even though its ownership has been
    transferred.   It would make little sense for a person in this
    context to be deprived of the protection of a permanent
    injunction simply because the corporate ownership of his
    employer changed.   Thus, we conclude that Live Nation (as
    successor to Great Woods) was entitled to enforce the permanent
    10
    injunction for the benefit of any person who had been an "owner,
    manager, employee or agent of Great Woods" at the time the
    injunction issued.
    The question that remains, though, is whether Live Nation
    is entitled -- and, if so, to what extent -- to enforce the
    permanent injunction with respect to individuals who were not an
    "owner, manager, employee or agent of Great Woods" when the
    injunction issued, but who are currently in one of those roles.
    As has been noted in a related context, "a judge who issues a
    permanent order knows that time will pass."   MacDonald
    v. Caruso, 
    467 Mass. 382
    , 388 (2014).   As a corollary to this
    proposition, we think it self-evident that the parties and judge
    anticipated and intended that the permanent injunction -- by its
    continuing nature -- would not be limited to the people who
    happened to be associated with Great Woods's operations on the
    day the injunction issued.   The continuing nature of the
    permanent injunction leads to the natural result, for example,
    that a person hired by Great Woods one week after the injunction
    issued would be covered by it.   We see no reason why that result
    would or should be different even if, during that week,
    ownership of the corporation had transferred to Live Nation.
    But the same reasoning cannot be applied ad infinitum.
    Here, we deal not with the passage of one week but of seventeen
    years, and Clemmey argues that circumstances have changed such
    11
    that the judge abused her discretion in denying his motion to be
    relieved of the injunction.    We begin with the general
    proposition that, even though the injunction was entered by
    agreement of the parties, the court retained the authority, as
    reflected in rule 60(b)(5), to amend or modify its prospective
    application. 7   See Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, 
    502 U.S. 367
    , 378 (1992) ("There is no suggestion in [case law] that
    a consent decree is not subject to Rule 60[b]"); MacDonald
    v. 
    Caruso, 467 Mass. at 387
    ; Mitchell v. Mitchell, 62 Mass. App.
    Ct. 769, 776-777 (2005).    Although relief may be obtained where
    "it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have
    prospective application," Mass.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(5), a party may
    not obtain relief simply "when it is no longer convenient to
    live with the terms of" the order.    
    Rufo, 502 U.S. at 383
    .   A
    party, such as Clemmey, seeking modification of, or relief from,
    prospective application of a permanent injunction bears the
    burden of showing a "significant change in circumstances"
    warranting revision of the injunction.    
    Ibid. MacDonald, supra at
    388.   Mitchell, supra at 779.
    "The significant change in circumstances must involve more
    than the mere passage of time, because a judge who issues a
    permanent order knows that time will pass. Compliance by
    the defendant with the order is also not sufficient alone
    to constitute a significant change in circumstances,
    7
    By contrast, a judge may not have authority to amend or
    modify a consent judgment that has no prospective application.
    See Thibbitts v. Crowley, 
    405 Mass. 222
    , 226-227 (1989).
    12
    because a judge who issues a permanent order is entitled to
    expect that the defendant will comply with the order."
    
    MacDonald, 467 Mass. at 388-389
    . "However, if there is a
    significant change in circumstances not foreseen when the last
    order was issued, the passage of time and compliance with the
    order may be considered."    
    Id. at 389.
    Here, the judge did not abuse her discretion in concluding
    that Clemmey had not shown an unforeseen significant change in
    circumstances.    Although it is true that many years have passed,
    largely without incident, they have not been trouble free.
    Although ownership of the venue has changed, the nature of its
    operations has not.    Moreover, several of the employees who had
    been the subject of Clemmey's actions in the 1990's remain
    employed at the venue today, including Montgomery who appears to
    have been Clemmey's primary target.    The evidence permitted the
    judge to find, as she did, that those employees remained
    justifiably fearful of Clemmey.    In addition, although Clemmey's
    interest in the adjoining property has changed, it has not
    disappeared.    Finally, Clemmey did not show either that "changed
    factual conditions make compliance with the [injunction]
    substantially more onerous," or that the injunction had proven
    "unworkable because of unforeseen obstacles."    
    Rufo, 502 U.S. at 384
    .    To the contrary, the undisputed facts showed that Clemmey,
    consistent with the safety valve built into the permanent
    13
    injunction, has been allowed to attend any event for which he
    has requested permission.
    For these reasons, the revised order dated February 24,
    2015, is affirmed.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 15-P-657

Citation Numbers: 89 Mass. App. Ct. 788

Judges: Wolohoiian, Green, Wolohojian, Henry

Filed Date: 7/26/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024