Qato, E. v. Xoxe, P. ( 2022 )


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  • J-A26003-21
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    ERALDO QATO, INDIVIDUALLY AND         :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    DERIVATIVELY ON BEHALF OF             :        PENNSYLVANIA
    AMERICA’S HOME CARE, INC.             :
    :
    :
    v.                       :
    :
    :
    PETRAQ XOXE, IMELDA XOXE, AND         :
    ALB CARE, INC.                        :
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: PETRAQ XOXE                :   No. 2128 EDA 2020
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered October 28, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Civil Division at No(s):
    No. 2017-02741
    ERALDO QATO, INDIVIDUALLY AND         :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    DERIVATIVELY ON BEHALF OF             :        PENNSYLVANIA
    AMERICA’S HOME CARE, INC.             :
    :
    Appellant           :
    :
    :
    v.                       :
    :
    :
    PETRAQ XOXE, IMELDA XOXE, AND         :
    ALB CARE, INC.                        :   No. 2161 EDA 2020
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered October 28, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Civil Division at No(s):
    No. 2017-02741
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                           FILED MARCH 4, 2022
    Eraldo Qato (“Qato”), individually and derivatively on behalf of
    America’s Home Care, Inc. (“AHC”), and Petraq Xoxe (“Xoxe”), have cross-
    J-A26003-21
    appealed from the judgment entered against Xoxe and in favor of AHC
    following a non-jury trial. Upon review, we vacate the judgment, affirm in
    part and reverse in part the parties’ motions for post-trial relief, and remand
    for further proceedings consistent with this memorandum.
    Qato and Xoxe are entrepreneurs whose families knew each other in
    Albania. When Qato moved to Pennsylvania, he obtained employment as a
    care manager with Philadelphia Corporation for Aging. Xoxe at the time was
    living in New Jersey and working in the medical field as a cardiovascular
    technician.     The men from time to time discussed opening a business,
    brainstorming ideas ranging from importation of stone from Albania to adult
    day care to opening a restaurant. In 2013, when the two men encountered
    each other after not having spoken in a while, Qato suggested to Xoxe that
    there was a business opportunity in the home care field1 catering to the
    Albanian- and Greek-speaking communities. See N.T. Trial, 8/28/19, at 26-
    30.
    Qato and Xoxe settled on a plan to incorporate AHC and run it as equal
    partners. As Qato did not have funds for the initial capital investment, Xoxe
    covered that $50,000 himself, with the understanding that he would be repaid
    ____________________________________________
    1 Home care service companies employ direct care workers to provide services
    such as dressing, grooming, bathing, medication management, and food
    preparation for seniors and disabled adults, who are the clients. See N.T.
    Trial, 8/28/19, at 38-39. Often, the direct care worker is a family member of
    the client.   The company pays the direct care worker, then receives
    reimbursement for the client through Medicaid. Id.
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    once AHC became profitable. While continuing in his other employment, Qato
    worked with Xoxe to obtain the necessary license for AHC. Once AHC was
    licensed and operating, Xoxe, AHC’s only director and officer, solicited
    business and handled administrative work. Qato, still working at his other
    full-time job, assisted with the paperwork and did his part to spread word
    about AHC in the community. Id. at 31-36.
    As AHC began to grow, Xoxe encouraged Qato to quit his other job and
    work full time at AHC, which Qato did in October 2014. Through the efforts
    of both men, AHC expanded from approximately forty clients and gross sales
    of near $1.6 million in 2015 to $2.7 million with more than double the clients
    in 2016. Both Xoxe and Qato earned six-figure salaries, and AHC employed
    Qato’s sister Pema to manage the office and answer calls and emails. AHC
    had achieved sufficient profitability by mid-2016 that AHC reimbursed Xoxe
    his $50,000 investment. Also at that time, the company changed from a non-
    stock to a stock corporation, and Xoxe transferred 50% of the shares to Qato,
    who took on additional responsibilities such as becoming the administrator of
    AHC. The company continued to prosper, with revenue of $3.35 million in
    2017, and profits distributed to the shareholders on top of their increased
    salaries as employees of AHC. Id. at 37-55; N.T. Trial, 8/29/19, at 46.
    Meanwhile, Qato and Xoxe’s relationship deteriorated in the summer of
    2016, after Xoxe went on a two-month vacation with his family, leaving Qato
    and Pema alone to prepare for a state compliance audit. When Xoxe returned,
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    he no longer engaged in conversation with Qato, speaking only to Pema. Xoxe
    ceased bringing in new clients or otherwise putting effort into the business.
    Xoxe then fired Pema without consulting with Qato. Then, a few weeks later,
    thirty-three of AHC’s 100 clients abruptly left without warning.    N.T. Trial
    8/28/19, at 56-70, 149.    There had been no prior complaints from these
    customers. Their caregivers, most of whom were family members, afterwards
    expressed confusion, as they were unaware that they were switching agencies
    and thought that paperwork which they had signed related only to AHC
    opening a new office. Id. at 70, 157.
    It turned out that Xoxe’s wife, Imelda (“Imelda”), who had briefly
    worked for AHC, was displeased with her husband’s plan to make Qato a full
    partner of the company. Since she did not wish for her family to have to share
    profits with Qato, she decided to form her own business and recruit AHC’s
    clients. See N.T. Trial 8/29/19, at 68-69. With Xoxe’s full knowledge, Imelda
    incorporated her own business, ALB Care, Inc. (“ALB”), in March of 2016, and
    began the process of obtaining a license for it to provide home care services.
    Imelda initially listed AHC’s address as that for ALB, and Xoxe informed
    caregivers that AHC was opening a new office at the location which ultimately
    became ALB’s office. N.T. Trial 8/28/19, at 154, 201. Imelda used $175,000
    of the assets which she and Xoxe held jointly, with Xoxe’s knowledge and
    consent, to capitalize ALB. Id. at 205-06; N.T. Trial 8/29/19, at 51, 88. Xoxe
    provided business advice to Imelda, and assisted their daughter, who at the
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    time was an employee of AHC, in obtaining the necessary certification for ALB
    to operate.    Id. at 218; N.T. Trial, 8/29/19, at 12.     When ALB became
    authorized to do business, Imelda and her daughter immediately completed
    the paperwork to transfer thirty-three of AHC’s clients and caregivers to ALB.
    N.T. Trial, 8/29/19, at 68-69. Xoxe acknowledged that he was aware that
    Imelda’s plan for ALB was to target even more of AHC’s customers, and the
    only thing that stopped her was Qato’s initiation of this lawsuit and the trial
    court’s issuance of a preliminary injunction. See N.T. Trial, 8/28/19, at 209,
    216-17.
    Despite this foreknowledge of the threat that ALB posed, and Imelda’s
    specific intent to target and transfer AHC clients, Xoxe never told Qato of the
    existence of ALB or Imelda’s plans, or himself took any actions as a director
    of AHC to retain its clients. Id. at 205-14. Xoxe said nothing to Qato because,
    as he saw it, Qato “didn’t pay a penny for that 50 percent of profits.” Id. at
    205.
    In April 2017, Qato initiated this action on behalf of AHC against Xoxe,
    Imelda, and ALB.         As indicated above, Qato succeeded in obtaining a
    preliminary injunction against Imelda’s further solicitation of AHC’s clients.
    AHC stated claims of breach of fiduciary duty against Xoxe, aiding and abetting
    the breach by Imelda and ALB, and civil conspiracy against Xoxe and Imelda.
    Xoxe filed counterclaims for breach of fiduciary duty, unjust enrichment, and
    corporate dissolution.
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    In August 2019, the trial court held a bench trial during which it received
    evidence of the above facts, as well as evidence that AHC sustained damages
    totaling $1,333,505.00 as the result of ALB’s poaching of clients.          After
    entertaining further written submissions, on June 22, 2020, the trial court filed
    a verdict indicating that: (1) it found in favor of the plaintiffs and against
    Xoxe in the amount of $566,752.50, which was half of the damages claimed
    by the plaintiffs, to be paid directly to AHC; and (2) Xoxe was to be removed
    as a director, but not as an officer, of AHC.2 See Order, 6/22/20.
    Qato and Xoxe each filed timely post-trial motions.      For reasons not
    apparent from the certified record, the trial court did not rule upon the motions
    within 120 days, although it entertained other filings in the case. Accordingly,
    Qato filed a praecipe for entry of judgment pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 227.4(1)(b).
    Xoxe filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment, and Qato filed a timely
    cross-appeal. Qato sua sponte filed a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement of errors
    complained of on appeal, and Xoxe timely complied with a subsequent order
    to file his statement.      Thereafter, the trial court filed a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)
    opinion addressing the parties’ claims of error.3
    ____________________________________________
    2  The trial court held that the claims for civil conspiracy and aiding and
    abetting failed. As Qato and AHC do not argue any claims of error regarding
    these rulings, Imelda and ALB have declined to participate in these appeals.
    3  As is discussed infra, the trial court acknowledged in its opinion that several
    of the parties’ claims are valid and asks this Court to correct them. See Trial
    Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 15-16, 18. While we appreciate the candid
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    The parties filed their briefs and presented oral argument to this Court.
    Accordingly, the appeal is ripe for disposition.
    Qato presents the following questions for our consideration:
    1.    Did the trial court err in failing to direct that the
    damages assessed against Petraq Xoxe be awarded directly to
    plaintiff Eraldo Qato, the 50% shareholder who brought the
    derivative action, or alternatively, whether the [c]ourt erred in
    failing to assess damages against Petraq Xoxe in the total amount
    of the harm he caused to the corporation?
    2.    Did the trial court abuse its discretion by failing to
    provide for the payment of prejudgment interest on the damages
    award from July 21, 2017 until the date of entry of the final
    judgment?
    3.     Did the trial court err in failing to remove Petraq Xoxe
    as an officer of [AHC]?
    Qato’s brief at 3-4.
    Xoxe submits the following questions:
    1.    Did the trial court err by finding that [Xoxe] breached
    his fiduciary duty by: (a) “permitting” his wife to open a business;
    (b) not stopping clients from leaving to go to his wife’s business;
    and (c) not disclosing the wife’s business to a 50% shareholder of
    the corporation?
    2.   Did the trial court err by finding that [Xoxe] was liable
    for damages for the alleged breach of fiduciary duty where: (a)
    there was no record evidence that the corporation could have
    prevented the customers from leaving; (b) the 50% shareholder
    knew about the competitor despite the non-disclosure; and (c)
    Pennsylvania’s health-care law prohibited the corporation from
    “influencing” its clients’ choice of which healthcare provider to
    use?
    ____________________________________________
    admission of error, we observe that the point of post-trial motions practice is
    to allow the trial court to correct such errors prior to appeal.
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    3.    Did   the   trial   court   err   by   removing   [Xoxe’s]
    directorship?
    4.   Did the trial court err in calculating damages because
    it relied on an expert report that: (a) stated that 36 customers
    left the corporation when in fact 33 did so; and (b) failed to
    consider the corporation’s obligation to pay the employer’s share
    of payroll taxes in calculating the corporation’s profit margin?
    Xoxe’s brief at 5-6.
    We consider the parties’ issues mindful of the following overriding legal
    principles:
    Our standard of review of a non-jury verdict is limited to
    determining whether the findings of the trial court are supported
    by competent evidence and whether the trial court committed an
    error in any application of the law. We consider the evidence in a
    light most favorable to the verdict winner and will reverse only if
    the trial court’s findings of fact are not supported by competent
    evidence in the record or if its findings are premised on an error
    of law.
    Hornberger v. Dave Gutelius Excavating, Inc., 
    176 A.3d 939
    , 943–44
    (Pa.Super. 2017) (cleaned up).
    Rather than addressing each cross-appellant’s claims of error seriatim,
    we group them by subject matter, first considering Xoxe’s challenges to the
    finding of liability for breach of a duty owed to AHC.               Pursuant to
    Pennsylvania’s Associations Code:
    A director of a business corporation shall stand in a fiduciary
    relation to the corporation and shall perform his duties as a
    director . . . in good faith, in a manner he reasonably believes to
    be in the best interests of the corporation and with such care,
    including reasonable inquiry, skill and diligence, as a person of
    ordinary prudence would use under similar circumstances
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    15 Pa.C.S. § 1712(a). Xoxe acknowledges that he was a director, and thus,
    a fiduciary, of AHC. See Xoxe’s brief at 36.
    The trial court offered the following basis for its determination that Xoxe
    breached his fiduciary duties:
    Here, at the very minimum, Xoxe did not act as a person of
    ordinary prudence would have in warding off competition from
    ALB. When ALB was draining AHC’s client base, Xoxe did nothing
    to battle AHC’s corporate foe. Instead, Xoxe concealed the
    existence of this new competitor from his corporation. Xoxe also
    permitted his wife, Imelda, to use their joint marital funds to
    establish ALB as a corporation and to fund ALB corporate offices.
    Finally, in response to the new threat, Xoxe stopped working with
    his business partner and provided no more assistance to the
    faltering AHC. This amounts to a breach of the fiduciary duty of
    care.
    The precise circumstances further cast aspersions on
    whether Xoxe displayed the necessary loyalty to AHC that
    Pennsylvania law prescribes to officers and directors. For one,
    Xoxe’s close relationship with his competitor leads to an inference
    that his loyalty was not wholly with AHC and Qato. With Xoxe and
    Imelda sharing a joint bank account, Xoxe’s personal wealth would
    be increased by Imelda’s operations, suggesting he placed his own
    wealth over the best interests of AHC. Xoxe’s implied assertion—
    that he exercised [the required skill and diligence] in his dealings
    with AHC and Qato—failed to persuade this court. To remark that
    Xoxe used his personal position—sharing a financial unity with his
    company’s competitor—to the detriment of his differently-suited
    AHC co-owner is a fair characterization. This court declined to find
    that Xoxe affirmatively sabotaged AHC, but Xoxe’s sundered
    allegiances and his subsequent suspect conduct constituted a
    breach of fiduciary duty.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 9-10 (footnotes omitted; party designations
    altered).
    Xoxe argues that the trial court erred in relying upon Xoxe’s failure to
    act as a basis for finding a breach because it improperly raised that theory of
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    liability sua sponte, and because imposition of such a duty is contrary to
    regulations governing home-healthcare providers. See Xoxe’s brief at 30-32.
    Xoxe further maintains that the trial court erred in basing its finding of a
    breach of duty upon a notion that Xoxe was required to control his wife or
    order her not to compete with AHC. Id. at 34-36. Finally, Xoxe contends that
    his failure to disclose the existence of ALB could not serve as a breach of duty
    because he had no obligation to do so.        We find merit in none of these
    arguments.
    First, Xoxe did not raise in his post-trial motion or his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)
    statement any claim of error regarding the alleged sua sponte injection of a
    new theory of liability by the trial court, or a complaint that Qato did not plead
    inaction as a basis for his claim.     Accordingly, the issue is waived.     See
    Pa.R.C.P. 227.1(b)(2) (stating grounds for post-trial relief not specified in the
    motion are waived); Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4)(vii) (providing issues not raised in
    a Rule 1925(b) statement are waived). In any event, Xoxe’s contention that
    he was “not on notice that Qato was challenging [Xoxe’s] alleged failure to do
    more to prevent clients from leaving” lacks merit.        See Xoxe’s amended
    fourth-step brief at 3.   As Qato details in his brief, inaction as a basis for
    breach of fiduciary duty appeared as early as at the preliminary injunction
    stage of the case, was addressed in Qato’s pretrial memorandum, and was
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    litigated at trial. See Qato’s third-step brief at 3-8.4 Hence, this issue does
    not undermine the trial court’s finding that Xoxe breached his fiduciary duty
    to AHC.
    Second,     the   then-applicable       provisions   of   Chapter   51   of   the
    Pennsylvania Code did not prohibit Xoxe from taking any actions to retain
    clients. Xoxe bases his contention on 
    55 Pa. Code § 55.11
    (i), which provided
    among the prerequisites for becoming a provider enrolled with the Department
    of Human Services, that a provider “may not influence a participant’s freedom
    of choice in selecting a new provider.”            
    55 Pa. Code § 55.11
    (i) (effective
    June 9, 2012 to February 2, 2020).
    The trial court agreed that Xoxe could not have forced AHC clients to
    stay, but it indicated that AHC was permitted to attempt to persuade them to
    remain. See Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 12. However, Xoxe contends
    that persuasion “is comparable to ‘influence,’ or perhaps represents even
    stronger efforts to alter a decision.” Xoxe’s brief at 50. He maintains that
    § 55.11(i) thus mandated his nonfeasance and, therefore, the trial court erred
    in finding him at fault for his failure to act. Id. at 49-51.
    We disagree. The plain intent of the then-operable regulation was to
    prohibit providers from interfering in a client’s freedom to choose a new
    ____________________________________________
    4  Although the terminology “third-step brief” and “fourth-step brief” are not
    utilized in Pa.R.A.P. 2136 in prescribing the briefing in cross-appeals, we
    designate them as such herein as the parties have so titled their filings.
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    provider. It does not preclude a provider from making efforts to retain clients
    so long as the efforts do not cause the clients to believe that they lacked the
    freedom to go elsewhere. As Qato observes, § 55.11(i) was “not intended to
    permit one provider access to the client while denying another provider, the
    existing provider, from the same access.”          Qato’s third-step brief at 25.
    Rather, the intent is to forbid a provider “from misrepresenting to the client
    the fact [that] his or her freedom of choice” is what ultimately controls. Id.
    The trial court did not err in concluding that Xoxe could have, but utterly failed
    to, make lawful efforts to keep AHC’s clients.5
    Third, we reject Xoxe’s suggestion that the trial court’s finding was
    based upon the abolished doctrine of coverture and its tenet that a wife’s
    identity merges into that of her husband. See Xoxe’s brief at 34-36. Xoxe’s
    argument is that the trial court’s reference to Xoxe’s willingness for Imelda to
    use funds from a joint account to fund her competing business necessarily
    implies “that Imelda had no right to open her own business.” Id. at 34. In
    actuality, the trial court merely cited Xoxe’s personal financial interest in his
    ____________________________________________
    5  Xoxe alternatively asks that we remand for the trial court to consider the
    business judgment rule as a basis to preclude his liability. See Xoxe’s brief
    at 33. However, that rule “insulates an officer or director of a corporation
    from liability for a business decision made in good faith” if certain conditions
    are met. Linde v. Linde, 
    220 A.3d 1119
    , 1143 (Pa.Super. 2019) (cleaned
    up). The trial court’s implicit finding that Xoxe did not act in good faith, having
    actively concealed his knowledge and preventing AHC and Qato from taking
    efforts to thwart Imelda’s plans, renders the business judgment rule
    unavailing under these circumstances.
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    competitor’s success as one of the circumstances evincing his lack of loyalty
    to AHC and its financial best interests.   See Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at
    9-10.
    Finally, we are not persuaded by Xoxe’s argument that he violated no
    fiduciary duty because he had no obligation to disclose the existence of ALB.
    Xoxe highlights that ALB was actually formed when Xoxe was the only
    shareholder of AHC, thus giving him no one else to whom to disclose the
    information. However, this straw-man argument is meritless. We reiterate
    that the trial court did not find Xoxe liable for a mere failure to disclose the
    fact that ALB existed.      Rather, the trial court found that Xoxe actively
    concealed his wife’s scheme to lure away AHC’s clients, made no effort in his
    role as an officer and director of AHC to retain its clients, and indeed stopped
    performing the normal work he had done for AHC before ALB’s recruitment
    campaign began. See Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 9. Moreover, since
    Xoxe and Imelda did not maintain separate finances, Xoxe personally
    benefitted from his decision to ensure that AHC took no steps to compete with
    ALB. Xoxe’s attempt to set up an overly-narrow basis for the trial court’s
    decision merely to knock it down does not persuade us that relief is due.
    Accordingly, we conclude that none of Xoxe’s claims of error concerning
    the trial court’s finding that he breached his fiduciary merits relief.
    In his next cluster of issues, Xoxe asserts that the trial court erred in
    finding that his breach of duty caused damages. Specifically, Xoxe contends
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    that his inaction was not the proven cause of any losses sustained by AHC
    since there was no evidence showing: (1) why any of the clients left AHC, (2)
    that Xoxe or AHC could have prevented any clients from leaving for ALB, and
    (3) what Qato would have done differently if Xoxe had disclosed Imelda’s
    efforts.6 See Xoxe’s brief at 44-48.
    We find our decision in CST, Inc. v. Mark, 
    520 A.2d 469
     (Pa.Super.
    1987), to be instructive.       CST was an advertising firm, and Mark its vice
    president of media operations. Mark had been involved in CST’s publication
    of a 1981 trip planning guide for a client. Although Mark had attempted to
    convince CST to take the necessary steps to seek the job of publishing the
    1982 guide, CST was reluctant, citing a cash-flow problem. Mark personally
    obtained the job in the name of his own company and fronted $5,000 to the
    client. CST later met with the client, which requested that Mark release his
    rights to the job. However, by the time this came about, CST was not able to
    post the required performance bond and did not publish the 1982 guide. CST
    terminated Mark and sued him for breach of fiduciary duty.
    The trial court found Mark liable for breaching his fiduciary duty of
    undivided loyalty and awarded $40,000 in damages.          Specially, the court
    found that Mark had not been unjustly enriched by usurping the opportunity,
    ____________________________________________
    6 Xoxe also relies upon the regulations against influencing the clients’ freedom
    to choose another provider in challenging the damages awarded by the trial
    court. See Xoxe’s brief at 49-51. This claim fails for the reasons explained
    supra in connection with Xoxe’s breach of his fiduciary duty.
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    as he lost the $5,000 of his personal money and released his interest in the
    contract. However, the court found that Mark’s breach of fiduciary duty “had
    been a substantial factor in bringing about, and, therefore, a legal cause of
    the corporation’s failure to get the contract.” Id. at 472. It therefore awarded
    damages “measured by the court’s estimate of the profits which the
    corporation had lost by not getting the job.” Id.
    On appeal, Mark contended, inter alia, (1) that the evidence was
    insufficient to establish that his actions were the cause of CST’s failure to
    obtain the contract or (2) that the profits would have been $40,000. Id. at
    473. This Court disposed of the claims as follows:
    These are close questions.        However, when a Pennsylvania
    appellate court reviews determinations of questions of fact, its
    only function is to examine and ascertain whether there is
    competent evidence in the record from which the facts necessary
    to sustain the judgment might properly be found. The test is not
    what conclusion the appellate court would have reached if it had
    been its province to find the facts, but whether there was evidence
    from which the facts could reasonably be found.
    Because our scope of review is thus limited, we are
    constrained to accept the findings of the trial court. Although the
    evidence would have supported contrary findings, we cannot say
    that the trial court arbitrarily rejected evidence or abused its
    discretion when it concluded that except for appellant’s breach of
    the duty of undivided loyalty to the corporation, CST would have
    been hired to produce the [1982] guide and would have realized
    therefrom a profit of $40,000.00.
    Id. (cleaned up).
    Applying this rationale to the case sub judice, we reach the same result.
    Qato did not produce witnesses to indicate that each of the thirty-three clients
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    who left within the two-week period in 2017 would have stayed with AHC if
    Qato had foreknowledge of Imelda’s plans or Xoxe had taken steps to retain
    their business. However, as detailed above, the court did hear that AHC had
    no complaints from clients prior to that time, that many expressed confusion
    afterwards about the fact that they were now with a different company, and
    that the mass exodus of clients ceased once Imelda was precluded from
    soliciting from AHC’s client base. Therefore, we cannot say that the trial court
    abused its discretion in inferring from the evidence presented that the clients
    would have stayed but for Xoxe’s malfeasance. No relief is due.
    Having concluded that the trial court acted within its discretion in finding
    a breach of duty and causation, we next consider the parties’ challenges to
    the amount of damages assessed by the trial court. The trial court awarded
    half of the amount of damages calculated by Qato’s expert to be paid by Xoxe
    to AHC. Plaintiffs contend that the trial court, finding for the corporation on
    the derivative action, should have awarded 100% of the damages to be paid
    to the corporation, rather than the 50% loss suffered by Qato individually.
    See Qato’s brief at 12-15. Xoxe argues that the trial court’s calculation was
    incorrect because it was based upon an expert report that (1) included more
    customers leaving than was supported by the evidence, and (2) did not factor
    taxes into the calculation. See Xoxe’s brief at 54-56.
    The trial court acknowledged that it committed two of the three errors
    alleged.   Regarding Xoxe’s claim about the number of customers, the trial
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    court suggests that this Court “account for the discrepancy by reducing the
    damages found in Qato’s expert report by 8.33% or three divided by thirty-
    six.”   Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 16.        As for Qato’s claim about the
    erroneous halving of damages, which Xoxe agrees requires correction, the
    trial   court   indicates   that   the   correct   damages   amount    should   be
    $1,039,046.25, which is the full, adjusted amount of lost profits sustained by
    AHC. See Xoxe’s brief at 28; Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 18.
    However, the trial court denies any miscalculation involving the FICA
    and unemployment compensation taxes.               It expressed the understanding
    “that these taxes would be assessed on [the] damage award after the
    distribution to the shareholders.” Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 16. The
    court explained: “If this is true, accounting for the unemployment and FICA
    taxes in [the] damage award to AHC would lead to what is essentially double
    taxation.” Id. The trial court thus declined to deduct these taxes, believing
    that “AHC’s damage award will presumably be taxed by FICA and
    unemployment after distribution.” Id.
    We conclude that the trial court erred in all three respects in formulating
    its damages award. As Xoxe explained, FICA and unemployment payroll taxes
    are paid in part by an employee on their wages and are generally withheld by
    the employer. See Xoxe’s brief at 55. However, the employer has its own,
    separate obligation to pay payroll taxes. Id. While Xoxe’s expert factored
    this business expense into the calculation of AHC’s net profits, Qato’s did not.
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    J-A26003-21
    Id.   Xoxe maintains that, applying the expense of payroll taxes to the
    calculations of Qato’s expert, AHC’s profit margin is 28.06%, not 34.1. Id.
    Notably, Qato does not offer any argument in support of the trial court as to
    this issue. Hence, we agree with Xoxe that the trial court’s calculation was
    further in error based upon its misapprehension of the nature of payroll taxes
    as a business expense of AHC which AHC would not have retained as profit.
    Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and that portion of the verdict
    ordering Xoxe to pay $566,752.50 to AHC. We further reverse the denial of
    Qato’s post-trial motion as to issue (A)(1) and Xoxe’s post-trial motion as to
    issue (III). Upon remand, the trial court shall enter a new verdict reflecting
    the damages of lost net profits from the thirty-three lost customers, and it
    shall order that either 100% of the damages be paid by Xoxe to AHC, or 50%
    of the damages paid directly to Qato.7
    Next, Xoxe argues that the trial court erred in removing him as a director
    of AHC, while Qato asserts that it erred in not also removing him as an officer.
    Our legislature has provided that directors of a corporation may be removed
    ____________________________________________
    7  Qato suggests that the trial court could have, and should have, instead
    awarded 50% of AHC’s damages directly to Qato. See Qato’s brief at 16-17.
    Xoxe, noting that the parties are in new litigation concerning control over AHC,
    agrees that ordering Xoxe to pay half of the corrected damages amount
    directly to Qato would be the most practicable solution. See Xoxe’s brief at
    57-58. We leave the question to the trial court to decide when entering its
    amended verdict.
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    J-A26003-21
    by shareholders, the board, or the court. Specifically, the following applies to
    court removal of a director:
    Upon application of any shareholder or director, the court may
    remove from office any director in case of fraudulent or dishonest
    acts, or gross abuse of authority or discretion with reference to
    the corporation, or for any other proper cause, and may bar from
    office any director so removed for a period prescribed by the court.
    The corporation shall be made a party to the action and as a
    prerequisite to the maintenance of an action under this subsection
    a shareholder shall comply with Subchapter F (relating to
    derivative actions).
    15 Pa.C.S. § 1726(c). This decision is within the sound discretion of the trial
    court. See Linde v. Linde, 
    220 A.3d 1119
    , 1145 (Pa.Super. 2019).
    As for officers, the Associations Code merely provides that “[a]ny officer
    or agent of a business corporation may be removed by the board of directors
    with or without cause.” 15 Pa.C.S. § 1733.
    The trial court addressed Xoxe’s claim of error as follows:
    Here, th[e trial] court found that Xoxe actively concealed
    Imelda’s business scheme from AHC, failed to notify Qato of this
    approaching business adversary, and spent increasingly less time
    working for AHC when his wife Imelda began targeting AHC
    customers. Th[e c]ourt finds this behavior exhibited a lack of trust
    and honesty. Similarly, Xoxe’s concealment of Imelda’s plot
    suggested a lack of integrity. Further, Xoxe’s failure to notify his
    corporation of a potential business threat that could potentially
    usurp all of ANC’s clients constituted a gross abuse of discretion.
    All in all, Xoxe committed the necessary acts to reach the
    offending level of conduct required for director removal.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/21, at 13-14 (party designations altered).
    Xoxe’s argument for reversal is primarily a regurgitation of his belief
    that it was a mere failure to tell Qato that ALB existed that formed the basis
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    J-A26003-21
    of the trial court’s ruling, and that it was in error because he had no duty to
    do so.   See Xoxe’s brief at 51-52.           We have already rejected Xoxe’s
    mischaracterization of the trial court’s holding, finding ample evidence that he
    breached his duty to AHC by both assisting Imelda in forming ALB with the
    full knowledge that she did so for the specific purpose of decimating AHC’s
    business and by ensuring that AHC would offer no resistance to her efforts.
    The trial court did not err in finding this proper cause to remove Xoxe as a
    director of AHC pursuant to § 1726(c).
    As for Qato’s claim, the trial court opined that it lacked the authority to
    remove corporate officers. Id. at 19. Qato offers no support for a trial court’s
    power to remove an officer other than § 1726(c). Qato contends that the
    statute’s reference to a court’s power to remove a director “from office” is a
    reference “to the fact that many corporate directors serve as officers as well.”
    Qato’s brief at 22. Therefore, Qato posits, § 1726(c) provides the “statutory
    authority to remove Petraq Xoxe as an officer of [AHC] for the very same
    reasons that his removal from the board of directors was warranted.” Id.
    We find Qato’s attempt to stretch the reach of § 1726(c) unavailing.
    The legislature plainly established separate rules for the removal of directors
    and officers, declining to allow court intervention regarding the latter.
    Compare 15 Pa.C.S. § 1726(c) (“Removal of directors”) with 15 Pa.C.S.
    § 1733 (“Removal of officers and agents”). The fact that a directorship is an
    “office” within the company does not make a director an “officer.” AHC is free
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    J-A26003-21
    to itself, through its new board of directors, which does not include Xoxe, to
    remove him as an officer with or without cause pursuant to § 1733.
    Finally, Qato contends that the trial court erred in failing to award pre-
    judgment interest.    Whether to award prejudgment interest is within the
    sound discretion of the trial court. See, e.g., Kaiser v. Old Republic Ins.
    Co., 
    741 A.2d 748
    , 755 (Pa.Super. 1999).
    When a court comes to a conclusion through the exercise of its
    discretion, there is a heavy burden to show that this discretion has
    been abused. It is not sufficient to persuade the appellate court
    that it might have reached a different conclusion, it is necessary
    to show an actual abuse of the discretionary power. An abuse of
    discretion will not be found based on a mere error of judgment,
    but rather exists where the court has reached a conclusion which
    overrides or misapplies the law, or where the judgment exercised
    is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice,
    bias or ill-will. Absent an abuse of that discretion, we will not
    disturb the ruling of the trial court.
    Linde, supra at 1150 (cleaned up).
    The general rule is that the prevailing litigant is entitled only to interest
    as of the date of the verdict. Id. However, “pre-judgment interest may be
    awarded when a defendant holds money or property which belongs in good
    conscience to the plaintiff, and the objective of the court is to force
    disgorgement of his unjust enrichment. Pre-judgment interest in such cases
    is a part of the restitution necessary to avoid injustice.” Id. (quoting Kaiser,
    
    supra at 755
    ) (cleaned up). In sum, the trial court should apply equitable
    principles and decide whether to award interest “according to a plain and
    simple consideration of justice and fair dealing.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    - 21 -
    J-A26003-21
    The trial court, in addressing Qato’s claim of error regarding its failure
    to award pre-judgment interest, acknowledged the legal principles noted
    above, then explained its decision as follows:
    Here, this [c]ourt used this broad discretion to [deciding whether
    to] award pre-judgment interest, and this [c]ourt declined to
    deviate from the general rule that the successful litigant is entitled
    to interest beginning only on the date of the verdict.
    Therefore, this Court did not err in declining to award pre-
    judgment interest to AHC.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/22, at 18.
    Qato maintains that an award of prejudgment interest is necessary to
    fully compensate AHC for Xoxe’s breach of fiduciary duty, and urges that
    “[t]his Court should not countenance” the trial court’s non-explanation for its
    decision to the contrary. Qato’s brief at 19.
    We agree that the trial court’s opinion does not shed much light on its
    balancing of the equities.    However, this Court has in a similar situation
    affirmed the trial court’s ruling where the certified record otherwise indicated
    that the trial court’s decision was based upon the proper considerations. See
    Kaiser, 
    supra at 755
     (affirming trial court’s award of prejudgment interest
    upon an examination of the evidence of record although “the trial court did
    not specify its reasons for the award of pre-judgment interest”).
    As Xoxe observed, the trial court did not find that Xoxe took property
    belonging to AHC, “but rather failed to do more to stop others from taking it.”
    Xoxe’s brief at 58. Further, since the clients went to ALB, of which Imelda
    - 22 -
    J-A26003-21
    was the only owner, and Qato points to no evidence of how much benefit Xoxe
    himself has realized, the traditional basis for the award of such interest,
    namely to disgorge wrongfully-obtained property from one who has been
    unjustly enriched, is not evident. Hence, we agree with Xoxe that the trial
    court’s decision to award AHC damages for the expected future profits lost
    from the transfer of all thirty-three clients, but to deny pre-judgment interest,
    was a reasonable compromise under the circumstances of this case and not a
    manifest abuse of discretion. See Kaiser, 
    supra at 755
    . Consequently, we
    hold that Qato’s final issue merits no relief.
    Nonetheless, for the reasons detailed above, we vacate the October 28,
    2020 judgment, affirm in part and reverse in part the denial by operation of
    law of the parties’ motions for post-trial relief, and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this memorandum.
    Judgment vacated.       Case remanded with instructions.       Jurisdiction
    relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/4/2022
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Document Info

Docket Number: 2128 EDA 2020

Judges: Bowes, J.

Filed Date: 3/4/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/4/2022