Rosario Turdo v. James Main ( 2016 )


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  •                                                    Supreme Court
    No. 2014-150-Appeal.
    (WC 11-0466)
    Rosario Turdo                 :
    v.                       :
    James Main.                   :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2014-150-Appeal.
    (WC 11-0466)
    Rosario Turdo                   :
    v.                       :
    James Main.                    :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Robinson, for the Court. Rosario Turdo, the plaintiff, appeals from a March 10,
    2014 judgment following a jury-waived trial in the Washington County Superior Court. The trial
    justice entered judgment in favor of James Main, the defendant, on the plaintiff’s breach of
    contract claim and also entered judgment in favor of the defendant on his counterclaim for
    conversion. In addition, the plaintiff appeals from the May 5, 2014 denial of her motion for
    relief from the March 10, 2014 Superior Court judgment, which motion invoked Rule 60(b) of
    the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant
    to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal
    should not be summarily decided. After a close review of the record and careful consideration of
    the parties’ arguments (both written and oral), we are satisfied that cause has not been shown and
    that this appeal may be decided at this time. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm
    the judgment of the Superior Court.
    -1-
    I
    Facts and Travel
    On July 12, 2011, plaintiff filed a complaint alleging that defendant was indebted to her
    in the amount of $17,840. She alleged that she had “an agreement in regard to said sum which
    was signed on December 17, 2009 by James Main, the [d]efendant.” On July 29, 2011,1 Mr.
    Main filed a response and a counterclaim for $12,050. On August 16, 2013, prior to trial, the
    parties agreed to a “Statement of Undisputed Facts.” The statement stipulated to the following
    facts: (1) the parties had been “involved in a ‘dating’/romantic relationship from 2007 to 2010;”
    (2) the parties entered into numerous agreements involving the exchange of funds and services;
    (3) plaintiff sold a truck to defendant for $11,000; (4) defendant made payments to plaintiff with
    respect to the truck; (5) plaintiff “had [d]efendant return [the] vehicle to her on or about February
    21, 2010 after contacting the police department of Westerly, Rhode Island;” and (6) plaintiff sold
    the truck in question for $10,000. In the same document the parties agreed that a contract signed
    by both parties on June 5, 2009 would be admitted as a full exhibit at trial. That handwritten
    contract reads, in its entirety, as follows:
    “Agreement between Rose Turdo [and] James Main
    “Ref: 2004 GMC Sierra 4X4 Black Pickup
    “VIN # 1GTHK29G74E292070
    “Rose Turdo to remain owner until final payment received by 12-
    1-09 - $500.00 received as down payment 6-5-09. $150.00 per
    week to be paid each Friday until $11,000 total received - First
    payment due 6-12-09.
    “All repairs - parts - maintenance - expenses are the
    responsibility of James Main -
    “Truck registration [and] Insurance [and] Title to remain
    under Rose Turdo with right to use. Upon default the truck remains
    the property of Rose Turdo without any reimbursement.
    1
    The record includes a handwritten objection to the complaint by Mr. Main denying all
    allegations and expressing his wish to “counter sue,” which is dated July 29, 2011. A more
    formal document containing Mr. Main’s answer and counterclaim was filed on August 13, 2013.
    -2-
    “Title to be released with Lean [sic] until previous debt of
    $10,000 paid in full by 7-1-2010.”
    On August 27, 2013, a jury-waived trial was conducted. We relate below the salient aspects of
    what transpired at that trial.
    A
    The Testimony at Trial
    1. The Testimony of Rosario Turdo
    Rosario Turdo testified at trial that she began dating Mr. Main in April of 2007. She
    testified regarding a ledger she kept which reflected monies owed to her by Mr. Main and
    payments made to her by Mr. Main. It was Ms. Turdo’s testimony on direct examination that she
    did not receive any payments from Mr. Main on the loan reflected in the above-referenced June
    5, 2009 contract after November 9, 2009. She also testified that she had to have repairs costing
    $2,038.86 done on the truck before its sale; she added that Mr. Main’s use of the truck for the
    purpose of towing certain items caused some of the damage which she had subsequently caused
    to be repaired.
    On cross-examination, Ms. Turdo testified that Mr. Main did not pay under the June 5,
    2009 contract “for any period of time.” She was then specifically confronted with the fact that
    she had just testified that Mr. Main made no payments on the June 5, 2009 contract whereas her
    ledger reflected payments at least until December 3, 2009. She then conceded that Mr. Main did
    make payments under the June 5, 2009 contract and that, contrary to what she testified to on
    direct examination, he made regular payments up until December 11, 2009. She added that Mr.
    Main did pay her $1,600 after December 11, 2009, but she stated that said payment was not
    “another payment” on the contract at issue but rather was related to a visit made by his parents at
    which time they stayed at her home. She admitted during cross-examination that that payment
    -3-
    was not recorded on her ledger, which ledger she testified had ended before that point in time
    due to a new agreement between the parties on December 17, 2009. She went on to testify that,
    in addition to the $1,600 which Mr. Main paid her in December of 2009, he also assigned to her
    a debt of $800 from one “Ed Alore.” It was her testimony that Mr. Main did not make any
    payments after the purported new agreement of December 17, 2009.
    On cross-examination, Ms. Turdo went on to testify that she told Mr. Main that she
    wanted the truck back on January 18, 2010. She conceded that in February she went to the
    Westerly Police Department with respect to the truck because “[Mr. Main] was driving my truck
    under my registration, and my insurance, without my permission.” She was asked if she told Mr.
    Main to return the truck “or [she] would pursue criminal charges,” and she replied in the
    affirmative. She was then asked whether she knew that Mr. Main was on probation, and she
    again replied in the affirmative. She denied that Mr. Main had offered to pay the debt he owed
    her in full in February of 2010, and she stated that he returned the truck on “February 26thish.”
    When questioned during her surrebuttal testimony, Ms. Turdo was asked: “[Y]ou also
    told [Mr. Main] if he didn’t give [the truck] back, you were going to say it was stolen?” She
    replied that she considered it to be stolen at that point. She was then asked: “You were basically
    threatening him?” Ms. Turdo’s reply was: “I wanted my truck back. Yes, I wanted my truck.”
    2. The Testimony of James Main
    James Main testified that it was his belief that he did not owe Ms. Turdo any money. He
    stated that Ms. Turdo wanted to enter into a new agreement on December 17, 2009 but that he
    refused to sign the new agreement. He also testified that Ms. Turdo intended to repossess the
    truck that day if he did not pay her $2,400. It was his understanding that the $1,600 he then paid
    her and the $800 debt which he agreed to assign to her were related to his debt for the truck. It
    -4-
    was his further testimony that he also commenced paying $200 a week. He added that he paid
    that $200 a week up until the time when Ms. Turdo repossessed the truck.
    Mr. Main’s testimony then turned to February 21, 2010, which he stated was the date
    when he received a phone call from Ms. Turdo in which she said that she wanted to repossess the
    truck. It was his testimony that he agreed to meet her at the Westerly Police Station. He added
    that, despite having agreed to meet at the Westerly Police Station, he actually went to the
    Hopkinton Police Station because they “knew both of us and our situation.” He stated that he
    offered to “pay off the vehicle” and that Ms. Turdo’s response was simply that “[s]he wanted the
    truck back.” He then testified that Ms. Turdo said that she would report the truck stolen if he
    did not return it to her; he added that he returned the truck because he did not want any “legal
    problems.” It was also Mr. Main’s testimony that he was seeking damages pursuant to his
    counterclaim because Ms. Turdo wrongfully took his truck at the time when he was current on
    his required payments.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Main conceded that he could not provide any proof for any of
    the payments which he made to Ms. Turdo that were not included in the ledger.
    3. The Testimony of Victoria Bentley
    Victoria Bentley testified that she was Mr. Main’s stepmother. She testified that she was
    “a witness to a conversation” that took place on or near February 21, 2010 between Ms. Turdo
    and Mr. Main. She stated that Mr. Main told Ms. Turdo that he did not want to return the truck
    because he was “up to date on the payments.” Ms. Bentley also testified that she told Mr. Main
    during the conversation that she would pay the balance due on the truck, which fact she heard
    him convey to Ms. Turdo.
    -5-
    B
    The Trial Justice’s Decision
    The trial justice issued a written decision on February 26, 2014. She began by making
    extensive findings of fact. The trial justice found that there was a handwritten contract between
    the parties, which was executed on June 5, 2009, authorizing Mr. Main to purchase a truck from
    Ms. Turdo. The trial justice found that Mr. Main timely made the down payment and “in large
    part” complied with the periodic payment terms. According to the trial justice, in mid-December
    of 2009, plaintiff presented defendant with a handwritten ledger regarding monies he owed her
    and told him that she would repossess the truck if he did not pay the lump sum of $2,500 and
    increase his weekly payments for the truck from $150 to $200. The trial justice also found that
    plaintiff presented defendant with a document to that effect on December 17, 2009. Crucially,
    the trial justice noted that the December 17, 2009 document, which is the basis of plaintiff’s
    complaint, was never introduced at trial. The trial justice then found that defendant did not
    execute any written agreement on December 17, 2009, although he did: (1) pay plaintiff $1,600;
    (2) assign to plaintiff an $800 debt he was owed; and (3) begin paying $200 a week.
    According to the trial justice, the “credible testimony, supported by the documentary
    evidence of record” demonstrated that, when plaintiff tried to repossess the truck on February 21,
    2010, defendant was current on his payments on his indebtedness with respect to the truck. The
    trial justice found that plaintiff demanded the return of the truck or she would report it as stolen
    to the police, knowing that defendant was on probation. The trial justice also found that, on the
    same February date, Ms. Turdo reported to the Westerly police that her ex-boyfriend would not
    return a truck after “she no longer permitted him to use it.” Eventually, as the trial justice found,
    -6-
    in February of 2010, defendant returned the truck to plaintiff, who thereafter sold it for $10,000
    in September of 2010.
    With respect to witness credibility, the trial justice found plaintiff to be “angry and
    vindictive” and characterized her testimony as “spiteful.” The trial justice stated that, “[w]hile it
    is not uncommon to observe some negative feelings between litigants, the disgust expressed by
    [p]laintiff about [d]efendant leaves the [c]ourt guessing what redeeming qualities [d]efendant
    had that attracted [p]laintiff to him in the first place.” She further found plaintiff’s testimony
    with respect to “debts incurred and payments received by [d]efendant” to “lack[] all credibility.”
    The trial justice then detailed circumstances where plaintiff’s testimony was inconsistent with a
    handwritten ledger on which she was relying to support her claim and where plaintiff’s testimony
    on direct examination was inconsistent with her testimony on cross-examination. By contrast,
    the trial justice found that defendant “presented as calm, rational, and genuinely hurt by the tone
    and vitriol of [p]laintiff’s testimony;” she added that defendant “appeared genuinely crestfallen
    during his testimony.” The trial justice went on to state that “[d]efendant never dismissed the
    affection he had for [p]laintiff, he presented as a credible witness, and [p]laintiff simply did not.”
    The trial justice also found Victoria Bentley’s testimony to be credible.
    With respect to plaintiff’s breach of contract claim, the trial justice’s conclusions of law
    were shaped by the fact that plaintiff sued under a purported December 17, 2009 contract, which
    defendant did not execute and which was never entered into evidence at trial. The trial justice
    stated that, consequently, there was no “mutuality of agreement” between plaintiff and defendant
    as to the purported December 17, 2009 contract. She also concluded that, at the time when
    plaintiff repossessed the truck, defendant was in compliance with the terms of the only contract
    between the parties, the June 5, 2009 contract. As such, the trial justice concluded that plaintiff
    -7-
    had failed to meet her burden of proving a “valid, enforceable agreement” as the basis for her
    breach of contract claim, and she indicated that judgment should enter for defendant on that
    claim.
    Moving on to defendant’s counterclaim, the trial justice reviewed the pertinent legal
    principles relative to the claims of conversion and then concluded that defendant had the required
    possessory interest in the truck at the time it was repossessed because he was current on his
    payments. She added that, for the same reason, plaintiff had no legal right to interfere with
    defendant’s possessory interest. The trial justice then stated that plaintiff had repossessed the
    truck in a manner “designed to intimidate and harass [d]efendant” and that, consequently,
    defendant’s act of turning over the truck was not voluntary. The trial justice then proceeded to
    state: “Accordingly, this Court finds that [p]laintiff appropriated the * * * truck for her own use
    without [d]efendant’s consent and without legal right;” she added: “Defendant has established
    the tort of conversion and is entitled to damages.” Finally, the trial justice set the amount for
    damages based on the value for which the truck was sold in September of 2010—viz., $10,000.
    A judgment to that effect was entered on March 10, 2014.
    C
    Post-Trial Motions
    On March 28, 2014, plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 59 of the
    Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. Subsequently, on April 23, 2014, she filed what she
    characterized as a “supplemental” motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 60(b)(3) & (6) of the
    Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. (We note that Ms. Turdo provides no argument with
    respect to her Rule 59 motion on appeal; she confines her contentions to her Rule 60(b)
    -8-
    “supplemental” motion. Accordingly, we will recount only those facts that are relevant to
    plaintiff’s Rule 60(b) motion.)
    A hearing on plaintiff’s motions was conducted on April 24, 2014. At the close of the
    hearing, the trial justice issued a bench decision. With respect to plaintiff’s Rule 60(b) motion,
    the trial justice stated that the “rule permits a Court to relieve a party from a judgment under
    certain circumstances and upon such terms that are just.” It was the trial justice’s opinion that
    plaintiff’s counsel was requesting a “do-over because the case was not tried in the manner that
    this new counsel[2] would have tried the case.” She held that such a request, especially where she
    had found plaintiff to be “entirely lacking in credibility,” did not meet the requirements of Rule
    60(b)(6). Moreover, she held that any misrepresentations alleged by plaintiff were “nothing
    more than a request to reconsider this Court’s determination of credibility;” she added that it was
    “just a last-ditch attempt to get a do-over after an unfavorable decision.” Accordingly, she held
    that plaintiff was not entitled to relief under Rule 60(b)(3).
    The trial justice’s decision denying Ms. Turdo’s motion for a new trial was entered as an
    order on May 5, 2014. Ms. Turdo timely appealed the judgment issued following the trial and
    the denial of her motion filed pursuant to Rule 60(b) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil
    Procedure.
    II
    Issues on Appeal
    The plaintiff argues that the trial justice erred: (1) in determining that “there was no
    contract on December 17, 2009;” (2) in not awarding plaintiff damages under the June 5, 2009
    2
    It is clear from the record that, at the hearing on her motion pursuant to Rule 60(b) of the
    Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, plaintiff was represented by an attorney who was
    different from the attorney who had represented her at trial; that new attorney entered her
    appearance on March 28, 2014.
    -9-
    contract; (3) in finding that defendant had a possessory interest in the truck; (4) in determining
    the amount of damages due to defendant on his conversion counterclaim; and (5) in denying
    plaintiff’s Rule 60(b) motion for relief from the March 10, 2014 judgment.
    III
    Standard of Review
    We have repeatedly stated that it is well established that the “factual findings of a trial
    justice sitting without a jury are accorded great weight and will not be disturbed unless the record
    shows that the findings clearly are wrong or the trial justice overlooked or misconceived material
    evidence.”     Wellington Condominium Association v. Wellington Cove Condominium
    Association, 
    68 A.3d 594
    , 599 (R.I. 2013) (quoting Hernandez v. JS Pallet Co., 
    41 A.3d 978
    , 982
    (R.I. 2012)); see also Manchester v. Pereira, 
    926 A.2d 1005
    , 1011 (R.I. 2007). If it becomes
    clear to us, as we review the record, that “competent evidence supports the trial justice’s
    findings, we shall not substitute our view of the evidence for [that of the trial justice] even
    though a contrary conclusion could have been reached.” Wellington Condominium 
    Association, 68 A.3d at 599
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Grady v. Narragansett Electric Co.,
    
    962 A.2d 34
    , 41 (R.I. 2009).
    We review questions of law on a de novo basis. Lamarque v. Centreville Savings Bank,
    
    22 A.3d 1136
    , 1140 (R.I. 2011); see also Cathay Cathay, Inc. v. Vindalu, LLC, 
    962 A.2d 740
    ,
    745 (R.I. 2009). However, based on our review of the record and plaintiff’s contentions on
    appeal, it is clear to us that no questions of law as to the original March 10, 2014 judgment have
    been raised in this case.
    - 10 -
    IV
    Analysis
    A
    The Breach of Contract Claim
    The plaintiff alleges that, despite the fact that the December 17, 2009 contract which
    formed the basis of her complaint was not entered as an exhibit at trial, the trial justice erred in
    determining there was no contract because both parties testified regarding the contract. She adds
    that testimony reflected the fact that Mr. Main made at least some payments in accordance with
    the terms of the purported December 17, 2009 contract.
    We begin by noting that plaintiff bore the burden of proving her breach of contract claim
    by a fair preponderance of the evidence. Campbell v. Walsh-Kaiser Co., 
    72 R.I. 358
    , 359-60, 
    51 A.2d 530
    , 531 (1947); see General Accident Insurance Co. of America v. American National
    Fireproofing, Inc., 
    716 A.2d 751
    , 757 (R.I. 1998); see also Gorman v. St. Raphael Academy, 
    853 A.2d 28
    , 37 (R.I. 2004). While we acknowledge that Mr. Main did testify that he made a lump-
    sum payment in December of 2009 and that he made larger payments after December 17, 2009,
    we nonetheless conclude, based on our review of the record, that the trial justice had competent
    evidence to support her finding that plaintiff failed to meet her burden of establishing the
    existence of a contract. See Wellington Condominium 
    Association, 68 A.3d at 599
    .
    We have stated that a contract requires “competent parties, subject matter, a legal
    consideration, mutuality of agreement, and mutuality of obligation.” Lamoureux v. Burrillville
    Racing Association, 
    91 R.I. 94
    , 98, 
    161 A.2d 213
    , 215 (1960) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The plaintiff inexplicably failed to produce at trial a copy of the purported December 17, 2009
    contract. Additionally, as plaintiff recognizes in her filing before this Court, defendant testified
    - 11 -
    at trial that he refused to sign the December 17, 2009 document. He also stated that he gave Ms.
    Turdo a lump-sum payment in December of 2009 because she had threatened to repossess the
    truck—not because such a payment was required under the terms of the purported new
    December 17, 2009 contract. Without a copy of the alleged contract containing defendant’s
    signature and in light of his testimony that he did not agree to its terms, we perceive no evidence
    in the record of a mutuality of agreement. Moreover, we must bear in mind that the trial justice
    found plaintiff’s testimony with respect to debts owed to her by Mr. Main and monies she had
    received from him to “lack[] all credibility.” As such, it is our opinion that the trial justice did
    not clearly err in making a factual determination that defendant did not execute a written
    agreement with plaintiff on December 17, 2009.3
    B
    The Counterclaim for Conversion
    Ms. Turdo contends that the trial justice’s finding in defendant’s favor on his conversion
    counterclaim was in error because Mr. Main did not prove a possessory interest in the truck. She
    references the fact that the registration, title, and insurance on the truck remained in her name.
    An action for conversion requires a plaintiff to establish that he or she “was in possession
    of the personalty, or entitled to possession of the personalty, at the time of conversion.”
    Narragansett Electric Co. v. Carbone, 
    898 A.2d 87
    , 97 (R.I. 2006) (quoting Montecalvo v.
    Mandarelli, 
    682 A.2d 918
    , 928 (R.I. 1996)). The “gravamen of an action for conversion lies in
    3
    The plaintiff makes an additional argument that she should have been awarded damages
    under the June 5, 2009 contract. But plaintiff’s complaint is based solely on the December 17,
    2009 document. Consequently, despite plaintiff’s contentions on appeal, there was no basis upon
    which the trial justice could award her damages on the June 5, 2009 contract. Moreover, it is
    also worth noting that the trial justice specifically found that Mr. Main was in compliance with
    the June 5, 2009 contract at the time the truck was repossessed.
    - 12 -
    the * * * taking [of the] personalty [of another party] without consent and exercising dominion
    over it inconsistent with the [other party’s] right to possession.” Fuscellaro v. Industrial National
    Co., 
    117 R.I. 558
    , 560, 
    368 A.2d 1227
    , 1230 (1977). The intentional exercise of dominion or
    control over another’s chattel must “so seriously interfere[] with the right of another to control it
    that [the individual exercising dominion or control over the chattel] may justly be required to pay
    the other the full value of the chattel.” Narragansett Electric 
    Co., 898 A.2d at 97
    (quoting
    
    Montecalvo, 682 A.2d at 928
    ).
    The June 5, 2009 contract, by its terms, granted Mr. Main the “right to use” the truck,
    regardless of the fact that the title, insurance, and registration were still in Ms. Turdo’s name; the
    contract allowed him to possess and use the truck as long as he continued to make the required
    payments. Mr. Main testified that he was current on his payments for the truck at the time it was
    repossessed. Moreover, Victoria Bentley’s testimony confirmed that Mr. Main expressed his
    belief that he was current in his payments to Ms. Turdo when she attempted to repossess the
    truck in February of 2010. In accordance with the just-referenced testimony, the trial justice
    found as a fact that defendant was current on his debt in February of 2010. She also found that
    Mr. Main did have a possessory interest at the time the truck was repossessed, which possessory
    interest existed pursuant to the June 5, 2009 contract. Moreover, she came to the conclusion,
    based upon her findings as to credibility, that Mr. Main returned the truck to plaintiff due to the
    threat of having it reported as stolen and that, therefore, his return of the truck was not a
    voluntary act. The trial justice proceeded to hold that plaintiff was liable for conversion. Upon
    our review of the record and the trial justice’s decision, we are also of the opinion that plaintiff
    was liable for conversion when she took the truck in which defendant had a possessory interest
    without his consent and, by taking dominion over the truck, deprived him entirely of the use of
    - 13 -
    the truck. See Narragansett Electric 
    Co., 898 A.2d at 97
    ; 
    Fuscellaro, 117 R.I. at 560
    , 368 A.2d at
    1230. Our review has unearthed no error in the factual findings of the trial justice; and, in our
    judgment, those facts can lead to only one conclusion—that plaintiff converted the truck to her
    own use without legal entitlement.
    Ms. Turdo further contends that, even if defendant prevails on his conversion
    counterclaim, defendant should not receive any damages due to the fact that the value of the
    truck had already been deducted from what Mr. Main owed her. However, the purpose of the
    trial in this case was to make a determination as to the debts of the parties based on any contracts
    or agreements executed by the parties. The trial justice found plaintiff’s testimony regarding
    defendant’s debt not to be credible. The plaintiff has not presented us with any basis on which to
    question the trial justice’s credibility findings in this regard. See Wellington Condominium
    
    Association, 68 A.3d at 599
    .
    The plaintiff also posits that defendant is not entitled to damages because he did not meet
    his burden of producing any evidence as to the value of the truck at the time it was repossessed
    in February of 2010. We have stated that “the measure of damages for conversion is usually the
    value of the property at the time of its conversion, a matter susceptible of being proved by
    evidence of market value.” Jeffrey v. American Screw Co., 
    98 R.I. 286
    , 291, 
    201 A.2d 146
    , 150
    (1964). The trial justice in the instant case based her award on the market value of the truck in
    September of 2010 when the truck was sold. Even though the trial justice based her damages
    award on the market value of the truck at a point in time after the conversion had taken place, she
    relied on our established method of calculating damages for a conversion using the market value
    of the chattel and, based on the evidence in this particular case, we cannot say that there was
    reversible error in the trial justice’s damages determination.
    - 14 -
    We would also note that, on appeal, plaintiff’s argument seems to be little more than an
    attempt to re-litigate this case. Her filings before this Court address only her disagreement with
    the factual findings of the trial justice. However, it is not our role to make new factual findings.
    Our role is confined to determining whether the trial justice committed clear error in her factual
    findings or misconceived or overlooked material evidence.          See Wellington Condominium
    
    Association, 68 A.3d at 599
    . We are entirely unable to say that the trial justice in the instant case
    committed any such error. Accordingly, we affirm the trial justice’s judgment in the instant case.
    C
    The Rule 60(b) Motion
    The plaintiff next avers that, at the hearing on her post-trial Rule 60(b)(3) & (6) motion,
    she demonstrated that Mr. Main “outright lied” at the trial and that she should have been granted
    “relief for manifest injustice.”    Specifically, plaintiff contends that she demonstrated the
    following: (1) that Mr. Main stated at trial that he never agreed to the terms of the purported
    December 17, 2009 contract whereas a police report from the Hopkinton Police reflected the fact
    that defendant “went to the police with the December 17, 2009 agreement in hand and told the
    police he had typed up the agreement;” (2) that Mr. Main lied about the date on which he went
    to the police; (3) that Mr. Main returned the truck not because of threats by Ms. Turdo but,
    rather, due to the fact that the police advised him to return it; and (4) that Mr. Main had been
    convicted of committing four domestic offenses against Ms. Turdo, for which he received jail
    time and probation.
    Rule 60(b)(3) provides that “[o]n motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may
    relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding
    for * * * [f]raud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party * * *.”           Rule
    - 15 -
    60(b)(6) allows for relief from a final judgment for “[a]ny other reason justifying relief from the
    operation of the judgment.” It is our well-settled precedent that “[a] motion to vacate a judgment
    is left to the sound discretion of the trial justice and such a ruling will not be disturbed absent an
    abuse of discretion.” Berman v. Sitrin, 
    101 A.3d 1251
    , 1260 (R.I. 2014) (quoting Malinou v.
    Seattle Savings Bank, 
    970 A.2d 6
    , 10 (R.I. 2009)). Moreover, our “review is limited to an
    examination of the decision to determine the correctness of the order granting or denying the
    motion, not the correctness of the original judgment.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    The trial justice in the instant case found no misrepresentations or misconduct on the part
    of the defendant that would allow for relief pursuant to Rule 60(b)(3). She further held that the
    plaintiff was not entitled to relief under Rule 60(b)(6) because that rule typically applies only in
    extraordinary circumstances and none were present in this case. See Allen ex rel. Allen v. South
    County Hospital, 
    945 A.2d 289
    , 297 (R.I. 2008) (“Rule 60(b)(6) was not intended to constitute a
    catchall and * * * circumstances must be extraordinary to justify relief.”) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). It was the opinion of the trial justice that the plaintiff was simply looking for a
    “do-over.” After our thorough review of the record in this case, we likewise are of the opinion
    that, in her Rule 60(b) motion and on appeal, the plaintiff appears to be seeking a “do-over” in
    view of the fact that she received an unfavorable result at trial. The misconduct or “lie[s]” which
    Ms. Turdo claims she demonstrated at the hearing on her Rule 60(b) motion did not sway the
    trial justice, and we cannot perceive any error in the trial justice’s application of Rule 60(b) to
    the instant case. Therefore, we uphold the trial justice’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s Rule 60(b)
    motion.
    - 16 -
    V
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    We remand the record to that tribunal.
    - 17 -
    RHODE ISLAND SUPREME COURT CLERK’S
    OFFICE
    Clerk’s Office Order/Opinion Cover Sheet
    TITLE OF CASE:        Rosario Turdo v. James Main.
    CASE NO:              No. 2014-150-Appeal.
    (WC 11-0466)
    COURT:                Supreme Court
    DATE OPINION FILED: February 18, 2016
    JUSTICES:             Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    WRITTEN BY:           Associate Justice William P. Robinson III
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:     Washington County Superior Court
    JUDGE FROM LOWER COURT:
    Associate Justice Kristin E. Rodgers
    ATTORNEYS ON APPEAL:
    For Plaintiff: Stefanie DiMaio-Larivee, Esq.
    For Defendant: Matthew R. Reilly, Esq.
    George J. Bauerle, III, Esq.