Jill Ruderman v. Kathy Pritchard ( 2022 )


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  •                                           COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges AtLee and Malveaux
    PUBLISHED
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    JILL RUDERMAN
    OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 0024-22-2                             CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER
    DECEMBER 20, 2022
    KATHY PRITCHARD
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SPOTSYLVANIA COUNTY
    William E. Glover, Judge
    (Matthew B. Kaplan; The Kaplan Law Firm, on briefs), for
    appellant. Appellant submitting on briefs.
    Tamara L. Tucker (Tucker Law Firm, PLC, on brief), for appellee.
    Jill Ruderman appeals a circuit court judgment that awarded money damages and a return
    of personal property to Kathy Pritchard in her de novo appeal of a detinue claim from the general
    district court.1 Ruderman contends that the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to
    permit Pritchard to file an amended complaint increasing her ad damnum beyond the
    jurisdictional limit of the district court. Consequently, she argues that the circuit court erred by
    denying her motion to dismiss. We hold that the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction
    to permit the filing of the amended complaint and to enter judgment on it. As a result, we vacate
    the circuit court’s judgment, dismiss the amended complaint, and remand the case for further
    proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
    1
    After briefing concluded and oral argument was scheduled, Ruderman’s counsel
    notified this Court that Ruderman had died. As permitted by Code § 8.01-20, the Court exercises
    its discretion to “retain jurisdiction and enter judgment or decree in the case as if” the death had
    not occurred. See, e.g., Kambis v. Considine, 
    290 Va. 460
    , 462 n.1 (2015); Utsch v. Utsch, 
    266 Va. 124
    , 126 n.1 (2003).
    BACKGROUND2
    Pritchard is a breeder of Cornish Rex cats. Ruderman was a veterinarian. The two
    women engaged in a series of transactions that involved breeding various cats. A dispute arose
    between them over several of the cats and their offspring.
    In 2018, Pritchard, proceeding pro se, filed a warrant in detinue against Ruderman in
    general district court. The warrant listed eleven cats that she alleged Ruderman had “unjustly
    withheld” from her, including one named Lady Godiva, and she provided a dollar amount
    representing each cat’s “alternate value.” The district court entered a judgment awarding money
    damages to Pritchard for some of the cats and ordering the return of other cats. The award was
    for $24,100.
    Pritchard appealed the district court’s decision to the circuit court.3 In October 2019,
    while the de novo appeal of the matter was pending in that court, Pritchard filed a motion for
    leave to amend the complaint. The amended complaint restated the original detinue claim as its
    first count and added additional kittens to its scope.4 It also included new counts for breach of
    contract, conversion, declaratory judgment, and permanent injunctive relief. The complaint
    2
    We recite what occurred in the circuit court as indicated by the pleadings and other
    undisputed contents of the record. See generally Watson v. Commonwealth, 
    297 Va. 347
    ,
    349-50, 352 (2019) (characterizing whether the pleadings properly allege the existence of subject
    matter jurisdiction as “a question of law” that “requires no factual development or evidentiary
    record to consider”); Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    42 Va. App. 142
    , 147-48 (2004) (en banc)
    (evaluating “certain facts underlying [the] question of law” that is subject matter jurisdiction to
    determine whether “the required jurisdictional facts were proved”).
    3
    Pritchard represents that although she substantially prevailed in the general district
    court, she appealed because that court erroneously allowed Ruderman to decide whether she
    would keep Lady Godiva or pay for her and failed to determine that Lady Godiva’s offspring
    belonged to Pritchard.
    4
    The amended complaint did not mention the proceeding in the general district court or
    attempt to incorporate the allegations made in the warrant in detinue filed in that court, on which
    the appeal was based.
    -2-
    sought the return of numerous cats; the transfer of all Cat Fancier’s Association registrations for
    those cats to Pritchard; damages of $20,000; punitive damages of $20,000; and attorney fees and
    costs “not to exceed $30,000.” None of the counts contained its own ad damnum or request for
    damages. Instead, a single prayer for relief at the end of the amended complaint listed the
    combined damages requested.
    In Pritchard’s accompanying motion for leave to file the amended complaint, she
    acknowledged that the case was an appeal from the judgment of the district court on a warrant in
    detinue. She represented that she learned for the first time while the appeal was pending in
    circuit court that two of the cats at issue had litters of kittens. Pritchard further noted that
    Ruderman did not object to her adding some of those kittens to the detinue claim. She indicated,
    however, that Ruderman objected to the remainder of the new claims set out in the amended
    complaint. Pritchard further noted that Supreme Court Rule 1:8 states that leave to amend
    should be granted liberally. She suggested that permitting her to file the amended complaint
    would serve “the interest of judicial economy” and “prevent the possibility of multiple
    inconsistent rulings” that might arise if she “were to file a separate action for the additional
    claims.”
    After a hearing, the circuit court entered an order granting the motion “on the grounds set
    forth” by Pritchard “and for good cause shown.” Following the court’s acceptance and filing of
    the amended complaint, the case proceeded under the same single case number as prior to the
    filing.
    Ruderman subsequently made a motion to dismiss the amended complaint due to an
    absence of subject matter jurisdiction. She asserted that Pritchard removed the matter from the
    circuit court’s jurisdiction when she filed the amended complaint in that court with the “ad
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    damnum clause of $40,000.00, not including costs and attorney’s fees,” an amount higher than
    the district court’s jurisdictional limit of $25,000.
    Following a hearing, the circuit court denied Ruderman’s motion to dismiss. In the order
    embodying that ruling, it asserted that Pritchard “did not increase the ad damnum of the
    original[] appealed claim beyond the jurisdictional limit” of the district court. (Emphasis
    omitted). The circuit court reasoned under those circumstances that the Rules of the Supreme
    Court permitted it to authorize Pritchard to add new claims not heard in the general district court
    “so that pursuant to Rule 1:6, all of [Pritchard’s] claims against [Ruderman] could be litigated
    once,” without the need for Pritchard to file a separate action.
    At trial in the circuit court, the jury returned a verdict in Pritchard’s favor. It found that
    she was the rightful owner of Lady Godiva and her offspring and was entitled to take possession
    of them, and it additionally awarded her $9,134.67 for their wrongful detention. The circuit
    court entered a final order consistent with the jury’s verdict.
    ANALYSIS
    Ruderman contends that the circuit court’s subject matter jurisdiction was limited to that
    of the general district court. As a result, she suggests that when Pritchard amended her
    complaint to seek an amount greater than the district court’s jurisdictional limit, the circuit court
    lost jurisdiction.
    Whether the record establishes subject matter jurisdiction in a particular case is a
    question of law reviewed de novo on appeal. Parrish v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Assoc., 
    292 Va. 44
    , 49
    (2016). The appellate court is “not limited to the arguments raised by the parties.” 
    Id.
     To the
    extent the Court’s analysis involves statutory interpretation, questions of statutory construction
    are also reviewed under a de novo standard. Collelo v. Geographic Servs., Inc., 
    283 Va. 56
    , 66
    (2012). We consider the issue within these well-established parameters.
    -4-
    Subject matter jurisdiction “is the authority granted through constitution or statute to
    adjudicate a class of cases or controversies.” Gray v. Binder, 
    294 Va. 268
    , 275 (2017) (quoting
    Morrison v. Bestler, 
    239 Va. 166
    , 169 (1990)). Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is
    a “‘threshold’” issue, and the parties “can neither waive nor confer” such jurisdiction on a court.
    Knight v. Ottrix, 
    69 Va. App. 519
    , 523-24 (2018) (quoting Parrish, 292 Va. at 49). Subject
    matter jurisdiction “must affirmatively appear on the face of the record[;] that is[,] the record
    must show . . . that the case is one of a class of which the court rendering the judgment was given
    cognizance.” Owusu v. Commonwealth, 
    11 Va. App. 671
    , 673 (1991) (quoting Shelton v.
    Sydnor, 
    126 Va. 625
    , 630 (1920)), quoted with approval in Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    42 Va. App. 142
    , 146 (2004) (en banc). Due to its fundamental nature, a claim of the absence of such
    jurisdiction “can be raised at any time in the proceedings,” even by the Court for the first time on
    appeal. Morrison, 239 Va. at 170. If it is determined that the lower court did not have subject
    matter jurisdiction, “the only function remaining . . . is that of announcing the fact and
    dismissing the cause.” Pure Presbyterian Church of Wash. v. Grace of God Presbyterian
    Church, 
    296 Va. 42
    , 50 (2018) (quoting Ex Parte McCardle, 
    74 U.S. (7 Wall.) 506
    , 514 (1868)).
    This case originated in the general district court. General district courts are “courts of
    limited jurisdiction and may exercise only such subject matter jurisdiction as has been expressly
    conferred by statute.” Parrish, 292 Va. at 49. Code § 16.1-106 provides the right to appeal a
    determination of a general district court in a civil case to the circuit court. Code § 16.1-106; see
    Code § 16.1-69.5 (defining “[c]ourts not of record”); Code § 17.1-500 (defining a “court of
    record of a city”). When a circuit court is “exercising its appellate jurisdiction in a de novo
    appeal,” its “subject matter jurisdiction is derivative of the court not of record from which that
    appeal is taken.” Parrish, 292 Va. at 49 (citing Addison v. Salyer, 
    185 Va. 644
    , 651-52 (1946)).
    Under these circumstances, therefore, “the circuit court has no more subject matter jurisdiction
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    than the general district court had in that court’s original proceeding.” 
    Id.
     This also means that
    “the jurisdictional limits” of the general district court, including the dollar limits, “carry over to
    the appeal” of a judgment of that court to the circuit court. Afify v. Simmons, 
    254 Va. 315
    ,
    317-18 (1997) (citing Stacy v. Mullins, 
    185 Va. 837
    , 844 (1946)).
    The applicable jurisdictional dollar limit of the general district court for the types of
    claims at issue in this case is $25,000, “exclusive of interest and any attorney fees.” See Code
    § 16.1-77(1); see also 2011 Va. Acts chs. 14, 702 (raising the upper jurisdictional limit from
    $15,000 to $25,000).5 Consequently, in the appeal of Pritchard, the plaintiff, to the circuit court,
    that court’s subject matter jurisdiction permitted it to entertain an ad damnum of no more than
    $25,000 absent a statutory or common law exception to these principles.
    Code § 16.1-114.1 provides generally that the circuit court, in an action appealed from a
    district court, has the authority to permit some amendments to the pleadings. Code § 16.1-114.1
    (providing in part that the statute “shall be liberally construed, to the end that justice is not
    delayed or denied by reason of errors in the pleadings or in the form of the proceedings”). That
    statute further expressly authorizes the circuit court to permit an increase in the amount of the
    claim above the jurisdictional dollar amount of $25,000 set forth in Code § 16.1-77 in “an
    appeal . . . taken by a defendant.” Id. (emphasis added). By omitting plaintiffs from this
    provision, the General Assembly signaled its intent that the circuit court’s authority to permit an
    amendment of the pleadings to increase the ad damnum in a de novo appeal does not include an
    appeal taken by a plaintiff such as Pritchard. See Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v. Hall, 
    260 Va. 349
    , 355
    (2000) (noting the fundamental principle of statutory construction that “mention of a specific
    5
    Effective July 1, 2021, the General Assembly increased the jurisdictional limit for
    general district court actions for “injury to person” or “wrongful death” to $50,000. 2021 Va.
    Acts Spec. Sess. I ch. 199. However, the limit for claims “to specific personal property,” “any
    debt,” or “damages for breach of contract” or “injury done to [real or personal] property”
    remains at $25,000. 
    Id.
    -6-
    item in a statute implies that omitted items were not intended to be included within the scope of
    the statute” (quoting Turner v. Sheldon D. Wexler, D.P.M., P.C., 
    244 Va. 124
    , 127 (1992))); see
    also Commonwealth ex rel. Dep’t of Corrs. v. Brown, 
    259 Va. 697
    , 705 (2000) (explaining that
    “[w]hen a legislative enactment limits the manner in which something may be done, the
    enactment also evinces the intent that it shall not be done another way” (quoting Grigg v.
    Commonwealth, 
    224 Va. 356
    , 364 (1982))).
    The holding of the Supreme Court of Virginia in Afify, which also involved detinue
    claims, supports the conclusion that a plaintiff appealing to the circuit court may not increase her
    ad damnum beyond the statutory limit of the district court. Afify is not directly controlling
    because it did not concern an appeal to the circuit court. 254 Va. at 317. Instead, it involved
    district court claims that were “removed” by the defendant to the circuit court before trial could
    occur in the district court. Id. At that time, the statutory scheme authorized removal where a
    defendant wished to file a counterclaim that exceeded the general district court’s jurisdictional
    limit. Id. at 316, 318-19 (citing Code § 16.1-92 (1988)).
    In deciding Afify, the Supreme Court considered whether the removal statute permitted
    the plaintiffs in that case to increase the amount of their claims beyond the civil jurisdictional
    limits of the district court. Id. at 317-18. The Court noted that the statute permitted defendants
    to amend but did not mention plaintiffs and expressly limited the general authorization to amend
    to “correct[ing] any defects, irregularities and omissions in the pleadings.” Id. at 318-19
    (quoting Code § 16.1-92 (1988)). It further pointed out that the General Assembly subsequently
    changed the statute to expressly “‘permit . . . amendments to increase the amount of the claim
    above the jurisdictional’ limits of the general district court,” which would have authorized the
    increase at issue, but that this amendment did not apply to the plaintiffs because the removal of
    the claims occurred prior to the statutory amendment. Id. at 319 n.3.
    -7-
    Under the circumstances in Afify, the Court held that only a defendant, not a plaintiff,
    could increase his ad damnum beyond district court jurisdictional limits following removal of the
    proceeding to the circuit court. Id. at 319. Similarly in the instant case, the applicable statute,
    Code § 16.1-114.1, expressly permits an increase in the ad damnum only following an appeal by
    the defendant, thereby implicitly preventing such an increase following an appeal by the
    plaintiff.
    Language in Code § 16.1-77 further supports this conclusion. That statute provides that a
    plaintiff may increase the amount of his or her ad damnum beyond the general district court’s
    jurisdiction “[w]hile a matter is pending in a general district court,” prior to trial in that court.
    See 2019 Va. Acts ch. 787 (adding this provision). But if the plaintiff makes such a request prior
    to trial, trial cannot be held in the district court. Code § 16.1-77(1). Instead, the statute dictates
    that the district court “shall” transfer the matter to the circuit court for trial. Id. (stating that “no
    such order of transfer shall issue unless the motion to amend and transfer is made at least 10 days
    before trial,” “[e]xcept for good cause shown”). By providing a mechanism for a plaintiff to
    increase her ad damnum prior to trial in the district court, resulting in transfer to the circuit court,
    the General Assembly expressed an intent that such an increase would not be allowed after trial.
    See Hall, 260 Va. at 355; Brown, 259 Va. at 705.
    Consequently, the statutory scheme permits a plaintiff to increase the amount of the ad
    damnum above the jurisdictional limit but only if she does so prior to trial in the district court,
    and such a request necessitates a transfer of the claim to the circuit court for trial. See Code
    § 16.1-77(1). The existing statutory framework makes clear that after trial in the district court,
    on de novo appeal to the circuit court, an increase in the amount of the claim beyond the $25,000
    jurisdictional limit is permitted only if the defendant appeals. See Code § 16.1-114.1.
    -8-
    Rules 1:8 and 3:2 also do not authorize a circuit court to allow an amendment that
    increases an ad damnum beyond jurisdictional limits. It is true that Rule 3:2(c)(ii), which
    requires the inclusion of “an ad damnum clause” in “[e]very complaint requesting an award of
    money damages,” provides that “[l]eave to amend the ad damnum clause is available under Rule
    1:8.” Rule 1:8, in turn, states generally that leave to amend “should be liberally granted in
    furtherance of the ends of justice.”
    Despite the broad language in Rule 1:8, leave to amend an ad damnum clause is limited
    by jurisdictional principles. See Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    263 Va. 13
    , 18 (2002) (recognizing
    that in the event of a conflict between a statute and a rule of court, the statute prevails (first citing
    Va. Const. art. VI, § 5; and then citing Code § 8.01-3)). In Afify, the Supreme Court held that the
    statute at issue (which permitted the circuit court, following removal, to allow amendments “to
    correct any defects, irregularities and omissions in the pleadings”) “express[ly] limit[ed] . . . the
    power of the circuit court to be liberal in granting leave to amend” pursuant to Rule 1:8. 254 Va.
    at 319 (citing Code § 16.1-92 (1988)). The Court held, as a result, that the circuit court erred by
    permitting the plaintiffs “to amend their original claims to increase the damages sought” in the
    circuit court “to amounts in excess of the jurisdictional limits of the general district court.” Id.;
    see also Stacy, 
    185 Va. at 840, 843
     (implying approval for the court hearing a matter in a de
    novo appeal “to permit amendments to be made . . . freely” as long as “the amendments d[id] not
    increase the amount claimed . . . beyond the jurisdiction of the inferior court” or otherwise
    exceed that court’s jurisdiction (first quoting Walker Ice Co. v. Blanchard, 
    27 A. 330
    , 330 (R.I.
    1893); and then citing Copperthite Pie Corp. v. Whitehurst, 
    157 Va. 480
    , 487 (1932))); cf. Air
    Power, Inc. v. United States, 
    741 F.2d 53
    , 58 (4th Cir. 1984) (interpreting Virginia law as
    precluding a losing party in a de novo appeal from “expanding either his claim or request for
    -9-
    remedies beyond those presented to the general district court” (first citing Stacy, 
    185 Va. 837
    ;
    and then citing Addison, 
    185 Va. 644
    )).
    Here, the circuit court acquired jurisdiction over plaintiff Pritchard’s claim when she filed
    her de novo appeal of the district court judgment on the warrant in detinue. At that time, the
    circuit court assigned a particular docket number to that claim. Following discovery, the court
    permitted Pritchard to file the amended complaint under the same docket number. That amended
    complaint did three things: it included her appealed detinue claim, expanded that claim to
    include additional cats, and added new claims based on breach of contract and conversion.
    We assume without deciding that the circuit court had the authority to permit plaintiff
    Pritchard to amend her complaint to add new claims to her de novo appeal. See McGinnis v.
    Commonwealth, 
    296 Va. 489
    , 501 (2018) (assuming without deciding that an issue was properly
    before the Court because addressing it on the merits provided the best and narrowest ground for
    resolution). Nonetheless, those new claims depended on the legitimacy of the de novo appeal for
    their existence. This is so because the new claims proceeded as a single amended complaint
    under the original docket number assigned to that appeal. In other words, the amended
    complaint wholly supplanted the original warrant in detinue in the circuit court. Cf. Afify, 254
    Va. at 317, 319 (involving a similar amended pleading filed by plaintiffs in the circuit court that
    supplanted several detinue warrants removed to that court by the defendant prior to trial).
    Further, the amended complaint contained only a single prayer for relief for all five counts. See
    generally Town & Country Props., Inc. v. Riggins, 
    249 Va. 387
    , 399-400 (1995) (recognizing
    that separate counts in a complaint can have separate ad damnums). Crucially, the ad damnum in
    that single prayer for relief was for a total of $40,000 in compensatory and punitive damages.
    The wording of the amended complaint, therefore, permitted Pritchard to receive an award of
    - 10 -
    $40,000 in damages based solely on the detinue claim appealed from the general district court,
    an amount that exceeded the $25,000 jurisdictional limit of that court.
    Accordingly, the amended complaint requested relief outside the circuit court’s subject
    matter jurisdiction.6 Cf. Afify, 254 Va. at 319 (holding that when a defendant removed detinue
    claims to the circuit court prior to a trial, the statute did not permit the plaintiff to increase the
    damages beyond the jurisdictional limits of the district court). Based on that lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction, the circuit court erred by allowing Pritchard to file her amended complaint
    and denying Ruderman’s motion to dismiss it. See id. (holding that the circuit court’s lack of
    jurisdiction to consider the amended pleading rendered “the trial and verdict on that pleading . . .
    nullities”).
    For these reasons, we vacate the judgment of the circuit court, dismiss the amended
    complaint, and remand the case for further proceedings in the circuit court. See id.; see also
    Robert & Bertha Robinson Family, LLC v. Allen, 
    295 Va. 130
    , 150 (2018) (recognizing that the
    “‘event’ that triggers the ‘annulment of the district court judgment’ is the trial de novo, not the
    notice of appeal” (citation omitted) (quoting Commonwealth v. Diaz, 
    266 Va. 260
    , 266 (2003)));
    cf. also Davis v. County of Fairfax, 
    282 Va. 23
    , 30 (2011) (holding that where a party appealed a
    district court ruling to the circuit court and took a nonsuit, the appropriate place to reinstate the
    proceeding was the circuit court).
    6
    The circuit court, when it denied the motion to dismiss the amended complaint due to a
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction, stated that Pritchard “did not increase the ad damnum of the
    original, appealed claim beyond the jurisdictional limit” of the district court. (Emphasis
    omitted). As noted, however, the single ad damnum clause in the amended complaint is for
    $40,000. Although the circuit court may have planned to ensure that the plaintiff would not be
    allowed to recover more than the jurisdictional limit on the original claim, the amended
    complaint wholly supplanted the warrant in detinue and did not contain such limits.
    - 11 -
    CONCLUSION
    The circuit court acquired jurisdiction over the detinue claim as a de novo appeal. Its
    jurisdiction over that claim, therefore, was derivative of the general district court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction and governed by the applicable $25,000 jurisdictional limit of that court. Further,
    assuming the circuit court had discretion to permit amendments to the complaint to add other
    theories of relief, the amended complaint, which contained only a single ad damnum clause for
    all counts, permitted plaintiff Pritchard to recover $40,000 in damages on the detinue claim, an
    amount substantially in excess of the district court limit. Consequently, the circuit court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction to permit the filing of the specific amended complaint and to enter
    judgment on it. Therefore, we vacate the judgment of the circuit court, dismiss the amended
    complaint, and remand the case for further proceedings in the circuit court.
    Vacated and remanded.
    - 12 -