Murray v. Ross-Dove Company, 1st Cir. (1993)
Murray v. Ross-Dove Company, 1st Cir. (1993)
Murray v. Ross-Dove Company, 1st Cir. (1993)
October 4, 1993
No. 92-2342
JOHN P. MURRAY, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
ROSS-DOVE COMPANY, INC. AND
DOVETECH, INC.,
Defendants, Appellees.
__________________
ERRATA SHEET
The opinion of this
amended as follows:
On page 12, last
with "continued".
footnote 5,
1993, is
replace "continual"
Before
Torruella, Circuit Judge,
_____________
Feinberg,* Senior Circuit Judge,
____________________
and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
_____________
____________________
BOUDIN,
decision
commercial
Circuit Judge.
______________
of the district
dispute
at
This
is an
appeal
end of
the
from
the jury a
plaintiffs'
case.
Although
show
we think
fraud
abandoned,
view
just
that the
and we
plaintiffs' evidence
treat an
aiding
and abetting
to
failed to
foreclose
claim as
verdict.
claim but
vacate the
and remand
judgment as to
to
Acquisition Corp.
(which
may well
dispute
arises
out of
certain
assets
of
corporation formerly
an
not be
suable entity).
appraisal done
Bevmar, Inc.
a division of
by
("Bevmar"),
Ross-Dove of
a
The
California
and sale of
1989,
one
Crawford, organized
effort
to solicit
Robert
H.
Marik,
Bevmar Acquisition
investments in
-2-2-
an
acquaintance
Corp. as part
Bevmar.
In aid
of
of an
of that
effort,
an
investment
banker
conducted by
employees, and
appraisal valued
was
working with
Dovetech's
help from
in
June 1989.
machinery, equipment,
sale.
$6 million depending
The appraisal
That
molds
engaged
of Bevmar's assets.
completed
Bevmar's
Marik
and
$2 million
on the circumstances
of
of molds
Dovetech
Crawford.
appraisal
Crawford
interest
in
Dovetech
appraisal.
appraisal
was
Bevmar
still
Bevmar's
contacted
and
to invest in
assets
Schneider
to determine
Schneider
valid.
the
assured
In
to
available
to
explain
his
status
of
Crawford
October
1989
the
that the
Crawford,
the loan,
security interest
Bevmar gave
in all of its
the Crawford
group a
and dies.
in the
security
items listed in
the recorded
-3-3-
discrepancies
rapidly
not
apparent
Crawford
immediately
was
invested a
chapter 7
that
noticed.
Bevmar
further $500,000
was
What
in
did
deep
but in
become
trouble.
March 1990
realized on the
charging
Ross-Dove
negligent misrepresentation,
and
Dovetech
with
million
were
sought,
as
damages.
The
gist of
carelessly
assets
or dishonestly
it had appraised in
group had
relied
to
its
well
as
punitive
overestimated
June 1989 and
detriment on
negligence,
and abetting
amount of $4.5
or
exemplary
that Dovetech
had
the
the
value of
appraisal
in
investing in Bevmar.
After
discovery,
September 1992.
of witnesses,
the
three
molds and
four-day
jury
trial
Crawford
employees,
person or by
group members,
an employee
dies after
of
from a number
deposition, including
Schneider,
the company
two
Bevmar
that purchased
occurred in
the
an appraiser
____________________
1The last of these claims is not discussed in the
plaintiffs' brief on appeal, there is scant evidence to
support such a claim, and we treat it as abandoned.
-4-4-
general
March
opinion about
1989.
expert
the value
Surprisingly,
witness
to
testify
of its
molds and
plaintiffs did
as
to
dies in
not provide
an
inadequacy
or
the
the
close
of plaintiffs'
judgment as a matter
the
current name
case,
defendants sought
of the
traditional relief
P. 50(a)(1),
afforded
by a
directed
verdict.
On
October 1,
1992, the
district court
that plaintiffs
defendants
were at
fault.
Alternatively, the
court found
to causation of injury.
as a close
plaintiffs did at
evidence to
a Rule
50(a) motion,
appellate review
is plenary.
considered in
favorable to
the
____________________
2Plaintiffs belatedly attempted to add an expert witness
but this was disallowed because the witness was not timely
listed as required by pretrial orders.
Plaintiffs complain
but we see no error in this ruling. The district court did
allow plaintiff to make use of deposition testimony of Steve
Piletz, an expert appraiser who had appraised certain of the
assets in March 1989.
-5-5-
directed verdict,
close
plaintiffs.
here, the
of plaintiffs'
only
when the
plaintiffs'
to find in favor
of the plaintiffs
on any permissible
claim or theory.
A reviewing
have
offered
evidence
not clear--and we
accept this
law,
to
permit
findings
in
action--why is
premise.
In re Newport
______________
See
___
Cir. 1993).
cause
misrepresentation
of
action
exists
for
if
the
negligence
Dovetech
or
negligent
appraisal
was
-6-6-
resulted in injury.3
evidence.
With
this yardstick, we
turn to
the
____________________
3Because plaintiffs' claims of negligence and negligent
misrepresentation both allege negligent supply of false
information, we will consider them as the same claim. See
___
Ralston Dry-Wall Co., Inc. v. United States Gypsum Co., 740
___________________________
________________________
F. Supp. 926, 932 (D.R.I. 1990), aff'd, 926 F.2d 99 (1st Cir.
_____
1991). The Rhode Island Supreme Court has not yet directly
addressed a cause of action for negligent misrepresentation,
Ostalkiewicz v. Guardian Alarm, 520 A.2d 563, 569 (R.I.
____________
______________
1987), but federal courts applying Rhode Island law have held
that negligent misrepresentation is actionable.
E.g., Banco
____ _____
Totta e Acores v. Fleet Nat'l Bank, 768 F. Supp. 943, 946-47
______________
________________
(D.R.I. 1991); Ralston Dry-Wall Company, Inc., 740 F. Supp.
______________________________
at 932.
-7-7-
A.
be considered
together.
In
the abstract,
an appraisal
or it could be carelessly
the magnitude
negligence.
of
the inaccuracy
may
be some
inference would be
evidence
of
depends, as
in the appraisal
First and
most
important,
plaintiffs
offered
to the
value realized
dies in
June
molds and
dies
disposition "as
is" at an
"orderly"
meant orderly
months;
and
"in
place"
liquidation over
meant
enterprise.
-8-8-
as
part
a maximum
of
an
of six
ongoing
When the
July 1990,
was
96 molds and
the winning bid was $40,000 for the whole lot and
dies to Bevmar in
collect the
1986.
molds and
96 molds and
found some
to
arrived to
be in
company.
Thus the
proof (subject
that
a lot in
molds and
claimed by
plaintiffs' starting
to reservations
dies appraised
at a
yet to
poor
point was
be discussed)
minimum price
of $1.5
of the this
a disparity as
$676,000 and
about $413,000.
between
the
the
to the machinery
these items
returned
appraisal
and
the
realized
price
for
the
all.
of
the
equipment,
molds
appraisal could
attributed
and
dies.
by itself
by
A
Dovetech to
serious
easily be
error
an adequate
machinery,
in
their
basis for
disparity
in the
price
predicted
and the
price
realized
auction might
not
have
dies is hardly
been fair,
conclusive.
although
there
is
The
no
-9-9-
suggestion
changed
so materially
that no
negligence could
be imputed
But
a prima facie
negligence.
Whether
the
huge disparity
here
would
be sufficient
evidence
appraisal.
that
Bevmar's California
where
they
products
cast
were
held
consulted by
by
light
on
the
plant or at about
for Bevmar.
an unfavorable
Bevmar
Schneider
subcontractors
testified that
make
he visited
to
and then
others as to
what they would pay if the molds and dies were sold.
won
But
Elcor's representative
the
bid
a year
later,
he
visited each
even unusable.
that Schneider
testified that
And a Bevmar
after Elcor
of
the nine
condition, in
employee testified
of the subcontractors
when doing his appraisal, had not even examined all the molds
and dies
molds and
-10-10-
Against this
apiece if
auctioned)
as highly
suspicious and
as
testimony of
jury's
judgment
Schneider could
reinforced
that
the
negligent.
also have
appraisal
was
littered
pressed
with
on the
matters.
the entry
puzzling uniformity
There was no
and abetting
"no
when he
of figures
fraud, and we do
response"
was
and related
or of aiding
trial court in
Yet at
least some of
think
that
the
evidence recited
would
permit
not a
____________________
4Schneider relied in
appraising the machinery and
equipment located on the East Coast on photographs sent to
him by a Dovetech employee based in Massachusetts.
He
apparently knew that Marik was seeking a high appraisal
figure.
And he was associated, although the evidence was
somewhat confused, with a possible proposal in September 1989
for Ross-Dove itself to offer $500,000 to Bevmar for all of
the items in question, the same month in which he assured
Crawford that the June 1989 appraisal was still valid.
-11-11-
to the evidence
inferences
and
plaintiffs,
we
issue
of
credibility
think that
jury
in
that
and resolving
favor
found
of
the
error
and
now to the
of the
difficult
was
based on
functioning molds
(in the
the market
value
of the
the court,
between
The court
dies were
sold at auction
items as
This, said
that Schneider
they, or
appraised the
molds and
dies as
apples but
oranges.
It is not
dies before
-12-
-12-
certainly
getting.
very low
At the
and may
same time,
be open
Elcor's bid
to the
was
inference that
Elcor knew that many of the items were scrap or little more.
No doubt, as the district court assumed, it
in Schneider's estimate
dies would be bought
above scrap
implicit
value.5
But
by
the
same token
and
is obviously
it
is
also
of $1.5 million
is implicit
Yet
change in
there is
by July 1990
unexpectedly deteriorated.
district court
buyer of
only 20 to 40
of the
court said
valuable ones
so because
were excluded.
____________________
5Piletz, who appraised Bevmar's machinery and equipment
in
March 1989,
offered an
informed guess
based on
reproduction value--not an appraisal--that the molds and dies
"might" sell for about $158,000 if sold as scrap and $634,000
if sold for continued use.
-13-13-
The
court
evidently
believed
appraisal and
price might
that Dovetech
was appraising
that
the
discrepancy
by the
in
fact
and valuable
collection of molds and dies than the subset that was finally
bought by Elcor.
The evidence,
Elcor bid
on
knowledge
that
the list
some
of
were
96 molds
missing
and
or
to find that
dies without
owned
by
any
others.6
thought
that, whatever
years."
the
number
Bevmar,
the
discrepancy
scrap
evidence that
plaintiffs
were
held
that
because
the
required
to
offer
expert
approach; absent
correct.
court
reflected a difference
value,
jury would
district
be
such expert
left to
"speculate"
on which
court, the
approach
was
testimony
____________________
6The 96 molds and dies were advertised as a lot, and the
Elcor
testimony is
open to
the inference
that its
representative was surprised when the post-auction survey
revealed fewer than had been promised.
-14-14-
to show negligence.
Murphy v.
______
1342, 1345-46
were
(R.I. 1986).
required
competing
between
techniques of
But
we agree that,
competing
concepts
appraisal an
if a choice
of
value
expert might
or
well be
required.7
Here, however, the evidence permitted the jury to assume
that Schneider's concept
conclude that he
values to many
the jury
of
of market value
had negligently
assigned excessive
to
market
huge discrepancy
suspiciously uniform
between
There is nothing
and proceeds,
the
failure (if
the jury so found) to visit each of the sites and inspect the
molds.
B.
B.
This brings us to
cause
the negligence
____________________
7Piletz' deposition suggests that he did believe that a
different method of appraising molds and dies than the
telephone survey used by Schneider was called for.
It is
very doubtful that Piletz' alternative approach was explained
adequately to permit the jury to reject Schneider's method.
But plaintiffs' far better case was that Schneider had used a
permissible method but botched the job by failing to do any
adequate inspection or make adequate inquiry.
-15-15-
required.
The
discrepancies,
Dovetech
of
several
appraised
missing molds
others have
evidence
A bit of background
suggested
that
there
were
different
kinds,
between
what
Bevmar
actually
owned.
The
and what
about ownership of
It
also appears
that
to a Rhode Island
the appraisal.
The
justifiable reliance
not entitled
to
district
court
because, it said,
rely on
the
was counted in
found
appraisal to
were
that
extent that
the
To the
items
owned
naturally
by Bevmar,
of
establish
items appraised.
not
lack
the plaintiffs
the
security
dies
had
reduced
was
no
value.
Therefore,
the
court
justifiable
reliance
on
the
appraisal
to
concede that
the
ownership
of
the
items
appraised
the appraisal.
At most,
dies,
property
subcontractors.
no case if
Bevmar
claimed to
Thus it is true
their cause
have
lent
to
its
of action depended
on showing
that
-16-16-
they
reasonably
Bevmar's title.
relied
upon
It seems
the
appraisal
to us that
to
establish
plaintiffs' cause
of
case
plaintiffs had
It is
to the jury
connection.
two different
and
In this
theories, and
One
theory is
not
that, but
have invested
and would
plaintiffs would
still have
their $3.5
their
own testimony
would not
on
have made
the
first
the initial
far
standpoint,
question
less
than
the
appraisal
said.8
From
this
to
Rhode
Island
or
to
Bevmar
____________________
8The testimony on this issue is not crystal clear but it
was adequate for the jury to draw such a conclusion.
And
given the importance the Crawford group attached to the
appraisal, evidenced by other facts (e.g., the inquiry to
____
Schneider
and
a
separate
inquiry
into
Ross-Dove's
reputation), the conclusion is eminently plausible.
-17-17-
subcontractors.
If
then
but for
the mistake,
not have
occurred.
cause.)
intervening
not matter.
Its
validity
very
much
does
matter
on
the
second
loss insofar
security
event
as
interest,
it
overstated
the
reducing plaintiffs'
of bankruptcy.
On
this
value
protection
theory, any
claims would be
recovery on this
for there
record;9 but
is nothing
Whether one
plaintiffs' damage
point
in the
this
the
misestimate of
speculative on
of
proportionately reduced.
second theory might
we
need not
decide
be
the
the first
Crawford's
appeal offer
reliance
justifiable reliance.
on
the
a different argument
appraisal
could
as to
not
be
appraisal by its
____________________
9Arguably, it would be plaintiffs' responsibility to
show which assets were owned by Bevmar and the extent to
which, as to those assets, the appraisal figure exceeded the
price received at auction. It is unclear whether the record
permits such an allocation.
-18-18-
consent of
Dovetech before
it could
be
undercut both
injury.
of
plaintiffs'
possible
theories
of
he
be distributed to financing
(Crawford) and
others were
he told Schneider
going
to rely
on the
validity.
Piletz testified
find that,
defendants urge,
that appraisers
on by third parties.
even if
the appraisal
Dovetech had
know that
Thus
caveat is
a jury
read as
or had
benefit
be described as
found
match
the list
of assets
agreement filing;
plaintiffs
included in
plaintiffs' security
-19-19-
certain of plaintiffs'
the
conditions were
bankruptcy trustee
plaintiffs'
security
proceedings
(a
had challenged
interest
challenge
in
that
satisfied; and
the validity
the
has
pending
now
that
of the
bankruptcy
apparently
been
dropped).
The
first and
injury are
last
of these
irrelevant so
far as
"intervening causes"
of
on
all.
alleged
The
cause" is
the attorneys'
third-party
certain
remaining "intervening
investments in
liens
against
its
Bevmar
be
property
committed
be
and
satisfied.
that
The
the client
instructions
had been
followed, either
the
or, less
failure of Bevmar.
There
was some
disregard
of
evidence
instructions,
of
the
attorneys'
but
very
little
is
not
defense,
especially
nor
especially
friendly to
precise;
an
and
supposed
about
Rhode Island
intervening
a
jury
the
cause
instructed
-20-20-
according
to the
latitude.10
think
that the
mistake at the
state's case
Measured
against
law might
such language,
evidence presented
closing compelled
_________
have considerable
as to
a jury to
we
do
not
counsel's alleged
decide that
an
loss.
Whether in
presenting their
defense defendants
could offer
CONCLUSION
that there
in the
appraisal and
While plaintiffs
may face
reliance,
causation,
and
explained
above that
negligence in
its preparation.
hurdles on issues
damages,
we
directed verdict
think
of justifiable
for
reasons
on those
grounds
On
remand
this
case
should be
possible.
The discrepancy
the amount
ultimately realized
with
the doubts
better
job
of
and
auction
appraised
by
Schneider.
value and
dies, coupled
appraisal's thoroughness,
the
price
humanly
On
explaining
appraisal
if
settled,
discrepancy
of
How a
the
jury
96
to do a
between
molds
and
will dispose
anyone's guess.
the
the
dies
of the
And even
if a
parties
respective
now
strengths
Money spent on
have
and
pretty
weaknesses
further litigation
fair
of
gauge
their
is a loss
of
the
positions.
to both
sides
recoverable.
case for a
think
Full reconstruction
jury is likely
counsel would
clients
not be
if they failed to
to be
especially expensive.
We
of their
effort to settle
this case.
The judgment
is affirmed insofar
________
as it
granted judgment as a
fraud
the
negligence claims.
proceedings.
matter of law on
The case
No costs.
-22-22-
is remanded
________
the claims of
for further