A.C. Vaccaro, Inc. v. Vaccaro

955 N.E.2d 299, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 635, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 1288
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2011
DocketNo. 10-P-420
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 955 N.E.2d 299 (A.C. Vaccaro, Inc. v. Vaccaro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.C. Vaccaro, Inc. v. Vaccaro, 955 N.E.2d 299, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 635, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 1288 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Sikora, J.

This appeal presents issues generated by the sale of a small business. The buyers and sellers were familiar with the local industry and each other. After the sale, the disappointing performance of the business cast doubt upon the integrity of the parties’ negotiations and set in motion the following dispute. The resulting issues include the evidentiary use of a party’s failure to file Federal income tax returns, the permissible approximation of compensatory damages, and the reasonableness of the amount of an award of attorney’s fees.

Background. The following facts developed as undisputed or well supported by the evidence at a five-day jury trial in Superior Court.1 Brothers Gerald Collier, Jr., and Kelly Collier had worked in the hardwood floor sanding business for decades in the town of Medford. Brothers Anthony Vaccaro and Francis Vaccaro had conducted a similar business for decades in the neighboring municipality of Malden. Both sets of brothers ran their businesses as unincorporated proprietorships. The Colliers employed the name “Collier Brothers.” The Vaccaros employed [637]*637the name “AC Vaccaro Floor Sanding” (Vaccaro business); Anthony was the controlling proprietor. The Vaccaros planned to retire. The Colliers wanted to purchase their operation.

In June of 2006, the principals of the companies and their business attorneys2 engaged in negotiations. Through his accountant, Anthony represented that the Vaccaro business had grossed about $600,000 in calendar year 2005 and that its expenses had amounted to $320,000. Anthony also represented to the Colliers that the Vaccaro business ordinarily maintained a book of scheduled work sufficient to occupy its seven-man crew for four to six weeks.3 The Colliers and their attorney accepted these representations. The parties reached an agreement.

To capture the good will accrued in the Vaccaro business trade name, the Colliers formed the corporation “A.C. Vaccaro, Inc.” (corporation) as the purchasing party. Two documents accomplished the transfer. Under an asset purchase agreement the corporation agreed to pay Anthony $200,000 for certain equipment (three aged vans and twenty pieces of machinery worth about $35,000), the Vaccaro business trade name, telephone numbers, customer lists, and the “goodwill of the business as a going concern.” Under an accompanying noncompetition agreement (required by the asset purchase agreement), Anthony covenanted that for ten years within a thirty-mile radius of his Malden location he would not “directly or indirectly . . . or on behalf of or in conjunction with any . . . entity[] establish any floor sanding business.” The noncompetition agreement recited its value to be $25,000 of the $200,000 asset purchase price. It provided that any damages caused by its breach would include the corporation’s expenditure of reasonable attorney’s fees. The signatories of the two agreements were Gerald Collier as president of the corporation and Anthony individually.4

The transaction closed in late June of 2006. During the ensuing weeks the Colliers discovered that the Vaccaro business had [638]*638a book of scheduled jobs for only one and one-half weeks. Anthony continued to receive calls on his business telephones and — apparently out of anger at the Colliers’ discharge of his cousin and of the inherited work crew —■ referred some calls to another floor sanding company rather than to the corporation. As the corporation, the Colliers sued Anthony and achieved immediate injunctive relief against Anthony’s diversion of prospective customers.5 The corporation also pursued damages. Its first year gross income approximated only $210,000.

A Superior Court jury awarded the corporation damages of $25,000 for Anthony’s breach of the asset purchase agreement; $15,000 for Anthony’s breach of the noncompetition agreement; and $55,000 for reasonable attorney’s fees resulting from the violation of the noncompetition agreement. The trial judge reserved to himself the corporation’s G. L. c. 93A claims and found that Anthony’s representation of the six-week schedule of business was an unfair or deceptive act pursuant to G. L. c. 93A, § 2. The judge awarded the corporation $19,600 in compensatory damages and doubled that sum under G. L. c. 93A, § 11, by reason of the knowing or wilful character of the violation. By partial allowance of Anthony’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the judge eliminated the jury’s award of $15,000 for breach of the noncompetition agreement as redundant of the award of $25,000 for breach of the asset purchase agreement.

Analysis. 1. Vaccaro business’s Federal tax returns, a. Pretrial discovery of Anthony’s failure to file Federal tax returns. Before trial a separate judge had allowed for “good cause” the corporation’s motion to compel Anthony to execute Internal Revenue Service (IRS) form 4506 in order to obtain Federal tax returns regarding the Vaccaro business. When the corporation was unsuccessful in obtaining those tax returns, it filed a motion to compel Anthony to execute IRS form 4506-T in order to discover evidence that Anthony had not filed Federal income [639]*639tax returns for the Vaccaro business for years 2004 through 2006, nor paid Federal income taxes for those years. The trial judge allowed the motion and later admitted that information in evidence.6 Anthony contests those rulings as prejudicial error upon the ground that the corporation had not shown a need for the evidence sufficient to overcome the presumption of confidentiality accorded Federal tax returns.

Information of the omission of a filing of a Federal return is distinct from the information within a filed Federal return. “A taxpayer who is a party to litigation can [only] be compelled to produce Federal tax returns upon a showing of substantial need by the party seeking to compel production.” Mass. G. Evid. § 519(b)(2) (2011). See Finance Commn. of Boston v. McGrath, 343 Mass. 754, 767 (1962) (Federal tax returns are discoverable “if substantial necessity for production of the copies ha[s] been established”). Federal tax returns are conditionally privileged against discovery because, “[u]nless taxpayers are assured that the personal information contained in their tax returns will be kept confidential, they likely will be discouraged from reporting all of their taxable income . . . [and] from using all of the tax-saving measures to which they are lawfully entitled.” Town Taxi Inc. v. Police Commr. of Boston, 377 Mass. 576, 587 (1979), quoting from Payne v. Howard, 75 F.R.D. 465, 469 (D.D.C. 1977). In contrast, disclosure of a taxpayer’s failure to file does not cause those concerns. That disclosure “would not create a motive to falsify tax returns,” because the taxpayer is not filing a Federal tax return in the first instance. Town Taxi Inc., supra. Bestowal of a privilege upon a taxpayer’s relevant failure to file would unnecessarily tolerate that oversight or evasion. No cogent general reason supports a privilege against evidence of the failure to file.

Finally, if the same privilege for filed Federal tax returns existed for evidence of nonfiling, the corporation showed the “substantial need” required to overcome the privilege. It needed to obtain verification that Anthony did not file Federal tax returns regarding the Vaccaro business from 2004 to 2006 in [640]

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Bluebook (online)
955 N.E.2d 299, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 635, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 1288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ac-vaccaro-inc-v-vaccaro-massappct-2011.