Anderson v. American International Group, Inc.

32 Mass. L. Rptr. 280
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 11, 2014
DocketNo. MICV200301212B
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Mass. L. Rptr. 280 (Anderson v. American International Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. American International Group, Inc., 32 Mass. L. Rptr. 280 (Mass. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Davis, Brian A., J.

On April 8, 2014, this Court issued its Findings of Facts, Rulings of Law and Order for Judgment in this M.G.L.c. 176D and 93A action (the “April 8 Order”) following a non-jury trial in September 2013. Familiarity with that Order is presumed. Judgment consistent with the April 8 Order entered in favor of the Plaintiffs on April 11, 2014. The parties thereafter filed various motions and petitions seeking to alter or amend the Court’s findings, rulings and judgment, and requesting an award of attorneys fees and costs to the Plaintiffs as the prevailing parties. The Court conducted a hearing on the parties’ respective postjudgment motions and the Plaintiffs’ petition for fees and costs on May 22, 2014. The following constitutes the Court’s memorandum of decision on the matters addressed at that hearing.

1. The Parties’ Motions to Amend or Alter the Judgment

Both the Plaintiffs and the Defendants have filed motions, pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. 59(e), seeking to modify the judgment set forth in the Court’s April 8 Order on the grounds that the Court misapprehended or miscalculated the amount of damages to be awarded under M.G.L.c. 93A, §9.3 Specifically, the Plaintiffs assert that the amount of damages previously awarded by the Court (i.e., two times the amount of the judgments obtained by the Plaintiffs in their underlying Superior Court tort action) should be increased because the Court expressed its intention in the April 8 Order to impose the “maximum available sanction,” which the Plaintiffs assert is, in fact, three times the amount of the judgments rendered in the underlying tort action. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Alter and Amend the Judgment to Correct the Calculation of the Award under G.L.c. 93A, dated April 18, 2014 (“Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend the Judgment”), pp. 2-4.

Defendants, conversely, argue that the damages awarded by the Court should be reduced because the judgment amounts used by the Court in calculating the Plaintiffs’ awards improperly include statutory post-judgment interest on those awards from the date on which they first were entered in 2003 until they finally were paid by Defendant AIGTS in 2007 and 2008.4 Defendants’ Motion to Amend or Alter the Judgment to Correct the Calculation of the Award Under G.L.c. 93A, dated April 15, 2014 (“Defendants’ Motion to Amend the Judgment”), pp. 1-4. The Court will address each of the parties’ various motions in turn.

A. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Increase the M.G.L.c. 93A Multiplier from Two to Three

Plaintiffs argue that the Court erred when it concluded that the “maximum available sanction” it can impose upon the Defendants under M.G.L.c. 93A, §9(3), is two times, rather than three times, the amount of the underlying judgments previously entered in favor of the Plaintiffs. After further review of the relevant case law, the Court agrees.5

In a typical Chapter 93A action where the facts supporting the plaintiffs claim for unfair or deceptive [281]*281acts or practices are the same facts that support the plaintiffs tort or breach of contract claims, punitive damages are limited to two to three times a plaintiff s actual or single damages resulting from the harm suffered. See, e.g., Cherick Distribs., Inc. v. Polar Corp., 41 Mass.App.Ct. 125, 128-30 (1996) (Plaintiffs actual damages are those “derived from all claims arising out of the same and underlying transaction,” which amount may be doubled or trebled for a willful or knowing violation of Chapter 93A). It is this standard measure of damages that the Court applied in its April 8 Order.

Chapter 93A damages are calculated differently, however, when the unfair or deceptive acts or practices at issue constitute independent violations of M.G.L.c. 176D. Two Supreme Judicial Court decisions, R.W. Granger & Sons v. J&S Insulation, Inc., 435 Mass. 66, 84-85 (2001), and Rhodes v. AIGDomestic Claims, Inc., 461 Mass. 486, 499 (2012), hold, in combination, that a plaintiffs “actual damages” in such circumstances “shall be taken to be the amount of the judgment for the purpose of bad faith multiplication,” and that the plaintiffs damages are not to be reduced by the amount, if any, paid by the defendant to satisfy the judgment on the plaintiffs underlying claims. As explained by the SJC in Granger,

[t]o offer [the defendant insurer] a “credit” for the amount paid ... to satisfy the underlying claims would contravene the Legislature’s intent to impose a stiff penalty under G.L.c. 93A on defendants who knowingly or willfully fail to settle claims where liability on an underlying claim is clear.

435 Mass. at 85. Thus, contrary to the Court’s original, erroneous understanding, the maximum sanction that can be imposed on the Defendants in this case (or in any Chapter 93A case arising from a violation of Chapter 176D) is three times the amount of the judgments obtained by the Plaintiffs in the underlying tort action, irrespective of the fact that those judgments already have been satisfied. Id.

The question of whether Plaintiffs Odin Anderson, Kerstin Anderson and Katarina Anderson’s damage awards in this action are to be increased to three times the amount of the underlying judgments is easily answered. The Court previously ruled that this matter presents an “egregious case” deserving of the “maximum available sanction.” April 8 Order, p. 39. That holding is not hyperbole. It was, and remains, the Court’s intention to assess the largest possible monetary sanction against these Defendants in order to punish them for their prior conduct and to deter them, to the greatest extent possible, from engaging in similar conduct in the future. These goals are best achieved by increasing the amount of the Plaintiffs’ damage awards in this case to three times the amount of the underlying judgments.6 Accordingly, the Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend the Judgment to that end •will be allowed.

B. Defendants’ Motion to Reduce the “Amount of the Judgment.”

Defendants argue that the Court erred when it included the accrued postjudgment interest that AIGTS actually paid on the underlying judgments in calculating the Plaintiffs’ damage awards. Defendants’ Motion to Amend the Judgment, pp. 1-4. According to the Defendants, the “amount of the judgment” to be multiplied pursuant to M.G.L.c. 93A, §9(3), is the “judgment that was entered on the docket,” which “d[oes] not include the postjudgment interest.” Id., p. 3.

Defendants’ unduly restrictive view of the “amount of the judgment” to be multiplied in assessing damages under M.G.L.c. 93A, §9, for a violation of M.G.L.c. 176D, is incorrect. The amount of a monetary judgment obtained by a prevailing plaintiff in a Massachusetts court proceeding is not static. Massachusetts General Laws c. 235, §8, provides that “[e]very judgment for the payment of money shall bear interest from the day of its entry at the same rate per annum as provided for prejudgment interest in such award, report, verdict or finding.” See also Mass.R.Civ.P. 54(f) (“Every judgment for the payment of money shall bear interest up to the date of payment of said judgment”). The Supreme Judicial Court further has held that any accrued postjudgment interest effectively becomes part of the “principal” amount of the judgment, notwithstanding the fact that the amount of postjudgment interest may not be expressly stated in the judgment decree. Boyer v.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Mass. L. Rptr. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-american-international-group-inc-masssuperct-2014.