Candelario-Del-Moral v. UBS Financial Services Incorpo

699 F.3d 93, 2012 WL 5458435, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 23188
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 2012
Docket10-1275, 10-1593, 11-2290, 11-2346
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 699 F.3d 93 (Candelario-Del-Moral v. UBS Financial Services Incorpo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Candelario-Del-Moral v. UBS Financial Services Incorpo, 699 F.3d 93, 2012 WL 5458435, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 23188 (1st Cir. 2012).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

OVERVIEW

This diversity suit for negligence presents interesting questions of Puerto Rico law in a complex procedural setting, but we will do our best to simplify. The combatants are plaintiff Madeleine Candelario del Moral (“Candelario”) and ' defendant UBS Financial Services Incorporated of Puerto Rico (“UBSPR”). Candelario’s ex-husband, David Efrón, also has a starring role in our story, though he is not a litigant in this case.

The lead issue argued here arises from a Puerto Rico judge’s verbal order in the Candelario/Efrón divorce contest — basically the order vacated a multi-million dollar attachment Candelario obtained against Efron’s UBSPR accounts. A courtroom clerk later wrote that vacating order up in a document called “minutes,” which never got signed by a judge and never got properly noticed to Candelario and Efrón. Claiming that the minutes were facially defective, Candelario insists that UBSPR was negligent as a matter of law in letting Efrón withdraw millions from certain accounts. UBSPR argues the opposite, not surprisingly. Ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment, Judge Casellas sided with Candelario, granting her motion as to liability. But acting on his own initiative, Judge Casellas granted her summary judgment on her damages claim too — even though she had expressly limited her motion to the threshold liability issue, candidly admitting that genuine issues of material fact precluded any pre-trial resolution of the damages question. Both parties filed post-judgment motions, which Judge Casellas denied, and both now appeal, fighting tooth and nail over liability and damages, and also over whether we should reassign the case to a different district judge if a remand is needed. When all is said and done, we vacate the summary judgment for Candelario — because there is an unresolved material factual dispute, which a jury needs to sort out — and remand for trial. And, yes, we remand the case back to Judge Casellas for further proceedings, because we see no reason not to.

BACKGROUND

Because the case comes to us on summary judgment for Candelario, we must take the facts and the reasonable inferences from them in the light most favorable to UBSPR. See, e.g., González-Droz v. González-Colón, 660 F.3d 1, 8-9 (1st Cir.2011).

When Candelario filed this federal-court suit against UBSPR in-2008, her divorce from Efrón (after sixteen years of marriage) was seven years old. But the two were still fighting over money, and there was lots of money to fight over — millions and millions of dollars, in fact. To give the reader a rough sense of what happened here, we go back a few years.

The Fallout from a Messy Divorce: Local-Court Proceedings

After shuttling between Puerto Rico trial and appellate courts in the early 2000s, Candelario got a judgment ordering Efrón to pay her $50,000 monthly till the marital estate was. divvied up, with interest on any unpaid amounts set at 10.50%. Efrón thumbed his nose at the order — Candelario claimed for the longest time that she never received my payments — so Cande *96 lario marched to Superior Court in October 2006, accused him of stiffing her out of $4,160,552.61 (a figure that included interest), and moved the court to let her execute on his assets to satisfy the amount then owed. A Superior Court judge obliged, ordering the attachment or garnishment of Efron’s property so that “in due course” money could be “sent to this Court in an amount sufficient” to cover “the principal sum of $4,160,522.61,” with “interest over said sum at a rate of 10.50% annually----” The judge signed the “Order for Execution of Judgment,” and the regional clerk signed the “Mandate of Execution of Judgment.” (Excessive capitalization removed.)

Two days later, Efrón moved the judge to set aside the attachment, and the judge set a hearing for November. In the meantime, a court marshal served UBSPR with the attachment order and related documents, and UBSPR froze all of Efron’s accounts that same day. About a week later UBSPR moved the judge to clarify the exact amount Efrón owed and which (if any) of his securities it should sell. UBSPR suggested that the judge could take up its motion at the hearing on Efron’s motion. But the judge chose not to do that and instead heard argument only on Efron’s motion.

Candelario and Efrón showed up for the November 2006 hearing with counsel. Because it was not a party to the litigation, UBSPR did not attend — apparently, family-law cases in Puerto Rico are not open to the public or to non-parties. Candelario and Efrón each testified about the amount of money that Efrón supposedly owed her. Ruling from the bench, the judge ended up vacating the attachment order for two reasons: first, because the amount attached appeared to exceed what Efrón actually owed (the judge put the number just south of $3.3 million), and, second, because another Superior Court judge was already handling issues related to the division of marital property. Candelario’s counsel then orally moved for reconsideration. But the judge would have none of it: “Reconsideration denied,” he said. “We affirm our finding. The orders of attachment are vacated....” That ruling puts Superior-Court Rule 32(B)(1) front and center, a rule that pertinently provides that the “minutes” of the proceeding “will constitute the official record” of the key events “that occur at the hearing in court and in chambers” and “will be signed by the judge and notified to the parties” if they reflect a ruling or order “issued by a judge in open court.” 1 Neither party got the minutes here until much later, as we are shortly to see.

The judge’s oral ruling sparked yet another series of pitched battles in the Puerto Rico appellate courts. Kicking things *97 off, Candelario immediately filed a petition for mandamus asking the Puerto Rico Court of Appeals to reverse the judge. Naturally, the Court of Appeals first checked to see if it had jurisdiction. After quoting Rule 32(B)(1) and canvassing the caselaw, the court said that the contested ruling “does not appear in writing in a signed minute or notified order” and stressed that a party cannot repair to the Court of Appeals until the judge’s “oral statement ... is transcribed in ruling or minutes.” So the court dismissed her petition toward the end of November.

Unhappy, Candelario petitioned the Puerto Rico Supreme Court a couple of weeks later for certiorari. Around this time, a courtroom clerk transcribed and signed the minutes and made them part of the Superior-Court file. The minutes accurately reported the judge’s ruling — on this the parties agree: “The orders and annotations of attachment are hereby set aside.” But the judge’s signature appears nowhere on that document.

Things stayed quiet until February 9, 2007, when Candelario’s lawyer wrote to UBSPR’s outside counsel, saying that she was challenging the lower court’s “verbal order” in the Supreme Court and that even though the attachment order “was verbally revoked” it “has never been notified” and thus “is not final and binding.” (Emphases removed.) Consequently, Candelario’s attorney demanded that UBSPR keep Efrón’s accounts frozen. About a week later, on the 15th, the Supreme Court rejected her certiorari petition because she had submitted no Rule 32(B)(1) minutes showing what the judge’s ruling was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
699 F.3d 93, 2012 WL 5458435, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 23188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candelario-del-moral-v-ubs-financial-services-incorpo-ca1-2012.