CARCO GROUP, Inc. v. Maconachy

718 F.3d 72, 2013 WL 2157875
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 2013
Docket11-4445-cv (L)
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 718 F.3d 72 (CARCO GROUP, Inc. v. Maconachy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CARCO GROUP, Inc. v. Maconachy, 718 F.3d 72, 2013 WL 2157875 (2d Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This suit involving breach of contract and related claims and counterclaims returns to us on cross-appeals. Following remand from the prior appeal, the District Court (Arlene R. Lindsay, Magistrate Judge) determined that Defendant-Counter-Claimant>-Appellant^Cross-Appellee Drew Maconachy’s (“Maconachy”) breaches of two contracts proximately caused injury to Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants CARCO GROUP, Inc. and PONJEB V, L.L.C. (collectively, “Carco”), and entered judgment accordingly, awarding damages, attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest. The parties now cross-appeal.

Maconachy argues principally that the District Court’s findings below were erroneous because proximate causation did not exist, and that various determinations as to damages, fees, costs, and interest were derivatively, as well as independently, in error. Carco challenges certain aspects of the District Court’s calculation of the attorneys’ fees awarded to Carco and the denial of prejudgment interest on that award. For the reasons that follow, we VACATE the breach of contract judgment, including any resulting damages, attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest awards, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. To the extent any costs and interest awards were based on the faithless servant cause of action, we AFFIRM. We REVERSE the District Court’s twenty-percent attorneys’ fees reduction and its denial of prejudgment in *76 terest on attorneys’ fees. We REMAND for recalculation of the award of attorneys’ fees in light of our reversal of the twenty-percent reduction and in light of findings to be made by the District Court with respect to proximate cause on the contract claim.

BACKGROUND

This is the second appeal in what is essentially a contractual dispute. Some of the background of this litigation is set forth in our prior ruling in Carco Group, Inc. v. Maconachy, 383 Fed.Appx. 73 (2d Cir.2010) (“Carco I”). In 2008, Magistrate Judge Lindsay, by mutual consent of the parties, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), presided over a bench trial on Carco’s breach of contract, warranty, and faithless servant claims, as well as on Maconachy’s breach of contract counterclaims. In Carco I, we affirmed in part the District Court’s judgment in favor of Carco and against Maconachy, vacated the judgment in part, and remanded the case for further proceedings.

Specifically, we affirmed entirely the District Court’s judgment as to the faithless servant cause of action. We also affirmed the District Court’s findings that Maconachy breached both the Employment Agreement (“EA”), which governed his employment by Carco, and the Asset Purchase Agreement (“APA”), which governed Carco’s acquisition of the private investigation business, Murphy & Maconachy, Inc. (“MMI”). We found error, however, in the District Court’s conclusions that all of MMI’s net operating losses constituted general (as opposed to consequential) damages, and in its failure to articulate the causal link between Maconachy’s breaches of the contracts and the damages awarded therefor.

Thus, the case was remanded so that the District Court could “determine what damages, if any, were directly and proximately caused by Maconachy’s breachfes].” Carco I, 383 Fed.Appx. at 76. Although the District Court had stated that MMI’s lack of profitability was “due almost exclusively to Maconachy’s breach[es]” of the relevant agreements, we indicated that the District Court should have “engaged in a proximate cause analysis to show that the breaches caused some loss,” and “then discussed potential intervening causes that might have broken the link between Maco-nachy’s breach[es] and any damages suffered.” Id. at 77 (internal quotation marks omitted). We further instructed that the District Court must “determine which damages were general and which consequential. It may award consequential damages only where the amount of loss can be ascertained with reasonable certainty. To award general damages, the court need only be certain that some damage resulted from the breach; certainty as to the exact dollar amount is not required.” Id. at 76.

In its post-remand filings in the District Court, Carco advanced three alternative measures of its damages resulting from Maconachy’s breaches: “(1) damages for its total lost capital investment in MMI West (or in the alternative damages for the loss of salary paid to a disobedient employee); (2) damages for the total loss of the value of the goodwill attributed to MMI West; and (3) damages for the loss of MMI West’s business opportunities from 2000 through 2005.” 1 SPA-98.

In considering the parties’ post-remand submissions on the issue of damages, the District Court stated that it had undertaken a proximate cause analysis, considered potential intervening causes that might *77 have broken the causal link between Maconachy’s breaches and the damages Carco suffered, and determined which damages were general and which were consequential.

With respect to proximate causation, the District Court stated that the trial record supported the finding (affirmed in Carco I) that Maconachy breached the EA and APA, and that Maconachy’s refusal to comply with Carco’s directives to, inter alia, implement sales programs — a key aspect of the valuation report Carco relied upon in its decision to acquire MMI — led directly to MMI West incurring losses.

Next, the District Court examined potential intervening factors that may have broken the causal connection between Ma-conachy’s breaches and Carco’s losses, as identified by Maconachy. The District Court rejected the notion that Carco’s failure to provide introductions to new business prospects was an intervening cause, because such a conclusion lacked foundation in, and indeed was inconsistent with, evidence adduced at trial. Certain of Car-co’s accounting decisions regarding MMI were also deemed not to be an intervening cause because the damages sought had already been reduced to exclude the acquisition costs of MMI. With respect to external market factors, the District Court (1) rejected them as an intervening cause between Maconachy’s breaches and Carco’s lost capital investment damages because the declining market had been explicitly factored into Carco’s acquisition costs' and expectations, but (2) accepted them as an intervening cause that broke the causal chain between Maconachy’s breaches and lost business opportunities and future profit damages, and (3) accepted them as an intervening cause between Maconachy’s breaches and loss of goodwill and return on Carco’s capital investment damages. 2

Having determined that external market factors intervened so as to preclude the use of two of Carco’s measures of damages, the District Court “stated that it ‘w[ould] not consider ... Carco’s capital investment in MMI West [ ] except to the extent that it included salary paid to a disobedient employee! ].’ ” SPA-106 (emphasis added).

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718 F.3d 72, 2013 WL 2157875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carco-group-inc-v-maconachy-ca2-2013.