Catucci v. Pacheco

866 A.2d 509, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 24, 2005 WL 348150
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 2, 2005
Docket2001-280-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 866 A.2d 509 (Catucci v. Pacheco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catucci v. Pacheco, 866 A.2d 509, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 24, 2005 WL 348150 (R.I. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

GOLDBERG, Justice.

This case came before the Supreme Court for oral argument on November 1, 2004, on appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court in favor of the plaintiff, Giacomo D. Catucci (plaintiff or landlord), by Wholesale Countertops & Solid Surface, Inc., a named defendant, and three parties added as party defendants at the dose of the plaintiffs case (collectively, defendants): an unincorporated entity called the Countertop Store; Alice M. Pacheco, d/b/a the Countertop Store; and Anthony Pacheco, d/b/a the Countertop Store. The defendants assign error to the trial justice’s decision to add the new party defendants sua sponte at the close of the plaintiffs case. We vacate the judgment.

Facts and Travel

On April 26, 1995, plaintiff filed a complaint against Wholesale Countertops & Solid Surface, Inc. (Wholesale), 1 seeking to collect $10,296.49 in rent and utilities due under a two-year lease agreement for premises at 95 Hathaway Street, Providence (95 Hathaway or the premises). On August 23, 1995, plaintiff amended his complaint to add two new defendants, Alice M. Pacheco, d/b/a Wholesale Coun-tertops & Solid Surface, Inc., and the Countertop Store, Inc., and to request an additional $500 in compensatory damages as reimbursement for a fine imposed for hazardous waste allegedly left behind by the tenants of 95 Hathaway in violation of a city ordinance. Significantly, for the purposes of this appeal, neither the unincorporated entity the Countertop Store, Alice M. Pacheco, d/b/a the Countertop Store, nor Anthony Pacheco, d/b/a the Countertop Store (collectively, new party defendants), was named in the amended complaint.

The case was tried to a jury, and plaintiff called three witnesses: his property manager, Christopher Catucci (Christopher ór property manager); and, as hostile witnesses, Alice M. Pacheco (Alice) and Anthony Pacheco (Anthony or, collectively, Pachecos). The property manager explained that, in 1992, a new lease was negotiated, but never signed, between plaintiff and the Pachecos for 95 Hathaway. Although he did not personally negotiate this lease, the property manager believed that plaintiff negotiated a lease with both Wholesale and the Pachecos as *511 tenants. However, Wholesale was listed as the lessee on the unsigned lease. Because the lease never was signed, the parties entered into an oral, month-to-month “lease.” The property manager testified that plaintiff addressed every monthly rent invoice for 95 Hathaway to Wholesale.

The property manager testified to his belief that, during the course of the tenancy, a business called the “Countertop Store” began operations at 95 Hathaway. He recalled that on at least three occasions, beginning in January 1995, he received inquiries from the general public, rather than the contractors that usually dealt with Wholesale, asking for the Coun-tertop Store. He noted that a second phone line had been installed at 95 Hathaway, and he recounted a conversation with Wholesale’s employees about a new location. He believed that the Countertop Store and Wholesale were the same operation because the Pachecos were in “charge of everything.”

Alice testified that she served as the president and director of Wholesale. Alice testified that at one point she and her husband operated an unincorporated entity called the Countertop Store, but that business was unrelated to Wholesale. On January 12, 1995, the Countertop Store, Inc., was incorporated, and in its articles of incorporation, Anthony was listed as the president, secretary, and treasurer. According to Alice, the unincorporated entity known as the Countertop Store became the Countertop Store, Inc. Beginning in May 1994, the Countertop Store, at 1120 Eddy Street, Providence, was listed in the NYNEX white pages. The defendants have argued that the unincorporated entity, the Countertop Store, ceased existence when the Countertop Store, Inc., was incorporated.

The property manager received a notice, dated April 26, 1995, advising that, as of June 1, 1995, Wholesale no longer would be occupying 95 Hathaway. Alice signed this notice as “president.” On or about May 5, 1995, the Internal Revenue Service placed locks on the doors of 95 Hathaway and posted a notice of tax sale and foreclosure. Shortly after the IRS’s visit, the property manager found and removed a document posted on the door of 95 Hathaway giving Wholesale’s phone number with directions to the Countertop Store at its new location on Eddy Street. The Pache-cos denied ever seeing this document before trial. On October 27, 1995, the State of Rhode Island revoked Wholesale’s certificate of incorporation.

The property manager recounted plaintiffs claims for outstanding rent and utilities, clean-up costs incurred once the tenants left the property, and reimbursement for the fine imposed by the city of Providence.

After the IRS closed Wholesale, Alice admitted, the Countertop Store, Inc., finished outstanding orders for Wholesale’s customers. Alice testified that the Coun-tertop Store, Inc., first occupied the Eddy Street premises in February or March 1995. Anthony was the owner and president of the Countertop Store, Inc. Alice and Anthony both denied that either the Countertop Store or the Countertop Store, Inc., occupied or conducted any business at 95 Hathaway.

At the close of plaintiffs ease, the defense argued that there was insufficient evidence to proceed against the Counter-top Store, Inc., and Alice Pacheco, d/b/a Wholesale, and moved for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. The defendants did not move for judgment as a matter of law on Wholesale, although that corporation was defunct at the time of trial. The trial justice concluded that the record did not speak to any fraudulent *512 behavior by Alice that entitled * plaintiff to disregard Wholesale’s corporate identity, and that no evidence placed the Counter-top Store, Inc., at 95 Hathaway. The trial justice granted judgment as a matter of law for the Countertop Store, Inc., and Alice M. Pacheco, d/b/a Wholesale. However, the trial justice determined that the testimony of Christopher, Alice, and Anthony “taken all together * * * seem[s] to put some activity by a business — an unincorporated business, known as the Coun-tertop Store, at [95] Hathaway Street, pri- or to the padlocking by the IRS.” The trial justice decided:

“that here we have an argument that can be made that there are two separate entities functioning out of one location at some time prior to the padlocking * * * [and] even after the creation of the Countertop Store, Inc.[,] in January of '95, the Pachecos ran a parallel operation, a separate entity known as the Countertop Store, an unincorporated entity which was doing something at the [95] Hathaway Street address.”

The trial justice specifically referred to Rule 15 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure and posited that Rule 15 would allow for an amendment to the complaint adding new defendants after the close of plaintiffs case. Further, the trial justice noted, the case had been tried, without objection, as if the Countertop Store, Anthony, d/b/a the Countertop Store, and Alice, d/b/a the Countertop Store, were actual defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
866 A.2d 509, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 24, 2005 WL 348150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catucci-v-pacheco-ri-2005.