Chaput v. Scafidi

66 V.I. 160, 2017 WL 2602040, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 87
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedJune 14, 2017
DocketCase No. SX-10-SM-123
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 V.I. 160 (Chaput v. Scafidi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaput v. Scafidi, 66 V.I. 160, 2017 WL 2602040, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 87 (visuper 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(June 14, 2017)

THIS MATTER is in the Appellate Division on review from the Magistrate Division. Robert J. Chaput (“Chaput”) sued Donald (“Don”) and Patricia (“Patti”) Scafidi2 for money Chaput claimed that he loaned them and for the value of his late wife’s gun, which Chaput claimed Patti stole. After requesting and receiving a number of continuances, the Scafidis failed to appear nearly two years later when the case was called for trial. Rather than enter their default, the Magistrate Court instead went forward with the bench trial, but found that Chaput failed to prove his claims and dismissed his complaint with prejudice. Chaput petitioned for review and argues on appeal that his evidence was sufficient, that the court erred because it considered matters not in evidence, and also erred by not letting him clarify any inconsistencies in the evidence. Subsequently, while this review was pending in the Appellate Division, Chaput “filed a voluntary Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition.” Chaput v. Cianci, 64 V.I. 682, 686 (V.I. 2016).

[167]*167For the reasons stated below, the Court concludes that it can hear this review, notwithstanding the bankruptcy stay because the automatic stay does not apply to cases commenced by the debtor or to appeals taken by the debtor from such cases. Since Chaput filed the small claims case and also filed for review of the dismissal of that case, the automatic stay does not apply here and this review can go forward. After reviewing the evidence and considering the law, the Court concludes that the Magistrate Court’s decision must be affirmed in part and reversed in part. The court reached the right result regarding the stolen gun claim and three of the debt claims, but the court erred on one of the debt claims. The Scafidis defaulted and by defaulting admitted the allegations against them. Chaput’s only viable claim was for a sum certain. So, he did not have to prove that claim. Although the court may not have committed error by proceeding with a hearing or trial, the court did err in holding that Chaput had to corroborate his own evidence and further by relying on irrelevant evidence to rule against Chaput. The dismissal order must be vacated and this matter remanded for entry of a partial judgment in favor of Chaput.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Chaput and his late wife, Evelyn, met Don and Patti Scafidi years ago at an art show. Don is “an artist, a very good artist” (Hr’g Tr. 5:25. Nov. 2, 2011). Evelyn was an artist too. The Chaputs and the Scafidis became “good friends.” Id. at 6:3-4. in fact, Chaput “taught the whole family how to play tennis.” Id. at 15:22-23. At some point in 2009, the Scafidis — or perhaps just Patti — approached Chaput about borrowing money. Chaput had loaned the Scafidis “money [once] before, a sizeable sum ... and they paid it. So [he] felt reasonably assured” that they would repay another loan. Id. at 5:20-22. They did not, at least according to Chaput, so he filed a complaint against them in the Small Claims Division of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands.

Chaput’s complaint, filed February 11, 2010, named “Donald & Patti Scafidi” as the defendants. (Compl. 1.) The complaint asserted claims for debt and for a stolen gun. In support, Chaput attached the following documents: a February 4, 2010 message from USAA regarding a June 1, 2009 transfer of $6,000 from his account to the Scafidis; copies of cancelled checks from Chaput’s Bank of St. Croix checking account with three of them written to Patti; and emails between Patti and Chaput’s stepson, John A. Cianci, regarding the Scafidis failure to vacate an [168]*168apartment at the inn at Pelican Heights in Estate St. John.3 In the aggregate, Chaput’s complaint demanded judgment for $10,000, the statutory limit of the jurisdiction of the Small Claims Division. See 4 V.I.C. § 112(a).

The Clerk’s Office processed Chaput’s complaint, assigned it to a Superior Court magistrate, calendared the case for March 16, 2010, and then issued notice to Chaput of the date. Summons was issued to Don, but not to Patti, even though the complaint named them both as defendants. Don was served on February 11, 2010. Proof of service was never filed for Patti. Five days after he was served, Don filed a motion to request a continuance. Patti was “in the United States mainland receiving medical treatment” and he was “scheduled to travel ... to accompany his ailing wife.” (Def.’s Mot. for Continuance 1, filed Feb. 16, 2010.) This is the only document between the parties that reflects service by any of them on each other. By order entered February 26, 2010, the Magistrate Court granted Don’s motion and continued the trial to May 25, 2010. Another year and a half would pass before the trial went forward.

Four days before the next trial date, Don filed another motion, this time by fax, to request another continuance, until “the month of September,” because Patti’s health prevented him from returning to St. Croix. (Def.’s Mot. 1, filed May 21, 2010.) Don remarked that Chaput’s “lawsuit is frivolous, but we feel we must answer it and want to do so.” Id. He had asked Patti’s doctor if she could travel to St. Croix for the trial “and got an emphatic NO.” Id. Don concluded by asking the court to “please allow [him] to defend this claim at a later date.” Id.

The court did not rule on Don’s motion before the scheduled trial date. So, Chaput appeared on March 16, 2010 and was allowed to testify under oath about a promissory note he and Patti allegedly signed, a copy of which was submitted and marked as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1. The Magistrate Court advised Chaput, however, that he would have to repeat his testimony for the Scafidis because they could not appear. The court then granted Don’s second motion and continued trial to September 14, 2010. The court also told Chaput that trial would go forward on that date, even if the Scafidis did not appear. That did not happen.

[169]*169Instead, on August 31, 2010, Patti now sent a letter to the Clerk’s Office and to the Magistrate Court, also by fax, stating that Don had suffered a stroke and was in the hospital. “We of course have no option but to ask for another continuance,” she wrote. (Def’s Mot. 1, filed Aug. 31, 2010.) “I myself was never served,” she said, “but according to my husband I have to come there too in order to defend myself.” Id. “Why in the world he would be sued as well is beyond me,” she remarked. “He never received a penny from Mr. Chaput.” Id. Patti concluded, saying “[a]s soon as my husband is home, I am going to send my version of what happened.” Id. That too never happened.

Chaput appeared on September 14, 2010 and was told about Don’s condition and his inability to travel. The court granted the Scafidis a third continuance and rescheduled the trial for January 12, 2011 to allow Don additional time to recover. The Clerk’s Office notified Patti by email on December 9, 2010 of the new trial date. The next day, the Scafidis’ daughter, April Scafidi (“April”), replied, but from her mother’s email account, and told the Supervisor of the Civil/Small Claims Division4 (“Supervisor”) that her father still could not travel due to his health. She said they were “trying to put together an answer to Mr. Chaput’s claims, make you all aware of our side of this story. . . . More will come in a formal counter-complaint (We will keep it under the maximum).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 V.I. 160, 2017 WL 2602040, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaput-v-scafidi-visuper-2017.