Charles E. Fogarty v. Ralph Palumbo James Ottenbacher v. Ralph Palumbo

163 A.3d 526
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 23, 2017
Docket15-271, 291 15-273, 292
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 163 A.3d 526 (Charles E. Fogarty v. Ralph Palumbo James Ottenbacher v. Ralph Palumbo) 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
Charles E. Fogarty v. Ralph Palumbo James Ottenbacher v. Ralph Palumbo, 163 A.3d 526 (R.I. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice Suttell,

for the Court.

The matter before us arises from the August 15, 2005, sale of an approximately 360-acre tract of undeveloped land located on Dye Hill Road in Hopkinton (the property). The plaintiffs, Charles E. Fogarty and James Ottenbacher, averred that the sale of the property to an entity of which the defendants, Ralph Palumbo and Jonathan Savage, were principals, without the plaintiffs’ consent, was fraudulent; they each consequently filed an eight-count complaint in Superior Court. The plaintiffs also named Pilgrim Title Insurance Company (Pilgrim), which was the title insurance and escrow agent in connection with the sale of the property, as a defendant in this case. Following discovery, all three named defendants, Palumbo, Savage, and Pilgrim (jointly, the defendants), filed motions for summary judgment, all of which were granted by a justice of the Superior Court. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court in part and we vacate the judgment in part.

I

Facts 1

The property was originally purchased by Fogarty in the 1970s. In 1994, Fogarty formed a corporation known as Stone Ridge, Inc. (Stone Ridge), with three other shareholders: Grant Schmidt, M.D.; William McComb; and co-plaintiff, Ottenbaeher; each shareholder owning 25 percent of the corporation. At or about the time Stone Ridge was formed, Fogarty transferred ownership of the property to Stone *530 Ridge. At all times pertinent to this case, the sole asset of Stone Ridge was the property and the shareholders’ objective was to develop it, 2 In or about 2003, Brushy Brook Development, LLC (Brushy Brook), was created as a holding company for Stone Ridge. Title to the property was transferred from Stone Ridge to Brushy Brook 3 and Schmidt became the managing partner for Brushy Brook. After disagreement arose among the partners of Stone Ridge concerning the development plans for the property, in late 2004 and early 2005, Brushy Brook sought to sell the property either to a separate buyer or to one or more of its shareholders. As of November 2004, Ottenbacher became the president of Stone Ridge.

Ottenbacher claimed that he secured Pa-lumbo, a certified public accountant, and Savage, a corporate attorney, to assist him in either purchasing the property, or securing another buyer. Palumbo and Savage “produced * * * a buy-out plan” whereby Ottenbacher and Fogarty, through financing, would buy out Schmidt and McComb, A buyout agreement was drafted by Adam Clavell, an associate at Savage’s law firm at that time, at the direction of Savage. At deposition, Fogarty stated that he met with Ottenbacher, Pa-lumbo, and Savage and discussed receivership as an option, but that they ultimately did not want to go that route. Fogarty testified that, at this time, Savage “was [their] attorney,” and “was doing all of the paperwork,” but that he had not signed a retainer agreement with, or ever paid, Savage or Savage’s law firm. Fogarty averred that it was his understanding that “from November 17, [2004,] to probably towards the end of December” he was represented by Savage. 4 He further indicated that “Palumbo was supposed to then be [their] accountant for the new project.”

Palumbo and Savage were the principals of an entity named Boulder Brook Development, LLC (Boulder Brook), and plaintiffs claim this was unknown to them. On April 6, 2005, the four shareholders of Stone Ridge (plaintiffs, Schmidt, and McComb) executed an Asset Purchase Agreement (APA) for the sale of the property to Boulder Brook. By the terms of the APA, a closing date was set for thirty days thereafter. The APA closing date lapsed prior to a closing occurring. 5

Sometime in July 2005, Ottenbacher made an offer to Brushy Brook to purchase the property with a partner, Steven Kaufman. 6 According to Ottenbacher, Schmidt and McComb agreed on the sale of the property and a closing was set for August 15, 2005, with Attorney Mark Spangler engaged as the closing agent. 7 In *531 anticipation of the closing, $3,654,367.38 was transferred into Spangler’s- clients’ trust account. On August 16, 2005, Span-gler traveled to the Hopkinton Town Hall to review the Hopkinton Land Evidence Records and discovered a deed signed by Schmidt dated August 15, 2005, transferring the property to Boulder Brook (herein, the sale to Boulder Brook). As noted, Pilgrim was the title insurance agent and escrow agent in connection with the sale to Boulder Brook. According to plaintiffs, the deed was executed without their knowledge and, because the terms of the APA had since expired without a closing, their approval was required to convey the property. 8

II

Travel

Approximately three years later, on August 14 and 18, 2008, Fogarty and Otten-bacher, respectively, filed two pro se complaints against Palumbo. Thereafter, in 2010, both of their complaints were amended to include Savage and Pilgrim as defendants, they obtained legal representation, and their matters were consolidated. Fo-garty’s second-amended complaint filed in March 2010 and Ottenbacher’s first-amended complaint filed in April 2010 are nearly identical and allege, against both Palumbo and Savage, negligence (counts 1 and 2 9 ), breach of contract (counts 3), tortious interference with a contractual relationship (counts 4), interference with‘a prospective contractual relationship (counts 5), fraud (counts 6), and civil conspiracy (counts 8). The plaintiffs'also each raise one negligence count against Pilgrim (counts 7).

' Discovery ensued for approximately five years. In addition to the production of documents and interrogatories exchanged between the parties, Fogarty, Ottenbacher, Schmidt, McComb, Palumbo,' Clavell, Spangler, Gerald Vande Werken, who was Brushy Brook’s attorney, and James A. Houle, who was retained to appraise the property, were all deposed. Certain depositions and documents produced during discovery will be discussed in further detail as they become pertinent to this Court’s analysis.

*532 On March 6, 2014, Pilgrim filed a motion for summary judgment on the negligence counts against it, to which plaintiffs objected. A hearing was held on April 7, 2014, and, on June 9, 2014, the hearing justice issued a written decision granting Pilgrim’s motion. The hearing justice reasoned that there was “no genuine issue of material fact that” any “potential liability” on Pilgrim’s part “was discoverable as of August 16, 2005.” Unable to satisfy the requirements of the discovery-rule exception to the three-year statute of limitations set forth in G.L. 1956 § 9-1-14.3 10 for legal malpractice claims, plaintiffs’ 2010 claims against Pilgrim were deemed untimely.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A.3d 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-e-fogarty-v-ralph-palumbo-james-ottenbacher-v-ralph-palumbo-ri-2017.