Dad Construction Co. v. Heimlich

24 Mass. L. Rptr. 230
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 6, 2008
DocketNo. 04CV0518B
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 230 (Dad Construction Co. v. Heimlich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dad Construction Co. v. Heimlich, 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 230 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Curran, Dennis J., J.

I.PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Dad Construction Co., Inc. brought claims for waste, destruction of property and negligence caused by eight Boston University students to a three-unit apartment building. The students countered with fourteen (14) affirmative defenses and six (6) counterclaims. They also filed a third-party complaint consisting of six counts, which, inter alia, sued the plaintiff corporation’s president individually. They removed this landlord-tenant dispute to the federal court. After a hearing, Judge Tauro promptly remanded the matter to the state court.

After a six-day jury trial, the plaintiff prevailed on 21 of 23 special verdict questions. Although the jury answered two questions in favor of the defendants, the plaintiff had conceded the issues involved in those two questions (regarding the defendants’ security deposit) well before this lawsuit was filed and indeed, at trial.

Presently before the court is the plaintiffs motion for attorneys fees and costs and the defendants’ cross motion to the same effect. The defendants have also filed a motion for recusal.

A hearing was held on all of these motions on March 29, 2007. For the reasons that follow, the motion for recusal is DENIED. The plaintiffs motion for attorneys fees and costs is ALLOWED, and the defendants’ motion is DENIED.

II.THE FACTS

On the eve of the 2001-2002 school year, the Chi Phi fraternity chapter at Boston University was evicted from university property. Desperate for housing, its members sought to rent a three-floor house from the plaintiff landlord, without disclosing either that they had just been evicted from another house or that they represented a fraternity. The parties entered into a one-year lease. A year-long “Animal House” atmosphere followed. The fraternity members and others trashed the entire house. Hundreds of people partied nearly every Thursday night through Sunday morning for nine months, from September until June. Neighbors complained; the police were regularly summoned; the landlord repeatedly admonished the students. He considered eviction proceedings, but feared that such judicial recourse would take too long and result in frivolous counterclaims. Thus, he determined to wait out the students until the end of the school year. All but two of the students did abandon the property after graduation in May; the others left within two months after that.

The students caused significant damage to the house. They pulled down ceilings and walls, yanked out electrical wiring, pulled doors off their hinges, and yanked kitchen cabinetry from the walls. Rotten food was left everywhere; vermin were a constant. The floors were caked with sticky dry beer. This was no ordinary college party aftermath; this was near-total property destruction.

The landlord sued the nine B.U. students and their lease-guarantee parents for property damage.

The students counterclaimed, alleging fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, unfair and deceptive practices, breach of the warranty of habitability, negligent failure to maintain the premises, violation of security deposit law and alter ego liability. They demanded a jury trial on all such triable issues.

Several months before trial, four of these same defendants filed another complaint in the Norfolk Superior Court (Docket No. 06-1418), Heimlich v. Friedfertig, against the plaintiff corporation’s president, individually. After a hearing, a Superior Court Judge found that the causes of action involved in both matters were the same, and sanctioned the defendants’ attorney, imposing $1,600 in costs upon him personally. She also dismissed the complaint.

In this action, discovery was contentious. At the pretrial conference, the defendants’ attorney predicted a “long trial.” Justice Brady issued a Scheduling Order to assess trial time requirements. Defense counsel planned to call 14 witnesses and estimated that he would require 17 to 18 hours to tiy his portion of the case. Judge Brady gave each side 10 hours.

In all, there were over 128 pleadings. Six pretrial court events occurred; the trial consumed six days.

On the Friday before trial, 18 of the 20 defendants settled. Two defendants, California resident Derek Heimlich, and his engineer/lawyer father, Alan, insisted upon their trial. After six days of trial, the jury found that Derek Heimlich had breached the lease, caused property damage and loss of income, wasted the premises, and breached a duty of care, as well as a duty of good faith and fair dealing. The jury awarded $18,200 in damages to the plaintiff.

III.THE DEFENDANTS MOTION FOR RECUSAL

The defendants ask this court to recuse itself on the parties’ motions for attorneys fees because “the defendants are appealing the judgment" and because various trial rulings were “unfair.”

Two reasons undercut such an effort. First, as to trial rulings, the defendants made no such claim until [232]*232well after the jury verdict was rendered against them; second, at oral argument on the present motion, the defendants’ attorney accused three other judges of bias in this case.

[TJhere were great problems with Judge Toro (sic)’s rulings as well.
sf: # sjs * * * * * sfc * * * * * *
The Courts feel that this case is a waste of time .. . [A]nd it’s not just related to your Honor. It’s related to other Judges that heard this [case] . . . (Tr. 18-19.)
I feel that the Court — not just your Honor, but every Judge has really heard the merits of this case just didn’t believe that it shouldn’t be this level of afight, and therefore, it shouldn't be in my courtroom. (Tr. 57.) (Emphasis added.)

Defense counsel specifically criticized federal judge Tauro, and two other Superior Court Justices. He offered this as to Judge Tauro:

. . . [Q]uite frankly, the reason why it was remanded, Your Honor, is because Judge Toro (sic) was not applying the law.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * sfc
[He] let attorney Maraño speak for 15 minutes. I wasn’t even allowed to speak. (Tr. 60.)
Now, Judge Toro (sic) deliberately chose to not apply the rules . . . (Tr. 60.)

He charged another Superior Court judge with inappropriate conduct as well:

[Judge D-] already granted $1,600 in sanctions [against me] * * * But it was done improperly. [Her ruling was] inappropriate as well . . . (Tr. 68.)

The plaintiffs attorney confirmed this procedural history:

[They play the] blame game for everything that happens to them.
They’re arguing Judge Toro (sic) [was] unfair to them, Judge B-[and] Judge D-were unfair to them (Tr. 9-10).

This case was tried over six days. In reflecting on it (see Commonwealth v. Eddington, 71 Mass.App. Ct. 138, 143-44 (2008)), this court finds no basis for recusal. Reduced to its essence, the defendants’ post-trial recusal attempt stems from one simple truth: they lost.

IV. MOTION FOR ATTORNEYS FEES

A. For the Plaintiff

Two reasons justify an award of fees for the plaintiff.

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Related

Linthicum v. Archambault
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872 N.E.2d 731 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Mass. L. Rptr. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dad-construction-co-v-heimlich-masssuperct-2008.