Dwyer v. Zuccari

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-01272
StatusUnknown

This text of Dwyer v. Zuccari (Dwyer v. Zuccari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dwyer v. Zuccari, (D. Md. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

CAPITAL FUNDING GROUP, INC., *

Plaintiff, * Civil Action No. RDB-19-1272

v. *

ALAN ZUCCARI, *

Defendant. *

* * * * * * * * * * * * *

AJZ CAPITAL, LLC, *

Plaintiff, * Civil Action No. RDB-19-3632

JOHN W. DWYER, et al., *

Defendants. *

MEMORANDUM OPINION These consolidated cases arise from the fallout of a nursing home business enterprise involving John Dwyer, Alan Zuccari, and their series of holding companies and subsidiaries, including Capital Funding Group, Inc., AJZ Capital, LLC, and CSCV Real Estate Holdings, LLC. The Court has disposed of the parties’ motions to dismiss and for summary judgment, and a bench trial is scheduled to begin on September 13, 2021. (Civil No. RDB-19-1272, ECF No. 245; Civil No. RDB-19-3632, ECF No. 219.) That trial will address Capital Funding Group, Inc.’s claim for unjust enrichment against Alan Zuccari, individually, in addition to AJZ Capital, LLC’s claims for breach of fiduciary duty against CSCV Real Estate Holdings, LLC, conversion against John Dwyer and Brian Reynolds, individually, and aiding and abetting against CSCV Real Estate Holdings, LLC. Presently pending are the following identical motions: Alan Zuccari’s Motion in Limine

to Exclude Testimony of R. Christopher Rosenthal in Civil Action No. RDB-19-1272 (ECF No. 203) and AJZ Capital, LLC’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Testimony of R. Christopher Rosenthal in Civil Action No. RDB-19-3632 (ECF No. 180). The parties’ submissions have been reviewed, and no hearing is necessary. See Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2018). For the reasons that follow, Alan Zuccari’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Testimony of R. Christopher Rosenthal in Civil Action No. RDB-19-1272 (ECF No. 203) and AJZ Capital, LLC’s Motion

in Limine to Exclude Testimony of R. Christopher Rosenthal in Civil Action No. RDB-19- 3632 (ECF No. 180) are DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE. BACKGROUND As this Court has already issued a number of written opinions in this case, the Court includes only a short summary of the relevant allegations here. (See Civil No. RDB-19-1272, ECF Nos. 17, 241; Civil No. RDB-19-3632, ECF Nos. 20, 215.) These consolidated cases

arise from a failed nursing home business enterprise involving John “Jack” Dwyer (“Dwyer”), Alan Zuccari (“Zuccari”), and a host of business entities they allegedly controlled.1 In Civil Action Number RDB-19-1272, one claim by Capital Funding Group, Inc. (“CFG”) for unjust enrichment remains against Defendant Alan Zuccari, individually, as a result of this Court’s granting a motion to dismiss all other claims. In Civil Action Number RDB-19-3632, also as

1 For ease of reference, the Court will refer to John Dwyer, Brian Reynolds, Capital Funding Group, Inc., and CSCV Real Estate Holdings, LLC as the “Dwyer parties” and will refer to Alan Zuccari and AJZ Capital, LLC as the “Zuccari parties.” a result of a previous ruling from this Court, three claims brought by AJZ Capital, LLC (“AJZ Capital”) remain: breach of fiduciary duty against Defendant CSCV Real Estate Holdings, LLC (“CSCV Real Estate”); conversion against Defendants John Dwyer and Brian Reynolds,

individually; and aiding and abetting against Defendant CSCV Real Estate. On March 26, 2021, this Court confirmed the parties’ agreement to waive a jury trial in these cases and to proceed with a bench trial on the remaining claims. (Civil No. RDB-19- 1272, ECF No. 245; Civil No. RDB-19-3632, ECF No. 219.) The presently pending Motion in Limine to Exclude Testimony of R. Christopher Rosenthal, filed by the Zuccari parties, is the sole remaining pretrial motion. (Civil No. RDB-19-1272, ECF No. 203; Civil No. RDB-

19-3632, ECF No. 180.) The Dwyer parties have identified R. Christopher Rosenthal (“Mr. Rosenthal”) as their expert on damages. Mr. Rosenthal is a Managing Member and partner of Vallit Advisors, a dispute consulting and forensic accounting firm. (Rosenthal Resume, Exhibit 1, Appendix A.2) He has produced three expert reports in Civil Action Number RDB- 19-1272: the “Rosenthal Report” (Exhibit 1), the “Rebuttal Rosenthal Report” (Exhibit 2), and the “Amended Rebuttal Rosenthal Report” (Exhibit 3). Mr. Rosenthal has also produced

an expert report in Civil Action Number RDB-19-3632: the “Rosenthal Vero Report” (Exhibit 5). In forming his forensic accounting opinions, Mr. Rosenthal assumed a finding of liability, but offered no legal opinion on the determination of liability. (Rosenthal Report at 1, 12, Exhibit 1.) The pertinent expert testimony proposed in each case is addressed below. I. Case No. RDB-19-1272

2 The cited Exhibits are the Zuccari parties’ exhibits attached to their Motion in Limine, the majority of which were filed under seal. In Civil Action Number RDB-19-1272, CFG seeks to hold Zuccari individually liable for professional liability settlements, expenses, and vendor fees incurred by a variety of nursing home businesses managed and operated by CFG and its subsidiaries and affiliates. Dwyer and

CFG’s original theory of liability was based on an alleged “oral partnership” formed between Dwyer and Zuccari. (See Compl., ECF No. 1.) On March 19, 2020, this Court rejected Dwyer’s partnership theory and dismissed all claims brought by Dwyer and CFG against Zuccari except for the unjust enrichment claim brought by CFG (Count IX). (March 19, 2020 Memorandum Opinion and Order in RDB-19-1272, ECF Nos. 17, 18.) In its March 17, 2021 Memorandum Opinion, this Court explained that the unjust enrichment claim survived

summary judgment because there exist genuine disputes of material fact as to the validity of the following obligations and whether Zuccari was unjustly enriched by CFG’s payments: (1) (1) Zuccari’s promise to repay the respective share of the February 2016 payment back to the partnership; (2) Zuccari’s contractual liability to various settling parties based on his status as a “disclosed or undisclosed principal” who authorized the representative of the LLCs to settle malpractice claims; and (3) Zuccari’s liability as a party to the settlements themselves, in cases

in which he was named as party. (ECF No. 241 *SEALED*.) The Court further reiterated that the unjust enrichment claim is not dependent on the existence of a partnership and is properly asserted as a quasi-contractual claim in the absence of an explicit agreement between Dwyer and Zuccari. (Id.) The Dwyer parties seek to offer Mr. Rosenthal as an expert witness to testify regarding the tracing of funds from CFG’s bank accounts to various nursing home settlements, vendors,

and attorneys that are the subject of CFG’s unjust enrichment claim. Specifically, Mr. Rosenthal’s expert reports analyze the payments that CFG allegedly made to the following nursing home holding companies to facilitate the settlement of professional liability lawsuits: Arkansas SNF Operations Acquisitions, LLC, (“Ark I”), Arkansas SNF Operations

Acquisition II, LLC (“Ark II”), and Lyric Investors, LLC (“Lyric”).3 He reviewed and analyzed the financial records of these holding companies for a period of nearly four years, including the review of thousands of check register entries, hundreds of bank statements, thousands of pages containing email communication detailing the financial matters of the holding companies, and dozens of invoices for vendor services and legal services related to defending the nursing home entities. (See Rosenthal Report, Exhibit 1; Amended Rebuttal

Rosenthal Report, Appendix D, Exhibit 3.) In addition, Mr. Rosenthal provided an explanation for the “cross-funding” that occurred between the various entities owned by Dwyer, Zuccari, and their respective Limited Liability Companies (“LLCs”).

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