Foreign Car Center, Inc. v. Essex Process Service, Inc.

821 N.E.2d 483, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 806, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 49
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 2005
DocketNo. 03-P-667
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 821 N.E.2d 483 (Foreign Car Center, Inc. v. Essex Process Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foreign Car Center, Inc. v. Essex Process Service, Inc., 821 N.E.2d 483, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 806, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 49 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Dreben, J.

Foreign Car Center, Inc. (Foreign Car), a corporation engaged in the selling, leasing and repairing of motor vehicles, was in difficult financial circumstances in the early 1990’s. Its president and treasurer, Stefano Picciotto (Picciotto), was sick due to toxic fumes from a neighboring factory and could only work a few hours at a time. His wife, Judith Picciotto (Judith), the sole stockholder of Foreign Car, testified that both were “very ill” and “were trying to run [Foreign Car] on a bit of a string.”

A creditor of Foreign Car, Warren Five Cents Savings Bank (bank), recovered a judgment against it of $16,000 in November, 1993. Pending Foreign Car’s appeal, the bank obtained an ex parte writ of attachment and, after the appeal was dismissed, a writ of execution. Pursuant to the writs, fifteen vehicles of Foreign Car were seized and eventually sold. This action naming multiple defendants and alleging multiple claims arose out of the seizure and sale of those vehicles.2 Foreign Car was [808]*808awarded damages by a jury, but on appeal it claims that it was deprived of an adequate award and of its valid claims because of errors by both the motion judge and the trial judge.

More particularly, Foreign Car urges that the trial judge made numerous errors with respect to its claims of conversion asserted against the four defendants in this action: the bank; Essex Process Service, Inc. (Essex), a for-profit corporation organized to serve civil process; Essex’s employee, George Curran, a deputy sheriff who seized the vehicles; and Gaeta Towing Services, Inc. (Gaeta), the company Essex had engaged to tow the vehicles. Foreign Car also claims, inter alla, that the trial judge erroneously directed a verdict in favor of Essex and Curran on its civil rights claim, and that the motion judge erroneously granted summary judgment to Essex on its G. L. c. 93A claim.

1. Background. We describe the facts as could have been found by the jury except as to the plaintiffs civil rights claim; for that claim, on which the judge granted a directed verdict in favor of Essex and Curran, we state the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.

On February 18, 1994, after the bank had obtained a writ of attachment for $20,000, Curran, acting pursuant to the writ, went to Foreign Car’s place of business in Peabody. Not finding Picciotto there, Curran began seizing vehicles and instructed Gaeta to tow them away. Alerted by a neighbor, Picciotto came to the premises and was shown the writ.

Picciotto asked Curran to return the cars immediately. He complained that Curran was taking customers’ cars not owned by Foreign Car, that Gaeta was towing vehicles over snowbanks in a rough and damaging manner, and that Essex and Gaeta were taking away vehicles whose value was substantially in [809]*809excess of $20,000.3 Seven of Foreign Car’s vehicles were taken in February. In the course of Picciotto’s attempts to stop Curran, the latter pointed a four by four piece of wood toward Picciotto in a “very menacing” manner. Picciotto felt intimidated and was in fear for his life. Later, when Picciotto’s wife, Judith, came to the premises and objected to the removal of the cars, Curran patted his gun and said to her, “I don’t want to hear from you anymore.” Judith felt frightened.

Picciotto called the Peabody police. A police officer came and, after looking at the writ, told Picciotto that the matter was civil and that no police action could be taken at that time. Picciotto did not tell the police officer that he had been threatened by Curran.

The writ of attachment was never returned to court. Curran testified he did not know what happened to the original writ.4

On May 2, 1994, Curran returned to Foreign Car’s place of business. This time he was armed with a writ of execution in the amount of $21,409.44 and with instructions from the bank’s attorney to make a demand for payment. Picciotto was not there. A man named Paul Stunzi, who sublet the premises and operated a similar business, identified himself as Picciotto’s partner and said he was in charge. Curran served Stunzi with the writ. Later, when Picciotto arrived, Curran also served Picciotto with the writ and again made a demand for payment.

On that day, Curran took an additional eight cars. He testified that he relied on the bank, both in February and in May, to determine how many cars to take. The bank’s attorney thought otherwise and testified that he directed Essex and Curran to seize the number of cars that would satisfy the writs. The value of the cars taken was also in dispute. Picciotto claimed that the fifteen cars had a value of $67,000.5 Curran stated that they ap[810]*810peared to be a “bunch of junks”; Gaeta thought the cars were “in disrepair” and that Foreign Car’s lot was a “junkyard.”

Because of Picciotto’s insistence that some of the vehicles were owned by customers and not by Foreign Car, Curran sought certificates of title as proof of ownership prior to selling the cars at a sheriff s sale. When Picciotto refused to cooperate, the bank’s attorney obtained a court order requiring Picciotto to deliver the certificates. The delay in obtaining them caused postponement of the sales, and none occurred within thirty days of levy as required.6 See G. L. c. 235, § 38. At the first sale, Picciotto requested that the engines be started before the bidding began, but Curran refused. The total proceeds of the sales were $4,620.

The net expenses to the bank of the levy by execution, including towing and storage, were $18,280 as determined in the underlying action between the bank and Foreign Car. After the three sales, judgment in that action entered for the bank in the amount of $39,689 plus interest. That judgment was affirmed by this court. Warren Five Cents Sav. Bank v. Foreign Car Center, Inc., 50 Mass. App. Ct. 1112 (2001).

Foreign Car’s claims of negligence, conversion and trespass, relating to the seizures of February 18, 1994, and May 2, 1994, were submitted to the jury on special questions. After an eight day trial, the jury found that Essex and Curran converted Foreign Car’s property on February 18, 1994, resulting in damages of $300, and again on May 2, 1994, with damages of $500. The jury also found that Essex and Curran were negligent with respect to the February 18, 1994 seizure resulting in damages of $507.50, and had committed a trespass with damages of $4,921.25. As to the May 2, 1994 seizure, the jury found Essex and Curran had committed a trespass resulting in damages of $2,881.25. Gaeta was also found negligent on May 2, 1994, resulting in damages of $410.

[811]*8112. Conversion, a. Damages. Foreign Car claims error in the judge’s charge, which distinguished between two kinds of conversion and instructed that each had a different measure of damages.7 The judge explained that the first occurs if there is no right to take the property at all,8 or if the amount that is taken exceeds in value the amount authorized by the writ. The second is “a conversion in ... a technical sense. . . . The technical sense being the seizure was appropriate, taking the vehicles and storing them was appropriate, but something thereafter happened that technically didn’t comply . . .

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Bluebook (online)
821 N.E.2d 483, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 806, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foreign-car-center-inc-v-essex-process-service-inc-massappct-2005.