1 In that action, the Bank is the plaintiff and brought suit against a gentleman named Steven E. Goodman in the Massachusetts Superior Court for Suffolk County. In 2007, Mr. Goodman entered into an agreement whereby he guaranteed all payment obligations owed by Village on the Common Realty, a Massachusetts LLC, to the Bank. After the Village defaulted on its obligations to the Bank, the Bank successfully foreclosed on the property. There remained a deficiency of $4,801,829. 00, and the Bank seeks to recover it from Mr. Goodman in Massachusetts Superior Court. The Bank named Auburn Plaza as a "reach and apply" defendant because Mr. Goodman has a minority financial interest in the company.
1 the Bank from enforcing the Massachusetts Order and correcting the public record. The motion alleges that Auburn Plaza will suffer irreparable harm without the injunction because the Bank has caused a cloud on its title, and "it will suffer the loss of a prime opportunity to refinance its debt." A party seeking injunctive relief has the burden of demonstrating that four elements exist: (1) [I]t will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted; (2) such injury outweighs any harm which granting the injunctive relief would inflict on the other party; (3) it has a likelihood of success on the merits ... ; and (4) the public interest will not be adversely affected by granting the injunction.
Bangor Historic Track, Inc. v. Dep't of Agric., Food & Rural Res., 2003 ME 140, <[ 9, 837 A.2d 129. An irreparable injury is an "injury for which there is no adequate remedy at law." 2 Id. <[ 10. The moving party has the burden to provide "evidence sufficient to support its claims of irreparable injury." Id. <[ 12. Ordinarily, "economic injury standing alone generally will not constitute irreparable injury." Me. Cent. R.R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Maint. of Way Emps., 646 F. Supp. 367, 371 (D. Me. 1986). In this case, Aubum Plaza has not demonstrated that a remedy at law is inadequate to compensate its claimed injury. To the contrary, Auburn Plaza alleges in its complaint that without an injunction it will lose an opportunity to refinance its debt worth $400,000.00 a year for the next 10 years. Thus, its alleged damages are easily quantifiable. Furthermore, the record does not adequately demonstrate that Aubum Plaza has sustained any injury at all. The complaint does not address the possibility that the current lender would close the transaction once the litigation is resolved, or that another lender would refinance the debt. Because Aubum Plaza does not affirmatively argue that it will lose the opportunity to refinance altogether, it cannot demonstrate a cognizable injury.
2 "The normal remedy at law is, of course, damages." Cyr v. Ruotolo, 1985 Me. Super. LEXIS 371, *18 (Dec. 27, 1985). Thus, an injunction may issue when "damages would not fairly compensate the plaintiff." Id.
2 As to likelihood of success on the merits, the recording statute in Maine incllcates that recording is permitted under the present circumstances: "Registers shall receive and record all ... copies of judgments and decrees certified by the clerk of courts in the county where the complaint is pending or the judgment or decree is rendered." 33 M.R.S.A. § 654. However, because recording the Massachusetts Order is a form of enforcement, the Bank must comply with the filing requirements of the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 8003-8004. Counsel for the Bank has indicated that it plans to comply with the Act in the near future in order to resolve any impediment to enforcing the Massachusetts Order, through recording or otherwise. As to Auburn Plaza's claims for slander of title and tortious interference with a prospective economic advantage or contract, the motion likewise does not demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits.3 Because Auburn Plaza cannot demonstrate irreparable injury or a likelihood of success on the merits, injunctive relief is denied.
The entry will be:
Plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction is DE
3 In particular, Plaintiff submits no evidence that the Massachusetts Order constituted a "false statement," as required for a slander of title claim. See Colquhoun v. Webber, 684 A.2d 405, 409 (Me. 1996). Plaintiff also submits no evidence of"fraud or intimidation," as required for a tortious interference with a prospective economic advantage or contract claim. See Rutlandv. Mullen, 2002 ME 98, ~ 13,798 A.2d 1104; Grover v. Minette- Mills, Inc., 638 A.2d 712, 716 (Me. 1994).
3 GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC - PLAINTIFF SUPERIOR COURT ANDROSCOGGIN, ss. Attorney for: GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC Docket No AUBSC-CV-2012-00187 PATRICK D THORNTON - RETAINED MONAGHAN LEAHY LLP 95 EXCHANGE ST DOCKET RECORD PO BOX 7046 PORTLAND ME 04112-7046
vs WEBSTER BANK NA - DEFENDANT
Attorney for: WEBSTER BANK NA CHRISTOPHER P MULLIGAN - RETAINED 12/31/2012 BOSEN & SPRINGER PLLC 96 CHESTNUT STREET PORTSMOUTH NH 03801
Filing Document: COMPLAINT Minor Case Type: DECLARATORY JUDGMENT Filing Date: 12/13/2012
Docket Events: 12/13/2012 FILING DOCUMENT - COMPLAINT FILED ON 12/13/2012
12/13/2012 Party(s): GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC ATTORNEY - RETAINED ENTERED ON 12/13/2012 Plaintiff's Attorney: PATRICK D THORNTON
12/13/2012 CERTIFY/NOTIFICATION - CASE FILE NOTICE SENT ON 12/13/2012
12/13/2012 Party(s): GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC MOTION - MOTION PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION FILED ON 12/13/2012 WITH DRAFT ORDER
12/17/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA OTHER FILING - ENTRY OF APPEARANCE FILED ON 12/17/2012 CHRISTOPHER MULLIGAN
12/17/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA OTHER FILING - OPPOSING MEMORANDUM FILED ON 12/17/2012 OBJECTION TO REQUEST FOR TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER
12/31/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA RESPONSIVE PLEADING - ANSWER & COUNTERCLAIM FILED ON 12/31/2012
12/31/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA ATTORNEY - RETAINED ENTERED ON 12/31/2012 Defendant's Attorney: CHRISTOPHER P MULLIGAN
12/31/2012 ORDER - SCHEDULING ORDER ENTERED ON 12/31/2012 MARYGAY KENNEDY , JUDGE ORDERED INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE AT THE SPECIFIC DIRECTION OF THE COURT. COPIES TO PARTIES/COUNSEL
Page 1 of 2 Printed on: 02/19/2013 STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT ANDROSCOGGIN, ss. CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV(12-1~7 I 7 (Y)Cdt; A NY ~ (vI :lt-j ;)D I GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY, LLC, Plaintiff ORDER ON PLAINTIFF'S v. RECElVED & FILED MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT JUN 2 4 2013 WEBSTER BANK, N.A., Defendant ANDROSCOGGIN SUPERinR r,nt IRT
Before the Court is Plaintiff GFI Auburn Plaza's motion for partial summary
judgment with respect to Count I of its complaint against Defendant Webster Bank. Count
I seeks a declaration that Defendant had a Massachusetts injunction against Plaintiff
improperly recorded in the Androscoggin County Registry of Deeds, and that the
injunction "has no effect on the title of Auburn Plaza's real property, or its ability to
mortgage the same."
BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Plaintiff GFI Aubum
Plaza Realty, LLC (Auburn Plaza) and Defendant Webster Bank (the Bank) are involved in
ongoing litigation in the Massachusetts Superior Court for Suffolk County (the
Massachusetts litigation). In that action, commenced February 28, 2011, the Bank as
plaintiff sued Steven E. Goodman pursuant to a personal guarantee he made on certain
obligations of another entity. 1 The Bank named Auburn Plaza as a "reach and apply"
1 In 2007-, Mr. Goodman entered into an agreement whereby he guaranteed all payment obligations owed by Village on the Common Realty, a Massachusetts LLC, to the Bank. After Village defaulted on its obligations to the Bank, the Bank successfully foreclosed on the property. There remained a deficiency of $4,801 ,829.00, and the Bank seeks to recover it from Mr. Goodman in Massachusetts Superior Court.
1 defendant because Mr. Goodman purported to have a minority financial interest in the
company.
On April 22, 2011, the Massachusetts Superior Court entered an order granting a
preliminary injunction in favor of the Bank (the Massachusetts injunction). The
Massachusetts injunction enjoined reach and apply defendant Auburn Plaza from
"conveying, assigning, transferring, pledging, encumbering, mortgaging, rece1vmg,
liquidating, dissipating or in any manner disposing of the interest of . . . Steven E.
Goodman in [Auburn Plaza] or in any other asset which [Auburn Plaza] may hold for the
benefit of Steven E. Goodman." 2 Thus, the Massachusetts injunction essentially froze Mr.
Goodman's interest in Auburn Plaza so that it would be available in the event the Bank
succeeded against Mr. Goodman.
On April 27, 2011, the Bank caused a copy of the Massachusetts injunction to be
recorded in the Androscoggin County Registry of Deeds. The Bank concedes that it did
not submit to the jurisdiction of any Maine court under the Uniform Enforcement of
Foreign Judgments Act, 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 8003, 8004, before recording the Massachusetts
injunction.
Auburn Plaza owns real property located at 730 Center Street, Auburn, by virtue of
a deed recorded in the Androscoggin County Registry of Deeds. Auburn Plaza attempted
to refinance the property, and discovered that the Massachusetts injunction had been
recorded. As a result, the lender indicated that it would not close the deal until the
injunction was released of record?
2 Similarly, it enjoined Mr. Goodman himself from taking any of those actions with respect to his interest in Auburn Plaza. 3 The Bank objects to this fact on the basis that the record citation is defective. The Court agrees; however, the fact is not material because it relates to Auburn Plaza's claimed damages, which are not at issue here. The Court includes it here for context.
2 On December 13, 2012, Auburn Plaza, now as plaintiff, brought the current suit
against the Bank as defendant. At issue here, Count I (declaratory judgment) seeks a
declaration that the Massachusetts injunction was improperly recorded, and that it "has no
effect on the title of Auburn Plaza's real property, or its ability to mortgage the same." 4
In its statement of additional material facts, the Bank states a range of facts meaning
to show that Mr. Goodman was "dissociated" as a member at the time of the
Massachusetts injunction and/ or that the LLC was actually dissolved. 5 Auburn Plaza
admits all of these facts, but they are not material to the issues on summary judgment. It
seems that the Bank is trying to undermine Mr. Goodman's affidavit by showing that he is
no longer a member or manager, but it does nothing to impugn his personal knowledge of
the relevant facts. Rule 56 directs, "affidavits shall be made on personal knowledge ...
and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated
therein." M.R. Civ. P. 56( e). Mr. Goodman attests that the facts in his affidavit are derived
from his own personal knowledge of Auburn Plaza's business, as well as his review and
understanding of the records of the company. Whether he should have been acting as
manager and whether Auburn Plaza should have been conducting business at that time
4 Count II alleges that the act of recording constituted slander of title "inasmuch as the Order should have no effect on real property in Maine." Count III alleges that the Bank is liable for interference with a contract or prospective economic advantage.
5 Specifically, in opposing the injunction as part of the Massachusetts litigation, Auburn Plaza
maintained that Mr. Goodman held a 25% ownership interest in the LLC. In January 2013, however, Auburn Plaza sued the Bank in a separate suit alleging that Auburn Plaza was arranged in such a fashion that Mr. Goodman was "dissociated" as a member at the time of the injunction. At that time, Mr. Goodman had a 50% ownership interest in an entity called GFI Auburn Member, LLC, which in turn had a 50% ownership interest in Auburn Plaza. Under the terms of Auburn Member's operating agreement, Mr. Goodman would have been dissociated as a member of Auburn Member and unable to act as a manager. With Mr. Goodman dissociated, Auburn Member should have been dissolved, which would cause Auburn Plaza to dissolve.
3 have nothing to do with his personal knowledge, and the Bank does not actually question
his personal knowledge.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when review of the parties' statements of
material facts and the record evidence demonstrate that there is no dispute over any
genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. M.R. Civ. P. 56(c); Beal v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2010 ME 20, !][ 11, 989 A.2d 733. Put
differently, summary judgment is a "procedural mechanism" suitable for resolving "those
matters that may be decided without fact-finding." Curtis v. Porter, 2001 ME 158, !][ 7, 784
A.2d 18.
DISCUSSION
Count I for declaratory judgment really contains two separate requests: First, a
declaration that the Bank improperly recorded the Massachusetts injunction, and second, a
declaration that the injunction "has no effect on the title of Auburn Plaza's real property,
or its ability to mortgage the same."
As to the second part of the inquiry - whether the Massachusetts injunction affects
title to Auburn Plaza's real property- Mr. Goodman's interest in Auburn Plaza does not
include an interest in its real estate. The only interest that matters in this context is that
which could be transferred between parties as a mode of recovery. In LLC parlance, this is
the "transferrable interest." 31 M.R.S.A. § 1571. "On application to a court of competent
jurisdiction by any judgment creditor of a member or transferee [of a LCC], the court may
charge the transferable interest of the judgment debtor with payment of the unsatisfied
amount of the judgment with interest." 31 M.R.S.A. § 1573(1) (emphasis added). A
member's "transferable interest" is defined as "the right, as originally associated with a
person's capacity as a member, to receive distributions from a limited liability company in
4 accordance with the limited liability company agreement, whether or not the person
remains a member or continues to own any part of the right." Id. § 1502(29). Directly on
point: "a judgment creditor ... has no right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise
legal or equitable remedies with respect to, the property of a limited liability company."
Id. § 1573(6).
This means that if the Bank recovers from Mr. Goodman in the Massachusetts
litigation, it may be entitled only to his "transferable interest" -essentially distributions -
and not the property of the LLC itself. It would be nonsensical to interpret the
Massachusetts injunction as encompassing a broader interest than that to which the Bank
would be entitled if it prevails. Thus, where the Massachusetts injunction freezes Mr.
Goodman's "interest in" Auburn Plaza, it does not affect title to the company's real
property or its ability to mortgage the same.
Furthermore, the Bank has not pointed to any "other asset which [Auburn Plaza]
may hold for the benefit of Steven E. Goodman," as described by the Massachusetts
injunction. An LLC does not hold its assets "for the benefit of" its members. That is a core
purpose of forming an LLC.
As to the first inquiry- whether the recording was proper- the Bank must comply
with the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act because recording the
Massachusetts injunction is a form of enforcement. 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 8003, 8004. This
includes filing the judgment with a clerk of District or Superior court, and providing
appropriate contact information so that the court can provide notice to the affected parties.
Id. "No execution or other process for enforcement of a foreign judgment filed hereunder
shall issue until 30 days after the date the judgment is filed." Id. The Bank concedes
that it did not submit to the jurisdiction of any Maine court under the Enforcement Act
5 before recording the Massachusetts injunction. The Bank did not comply with the
Enforcement Act, and, thus, the recording is invalid.
Furthermore, the recording is inappropriate because in this case it can only
accomplish a misguided result. The Court recognizes that there is nothing in the
recording statute that expressly prohibits this sort of recording. 6 However, the ordinary
purpose of recording is to track title to real property, and the Court determined that Mr.
Goodman's interest consists only of his transferrable interest and not any interest in
Auburn Plaza's real property or other assets. Recording was not the proper mechanism to
attach Mr. Goodman's transferrable interest in Auburn Plaza.
The entry is: The Court GRANTS the Plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment.
DATE/
6 "Registers shall receive and record all ... copies of judgments and decrees certified by the clerk of
courts in the county where the complaint is pending or the judgment or decree is rendered." 33 M.R.S.A. § 654.
6 GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC - PLAINTIFF SUPERIOR COURT ANDROSCOGGIN, ss. Attorney for: GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC Docket No AUBSC-CV-2012-00187 PATRICK D THORNTON - RETAINED MONAGHAN LEAHY LLP 95 EXCHANGE ST DOCKET RECORD PO BOX 7046 PORTLAND ME 04112-7046
Attorney for: WEBSTER BANK NA CHRISTOPHER P MULLIGAN - RETAINED 12/31/2012 BOSEN & SPRINGER PLLC 96 CHESTNUT STREET PORTSMOUTH NH 03801
Filing Document: COMPLAINT Minor Case Type: DECLARATORY JUDGMENT Filing Date: 12/13/2012
Docket Events: 12/13/2012 FILING DOCUMENT - COMPLAINT FILED ON 12/13/2012
12/13/2012 Party(s): GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC ATTORNEY - RETAINED ENTERED ON 12/13/2012 Plaintiff's Attorney: PATRICK D THORNTON
12/13/2012 CERTIFY/NOTIFICATION - CASE FILE NOTICE SENT ON 12/13/2012
12/13/2012 Party(s): GFI AUBURN PLAZA REALTY LLC MOTION - MOTION PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION FILED ON 12/13/2012 WITH DRAFT ORDER
12/17/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA OTHER FILING - ENTRY OF APPEARANCE FILED ON 12/17/2012 CHRISTOPHER MULLIGAN
12/17/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA OTHER FILING - OPPOSING MEMORANDUM FILED ON 12/17/2012 OBJECTION TO REQUEST FOR TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER
12/31/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA RESPONSIVE PLEADING - ANSWER & COUNTERCLAIM FILED ON 12/31/2012
12/31/2012 Party(s): WEBSTER BANK NA ATTORNEY - RETAINED ENTERED ON 12/31/2012 Defendant's Attorney: CHRISTOPHER P MULLIGAN
12/31/2012 ORDER - SCHEDULING ORDER ENTERED ON 12/31/2012 MARYGAY KENNEDY , JUDGE ORDERED INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE AT THE SPECIFIC DIRECTION OF THE COURT. COPIES TO PARTIES/COUNSEL
Page 1 of 3 Printed on: 07/02/2013