Glen Davis v. Brent Caldwell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 27, 2022
Docket2021 CA 000975
StatusUnknown

This text of Glen Davis v. Brent Caldwell (Glen Davis v. Brent Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glen Davis v. Brent Caldwell, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 28, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-0975-MR

GLEN DAVIS APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM SCOTT CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE BRIAN PRIVETT, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-CI-00126

BRENT CALDWELL; BRYCE CALDWELL; AND GULAM ZADE APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; JONES AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

THOMPSON, L., JUDGE: Glen Davis (“Appellant”) appeals from an order of the

Scott Circuit Court dismissing his action against Brent Caldwell, Bryce Caldwell,

and Gulam Zade (“Appellees”). Appellant asserts that the circuit court erred in

failing to find that his complaint supports the claims of fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud, and that the court improperly applied the Exoneration Rule. After

careful review, we find no error and affirm the order on appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In the interest of judicial economy, and as Appellant’s underlying

criminal action was adjudicated on direct appeal by the Kentucky Supreme Court

in Davis v. Commonwealth, No. 2018-SC-000535-MR, 2020 WL 1302688 (Feb.

20, 2020), we adopt its rendition of the facts as follows:

Glen A. Davis and his wife, Megan Davis, were married in 1995. After moving to Scott County, the couple had two daughters: M.D., born September 23, 2000, and a second daughter born in 2005. Their marriage began to fall apart and in 2012 Davis informed Megan that he wanted a divorce. Thereafter Megan noticed distressing changes in M.D.’s behavior. She became angry, moody, and afraid. She was very reluctant to spend time with Davis. M.D. was treated twice at a psychiatric facility for her self-harming behaviors, which included clawing and scratching at her own skin and banging her head against a wall. Upon being questioned by Megan in January 2013, M.D. disclosed that she had been abused. Megan reported the allegations to law enforcement on January 31, 2013.

Police opened an investigation and arranged an interview for M.D. at a children’s advocacy center. After viewing this interview via closed circuit television, a detective requested the family laptop and camera from Megan. The family laptop had four different user accounts – one for each family member. Police discovered four deleted images of what appeared to be child pornography dated January 13, 2010. They depicted a young female lying on a table exposing her genitals. Three of the four photos contained embedded

-2- data which indicated they were taken with the family camera.

Megan positively identified M.D. in one of the photos and determined that they were taken during winter in the family home because she could see a portion of one of the family’s seasonal place mats in the photos, as well as the wallpaper border in the background. The Commonwealth’s digital forensic expert could not determine when the photos were uploaded from the camera to the laptop, how many times they were viewed, which of the four family accounts the images existed on before being deleted, or when they were deleted.

At trial M.D. testified regarding several instances of abuse. She stated that Davis touched her “private area” one afternoon in March 2007 when she was six years old. She also testified that in 2010, when she was nine years old, Davis photographed her genitals and he told her that he did so because he wanted her to see what she looked like “down there.” She identified herself in the photos and also identified the walls and seasonal place mats on the table. She stated that Davis uploaded the photos to the family laptop and that they looked at them together. M.D. also testified that Davis raped her when she was home sick from school sometime in December 2012 when she was twelve years old. She stated that Davis overpowered her, and she was in excruciating pain during the rape. She was evaluated by the Children’s Advocacy Center in Lexington and her physical exam was normal.

Davis was tried for four counts of use of a minor in a sexual performance and one count each of first-degree sexual abuse, incest, and second-degree rape. He testified at trial and denied all of M.D.’s allegations. The jury convicted him of four counts of use of a minor in a sexual performance and acquitted him on all other charges. The jury recommended a sentence of twenty years for each count to run consecutively for an eighty-

-3- year sentence. The trial court sentenced Davis to the statutory maximum of seventy years in prison[.]

Id. at *1-2.

The Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed Appellant’s conviction.

Thereafter, Appellant filed a motion in Scott Circuit Court seeking relief from

judgment pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure (“RCr”) 11.42. At

about the same time, Appellant, pro se, filed the instant civil action against

Appellees in Scott Circuit Court. Appellant alleged in his complaint that his trial

counsel in the criminal proceeding, who are Appellees Brent Caldwell and Bryce

Caldwell herein,1 told Appellant in May 2014, and during the pendency of his

criminal proceeding in Scott Circuit Court, that the Caldwells would need $15,000

to $20,000 from Appellant to hire forensic computer experts to examine

Appellant’s laptop on which the Georgetown, Kentucky, police had discovered 73

nude photographs of minor girls. Appellant’s parents forwarded the requested sum

to the Caldwells.

According to Appellant, in June 2014, the Caldwells told him that

they had engaged Logicforce Consulting, LLC (“Logicforce”) in Nashville,

Tennessee, to perform the examination of Appellant’s computer. Appellee Zade

was the CEO of Logicforce. Appellant alleged that after his conviction on the

1 Brent Caldwell is Bryce Caldwell’s father.

-4- underlying criminal charges was affirmed by the Kentucky Supreme Court, he

contacted the Caldwells and requested all forensic reports produced by Logicforce.

According to Appellant, the Caldwells responded by producing for Appellant

several invoices from Logicforce totaling $15,125.00, but did not send him any

forensic reports.

Appellant contends that he then contacted Logicforce to request the

forensic reports, and Logicforce responded that it had no record of any such

reports. It was on this basis that Appellant filed the instant action against

Appellees, alleging that the Caldwells and Logicforce colluded to defraud

Appellant of $15,125.00.2

The matter proceeded in Scott Circuit Court, and each defendant filed

a motion to dismiss the action. The Caldwells argued that Appellant failed to

sufficiently plead his claim of fraud; that his claims for breach of oral contract and

civil conspiracy were barred by the statute of limitations; that the “Exoneration

2 In addition to the Caldwells, the complaint designated “Logicforce LLC Gulam Zade, CEO [sic]” as a party defendant. The Scott Circuit Court interpreted this as an action against Logicforce Consulting, LLC rather than Mr. Zade individually. In its June 18, 2021 order dismissing Logicforce, the court noted that to the extent the complaint intended to assert claims against Mr. Zade, all such claims against him individually were also dismissed. Appellant’s notice of appeal designates the Caldwells and Mr. Zade as Appellees, but does not so designate Logicforce.

-5- Rule”3 bars any claim for legal malpractice Appellant intended to assert; and, that

Appellant should not be permitted to enforce an illegal contract that the Caldwells

claim does not exist. Zade asserted that Appellant failed to state a claim against

Logicforce; a claim for civil conspiracy was barred by the statute of limitations;

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Glen Davis v. Brent Caldwell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glen-davis-v-brent-caldwell-kyctapp-2022.