Guzzetta v. SERVICE CORP. OF WESTOVER HILLS

7 A.3d 467, 2010 Del. LEXIS 570, 2010 WL 4456982
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 9, 2010
Docket34, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 7 A.3d 467 (Guzzetta v. SERVICE CORP. OF WESTOVER HILLS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guzzetta v. SERVICE CORP. OF WESTOVER HILLS, 7 A.3d 467, 2010 Del. LEXIS 570, 2010 WL 4456982 (Del. 2010).

Opinion

BERGER, Justice:

In this appeal we consider whether the Court of Chancery abused its discretion in setting the amount of an injunction bond. A party that is wrongfully enjoined may recover damages resulting from the injunction, but that recovery is limited to the amount of the bond. Thus, in order to fully protect the enjoined party, the trial court should set the bond at a level likely to meet or exceed a reasonable estimate of potential damages. In this ease, the trial court correctly rejected several items that appellants included in their list of potential damages. But the remaining items totaled more than twice the amount of the bond, and the trial court did not explain which of the remaining items were rejected, or why. Accordingly, we reverse.

Factual and Procedural Background

In 2007 Robert and Kathleen S. Guzzet-ta purchased 907 Berkeley Road, a residential property located in Westover Hills, Wilmington, Delaware (the Property). At that time, the Guzzettas owned and lived in the adjoining property. They purchased the Property in order to create a grassy play area for their children. The Guzzettas intended to demolish the existing structures and re-landscape the Property. In May 2007, the Service Corporation of Westover Hills filed this action seeking a permanent injunction claiming that the demolition would violate a restrictive covenant in the Guzzettas’ deed. The trial court entered a temporary restraining order, and then a preliminary injunction.

Shortly after being enjoined, the Guzzet-tas filed a motion, pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 65(c), seeking security in the amount of $10,189.56, based on an itemized list of potential damages. After a telephonic hearing, the court required the Service Corporation to post security in the amount of $5,000. A Master tried the case, and issued a Draft Report on August 5, 2008. The Master concluded that the Service Corporation should not be granted a permanent injunction because the applicable deed restriction did not govern the planned demolition.

In September 2008, the Guzzettas filed a motion to increase the security from $5,000 to at least $79,146.94. The trial court agreed to increase the Service Corporation’s bond to $10,000. The Master issued a Final Report in April 2009, and in December 2009, the Court of Chancery: 1) vacated the preliminary injunction; 2) denied the Service Corporation’s application for a permanent injunction; 3) ordered the Service Corporation to reimburse the Guz-zettas for fees and costs; and 4) awarded the Guzzettas $10,000 in damages. This appeal followed.

Discussion

The only issue on appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in setting the amount of the injunction bond. 1 Chancery Court Rule 65(c), pro *470 vides that a party seeking an injunction must give security “for the payment of such costs and damages as may be incurred or suffered by any party who is found to have been wrongfully enjoined. ...” The security, usually a bond, fixes the maximum amount that an enjoined party may recover. 2 Damages are those proximately caused by the injunction, and must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence. 3 But, damages are not fully ascertainable until the court vacates the injunction. Because actual damages are uncertain, and because a wrongfully enjoined party has no recourse other than the security, the court should “err on the high side” in setting the bond. In Mead Johnson & Co. v. Abbott Laboratories, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals explained:

When setting the amount of security, district courts should err on the high side. If the district judge had set the bond at $50 million, as Abbott requested, this would not have entitled Abbott to that sum; Abbott still would have to prove its loss, converting the “soft” numbers to hard ones. An error in setting the bond too high thus is not serious .... Unfortunately, an error in the other direction produces irreparable injury, because the damages for an erroneous preliminary injunction cannot exceed the amount of the bond. 4

The party seeking an injunction bond must support its application with “facts of record or ... some realistic as opposed to a yet-unproven legal theory from which damages could flow to the party enjoined.” 5 The Guzzettas, in their motion to increase the bond, attached an itemized list of their potential damages. That list included, among other things, $8,123.63 for additional property and school taxes, $1,564 for insurance, $8,000 for increased demolition costs, $550 for increased landscape costs, and $8,500 for lost use of the Property. Those potential damages total almost $27,000. The other substantial items on the Guzzettas’ list were $2,866.50 for a landscape architect, $1,532 for interest on damages, and $46,646.15 for the Guzzettas’ time off from work.

The trial court decided that the Guzzettas “may be able to prove damages resulting from higher property taxes ... and higher insurance costs, as well as something for lost use of the property....” 6 The court rejected their claimed damages for landscaping and arborist costs because there was no showing that those costs were proximately caused by the injunction. It rejected the interest on damages claim because there was an insufficient showing of out-of-pocket damages. Finally, the trial court found no legal basis on which to claim damages based on the time spent litigating this matter. Without further reference to the amounts in the Guzzettas’ motion, the court increased the bond from $5,000 to $10,000.

We agree with the trial court’s reasons for rejecting the categories of potential damages noted above. On appeal, the *471 Guzzettas specifically address only the $46,646.15 in damages for lost time from work. They cite Emerald Partners v. Berlin 7 as authority that such damages can be compensated under Rule 65(c). That case is inapposite. In Emerald Partners, the enjoined party recovered the value of the senior executives’ time spent dealing with the effects of having a merger enjoined. Here, there was nothing that the Guzzet-tas had to do but wait for the injunction to be lifted. In short, the Guzzettas have presented no legal theory under which their lost earnings would be protected by an injunction bond.

Even after excising the rejected categories of damages from the calculation, however, the trial court’s decision to set the bond at $10,000 remains problematic. We recognize that a decision fixing the amount of a bond is a matter of discretion, but that discretion must be exercised in a manner consistent with the purpose of an injunction bond — to protect a party that is wrongfully enjoined. It should be remembered that the bond does not entitle the enjoined party to any damages, and the cost of a bond typically is a very small fraction of its face value. 8

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Bluebook (online)
7 A.3d 467, 2010 Del. LEXIS 570, 2010 WL 4456982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guzzetta-v-service-corp-of-westover-hills-del-2010.