Harris v. Soley

2000 ME 150, 756 A.2d 499, 2000 Me. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 28, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 2000 ME 150 (Harris v. Soley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Soley, 2000 ME 150, 756 A.2d 499, 2000 Me. LEXIS 154 (Me. 2000).

Opinion

SAUFLEY, J.

[¶ 1] Joseph Soley, Monopoly, Inc., Jo-bar, Inc., Seamen’s Club, Inc., Christopher Stafiej, and Preston Wilkin 1 appeal from a judgment entered against them by the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Mills, J.) on a complaint filed by former tenants. The defendants appeal both from the default judgment on liability, entered by the court as a sanction for discovery violations, and from the judgment entered on the jury’s verdict on damages. We affirm the judgments.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

[¶ 2] Near Labor Day of 1997, Andrea Harris, Kimberly Nightingale, Karen Si-mard, and Michelle Dussault 2 moved into a large apartment that was located in the Old Port area of Portland and owned by Joseph Soley. Soley had promised the tenants that the apartment, which had previously been condemned by the City of Portland, would be repaired by the time they moved in. When they arrived, the condemnation notice was still on the door. Upon entering the apartment, they found it in an uninhabitable condition. They spoke to Soley’s property manager who indicated that if the tenants were willing to clean the apartment themselves, she would credit them with $750 of their $1000 monthly rent for the month of September. They rented a steam cleaner, bought various cleaning supplies, and cleaned the apartment themselves. Soley’s property manager also suggested that they buy a new refrigerator and deduct it from the rent because the one in the apartment did not work.

[¶3] Despite their efforts to clean the apartment, the tenants continued to have problems with infestations of mice and cockroaches, as well as a persistent odor of cat urine. A dead cat was eventually found beneath the floorboards. The apartment had no heat during the month of October. One tenant slept with blankets over her head, not only because of the cold, but also to keep bugs away from her. These problems persisted into November, and the tenants submitted to Soley a list of complaints including a broken skylight, a broken toilet, a broken garbage disposal, a leaking roof, and cockroach infestation. As winter arrived, snow would fall into the *503 living room through the broken skylight. When Soley did not make the needed repairs, the tenants stopped paying rent. During this period, Soley telephoned them on several occasions regarding the rent and spoke to the tenants in a rude and abrasive manner. In February, the property manager told the tenants that Soley had begun eviction proceedings against them.

[¶ 4] The tenants eventually found another place to live and had begun moving out by April 1, 1998. 3 While the tenants were in the process of moving out, but were away from the apartment, Soley’s agents broke into the apartment and took many of the tenants’ remaining belongings. Upon confrontation with the returning tenants and police officers who had been called to the scene, Soley’s agents indicated that Soley had directed their actions. Eventually, the officers and one of the tenants went to an apartment nearby and recovered some, but not all, of the missing property.

[¶ 5] The tenants then sought out Soley to request that he return their remaining possessions. They located him at his restaurant, the Seamen’s Club. According to one of the tenants, he replied that he would return their property only after they paid him $3000. 4 He then ordered them to leave and threatened to call the police and have them forcibly removed. Soley told the tenants that he knew where they were moving and where their families lived, a statement that the tenants took as a threat.

B. Procedural Background

[¶6] On June 18, 1998, the tenants brought suit against the defendants in a complaint that included claims for conversion, intentional infliction of emotional distress, punitive damages, breach of contract, wrongful-eviction, and wrongful retention of a security deposit. The court set a discovery deadline of February 1, 1999. As discovery proceeded, Soley repeatedly failed to comply with appropriate discovery requests, failed to make the apartment available for inspection, and, later, failed to make witnesses available for deposition. Eventually, the tenants filed a motion to compel discovery: The parties reached agreement on certain aspects of discovery and the court entered an order compelling the delivery of documentary discovery by December 20. When the defendants did not comply with that order, the court sanctioned the defendants by entering judgment against them on all counts, leaving only the matter of damages for trial. When Soley again failed to comply with damage-related discovery requests, the court precluded him from offering certain evidence in the trial on damages.

[¶ 7] At the two-day jury trial on the issue of the tenants’ damages, the trial judge read the complaint to the jury and explained that they were to accept those facts as true and would only be required to address the question of damages. 5 After hearing the evidence, the jury awarded each of the tenants $15,000 for intentional infliction of emotional distress, $110 for breach of contract, and damages varying from $250 to $1060 on their claims for conversion. They also awarded a total of $1 million in punitive damages against Joseph Soley, Monopoly, Inc., Seamen’s Club, Baker’s Table, Inc., and Jobar, Inc., and $4000 against Christopher Stafiej. The court entered its judgment in accordance with the jury’s determinations of damages, along with additional damages determined by the court and those agreed *504 to by the parties on the claims for wrongful eviction, wrongful retention of a security deposit, and breach of implied warranty of fitness for human habitation. 6 This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Entry of Judgment as a Discovery Sanction

[¶ 8] Soley first challenges the court’s imposition of a judgment against all defendants on all claims of liability as a sanction, pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C), 7 for discovery related conduct. Soley argues that the court abused its discretion by imposing the ultimate sanction without providing the defendants another chance to comply with the discovery order, and without issuing a warning that the court was contemplating the entry of judgment as a sanction. 8

[¶ 9] We review the imposition of sanctions for discovery violations for an abuse of discretion, but will more closely scrutinize sanctions such as dismissal or default. See Saucier v. State Tax Assessor, 1998 ME 61, ¶ 6, 708 A.2d 281, 283. Nevertheless, “[ajlthough we recognize the constitutional implications of dismissal and give greater scrutiny to the decision to dismiss than we would give to a lesser sanction, we will not lightly overrule the trial court’s decision.” Orlandella v. O’Brien,

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Bluebook (online)
2000 ME 150, 756 A.2d 499, 2000 Me. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-soley-me-2000.