Ida Espaillat v. Berlitz Schools of Languages of America, Inc.

383 F.2d 220, 24 A.L.R. 3d 1380, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 293, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5323
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 1967
Docket20087
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 383 F.2d 220 (Ida Espaillat v. Berlitz Schools of Languages of America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ida Espaillat v. Berlitz Schools of Languages of America, Inc., 383 F.2d 220, 24 A.L.R. 3d 1380, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 293, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5323 (D.C. Cir. 1967).

Opinion

DANAHER, Circuit Judge.

After a jury trial in the Court of General Sessions, this appellant had been awarded damages of $2,000. The appellee filed its motion for judgment n. o. v. That motion was granted, and on appeal, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed, 1 having concluded that there was insufficient evidence upon which to base the award of damages. We allowed an appeal to this court solely to consider the question of damages. Since we find error, we will remand for a hearing on damages to be ascertained conformably to this opinion.

Both the trial judge and the appellate court had accepted the jury’s finding that this appellant had entered into a personal service contract with Berlitz because of knowingly fraudulent inducement by the appellee. Her contract had called for employment for a year with compensation at the rate of $600 per month.

Additionally as a matter of background, we may note that the record shows the appellant, a native of the Dominican Republic, had graduated from Columbia University in 1942. She had been an assistant professor of English in the University of Santo Domingo for some seven years, and in due course had become chief of the translation section of the State Department in the Dominican Republic at a salary of $500 per month. Returning to the United States in February 1962, she had engaged in free-lance translation work. Before signing her contract with the appellee in May, 1962, she had specifically inquired whether her status as an alien would interfere with the proposed employment and was told by the appellee, untruthfully and knowingly, that it would not. Some two months later Army authorities had required Berlitz to discharge her because it had been learned that she was an alien. The appellant thereafter instituted her action 2 against the appellee.

Having concluded that the appellant had been victimized by the willful misrepresentation attributable to the appellee, the jury returned a verdict awarding the appellant damages of $2,000. The trial judge had instructed the jury “to award the plaintiff such sum as will fairly and reasonably compensate her for all the damages suffered as a result of this fraud.” Again, the jury was instructed that the appellant was to receive such compensation as “would make her position as good as it would have been had she not entered into the contract” and further with some lack of clarity the instructions ran,

*222 “She testified that she was doing freelance work. You must take the money that she was making as a result of doing this free-lance work and you must deduct from that the sum to which she has testified that she made after she was fired from this job which amounted to approximately $2700.”

It is fair to conclude that the trial judge, confronted with a motion for judgment n. o. v., realized that how the jury was to measure that loss had not been explained. What standards were to be applied in determining how the plaintiff was to recover $2,000 rather than, say, $12,000, or any other such sum, simply had not been spelled out, the judge may have concluded. At all events, respecting only the item of damages, the jury’s verdict was set aside.

In due course, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals found itself unable, as its opinion states, to discern evidence “upon which the jury could make a comparison between her earnings prior to her employment with Berlitz and those during the ten months after her discharge.” Under such circumstances the court said “[T]he award must have been made on sheer speculation,” and at first blush, so it may seem.

The appellate court had observed correctly that basically in tort actions “for fraud or fraudulent inducement to enter into a contract for the sale or exchange of property,” the perpetrator of a fraud is liable to respond in such damages as naturally and proximately resulted from the fraud, and the “proximate result” rule “should be employed in a flexible manner.”

Such a rule had been announced in Smith v. Bolles, 132 U.S. 125, 129, 10 S.Ct. 39, 33 L.Ed. 279 (1889) and reaffirmed in Sigafus v. Porter, 179 U.S. 116, 123, 21 S.Ct. 34, 45 L.Ed. 113 (1900). As the Court of Appeals in this case realized, where the problem presented involves the sale or exchange of property, real or personal, the rule so stated will govern in this Circuit, and the loss sustained by the victim must be made good. Where fraud has been established, our court has said, the relief to which the party defrauded would be entitled “would be the difference between the value of the property which he received and the value of the property with which he parted under the contract.” 3

It is our view, however, that-a measurement merely in terms of the value of real or personal property sold or exchanged fails of applicability in the requisite “flexible manner” when a contract for personal services has been induced by fraud. Our thought is activated by an observation in the Court’s opinion in S.E.C. v. Capital Gains Bureau 4 :

“There has also been a growing recognition by common-law courts that the doctrines of fraud and deceit which developed around transactions involving land and other tangible items of wealth are ill-suited to the sale of such intangibles as advice and securities, and that, accordingly, the doctrines must be adapted to the merchandise in issue.”

It may well seem that an issue involving loss upon the termination of a fraudulently induced contract for personal services comes pointedly within the scope of the language quoted. We deem it so that it is no answer to suggest that the damages recoverable by a defrauded party may be difficult of ascertainment. Here again the Court has given us direction:

“Where the tort itself is of such a nature as to preclude the ascertainment of the amount of damages with certainty, it would be a perversion of fundamental principles of justice to deny all relief to the injured person, and thereby relieve the wrongdoer *223 from making any amend for his acts. In such case, while the damages may not be determined by mere speculation or guess, it will be enough if the evidence show the extent of the damages as a matter of just and reasonable inference, although the result be only approximate. The wrongdoer is not entitled to complain that they cannot be measured with the exactness and precision that would be possible if the case, which he alone is responsible for making, were otherwise.” [Citations omitted.] 5

The principles thus stated generally seem singularly pertinent in the instant case as we scrutinize the ground upon which the intermediate appellate court had relied. Although its opinion discussed the “benefit of the bargain” rule and the “out of pocket” standard, 6

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Bluebook (online)
383 F.2d 220, 24 A.L.R. 3d 1380, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 293, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ida-espaillat-v-berlitz-schools-of-languages-of-america-inc-cadc-1967.