Jill Ruderman v. Kathy Pritchard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 20, 2022
Docket0024222
StatusPublished

This text of Jill Ruderman v. Kathy Pritchard (Jill Ruderman v. Kathy Pritchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jill Ruderman v. Kathy Pritchard, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges AtLee and Malveaux PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

JILL RUDERMAN OPINION BY v. Record No. 0024-22-2 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER DECEMBER 20, 2022 KATHY PRITCHARD

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SPOTSYLVANIA COUNTY William E. Glover, Judge

(Matthew B. Kaplan; The Kaplan Law Firm, on briefs), for appellant. Appellant submitting on briefs.

Tamara L. Tucker (Tucker Law Firm, PLC, on brief), for appellee.

Jill Ruderman appeals a circuit court judgment that awarded money damages and a return

of personal property to Kathy Pritchard in her de novo appeal of a detinue claim from the general

district court.1 Ruderman contends that the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to

permit Pritchard to file an amended complaint increasing her ad damnum beyond the

jurisdictional limit of the district court. Consequently, she argues that the circuit court erred by

denying her motion to dismiss. We hold that the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction

to permit the filing of the amended complaint and to enter judgment on it. As a result, we vacate

the circuit court’s judgment, dismiss the amended complaint, and remand the case for further

proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

1 After briefing concluded and oral argument was scheduled, Ruderman’s counsel notified this Court that Ruderman had died. As permitted by Code § 8.01-20, the Court exercises its discretion to “retain jurisdiction and enter judgment or decree in the case as if” the death had not occurred. See, e.g., Kambis v. Considine, 290 Va. 460, 462 n.1 (2015); Utsch v. Utsch, 266 Va. 124, 126 n.1 (2003). BACKGROUND2

Pritchard is a breeder of Cornish Rex cats. Ruderman was a veterinarian. The two

women engaged in a series of transactions that involved breeding various cats. A dispute arose

between them over several of the cats and their offspring.

In 2018, Pritchard, proceeding pro se, filed a warrant in detinue against Ruderman in

general district court. The warrant listed eleven cats that she alleged Ruderman had “unjustly

withheld” from her, including one named Lady Godiva, and she provided a dollar amount

representing each cat’s “alternate value.” The district court entered a judgment awarding money

damages to Pritchard for some of the cats and ordering the return of other cats. The award was

for $24,100.

Pritchard appealed the district court’s decision to the circuit court.3 In October 2019,

while the de novo appeal of the matter was pending in that court, Pritchard filed a motion for

leave to amend the complaint. The amended complaint restated the original detinue claim as its

first count and added additional kittens to its scope.4 It also included new counts for breach of

contract, conversion, declaratory judgment, and permanent injunctive relief. The complaint

2 We recite what occurred in the circuit court as indicated by the pleadings and other undisputed contents of the record. See generally Watson v. Commonwealth, 297 Va. 347, 349-50, 352 (2019) (characterizing whether the pleadings properly allege the existence of subject matter jurisdiction as “a question of law” that “requires no factual development or evidentiary record to consider”); Jones v. Commonwealth, 42 Va. App. 142, 147-48 (2004) (en banc) (evaluating “certain facts underlying [the] question of law” that is subject matter jurisdiction to determine whether “the required jurisdictional facts were proved”). 3 Pritchard represents that although she substantially prevailed in the general district court, she appealed because that court erroneously allowed Ruderman to decide whether she would keep Lady Godiva or pay for her and failed to determine that Lady Godiva’s offspring belonged to Pritchard. 4 The amended complaint did not mention the proceeding in the general district court or attempt to incorporate the allegations made in the warrant in detinue filed in that court, on which the appeal was based. -2- sought the return of numerous cats; the transfer of all Cat Fancier’s Association registrations for

those cats to Pritchard; damages of $20,000; punitive damages of $20,000; and attorney fees and

costs “not to exceed $30,000.” None of the counts contained its own ad damnum or request for

damages. Instead, a single prayer for relief at the end of the amended complaint listed the

combined damages requested.

In Pritchard’s accompanying motion for leave to file the amended complaint, she

acknowledged that the case was an appeal from the judgment of the district court on a warrant in

detinue. She represented that she learned for the first time while the appeal was pending in

circuit court that two of the cats at issue had litters of kittens. Pritchard further noted that

Ruderman did not object to her adding some of those kittens to the detinue claim. She indicated,

however, that Ruderman objected to the remainder of the new claims set out in the amended

complaint. Pritchard further noted that Supreme Court Rule 1:8 states that leave to amend

should be granted liberally. She suggested that permitting her to file the amended complaint

would serve “the interest of judicial economy” and “prevent the possibility of multiple

inconsistent rulings” that might arise if she “were to file a separate action for the additional

claims.”

After a hearing, the circuit court entered an order granting the motion “on the grounds set

forth” by Pritchard “and for good cause shown.” Following the court’s acceptance and filing of

the amended complaint, the case proceeded under the same single case number as prior to the

filing.

Ruderman subsequently made a motion to dismiss the amended complaint due to an

absence of subject matter jurisdiction. She asserted that Pritchard removed the matter from the

circuit court’s jurisdiction when she filed the amended complaint in that court with the “ad

-3- damnum clause of $40,000.00, not including costs and attorney’s fees,” an amount higher than

the district court’s jurisdictional limit of $25,000.

Following a hearing, the circuit court denied Ruderman’s motion to dismiss. In the order

embodying that ruling, it asserted that Pritchard “did not increase the ad damnum of the

original[] appealed claim beyond the jurisdictional limit” of the district court. (Emphasis

omitted). The circuit court reasoned under those circumstances that the Rules of the Supreme

Court permitted it to authorize Pritchard to add new claims not heard in the general district court

“so that pursuant to Rule 1:6, all of [Pritchard’s] claims against [Ruderman] could be litigated

once,” without the need for Pritchard to file a separate action.

At trial in the circuit court, the jury returned a verdict in Pritchard’s favor. It found that

she was the rightful owner of Lady Godiva and her offspring and was entitled to take possession

of them, and it additionally awarded her $9,134.67 for their wrongful detention. The circuit

court entered a final order consistent with the jury’s verdict.

ANALYSIS

Ruderman contends that the circuit court’s subject matter jurisdiction was limited to that

of the general district court. As a result, she suggests that when Pritchard amended her

complaint to seek an amount greater than the district court’s jurisdictional limit, the circuit court

lost jurisdiction.

Whether the record establishes subject matter jurisdiction in a particular case is a

question of law reviewed de novo on appeal. Parrish v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Assoc., 292 Va.

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