Leased Optical Departments-Montgomery Ward, Inc. v. Opti-Center, Inc.

120 F.R.D. 476, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17192, 1988 WL 66979
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedApril 12, 1988
DocketCiv. No. 85-2879 (R)
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 120 F.R.D. 476 (Leased Optical Departments-Montgomery Ward, Inc. v. Opti-Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leased Optical Departments-Montgomery Ward, Inc. v. Opti-Center, Inc., 120 F.R.D. 476, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17192, 1988 WL 66979 (D.N.J. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

JEROME B. SIMANDLE, United States Magistrate:

This matter is before the court pursuant to Rules 15(a) & (c), Fed.R.Civ.P., upon plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file an amended complaint to state a claim for breach of contract which was allegedly an “obvious” claim implicit in former pleadings. [Plaintiffs’ Br. at 2.]

The dispute between plaintiffs and defendants arises from the purchase by plaintiff Leased Optical Departments (“LOD”) of 16 optical dispensaries located in Montgomery Ward department stores in Florida and Ohio on July 1, 1981. The closing on this transaction took place on July 22,1981. There were exchanges of correspondence shortly thereafter in which plaintiffs’ former attorney, J.K. Groon, Esquire, alleged to defendants’ counsel that defendants Dr. Gold and Opti-Center, Inc. had breached the contract of sale in specified ways (see Letter of Groon, September 22, 1981). Thereafter, Dr. Gold, together with OptiCenter, Inc. and others were indicted and convicted of forty (40) counts of Medicare fraud in connection with their previous operation of these optical departments.

The present action was filed on May 15, 1985, in the Superior Court of New Jersey, and it was removed to this court. The complaint alleged that defendants made material and deliberate misrepresentations which induced plaintiffs to enter into the purchase agreement. The alleged misrepresentations were enumerated throughout the complaint. Some of the misrepresentations concerned defendants’ allegedly false proclamations of integrity and honesty in these business operations [Complaint ¶ 3], while others concerned concealments about the true status of ownership of furnishings and leasehold improvements, patient records, accounts receivable [id. ¶ 2], and pay-raises and secret reimbursements promised to employees, failure to identify employees, failure to disclose licensure violations with state and federal agencies, maintenance of inaccurate business records, and concealment of liens, inter alia. [Id. ¶ 5.] The single count complaint thus alleged defendants’ fraud concerning the purchase agreement, for which reformation, compensatory damages, punitive damages, costs and counsel fees are sought. Inexplicably, breach of contract was not asserted as a second cause of action.

Defendants’ answer and counterclaim, filed June 21, 1985, did allege plaintiffs’ breach of contract, asserting that plaintiffs breached their obligation to pay Opti-Center the remaining purchase price called for under the July 1, 1981 Agreement, indeed attaching a copy of the Agreement. The plaintiffs/ counterclaim-defendants filed their answer to the counterclaim on July 5, 1985, denying the existence of such an obligation due to defendants’ fraud; this answer nowhere asserts that defendants breached the agreement.

The proposed amended complaint would restate the original complaint and make grammatical and syntactic improvements, and it would add a Second Count for breach of contract. The defendants allegedly breached their Agreement as stated in 1110 of the proposed Amended Complaint, namely:

a. By selling plaintiffs a business that they knew to be fraught with Medicare fraud;
b. By failing to keep records and books of account of the business in a true, complete, and correct manner, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles;
c. By failing to convey rights to unpaid and undelivered work in process to plaintiffs for orders received by defendants [478]*478prior to July 23, 1981, which work in process defendants represented and warranted to be not less than $64,000;
d. By omitting material facts with respect to the business conveyed to the plaintiffs; and
e. By failing to indemnify and save harmless the plaintiffs from the costs, claims, liabilities, obligations or bills which arose by reason of defendants’ operation of the subject business prior to the sale of it to plaintiffs.

The proposed Amended Complaint thus largely recapitulates allegations of breach of contract which were made in pre-complaint correspondence but which have never been directly asserted within the complaint in this three-year-old lawsuit. Furthermore, when plaintiffs served the answer to the counterclaim, they failed to assert defendants’ breach of contract as an affirmative defense. They did, however, deny the existence of such an obligation due to defendants’ fraud “as particularly delineated in plaintiff’s [sic] complaint.” Finally, in a Statement of Damages filed November 10, 1987, plaintiffs have set forth each element of damages claimed, with specific reference to each document or source of testimony upon which each allegation is based. This Statement was compelled by Order of the Honorable Joseph H. Rodriguez filed October 19, 1987. The Statement contains plaintiffs’ theories of damages for both fraud and breach of contract.

Discussion of Law

Leave to amend a pleading is “freely given when justice so requires,” Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P. The amendment may be denied where there is “undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, [or] ... undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment____” Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182, 83 S.Ct. 227, 230, 9 L.Ed.2d 222 (1962).

At the outset we examine the proposed changes to the fraud claim in Court I, in which plaintiffs purport to restate the original complaint. Defendants’ objection, to the effect that new counsel should not have the opportunity in this case to inject their own grammar and syntax, citing Wakeen v. Hoffman House, Inc., 724 F.2d 1238, 1244 (7th Cir.1983), lacks merit in this case. The proposed amendment to Count I clarifies and draws focus to plaintiffs’ allegations without making substantive changes. It performs the clarifying function envisioned by Rule 15(b), which freely permits amendments to conform to the evidence, and it injects no new cause of action. This sort of pruning and shaping is also encouraged when counsel prepare the Joint Final Pre-Trial Order, restating factual contentions and legal claims, under Rule 16(e) and also the practices of this Court. By advancing this clarifying process to the pleadings stage, the proposed amendment to Count I serves the beneficial needs of trial preparation while causing no known prejudice to defendants. Plaintiffs’ motion to amend Count I to clarify the fraud claim will be granted. We turn to the more extensive issue of asserting a new claim for breach of contract in Count II.

The movant has the burden of showing good cause to amend under Rule 15(a). In the present case, new counsel for plaintiff assert that prior counsel simply failed to raise the obvious claim of breach of contract, which is seen as a lesser-included-offense within the fraud allegations which were raised. Plaintiffs assert that the proposed amendment to the pleadings is necessary to more clearly state the contract claim and to frame the issues for trial, arguing that breach of contract is at the heart of this dispute. Plaintiffs claim that no further discovery will be required to prove breach of contract.

Defendants assert that this proposed amendment would require additional discovery at a time when discovery is closed.

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120 F.R.D. 476, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17192, 1988 WL 66979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leased-optical-departments-montgomery-ward-inc-v-opti-center-inc-njd-1988.