Machhal v. Machhal

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00888
StatusUnknown

This text of Machhal v. Machhal (Machhal v. Machhal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Machhal v. Machhal, (W.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

REENA MACHHAL, ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 1:21-cv-888 v. ) ) Honorable Paul L. Maloney IKBAL MACHHAL, ., ) Defendants. ) )

OPINION AND ORDER RESOLVING DAMAGES ASPECT OF MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT

This matter is before the Court on the damages aspect of Plaintiff’s motion for default judgment (ECF No. 100). The Court has already granted the motion for default judgment with respect to liability ( ECF No. 117); thus, the only task remaining is to determine the amount of damages to which Plaintiff is entitled. The Court held a hearing on the issue of damages on January 23, 2023, and continued that hearing on February 23, 2023. In determining Plaintiff’s damages, the Court has considered Plaintiff’s motion for default judgment and exhibits (ECF No. 100); the testimony, evidence, and argument presented at the motion hearing; and the parties’ post-hearing briefs (ECF Nos. 149,1 152). For the following reasons, the Court will award Plaintiff a total amount of $866,623.01 in damages. Each Defendant will be individually liable for the appropriate amount of damages attributable to their liability, outlined in the accompanying default judgment.

1 In accordance with the Court’s previous order striking a portion of Defendants’ post-hearing brief (ECF No. 157), the Court has considered only the non-stricken portions of the document. I. Facts Upon the entry of default against Defendants (ECF No. 76), Plaintiff’s well-pleaded factual and jurisdictional allegations in her complaint were deemed as true. The Court finds

that the facts alleged in Plaintiff’s first amended complaint are well-pleaded pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 8, and it accepts them as true. To summarize, the facts alleged in the first amended complaint, and accepted as true, are as follows (ECF No. 62).2 In February 2009, at age 18, Plaintiff Reena Machhal was forced to enter into an arranged marriage with Defendant Ikbal Machhal in India. In 2012, they moved to

Pennsylvania. Upon their arrival in Pennsylvania, Defendant Ikbal took Plaintiff’s passport and held it captive. At some point, Plaintiff became pregnant. While she was pregnant, Defendant Ikbal forced Plaintiff to move from Pennsylvania to Michigan to live with his parents and so that Plaintiff could work at their family business, a convenience store called the Broadway Market in Three Rivers, Michigan. Defendant Ikbal and Plaintiff lived with Defendant Ikbal’s

parents, Defendants Kartar Chand and Shile Devi, in Michigan, in a small two-bedroom apartment. Defendant Ikbal’s brother, his wife (who is also Plaintiff’s sister), and their children also lived in the apartment. When Plaintiff gave birth to her first child, Defendants Chand and Devi “put Plaintiff out to live in another apartment with her 15-day old daughter” alone ( at PageID.306).

2 Plaintiff’s counsel also read the relevant facts into the record at the damages hearing ( ECF No. 135 at PageID.707- 12). Plaintiff began working at the Broadway Market in January 2014. She was not paid any money for her six years of work at the market, she did not share in the proceeds or profits, and she had no ownership or other interest in the business; rather, she was a mere

laborer. On the other hand, Defendants Ikbal, Chand, and Devi were all paid employees of the market. Plaintiff often worked seven days a week, usually eight to nine hours a day, handling the responsibilities of running the store’s onsite operation, including receiving deliveries, stocking the shelves, running the cash register, removing trash, and cleaning. The Broadway Market grossed approximately $500,000 or more in receipts/sales during the years

that Plaintiff worked there. Plaintiff testified that she worked at the Broadway Market until July 2020 (ECF No. 135 at PageID.749).3 To force Plaintiff to work at the market, Defendants threatened her, battered her, battered her daughter, and punished her when she did not comply. For example, Plaintiff described the following abuse: Defendant Ikbal regularly hit and beat Plaintiff; when she refused to go to work, Defendants Devi and Chand made her stand in the snow without

shoes by forcing her out the door and refusing to allow her to come back inside until she agreed to go to work; Defendants Devi and Chand slapped and hit Plaintiff’s daughter when Plaintiff did not obey them; Defendant Devi hit Plaintiff with a cooking pan; Defendant Chand regularly slapped Plaintiff; and Defendant Devi threatened to take Plaintiff’s child and move back to India without her. They also held Plaintiff’s passport captive to prevent

her from escaping back to India.

3 Plaintiff also testified that, in addition to working at the Broadway Market, in January 2020, she began working at Dairy Queen (ECF No. 135 at PageID.726). Today, Plaintiff still works at Dairy Queen ( ). When Plaintiff got pregnant for the second time, Defendant Ikbal and Devi gave Plaintiff a pill they said were “vitamins.” They later admitted that it was a pill to induce an abortion, and Plaintiff lost the baby. Plaintiff eventually got pregnant again and gave birth to

her son. When she got pregnant a fourth time, Defendant Ikbal “made her take the pill to terminate the pregnancy,” and she eventually lost the baby (ECF No. 62 at PageID.307).4 In October 2020, Defendant Ikbal’s abuse became so severe that Plaintiff had to seek medical attention. Defendant Ikbal threatened Plaintiff that if she made a police report, he would take the children away from her and tell the police that she wanted to kill herself. At

the hospital, medical personnel called the police, ultimately leading to Plaintiff’s ability to escape the abuse. In September 2021, Defendant Ikbal was convicted of aggravated domestic violence against Plaintiff. Since then, Plaintiff and Defendant Ikbal have gotten a divorce. Defendant Ikbal’s family has threatened to kill Plaintiff. II. Procedural History Plaintiff commenced this action in October 2021. Her first amended complaint raises

claims of forced labor, trafficking in forced labor, participation in a forced labor venture, assault and battery, violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act, and unjust enrichment/quantum meruit ( ECF No. 62).5 She sued the three individual defendants named above, as well as Ikdil, Inc., d/b/a Broadway Market.

4 At the damages hearing, Plaintiff testified that Defendants forced her to have these two abortions because she was pregnant with girls, and girls are not preferred in their culture (ECF No. 135 at PageID.719). 5 The forced labor, trafficking in forced labor, and participation in a forced labor venture are all claims raised under both Michigan and federal law. After all the Defendants failed to answer the first amended complaint, the Clerk of Court entered default against all four Defendants (ECF No. 76). Defendants filed four separate motions to set aside the defaults (ECF Nos. 78, 83, 85, 92), and the Court dismissed

or denied all four motions, finding that good cause to set aside the defaults was absent ( ECF No. 98). Plaintiff then moved for default judgment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 55 (ECF No. 100). Shortly thereafter, the parties filed a “joint notice of Defendants’ concurrence in relief sought in Plaintiff’s motion for default judgment,” which indicated that Defendants did not oppose the motion for default judgment and agreed to the entry of a judgment granting

Plaintiff all relief sought in the motion (ECF No. 103).

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Machhal v. Machhal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/machhal-v-machhal-miwd-2023.