Millennium Equity Holdings, LLC v. Mahlowitz

925 N.E.2d 513, 456 Mass. 627
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 3, 2010
DocketSJC-10515
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 925 N.E.2d 513 (Millennium Equity Holdings, LLC v. Mahlowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millennium Equity Holdings, LLC v. Mahlowitz, 925 N.E.2d 513, 456 Mass. 627 (Mass. 2010).

Opinion

Marshall, C.J.

The defendants-in-counterclaim, Millennium Equity Holdings, LLC (Millennium), and two of its partners, David Rabinovitz and Joseph R Zoppo (collectively defendants), appeal from the decision of a Superior Court judge holding them liable for abuse of process and the malicious prosecution of Attorney Edward M. Mahlowitz. 2 The underlying dispute in this bitter litigation arose when Mahlowitz, representing Rabinovitz’s wife in her divorce action against Rabinovitz, obtained an attachment on her behalf in the Probate and Family Court on Rabinovitz’s interest in property owned by Millennium. The attachment was secured after the wife discovered by happenstance that Rabinovitz was concealing from her the imminent sale of the property.

The defendants made no attempt to dissolve or modify the attachment in the Probate and Family Court, despite ample opportunity and specific court rules permitting them to do so. Rather, eighteen months after the attachment had issued, and approximately one year after the attachment had been dissolved, Rabinovitz, Zoppo, and Millennium brought suit against Mahlowitz for abuse of process, malicious prosecution, and interference with contractual rights for obtaining the attachment. After failing to secure dismissal of the lawsuit, Mahlowitz counterclaimed against the defendants for abuse of process and malicious prosecution in connection with their suit against him.

After an eight-day, jury-waived trial in the Superior Court on the defendants’ abuse of process claim, 3 and on Mahlowitz’s counterclaims, the judge ruled in favor of Mahlowitz both on *629 the claims of Millennium, Rabinovitz, and Zoppo against him, and on his counterclaims against them, awarding damages to Mahlowitz for the latter. She denied Mahlowitz’s motion for sanctions pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 11, 365 Mass. 753 (1974), against Robert S. Sinsheimer, the attorney representing Rabinovitz, and Isaac H. Peres, the attorney representing both Zoppo and Millennium at trial.

The Appeals Court reversed the judgment in favor of Mahlowitz on his counterclaims; it otherwise affirmed the trial judge in all respects. Millennium Equity Holdings, LLC v. Mahlowitz, 73 Mass. App. Ct. 29 (2008). None of the defendants sought further appellate review. We granted Mahlowitz’s application for further appellate review on his counterclaims against the defendants, as well as the judge’s order denying his request for sanctions.

Contrary to the defendants’ assertion that the judge’s findings were replete with error, we first conclude that the record supports Mahlowitz’s claim of abuse of process against Rabinovitz. 4 Specifically, the evidence, including the reasonable inferences therefrom, supports the judge’s conclusion that the only motivation Rabinovitz had in bringing his lawsuit against Mahlowitz was to cause the removal of Mahlowitz as counsel for his wife in their divorce action. The judge also acted within proper bounds as a finder of fact in concluding that Zoppo and Millennium acted in concert with Rabinovitz to that same end. We thus affirm Mahlowitz’s abuse of process claim against all of the defendants.

Mahlowitz’s malicious prosecution claim is substantially similar to his abuse of process claim, and his damages under each are identical. Because we affirm the judgment on the abuse of process claim, we need not and do not reach Mahlowitz’s malicious prosecution claim against the defendants.

*630 As to damages, we conclude that the judge made errors in her evaluation of some aspects of the damages that require remand for recalculation of two discrete issues pertaining to damages alone. Last, we agree with the judge that Mahlowitz has not met his burden of proving that Peres and Sinsheimer acted in bad faith in representing the defendants in their claims against Mahlowitz, and that he is not entitled to sanctions against them.

We turn now to a summary of the facts salient to Mahlowitz’s counterclaims against the defendants, the only issue before us.

1. Background. We draw our factual summary from the findings of the judge, sitting without a jury, and the uncontested facts of record, all of which are supported by the trial record. 5 We reserve some details for later discussion where pertinent to our analysis.

a. Millennium. Millennium, a Delaware limited liability company, was formed in 2000 for the purpose of purchasing and developing a commercial property on Washington Street in the Brighton section of Boston (Washington Street property). Rabinovitz held at least a seventy-seven per cent ownership interest in the company. Zoppo was one of two additional shareholders, and Edward Stevenson was the other. The judge found that Rabinovitz “completely controlled” Millennium.

By February of 2002, Millennium was in financial difficulties. At the urging of its mortgagee, which declared Millennium’s loan obligations in default, Millennium agreed to put the Washington Street property up for sale. Around September, 2002, the mortgagee directed Millennium to accept an offer by Fargo Street Associates, Inc. (Fargo), to purchase the property for $1.65 million. For tax reasons, Fargo needed to complete the sale by December 31, 2002.

b. Rabinovitz divorce proceedings. There was evidence at trial concerning Rabinovitz’s conduct in the divorce proceed *631 ings against his wife. It was admitted as relevant to Rabinovitz’s state of mind at the time he filed his abuse of process and other claims against Mahlowitz. 6 We summarize that evidence.

In April, 2002, Rabinovitz’s wife filed a divorce action against him in the Probate and Family Court. Mahlowitz represented her in that action. From its inception, and throughout its course, the divorce and postdivorce litigation was acrimonious. A major source of conflict was Rabinovitz’s lack of good faith concerning the disclosure of marital assets and issues of child support. In her findings in this action, the Superior Court judge included a comprehensive but not an “exhaustive list” of all of Rabinovitz’s misrepresentations concerning the marital estate. She found, for example, that Rabinovitz was “intentionally dishonest” and “deceitful” in the information he provided in his financial statements. 7 Among other things, he understated his income, failed to divulge the actual value of certain real property even when that value was known or readily ascertainable by him, concealed assets, failed to comply with court orders, and otherwise attempted to deprive his wife of her fair share of the marital assets. 8 As a consequence, the judge found, Mahlowitz *632 was forced to bring multiple contempt actions against Rabinovitz, including for his failure to pay child support.

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Bluebook (online)
925 N.E.2d 513, 456 Mass. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millennium-equity-holdings-llc-v-mahlowitz-mass-2010.