Mohammad Al-Haddad v. Walter Ritter and Wife, Helma Ritter
This text of Mohammad Al-Haddad v. Walter Ritter and Wife, Helma Ritter (Mohammad Al-Haddad v. Walter Ritter and Wife, Helma Ritter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MOHAMMAD AL-HADDAD, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellee, ) ) Appeal No. ) 01-A-01-9608-CV-00369 VS. ) ) Williamson Circuit ) No. 95165 and 95166 WALTER RITTER AND WIFE, ) HELMA RITTER, )
Defendants/Appellants. ) ) FILED February 5, 1997
COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE Cecil W. Crowson MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE Appellate Court Clerk
APPEALED FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY AT FRANKLIN, TENNESSEE
THE HONORABLE DONALD P. HARRIS, JUDGE
LAWRENCE WILSON 2400 Crestmoor Road Suite 314 Nashville, Tennessee 37215 Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee
WILLIAM CARTER CONWAY 236 Court Square, Suite 205 Franklin, Tennessee 37064 Attorney for Defendants/Appellants
REVERSED AND REMANDED
BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE
CONCUR: LEWIS, J. KOCH, J. OPINION
Pursuant to Rule 11, Tenn. R. Civ. P., the trial court sanctioned the
appellants and their attorneys. The appellants argue on appeal that they cannot be
sanctioned under Rule 11 because they did not sign the offending pleading and that
the facts do not establish a violation of the rule. We hold that a party may be
sanctioned under Rule 11 without actually signing the pleadings, but we find that the
facts of this case do not justify a Rule 11 sanction and that the proof fails to show any
expenses incurred as a result of the alleged violation. Therefore we reverse the
judgment against the appellants for sanctions.
I.
The appellants, Walter Ritter and Helma Ritter employed Mohammed
Al-Haddad to install tile in three bathrooms at the their home. The Ritters refused to
pay because of alleged defects in the workmanship. Mr. Al-Haddad sued the Ritters
in General Sessions Court and obtained a default judgment for $3,445.
The Ritters appealed the judgment to the Circuit Court. In a separate
complaint they sued Mr. Al-Haddad for faulty workmanship and specifically charged
that Mr. Al-Haddad’s agent flushed tile grout down two bathroom drains where it
hardened and did $8,000 worth of damage to the drainage pipes. The two actions
were consolidated for trial before a six person jury.
The jury returned a verdict against Mr. and Mrs. Ritter for $3,000. Mr.
Al-Haddad then moved for sanctions against the Ritters under Rule 11 alleging that
in defending his claim and in pursuing their counterclaim, the Ritters did so without a
factual or legal basis and solely to hinder and delay Mr. Al-Haddad’s claim. The trial
-2- judge granted the motion and assessed costs of $3,000 against the Ritters and $1500
against their attorneys.
Only the Ritters have appealed.
II.
Rule 11 requires that every pleading, written motion, and other paper
shall be signed by an attorney of record or by the party if he or she is not represented
by an attorney. Rule 11.01. The signature amounts to a certification that “to the best
of the person’s knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable
under the circumstances,
(1) it is not being presented for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation;
....
(3) The allegations and other factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, are likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery;
Rule 11.02.
Not only is the signature a certification of the foregoing facts, but anyone
who presents the pleading, written motion, or other paper to the court “whether by
signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating” it makes the same representation. Id.
Thus, anyone who “advocates” a pleading certifies that the pleading is not filed to
harass or delay and that a reasonable inquiry has been made to discover the facts
alleged. A non-signing party, therefore, falls under the provisions of Rule 11.
III.
-3- The trial judge made the following findings in a memorandum issued on
the Rule 11 motion:
In this case, complainant filed suit in the General Sessions Court for $3,445.00 in labor and materials supplied in the construction of defendants’ home. At their attorney’s suggestion, defendants allowed a judgment by default be entered against them. This judgment was appealed and defendants brought a countersuit for $9,000.00. As specified in the counter complaint, $1,000 was being sought for labor and materials required to complete the tile work complainant had been hired to perform and $8,000.00 was being sought for the costs of repair for damages caused by complainant or his agent to the pipes in defendants’ home. At trial, there was proof that some grout had been poured into two bathroom drains. The grout had hardened and the drains had become blocked.
Defendants assert they were given a bid of $8,000.00 to replace all the pipes under their house. There was no evidence, however, that all the pipes had been damaged. The plugged drain traps had been replaced at a cost of $35.00 and the plumbing system seemed to function properly. Moreover, the grout that had clogged the two drain traps was not of the type used by the complainant. Clearly, the attorneys for plaintiffs should have discovered that the damage to the defendants’ plumbing had been corrected at a cost of $35.00 and there was no apparent basis for alleging further damage. The court is of the opinion the countersuit was brought to harass, delay and increase the costs of litigation for the complainant.
The court concluded that by claiming damages amounting to $8,000 to
their drain pipes, when the damage had been repaired for $35.00 the Ritters had
violated Rule 11.
The test to be applied in Rule 11 cases is objective reasonableness
under all the circumstances. Andrews v. Bible, 812 S.W.2d 284 (Tenn. 1991). Mrs.
Ritter testified in her affidavit that she saw Mr. Al-Haddad’s workman pour grout into
the drain; that she had to pay a plumber to unstop two drains; that the plumber could
not be sure that there would be no further problems throughout the house; that
another drain cleaner advised her that to be sure the drain problem would not show
up it would be necessary to replace all the drain pipes under her house at a cost of
-4- $8,000. The second plumber did not testify at the trial but his estimate is in the
record.
From an objective standpoint, we think Mrs. Ritter was justified in making
the $8,000 claim. When her attorney filed the complaint, she knew that two drains
had been plugged with grout and there remained a possibility that the entire drain
system might have to be replaced. Since hindsight cannot be used to establish
liability in Rule 11 cases, Andrews v. Bible, 812 S.W.2d 284 (Tenn. 1991), Mrs.
Ritter’s conduct passes the test of objective reasonableness.
Turning to the question of the amount of the sanction, it is important to
note that the $8,000 claim was only one part of the Ritter’s complaint. The other part
was a claim for $1,000 for faulty workmanship in laying the tile. There is no question
that a genuine dispute existed between the Ritters and Mr. Al-Haddad, a dispute that
was destined to be tried. Therefore, we think it would be hard to find any extra
expenses incurred in litigating whether the grout poured in the drains caused
damages of $35 or $8,000. The affidavits of Mr. Al-Haddad and his counsel do not
attempt to attribute any of their expenses to the $8,000 claim. Therefore, the
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