Pauley v. Gilbert

522 S.E.2d 208, 206 W. Va. 114, 1999 W. Va. LEXIS 114
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1999
Docket25808
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 522 S.E.2d 208 (Pauley v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pauley v. Gilbert, 522 S.E.2d 208, 206 W. Va. 114, 1999 W. Va. LEXIS 114 (W. Va. 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The appellant herein and plaintiff below, Cindy Dawn Pauley [hereinafter “Ms. Pau-ley”], appeals from the April 14, 1998, order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, modifying its earlier judgment order. The first judgment order, entered July 9, 1997, upheld a jury verdict in favor of Ms. Pauley and against the appellee herein and defendant below, Jeanette L. Surface Gilbert [hereinafter “Ms. Gilbert”], and granted Ms. Pauley, in part, prejudgment interest on her compensatory damages award, postjudgment interest on her punitive damages award, and the attorney’s fees and costs she incurred in the prosecution of her action against Ms. Gilbert. By its subsequent order, the circuit *117 court recalculated the amount of prejudgment interest to which Ms. Pauley was entitled on her award of compensatory damages and withdrew its earlier awards of post-judgment interest on her punitive damages award and its allowance of attorney’s fees and costs.

Upon a review of the parties’ arguments, the record designated for appellate review, and the pertinent authorities, we affirm, in part; vacate, in part; and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In this regard, we affirm that portion of the circuit court’s April 14, 1998, order which recalculates the amount of prejudgment interest that Ms. Pauley may recover on her award of compensatory damages. However, we vacate the circuit court’s April 14, 1998, order to the extent that it denies Ms. Pauley postjudgment interest on her award of punitive damages and her attorney’s fees and costs associated with this action. We further remand this ease for the reinstatement of the court’s July 9, 1997, order insofar as it granted postjudgment interest on punitive damages and awarded attorney’s fees and costs.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The evidence presented at trial suggests the following facts. In April, 1975, Ms. Pau-ley’s father passed away, leaving her life insurance benefits and Social Security death benefits. Because Ms. Pauley was a minor when she became the beneficiary of these funds, Ms. Gilbert, who is Ms. Pauley’s mother, was appointed her guardian and was charged with holding these monies for her daughter until she reached the age of eighteen. With specific respect to the life insurance benefits, Ms. Gilbert, in her fiduciary capacity as Ms. Pauley’s guardian, obtained two separate surety bonds during her daughter’s minority. These bonds, which were in varying amounts proportionate to the accrued amount of death benefits at the time of each bond’s issuance, were procured from the second defendant below, American Casualty Company of Reading, Pennsylvania [hereinafter “American Casualty”].

Also during Ms. Pauley’s minority, Ms. Gilbert breached her fiduciary duty as Ms. Pauley’s duly appointed guardian by using these monies as collateral for a personal loan and failing to make required accountings to the Kanawha County Commission. Further evidence of her fiduciary breaches includes Ms. Gilbert’s actions in misappropriating these assets for her own use, including loaning $20,000 of these funds to her brother, who was subsequently incarcerated, and withdrawing the bulk of her daughter’s estate, shortly before Ms. Pauley’s eighteenth birthday, to use as purchase money for an adult entertainment establishment.

Upon reaching the age of majority, Ms. Pauley requested from her mother the monies to which she was then entitled. Although Ms. Gilbert paid Ms. Pauley certain sums from the trust assets, these payments were fairly insubstantial and fell far short of the total amount that had been entrusted to her, due to Ms. Gilbert’s depletion of these funds. Thereafter, Ms. Pauley filed a claim against American Casualty, seeking to recover on her mother’s surety bond therewith. Ms. Pauley also instituted a civil action, naming as defendants Ms. Gilbert and American Casualty. During the course of the jury trial, in February, 1997, Ms. Pauley settled with American Casualty for $30,000, and American Casualty was dismissed from the lawsuit. On February 6, 1997, a Kanawha County jury returned a verdict in Ms. Pau-ley’s favor, finding:

[1.] We, the jury, find that the defendant, Ms. Gilbert, has failed to meet her burden of proving a valid release.
X YES NO
[2.] We, the jury, find that the defendant, Ms. Gilbert, violated her fiduciary duty to the plaintiff by converting trust funds for her personal use, or by her failure to adhere to statutory requirements imposed upon a legal guardian.
*118 X YES NO
[3.] We, the jury, award compensatory damages to the plaintiff as follows:
a. Loss to the estate of plaintiff Cindy Dawn Pauley: $ 33,500.00.
YOU CANNOT AWARD PUNITIVE DAMAGES UNLESS YOU FIND COMPENSATORY DAMAGES.
[4.] We find the defendant, Jeanette Gilbert, to be guilty of malicious, wilful, outrageously [sic] and reckless conduct toward Cindy Dawn Surface Pauley [sic] and we award punitive damages.
X YES NO

Punitive Damages $ 15,000.00 .

Following the return of the jury’s verdict, counsel for Ms. Pauley moved for an award of prejudgment interest, to which counsel for Ms. Gilbert objected. Having considered the matter, the circuit court submitted to the still-impaneled jury the following special interrogatory:

(1.) Does the verdict of the jury in awarding compensatory damages to the plaintiff, Cindy Dawn Pauley, in the amount of $33,500.00 include interest from the date (dates) of breach of fiduciary duty — to February 6,1997?
X YES NO
(2.) If above answer yes, then what rate of interest did the jury utilize in its calculation? _6%
Reply of Jury
By order entered July 9, 1997, the circuit court entered judgment for Ms. Pauley in accordance with the jury’s verdict in her favor. The court further specified the precise amounts of Ms. Pauley’s award:
The jury having returned a jury verdict awarding to the plaintiff compensatory damages in the amount of $33,500.00 plus $30,056.03 in simple interest at 10% per annum from the date of the breach of May 24, 1990 (the date on which plaintiff reached age eighteen (18)) for a total judgment of $63,556.03 in compensatory damages and the court having been advised that in accordance with the Partial Dismissal Order entered in this action on February 5, 1997 that Cindy Dawn Pauley Surface [sic] did receive of and from American Casualty Company the sum of $30,-000.00, this Court does proceed to enter judgment upon the jury verdict and it is, accordingly ORDERED that the plaintiff, Cindy Dawn Surface Pauley, do recover of and from the defendant, Jeanette Surface Gilbert, in compensatory damages the sum of $33,556.03 with interest thereon from February 7, 1997 at the legal rate until paid.

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Bluebook (online)
522 S.E.2d 208, 206 W. Va. 114, 1999 W. Va. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pauley-v-gilbert-wva-1999.