Peter J. Rumsavich v. Daniel M. Borislow

154 F.3d 700, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 691, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 21087, 1998 WL 544835
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 1998
Docket98-1207
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 F.3d 700 (Peter J. Rumsavich v. Daniel M. Borislow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter J. Rumsavich v. Daniel M. Borislow, 154 F.3d 700, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 691, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 21087, 1998 WL 544835 (7th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

Most suits under the diversity jurisdiction seeking to collect on unpaid promissory notes are straightforward affairs. Not this one. The supposed maker of the note contended that the document is phony. After a bench trial, the district judge concluded that plaintiff Peter Rumsavich is a forger and a perjurer.

Rumsavich received payments from Tel-Save, Inc., for marketing long distance communication services. A dispute developed over their size and whether Rumsavich was supposed to remit some or all of them to a telemarketing firm that did much of the work of drumming up business. When Rumsavich and Tel-Save had their falling out, each claimed that the other owed it money. By 1996 Rumsavich was in financial distress as a result of a failed pizza venture (his activities peddling partnership interests in that business led both Illinois and Indiana to bar Rumsavich from ever selling securities again, and led the National Association of Securities Dealers to fine and expel him) and ongoing difficulties with the Internal Revenue Service. On March 20, 1996, Rumsavich traveled to Tel-Save’s headquarters in Pennsylvania, where he and Daniel Borislow, Tel-Save’s CEO, negotiated a compromise. Bor-islow initially offered Rumsavich a net payment of $30,000; Tel-Save would forgive re-coupment of advances paid, and Rumsavich would give up commissions on his clients’ future purchases. Further negotiations on March 21 led Rumsavich to accept $120,000, which he thought would be enough to pay off his back taxes; but after a phone call to his wife Rumsavich told Borislow that $140,000 would be necessary. Borislow agreed to that amount; a settlement contract (drafted by Tel-Save’s counsel and faxed from Washington, D.C.) was signed by Rumsavich and Borislow, and notarized by Kristina Tecce. Tel-Save disbursed the $140,000, and that should have been the end of the parties’ dealings.

It was not. Rumsavich soon demanded payment of the following note, which he testified was prepared by Tel-Save and signed contemporaneously with the $140,000 settlement agreement:

ADDENDUM TO AGREEMENT DATED 03/21/96
I, Dan Borishow, agree to pay Peter J. Rumsa-vich, personally, an additional seven hundred *702 .eighty-five thousand dollars ($785,000). This amount is to be paid after my secondary offering or no later than the close of business Monday, April 22nd.
Mr. Rumsavieh solicited and was successful in bringing in the following partitions [customers] to Tel "Save: Mr. Joseph Pollack of Virginia, Mr. Beil Hopkins 'and Dave Moody of Denver, Colorado, Mr. Martin Gilmore, of Chicago, IL, Mr. James McGuire of Clearwater, FL, Mr. Merle Wooley of Springfield Missouri, Mr. Henry Rod.riguez of Tampa FL.
Total traffic for all partitions listed was of three Million dollars ($3,000,000) prior to Tel Save’s first stock offering.

Borislow testified that he had not signed (or even seen) this document; Tecce testified that she had not notarized Borislow’s signature on it. An expert analyzed Tel-Save’s word processing system and concluded that the document had not been prepared on its computers. After a bench trial the district judge credited this testimony, disbelieved Rumsavich’s contrary testimony, and concluded that the document “is a blatant forgery — a patently fabricated product”. The district judge gave multiple reasons (in addition to Borislow’s testimony) for this conclusion. This is an abbreviated list:

• ■ The , document misspells Borislow’s name as “Borishow”, unlikely for a document prepared by Tel-Save’s staff.
• The document gives Tel-Save’s name as “Tel Save”-something Tel-Save’s staff never did, but which Rumsavieh repeatedly did in correspondence he sent to Tel-Save.
• The document’s typeface, a proportional font in the Times family, was never used by Tel-Save’s staff; the firm always prepared documents in a monos-paced face such as Courier. Documents known to have been prepared by Rumsavieh, however, use the Times font.
• The document is not an original but is a copy on the back side of the fax cover sheet transmitting the settlement agreement. This implies that it was produced by a photocopier rather than a laser printer, as would have been the ease had Tel-Save’s staff prepared it on March 21. (The district judge observed that Tel-Save’s staff, which lacked manual typewriters and produced documents exclusively on laser printers, was unlikely to have removed the plain paper from its printer and inserted a used fax cover sheet for the purpose of producing a contract.)
• The document purports to create a personal debt from Borislow to Rumsa-vich, an unlikely way' to settle Tel-Save’s corporate obligation to a sales agent.
• Rumsavieh sent the “addendum” to Borislow via Borislow’s assistant Thomas, and told Thomas to look at Borislow’s face when he saw it. The district judge remarked: “That comment is clearly more consistent with a document that would come as a total surprise to Borislow ... than with a document that was already known to Borislow and was now sought to be enforced”. Thomas characterized Bor-islow’s reaction as one of astonishment.

The district judge might have added that the sheer sloppiness of this “addendum” — which on top of informality (“Dan Borishow”) and spelling errors uses inconsistent punctuation and abbreviation, and contains grammatical and capitalization blunders (“traffic for all partitions listed was of [sic] three Million [sic] dollars”) — is unlikely for an $800,000 commitment. The promise to pay Rumsa-vich $140,000 was -carefully negotiated, prepared by counsel, and executed with formality; Borislow was unlikely to throw in an extra $785,000 via a slapdash document on the back of a fax cover sheet. According to Rumsavieh, on March 20 Tel-Save promised to pay him a total of $925,000, some immediately (to handle tax problems) and some deferred. If that were so, then counsel would have prepared a single package to be signed on March 21; there is no accounting for the 'differences between the professionally prepared $140,000 settlement and the $785,000 “addendum”. The district judge concluded that Rumsavieh ginned up the text on his own word processing equipment, cut Boris-low’s signature andTecce’s notarization from *703 a different document, added the date in his own handwriting, and photocopied the pastiche to create the “addendum”.

Rumsavich’s appeal takes issue with none of this. Borislow’s testimony, which alone is enough to support the judgment given the district judge’s finding that it is credible, goes unmentioned. The spelling and grammar errors, the details of typeface and production that all but exclude the possibility of the document’s being genuine — all of this Rumsavich now ignores. Instead he concentrates fire on the district court’s Finding 15, which concluded that Rumsavich gave the game away on the witness stand. Rumsa-vich testified that Tel-Save agreed to pay him a total of $925,000, and that the “addendum” had been prepared by Tel-Save’s staff while Rumsavich was off calling his wife. Because the pre-call settlement payment was to be $120,000, this implied an additional figure of $805,000.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F.3d 700, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 691, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 21087, 1998 WL 544835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-j-rumsavich-v-daniel-m-borislow-ca7-1998.