Prezioso v. Thomas (In Re Thomas)

254 B.R. 879, 1999 WL 33219326
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 3, 1999
DocketCiv.A. 96-74163-W, 9:97-1341-8
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 254 B.R. 879 (Prezioso v. Thomas (In Re Thomas)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prezioso v. Thomas (In Re Thomas), 254 B.R. 879, 1999 WL 33219326 (D.S.C. 1999).

Opinion

ORDER

BLATT, Senior District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

On January 4,1995, this action was commenced by the Plaintiff against the Defendant, both South Carolina residents, in the Beaufort County Court of Common Pleas alleging causes of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy by wrongful intrusion.

On June 14, 1996, the Defendant filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In the Bankruptcy proceeding, the Plaintiff filed a proof of claim in the amount of $500,000.00 based on the allegations contained in his state court complaint. The Plaintiff then filed a Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay in order to continue to prosecute his state court action against the Debtor, which motion Bankruptcy Judge Waites granted. 1 Thereafter, the Defendant removed the action to this Court, and this Court has determined that it has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b). The Defendant died on April 17, 1997; 2 this action is being defended by the Trustee of the Defendant’s bankrupt estate.

Although this action was set for a jury trial, the Plaintiff on July 16, 1998, filed a Motion to Withdraw Jury Trial Demand, *882 to which the Defendant consented; thus, this action was tried by this Court, sitting as Judge and jury, on July 27, 1998, and it was tried solely on the cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress. 3 Thereafter, this Court required the parties to submit to mediation, which was unsuccessful, and it required the parties to submit further briefs on the issue of whether punitive damages can be awarded under South Carolina law against a deceased tortfeasor’s estate; the parties submitted their briefs on this issue by January 26, 1999.

Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), this Court hereby issues the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT 4

1. Grandee Hardy had an intimate romantic and sexual relationship with Calhoun Thomas, Jr., the Defendant, between February, 1993 and January, 1994.

2. During this relationship Ms. Hardy allowed the Defendant to take photographs of her in sexually explicit poses and in the act of sexual intercourse with him.

3. Ms. Hardy broke off her relationship with the Defendant in February, 1994.

4. In March, 1994, Mr. Prezioso, the Plaintiff, began an intimate romantic and sexual relationship with Ms. Hardy.

5. On September 29, 1994, the Plaintiff received an envelope in the mail at his business office. Enclosed were an unsigned letter dated September 23, 1994, and five photocopied Polaroid sexually explicit photographs of Grandee Hardy.

6. During a search of the Defendant’s residence on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, law enforcement officers were able to recover the photostatic copy of the pictures and original copies of the letter in a briefcase and in file cabinets located in the bedroom of the Defendant’s home. The briefcase belonged to the Defendant.

7. The Defendant had left a box containing the actual sexually explicit photographs of Grandee Hardy at a motel on Hilton Head Island, the Red Roof Inn, to be picked up by someone whose name he left at the desk. Before being picked up by anyone, the box was taken into custody by the Beaufort County Sheriffs department. The Defendant had reported the photographs as being stolen.

8. The Defendant mailed the September 29, 1994, envelope and its contents to the Plaintiffs business address. The Defendant was the author of the anonymous letter enclosed in the envelope and prepared the photocopy of sexually explicit pictures of Ms. Hardy also found in the envelope.

9. The Defendant mailed a second anonymous letter in November, 1994, to the Plaintiffs business address. It contained no pictures.

10. The September, 1994, letter was addressed to the Plaintiff, and the contents of that letter, along with the photocopies of Ms. Hardy in sexually explicit positions, clearly indicated that Ms. Hardy had a “sexual relationship” with some man, 5 and the letter indicated a threat to the Plaintiff that the sender would mail copies of the pictures to M.U.S.C. employees, which is where Ms. Hardy was *883 employed, unless the Plaintiff paid money to the sender and Ms. Hardy engaged in sex with the sender.

11. The second, November, 1994, letter was addressed to the Plaintiff, and it demanded $5,000.00 from the Plaintiff, to be delivered to the sender by Ms. Hardy.

12. The Defendant intended to harm, and to destroy, the Plaintiffs intimate relationship with Grandee Hardy, and the Defendant intended to hide the fact that he had sent the two letters and the pictures.

13. The Plaintiff began dating Ms. Hardy in March, 1994, and they became secretly engaged in April, 1994, as Ms. Hardy’s divorce was not then final; the Plaintiff had quickly developed a close attachment to Ms. Hardy. Ms. Hardy’s divorce became final in September, 1994, and, prior to the Plaintiffs receipt of the first letter from the Defendant on September 29, 1994, the Plaintiff and Ms. Hardy announced their engagement and a November 7,1994, wedding date.

14. When the September, 1994, letter arrived at the Plaintiffs office, it was around noon on Wednesday. The Plaintiff opened it while sitting at a conference table where he was eating lunch with his employees; he saw one of the photographs and was shocked. He stood up, walked about fifteen feet to the bathroom and vomited.

15. Upon receiving the first letter and pictures, the Plaintiff was deeply shocked and greatly concerned as to who else may have received copies of these photographs. He was embarrassed, humiliated, and devastated to see these pictures of his fiancé, Ms. Hardy.

16. The Plaintiff did not see or discuss the September letter with Ms. Hardy until the following Friday afternoon when they met to go on a trip to Greenville, South Carolina. Between Wednesday at noon, until Friday afternoon, the Plaintiff spent that time agonizing over what he should do.

17. Between his receipt of the first and second letters, the Plaintiff and Ms. Hardy had discussions about what had occurred in relation to those pictures, and they decided to turn the matter over to the police. The Plaintiff called the Richland County Solicitor’s Office and the United States Attorney’s Office to request their assistance with his efforts to keep the sexually explicit pictures of Ms. Hardy from being distributed to his friends and business associates.

18. Upon receiving the second, November, 1994, letter, the Plaintiff again felt sick to his stomach but did not vomit.

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254 B.R. 879, 1999 WL 33219326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prezioso-v-thomas-in-re-thomas-scd-1999.