Reliant Life Sciences, LLC v. AGC Biologics, Inc. and Daigle Computer Systems, Inc.

2024 DNH 005
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 24, 2024
Docket22-cv-137-SE
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 DNH 005 (Reliant Life Sciences, LLC v. AGC Biologics, Inc. and Daigle Computer Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reliant Life Sciences, LLC v. AGC Biologics, Inc. and Daigle Computer Systems, Inc., 2024 DNH 005 (D.N.H. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Reliant Life Sciences, LLC

v. Civil No. 22-cv-137-SE Opinion No. 2024 DNH 005 AGC Biologics, Inc. and Daigle Computer Systems, Inc.

ORDER

New Hampshire’s Consumer Protection Act (“CPA”) authorizes private actions to

recover liquidated damages of $1,000 or “actual damages,” whichever is greater, for a violation

of the statute. N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) § 358-A:10, I. The CPA also provides for treble

damages when the violation is “willful or knowing.” Id. Plaintiff Reliant Life Sciences, LLC

(“Reliant”) has filed a renewed motion for default judgment on its CPA claim against Daigle

Computer Systems, Inc. (“Daigle”) seeking trebled, actual damages of $269,765.76. That sum is

derived from Reliant’s calculation of its lost profits due to Daigle’s breach of its subcontractor

agreement with Reliant, under which Daigle agreed to consult for one of Reliant’s clients.

The court denies Reliant’s motion in part, as it has not proven its actual damages under

the CPA. Instead, the court awards Reliant $35,000 in liquidated damages according to the

contract between it and Daigle, as well as $1,000 in liquidated damages provided by the CPA.

The CPA damage award is trebled by the court’s finding that Daigle acted willfully and

knowingly. The court also awards Reliant additional attorneys’ fees.1

1 The court previously adopted the Report and Recommendation approving Reliant’s attorneys’ fees and costs, doc. no. 23, but Reliant has incurred additional fees and costs since that time. As explained below, the court finds those amounts to be reasonable, and they are owed to Reliant under both the CPA and its subcontractor agreement with Daigle. See doc. no. 20 at 17 (R&R finding the same). Background

On July 31, 2023, the court acted on the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate

Judge Andrea K. Johnstone and granted Reliant’s motion for default judgment on its claims

against Daigle for breach of contract and a violation of the CPA. The court also awarded Reliant

its attorneys’ fees and costs and dismissed the remaining claims against Daigle as moot.

However, after receiving supplemental briefing from Reliant on the issue of damages, the court

did not approve the recommended award of $105,000, as it relied on the mistaken premise that

RSA 358-A:10, I authorizes trebling the liquidated damages provided for in the contract between

Reliant and Daigle. Instead, the court granted Reliant’s request to present evidence of its actual

damages under the CPA and ordered it to file a renewed motion for default judgment. Reliant

filed its motion with accompanying exhibits on August 11, 2023, and the court held a hearing on

January 19, 2024.

Standard of Review

Fed. R. Civ. P. 55 establishes two processes for awarding damages by default judgment.

Rule 55(b)(1) allows damages to be awarded against a defaulting party on the pleadings when

the claim is for a “sum certain,” meaning “there is no doubt as to the amount to which a plaintiff

is entitled as result of the defendant’s default.” KPS & Assocs., Inc. v. Designs By FMC, Inc.,

318 F.3d 1, 19 (1st Cir. 2003). “The classic example is an enforceable liquidated damages clause

in a contract.” Id. at 20. However, if the claimed sum is not certain, the court proceeds under

Rule 55(b)(2) and receives evidence on the issue of damages. Id. “[A] plaintiff must prove the

damages it claims” under Rule 55(b)(2), Equip. E., LLC v. Corbell Dev., LLC, No. 20-CV-274-

JD, 2020 WL 5549102, at *1 (D.N.H. Sept. 16, 2020), and a claim for lost profits must be proven

2 with “reasonable certainty,” Boyle v. City of Portsmouth, 172 N.H. 781, 792 (2020). “[D]amages

cannot be awarded for ‘speculative losses.’” Boyle, 172 N.H. at 792.

Discussion

Because the court already decided the issue of Daigle’s liability when it granted

Reliant’s first motion for default judgment, all that is left for the court’s determination is the

question of the total amount of damages due to Reliant.

Although Reliant avers that its claimed damages are a sum certain and that its motion is

properly bought under Rule 55(b)(1), that assertion is incorrect. Reliant seeks actual damages for

its lost profits. As the court previously held in response to Reliant’s argument that its actual

damages are the liquidated damages provided in the subcontractor agreement, “Liquidated

damages and actual damages are distinct as a matter of New Hampshire law.” Doc. no. 21 at 2

(quotations omitted) (citing Orr v. Goodwin, 157 N.H. 511, 516-18 (2008)). Reliant also seeks

treble damages under RSA 358-A:10, I, arguing that the evidence establishes that Daigle’s

violation of the CPA was knowing and willful. Inherent in Reliant’s motion is an

acknowledgment that its damages are not certain, as they depend on findings made by the court

based on evidence put forth by Reliant. And, Reliant seeks an award of attorneys’ fees, which

also must be proven. Doc. no. 20 at 2 n.1 (citing Trustees of Sheet Metal Workers Loc. Union

No. 17 Ins. Fund v. Phils HVAC, Inc., No. 21-CV-10680-ADB, 2021 WL 4594925, at *2 (D.

Mass. Oct. 6, 2021)). For these reasons, Reliant’s claimed damages are not for a sum certain, and

the court analyzes Reliant’s motion under the default judgment standard in Rule 55(b)(2).

3 I. Lost Profits

In support of its application for actual damages under the CPA, Reliant claims that, due

to Daigle’s breach, it lost profits of $89,921.92. Reliant previously described its actual damages

as “the net profits lost on every day that Daigle worked directly for Reliant’s customer.” Doc. no.

22 at 5. It now takes the more nebulous position that its actual damages are its anticipated net

profits, determined by the number of annual hours worked by the “typical contractor,” multiplied

by the expectation that Daigle would work for at least one year, deducting compensation to

Daigle and other anticipated costs to Reliant. Doc. no. 24 at 2-3. Reliant’s evidence is 1) the

$165 per hour rate that Reliant’s client agreed to pay it in exchange for Daigle’s services; 2) the

$100 per hour rate that Reliant agreed to pay Daigle for its services, as well as other costs that

Reliant would have incurred over the year-long contract; 3) the independent subcontractor

agreement and statement of work, signed by Reliant and Daigle, estimating that Daigle’s

consulting work for Reliant’s client would last one year; and 4) the declaration of Reliant’s Chief

Operating Officer, Mark Castellarin, that “a typical consultant bills 2,000 hours in a year,” doc.

no. 24-2 at 2. Considering these pieces of evidence together, Reliant asserts that its net profits

would have been its gross revenue (2,000 hours times $165 per hour) minus compensation to

Daigle (2,000 hours times $100 per hour) and other expenses associated with the contract, for a

total of $89,921.92.

Although the court finds that Reliant has established by a reasonable certainty the

relevant rates that would have determined the amount of its profit, it has not met its burden

regarding the other essential part of the lost profits determination: the number of hours that

Daigle would have worked under the subcontractor agreement. See P.C. Hoag & Co. v. Man Lift

Mfg., Co., No. 15-CV-498-JL, 2018 WL 4298343, at *9 (D.N.H. Jan. 10, 2018), R&R approved,

4 No.

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Related

Orr v. Goodwin
953 A.2d 1190 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2008)

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2024 DNH 005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliant-life-sciences-llc-v-agc-biologics-inc-and-daigle-computer-nhd-2024.