Rozen v. Greenberg

886 A.2d 924, 165 Md. App. 665, 2005 Md. App. LEXIS 257
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 7, 2005
Docket1990, September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 886 A.2d 924 (Rozen v. Greenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rozen v. Greenberg, 886 A.2d 924, 165 Md. App. 665, 2005 Md. App. LEXIS 257 (Md. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

In 2001, appellant, Arie Rozen, told appellee, a Montgomery County woman named Michal Greenberg, that he “headfed]” a *669 tax preparation business in Rockville, Maryland, called Taxido, Inc., and appellant proposed to merge Taxido with appellee’s tax preparation business, which was also based in Rockville. Rather than merging, appellee sold her client list to appellant in exchange for a share of the income he generated from preparing those clients’ returns. The parties’ relationship soon deteriorated, as they disputed their obligations under their contract of sale.

Appellee ultimately sued appellant and Taxido in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, alleging that appellant fraudulently induced her to sell her business by misrepresenting his background. After a four-day bench trial, judgment was entered for appellee on her fraud claim, and she was awarded $368,760 in damages as well as rescission of the contract to sell her business. 1 Appellant noted this appeal, presenting three questions for our review:

I. Was the trial judge clearly erroneous in finding that appellant’s misrepresentations were material to appellee’s decision to sell her business to appellant?
II. Was the trial judge clearly erroneous in finding that appellee reasonably relied on appellant’s misrepresentations?
III. Did the trial judge err in calculating damages based on appellee’s projected gross revenues, as opposed to her projected income?

We answer the first two questions in the negative, but, because the trial judge erred in his decision on damages, we shall vacate that judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

Appellee’s Rockville-based business consisted of preparing U.S. tax returns for Israelis. Appellee worked as a sole *670 practitioner, residing in Israel most of the year, but traveling to the United States annually to perform her work here. She had been an accountant for nearly twenty years and, by 2001, she had nearly 700 clients.

Appellant was not acquainted with appellee in 2001, but he sent her the following e-mail on November 9 of that year:

My name is Arik Rozen and I am heading a TAX PREPARATION SERVICE for Israelis in the US.
The service is based in Rockville, MD and we are focusing on the DC area, Boston, and NY. You can find more info at www.taxido.com. We have a powerful website which supports on-line preparation from any where [sic] in the US. I understand that you have been doing something similar in the last few years. Since I have always believed in joining forces I am writing to you to see if you are interested in cooperating and if so on which level. I truly believe that we can benefit greatly by working together instead of competing.
I am looking forward to discussing the opportunity with you.
Sincerely,
Arik Rozen, CPA

At trial, appellee testified that one of the reasons she found appellant’s e-mail so intriguing was that it seemed that his business comprised a team of several professionals, whereas she had always been a sole practitioner. She testified:

... I all the time worked on my own, I never had any assistant or any employee and it was very interesting that there is here somebody who owns a company or have a business that many people are working for him, and it seems interesting.

Appellee testified that, after receiving the e-mail, she visited Taxido’s website. Her trial testimony regarding the website was as follows:

Q And what did you see when you went to the website?
*671 A When I went to the website I saw first of all About Us, that was the most interesting part for me and there I saw that—
Q When you say About Us, what do you mean when you say you saw About Us? Was that a heading on the website?
A Yes. Yes.
Q Okay. And what did you see under the heading About Us?
A Under the heading I saw that this company is serving I don’t know, I didn’t know what entity it was, it said Taxido, and this entity is serving is specializing in foreigners and Israelis, there was a clause about it, that they are trying to serve their clients very well and many things, and then there was a heading Team and under the Team it says that they are account, tax professionals, accounts, supervised by CPA and leading of the team is Aric Rozen or Arie Rozen, I don’t remember exactly how he pronounced his name there, who is having an accounting degree MBA from Harriett College U.K. and he is a very, he is experienced for years in some financing position and for years as a CPA, that’s what I thought, that’s what I saw there.

Appellee then replied to appellant’s e-mail, expressing her interest in discussing his proposal and inviting him to call her. At trial, she recounted their initial conversation, in which her primary concern was appellant’s level of experience:

Q What did he say when he called you?
A He told me that he is very experienced, that he has many people working for him, that he specialized in Israelis and foreigners and he knows very well the law, and he praised himself about his experience, how good he is, how excellent he is and he says to me will you consider partnership and I’ll never want a partner. And he said why and I said I don’t believe that I can be in Israel coming for three months and that will work, and so that I remember very well.
*672 And then he said how about you giving me your clients. I said let’s talk about it. He said I’m very familiar, I did it [sic] few times before, I can send you a contract.
Q Okay. Let me stop you right there. Why did you say let’s talk about it? Why were you interested in continuing that dialogue?
A As I told you, I didn’t think of selling at that point, in particular, I didn’t advertise, or thought, I mean, I had thought about how to retire.
Q Okay.
AI thought that I would like to retire at some point in time, but I need somebody very special to give my clients to him because I have a niche.
Q Okay. Had you ever received offers similar to this, prior to this occasion?
A I received offers from CPAs like one from Philadelphia, one from California before, and, in particular, the year before, just a year before, I received an offer from a client of mine who is a CPA in Israel and was about to take his exams in the United States, and he called me and he said to me that he is very interested to talk to me, how we can cooperate and I went to meet him in New York.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
886 A.2d 924, 165 Md. App. 665, 2005 Md. App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rozen-v-greenberg-mdctspecapp-2005.