Sheraton Boston Corp. v. Bozzotto

4 Mass. L. Rptr. 321
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1995
DocketNo. CA 9303405F
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 321 (Sheraton Boston Corp. v. Bozzotto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheraton Boston Corp. v. Bozzotto, 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 321 (Mass. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The plaintiff Sheraton Boston Corporation (“the Sheraton”) brought this complaint against Dome-nic Bozzotto individually and as president of the Hotel, Restaurant, Institutional Employees and Bartenders Union AFL-CIO, Local 26 (“the Union”), and against the Union, alleging abuse of process and malicious [322]*322defamation. The matter is before the court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. For reasons stated, the motion is denied as to the claim for abuse of process, and denied as to the claim for malicious defamation.

BACKGROUND

For the purposes of this motion, the following facts are undisputed:3

The Sheraton operates a hotel in Boston. In March and April of 1991, the Sheraton established a covert video surveillance operation in order to confirm and eliminate the distribution of controlled substances on hotel premises. A covert video camera was set up in a men’s locker room used by hotel employees. This surveillance camera recorded approximately 576 hours of activities taking place in one corner of the locker room, including men studying, resting, and changing clothes, and one apparent drug transaction.

Additionally, in 1990 and 1991, the Sheraton conducted other covert video surveillances. These included surveillance from November 5 to November 26, 1990 of a cash register at the Edible Express, a coffee shop in the hotel, in order to investigate unaccounted-for shortages in receipts; surveillance of a restaurant cash register in March 1991, to account for unexplained cash shortages; and surveillance from September 16 to October 7, 1991, of an area around a liquor cabinet in the kitchen of a bar called the Towers Lounge to investigate the service of adulterated drinks.

In September or October of 1991, Lynda Kerns, a hotel employee and a Union member, found a videocassette on a shelf in the kitchen of the Towers Lounge. She took the video home and viewed it, and discovered that it contained film of male employees changing their clothes without knowing they were being recorded. In fact, this video was one of those used by the Sheraton for surveillance of the men’s locker room. Kerns told Beth Ann Hyland-Babaie, another employee, about the tape.

Hyland-Babaie told Kerns that there had been a meeting of hotel managers in a nearby room the day before Kerns found the tape. However, Ms. Hyland-Babaie did not see or hear anyone listening to the videotape at the meeting of the hotel managers.

In or around February 1992, Kerns called Bozzotto, the president of the Union, and told him about the tape. Kerns told Bozzotto that she had found the cassette in the kitchen and that she believed it came from a meeting where managers reviewed it. Bozzotto did not inquire how Kerns knew that managers had watched the tape. Kerns brought the tape to Bozzotto, and he viewed it.

In June 1992, Robert Morse became General Manager of the hotel. By July, Morse had begun to aggressively address with the Union labor practices and interpretations of the Collective Bargaining Agreement that Morse considered to be lax and incorrect and inconsistent with good management and efficient labor practices. Morse’s management and insistence upon changes in certain practices were met by Union officers with hostility and an adversarial attitude.

In August of 1992, Bozzotto arranged to meet with attorney Goldstein and Kerns and all three viewed the videotape. A few days later, Bozzotto invited to his office and reviewed the videotape with Franklin Etienne and Jean Clement, two hotel employees who were shown on the tape reading books and studying. Neither Etienne nor Clement are native English speakers. Bozzotto told them that he thought secret videotaping of people in the locker room was a violation of the workers’ civil rights. He suggested that they speak with the Union lawyers and told them that they could bring a lawsuit. Later, he accompanied Etienne to attorney Lee Goldstein’s office. Clement met with Goldstein on a separate occasion. A fee agreement was arranged between with Goldstein, Etienne, Clement, and the Union whereby the Union would pay attorneys fees and costs associated with bringing suit, and would be reimbursed by up to one third of any damage awards.4

In February 1993, a lawsuit alleging claims arising from the videotaping was filed, with Clement and Etienne as plaintiffs. The complaint asserted, among other things, that on information and belief the video was viewed by a meeting of managers of the Sheraton, and that the contents of the video constituted a wire or oral communication which was knowingly and willfully intercepted, disclosed, and used by the Sheraton in violation of G.L.c. 272, §99C and Q. Bozzotto saw and reviewed the complaint before it was filed. Clement and Etienne had not seen the complaint before it was tiled. Moreover, neither knew of the filing of the complaint until they heard about the filing over the news media on the date of the tiling. Clement testified at a deposition, however, that the content of the complaint had been explained to him, and Etienne testified that he had given permission to his lawyer to file the complaint on his behalf. However, Bozzotto, and not Clement and Etienne, actively participated in advancing the litigation. The Sheraton alleges that Bozzotto and the Union caused process to issue in that suit, and that they did so for ulterior motives.

For several weeks following the filing of the complaint, Bozzotto and Goldstein were widely quoted in local and national print and broadcast media about the allegations contained therein. These statements are the basis for the defamation claim.

The Boston Globe quoted Bozzotto as saying, “We think there was an audio part to this [surveillance] which clearly is a violation of the wire tapping laws.” The Boston Herald quoted Bozzotto as saying, “We are convinced [the surveillance] was in both male and female locker rooms.” Bozzotto appeared on the news show for WHDH-TV (CBS) and said, “We’re convinced, again, that they were in all of the locker rooms: ladies [323]*323and womens [sic], because we’ve heard the rumors.” Goldstein also referred to surveillance in women’s locker rooms in a Boston Globe article, in which he also stated that the union had waited several months before filing the lawsuit in order to make sure the information they had received was correct. The Boston Herald quoted Goldstein as asking, “How would you like to be photographed in the bathroom at your workplace?” Goldstein was also quoted on a television news show as saying, “How would you like your workplace to have a camera in the bathroom recording you when you’re alone? I think its an outrageous act by the Sheraton.” He made similar statements on another television news show. Bozzotto stated on yet another television news broadcast, “We’re convinced that at one time there was a group of management people in the conference room looking at a large range of tapes, and this tape was left behind by mistake, obviously.” Other television news shows quoted him making similar statements. Bozzotto and Goldstein made numerous other assertions to the media.

Prior to making these statements, Bozzotto had generally inquired of Sheraton management about the surveillance, but did not receive any reply. He did not investigate whether audio recordings had been made by the Sheraton. He had not received any information that taping had occurred in women’s locker rooms.

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4 Mass. L. Rptr. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheraton-boston-corp-v-bozzotto-masssuperct-1995.