Teferi v. Dupont Plaza Associates

551 A.2d 477, 77 Md. App. 566, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 5, 1989
Docket464, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 551 A.2d 477 (Teferi v. Dupont Plaza Associates) 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
Teferi v. Dupont Plaza Associates, 551 A.2d 477, 77 Md. App. 566, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 5 (Md. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*568 KARWACKI, Judge.

On March 2, 1988, appellee, Dupont Plaza Associates (DPA), filed suit in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County against Abraham Teferi, appellant, seeking compensatory and punitive damages. DPA’s three count complaint, alleging conversion, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty, related that Teferi had embezzled over $50,000 from DPA while employed by it. DPA also moved for an ex parte injunction and interlocutory injunction enjoining Teferi from transferring or otherwise disposing of his assets under certain conditions prior to final judgment in the action. On the day the complaint was filed, Judge James S. McAuliffe, Jr. issued the requested ex parte injunction which complied with Rule BB72(b). 1 A hearing on the motion for interlocutory injunction was scheduled before Judge William C. Miller for March 14, 1988.

At the beginning of the hearing before Judge Miller, appellant moved to dissolve the ex parte injunction. Judge Miller declined to rule on that motion and directed appellant to Judge McAuliffe who, in a memorandum dated March 14, 1988, denied appellant’s motion. After one and one-half days of testimony and the introduction of numerous exhibits, Judge Miller issued an interlocutory injunction. It is from these two orders that appellant now appeals. He raises two issues for our review:

I. The circuit court (Miller, J.) erred in issuing an extraordinary prejudgment attachment-type injunction because *569 it failed to apply the standard for such relief set forth in Levitt v. State of Maryland Deposit Insurance Fund Corporation, 66 Md.App. 524, 505 A.2d 140 (1986).

II. The circuit court (McAuliffe, J.) erred in not dissolving the ex parte injunction upon the defendant’s uncontroverted evidence that the plaintiff intentionally failed to give notice to opposing counsel with whom it was negotiating.

We shall affirm the judgment that the interlocutory injunction should issue. We decline to address the second issue because of its mootness.

FACTS

DPA is a limited partnership which owns and operates the Dupont Plaza Hotel (Hotel) in Washington, D.C. Appellant was employed by DPA as the controller for the hotel on October 24, 1983. He continued in that capacity until February 17, 1988, when he was suspended from his position without pay. As the controller, appellant was responsible for maintaining the hotel’s books and records, transacting the hotel’s banking business, including bank deposits and withdrawals, and supervising the payment of the hotel’s employees.

In January of 1988, David Thomas, an operations analyst assigned to the hotel’s accounting department, discovered that a check payable to the hotel for $1,305.25 from the Barclay Hotel had been received by the hotel but was not listed on the list which routinely recorded all checks received by the hotel on a given day. Mr. Thomas also noted a similar irregularity concerning another check for $1,243.55 payable to the hotel from the Center for Defense Information. Mr. Thomas reported these discrepancies to his superiors and an investigation was initiated. That investigation implicated Teferi in the discrepancies, and on February 17, 1988, Scott Murdoch, the hotel’s general manager, suspended appellant from employment by DPA.

*570 Immediately after Mr. Murdoch advised appellant of the suspension, he escorted Teferi to the controller’s office so that he could collect his personal belongings before leaving the hotel. Mr. Murdoch briefly left appellant’s office to make a telephone call. At that moment appellant attempted to destroy various documents contained in his office including cash control work sheets, journal vouchers, and financial statements. After appellant left the hotel, his office was secured. The mutilated documents were subsequently turned over to Randy Weaver, a certified public accountant in private practice, who was retained by the hotel to investigate the nature and extent of the suspected embezzlement.

At the hearing on the interlocutory injunction motion, Mr. Weaver was qualified as an expert witness and testified in detail as to the nature and extent of his analysis and as to his conclusions regarding the misappropriation of the hotel’s funds by Teferi. In Weaver’s opinion, Teferi had employed two principal methods to accomplish the embezzlement, both of which involved the hotel’s “payroll exchange.”

In order to fulfill a requirement of its union contract the hotel cashed the paychecks of certain employees each weekly payday. To do so, each payday a “payroll exchange fund” was withdrawn from the hotel’s operating account. This fund was utilized to cash payroll checks endorsed by employees to the hotel. After all paychecks had been cashed, the remaining cash left from the fund plus the endorsed checks were customarily returned to the controller’s safe for redeposit to the hotel’s operating account. The combination of the remaining cash and checks should have equaled the total amount withdrawn from the payroll exchange fund. Testimony from other witnesses at the hearing indicated that appellant was the only one who knew the combination to the safe which was located in his office.

First, Mr. Weaver testified that on three occasions the payroll exchange fund of cash and endorsed checks was never redeposited into the hotel’s operating fund. Nevertheless, in each instance the hotel’s books, for which Mr. *571 Teferi was responsible, reflected that a $15,000 deposit to the operating account had been made. In order to cover the failure to redeposit these funds, monies were transferred from the hotel’s savings account to the operating account. For example, Mr. Weaver determined that in November of 1987, $90,000 was transferred from the savings account to the operating account, while only a $75,000 transfer was recorded on the hotel’s books. It was alleged that the appellant was the only person in the accounting department authorized to initiate transfers between these accounts.

Second, Mr. Weaver asserted that appellant cashed checks payable to the hotel with cash from the “payroll exchange fund” and then made false journal entries on the hotel’s books to cover for the missing checks. For example, Weaver discovered that the $1,243.55 Center for Defense Information check had been cashed by Teferi through the “payroll exchange fund.”

Appellant did not testify at the hearing because at that time criminal charges, arising out of the alleged embezzlement, were pending against him. Nevertheless, he vigorously cross-examined all witnesses presented by DPA and called four witnesses on his own behalf. Appellant asserted, based on the testimony of two co-workers, that he was not responsible for the deposit slips and journal entries in question. His counsel argued, without any supporting evidence, that appellant was suspended for reporting bookkeeping irregularities that his superiors were directing him to commit in order to “cook the books” so the hotel could acquire a 12.5 million dollar loan.

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Bluebook (online)
551 A.2d 477, 77 Md. App. 566, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teferi-v-dupont-plaza-associates-mdctspecapp-1989.