Tobin v. Liberty Mgmt., Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedApril 23, 2004
DocketHANcv-02-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tobin v. Liberty Mgmt., Inc. (Tobin v. Liberty Mgmt., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tobin v. Liberty Mgmt., Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

HANCOCK, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-02-2 . Philip C. Tobin, Plaintiff V. Decision and J udgment Liberty Management, Inc., Conair Me Defendant be

Philip Tobin has lived since 1998. In 2002, Liberty took initial steps to evict Tobin because Tobin kept a dog in his apartment. Liberty terminated the eviction process after a physician certified that the dog was medically indicated, and Tobin continues to live at Riverview. Nonetheless, Tobin has brought this action against Liberty, seeking recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress, wrongful use of civil proceedings and unlawful detainer,!

Tobin executed a lease agreement in August 1998. See defendant’s exhibit 1. The lease instrument recited that pets are allowed, subject to Riverview’s policy on pets. Id., 4. The lease further provided that “Cilf the tenant is allowed to have a pet and does in fact have one,” the tenant Must provide an additional $200 security deposit. Id., J I1(b). In fact, there exists a separate document (“attachment 7”) sets out the rules and regulations governing the ownership of pets at Riverview. Under the lease instrument,

Tobin was required to follow Riverview’s rules regarding pets. Id., J 12G)(2). Such

rules could be posted in common areas. Id. By Tobin’s own testimony, no later than 2000, the House Rules that are included in defendant’s exhibit 1 were posted and applied to Tobin and the other residents. Those rules required tenants to secure “prior Management approval” in order to keep a pet.

When Tobin started his tenancy at Riverview, he did not own apet. He never signed attachment 7, and he never paid the $200 security deposit Tequired to keep a pet in his apartment. At some point not long into his tenancy at Riverview, Tobin either told Denise Beaudoin (Liberty’s Riverview site manager), or Beaudoin discovered (see defendant’s exhibit 3), that he (Tobin) had a dog and kept the dog in his apartment. If the former, then in the relevant conversation, Tobin may have created the impression that he had not decided whether to keep the dog. If the latter, Tobin told Beaudoin that he was keeping the dog only temporarily. In either event, Liberty was not aware that Tobin intended to keep a dog permanently. Liberty’s Riverview site managers, Beaudoin and Esther Curtis, saw the dog on the premises several times. However, neither they nor anyone else on behalf of Liberty ever gave Tobin permission or approval to kept the dog in his apartment. Additionally, the evidence shows that Tobin never paid a pet security deposit. (Tobin testified that due to some changes in his rent, he believed that some of his monthly payments were being applied to cover the pet deposit. The court does not adopt Tobin’s assumption because of its speculative quality.)

For these reasons, as things stood, Tobin was not authorized to keep the dog in his apartment, even though he did so. In June 2001, Tobin was in the Process of changing apartments within the Riverview facility. His relocation was interrupted by complications, which ultimately caused Liberty’s regional manager, Rhonda Gordon, to learn that Tobin kept a dog in his apartment. In a letter dated July 17, 2001, Gordon advised Tobin that he would need to move the dog out of the Riverview facility by September 5, 2001, and that if he failed to do so, Liberty would initiate eviction proceedings. See plaintiff's exhibit 7. Tobin did not find another home for the dog in accordance with Gordon’s letter, and on September 10, Liberty served a “Notice of Intent to Terminate” on Tobin. See plaintiffs exhibit 11. Then, on September 18, it served on Tobin a “Notice of Termination of Lease.” See plaintiffs exhibit 12. In both notices,

Liberty claimed that Tobin had kept a dog on the premises without prior management approval.” On October 18, a physician issued a written request for a reasonable accommodation, certifying that the companionship of a dog would benefit Tobin. See defendant’s exhibit 5. On that date, Liberty wrote Tobin, advising him that it was terminating the eviction Process and that it would allow him to keep the dog in his apartment. See plaintiff's exhibit 24. This decision was confirmed in another letter dated October 30. See plaintiff's exhibit 26. From this succession of events, the court finds that Liberty decided not to seek Tobin’s eviction because he provided Liberty with a written request, from an appropriate and competent source, legitimizing the reasons why it was reasonable for Tobin to be able to keep his dog. The court rejects Tobin’s factual contention that this was a ruse and that Liberty actually buckled to Pressure applied by an attomey who became involved in the matter on Tobin’s behalf. The trial record simply does not support that claim. Further, defense counsel’s use of the word “ostensible” in a summary judgment submission — even if it has the implication urged by Tobin -- does not undermine the weight of the evidence demonstrating that the real reason for Liberty’s action was to enforce the Provisions of Tobin’s lease regarding pets.

Tobin alleges that by taking preliminary steps toward his eviction, Liberty committed the tort of wrongful use of civil proceedings. To prevail on such a claim, Tobin must prove (1) that Liberty initiated civil proceedings without probable Cause; (2) that Liberty’ s primary purpose was something other than securing a proper adjudication of an eviction proceeding; and (3) that the proceeding was terminated favorably to Tobin. Pepperell Trust Co. v. Mountain Heir Financial Corp., 1998 ME 46, J 15, 708 A.2d 651, 656. See also RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TorTS § 674 (1977) (cited in Pepperell Trust). Tobin has failed to prove at least the first two elements of this tort.

First, a party is deemed to have probable cause of a claim if that party “reasonably believes in the existence of facts on which the claim is based, and. . -correctly or reasonably believes that under those facts the claim may be valid under the applicable law... .” RESTATEMENT, § 675. Here, Liberty had information that Tobin kept a dog in

his Riverview apartment and that, under the terms of the lease, Tobin was not authorized

* The two notices cite provisions of the “House Rules” and the “Regulations for Pets.” For the reasons noted above, the House Rules are binding on Tobin as part of the lease agreement. See defendant’s exhibit 1, ¥ 12). to do so. A violation of the pet rules, under the lease, is a basis for termination of the

lease (i.e., eviction). See defendant’s exhibit 1, § 12(j) (final sentence). Liberty

The provisions of section 12(j) did not require Liberty to do anything other than seek termination of the lease. However, by offering Tobin with the first of those two alternatives, it is clear that Liberty’s primary goal was to prompt Tobin to remove the dog from the premises, After Tobin provided a physician’s written certification that the dog was medically warranted, Liberty then had reliable confirmation that the justification for the dog went far beyond the joys of conventional pet ownership. Thus, Liberty’s actions were motivated by a proper and legitimate objective. See RESTATEMENT, § 676. cmt. c.

Without the need to address the question of whether Liberty “initiated” a civil proceeding against Tobin by serving him with a notice of termination, the court concludes that Tobin has failed to prove his claim of wrongful use of civil proceedings, because the evidence does not support the other two elements of this cause of action.

Tobin also seeks recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress.

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Related

Cameron v. Pepin
610 A.2d 279 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1992)
Fuller v. Central Maine Power Co.
598 A.2d 457 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1991)
Pepperell Trust Co. v. Mountain Heir Financial Corp.
1998 ME 46 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1998)
Theriault v. Swan
558 A.2d 369 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)
Curtis v. Porter
2001 ME 158 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2001)

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