Walsh v. Curran

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 2024
Docket3:22-cv-00513
StatusUnknown

This text of Walsh v. Curran (Walsh v. Curran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Curran, (M.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

KEVIN WALSH and AAA BAILMASTER BAIL BONDS, LLC,,

Plaintiffs, CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:22-cv-00513

v. (SAPORITO, C.M.J.)

DEIRDRE CURRAN, JOSEPHINE CASTELLANO, ABSOLUTE BONDS, LLC and ABA BAIL BONDS, LLC,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM This is a contract dispute among professional bail bondsmen. We may properly exercise jurisdiction over the dispute as it involves citizens of different states and an amount in controversy exceeding $75,000. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. I. BACKGROUND The plaintiffs in this action are: (a) Kevin Walsh, a resident of New Jersey, and (b) AAA Bailmaster Bail Bonds, LLC (“Bailmaster”), a New Jersey limited liability company, of which Walsh is the sole owner and principal. The defendants are (a) Deirdre Curran, a resident of Florida, (b) Absolute Bail Bonds, LLC (“Absolute”), a Pennsylvania limited liability company, of which Curran is the sole owner and principal; (c)

Josephine Castellano, a resident of Florida, and (d) A B A Bail Bonds, LLC (“ABA”), a Pennsylvania limited liability company, of which Castellano is the sole owner and principal.1

Beginning in 2015, the defendants had provided bail bond service to criminal defendants in seven northeastern Pennsylvania counties: Pike, Monroe, Wayne, Wyoming, Lackawanna, Carbon, and Luzerne

Counties. In 2021, Curran and Castellano decided to move from Pennsylvania to Florida for personal reasons. They negotiated a sale of their bail bondsman businesses for $150,000 to Walsh, whom Curran and

Castellano had known professionally for years. On June 18, 2021, the parties entered into a “Contract for Sale of Advertisement” in which the defendants sold the assets of their bail

bondsman businesses, including advertising assets, to the plaintiffs. The contract provided for the conveyance to Bailmaster of four phone numbers and other personal property located at the offices of Absolute

and ABA in exchange for $150,000 paid in installments. The first

1 At the time when the contract between the parties was executed, Curran and Castellano resided in Pennsylvania. installment of $30,000 was due at closing, and the remaining $120,000

was to be paid in monthly installments of $10,000 beginning August 1, 2021. The contract also contained a restrictive covenant and an anti- solicitation clause. The restrictive covenant prohibited Curran or

Castellano from engaging in the bail bondsman business in Pennsylvania for a period of three or five years from the closing date.2 The anti- solicitation clause prohibited the defendants from soliciting employees,

customers, clients, lessors, renters, vendors, or property owners who had done business with them prior to closing without the plaintiffs’ consent. The contract was drafted by an attorney retained by the plaintiffs,

Alexander J. Rinaldi, Esq.3 At the closing, the plaintiffs remitted payment of the initial $30,000 payment. Beginning August 1, 2021, and continuing for six months,

Walsh remitted the $10,000 monthly installment payments to Curran and Castellano. Notwithstanding the restrictive covenant, Castellano continued to

2 The parties have disputed whether the restrictive covenant was for three years or five years. Two versions of the same contract were offered into evidence at trial. 3 The defendants were not represented by an attorney in connection with the agreement. write bail in Pennsylvania from time to time after the closing with

Walsh’s consent, typically when Walsh was out of town for the weekend or otherwise unable to write bail himself. In September 2021, however, Walsh learned from Curran that Castellano had also been writing bail in

Pennsylvania “behind his back” and as a sub-producer for one of his competitors, a Scranton-based bail bond agency, Cutting Edge Bail Bonds (“Cutting Edge”).

On January 31, 2022, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, William H. Pandos, Esq., sent a cease-and-desist letter to the defendants, advising the defendants that, based on Castellano’s writing of bail in

Pennsylvania on multiple occasions without the plaintiffs’ consent, the plaintiffs considered the defendants to be in material breach of the non- compete clause in the asset sale agreement that the parties had executed.

As a consequence, Pandos advised, the plaintiffs would suspend further payment to the defendants under the contract until such time that this breach was cured and the plaintiffs were made whole for damages

incurred as a result of the breach. The plaintiffs ceased payment immediately. The last six monthly payments due under the contract have not been remitted to the defendants.

On April 6, 2022, the plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action, asserting breach of contract claims against the defendants, and seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief. On April 21, 2022, the

defendants filed their answer and affirmative defenses to the complaint, and they asserted counterclaims for breach of contract against the plaintiffs, seeking damages and injunctive relief. On April 26, 2022, the

plaintiffs filed their answer and affirmative defenses to the defendants’ counterclaims. The parties engaged in a period of discovery. On May 15 and 16,

2023, the parties appeared before the undersigned United States magistrate judge for a bench trial. II. DISCUSSION

Both sides claim that the other side materially breached the advertising asset sale agreement between them. For relief, the plaintiffs request declaratory judgment, and both sides seek compensatory

damages and equitable relief in the form of an injunction or decree of specific performance. Both sides also seek an award of costs and attorney fees. The plaintiffs contend that Castellano’s posting of bail bonds

without their consent—moreover, for a competitor—constitutes a material breach of the asset sale contract’s five-year non-compete clause. The plaintiffs further contend that this material breach permitted them

to suspend performance under the contract—i.e., suspend the monthly installment payments of $10,000 that remained due under the contract. The defendants contend that, because Walsh consented to

Castellano’s writing bail in Pennsylvania from time to time when he was unavailable, the non-compete clause had been waived or the plaintiffs should be estopped from enforcing it. The defendants further contend

that, to the extent Walsh and Bailmaster would not have written smaller bail amounts, those bails written by Castellano are not material.4 Moreover, the defendants contend that the duration of the non-compete

clause was three years, not five years. Finally, the defendants contend that it was the plaintiffs who materially breached the asset sale agreement in failing to make the final six monthly payments.

4 Walsh testified that, as a matter of practice, he would not write bail for amounts less than $5,000. Some of the bails posted by Castellano were for $1,000. Most, however, were for $5,000 or more. A. Evidence Received Into the Record

The plaintiffs presented the testimony of Kevin Walsh, the owner and principal of AAA Bailmaster Bail Bonds, LLC. Walsh testified about his professional background in the bail business and the background of

his company, Bailmaster. Walsh explained how the bail business worked, how he had come to know the defendants professionally, and how he came to write bail bonds in Pennsylvania after bail reform had been adopted

in New Jersey. He testified about the negotiation of the advertising asset sale agreement between himself and the defendants. He identified and authenticated the contract executed by the parties on June 18, 2021, and

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