Case Information
*1 United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 01-1862
NEAL DAVIGNON AND PATRICIA KELLEY, Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross-Appellants,
AMANDA DAVIGNON AND CHELSEA DAVIGNON,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
KARL D. CLEMMEY AND KARL D. CLEMMEY, JR., Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
TOWN OF MANSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS,
ARTHUR O'NEIL, ETC.
Defendants-Appellees,
CLEMMEY, INC., ET AL.,
Defendants. No. 02-1293
NEAL DAVIGNON AND PATRICIA KELLEY, Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross-Appellants,
AMANDA DAVIGNON AND CHELSEA DAVIGNON,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
KARL D. CLEMMEY AND KARL D. CLEMMEY, JR., Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
TOWN OF MANSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS,
ARTHUR O'NEIL, ETC.
Defendants-Appellees,
CLEMMEY, INC., ET AL.,
Defendants. No. 02-1346
NEAL DAVIGNON AND PATRICIA KELLEY, Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross-Appellants,
AMANDA DAVIGNON AND CHELSEA DAVIGNON,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
KARL D. CLEMMEY AND KARL D. CLEMMEY, JR., Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
TOWN OF MANSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS,
ARTHUR O'NEIL, ETC.
Defendants-Appellees,
CLEMMEY, INC., ET AL.,
Defendants. APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Circuit Judge,
Cyr and Stahl, Senior Circuit Judges.
Michael J. Traft, with whom Carney & Bassil, P.C. was on brief for defendants-appellants.
Leonard H. Kesten, with whom Deidre Brennan Regan, Patricia Malone Campbell, and Brody, Hardoon, Perkins & Kesten were on brief for plaintiffs-appellees and defendants-appellees. March 4, 2003
*4
CYR, Senior Circuit Judge. Defendants Karl D. Clemmey ("Karl") and Karl D. Clemmey, Jr. ("Dan") appeal from a district court judgment, entered following a jury verdict, directing them to pay $2,850,000 in damages to Neal Davignon, Patricia Kelley, and their two minor children, for intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault and battery, and various violations of their civil rights. In turn, Davignon and Kelley cross-appeal from a district court ruling that their jury verdiсt against Karl Clemmey, totaling $2,000,000, for intentional infliction of emotional distress, is barred by res judicata. We affirm the jury verdict. I
BACKGROUND
The relevant background facts are recited in the light
most consistent with the jury verdict. See Quint v. A.E. Staley
Mfg. Co.,
Twenty minutes after he was fired, Davignon returned to the auto body shop, with Kelley and their children, in order to *5 retrieve some personal tools which had been wrongfully confiscated from Davignon by the Clemmeys during the earlier assault. After Dan Clemmey refused to allow Davignon to enter, claiming that Davignon had assaulted his father — Karl Clemmey — Kelley and the children left in tears to seek police assistance. Subsequently, Dan Clemmey advised the police officer that Karl Clemmey had decided not to press assault charges against Davignon and Kelley. Thereafter, Neal Davignon signed an assault-and-battery complaint against Karl Clemmey.
One week later, the Clemmeys commenced a long and relentless campaign of harassment and intimidation against Davignon and Kelley, beginning with their filing of criminal charges of assault and threats of arson. Subsequently, Karl Clemmey actively opposed Davignon's pending claim for unemployment compensation. Additionally, Karl Clemmey's real estate company, 360 Chauncey Street LLC, commenced eviction proceedings in state housing court against Davignon and Kelley. Davignon and Kelley counterclaimed fоr intentional infliction of emotional distress and thereafter included Karl Clemmey as a party defendant. Ultimately, in July 1998, Davignon, Kelley, and 360 Chauncey Street LLC entered into an Agreement for Judgment, which ceded possession of the leased premises to 360 Chauncey Street LLC, effective October 1, 1998, and stated that "the parties agree to waive all claims and counterclaims regarding this matter with prejudice."
Meanwhile, the Clemmeys, acting in concert, repeatedly intimidated and harassed the Davignons from February to August of 1998. For instance, while Davignon was visiting a friend at another auto repair garage, he observed that Karl Clemmey was taking his photograph. On the same occasion, Karl Clemmey warned Neal Davignon that no unemployment-compensation hearing would ever be held because "[y]ou'll be dead by then, you and your family."
In due course, Neal Davignon rеported these threats to the Mansfield Police Department. Whereupon, Karl Clemmey was arrested and charged with the January 9 assault, and the state court entered a "stay-away" order as a condition of bail. Thereafter, Karl Clemmey submitted several additional false criminal complaints against Davignon, alleging assault and threatened assault.
Another witness saw Dan Clemmey break open a trash bag and strew its contents over the Davignons' lawn. In a similar vein, Patricia Kelley observed as Karl Clemmey drove past the Davignon residence. Later, upon returning home from an errand, Kelley found that the front door had been broken. On yet another occasion, a Mansfield police officer saw Karl as he was driving by the Davignon home. By way of further harassment, Karl falsely reported to the Mansfield Fire Department that the Davignons were storing explosives and other hazardous materials at their home. *7 Upon investigation, the latter allegation proved to be unfounded as well.
In April 1998, an anonymous telephone report was received by the Massachusetts Department of Social Services, to the effect that Davignon and Kelley were abusing and/or neglecting their children. Following an investigation, which included interviews of the Davignon children, the allegations were determined to have been unfounded.
On several other occasions, Patricia Kelley and another person witnessed the Clemmeys surveilling the Davignon residence from their parked car. In August 1998, Davignon saw Karl Clemmey as he was driving away from the Davignon residence, and immediately thereafter found the rock which had been thrown through the window of his residence moments earlier. On yet another occasion, Karl Clemmey brought his car to a stop on the street beside the Davignon residence and (i) called out to the Davignon children: "Assholes"! and (ii) ranted that their parents were "pieces of shit." These outbursts brought the Davignon children to tears.
Subsequently, Karl Clemmey was convicted in state court for having assaulted Davignon on January 9, 1998; at the same time, Kelley was acquitted of the charge that she had assaulted Dan Clemmey. Thereafter, the numerous remaining criminal complaints brought by the Clemmeys against Davignon and Kelley were dropped.
In September 1999, Davignon, Kelley, and their children commenced the instant action against the Clemmeys in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, demanding damages for (i) assault and battery; (ii) intentional infliction of emotional distress; and (iii) various civil rights violations. The Clemmeys counterclaimed against Davignon and Kelley, and instituted a cross-claim against the Town of Mansfield and its policе chief for facilitating Davignon's and Kelley's alleged harassment of the Clemmeys. [1] Following the nine-day trial, the jury awarded Davignon $350,000 on the assault and battery charge; as well as $1,000,000 each to Davignon and Kelley, and $1,250,000 to each Davignon child, on their respective claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil rights violations.
On June 1, 2001, at the behest of Davignon and Kelley, the district court certified its partial judgment as final, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), and the Clemmeys timely filed their notice of appeal. On June 11, the district court extended the time for submitting applications for counsel fees, as well as motions for judgment as a matter of law, new trial, and remittitur. *9 The Clemmeys did not file their post-trial motions until June 29, more than ten days after the entry of final judgment on June 1.
Although the district court rejected the Clemmeys' motions for new trial and remittitur, it vacated the $1,000,000 jury awards to Davignоn and Kelley for intentional infliction of emotional distress as well as various civil rights violations. The district court determined that these claims had been fully litigated and waived by Davignon and Kelley pursuant to the July 1998 Agreement for Judgment in the housing-court eviction proceedings, which included a release stating that "the parties agree to waive all claims and counterclaims regarding this matter with prejudice."
The Clemmeys now appeal from the district court rulings which rejected their post-trial motions. Davignon and Kelley cross- appeal from the district court order which vacated their respective $1,000,000 awards for intentional infliction of emotional distress and various civil rights violations.
II
DISCUSSION
A. The Clemmey Appeal
1. Federal Rule of Evidence 803(4)
The district court permitted Jeffrey Parks — a family therapist and social worker not licensed to practice medicine — to testify concerning statements made to him by the Davignons during family-theraрy sessions relating to the extreme emotional distress *10 experienced by the Davignon children. [2] The Clemmeys contend that the district court erred in permitting Parks to testify regarding these statements because (i) Federal Rule of Evidence 803(4) provides an exception to the hearsay rule only for those statements made "for the purpose of medical diagnosis," whereas (ii) the plaintiffs consulted Parks for generalized advice on family problems, rather than to facilitate contemporaneous or subsequent treatment by a medical professional for any particular illness or disease.
Normally, "proper interpretation of the Federal Rules of
Evidence [presents] a question of law and is reviewed de novo,
whereas the application of [a particular rule of evidence] . . . is
reviewed under an abuse-of-discretion standard." Crowley v. L.L.
Bean, Inc.,
1999) (noting that objection asserted by motion in limine does not
*11
preserve evidentiary challenge absent contemporaneous objection at
trial). Consequently, we review for plain error only. We discern
none. See Linn v. Andover Newton Theolog. Sch., Inc.,
2. The Jury Instruction
The district court instructed the jury that a knowing
violation of the state-court restraining order by the Clemmeys would
be sufficient, "standing alone," to demonstrate "outrageous
conduct," an essential element of the claim for infliction of
*12
emotional distress. See supra note 2.
[4]
The Clemmeys maintain that
the challenged instruction misstates Massachusetts law. Jury
instructions are reviewed de novo. See Crowley,
verdict and the "substantial rights" of the objecting party, see
Romano v. U-Haul Int'l,
*13 We need not consider whether the instant jury instruction constitutes a correct statеment of Massachusetts law, [5] nor whether the Clemmeys adequately preserved the present claim for appeal, [6] inasmuch as the record on appeal discloses beyond any genuine doubt that the putative error was neither plain nor harmful, given that it almost certainly did not affect the verdict. The Clemmeys maintain, for example, that the jury may have found them liable based merely on some isolated and relatively innocuous violation of the "stay-away" order, such as Karl Clemmey driving by the Davignon home on a single occasion. Of course, appellants conveniently overlook the fact that the jury was explicitly charged with *14 assessing the outrageousness of the Clemmeys' conduct in determining the severity of the injury proximately caused to the Davignons, hence the amount of damages. Thus, the district court explicitly instructed the jury: "The violation [of the stay-аway order] would have to be the proximate cause of this severe emotional distress." (Emphasis added.)
Given the $4.5 million jury award for intentional infliction of emotional distress, we are entirely confident that the jury did not opt to rely upon any one innocuous drive-by. Instead, as the trial outcome turned almost entirely upon the Clemmeys' credibility vel non, the jury in all likelihood determined that appellants' well-documented, extensive campaign of harassment readily rose to the level of "outrageous conduct," resulting in severe emotional injury to the Davignon family. Accordingly, viewed in context, any instructional error was harmless.
3. The Sufficiency of the Evidence
a. Appellate Jurisdiction
The Davignons contend that we lack jurisdiction of the
Clemmeys' challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting
the jury verdict, given that the Clemmeys failed to submit their
Rule 50 and Rule 59(e) motions within ten days after entry of the
final judgment on June 1, 2001. See Vargаs v. Gonzalez, 975 F.2d
916, 917 (1st Cir. 1992) (per curiam) (noting that district court
lacks jurisdiction to extend "mandatory" ten-day window prescribed
*15
by Fed. R. Civ. P. 6(b)). The Clemmeys respond that we may excuse
their tardy motions under the "unusual circumstances" exception, see
Thompson v. INS,
First, the viability of the Thompson doctrine remains in
considerable doubt, see, e.g., Osterneck v. Ernst & Whinney, 489
U.S. 169, 178-79 (1989); United States v. Heller,
Given the enigmatic nature of the "unique circumstanсes"
doctrine, and our determination that the sufficiency challenges
asserted by the Clemmeys fail on the merits, see infra, we bypass
the jurisdictional issue, and turn to the substance of their appeal.
See United States v. Woods, 210 F.3d 70, 74 n.2 (1st Cir. 2000)
(noting that timely notice of appeal is not an Article III
requirement, thus does not implicate Steel Co. v. Citizens for a
Better Env't,
*17 b. The Assault and Battery Verdict for Neal Davignon The Clemmeys contend that the $350,000 damages award to Neal Davignon, arising from the assault and battery by Karl Clemmey on January 9, 1998, is excessive, in that (i) Davignon established at most that he sustained but minor physical injuries (e.g., bruised ribs), as well as little or no lost income; and (ii) the jury may have compensated Davignon separately — for the emotional injuries resulting from the assault — under the Davignon intentional- infliction-of-emotional-distress count. The Clemmeys seek either a new trial or a remittitur.
A district court ruling rejecting a motion for new trial
is reviewed only for abuse of discretion. See Marrero v. Goya of
P.R., Inc.,
A district court ruling rejecting a motion for remittitur is reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Trull, PPA v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc., 311 F.3d 58, 67 (1st Cir. 2002). The task of estimating money damages, especially intangible, noneconomic loss, constitutes a core jury function. Id. Thus, in the instant case appellants face a "formidable" burden, since they must demonstrate that the district court abused its discretion in determining that the jury verdict (i) does not exceed "any rational appraisal or estimate of the damages that could be based on the evidence before the jury"; and (ii) is not "'grossly excessive, inordinate, shocking to the conscience of the court, or so high that it would be a denial of justice to permit it to stand.'" Id. (citations omitted). An abundance of evidence enabled the jury rationally to conclude that Neal Davignon sustained severe physical and emotional injury as a consequence of the Clemmeys' brutal assault on January 9, 1998. Well known for his temper, enraged and unprovoked, Karl Clemmey abruptly fired Davignon, shoved him, pinned him against a van, insulted him (e.g., "You're so f---ing stupid"); threatened him and his family with bodily harm (e.g., "You're a f---ing deadman," and "I'm going to stuff you in a trunk so you never see the light of day."); misappropriated Davignon's work tools and other personal belongings; held him from behind with a tire iron, while using it *19 to lift him off the floor by the neck and chest, swinging him from left to right; threatened to break his back "so you never work again"; and finally struck Davignon in the face with the tire iron.
The version of these events tendered by the Clemmeys was
quite different, of course, but both the jury and the district court
credited the Davignon evidence. Thus, the suddenness and brutality
of the assault, precipitated principally by Karl Clemmey's
unprovoked rage against Davignon and his family, amply supportеd the
jury finding that much of the emotional trauma sustained by Davignon
proximately resulted from the physical assault, as distinct from the
trauma caused by the Clemmeys' ensuing campaign of harassment,
thereby precluding any ruling on appeal that the $350,000 jury award
was either grossly excessive or shocking to the conscience. See
Trull,
The Clemmeys contend as well that the damages awarded in relation to Karl's assault upon Davignon must be set aside, since the jury may have compensated Davignon for the same injuries in its *20 discrete award for intentional infliсtion of emotional distress. The district court instructed the jury to indicate, on its special verdict form, whether and to what extent the mental and emotional damages sustained by Davignon, due to the Clemmeys' assault, overlapped with the damages awarded for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Clemmeys neither objected nor proposed an alternative instruction. But cf., e.g., O'Connell v. Chasdi, 511 N.E.2d 349, 350 (Mass. 1987) ("In response to a special question, the jury indicated that the damages awarded for intentional infliction of emotional distress included the amount awarded for assault and battery."). Moreover, on the verdict form in the instant case, the jury explicitly noted: "no overlap."
c. The Verdict for the Davignon Children The Clemmeys contend that the district court erred in declining to enter judgment, as a matter of law, against the Davignon children in relation to their claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, in that (i) thе children's counsel failed to mention or describe, during opening statement, any damages sustained by the children; and (ii) the children adduced no evidence that they were present during most of the alleged harassment, so as to have experienced the requisite "direct impact" of any such harassment.
Normally, a district court order rejecting a Rule 50(b)
motion is reviewed de novo, and is to be sustained unless the
*21
evidence adduced at trial permitted but one conclusion — that the
verdict simply cannot stand. See Jarrett v. Town of Yarmouth, 309
F.3d 54, 59 (1st Cir. 2002). In order even to qualify for such
deferential review, however, appellants were required to preserve
their arguments by (i) submitting timely Rule 50 motions at the
close of evidence; (ii) renewing their motions following the jury
verdict; and (iii) identifying with sufficient particularity the
legal theories supporting their motions. See, e.g., CMM Cable Rep,
Inc. v. Ocean Coast Props., Inc.,
As appellants did not broach their first contention —
viz., that the children's attorney failed to mention damages during
opening argument — until their post-verdict Rule 50 motion, it must
be deemed waived. Additionally, although the two cited cases do
acknowledge that, in certain circumstances, a trial court might
enter judgment immediately after such a delinquent opening argument,
neither case upheld such a premature dismissal on its facts. See
Best v. Dist. of Columbia,
Although plaintiffs' counsel certainly could have been
more particular, in no respect did their opening statements remotely
permit the suggestion that the Davignon children had sustained no
damages. See id. (in order to warrant early dismissal, opening
statement must be unambiguously "inconsistent" with asserted cause
of action). Instead, these opening statements placed the children
in the presence of tumultuous confrontations between their parents
and the Clemmeys, which necessarily implied that the children were
exposed to the harassment directed at their parents. See Sixty-
Eight Devonshire, Inc. v. Shapiro, 202 N.E.2d 811, 815-16 (Mass.
1964) ("[I]n an opening it is not to be expected that a plaintiff
will outline his damages with particularity. That is a mаtter
ordinarily left to proof.") (citation omitted).
[8]
Consequently, we
conclude that (i) the instant claim has been waived; and (ii)
*23
appellants have not demonstrated an "absolute dearth of evidentiary
support" for the jury verdict. Udemba,
The second sufficiency challenge advanced by the Clemmeys
— that the children failed to establish that they sustained any
"direct impact" from the alleged harassment — was waived as well.
Contrary to their record citations on appeal, the Clemmeys failed
to include the present contention in their prejudgment Rule 50
motions. Appellants' assertion that their post-verdict motion not
only "focused" upon the plaintiffs' failure to mention damages in
their opening arguments, but also raised the "direct impact"
argument, is utterly disingenuous. Instead, their post-verdict
motion focused exclusively upon the "opening argument" claim. See
CMM Cable Rep, Inc.,
Moreover, even if we were to assume, arguendo, that Massachusetts law requires evidence of "direct impact," as advocated by the Clemmeys, the record on appeal contains such evidence. Unlike a truly absent family member who lives in another state, for example, the Davignon children resided with their parents, and their family home was the focal point of the Clemmeys' campaign. Accordingly, it cannot reasonably be considered unduly speculative to infer that the Davignon children were directly impacted by the Clemmeys' actions. Furthermore, the record discloses several instances in which the Clemmeys directed their conduct at the children. For example, Karl Clemmey himself directly asserted to *24 the Davignon children that they were "assholes," and their parents "pieces of shit!" Finally, Karl Clemmey submitted a false child- abuse comрlaint to DSS, which resulted in a DSS interview of the Davignon children.
Accordingly, and for all these reasons, the Clemmey appeal
must be denied. See Udemba,
B. The Davignon Cross-Appeal
In January 1998, the Clemmeys' real estate company, which owned the house the Davignons were renting, brought suit in state housing court to evict Neal Davignon and Patricia Kelley, who then counterclaimed against both the real estate company and Karl Clemmey for intentional infliction of emotional distress. In July 1998, Davignon, Kelley, and the company (but not Karl Clemmey) entered into an Agreement for Judgment, which provided, inter alia, that (i) judgment enter for the real estate company "for possession only," requiring the Davignons to vacate the premises by October 1, 1998; (ii) the real estate company reimburse the Davignons for moving expenses and attorney fees; (iii) "[t]he parties agree to waive all claims and counterclaims regarding this matter with prejudice"; and (iv) that the Agreement for Judgment was to operate as "a direct order from the [Housing] Court . . . [and] as an injunction." The caption of the Agreement designated the company alone (i.e., not Karl Clemmey) as "Landlord/Plaintiff," and Davignon and Kelley as *25 "Tenant/Defendant." Karl Clemmey's counsel signed the Agreement for "P's" – viz., Plaintiffs.
Davignon and Kelley now cross-appeal from a post-trial
ruling, in which the district court set aside their $2 million
damages award against Karl Clemmey for intentional infliction of
emotional distress, on the ground that their July 1998 Agreement for
Judgment in the housing-court case is res judicata. See Forman v.
Wolfson,
1.
First, the Davignons assert that the district court lacked
subject matter jurisdiction to vacate the jury verdict, since Karl
Clemmey failed to submit his post-trial motion within the ten-day
postjudgment deadline. For the reasons previously discussed, see
supra Section II.A.3(a), we bypass the jurisdictional issue, as the
Davignon and Kelley cross-appeal must be sustained on the merits in
any event. See Kelly,
2.
The Waiver of the Karl Clemmey Res Judicata Defense
Next, the Davignons insist on appeal, as they did before
the district court, that Karl Clemmey waived any res judicata
defense by failing to raise it until near the close of the
Davignons' case on the eighth day of the nine-day trial. As an
*26
affirmative defense enumerated in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
8(c), normally res judicata is deemed waived unless raised in the
answer. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(c); Rivera-Puig v. Garcia-Rosario,
*27 Although application of the res judicata doctrine essentially constitutes a legal determination for the district court, which we would assess de novo, post-trial motions generally
аre reviewed only for abuse of discretion, as is the case with
district court rulings regarding whether a defendant timely
interposed an affirmative defense. See Perez v. Volvo Car Corp.,
In the instant case, Karl Clemmey concededly failed to
raise the res judicata defense in his answer. Moreover, given the
circumstances, the district court abused its discretion, both in
permitting Clemmey to assert a res judicata defense at the eleventh
hour, and in failing to address the Rule 8(c) waiver issue squarely
raised by the Davignons in their opposition. See Coutin v. Young
& Rubicam P. R., Inc.,
The contention that Karl Clemmey raised the res judicata defense before trial is disingenuous, especially since he relies entirely upon the fact that he asserted an estoppel defense in his answer. To the contrary, (i) estoppel — viz., equitable estoppel — is a defense separate and distinct from res judicata; and (ii) estoppel broadly adverts to a claimant's prior representations and conduct in general, while Rule 8(c), with its individualized enumeration of "res judicata," "estoppel," and "release" as *28 affirmative defenses, plainly evinces an intention to accord discrete treatment to the preclusive effects of prior consent judgments, releases, and settlements.
Additionally, Karl Clemmey disingenuously contends that the plaintiffs were placed on notice, during discovery, that he intended to pursue a res judicata defense, simply by virtue of the fact that Clemmey inquired of Patricia Kelley, on deposition, regarding the Agreement for Judgment. The Patricia Kelley deposition reflects, however, that defense counsel briefly probed her understanding of the intended scоpe of the July 1998 settlement. When Kelley insisted upon a narrow interpretation, and emphasized her understanding that her waiver of claims pertained exclusively to claims "regarding this matter" — viz., the company's claim for eviction and possession — defense counsel dropped the subject. At that juncture, therefore, it seems much more likely that plaintiffs would have understood that Clemmey would not pursue any defense predicated on the preclusive effect of the Agreement for Judgment, particularly in light of Clemmey's admitted failure to raise the defense in his answer.
Those cases which permit the interposition of an
affirmative defense outside the pleadings generally have involved
moderate delays, such as an attempt to raise the defense in a
pretrial motion to dismiss or for summary judgment, rather than at
trial or in a postjudgment motion. Compare , e.g., LaFreniere Park
*29
Found. v. Broussard,
Moreover, Clemmey continued to waffle even after purportedly asserting his affirmative defense. At trial, the parties stipulated that thе jury should be instructed that the Agreement, at the very least, waived Davignon's and Kelley's claims with respect to any emotional distress directly attributable to the eviction, as distinguished from that attributable to the other acts of harassment and intimidation perpetrated by the Clemmeys. The district court (i) advised Clemmey's trial counsel that he could later contend, by motion, that the Agreement had a broader preclusive effect; (ii) suggested as possible defenses accord and *30 satisfaction, collateral estoppel (or issue preclusion), and res judicata (or claim preclusion); and (iii) expressed its intention to decide the issue as a matter of law.
Nevertheless, the post-trial motion submitted by Clemmey
broached no res judicata defense. Instead, the Clemmey motion
captioned his argument "Release," rather than "Res Judicata."
Moreover, the motion mаde but one prefatory citation to the general
doctrine of collateral estoppel. All five pages of the Clemmey
argumentation focused exclusively upon release, however, yet another
affirmative defense which he had never asserted in his answer. See
Sharon v. City of Newton,
Moreover, as has been made crystal clear, "a suit can be
barred by the earlier settlement of another suit in either of two
ways: res judicata or release . . . [and] [t]he defenses are
separate and distinct." Nottingham Partners v. Trans-Lux Corp., 925
F.2d 29, 31-32 (1st Cir. 1991) (emphasis added). Here, however,
Clemmey argued that once he established the existence of the
release, the Davignons had to bear the burden of proving its
invalidity, Costello v. Hayes, 144 N.E. 368, 370 (Mass. 1924),
*31
whereas the burden of establishing the affirmative defense of res
judicata rests upon the proponent. See Cochrane v. Cochrane, 22
N.E.2d 6, 9 (Mass. 1939); see also Nwosun v. Gen. Mills Rests.,
Inc., 124 F.3d 1255, 1257 (10th Cir. 1997) ("Res judicata is an
affirmative defense on which the defendant has the burden to set
forth facts sufficient to satisfy the elements."). Unlike res
judicata, see Forman,
It is debatable, however, whether the Agreement for Judgment applies to Clemmey at all, given that his name appears nowhere in its caption. The only parties named in the Agreement are the Clemmey real estate company, Davignon, and Kelley. Moreover, the caption of the Agreement names the company, rather than Karl Clemmey, as "Landlord/Plaintiff," and the Davignons as "Tenant/Defendant."
In addition, the judgment arguably purports simply to settle the real estate company's eviction action, rather than the counterclaims for intentional infliction of emotional distress against Karl Clemmey individually. Karl was merely a counterclaim *32 defendant, of course, not a "plaintiff," and his attorney signed the Agreement as counsel for the plaintiffs. The release ambiguously applies to claims "regarding this matter," which may advert either narrowly to the settlement of the company's claim for eviction, or mоre broadly to the eviction claim as well as all counterclaims in the case, including the counterclaims against Clemmey individually. But the intended breadth of the pivotal term "matter" is neither expressly nor otherwise unambiguously defined. Finally, the fact that the settlement took effect as "a direct order from the [Housing] Court[,] . . . [and] as an injunction," is not conclusive for purposes of its interpretation, in that the housing court may have envisioned its injunctive order merely as a partial, nonfinal judgment on the 360 Chauncey Street LLC eviction claim.
A judicial interpretation of an ambiguous release of a joint tort liability implicates two important principles. First, unless the release specifically conveys such an intent, it should not be construed as a release of joint tortfeasors. See Cram, 575 N.E.2d at 748-49. Second, any ambiguity in the release is to be resolved in favor of Davignon and Kelley. See Cormier v. Cent. Mass. Chapter of the Nat'l Safety Council, 620 N.E.2d 784, 786 (Mass. 1993) ("[A]ny doubts about the interpretation of the release must be resolved in the plaintiff's favor."). Thus, Clemmey arguably failed to sustain the burden of proving the affirmative defense of release, let alone to meet the more stringent *33 requirements of res judicata (e.g., identicality of parties, finality of prior judgment).
Nor has Clemmey demonstrated that the res judicata
doctrine, even if applicable to the Agreement for Judgment, would
support a vacatur of the entire jury verdict. Clemmey acknowledges
that evidence of tortious conduct after the entry of the Agreement
for Judgment, such as the allegation that he threw a rock through
a window at the Davignon home in August 1998, was introduced and
admitted at trial. See Havercombe v. Dep't of Educ. of the
Commonwealth of P.R.,
Finally, the record on appeal is sufficiently developed to enable clear resolution of the pivotal Rule 8(c) waiver issue, without a remand. Although the district court ably grappled with the affirmative defense asserted by Clemmey, its failure to consider the waiver issue, which resulted in the vacation of the jury award, constituted an abuse of discretion.
The district court order allowing the cross-appellees' postjudgment motion is therefore vacated, and the original judgment *34 for the appellees, entered pursuant to the jury verdict, is hereby reinstated and affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs. SO ORDERED.
Notes
[1] Following their appeal, the Clemmeys' cross-claim against the Town was dismissed by the district court as moot, pursuant to Federal Rule оf Civil Procedure 16(c). The Clemmeys contend on appeal that we must reverse the Rule 16(c) dismissal in the event we determine that a new trial is warranted on the Clemmeys' claims. As we reach no such conclusion, see infra, their contention need not be addressed.
[2] There are four elements to an intentional-infliction claim under Massachusetts law: (i) defendant intended to inflict emotional distress or knew or reasonably should have known that emotional distress was likely to result from such conduct; (ii) the conduct was "extreme and outrageous," "beyond all possible bounds of decency," and "utterly intolerable in a civilized community"; (iii) the defendant's conduct proximately caused plaintiff's emotional distress; and (iv) the distress was so "severe that no reasonable man could be expected to endure it." Agis v. Howard Johnson Co., 355 N.E.2d 315, 318-19 (Mass. 1976) (citations omitted).
[3] The ambit of Rule 803(4) is not limited to statеments made to
a licensed physician, but instead may encompass those made to
social workers, provided that the declarant intended to procure
medical treatment. See Navarro de Cosme v. Hospital Pavia, 922
F.2d 926, 933 (1st Cir. 1991). Here, the plaintiffs sought Parks'
counsel in order to address mental-health issues associated with
the campaign of harassment which the Clemmeys conducted against
them and their children.
The Clemmeys belatedly attempt to distinguish Navarro, based
on legal arguments whose correctness is not remotely obvious. For
instance, they urge that these statements should have been excluded
from evidence because the declarants (viz., the Davignons) had a
compelling motive to lie. However, the district court allowed Park
to testify only to statements the Davignons made prior to this
litigation. Similarly, the Clemmeys cite child-sex-abuse cases, in
which vаrious courts have refused to admit parental statements to
medical doctors who diagnosed physical abuse. However, those cases
are based on the theory that a parent who abuses his or her own
child may harbor a strong motive to mislead the doctor. See, e.g.,
United States v. Yazzie,
[4] The challenged instruction stated, in pertinent part: [If Karl Clemmey] knew there was a[] [stay- away] order and that he intentionally violated it, I'm telling you that that's enough under intentional infliction of emotional distress standing alone because the orders of the state court are expected to be obeyed. Now that doesn't say that there's damages. The violation would have to be the proximate cause of this severe emotional distress.
[5] We note, however, that the validity of the Clemmeys' legal
thesis is hardly self-evident. The Clemmeys cite cases which hold
that a violаtion of a statute does not itself establish a
negligence claim per se, but rather that it is one factor the
factfinder may consider. See Bennett v. Eagle Brook Country Store,
Inc.,
[6] During the precharge conference, the Clemmeys lodged no objection when the district court announced its intention to give this jury instruction. Tr. VIII, at 195-96. Following the jury charge, however, counsel stated: "Objection for the record to the instruction that violation of the stay-away order is per se emotional distress." Tr. IX, at 108. A party will be deemed to have waived objection to a jury instruction unless, prior to the jury deliberations, it "'stat[ed] distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection.'" Seahorse Marine Supplies, 295 F.3d at 79 (emphasis added; citation omitted).
[7] We reject their alternative argument that the judgment entered on June 1 was not "final." The district court explicitly certified its judgment as final, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), and the Clemmeys thereafter lodged their notice of appeal from that judgment.
[8] For instance, plaintiffs' counsel stated that they represented the Davignon children; "Patty Kelley arrive[d], with the two babies in the back of the car" at the Clemmeys' business on the day the Clemmeys fired Davignon, and that when Kelley left with the children to get the police, she was crying; and the Clemmeys submitted a false child-abuse claim, against Davignon аnd Kelley, to the DDS, seeking to have the Davignon children removed from parental custody.
[9] Federal Rule 8(c) provides, in pertinent part: "In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth affirmatively accord and satisfaction, arbitration and award, assumption of risk, contributory negligence, discharge in bankruptcy, duress, estoppel, failure of consideration, fraud, illegality, injury by fellow servant, laches, license, payment, release, res judicata, statute of frauds, statute of limitations, waiver, and any other matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense." Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(c) (emphasis added).
[10] Clemmey contends that these post-July 1998 events are immaterial, as the Davignons did not include them in their original complaint. Nevertheless, the testimony was admitted at trial, without objection. Consequently, the related factual issues were tried with the implied consent of the parties.
