Upon a complaint charging negligence, false imprisonment, and assault and battery, a jury returned verdicts assessing damagеs at $6,001.00 in favor of each of Anthony Harvey and Deborah Harvey. From each verdict, the jury subtracted $6,000 which had been paid in settlement to each of the plaintiffs by a codefendant, leaving net damages in each case of $1.00. The single quеstion before us is whether prejudgment interest should be calculated on the aggregate amount of a jury’s verdict, or on the net verdict after a settlement has been deducted.
We outline pertinent facts the jury could have found, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. The
At the K Mart storе, the plaintiffs split up. Anthony Harvey went to the automotive shop for the snow tires and Deborah Harvey repaired to thе main store for other purchases. After selecting tires and having them mounted, Anthony, as instructed by the tire salesman, went to a cashier, where he presented an invoice and his Mastercharge card. An inquiry by the cashier for credit authorization frоm New England Bankcard Association, Inc., produced the electronic credit transfer equivalent of “tilt.” The cashier wаs told to decline the sale and to confiscate Anthony’s credit card.
In accordance with standard instructions, the cashier conveyed this disquieting information to her supervisor, who, in turn, notified K Mart’s security office. K Mart’s security manager materiаlized at the cashier’s booth almost at once. He informed Anthony that his credit card would not be returned and that his car wаs “impounded.” The security man demanded that Anthony surrender his car keys so that a K Mart employee might drive the car to where the new snow tires could be removed and the old ones remounted.
Oblivious to this unfolding drama, Mrs. Harvey returned to the automotivе department and sat herself in the Harvey automobile to await her husband’s return. Presently an agitated K mart employee, rather than Anthony Harvey, appeared, the Harvey car keys in hand. With an order to Mrs. Harvey not to move from the cаr, the K Mart employee drove it onto a lift so that the old and new tires could be swapped. One gathers that Mrs. Harvey wаs allowed to step out of the car before it
It was all a mistake. The Harveys’ credit was, in fact, good; the bank had furnished erroneous information to New England Bankcard.
In his charge, the trial judge instructed the jurors to find “full fair damages” as to each plaintiff and then to subtract the $6,000 which K Mаrt had paid. As to each the jury verdict slips assessed “damages in the sum of $6,001.00 - $6,000.00 = $1.00.”
In the first instance, the clerk assessed interest on $6,001 before subtracting the settlement figure. The judgment in each case came to $4,598.19. Essex Bancorp moved successfully to strike the interest computation from the judgment and to substitute in its place a computation based on $1.00 in damages, i.e., $.75. The Hаrveys preserved the point for review by moving for reinstatement of the original judgments and for a new trial. Those motions werе denied.
There is concurrence between the parties that interest is to be computed in accordance with G. L. c. 231, § 6B, as amended by St. 1982, c. 183, § 2, which requires that interest at the rate of twelve percent from the date of commencement of the action shall be added to the “amount of damages.” The statutory language does not answer the question whether “amount of damages” is the gross figure or the net figure when a settlement payment by a joint tortfeasor is in the picture. Mаking the jury aware that a settlement has been paid is a long-accepted practice. See O’Neil v. National Oil Co.,
It is word play to suggest that the damages here are $1.00. The jury went to obvious pаins to state that in each case its view of a just verdict for the injuries sustained by each plaintiff was an aggregate $6,001. See Turcotte v. DeWitt,
The judgment is reversed. The case is remanded to the Superior Court with directions to the clerk to enter a new judgment with prejudgment interest computed as to eaсh plaintiff on $6,001 from the date of the commencement of the action to the date of payment of the $6,000 settlemеnt (August 29, 1986) and on one dollar from that date to the date of judgment.
So ordered.
Notes
A verdict was directed in favor of New England Bankcard by the trial judge, and there is no appeal from that action.
