The plaintiffs agreed to buy an oven for the baking of Arabic bread under a contract which, as amended, provided that an adequate supply of gas would be furnished by the defendant. At the time for delivery of the oven, natural gas was not available, and the plaintiffs asked for a return of the $10,600 they had paid as a down payment on the oven. The defendant refused to return the deposit, and the plaintiffs brought this action for damages, alleging breach of contract, fraud, and unfair and deceptive acts under G. L. c. 93A. The defendant counterclaimed. The plaintiffs’ common law claims were tried to a jury, which awarded the plaintiffs $15,000 and found for the plaintiffs on the defendant’s counterclaim. A judge sitting in the Superior Court by statutory authority found that the defendant had violated c. 93A, § 11, and awarded the plaintiffs counsel fees. The defendant appeals from the judgments entered on the jury verdict and on the findings of the judge, from the denial of its motion for a new trial, and from an order of the judge which amended his findings with respect to the date on which certain events had occurred. We affirm.
We shall first dispose of the defendant’s contentions which relate to the plaintiffs’ common law claims tried to the jury. The defendant alleges error in the judge’s refusal to suspend the trial in order to allow a rebuttal witness to testify. The witness, whose absence was due to a flight delay, presumably would have testified that the oven which was originally intended for the plaintiffs was sold at a loss as a pizza oven. The judge refused the request which was made for the first time on a Monday morning after the conclusion of all the evidence. There was no error. Whether the defendant had been sufficiently diligent or whether for any reason “justice required a postponement” are ordinarily questions for “the presiding judge alone” and will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing of an abuse of discretion or arbitrariness.
The defendant also argues that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to award the plaintiffs damages in excess of the amount of the deposit of $10,600. This claim, however, should have been made at the time of the charge to the jury. The defendant did not object to the judge’s instructions (which permitted damages in excess of the deposit) and made no suggestions after the charge was given although invited to do so by the judge. It is only by way of appeal from the denial of its motion for a new trial that the defendant argues the issue of excessive damages. The defendant was not entitled as of right to bring before the trial judge on his motion for a new trial this question which it neglected to raise at trial.
Devore
v.
Good,
We turn next to the defendant’s contentions which relate to the plaintiffs’ statutory claim heard by the judge under
The defendant manufactured and sold “Arabic Tunnel Ovens”, which are ovens specially designed to bake Arabic or Syrian bread. These ovens require sufficient gas to produce 1,000,000 B.T.U.’s per hour and, in most locations, the installation of a larger gas line. In the summer of 1974, officers of the defendant took the plaintiffs to places in Massachusetts where the defendant’s ovens were in use. All those ovens used natural gas as a source of heat.
The plaintiffs decided to go into the Syrian bread baking business and, in August, 1974, signed a contract for the purchase of an oven from the defendant. They gave a $600 deposit, and some time in October, deposited an additional $10,000. At about the time of the additional deposit, the plaintiffs became concerned that they would be obliged to purchase an oven for which they would be unable to obtain gas. As a result of this concern, an amendment to the contract was executed under which “the seller agreed to procure the necessary gas to run the Arabic Bread oven purchased by Mr. Homsi and partners.”
At the time the amendment was signed, there was an acute oil and gas shortage. The judge found that the defendant at that time knew that natural gas was not available in an adequate amount in the Brockton area, where the plaintiffs wanted to locate. The defendant argues that there was no evidence to support this finding, but we disagree. The defendant knew the quantity of gas needed for the oven and that a larger gas line would probably be needed. It was in a business highly dependent on adequate fuel
The defendant introduced evidence that at the time it offered delivery of the oven, an event which occurred approximately one month after the contract amendment had been signed, propane gas was available for the operation of the oven. The judge, on conflicting evidence, determined that the defendant’s arguments about the suitability of the propane gas were “specious and unpersuasive”, and that propane gas cost twenty-five percent more than natural gas. He also found that the defendant knew that “necessary gas” would be interpreted by the plaintiffs to mean natural gas, and that this interpretation was reasonable. The judge’s finding that the contract amendment referred to “natural gas” is supported by the evidence and is not clearly erroneous. Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a),
On these facts, the judge ruled that the defendant’s officers commited an unfair or deceptive act within the meaning of G. L. c. 93A, § 2, when “they recklessly made a promise, knowing that the promise could not be kept and that the plaintiffs would rely on this promise.” We agree.
While there is as yet not a “clear definition of conduct which may constitute a violation of c. 93A”, there are definitions which “offer some guidance.”
Purity Supreme, Inc.
v.
Attorney Gen.,
There is no question that, by its deceptive promise, the defendant not only “could . . . have caused” but did cause the plaintiffs “to act differently from the way [they] otherwise would have acted”, and, hence, the promise fell within the proscription of c. 93A, § 2.
Purity Supreme, Inc.
v.
Attorney Gen.,
The failure of the defendant to disclose that it meant propane gas when it used the term “necessary gas” was a failure to disclose a fact which may have influenced the buyers. In addition, the implicit assurances contained in the defend
The defendant argues that even if it committed an unfair or deceptive practice, the plaintiffs have not shown any “loss of money or property” within the meaning of
Baldassari
v.
Public Fin. Trust,
Although the judge found that the reasonable damages caused by the defendant’s unfair and deceptive act were $15,000, he awarded no damages additional to those awarded the plaintiffs by the jury on the common law claims, as he did not find the defendant’s acts to be wilful. Therefore, even if the judge’s findings as to the extent of the damages on the c. 93A claim were erroneous, the defendant was not harmed by that error.
The defendant also contends that the award of attorney’s fees pursuant to G. L. c. 93A, § 11, was excessive. The judge awarded attorney’s fees and costs of $12,583.30. The fees, if calculated at an hourly rate, amount to approximately fifty dollars an hour. The plaintiff’s counsel submitted an extensive memorandum indicating the time spent on each of the many matters involved in the preparation for this case which involved first a District Court trial and then a second trial lasting five days in the Superior Court.
Section 11 provides that if the court finds a violation of § 2, “the petitioner shall, in addition to other relief provided for by this section and irrespective of the amount in controversy, be awarded reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs . . . .” Under c. 93A, where the award “is assessed against the party having no contractual relationship with the attorney involved, the standard of reasonableness depends not on what the attorney usually charges, but rather, on what his services were objectively worth”.
Heller
v.
Silverbranch Constr. Corp.,
The defendant also argues that the fact that the plaintiffs had an arrangement with their counsel which provided for a contingent fee requires that the amount to be awarded not exceed the amount of the contingent fee provided for in the agreement. However, the letter agreement as to fees pointed out the newness of c. 93A, the dearth of case law as to fees, and the likelihood that the contingent fee would be less than the amount usually charged at the regular hourly rate. The letter then continued “if the court should award legal fees under 93A our compensation for your legal services will not be on the basis of contingent fee agreement.” The judge, therefore, did not award a fee higher than that provided for by agreement. 6
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Although the deposit was returned, there was necessarily some loss of interest on the funds deposited.
The 1978 and 1979 amendments of § 11 did not make any changes in § 11, as enacted by St. 1972, c. 614, § 2, which are relevant to this action.
section 3.05(1) provides: “No claim or representation shall be made by any means concerning a product which directly, or by implication, or by failure to adequately disclose additional relevant information, has the capacity or tendency or effect of deceiving buyers or prospective buyers in any material respect. This prohibition includes, but is not limited to, representations or claims relating to the construction, durability, reliability, manner or time of performance, safety, strength, condition, or life expectancy of such product, or financing relating to such product, or the utility of such product or any part thereof, or the ease with which such product may be operated, repaired, or maintained or the benefit to be derived from the use thereof.”
After the appeal was docketed, the plaintiffs, with leave of a single justice of this court, moved in the trial court under Mass.R.A.P. 8(e),
We note that even where the agreement provides that the amount awarded is to be in addition to a contingent fee, at least one court has allowed such an award, subject, of course, to the concern that windfall fees be avoided. See
Farmington Dowel Prod. Co.
v.
Forster Mfg. Co.,
