IN RE: SIMPLY MEDIA, INC., Debtor. BRADLEY C. REIFLER, Plaintiff, STEVEN M. NOTINGER, CHAPTER 7 TRUSTEE, Plaintiff, Appellee, v. CHRISTINA BROWN, a/k/a CHRISTINA RAGO, Individually and in her capacity as Trustee of First Marcus Trust, Defendant, Appellant. ELIZABETH BROWN; MARIA SCHULMAN; DUDLEY C. GOAR; MIDDLESEX SAVINGS BANK; ANGELIKA THUMM; KATHERINE SAN FILIPPO, Defendants.
No. 08-2275
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
May 15, 2009
Hon. Steven J. McAuliffe, U.S. District Judge
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
*Of the District of Maine, sitting by designation.
Todd B. Gordon with whom Stephen F. Gordon and Gordon Haley LLP were on brief for appellee.
At trial, there was evidence from Notinger and his witnesses that David and Christina Brown had formed Simply Media, a company making (or purporting to make) CDs, and had gotten friends to invest in it based on fictitious financial statements and a compelling sales pitch; that the Browns used the invested funds to pay for their personal expenses over several years including the mortgage on their home, personal dry cleaning bills, credit card bills, rent on their daughters’ apartments, medical bills, vacation and school tuition; and that when the funds were exhausted, Simply Media and David Brown filed for bankruptcy.
Based on evidence received at a pre-trial hearing and Christina Brown‘s trial testimony when called by Notinger, the district judge sanctioned Christina Brown for deliberately destroying records by precluding her from testifying as to why the diverted corporate funds constituted legitimate business expenses. A jury returned a verdict against Christina Brown of $1,103,508.60 on the fraudulent transfer claim and $2,968,071 (later reduced to
- that positions taken by Notinger in other litigation against former board members of Simply Media, after the jury returned a verdict in this case, were inconsistent with his positions in this litigation;
- that the
New Hampshire Business Corporation Act, N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 293-A:1.01 et seq. (2009), authorized the payments, which could be regarded as serving business ends; and - that the spoliation sanction for deliberate destruction of evidence imposed by the district court was error.
We do not pass definitively on these or other arguments, because Brown‘s brief does not properly present them. The governing rule requires that an appellant‘s brief contain “a statement of facts relevant to the issues submitted for review with appropriate references to the record” and an argument “with citations to the authorities and parts of the record on which the appellant relies.”
Although claiming that there are “18 issues of material facts” that warrant revisiting the judgment, Brown‘s opening brief does not once cite the trial transcript; and the separate statement of facts in the brief is one paragraph long, with other factual
Brown initially indicated on her transcript order form that no transcript was necessary to our resolution of this case. After the briefing schedule was set--well after the ten day limit set by
Neither does Brown‘s brief supply the information that would be necessary to evaluate the claims. Thus, while Notinger‘s position in this case is alleged to be inconsistent with his position in other litigation, the specific statements in each forum are neither quoted nor documented in Brown‘s opening brief, and in the reply brief it becomes clear that the supposed inconsistency is imaginary.1 Nor is there any case law offered to show that
Brown‘s argument under the New Hampshire Business Corporation Act seems to be that the types of expenses that Simply Media paid on her behalf were permitted as valid expenses necessary to locate an office, maintain the health of officers, and so on. No authority is offered to suggest that the statute allows a corporation to pay personal expenses of the type and on the scale that the evidence indicated in this case. In Brown‘s reply brief, it is argued that Delaware law applied--an argument waived by failing to make it in the opening brief. VanHaaren v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 989 F.2d 1, 7 n.6 (1st Cir. 1993).
As to the spoliation sanction, Brown says that it was unjustified because there was “no evidence introduced of any single document destroyed or any required document not available elsewhere.” The brief does not address or explain the extensive evidence, presented at the pre-trial hearing and through Brown‘s own testimony, supporting the district court finding that “the Browns had deliberately and systematically destroyed nearly every relevant corporate document they ever received or generated.”
Given the deficiencies of the brief and violations of applicable rules, we dismiss this appeal, as precedent permits, Reyes-Garcia v. Rodriguez & Del Valle, Inc., 82 F.3d 11, 15-16 (1st Cir. 1996), and the inadequacies of the brief require. In addition, we direct Brown‘s counsel to show cause by written response within 14 days as to why the court should not order payment by him personally of attorney‘s fees and double costs for needlessly consuming the time of the court and opposing counsel with a brief that renders the appeal frivolous. See
It is so ordered.
