This action arises under the wiretap statute, G. L. c. 272, § 99 (1986 ed.). 3 After a nonjury trial in the Housing Court of the City of Boston, the judge awarded statutory liquidated damages, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees and costs. Defendants concede that the tape recording was unlawful, but appealed the awards of damages and attorney’s fees. We transferred the case to this court on our own motion. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand on the issue of attorney’s fees and costs.
The facts found by the trial judge may be summarized as follows. At all times relevant to this action, the defendant, Frederic W. Rust, III, was the trustee of various realty trusts which owned approximately 2,000 apartment units in Boston. The defendant, Longfellow Management Co., Inc. (Longfellow), was a Massachusetts corporation, responsible for the management of said apartment buildings. In the spring of 1980, Longfellow sent notices of substantial rent increases, averaging $1,000 per apartment per year, to the tenants in the apartments it managed for Rust. Upset about the proposed increase, a num *413 ber of tenants formed the Longfellow Tenants Union (tenants union) and scheduled a series of meetings to which they invited all Longfellow tenants. Neither Rust nor any representatives of Rust or Longfellow Management were invited to attend, and certain steps were taken to ensure that none of their representatives were present at the meeting, which was held on July 17, 1980, at the apartment of one of the tenants. The tenants union invited two Boston attorneys, Mr. Robert Patt and Mr. G. Emil Ward, to attend the meeting to advise the tenants of their legal rights. Approximately seventeen other persons attended the meeting, all of whom were tenants except for Rust’s wife, defendant Louise Rust, who gave a false name and address indicating she was a Longfellow tenant. Louise Rust carried a small tape recorder concealed in her purse and clandestinely tape recorded parts of the meeting.
Louise Rust attended the meeting at the direction of Rust, and planned the secret tape recording with Rust and her brother, Paul Dutkiewicz, who lived with the Rusts and loaned them his tape recorder in furtherance of the plan. By July, 1980, it was evident that litigation would ensue over the proposed rent increases and that the purpose of Louise Rust’s covert presence at, and recording of, the meeting was to aid Rust and Longfellow in ascertaining the tenant union’s strategy so as to gain a tactical advantage in any litigation. Information was illegally obtained by the secret recording which was used to harass the tenants through threatening telephone calls and eviction actions. 4
1.
Wilful violation of G. L. c. 272, § 99.
The defendants contend that, to make any award under G. L. c. 272, § 99 Q, the court must find that the violation of the statute was intentional or in reckless disregard of legal obligations.
Citron
v.
Citron,
The Massachusetts statute, on the other hand, grants a civil remedy to any aggrieved person whose communications were intercepted, disclosed, or used, except as authorized by the statute. G. L. c. 272, § 99 Q. 5 To be actionable under § 99 Q, then, an interception need not rise to the level of criminal conduct covered by the penal provisions of the law. Even were this not the case, however, the wilfulness requirement of the criminal statute is satisfied by the judge’s finding that “defendants maliciously spied upon a private meeting” in order “to wrongfully obstruct” lawful activities.
2.
Individual awards against each defendant.
The defendants also contend that, even if joint and several liability against the four defendants is appropriate, where they acted in concert to
*415
make a single illegal recording, separate judgments against each defendant should not have been entered. We disagree. The statute provides a remedy for
“any
aggrieved person” against
“any
person who so intercepts, discloses or uses” intercepted communications (emphasis added). G. L. c. 272, § 99 Q. We have often held that “concurrent wrongdoers are independently liable under statutes designed to impose a penalty.”
International Fidelity Ins. Co.
v.
Wilson,
3.
Punitive damages.
The judge interpreted the statute as requiring him to impose punitive damages in this case, even though he found that no actual harm had been incurred.
6
Punitive damages are not favored in Massachusetts, and we have long followed the principle that, absent statutory authorization, punitive damages may not be awarded. See, e.g.,
Lowell
v.
Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co.,
4.
Attorney’s
fees. After reviewing the plaintiffs’ motion for attorney’s fees and accompanying affidavits, the judge awarded attorney’s fees in the amount of $16,350, and costs of $640.40. The defendants contend that the bulk of plaintiffs’ counsel fees was incurred unnecessarily and therefore should be reduced to a nominal award. Their argument rests on defendants’ admission of liability under the statute in their answer to plaintiffs’ complaint, and on their offer of settlement approximately one year after the complaint was filed, consisting of the statutory minimum for liquidated damages and an additional amount for attorney’s fees and costs. In their brief and in oral argument before this court, the defendants assert that an award for fees incurred after the offer of settlement would reward the plaintiffs and their attorney for “needlessly exacerbating” the litigation and would encourage plaintiffs not to accept fair and reasonable offers of settlement made pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 68,
5. Survivability of action. The complaint in this action was filed on February 9, 1982. On January 9, 1984, plaintiff Robert Patt died. On November 15, 1984, the plaintiffs filed a suggestion of death of Mr. Patt and a motion to substitute Carol Pine, which was allowed on January 28, 1985. The defendants opposed the motion to substitute parties, and now contend it was error for the judge to grant the motion, arguing that claims under G. L. c. 272, § 99, do not survive the plaintiff’s death. We agree.
At common law, a cause of action in tort did not survive the death of either party to the action.
Putnam
v.
Savage,
We therefore affirm the award of liquidated damages for Mr. Ward against each of the defendants. We reverse the award of punitive damages for both plaintiffs, and reverse the award of liquidated damages for Carol Pine as executrix of Mr. Patt’s estate. Finally, we remand to the trial judge on the issue of attorney’s fees and costs, for a determination of what costs appropriately should be awarded to the one prevailing party.
So ordered.
Notes
The complaint was amended to add counts for invasion of privacy under G. L. c. 214, § 1B, and violation of the Federal wiretap statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510 et seq. (1982). After trial, the judge dismissed these two claims against all defendants.
The judge found that, while the tape recording of the July 17, 1980, meeting was just one of a number of similar unlawful activities by Rust directed against the tenants union, that meeting was the only one attended by Mr. Patt and Mr. Ward. The tenants union ultimately decided to hire other counsel. Actions brought against the defendants by all of the other persons who attended that meeting were settled.
General Laws c. 272, § 99 Q, creates a civil cause of action for: “Any aggrieved person whose oral or wire communications were intercepted, disclosed or used except as permitted or authorized by this section or whose personal or property interests or privacy were violated by means of an interception except as permitted or authorized by this section . . . .” Section 99 B 6 defines “aggrieved person” as “any individual who was a party to an intercepted wire or oral communication . . . .”
General Laws c. 272, § 99 Q, states that aggrieved persons shall have a cause of action against any person who intercepts or discloses their oral communications, and “shall be entitled to recover from any such person—
“1. actual damages but not less than liquidated damages computed at the rate of $ 100 per day for each day of violation or $1,000, whichever is higher;
“2. punitive damages; and
“3. a reasonable attorney’s fee and other litigation disbursements reasonably incurred.”
