Memorandum Opinion
The Cuneo Law Group and Jonathan Cuneo (“the plaintiffs”) initiated this action for a declaratory judgment against Joel Joseph (“the defendant”) for the alleged material breach of parties’ settlement agreement. First Amended Complaint for Declaratory Relief (“Am. Compl.”) ¶¶ 43-45. The defendant denies breaching the settlement agreement and has filed a counterclaim seeking, inter alia, a declaration from the Court that it was in fact the plaintiffs who breached the settlement agreement. First Amended Counterclaim; Jury Trial Demanded (“Am. Countercl.”) ¶¶ 37-42. Currently before the Court is the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and the defendant’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), and the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss Counts I, III, IV, V, VI, and VII of the defendant’s counterclaim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Upon careful review of the pleadings filed by the parties, their motions, and all memoranda and exhibits submitted in support of those motions, for the reasons that follow, the Court will grant summary judgment to the plaintiffs and deny the defendant’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment. The Court will also grant the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss Counts I, III, IV, V, VI, and VII of the defendant’s counterclaim.
I. Factual Background 1
A. The Relationship Between the Parties
The parties’ underlying relationship began in 2001 when the plaintiffs, a law firm and Mr. Cuneo, who “holds an interest in [the firm,]” initially employed the defendant as one of the firm’s staff attorneys, Am. Compl. ¶ 12; Verified Answer to the
B. The 2002 Settlement Agreement
The 2002 Settlement Agreement “provided that [the defendant] was to receive 20 percent (20%) of Cuneo’s net fees, if any, in three (3) then-pending plaintiffs’ contingency fee cases, referred to as the
Gold Train
Case, the
Leatherman
Case, and the
Kwikset
Case.” Am. Compl. ¶ 20;
C. The Defendant’s Alleged Breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement
The plaintiffs allege that in January 2006, payment was received for the Gold Train case, 5 Am. Compl. ¶23, and from those funds the plaintiffs paid and the defendant accepted $240,895 in accordance with the 2002 Settlement Agreement. 6 Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 7; Am. Compl. ¶ 24; Verified Answer ¶ 24. However, despite accepting this payment and in disregard of the 2002 Settlement Agreement, the defendant contacted the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in the Gold Train case, demanding an additional 20% “finders fee” for his work on that case. Am. Compl. ¶ 26; Verified Answer ¶ 26, 31; Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 8. 7 Upon receipt of the defendant’s demand letter, the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in the Gold Train case notified the plaintiffs of the defendant’s demand, Pis.’ Mem. I at 2; Cuneo Aff. ¶ 8 & Ex. E (Letter to the defendant from the plaintiffs’ counsel, Jan. 19, 2006.), and the plaintiffs informed the defendant that his conduct constituted a material breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement, id. Then, on February 24, 2006, the defendant filed a complaint against the plaintiffs’ co-counsel seeking one-third of their fees from the Gold Train case. Pl.’s Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 9 & Ex. F (Complaint, Joseph v. Dubbin, No. 06-20464, Feb. 24, 2006). On December 22, 2006, the case against the plaintiffs’ co-counsel was dismissed with prejudice, which Joseph appealed. Id., Cuneo Aff. ¶ 9 & Ex. H (Docket, Joseph v. Dubbin, No. 06-20464). The parties to that lawsuit then engaged in negotiations, which resulted in a settlement, and the case was dismissed with prejudice on March 15, 2007. Id.
On February 12, 2008, the plaintiffs “received payment in the
Leatherman
Case.” Am. Compl. ¶ 41. The plaintiffs promptly filed the present lawsuit claiming that the
D. The Current Dispute
On February 15, 2008, the plaintiffs filed their initial complaint in this case, and on February 26, 2008, they filed their amended complaint. After filing an initial answer and counterclaim on March 5, 2008, on May 22, 2008, the defendant filed an amended counterclaim and answer asserting claims of legal malpractice; breach of the settlement agreement; quantum me ruit;; unjust enrichment; unfair trade practices under the District of Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act; intentional infliction of emotional distress; and conversion. Am. Countercl. On June 11, 2008, the plaintiffs filed their motion for summary judgment as to their request for declaratory judgement and their motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, for motion for summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim. The defendant then filed a memorandum on June 23, 2008, in opposition to the plaintiffs’ motions and also a separate cross-motion for partial summary judgment.
II. Legal Analysis
A. The Plaintiffs’ Summary Judgment Motion
To grant a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56(c), this Court must find that “the pleadings, the discovery, and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The Court must also view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Bayer v. U.S. Dept. of the Treasury,
1. The Plaintiffs’ Breach of the Settlement Agreement Claim
The plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to summary judgment on their settlement breach claim, arguing that the defendant materially breached the 2002 Settlement Agreement by interfering with the then-pending contingency fee cases, filing a lawsuit against the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in one of those cases, and corresponding with the litigants in that case, which violated the terms of the settlement agreement’s non-interference clause. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 44-45. The defendant responds that he did not materially breach the 2002 Settlement Agreement because he contacted only “co-counsel” and not the actual parties. Verified Answer ¶¶ 2, 25-26, 31. He further asserts that “even if he did [breach the agreement], the paragraph in question [in the 2002 Settle
a. The Terms of the Non-Interference Clause of the 2002 Settlement Agreement
The parties dispute the meaning of the terms litigants and pending contained in the 2002 Settlement Agreement. The defendant contends the term “litigants” does not include lawyers and the term “pending” means a case that has not been “settled.” 8 Defendant’s Opposition to the Motion for Summary Judgment and the Motion to Dismiss the Counterclaim and Statement of Points and Authorities in Support of the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“Def.’s Opp’n I”) at 3. 9 On the contrary, the plaintiffs argue that “the term ‘litigants’ was intended to include [both the] parties and their attorneys” because “[n]one of the defendants in the pending cases were natural persons[,]” as “[t]hey were the United States and two corporations,” and therefore, the only way the defendant “could have corresponded with a party defendant would be through its attorney.” Pis.’ Mem. I at 10. Furthermore, the plaintiffs contend that the term “pending” includes all cases covered by the settlement agreement, even if a case was “administratively closed,” 10 so long as the settlement remained outstanding and the case was still under the Court’s jurisdiction, which was the status of the case the parties had agreed to settle. Id. at 10-11.
Settlement agreements “are in the nature of contracts.”
America v. Preston,
When construing a contract to determine whether an interpretation of its terms is reasonable, courts “considerf ] the intent of the parties entering the agreement and whether a reasonable person in the position of the parties, knowing the circumstances surrounding the agreement
Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law.
Id.
A contract is “not ambiguous where the court can determine its meaning without any other guid[ance] than a knowledge of the simple facts on which, from the nature of language in general, its meaning depends.”
Wash. Props., Inc. v. Chin, Inc.,
Here, the issue of whether the parties intended the terms litigants to include lawyers and pending to include the implementation stage of the settlement distribution must be derived from the language of the 2002 Settlement Agreement and what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would have intended each term to mean. The pertinent part of the 2002 Settlement Agreement states: “Joel Joseph shall make no attempt to interfere with the pending case or cases that follow, nor shall he attempt to file liens or notices of claim, or correspond with the litigants. If he does he has breached the agreement and waives his percentages.” Pl.’s Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 4 & Ex. B (2002 Settlement Agreement).
The plaintiffs’ argument that the parties intended the term “litigants” to also include the attorneys representing the parties is persuasive. The three lawsuits covered by the 2002 Settlement Agreement involved class action suits against the United States and two corporations. Plaintiffs’ Reply in Support of their Motion for Summary Judgment as to their Action for Declaratory Judgment and Motion to Dismiss and/or for Summary Judgment as to Defendant Joseph’s Counterclaims (“Pis.’ Reply I”) at 4. 11 Therefore, the only plausible means of corresponding with the defendants would necessarily have been through their attorneys. Consequently, a reasonable person in the position of either the plaintiffs or the defendant, all of whom were attorneys, would have understood that the term litigants included the attorneys representing the parties. The defendant’s assertion that the term litigants excluded the attorneys, absent any such exclusionary language, totally lacks credibility.
Additionally, the plaintiffs’ argument that the parties intended the term “pending cases” to include “administratively closed” cases covered by the 2002 Settlement Agreement while the settlement remained outstanding is equally persuasive. Pis.’ Mem. I at 10-11. The context in which the 2002 Settlement Agreement was executed is an important consideration.
See C & E Servs.,
In Howell, the court rejected the plaintiffs claim that the defendant breached a settlement agreement. Id. While the settlement agreement itself did not include a specific time frame during which the defendant would provide the agreed-to services, the notes of the resolution meeting indicated that the defendant would require “at least 90 days” to provide the services. Id. The court stated that, “although the [language in the] settlement agreement [ ] ma[de] no mention” or express limitation of the time frame during which the defendant would provide the services, the court would accept the “settled usage” of the express terms that the parties memorialized in their meeting, not the limiting language that the plaintiff alleged. Id. Therefore, the plaintiff could not inject her proposed limiting language into the agreement.
In this case, the defendant attempts to limit the meaning of the term pending cases just as the plaintiff in Howell attempted to impose an unexpressed limitation on the phrase “at least 90-days” in her settlement agreement to mean that after ninety days the defendant was in breach. Id. The Howell Court rejected the plaintiffs attempts to “torture” the agreement’s terms to benefit her reasoning and, instead, “honor[ed]” the accepted language of the terms of the contract. Id. This Court agrees with the court’s reasoning in Howell, concluding that the term pending cases, in the face of specific cases being expressly identified in the agreement, leaves no room for any interpretation other than the parties were referring to the cases identified in the agreement, and that these cases would remain subject to the terms of the agreement until such time as the conditions of the agreement were satisfied. Therefore, the Court must “honor the intentions of the parties as reflected in the settled usage of the terms they accepted in the contract ... and will not torture words to import ambiguity where the ordinary meaning leaves not room for ambiguity.” Id. at 63 (internal citation and quotation marks omitted, emphases added).
b. Did the defendant’s actions constitute a material breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement?
The plaintiffs argue that the defendant materially breached the 2002 Settlement
If the defendant engaged in conduct that constituted a material breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement, conduct that “go[es] to the essence and frustrate[s] substantially the purpose for which the contract was agreed to by the injured party,” then under the terms of the settlement agreement, he is not entitled to any payments provided by the agreement.
Draim v. Virtual Geosatellite Holdings, Inc.,
In determining whether a material breach has occurred, the Court must consider:
the extent to which [the] plaintiff[s] will be deprived of the benefit which [they] reasonably expected under the contract; the extent to which the plaintiff[s] can be adequately compensated for the part of that benefit of which [they] will be deprived; the extent to which the defendant will suffer forfeiture; the likelihood that the defendant will cure his failure, taking account of all the circumstances including any reasonable assurances; and the extent to which the behavior of the defendant comports with standards of good faith and fair dealing.
America,
Here, the question that must be answered is whether the defendant’s communication with the plaintiffs’ co-counsel went to the essence of the agreement, and thus, interfered with or substantially frustrated the purpose for which the 2002 Settlement Agreement was reached. The plaintiffs contend that the non-interference clause was added to the 2002 Settlement Agreement due to the defendant’s “prior conduct,” which included filing liens in other cases in which the plaintiff law firm was involved as counsel. Pis.’ Mem. I at 8. The defendant disputes the plaintiffs’ contention, but does not offer an alternative argument as to why the parties agreed to include the non-interference clause. Def.’s Opp’n I at 1. The Court finds that the plaintiffs’ position is the only reasonable explanation for the inclusion of the clause in the absence of any other explanation provided by the defendant. Moreover, the prior history between the parties also supports the plaintiffs’ position, illustrated by the fact that in 2001 the plaintiffs took exception to the defendant’s behavior at that time, which consisted of the defendant filing liens and contacting the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in their pending cases. Am. Compl. ¶ 16. To prevent the defendant from engaging in similar behavior, the parties entered into the 2002 Settlement Agreement.
See
Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 5. These circumstances logically support the plaintiffs’ position that the non-inter
The plaintiffs assert that the defendant improperly interfered in the Gold Train case, Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 9, when he deliberately contacted their co-counsel on several occasions despite the language of the 2002 Settlement Agreement prohibiting such behavior. As noted earlier, the defendant demanded a 20% fee from the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in one of the three cases covered by the settlement agreement for work he performed in that case even though he had already received $240,895 in accordance with the settlement agreement. Pis.’ Mem. I at 2. The defendant was made aware by the plaintiffs that his actions were not in compliance with the 2002 Settlement Agreement, but he nonetheless continued to communicate with the plaintiffs’ co-counsel, disregarding multiple letters from the plaintiffs informing him that he was in material breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement by doing so. Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff., Ex. E. (Letter from the plaintiffs’ counsel to the defendant, Feb. 10, 2006.)
In
America,
the court found that the defendant breached a settlement agreement which contained a provision stating that “all inquiries [about the plaintiff] from prospective employers received by [the defendant’s agency] shall be referred to and handled by the Agency’s Office of Human Resources.”
Here, the settlement agreement contains express language forbidding the defendant from “fil[ing] any independent fee applications, and [failing to] ... cooperate with the Cuneo Law Group reasonably in the prosecution of these cases,” or “mak[ing][any] attempt to file liens or notices of claim, or correspond with the litigants,” Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff., Ex. B, just as the settlement agreement in
America
prohibited the defendant’s agency from failing to refer inquiries about the plaintiff to the agency’s human resources department. Moreover, whereas the defendant in
America
only had “reasonable] belie[f|” that the defendant was in breach of the settlement agreement,
The magnitude of the breach cannot be considered minor because the defendant’s conduct went further than simply communicating with litigants, as he subsequently filed a claim against the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in the Gold Train case in the federal District Court in Miami, suing not for just 20% as he previously demanded on January 10, 2006, from the plaintiffs’ co-counsel in that case, Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff. ¶ 8, but rather “1/3 of their fees.” Pis.’ Mem. I at 2. And when the defendant filed suit against the plaintiffs’ co-counsel, “[t]o avoid further interference and disruption to the Gold Train case,” the plaintiffs “agreed to indemnify [their] co-counsel against [the defendant’s] suit. Statement of Material Facts as to which there is No Genuine Issue in Support of Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to His Breach of Contract Counterclaim (“Pis.’ Stmt.”) ¶ 9. [However, the plaintiffs also] retained counsel to defend the suit in Miami[, and] Miami counsel succeeded twice in having [the defendant’s] suit dismissed for failure to state a claim, the second time with prejudice. Id. [The plaintiffs] ultimately paid a sum of money to settle the case on behalf of [their] co-counsel.” Id. As a result of the defendant pursuing the Miami litigation, the plaintiffs incurred “out-of-pocket costs, including the settlement, but excluding the time spent and the plaintiffs’ overhead costs, were in excess of $35,000.” Id. And in addition to the plaintiffs’ monetary expenses, they expended nearly one year defending against the Miami case. PL’s Mem. I, Cuneo’s Aff. ¶ 9 & Ex. H (Docket, Joseph v. Dubbin, No. 1:06-cv20464). These expenditures of time and money were exactly what the plaintiffs sought to avoid through the execution of the 2002 Settlement Agreement. Nonetheless, the defendant insists that the Court should disregard his actions, even if they amounted to a breach of the settlement agreement, and focus on the extent of the harm he will suffer if the Court enforces the 2002 Settlement Agreement’s forfeiture clause.
Although the defendant disagrees, Def.’s Opp’n I at 5, the extent of his loss resulting from the forfeiture provided in the settlement agreement is but one of eight factors that the Court may consider when assessing the materiality of a breach.
See America,
In addition, the defendant’s behavior was not a breach based on a mere technicality; rather, his behavior caused the plaintiffs to spend more than $35,000 defending against the Miami litigation, which took nearly a year to resolve. On this record, the Court can only conclude that the plaintiffs were deprived of a critical benefit for which they had bargained when they entered into the settlement agreement with the defendant and that the defendant’s actions therefore amounted to a material breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement.
c. Was the non-interference clause a liquidated damages provision?
The defendant relies on
District Cablevision Ltd. Partnership v. Bassin,
The defendant’s reliance on Bassin is misplaced. Bassin states, as the defendant accurately quotes in his opposition memorandum, that a penalty occurs:
when a contract specifies a single sum in damages for any and all breaches even though it is apparent that all are not of the same gravity, the specification is not a reasonable effort to estimate damages; and when in addition the fixed sum greatly exceeds the actual damages likely to be inflicted by a minor breach ...828 A.2d at 724 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added).
However, the 2002 Settlement Agreement does not specify a single sum in damages that the plaintiff would receive if the agreement was breached; instead, the settlement agreement simply states that the defendant will forfeit his percentages if he does not comply with paragraph six (the non-interference clause) of the 2002 Settlement Agreement. In addition, as indicated above, the breach occasioned by the defendant’s conduct was not minor, but to the contrary was significant. Therefore, the Bassin proscription is not applicable to the facts presented in this case.
As previously noted, part of the 2002 Settlement Agreement states that “Joseph shall make no attempt to interfere with the pending cases or cases that follow, nor shall he attempt to file liens or notices of claim, or correspond with the litigants. If he does he has breached the agreement and waives his percentages.” Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff., Ex. B. In assessing whether a provision in a contract amounts to a liquidated damages clause,
In Red Sage, a District of Columbia restaurant sought a declaration from the court that its landlord breached an exclusive-use contract that was part of its lease. Id. at 1122. The restaurant alleged that its landlord breached the agreement by leasing space to a specialty cake shop in the same building. Id. Furthermore, the restaurant claimed that another clause in the lease agreement reduced its monthly rent by 50% during the period while the competing-use business operated on the premises. Id. at 1123. Specifically, the clause in question stated that “rent ... shall be abated” by 50% if the landlord violated his obligations under the contract. Id. Additionally, the contract stated that the rent abatement “shall not limit any other remedies which [the tjenant may have against [the l]andlord for violating its obligations under this Section.” Id. (emphasis added). While the restaurant claimed that this was not a liquidated damages clause, and was instead a readjustment of its rent based on changed conditions, the court concluded that the language created a liquidated damage clause because it indicated the parties’ intent to provide a remedy in the event the lease was breached as a result of space in the building being leased to a competing business. Id. at 1125
As in
Red Sage,
the language used in this case in the 2002 Settlement Agreement indicates that the non-interference clause was intended to be a liquidated damages clause. To reiterate, the clause reads, in part, that “Joseph
shall make
no attempt to interfere with the pending cases or cases that follow, nor
shall
he attempt to file liens or notices of claim, or correspond with the litigants. If he does he has breached the agreement and
waives
his percentages.”
See
Pis.’ Mem. I at 6 (emphasis added) (citing 2002 Settlement Agreement ¶ 6). The clause in
Red Sage
used nearly identical language, such as use of the terms “shall be” and “shall not.”
d. Is the non-interference clause enforceable?
District of Columbia “jurisprudence has been tolerant of liquidated damages clauses unless they are demonstrated unreasonable.”
S. Brooke Purll, Inc.,
Courts examine a number of variables when assessing whether a particular liquidated damages clause amounts to a penalty. For instance, a liquidated damages clause will not be deemed a penalty if the contracting parties reasonably believed that any damages arising from the breach of the contract would be difficult to ascertain, and thus determined that such a provision was a “reasonable protection against uncertain future litigation.”
Order of Am. Hellenic Educ. Progressive Ass’n v. Travel Consultants, Inc.,
In
Red Sage,
the Circuit Court held the liquidated damages clause enforceable under District of Columbia law, reasoning that at the time the parties signed the agreement they could have reasonably believed that damages arising from the breach would be difficult to ascertain due to the fact that isolating lost sales caused entirely by a competitor is difficult to determine.
In
Ashcraft & Gerel,
In
S. Brooke Purll, Inc.,
a contractor filed a counterclaim seeking liquidated damages pursuant to a contract clause, which stated that in the event of a breach, liquidated damages would be 35% of the full contract price.
Similarly, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals held in
Order of American Hellenic
that a liquidated damages provision was enforceable because of the difficulty in determining the amount of damages that would be sustained in the event of a breach, and that the “reasonable estimate of the [plaintiffs] net profit” approximated the minimum sum of $100,000 selected by the parties as the liquidated damages amount was close in value to what the actual damages may have been.
All of the cases discussed above support the conclusion that the non-interference clause in the parties’ 2002 Settlement Agreement is an enforceable liquidated damages clause. Just as damages were too difficult to assess in
Red Sage, S. Brooke Purll, Inc.,
and
Order of American Hellenic
when the agreements in those cases were executed, the extent of the damages that would be occasioned by a breach resulting from the defendant’s interference with the three then-pending class action lawsuits would have been difficult, if not impossible to assess when the
Additionally, the defendant’s loss of his percentage of the legal fees bore a reasonable relation to the potential damages the plaintiff could suffer as a result of a breach caused by the defendant. If the defendant’s interference led to an unfavorable outcome in any of the pending cases, then obviously the plaintiffs would incur a monetary loss, and considering the fees ultimately acquired by the plaintiffs in two of the cases — $3.85 million in the Gold Train case, id., Cuneo Aff. ¶ 7, and $2,190,982 in the Leatherman case, id. ¶¶ 11-12 — it is evident that the damages the plaintiffs would potentially sustain could have far exceeded the amounts provided by the liquidated damages provision. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals in Ashcraft & Gerel and Order of American Hellenic concluded that the liquidated damages provisions in those cases provided reasonable estimations of the actual damages that would be incurred, and the facts of this case provide no basis to depart from those rulings. Not only has the defendant failed to make any showing that the liquidated damages provision did not follow the guidance provided in Red Sage and the legal authority upon which it relied, but his argument that the actual damages sustained by the plaintiffs was minimal, as compared to the actual liquidated damages amount, is irrelevant. The fact remains that the extent of the damages could not be reasonably calculated when the settlement agreement was executed and the plaintiffs were deprived of a material benefit they bargained for, causing them to expend more than $35,000 and considerable time defending against and resolving the defendant’s interfering behavior.
Finally, while the defendant cites
District Cablevision
as support for his position that the non-interference clause is unenforceable, the ruling in that case actually undermines his position. In
District Cablevision,
two consumers on behalf of a class of cable television subscribers brought an action against the District Cablevision Limited Partnership claiming they were charged excessive late payment fees of $5.00 each for failure to make timely monthly payments for their television service.
B. The Plaintiffs’ Motion to Dismiss the Defendant’s Counterclaims
The defendant’s counterclaim asserts the following claims: legal malpractice (Count I) 12 , breach of the settlement agreement (Count II), quantum meruit (Count III), unjust enrichment (Count IV), unfair trade practices under the District of Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act (the “D.C. Consumer Act”)(Count V), intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count VI), and conversion (Count VII). The plaintiffs’ Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 12(b)(6) motion seeks dismissal of all of these claims.
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) tests whether a party asserting a claim has properly stated a claim upon which relief may be granted.
Woodruff v. DiMario,
The plaintiffs argue that the 2002 Settlement Agreement precludes the defendant from pursuing his counterclaims for legal malpractice (Count I), quantum meruit (Count III), and unjust enrichment (Count IV). Pis.’ Mem. I at 14-16. The defendant responds, arguing that the “[plaintiffs’ breach of the settlement agreement reopens the underlying claims.” Def.’s Opp’n I at 5. In addition, the plaintiffs assert that the defendant has failed to state viable claims with regards to his unfair trade practices (Count V), intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count VI), Pis.’ Mem. I at 17-20, and conversion (Count VII) claims, Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment and/or to Dismiss Defendant Joseph’s First Amended Counterclaim (“Pis.’ Mem. II”) at 5. The defendant counters this point by also arguing stating that the plaintiffs “breach of the settlement agreement reopens the underlying claims.” Def.’s Opp’n I at 5. 13
The defendant submitted a copy of the 2002 Settlement Agreement with his Verified Answer,
see
Verified Answer, Exs. 1 (Exhibit A, 2002 Settlement Agreement) & 2 (Agreement of Release, 2002 Settlement Agreement),
14
and he asserts a breach of contract claim, which arises out of that agreement. Am. Countercl. ¶¶ 25, 37-42. Therefore, consideration of the 2002 Settlement Agreement for the purpose of addressing the plaintiffs’ dismissal motion will not convert the motion into one for summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c).
E.E.O.C.,
1. Is the 2002 Settlement Agreement a bar to the defendant’s legal malpractice, quantum meruit, and unjust enrichment claims?
The 2002 Settlement Agreement stems from a lawsuit the defendant in this action brought in this Court against the plaintiffs in 2001 seeking compensation for work he performed in the same three contingency fee cases while employed as a staff attorney, and later as a contract attorney, by the plaintiffs. In that lawsuit, the defendant asserted claims for,
inter alia,
“breach of contract,
quantum meruit,
un
Earlier, the Court noted that “[a]n agreement to settle a legal dispute is a contract. Each party agrees to extinguish those legal rights it sought to enforce through litigation in exchange for those rights secured by the contract.”
Green v. Small,
No. Civ.A. 05-1055(ESH),
Here, when the defendant agreed to resolve his case by entering into the 2002 Settlement Agreement with the plaintiffs, he forfeited his legal right to a determination on the merits of his legal malpractice,
quantum meruit,
and unjust enrichment claims.
15
Green,
The defendant’s unfair trade practice claim is based on his theory that the 2002 Settlement Agreement’s non-interference clause is an unfair and improper trade practice under the D.C. Consumer Act, D.C.Code § 28-3901 (2001). Am. Countercl. ¶¶ 60-62. The plaintiffs and the defendant both advance arguments concerning their perspectives of what is a “trade practice” under the D.C. Consumer Act. The defendant argues that the term must be interpreted broadly and when construed from this perspective “the [2002 Settlement Agreement] between [the plaintiffs] and [the defendant] was incidental to the supply of legal services to consumers and comes within the broad reach of the D.C. Consumer ... Act.” Def.’s Opp’n I at 6. The plaintiffs respond that the defendant reads the term too broadly and that “[w]hile it may be true the [the plainitffs are] in the business of providing consumer legal services, the dispute between [the parties,] which the Settlement Agreement resolved[,] concerned the employment relation between [the parties] and only indirectly the provision of those legal services.” Pis.’ Reply I at 10. The Court agrees with the plaintiff that the defendant has failed to state a claim under the D.C. Consumer Act.
The defendant’s theory is that the plaintiffs action in attempting to enforce an invalid liquidated damages clause is an unfair and improper trade practice under the D.C. Consumer Act. Am. Countercl. ¶ 62. Therefore, the defendant’s claim hinges on the Court finding that the noninterference clause is invalid, a proposition that the Court has already rejected. See supra Part III.A.3. Thus, the defendant’s claim must be dismissed.
Even in absence of the Court’s finding that the non-interference clause is an enforceable liquidated damages provision, the defendant’s counterclaim would nevertheless have to be dismissed because under the D.C. Consumer Act the term “trade practice” does not apply to the 2002 Settlement Agreement in any respect. The Act defines “trade practice” as “any act which does or would create, alter, repair, furnish, make available, provide information about, or, directly or indirectly, solicit or offer for or effectuate, a sale, lease or transfer, of consumer goods or services.” D.C.Code § 28-3901(a)(6). The Act defines a “consumer” as “a person who does or would purchase ... or receive consumer goods or services ... or a person who does or would provide the economic demand for a trade practice[,]” and “as an adjective, ‘consumer’ describes anything, without exception, which is primarily for personal, household or family use[.]”
Id.
§ 28-3901(a)(2). Finally, the Act defines “merchant” as “a person who in the ordinary course of business does or would supply the goods or services which are or would be the subject matter of a trade practice.”
Id.
§ 28-3901(a)(3). Here, the defendant’s actions, in regards to the settlement agreement, cannot by any stretch of the imagination be construed as purchasing activity, but instead involved negotiations between attorneys and their subsequent execution of an agreement settling their dispute. As such, the plaintiffs’ participation in the process that brought about the settlement agreement did not involve them in providing the defendant with any consumer services, and thus the defendant’s claim falls outside the scope of a consumer-merchant relationship, which the D.C. Consumer Act regulates.
See Ford v. Chartone, Inc.,
Finally, the defendant cites
Banks v. District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs,
3. Should the defendant’s intentional infliction of emotional distress counterclaim be dismissed because he has failed to assert extreme and outrageous conduct by the plaintiffs?
The plaintiffs argue that the defendant’s intentional infliction of emotional distress counterclaim should be dismissed because the defendant fails to provide a “description of the emotional distress supposedly suffered,” a description of the effect of the distress upon him, and an explanation for how a “contract dispute involving payment of a sum of money in a business context” amounts to “outrageous” conduct that goes “beyond all possible bounds of decency[.]” Pis.’ Mem. I at 20. The defendant argues that he has adequately asserted a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress in his counterclaim. Def.’s Opp’n I at 7. Specifically, he states that the plaintiffs “acted unreasonably and in bad faith in failing to pay the sum due as agreed in the settlement agreement,” id., and that this “conduct was truly outrageous and should not be justified in a civilized society” because they had “no valid argument for failing to pay [him], other than to punish him for recovering compensation from other lawyers for a case that he created,” id. at 8.
An intentional infliction of emotional distress claim “requires a showing of (1) extreme and outrageous conduct on the part of the defendant which (2) intentionally or recklessly (3) causes the plaintiff[, here the defendant,] severe emotional distress.”
Khan v. Parsons Global Servs., Ltd.,
In
Williams,
the Court held that the complaint failed to state a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress,
Furthermore, in
Tiefenbacher v. AARP,
No. 05-1802(CKK),
In this case, the defendant’s counterclaim is based on his assertion that he was denied the payment of money owed to him. None of the allegations presented in support of the defendant’s counterclaims even rise to the level of the defendants’ actions in
Tiefenbacher
or
Duncan,
which the courts in both cases deemed insufficient to show extreme and outrageous conduct.
Id.
Further, as the court in
Tiefenbacher
noted, claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress have been denied under even more severe facts than were present in that case.
See
Similar to the plaintiffs in the cases discussed above, the defendant has failed to demonstrate that if his allegations are proven true, he is entitled to relief. Even assuming the accuracy of his allegation that the plaintiffs intentionally, recklessly, and deliberately “depriv[ed the] defendant of his share of proceeds from the
Leather-man
case,” Am. Countercl. ¶ 65, not only was the withholding a justifiable response to the defendant’s breach of the settlement agreement, but the plaintiffs’ conduct cannot be described, as a matter of law, to have been extreme and outrageous to such a degree as to cause the defendant severe emotional distress.
See Williams,
4. Should the defendant’s conversion counterclaim be dismissed for failure to state a claim?
The plaintiffs argue that the defendant’s conversion counterclaim fails because “the failure to pay a sum of money pursuant to a contract, even if wrongful, does not constitute a ... conversion.” Pis.’ Mem. II at 5. The defendant contends that the plaintiffs unlawfully “exercised control, and continued to exercise control” of money that is due to him pursuant to the 2002 Settlement Agreement. Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to the Motion for Summary Judgment and/or to Dismiss the First Amended Counterclaims and in Support of his Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“Defl’s Mem. II”) at 3. Both parties rely on
Curaflex Health Services, Inc. v. Bruni,
Conversion is “any unlawful exercise of ownership, dominion or control over the personal property of another in denial or repudiation of his rights thereto.”
Curaflex,
In
Curaflex,
a contractual relationship existed between the plaintiff and the defendants that required the plaintiff to provide products and services to the defendants’ patients regardless of whether the patients paid the defendants.
In
Rwanda,
a contractual relationship also existed between the plaintiff and the defendant, which required the plaintiff to pay the defendant a specific sum of money for work that would then be performed on behalf of the plaintiff.
The facts in this case more resemble those in
Curaflex.
First, when the 2002 Settlement Agreement was executed, there was no specified amount of money the defendant was entitled to receive under the agreement, rather he was entitled to receive a specific percentage of an unspecified sum based on the fees the plaintiffs might be awarded if the three cases covered by the settlement agreement settled.
See Curaflex,
C. The Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on his Breach of Contract claim. 16
The defendant seeks partial summary judgment on his second counterclaim for the plaintiffs’ alleged breach of the 2002 Settlement Agreement. Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment at 1.
A party’s material breach of a settlement agreement generally excuses the other party’s obligation to perform its end of the bargain under the agreement.
Hazel,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that the defendant materially breached the 2002 Settlement Agreement, while on the other hand no breach of the agreement was committed by the plaintiffs. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on their claim for
SO ORDERED. 17
Notes
. The facts set forth below are either admitted or are not in dispute.
. The defendant combined his answer and counterclaim into his Verified Answer to the First Amended Complaint and Counterclaim (“Verified Answer”). The defendant later amended his counterclaim in his First Amended Counterclaim without amending the Verified Answer. Therefore, when referring to the defendant’s answer to the plaintiff's First Amended Complaint for Declaratory Relief, the Court will reference the defendant’s initial Verified Answer.
. The plaintiffs filed their initial motion for summary judgment on March 27, 2008; however, because the defendant filed an amended counterclaim, the plaintiffs filed a new motion for summary judgment on June 11, 2008. Their new motion and supporting memorandum incorporate the original arguments advanced in their initial motion and supporting memorandum without further reiteration. Because the original arguments are incorporated in this manner, the court will have to reference both memoranda in this opinion and distinguish them by referring to the first submission as "I” and the second submission as "II.”
. The defendant objects to Cuneo’s reasoning for withholding payment, asserting that the plaintiffs were holding "[t]he funds ... in trust for payment of a health insurance policy for [the defendant] and his three sons,” and therefore, according to the defendant, “had no right not to pay the insurance premium.” Verified Answer ¶ 14.
. The defendant states that he believes the plaintiffs received payment in the Gold Train case in December 2005. Verified Answer ¶ 23.
. The defendant never disputes the amount that the plaintiffs assert was forwarded to him pursuant to the 20% he was entitled to receive under the terms of the 2002 Settlement Agreement. Furthermore, the plaintiffs “withheld $50,000 as a reserve to cover [expenses associated with the disbursement of the settlement agreement], and paid [the defendant] 20% of [the plaintiffs'] fees after such amount was withheld.” See Statement of Material Facts as to which there is No Genuine Issue in Support of Plaintiffs' Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to his Breach of Contract Claim ¶ 12. According to the defendant, he was told by an individual associated with the plaintiff law firm that he would receive the withheld funds "within 90 days.” Verified Answer ¶ 24.
. The plaintiffs contend that the amount the defendant initially demanded was for an additional finders fee of 20 %, although the defendant does not explicitly admit that he demanded an amount equal to 20%, he never disputes the plaintiffs’ contention as to the amount. Furthermore, the record reflects that he did in fact demand an additional finders fee.
. Although the defendant never adopts the term administratively closed, it is the Court's understanding that the defendant is asserting that once a case has been "settled” and is closed, it is no longer in a pending status.
. Like the plaintiffs, see supra at n. 2, the defendant filed his initial memorandum opposing plaintiffs' motion for dismissal or summary judgment on April 14, 2008. After the plaintiffs filed a new motion for summary judgment or dismissal, the defendant filed a new memorandum in opposition to that motion on June 23, 2008, incorporating the arguments made in his original memorandum without actually further reiterating them. The Court will therefore have to reference both memoranda and will distinguish them by referring to the first submission as "I” and the second submission as "II.”
. The case that was the subject of the settlement agreement was also assigned to the judge in this case at the time of the settlement. Cases are administratively closed by this judge solely for statistical and case management purposes. Cases in this status usually have been settled but remain under the Court's supervision and can be administratively opened in the event problems arise with the settlement and the Court's intervention becomes necessary.
. The Court notes that the plaintiffs assert that the three contingency fee cases involved the United States and two corporations, and the defendant never disputes this contention. Furthermore, the plaintiffs include a copy of the Final Order and Judgment in the Gold Train case, which illustrates that Gold Train was in fact against the United States. See Pis.’ Mem. I, Cuneo Aff., Ex. C (Final Order and Judgment).
. In the defendant's amended counterclaim he titles his "first cause of action" as a claim for "Breach of Obligations of Attorney to Client.” Am. Countercl. ¶ 30. However, in the parties subsequent filings, they both refer to the claim as one for legal malpractice; therefore, the Court will take the liberty of continuing to address the claim as both parties have.
. The defendant also asserts that his "claim regarding malpractice is not time barred as [he] continues to suffer harm.” Id. For the reasons expressed later, infra at 119 n. 15, the Court need not address the defendant’s statute of limitations argument because he is foreclosed from pursuing his malpractice claim under the terms of the 2002 Settlement Agreement.
. The Court has taken the liberty of assigning numbers to the defendant's exhibits in his opposition memorandum and to the exhibits in his Verified Answer as he has failed to do so.
. Specifically, the defendant and the plaintiffs agreed to "make a full and final settlement and release of any and all claims of any type whatsoever that they do or may have against each other and they acknowledge that there is good and valuable consideration for this Agreement.” Pis.' Mem. I, Cuneo Aff., Ex. B. (emphasis in original). Clearly, the claims being asserted in Counts I, III, and IV of the defendant's counterclaim arose out of events that occurred before the defendant initiated the lawsuit in 2001 and could have been pursued in that action, as in fact two of the three Counts were. However, the defendant knowingly abandoned those claims and any other future claims he could have pursued in consideration for a 20% interest in the net fees the plaintiffs acquired in the three pending contingency fee cases.
. The defendant also requested summary judgment on his conversion claim. The request is being denied for the same reason the plaintiffs are entitled to dismissal on their Rule 12(b)(6) motion.
. This Memorandum Opinion is being issued to explain the reasoning underlying the Order issued on March 27, 2009, which is now a final appealable order.
