I. INTRODUCTION 1
The plaintiff, Susan C. Tilley, filed the instant action against defendants Anixter Incorporated, Pacer/Anixter, Inc., and David G. Tilley. Compl. [Dkt. No. 1]. In response to the plaintiffs claims, the corporate defendants counterclaimed for breach of contract. Corporate Defs.’ Amended Answer and Counterclaim [Dkt. No. 39],
This court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss two of the plaintiffs claims but denied their motion to dismiss the plaintiffs third claim. Ruling [Dkt. No. 23], This third claim, a tort action for intentional infliction of emotional distress, also survived defendants’ subsequent Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings. See Ruling [Dkt. No. 38]. The corporate defendants now move for summary judgment on this claim. Corporate Defs.’ Mot. Summ. J. [Dkt. No. 67]. Mr. Tilley moves to join their motion with the exception of their argument that the release the plaintiff signed with the corporate defendants bars her suit. Def. Tilley’s Mot. Joinder [Dkt. No. 69]. Susan Tilley now moves for summary judgment on the defendants’ counterclaim. Plf.’s Mot. Summ. J. [Dkt. No. 66].
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
In a motion for summary judgment, the burden lies on the moving party to establish that there are no genuine issues of material fact in dispute and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
A court must grant summary judgment “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact .... ”
Miner v. City of Glens Falls,
The court resolves “all ambiguities and draw[s] all inferences in favor of the non-
When a motion for summary judgment is supported by sworn affidavits or other documentary evidence permitted by Rule 56, the nonmoving party “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the [nonmoving] party’s pleading.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Goenaga v. March of Dimes Birth Defects Found.,
III. FACTS 2
A. Divorce Proceeding and June 1998 Action
Susan and David Tilley were divorced in Connecticut Superior Court on October 18, 1994. At the time of their divorce, Mr. Tilley worked for Pacer Electronics, Inc. (“Pacer”). Mr. Tilley’s girlfriend (now wife), Terri Tilley, worked at the same company. During the divorce proceeding, Mr. Tilley and Michael Rosa, the president and CEO of Pacer, both testified about Mr. Tilley’s compensation at Pacer. In its final judgment of dissolution of the marriage, the Superior Court ordered Mr. Til-ley to pay plaintiff $100 per week in alimony plus $260 per week in child support. In December 1994, the Superior Court ordered Pacer to garnish Mr. Tilley’s wages in the amount of $360 per week to pay the aforementioned support order.
The parties settled the June 1998 matter, and the plaintiff received $10,000. In consideration for this sum, she signed a release, stating that she
has remised, released and forever discharged, and by these Presents does remise release and forever discharge the said Releasees [Pacer, Rosa, Summit, and Anixter] of and from all debts, obligations, reckonings, promises, covenants, agreements, contracts, endorsements, bonds specialties, controversies, suits, actions, causes of actions, trespasses, variances, judgments, extents, executions, damages, claims or demands, in law or in equity, which against the said Releasees the Releasor ever had, now has or hereafter can, shall, or may have, for, upon or by reason of any matter, cause or thing whatsoever, from the beginning of the world to the date of these Presents.
More particularly all claims or demands in law or equity arising or asserted in or in connection with an action pending in the Superior Court of the State of Connecticut for the Judicial District of Hartford/New Britain at Hartford, Docket No. CV-98-580678S.
Release, 6/17/98, Def. Ex. 30 [Dkt. No. 68-11]. The release stated that it did not apply to claims the plaintiff may have had directly against Mr. Tilley. Id. In deposition testimony, the plaintiff agreed that the Release provided for the release of Pacer and Anixter from all claims that she had against them at the time she signed it. S. Tilley Dep. Oct. 6, 2004 at 111, Def. Ex. 30 [Dkt. No. 68-6],
B. April 1999 Motions
In April 1999, Attorney Rittenband filed two motions in Connecticut Superior Court on the plaintiffs behalf: a motion to hold Mr. Tilley in contempt of the court’s previous orders and a motion for modification of the court’s orders in the divorce action. Mot. for Contempt and Order to Show Cause, 4/19/99, Def. Ex. 15 [Dkt. No. 68-
The plaintiff asserts that she “did not have any proof of any diversion of income” until Pacer produced certain documents in response to an August 1999 subpoena. S. Tilley Aff. of 6/6/05 ¶ 12 [Dkt. No. 74]. Attorney Rittenband requested that Pacer’s attorney produce “all wage records of both David and Theresa Tilley, including regular pay, commissions, bonuses, car allowances, benefit plans,” and other income over the preceding five years, which she stated were “essential” to the April 1999 motions. Letter from Rittenband to Ecker (6/11/99), Def. Ex. 50 [Dkt. No. 68-17]. In response, Pacer provided Attorney Rit-tenband with documentation regarding compensation paid to David and Terri Til-ley from 1994 to August 1999. Letter from Eeker to Rittenband (8/18/99), Def. Ex. 19 [Dkt. No. 68-20]; Rittenband/Delu-co. Dep. 47-48 [Dkt. No. 68-9]; S. Tilley Aff. of 6/6/05 ¶ 12 [Dkt. No. 74], The plaintiff states that she did not receive all of the wage documents Attorney Ritten-band had requested until November 2004. Id. at ¶¶ 12-13.
Soon after she had received the initial documents in April 1999, the plaintiff fired Attorney Rittenband. Attorney Ritten-band withdrew from the case in December 1999, and Attorney Robert Muchinsky (Ms. Tilley’s current attorney) entered an appearance as Susan Tilley’s counsel before the Connecticut Superior Court. Mot. to Withdraw by Beth Rittenband, 12/6/99 [Dkt. No. 68-21]; Appearance of Robert B. Muchinsky, 12/23/99 [Dkt. No. 68-22]. Attorney Muchinsky filed two new motions on the plaintiffs behalf, patterned after the April 1999 motions but alleging additional facts. The Motion for Contempt that he filed stated that Mr. Tilley’s “actual income was and is considerably greater than that which he reported at the time of said orders and defendant has hidden over $300,000 in income since the time of said orders.” Mot. for Contempt ¶ 2, 6/21/00 [Dkt. No. 68-23]. It also stated that Mr. Tilley “continued to under report his income to Support Enforcement in North Carolina, Lincoln County who were acting pursuant to a request from the State of Connecticut Support Enforcement Division.” Id. at ¶ 3. Approximately nine days later, Attorney Muchinsky filed a Motion for Modification of Orders, which repeated the above-quoted allegation from the April 1999 Motion for Modification and added that, since the time of the 1994 child support orders, Mr. Tilley “has concealed over $300,000 in income.” Mot. for Modification of Orders ¶ 2.B, 6/30/00 [Dkt. No. 68-24]. The plaintiff and Mr. Tilley resolved both June 2000 motions in a stipulated judgment on November 13, 2000. Stipulation, Docket No.: FA-92-0513362-S, Def. Ex. 25 [Dkt. No. 68-25].
On June 8, 2000, shortly before Attorney Muchinsky filed the motions for contempt and modification, the plaintiff filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Connecticut. S. Tilley Bankruptcy Pet., 6/8/00, Def. Ex. 31 [Dkt. No. 68-26]. On the list of personal property on the bankruptcy petition (“Schedule B”), she included “Claim against ex-husband and ex-husband’s employer for back child support.” Id. at 965. She did not include any other causes of action. Id. She included the same language on the list of property claimed as exempt (“Schedule C”), and cited to 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(10)(D) as the law providing for this exemption. 4 The plaintiff did not amend her list of personal property at any time during the bankruptcy proceeding. S. Tilley Dep. 10/6/04 at 125. In July 2000, her bankruptcy trustee submitted a “no asset report.” It stated that he had “neither received any property nor paid any money on account of [the plaintiffs] estate except exempt property,” and that he found no property available for distribution to creditors. Trustee’s Report of No Distribution, 7/18/00 [Dkt. No. 68-28]. Plaintiffs bankruptcy case was closed on October 11, 2000. Docket Report for Bankruptcy Petition No. 00-21630 [Dkt. No. 68-27],
IV. DISCUSSION
As a preliminary matter, the court grants Mr. Tilley’s Motion to Join in the Corporate Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on all grounds except the third 5 [Dkt. No. 69].
A. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment
The defendants argue that the plaintiff lacks standing to pursue the present action because the tort claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress is the property of her bankruptcy estate. A debtor or former debtor does not have standing to pursue claims that constitute property of a bankruptcy estate.
See, e.g., Seward v. Devine,
A trustee may abandon scheduled property, i.e., property that has been listed on the bankruptcy petition, either through procedures requiring notice and a hearing, 11 U.S.C. § 554(a) & (b), or by failing to administer it before the close of the bankruptcy case,
id.
at § 554(c). Unscheduled property, in contrast, can never be abandoned without the notice and hearing required in sections 554(a) and (b).
See Correll,
The plaintiff does not allege that her bankruptcy trustee gave notice to creditors or held a hearing with regard to the instant claim. Thus, she has standing in the present action only if: (1) it did not accrue before the close of her bankruptcy estate on October 11, 2000, or (2) she scheduled the present claim on her bankruptcy petition and the trustee did not administer it before the close of the estate. The plaintiff received payroll information from Pacer that revealed diversion of income from Mr. Tilley to Terri Tilley in August 1999. Compl. ¶ 15 [Dkt. No. 1], Defendants correctly argue that her claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress arising from this income diversion accrued before that time.
See Calabrese v. McHugh,
Indeed, in her Memorandum of Law in Opposition, the plaintiff does not argue that she did not know about the diversion of income during the pendency of her bankruptcy case, but rather argues that she properly scheduled the instant claim. With respect to that argument, it is undisputed that the bankruptcy trustee did not administer the instant claim before the close of the estate. The words plaintiff included on the personal property schedule on her bankruptcy petition are likewise undisputed. See supra, Part III. C. The parties dispute only whether these words rendered the instant emotional distress claim “scheduled” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 521(1). Thus, no genuine issue of material fact exists on the matter of whether the bankruptcy proceedings deprived the plaintiff of standing in the present case. The court must determine if, in light of the undisputed terms of the bankruptcy petition, the plaintiff lacks standing as a matter of law.
There are ... no bright-line rules for how much itemization and specificity is required. What is required is reasonable particularization under the circumstances. The Official Forms themselves have generally been regarded as subject to a rule of substantial compliance. As one court has noted, “it would be silly to require a debtor to itemize every dish and fork,” but “every bankrupt must do enough itemizing to enable the trustee to determine whether to investigate further.”
In re Mohring,
In
Bonner,
the Sixth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel applied the standard articulated in
Mohring
to hold that debtors’ scheduling of an asset labeled “Auto Accident Claim” “plainly and unambiguously included any claim that the debtors may have had for any personal injury arising out of the automobile accident.”
Bonner,
In
In re Suplinskas,
As discussed above, Susan Tilley listed on her personal property schedule a claim “for back child support” against both Mr. Tilley and his employer, and she included identical language to list the claim on her schedule of exempt property. The statute that she cited to support her assertion that this claim was exempt from distribution to creditors was one authorizing an exemption for “[t]he debtor’s right to receive ... alimony, support, or separate maintenance, to the extent reasonably necessary for the support of the debtor and any dependent of the debtor.” 11 USCS § 522(d)(10)(D). It does not authorize any exemption for intentional infliction of emotional distress. Moreover, at the time she filed for bankruptcy, the plaintiff had a pending claim for modification of a child support order, which is more appropriately styled a claim for back child support than the present claim would have been. The language the plaintiff used to describe her claim, read in light of her assertion that the quoted section of the exemption statute applied to her claim, show that she scheduled a state court claim for unpaid child support, not for intentional infliction of emotional distress. Like the
Cusano
plaintiffs preexisting claim for unpaid royalties arising out of scheduled songrights and the
Sup-linskas
debtor’s pre-existing claim for fraud arising out of the purchase of a scheduled partnership interest, the fact that the instant plaintiffs claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress may have arisen out of the defendants’ failure to pay adequate child support did not absolve her of a duty to schedule it separate
Having found that the defendant lacks standing as a result of the bankruptcy proceeding, the court need not address the remaining arguments the defendants have offered in support of their motion. The court grants the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
B. Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment
In support of her motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff argues that the corporate defendants’ counterclaim does not allege a breach of contract as a matter of law. The counterclaim alleges that the present action puts the plaintiff in breach of the release that she signed with the corporate defendants as part of the settlement of the June 1998 lawsuit [hereinafter “Release”].
Because the court has diversity jurisdiction over the present case, it applies the substantive law of Connecticut, including choice of law rules.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Two disputed issues exist with respect to the interpretation of the Release: (1) whether the words following the phrase “[m]ore particularly” should limit the broader release language that precedes them such that the Release would apply only to claims “arising or asserted in or in connection with” the June 1998 case, and (2) whether the Release bars claims arising after its signing.
The corporate defendants cite three cases to support the proposition that a release that includes general release language followed by the clause “more particularly” and a reference to a specific matter should be construed according to the more general language.
Murphy v. City of New York,
“It is well settled that a release, being a contract whereby a party abandons a claim to a person against whom that claim exists, is subject to rules governing the construction of contracts.... The intention of the parties, therefore, controls the scope and effect of the release, and this intent is discerned from the language used and the circumstances of the transaction.... It is similarly stated that a release, no matter how broad its terms, will not be construed to include claims not within the contemplation of the parties ... and, where the language of the release is directed to claims then in existence, it will not be extended to cover claims that may arise in the future.”
Muldoon v. Homestead Insulation Co.,
The issue of whether the release covers claims that existed at the time of the release but which were not connected to the 1998 lawsuit is not appropriate for resolution at summary judgment. Defendants correctly note that Connecticut courts “have frowned on interpreting a contract in a way that renders a clause in the contract mere surplusage and inoperative.”
Patron v. Konover,
Greeting: Know Ye, That, I, Daryl T. Pudlo of Colchester, Connecticut, for and in consideration of the sum of FIFTY THOUSAND ($ 50,000.00) DOLLARS, lawful money of the United States of America to me in hand paid by Christopher Moroch and Great American Insurance Company, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, have remised, released, and forever discharged, and by these presents do for my heirs, executors and administrators, remise, release and forever discharge the said Christopher Moroch and Great American Insurance Company, their agents, servants and employees, of and from all, and all manner of action and actions, cause and causes of action, suits, debts, dues, sums of money, accounts,reckoning, bonds, bills, specialties, covenants, contracts, controversies, agreements, promises, variances, trespasses, damages, judgments, extents, executions, claims and demands whatsoever, in law or in equity, which against the said Christopher Moroch and Great American insurance Company, I ever had, now have or which my heirs, executors or administrators hereafter can, shall or may have for, upon and by reason of any matter, cause or thing whatsoever from the beginning of the world to the day of the date of these presents.
More particularly for personal injuries sustained by Daryl T. Pudlo on August 20, 1995, on Route 16 in the town of Colchester, CT, which is the subject of a civil action Docket No. CV970113459S which was brought in the Judicial District of New London at Norwich.
Pudlo,
Analysis of the contract focuses on the intention of the parties as derived from the language employed. Where the intention of the parties is clearly and unambiguously set forth, effect must be given to that intent. “Contract language is unambiguous when it has a definite and precise meaning ... concerning which there is no reasonable basis for a difference of opinion.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Although ordinarily the question of contractual intent presents a question of fact for the ultimate fact finder, where the language is clear and unambiguous it becomes a question of law for the court.
Id.,
The language of the release Susan Tilley signed is ambiguous under Connecticut law because the release does not specify whether or not the “more particularly” clause is intended to limit the general language that precedes it, and the two clauses are inconsistent. Contrast, for example,
Tallmadge Bros.,
in which specific language following more general language was preceded by the phrase “without limit.”
Tallmadge Bros.,
In addition, there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the plaintiffs present claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress was “arising or asserted in or in connection with” the June 1998 action for underpayment of child support. As discussed above, Attorney Rittenband testified at her deposition that the plaintiffs “belief that ... Michael Rosa specifically was giving — putting David [Tilleyj’s commissions into Theresa [Tilley]’s paychecks so that Sue [Tilley] wouldn’t get the proper amount of child support taken out of the check” was “the basis for” the June 1998 complaint. This assertion is disputed by the plaintiff and is not obvious from the face of the June 1998 complaint. But Attorney Rittenband’s testimony creates genuine issues of material fact as to whether the plaintiff had notice of the alleged income diversion that gives rise to her present claim at the time of the Release, and as to whether this diversion of income arose or was asserted in connection with the June 1998 child support action. Thus, even if the court were to interpret the release as barring only suits that arose on or before the release date and that arose or were asserted “in or in connection with” the June 1998 claim, summary judgment on the counterclaim would still be inappropriate.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Tilley’s motion to join the corporate defendants’ motion for summary judgment, [Dkt. No. 69], and defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the plaintiffs claim, [Dkt. No. 67], are GRANTED, and the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment on the corporate defendants’ counterclaim, [Dkt. No. 66], is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In this ruling, the court will refer to Susan Tilley as the plaintiff and Anixter Inc., Pacer/Anixter, Inc. and David Tilley as the defendants, even when discussing the counterclaim. The phrase “corporate defendants” refers to Anixter Inc. and Pacer/Anixter, Inc.
. To the extent they are undisputed, this section sets forth the facts in the parties' local Rule 56(a)l statements. To the extent the facts are disputed, this section sets forth the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. (If any disputed facts are relevant to both parties' motions for summary judgment, the court will set forth both parties’ versions of the facts.)
. Attorney Rittenband now goes by her married name of Deluco, but the court will refer to her as Beth Rittenband.
. 11 USCS § 522(d)(10)(D) authorizes an exemption for "[t]he debtor’s right to receive ... alimony, support, or separate maintenance, to the extent reasonably necessary for the support of the debtor and any dependent of the debtor.”
. The corporate defendants argue as their third ground for summary judgment that the June 1998 release bars the plaintiff’s present action. Mr. Tilley was not a party to that release. Release, 6/17/98 [Dkt. No. 68-11].
