Appellants Gerald Weaver and Katherine Brewer brought this suit against appellee Sai Grafio for breach of contract, defamation, and intentional infliction of emo
I.
Appellee Sai Grafio, a professional hou-sepainter, agreed to paint appellants’ 1 house for $5,650. The parties’ contract provided that payments were to be made in three installments, with the final installment of $1,845 to be paid when the work was completed. Prior to this time, however, appellants began to raise questions about the quality of Grafio’s work. The parties’ relationship continued to deteriorate, and when the final payment was due, appellants paid with a check on which they had placed a stop payment order.
Grafio sued appellants in the Small Claims Branch of the Superior Court for the final $1,845 owed on the contract. Appellants filed a separate suit in the Civil Division against Grafio for breach of contract, fraudulent misrepresentation and property damage, consisting of Grafio’s failure to obtain a smooth finish on the painted surface. Appellants alleged that the paint job appeared lumpy and that the paint peeled, and ascribed these problems to Grafio’s failure to properly sand and spackle the surface of the house before painting. They also alleged that Grafio had left trash in their yard and footprints in the paint on their roof. Appellants later amended their complaint, adding claims of defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. According to the amended complaint, Grafio sent appellants a copy of a letter that he had sent to the Bar Ethics Committee of the D.C. Bar accusing appellants of a felony for knowingly passing a bad check.
At the start of the Small Claims action, appellants moved to consolidate the two lawsuits. Grafio opposed the motion and it was denied by the Hearing Commissioner. Following a two-day trial in the Small Claims Branch, Judge Levie ruled that Gra-fio had substantially performed his contract to paint appellants’ house. The judge found that Grafio had warned appellants that their house, which was extremely old, was difficult to paint and that rotten boards and the many previous coats of paint would make it almost impossible to create a smooth finish. He credited the testimony of Grafio’s expert that the paint job was as good as could be expected under such conditions. He further stated that he had examined photographs of the alleged damage to appellants’ property and concluded that Grafio was responsible only for a single footprint on the roof. Thus, the judge awarded Grafio $1,845 less $50 as a setoff to pay for the cost to appellants of removing the footprint.
Appellants filed a motion to reconsider or to reopen the record, claiming that they were surprised by Judge Levie’s ruling on the question of setoff, and that because they had not expected him to reach that issue, they had failed to present all the evidence in support of their damages claim. Judge Levie denied the motion on the grounds that appellants had an ample opportunity to present evidence of property damage as a defense to Grafio’s contract claim and could have contested Grafio’s testimony that the cost of fixing the footprint was approximately $50.
Grafio thereafter moved for dismissal of appellants’ breach of contract claim in the Civil Division, on the grounds that it was barred by
res judicata,
for summary judgment on the defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims, and for sanctions under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 11. In his Super.Ct.Civ.R. 12-I(k) statement, Gra-fio asserted that the letter he had sent to the Ethics Committee was privileged and, although the letter showed a “cc:” to Channel 7, he denied publication of the letter to Channel 7. Appellants opposed the motion and, in the alternative, requested leave to amend further their complaint to refer to the letter being sent to Channel 7; in their Rule 12-I(k) statement, appellants disputed
II.
A threshold issue is whether the court has jurisdiction to review Judge Bacon’s order.
See
Super.Ct.Civ.R. 54(b) (1990);
Customers Parking, Inc. v. District of Columbia,
Similar reasoning persuades us that an order disposing of all issues except Rule 11 sanctions should be treated as immediately appealable. As with attorney’s fees, a motion for sanctions under Rule 11 raises issues that “are not tied to the outcome of litigation; the relevant inquiry is whether a specific filing was, if not successful, at least well founded.”
Business Guides, Inc. v. Chromatic Communications Enterprises, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
[A trial] courts’ intentional deferral of action on a motion for [Rule 11] sanctions, when it enters a judgment definitely and completely disposing of the underlying action, constitutes a determination on the part of the [trial] court that its disposition of the motion for sanctions will not impact upon its resolution of the underlying litigation. Under these circumstances, a “practical approach” to the matter of finality counsels that we not defer consideration of the merits until the [trial] court addresses the matter of sanctions.
Cleveland v. Berkson,
Accordingly, we hold that the court has jurisdiction to entertain this appeal even though the trial judge has not yet ruled on the pending motion for sanctions under Rule 11.
Judge Bacon dismissed appellants’ breach of contract claim as barred by issue preclusion: the issues raised had already been conclusively decided against appellants in the Small Claims action. 2 Appellants contend that the Small Claims action determined only that Grafio substantially performed the contract, and did not determine whether he should be held responsible for breach of the contract. To the extent Judge Bacon made findings relevant to the setoff, appellants claim that these rulings were unnecessary, and that they were surprised by them. Appellants’ contentions are unpersuasive.
The doctrine of substantial performance is a “rule of recovery that the contractor has a right to the contract price, less compensatory damages for the injury caused by his breach.” 3A CORBIN on Contracts § 709 at 334-35 (1960);
see also Matthew A. Welch & Sons, Inc. v. Bird,
Because appellants raised the issue of Grafio’s breach of contract in the Small Claims Branch, Judge Levie was obliged, in deciding whether Grafio was entitled to recover, to consider whether Grafio breached the contract, and (if so) whether the breach was substantial. Judge Levie credited Grafio’s explanation, concluding that he substantially performed the contract with the exception of “one defect:” the footprint on the roof. Given Grafio’s testimony that his only breach was the footprint, which would cost $50 to repair, the judge could properly take the $50 into account in awarding Grafio’s damages.
See Turner v. Henning,
IV.
Appellants’ complaint also states claims for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress, both allegedly resulting from Grafio’s act of maliciously mailing a letter to several entities accusing appellants of passing a bad check. The trial judge granted summary judgment for Grafio, which the court reviews de novo.
Truitt v. Miller,
A. Defamation
The defamation claim is based on Gra-fio’s act of sending a letter accusing appellants of “uttering a check for 1845.00 dollars” and of committing a “felony.” Assuming its falsity, this is clearly sufficient to qualify as a defamatory statement.
See Johnson v. Johnson Publishing Co.,
“Complaints submitted to the Board or Bar Counsel shall be absolutely privileged, and no claim or action predicated thereon may be instituted or maintained.” D.C.Bar R. XI § 19(a) (1990). Thus, by the very terms of the rule, Grafio cannot be held liable for sending a copy of the letter to the Board of Professional Responsibility. The letter was addressed, however, to the “Ethics Committee” in addition to the Board. Appellants argue that because the Ethics Committee is not specifically mentioned in Rule XI, only a common law qualified privilege should apply.
See
Annotation,
Testimony Before or Communications to Private Professional Society’s Judicial Commission, Ethics Committee, or the Like As Privileged,
Summary judgment also was appropriate on the defamation theory based on Grafio’s sending the letter to “Channel 7 on Your Side.” In response to Grafio’s Super.Ct. R. 12-I(k) statement of material facts not in dispute and his affidavit denying that the letter was sent to the television station, appellants relied, in their Rule 12-I(k) statement of material facts in dispute, on his admission in the form of the “cc:” notation at the bottom of the letter and the fact that he admitted sending the letter to the other two entities or persons noted as “cc:” ’d.
Cf. Diamond Servs. Co., Inc. v. Utica Mutual Ins. Co.,
Therefore, the question is whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to deny appellants’ requests for additional time for discovery regarding a nonprivi-leged mailing to Channel 7.
Blake Constr. Co. v. Alliance Plumbing & Heating Co.,
On the other hand, appellants asserted that their failure to refer to Channel 7 in the amended complaint was an “inadvertent oversight.” Once faced with Grafio’s denial in November 1989 they requested additional time and endeavored to determine whether Channel 7 could advise if it had received Grafio’s letter. See note 5, supra. Their earlier efforts to consolidate the two lawsuits had been opposed by Gra-fio, who sought an expedited trial in the Small Claims Branch, and thus diverted appellants’ time and attention to defending that suit; earlier efforts at mediation had failed. Nor could Grafio claim surprise or prejudice as a result of appellants’ failure to refer to the mailing to Channel 7 in their amended complaint; Grafio’s Rule 12-I(k) statement, as well as his affidavit, addressed the Channel 7 claim. Moreover, at the time of their initial request for additional time, the time for discovery had not yet expired. See Super.CtCiv.R. 26(d).
On balance we conclude that the denials of appellants’ requests for additional time for discovery did not constitute an abuse of discretion. Even when their motion for reconsideration was denied, appellants had not obtained information from Channel 7 that was critical to their theory of defamation. Obviously, the appellate court is assisted in reviewing an exercise of discretion when the trial court spells out the reasons underlying that exercise.
6
But the record here supports the denials.
See Johnson v. United States,
B. Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
“Intentional infliction of emotional distress consists of (1) extreme and outrageous conduct on the part of the defendant which (2) intentionally or recklessly (3) causes the plaintiff severe emotional distress.”
Howard Univ. v. Best,
Grafio’s alleged conduct is not so outrageous as to raise a jury question on the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim.
See Howard Univ. v. Best, supra,
Accordingly, the dismissal of the breach of contract claim and the summary judgment on the defamations and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims are affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants, two attorneys proceeding pro se, are husband and wife.
. Appellants maintain that Judge Bacon erred in dismissing the complaint on the grounds of claim preclusion. Appellants correctly note that because there is not a compulsory counterclaim rule in the Small Claims Branch, they cannot be penalized for failing to raise a counterclaim. The trial judge relied, however, on
issue
preclusion in dismissing appellants’ breach of contract claim. The order states that "[a]ll issues raised in the Amended Complaint were litigated or should have been litigated” in the Small Claims action. Despite the reference to what "should have been litigated,” in context the judge is most likely referring to issue preclusion, the only ground raised by Grafio in his motion for dismissal.
See Goldkind
v.
Snider Bros., Inc.,
. We rely on Judge Levie’s summary of the Small Claims proceedings because neither party has transmitted a transcript, or has provided a “statement of the proceedings" pursuant to D.C.App.R. 10(d) (1990). Appellants bear the burden of establishing the record on appeal.
Jonathan Woodner Co. v. Adams,
. Appellants’ original request for additional time in their opposition to the motion to dismiss and for summary judgment failed to comply with Super.Ct.Civ.R. 56(f), which provides:
Should it appear from the affidavits of a party opposing the motion that the party cannot for reasons stated present by affidavit facts essential to justify the party’s opposition, the Court may refuse the application for judgment or may order a continuance to permit affidavits to be obtained or depositions to be taken or discovery to be had or may make such other order as is just.
Super.Ct.Civ.R. 56(f) (1990). Grafio contends that the trial judge did not need to address appellants’ request because it was not made in a separate motion. The rule makes clear, however, that a party may make such a request in an affidavit opposing summary judgment. Moreover, appellants did attach an affidavit to
. On January 31, 1990, over eight months after they filed their lawsuit, appellants, faced with Grafio's denial in November 1989, endeavored to determine whether Channel 7 would be able to advise them if it had received a copy of the letter. They wrote a letter to Channel 7 on January 31, 1990, which stated:
Unfortunately, a letter which may have been sent to your office in March of 1989 has become an issue in a law suit. All I need to know at this point is if you maintain a file of such letters sent to your office. Do you? Is it possible for your files to be checked to see if you did receive it?
Please do not undertake to retrieve it at this time, but let me know if such a retrieval is possible....
An affirmative response by Channel 7 still would not have provided the evidence that appellants needed to overcome Grafio’s denials. There would still not have been evidence to show receipt by Channel 7 of Grafio’s letter.
When the television station apparently did not respond to the January 31, 1990, letter, appellants’ further efforts to obtain information from Channel 7 still did not show that appellants had done what was required. Appellant Weaver’s affidavit stated that the attorney for Channel 7 had advised that the station "would not inform me as to whether or not they received Mr. Grafio’s defamatory letter, unless I served them with a subpoena.” The affidavit further stated that a "subpoena is being prepared and will be served on [Channel 7] on May 11, 1990.” The record does not contain any indication that the subpoena to Channel 7 had been served when appellants’ motion for reconsideration was denied on May 22, 1990.
. In addition to providing no reasons for the denials, neither the order granting Grafio’s motion to dismiss nor the order denying appellants’ motion for reconsideration made explicit reference to the request for additional time for discovery.
