FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
BETH L. BROWN V. MICHAEL DRAYTON
KARL K. VANZO Sallwasser and McCain
Law Offices of Timothy Kelly & Associates LaPorte, Indiana
Dyer, Indiana
TIMOTHY F. KELLY d/b/a )
TIMOTHY F. KELLY AND ASSOCIATES, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 46A03-0406-CV-287
)
STANLEY LEVANDOSKI d/b/a )
STANS SERVICE, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
OPINION FOR PUBLICATION
Timothy F. Kelly, d/b/a Timothy Kelly and Associates, appeals a judgment in favor
of Stanley Levandoski, d/b/a Stans Service. Kelly raises four issues, which we
restate as:
1. Whether the trial court erred when it denied Kellys motion for summary judgment;
2. Whether the trial court erred when it denied Kellys motion for judgment on
the evidence;
3. Whether the trial court abused its discretion when it limited the testimony of
Kellys expert witness; and
4. Whether the trial court erred when it instructed the jury on implied contract,
quasi contract, and agency law.
We affirm.
(Appellees App. at 19.) In addition, he explained:
Mr. Kellys representations and instructions made over the telephone as stated in No.
2 [quoted directly above] were very definite and I understood them easily and
did what he requested. I sent him updated bills as he requested
and he never told me anything different than what he first represented to
me. He (Mr. Kelly) never objected to the storage bills or that
I was still storing the vehicle as he requested. He (Mr. Kelly)
never told me he was not going to be responsible for the storage
bill nor did he ever tell me someone else was responsible.
(
Id. at 25.)
Those answers create genuine issues of material fact about whether an oral contract
was created.
See footnote
If Kelly asked Levandoski to keep the van, to send
copies of the bills to Kelly, and be paid when the personal injury
case was over, an offer can reasonably be inferred. Levandoskis act of
sending the bill to Kelly can reasonably indicate his acceptance of Kellys offer.
If Levandoski stored the van longer than he would have because he
believed he would be paid for the storage, consideration can be found.
Accordingly, it appears the trial court did not err when it declined to
grant Kellys motion for summary judgment under Kellys theory that as a matter
of law no contract was formed.
Nevertheless, Kelly argues he cannot be held personally responsible for the contract because
he was acting as the Browns agent and an agent is not responsible
for a contract made on behalf of the principal. Indiana recognizes the
general rule that where an agent discloses the identity of his principal and
does not exceed his authority when contracting on the principals behalf, the agent
is not personally bound by the contract unless the agent agrees to be
so bound.
Boesch v. Jones, 712 N.E.2d 1061 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999),
trans. denied 726 N.E.2d 313 (Ind. 1999).
In
Boesch, we were faced with the question whether an attorney may be
held personally liable for the costs of court reporting services he requested on
behalf of his client. Id. at 1062. The facts were these:
Boesch is an attorney hired by Dr. Sylvester Nathan (Nathan) and Jones is
a court reporter hired by Boesch for her services provided at a deposition
of Nathan. Neither Jones nor Boesch presented any direct evidence as to
the precise terms of the agreement. On November 8, 1996, Jones attended
the deposition and recorded Nathans testimony. Jones was aware that Boesch had
arranged for her services on behalf of Nathan. After the deposition, Jones
sent a bill for her services to Boesch. Boesch forwarded the bill
to Nathan for payment. However, Nathan never paid Jones. After the
passage of over five months and issuance by Jones of no less than
three billing statements during this time period, Boesch, for the first time, forwarded
a letter to Jones indicating that Nathan was responsible for the payment of
all deposition charges. Meanwhile, Boesch obtained a judgment against Nathan for attorney
fees, and indicated to Jones that the funds, if collected, would be used
to pay the court reporting charges. However, Nathan never paid either Boesch
or Jones. Therefore, Jones filed suit against Boesch to recover for her
services. A bench trial was held on September 21, 1998 and the
court issued its judgment on October 1, 1998 in Jones favor. Boesch
now appeals.
Id.
Boesch claimed the trial court erred when it ruled in Jones favor because
an attorney cannot be responsible for a contract made on behalf of a
disclosed client. We held:
Nevertheless, it is well settled that an attorney, by virtue of the representation,
becomes a powerful agent with a great deal of authority. Retention confers
on an attorney the general implied authority to do on behalf of the
client all acts in or out of court necessary or incidental to the
prosecution or management of the suit or the accomplishment of the purpose for
which the attorney was retained. Essentially, an attorney is more than a
mere agent of the client, he is the sole manager of the business
committed to his care.
Id. at 1063 (internal citations omitted).
Kelly claims we should not follow
Boesch because the storage of the van
was not a litigation expense.
See footnote
Kelly asserts Levandoskis storage of the van
was performed in connection with an automobile accident which resulted in litigation, not
in connection with litigation. (Appellants Br. at 11.) To call storage
of the van a litigation expense would, Kelly claims, be akin to calling
medical services provided after a traffic accident litigation expenses. That, he asserts,
would make attorneys responsible for the medical bills of their clients.
Kellys argument is a red herring. Kelly did not simply call and
request a copy of the towing and storage bill to present as damages
in the lawsuit. Instead, Kelly called and asked Levandoski to keep the
van because Kelly needed it for the Browns personal injury litigation. As
Levandoski explains: The better comparison would be one where Attorney Kelly had a
medical exam performed for permanent partial impairment on his client, as with Stans
services, Attorney Kelly would and should be responsible for those services he requests.
(Appellees Br. at 13-14.)
Kellys request that Levandoski keep the van because Kelly needed it for the
Browns lawsuit was a request for a service in connection with litigation and
can reasonably be construed as a litigation expense. Thus, Kelly could be
held personally liable under
Boesch, unless Kelly specifically disclaimed personal liability to Levandoski.
Kelly acknowledges he made no such disclaimer to Levandoski. Kelly was
not entitled to summary judgment on the ground he was an agent of
the Browns.
Kelly also claims there was no consideration for a contract between himself and
Levandoski. Consideration is a bargained for exchange whereby the promisor accrues a
benefit or the promisee accepts a detriment.
DiMizio v. Romo, 756 N.E.2d
1018, 1022-23 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001), trans. denied 774 N.E.2d 509 (Ind. 2002).
A benefit is a legal right given to the promisor to which
the promisor would not otherwise be entitled. Id. at 1023. A
detriment, on the other hand, is a legal right the promisee has forborne.
Id.
Specifically, Kelly asserts that because the police, and not he, asked Levandoski to
tow and store the van, Levandoski was not providing a benefit to Kelly
that was not already being provided for the Browns. (Appellants Reply Br.
at 6.) Kelly fails to acknowledge the facts most favorable to Levandoski.
Levandoski initially towed and stored the van for the Browns at the
request of the police; however, Kelly then asked Levandoski to keep the van
because Kelly needed it for the lawsuit. Levandoski kept the van for
four years, and he claims he did so in reliance on Kellys request
and promise that he would be paid when the case was over.
Levandoskis statements, which the trial court was obliged to take as true at
the summary judgment stage, demonstrated a genuine issue of material fact regarding consideration.
Even if there is no express contract, a plaintiff may sometimes recover under
the theory of unjust enrichment,
See footnote
which is also called quantum meruit, contract implied-in-law,
constructive contract, or quasi-contract. Bayh v. Sonnenburg, 573 N.E.2d 398, 408 (Ind.
1991), rehg denied, cert. denied 502 U.S. 1094 (1992). These theories are
legal fictions invented by the common law courts in order to permit recovery
where in fact there is no true contract, but where, to avoid unjust
enrichment, the courts permit recovery of the value of the services rendered just
as if there had been a true contract. Wallem, 725 N.E.2d at
890.
Principles of equity prohibit unjust enrichment in cases where a party accepts the
unrequested benefits another provides despite having the opportunity to decline those benefits.
Truck City of Gary, Inc. v. Schneider Nat. Leasing, 814 N.E.2d 273, 280
(Ind. Ct. App. 2004). The purpose of these equitable theories is to
force those who have been unjustly enriched at the expense of another party
to make restitution to that other party. Bayh, 573 N.E.2d at 408
(quoting Restatement of Restitution § 1 (1937)).
A party seeking to recover on a theory of
quantum meruit must demonstrate
that a benefit was rendered to another at the express or implied request
of such other party. SLR Plumbing, 757 N.E.2d at 200. The
plaintiff must also demonstrate that to allow the defendant to retain the benefit
without paying for it would be unjust and that the plaintiff expected payment.
Bayh, 573 N.E.2d at 408. Levandoskis answers to interrogatories create genuine
issues of material fact about whether Kelly asked Levandoski to keep the van,
whether Levandoski stored the van longer than he would have because he believed
he would be paid for the storage when the Browns case concluded, and
whether allowing Kelly to avoid payment for the storage would be unjust.
Finally, Levandoski could have recovered under a theory of unilateral contract. A
unilateral contract arises without a bargaining process or exchanges of promises by the
parties.
Orr v. Westminster Village North, Inc., 689 N.E.2d 712, 719 n.11
(Ind. 1997). Only one party makes an offer (or promise) which invites
performance by another, and the performance constitutes both the acceptance of that offer
and the consideration. Id. Levandoski asserted he kept the van for
four years because Kelly promised him he would be paid when the Browns
lawsuit concluded. As such, genuine issues of fact exist regarding the creation
of a unilateral contract.
The evidence most favorable to Levandoski would permit a jury to find in
favor of Levandoski under theory of express contract, unjust enrichment, or unilateral contract.
Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it declined to grant
Kellys motion for summary judgment.
2.
Judgment on the Evidence
Kelly also claims the trial court erred when it did not grant his
motion for judgment on the evidence.
See footnote
A motion for judgment on the
evidence challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence. Town of Highland v.
Zerkel, 659 N.E.2d 1113, 1120 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995), trans. denied. If
issues are not supported by sufficient evidence the court shall withdraw such issues
from the jury and enter judgment thereon. Id. The trial court
should consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party
and determine whether substantial evidence, or a reasonable inference therefrom, supports each essential
element of a claim. Id.
On appeal from the denial of a motion for judgment on the evidence,
we apply the same standard as the trial court. Id. We
consider the evidence most favorable to the non-moving party and determine whether the
evidence supports without conflict only one inference that is in favor of the
defendant. Hurlow v. Managing Partners, Inc., 755 N.E.2d 1158, 1161 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2001), trans. denied 774 N.E.2d 509 (Ind. 2002). If reasonable persons
could come to different conclusions from the evidence, the trial court should not
grant a motion for judgment on the evidence. Id.
At trial, Levandoski testified as follows:
A I was contacted by Mr - - I believe I was contacted by
Mr. Kelly.
Q And Mr. Kelly contacted you how?
A By telephone.
Q Okay, and did he identify himself as Mr. Kelly?
A Yes, sir.
Q How else did he identify himself?
A That he was an attorney and that he was working on a Brown
case in which thats who owned the van. And that he knew
I had the van.
Q Okay. Did you have a conversation then with Mr. Kelly about what
to do with this van?
A Yes, sir.
Q And what did Mr. Kelly tell you?
A Mr. Kelly informed me that it was wrapped up in a legal suit
of some nature and to hold on to the vehicle and send him
the bill. And then the [gist] of it was that I was
to hold on to it, send him the bill, and when this legal
suit, Im trusting with the Browns, was over that I would get paid.
Q Was there anything else that Mr. Kelly told you in that conversation?
A He gave me his address.
Q On how -- where to send the bill to?
A To where to send the bill to.
Q And what --
A Munster.
Q -- did you do in response to that call from Mr. Kelly?
A I done what Mr. Kelly wanted. I sent him --
Q What was it?
A -- I sent him a copy of the bill.
Q Do you remember when it was that Mr. Kelly contacted you?
A Middle of October 95, perhaps early part of November, I would say closer
to October.
Q Okay. During that conversation that you had with Mr. Kelly, did he
specifically tell you that he would not personally be responsible for the bills
for storage?
A No, sir.
(Appellees App. at 158-59.)
As at the summary judgment phase, Kelly argues his requests that Levandoski store
the van and send the bills to Kelly could not, as a matter
of law, have created an express contract between them. In addition, Kelly
again argues he cannot be held personally responsible for the bill as the
Browns agent because the storage was not a litigation expense as defined in
Boesch. As at the summary judgment phase, those arguments fail.
Levandoskis testimony created a dispute of material fact about whether Levandoski stored the
van at Kellys request with the understanding he would be paid when the
Browns case concluded. In addition, it created questions of fact about whether
equity required Kelly to pay Levandoski for the service so that Kelly would
not be unjustly enriched. As the record contains evidence that supports each
element necessary for Levandoski to recover under a number of legal theories, we
cannot hold the trial court erred when it denied Kellys motion for judgment
on the evidence.
3.
Expert Witness Testimony
Admission of evidence, including the proffered testimony of experts, lies within the sound
discretion of the trial court. Merrill v. Knauf Fiber Glass GmbH, 771
N.E.2d 1258, 1263 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans. denied 783 N.E.2d 703 (Ind.
2002). The court has abused its discretion if its decision was against
the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before the court.
Id. We will reverse for the improper exclusion of evidence only if
the appealing party can demonstrate prejudice. Indianapolis Podiatry, P.C. v. Efroymson, 720
N.E.2d 376, 383 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999) (Erroneously excluded evidence requires reversal only
if the error relates to a material matter or substantially affects the rights
of the parties.), trans. denied 735 N.E.2d 230 (Ind. 2000).
Kelly called as an expert witness an attorney, Craig Braje. Kelly attempted
to have Braje testify regarding: (1) the elements of a contract; (2)
case law regarding contracts, including
Boesch v. Jones; (3) the legal concept of
agency; (4) his opinion whether a contract existed between Kelly and Levandoski; (5)
his opinion that Levandoski failed to mitigate his damages; (6) his opinion whether
Levandoski sued the right party; and (7) his opinion about the contingency fee
arrangement between Kelly and the Browns.
Levandoski objected to those categories of testimony and, after a hearing at which
Kelly presented his offer of proof, the court sustained Levandoskis objection:
The Court on the basis of the offer to prove finds that Mr.
Braje can testify as to what he does in the context of litigation,
collecting facts, evidence etcetera, and what he normally does as it relates to
preparing a case for trial.
Mr. Braje can also testify as to what he does and what he
considers to be the standard practice to hire people to assist as experts,
and how he enters into agreements with those people.
Mr. Braje may not testify as to his opinion as to whether or
not the right person has been sued.
Mr. Braje may not testify as to his interpretation of Exhibit G [the
contingency fee agreement between Kelly and the Browns]. The reason for that
is the testimony of Mr. Kelly that that agreement is put into common
language that ordinary people can understand. Therefore, we do not need an
expert to interpret that agreement.
The Court stands in its rulings that Mr. Braje may not testify as
to the elements of the contract. He may not testify as to
agency, and the other matters that deal with what his opinion as to
whether there is or is not a contract, that invades the province of
the jury. All of Mr. Brajes opinions as to what the law
is, and the Court has extremely high regard for Mr. Braje, are accurate.
Those are jury instructions. Theyre to be given to the jury,
thats the Courts function.
(Appellants App. at 150-51.)
Ind. Evidence Rule 704 provides:
(a) Testimony in the form of an opinion or inference otherwise admissible is
not objectionable merely because it embraces an ultimate issue to be decided by
the trier of fact.
(b) Witnesses may not testify to opinions concerning intent, guilt or innocence in
a criminal case; the truth or falsity of allegations; whether a witness has
testified truthfully; or legal conclusions.
Regarding that rule, we recently explained:
We are cognizant of the trend to allow expert opinion testimony even on
the ultimate issue of the case, so long as the testimony concerns matters
which are not within the common knowledge and experience of ordinary persons and
will aid the trier of fact. . . .
We remain of the opinion, however, that experts should not be permitted to
offer legal conclusions as part of their testimony because to do so would
violate the spirit of Evidence Rule 704(b), which provides that [w]itnesses may not
testify to opinions concerning . . . legal conclusions. The purpose of
the rule is that legal conclusions from a witness are not helpful to
the trier of fact; the judge, not an expert witness, instructs on the
law.
Vaughn v. Daniels Co. (West Virginia), Inc., 777 N.E.2d 1110, 1122-123 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2003) (internal quotations and citations omitted), transfer pending, clarified on rehg on
unrelated matter 782 N.E.2d 1062 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).
The first three topics about which Kelly wished Braje to testify were:
(1) the elements of a contract; (2) case law regarding contracts, including
Boesch
v. Jones; and (3) the legal concept of agency. Those topics, as
the trial court held, are topics about which the court, and not a
witness, should inform the jury. See Vaughn, 777 N.E.2d at 1123 (the
judge, not an expert witness, instructs on the law). Kellys expert witness
should not have been permitted to explain those topics to the jury.
The other four topics about which Kelly wanted Braje to testify included Brajes
opinions whether a contract existed between Kelly and Levandoski, whether Levandoski failed to
mitigate his damages, whether Levandoski sued the right party, and about the impact
of the contingency fee arrangement between Kelly and the Browns. Whether a
set of facts establishes a contract is a question of law.
Wallem,
725 N.E.2d at 883. Accordingly, Brajes opinion about the existence of a
contract would have been a legal conclusion. In addition, the other three
topics would have required Braje to draw conclusions based on application of the
relevant law to the facts of the case, and as such they were
legal conclusions.
We follow
Vaughn and affirm the trial courts exclusion of those legal conclusions.
See 777 N.E.2d 1110. Vaughn, a construction worker, sued his employer
and two other companies after he was injured while constructing a coal preparation
plant. When the defendants filed motions for summary judgment, Vaughn designated in
opposition to summary judgment an affidavit from a construction expert. The experts
affidavit included in pertinent part the following statements:
12. . . . Failure to have a structural member and a
railing around the top of the heavy media sump rendered the heavy media
sump unreasonably dangerous.
In my opinion, failure to use safety engineering relating to the design of
the heavy media sump proximately resulted in injuries to Mr. Vaughn.
13. . . . Defendant Daniels failed to use reasonable care by
not applying the above safety engineering principles resulting in its failure to incorporate
a structural member and handrail into the design of the heavy media sump.
. . .
14 Based upon the discovery and documents, it is my opinion Defendant
Daniels knew or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known that
persons, such as Mr. Vaughn, intended to do work, maintenance, or stand in
the top of the heavy media sump, as the heavy media sump was
designed to have a ladder for access. . . .
15. Based upon my engineering and construction management expertise and review of the documents
listed above, it is my opinion Defendants [sic] Daniels failed to use reasonable
care by not having [a] construction management plan and/or a process of plant
assembly plan for the design.
16. . . . The failure to have a construction management plan and/or a
process of plant assembly plan for the design of the Cannelburg Project site
proximately resulted in Mr. Vaughns injuries.
17. Based upon engineering and construction management expertise and review of the documents listed
above, it is my opinion Defendant Solar as owner of the property in
question failed to use reasonable care by not requiring and/or participating in a
construction management plan and/or a process of plant assembly plan for the design
of the Cannelburg Project. Failure to use such reasonable care proximately resulted
in injury to Mr. Vaughn.
Id. at 1118-120. We held those statements were inadmissible as improper
legal conclusions . . . relating to proximate cause and reasonable care, which
issues were to be decided by the jury when determining whether the defendants
had been negligent. Id. at 1122.
Similarly, the legal conclusions about which Kelly wanted Braje to give his opinions
were the legal conclusions the jury needed to reach in deciding whether to
find a contract between Kelly and Levandoski and whether to award damages to
Levandoski. The trial court did not err when it sustained Levandoskis objection
to these categories of testimony.
See footnote
Id.
4.
Jury Instructions
Instruction of the jury lies within the discretion of the trial court, and
we reverse only for an abuse of that discretion. Armstrong v. Federated
Mut. Ins. Co., 785 N.E.2d 284, 287 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), rehg denied,
trans. denied 804 N.E.2d 750 (Ind. 2003). Instructions should inform the jury
on the law applicable to the facts of the case without misleading the
jury and should enable the jury to understand the case in a manner
that allows the jury to arrive at a fair, just, and correct verdict.
Id. Instructions given to a jury must be correct statements of
law, applicable to the evidence presented at trial, and relevant to the issues
the jury needs to decide to reach a verdict. Id. at 289.
Erroneous jury instructions need not result in reversal of a judgment.
Id.
at 287. Reversal is warranted only upon an affirmative showing that the
instructional error prejudiced the partys substantial rights. Id. at 289. If
the verdict would not have been different, any error was harmless. Id.
at 287.
Final instruction fourteen stated:
The Plaintiff has made a claim for damages based on contract implied in
law. Even if you find that a contract has not been entered
into, the plaintiff may be entitled to recover damages.
To recover, the plaintiff has the burden of proving the following elements by
a preponderance of the evidence:
First: The plaintiff provided valuable services or benefits to the defendant;
Second: The services or benefits were provided at the express or implied request of
the defendant;
Third: The services or benefits were provided under circumstances where it is only fair
the plaintiff be compensated; and
Fourth: Compensation is necessary to prevent the unjust enrichment of the defendant at the
expense of the plaintiff.
If you find after considering all the evidence that the plaintiff has proved
each of these elements, you may award damages to the plaintiff for the
reasonable value of the services or benefits provided.
(Appellants App. at 190-91.)
Kelly asserts the court should not have given this instruction because the record
contained no evidence demonstrating Kelly received a benefit from Levandoski. As we
discussed in Issue 1,
supra, the evidence permitted the inference Kelly received the
benefit of knowing the van was available during trial preparations if he needed
it for an accident reconstructionist or to obtain damage estimates. Kelly claimed
at oral argument he did not need the van for an accident reconstructionist
because the only issue was the timing of the lights at the intersection
where the accident occurred. However, 1998 correspondence from Wolf Technical Services to
Kelly indicates to create an accident reconstruction Wolf would go see the van
at Stans Towing. (Plaintiffs Exhibits Nos. 16 & 17.) Accordingly, the
evidence permits the inference Kelly still thought he needed the van two and
a half years after the accident and the inference Kelly believed Levandoski would
still have the van. The evidence supported the inference that Kelly received
a benefit from Levandoski.
Final instruction fifteen provided:
A unilateral contract is a promise in exchange for an act one
person promises to do a certain thing if another person performs or forbears
from performing a certain act. The offer is accepted when the other
person performs the act, or forbears. This acceptance makes the contract complete.
(Appellants App. at 191.)
Kelly asserts the evidence did not support the giving of this instruction because
there was no evidence Levandoski refrained from seeking a salvage title to the
van based on the discussion between Kelly and Levandoski. Kelly again fails
to acknowledge the facts most favorable to Levandoski. Levandoski testified he would
have sought a salvage title within thirty to sixty days if Kelly had
not asked him to keep the van. (
See id. at 164-66.)
Accordingly, the evidence supported this instruction.
Final instruction seventeen stated:
You are instructed that it is the law in Indiana that an attorney,
of a disclosed client, who actively seeks anothers services in connection with litigation
and enters into a contract for the performance of those services is personally
liable for those costs unless the attorney expressly disclaims such responsibility to the
provider of the services.
(Id. at 191-92.)
Kellys objection to this instruction was that it was based on
Boesch, 712
N.E.2d 1061, which Kelly believes is not relevant to Levandoskis claim against Kelly.
For the reasons discussed above, we disagree. Kelly contacted Levandoski and
identified himself as the Browns attorney. Kelly asked Levandoski to keep the
van and to send the bills for storage to Kelly. Kelly did
not expressly disclaim his responsibility for the bills, but rather told Levandoski he
would be paid when the case was over. Those facts support a
possible recovery for Levandoski under the theory of Boesch, and the trial court
did not err when it gave that instruction.