Boyes-Bogie v. Horvitz

Decision Date31 October 2001
Docket Number991868F
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
PartiesKaren Boyes-Bogie v. Joel R. Horvitz dba Joel R. Horvitz & Associates et al.

Mass L. Rptr. Cite: 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 208

Venue Superior Court, Middlesex, SS

Judge (with first initial, no space for Sullivan, Dorsey, and Walsh): KOTTMYER

INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Karen Boyes-Bogie ("Boyes-Bogie"), brought this action for negligence, breach of contract and malpractice against, among others, defendant Joel Horvitz, d/b/a/ Joel R. Horvitz & Associates. Horvitz, an expert in business valuations, was retained to provide litigation services to Boyes-Bogie in connection with a pending divorce action. Horvitz has moved for summary judgment on all claims against him on the grounds that he has absolute immunity. For the reasons set forth below, Horvitz' motion for summary judgment is denied.

SUMMARY JUDGMENT RECORD

The undisputed facts and disputed facts viewed in the light most favorable to Boyes-Bogie are as follows. In October 1994, Boyes-Bogie retained Attorney Kenneth Soble of Soble, VanDam, Pearlman & Gittlesohn to represent her in a divorce action against her husband Andrew Rogal ("Rogal"). A major marital asset was stock of Rogal America, Inc. ("RAI"). Rogal owned 100% of the RAI stock.

In March of 1995, Soble, acting on behalf of Boyes-Bogie, retained Horvitz to provide expert litigation support and testimony relating to the valuation of the RAI stock and Rogal's 100% ownership interests in RAI and a related corporation.1 Horvitz, a certified public accountant, had previously qualified as an expert in business valuations in the Probate and Family Court. On or about March 20, 1995, the parties executed an engagement letter drafted by Horvitz. Horvitz agreed "to perform a review of the accounting records and other related data of [RAI and a related company] in order to determine the fair market value of the corporate stock and Andrew Rogal's 100% ownership interests." Horvitz estimated that his fees for the engagement would be in the range of $6,000 to $7,500, exclusive of formal report and trial preparation and testimony. He requested and received a retainer of $6,500. In the engagement letter, Horvitz stated: "We will always be available for consultation and questions, and all necessary telephone calls are encouraged." Boyes-Bogie agreed to compensate Horvitz for his services at the rate of $165 per hour for "noncourt time" and $175 per hour for court time, including preparing to testify and testifying.

Soble sent a series of letters to Horvitz requesting progress reports. On September 28, 1995, he requested by facsimile and mail a progress report on the appraisals. He referred to "personal problems" on the part of Horvitz, which may have caused delays and stated "but your attention to this matter and failure to keep me advised of any progress is extremely questionable." He continued:

I can go no further without your assistance. If you are unable to professionally perform your services in a more timely manner, perhaps you should re-evaluate whether you should so advise me and appropriately withdraw so I can retain someone to complete this much needed information.

Soble noted that Horvitz had canceled the last three appointments he had made at RAI and asked him to give the matter his immediate attention. Soble again wrote to Horvitz on October 25, 1995. He noted that Horvitz had not responded to his previous communications, described ongoing settlement negotiations and asked Horvitz to give him "some parameters regarding an appraisal" which would assist him "in getting to work towards a settlement." Soble concluded:

I have been most patient, as you know, and I have tried to be sensitive to your personal problems, but it is now affecting a number of people and I must ask that you respond accordingly to the above as soon as possible. I implore you to give this matter your immediate attention.

On November 20, 1995, Soble sent a letter to Horvitz by facsimile stating: "I must have a letter with the parameters of the appraisal we discussed by the end of the week." On November 30, 1995, Soble sent another letter by facsimile. Soble stated that he was sympathetic to Horvitz' personal problems, and continued:

I certainly don't mean to threaten you but in the alternative you are leaving me with little opportunity to do otherwise. I need that letter appraisal no later than Tuesday, December 5, 1995. In the event that I do not have what we agreed upon which is minimal to what you were hired to produce, I will have to seek the appropriate recourse which will be unpleasant for both of us. I urge you Joel to take the time and assert every effort to complete this limited task. Please don't force me to have to report this matter which will be painful for you and extremely unpleasant for me. I regret having to write you in this manner but you are leaving me no alternative.

(Emphasis in original.)

Horvitz delivered a typed report to Soble on December 1, 1995.2 In the report Horvitz stated that his objective was "to determine the current fair market value of Rogal America, Inc. and Andrew Rogal's 100% ownership interest." He concluded that "[t]he results of all my analysis is a $2,989,500 gross value of the business and a $2,093,000 net value after discounts attributed to Mr. Rogal's 100% interest." The case did not go to trial. On April 12, 1996, Boyes-Bogie and Rogal entered into a Settlement Agreement. Horvitz was paid $7,500 for his services in the case. Horvitz did not comply with the applicable professional standards in valuing RAI and substantially understated the value of Rogal's ownership interest. (Sheeler Aff. 9 through 14.)3 Boyce-Brice relied on Horvitz' valuation when she agreed to the settlement.

DISCUSSION

The narrow issue presented by this motion is whether the doctrine of witness immunity protects a privately retained professional who negligently provides litigation support services from liability in a case brought by the individual who retained the expert. There is no Massachusetts authority directly on point.4

Courts have consistently held that the witness immunity doctrine protects an expert witness from suit by an adverse party. But the majority of courts which have considered the issue in cases analogous to the present case have held that the doctrine does not protect an expert witness from a claim of negligence by the party who retained the expert to provide litigation support services. Murphy v. A.A. Mathews, A Division of CRS Group Ingenous, Inc., 841 S.W.2d 671 672 (Mo. 1992) (en banc) (witness immunity did not bar negligence action brought against engineering firm by party which retained the firm to provide pretrial litigation support services);5 Mattco Forge v. Arthur Young & Co., 6 Cal.Rptr.2d 781, 783 (Cal.Ct.App. 1992) (privilege did not protect accounting firm retained to provide litigation support services from suit for malpractice by party which retained the firm where case was dismissed before trial as a result of rulings resulting from the alleged malpractice and expert did not testify); LLMD of Michigan, Inc. v. Jackson-Cross Company, 559 Pa. 297 (1999) (witness immunity doctrine did not apply where expert's testimony on lost profits was stricken when he was unable to recalculate lost profits while on the witness stand by correcting a mathematical error disclosed during cross examination and case then settled);6 Pollock v. Panjabi, 27 Conn. L. Rptr. 16, 2000 WL 739639 (Conn. Super. Ct. May 17, 2000) (witness immunity did not bar negligence action against expert retained by party whose testimony was excluded based on Court's determination after a series of pretrial hearings that experiment was not properly conducted).

In only one state has the highest court held that expert witnesses are immune from liability to the individual who retained the expert.7 In Bruce v. Byrne-Stevens & Assocs. Eng'rs, Inc., 776 P.2d 666, 667 (Wash. 1989), a plurality of the Washington Supreme Court held that witness immunity barred a malpractice suit by plaintiffs against an expert they had retained to calculate the costs of corrective work. Four judges concurred in the opinion, with a fifth judge concurring in the result only, and four judges dissented. The engineer had testified as an expert in the underlying case and plaintiffs in the malpractice action were awarded damages based on the expert's testimony. Actual costs were twice the amount estimated by the engineer and the plaintiffs sued for malpractice. The Court held that immunity extended to pretrial preparation services forming the basis of the expert's testimony.

The plurality in Bruce focused on the chilling effect that the threat of subsequent litigation would have on the expert's testimony. According to the Court, a loss of objectivity would result because experts would be encouraged to assert the most extreme position favorable to the party for whom they testify. Id. at 670. Moreover imposition of civil liability on expert witnesses would discourage anyone who is not a professional expert witness from testifying...

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