KANSALLIS FINANCE LTD. V. FERN
659 N.E.2d 731 (1995)
NATURE OF THE CASE: The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit certified two questions;
(1) Is an intent to benefit the partnership required for vicarious liability and whether
uninvolved and unaware partners could be liable for authorized conduct of a partner that
violated Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A?
FACTS: Stephen Jones and the four defendants (Ds) were law partners in Massachusetts
when, in connection with a loan and lease financing transaction, Kansallis (P) sought and
obtained an opinion letter from Jones. The letter on D letterhead contained several
intentional misrepresentations concerning the transaction and was part of a conspiracy by
Jones and others (though not any of the defendants here) to defraud P. Jones was later
convicted on criminal charges for his part in the fraud, and P was unable to collect its
$880,000 loss from Jones or his coconspirators. P sued D on the theory that the partners
were liable for the damage caused by the fraudulent letter. The judge and jury decided that
Ds were not liable for Jones's conduct. The Court of Appeals affirmed both the judge's and
the jury's factual findings and certified two questions to this court in order to resolve
the legal issues. On P's common law claims, the jury held that Jones did not have apparent
authority to issue the opinion letter and that his action in issuing the opinion letter was
outside the scope of the partnership. On appeal P contends that the jury based their second
finding on an erroneous instruction to satisfy a three-prong test. It must have: (1) been
'the kind of thing a law partner would do'; (2) 'occurred substantially within the
authorized time and geographic limits of the partnership; and' (3) been 'motivated at least
in part by a purpose to serve the partnership.' P had objected to the addition of the third
prong. On P's claim under G. L. c. 93A, the judge found that D had clothed Jones with
apparent authority to issue the letter on its behalf. The judge held as a matter of law,
that 'innocent' partners may not be held vicariously liable under 93A for their partners'
fraudulent acts. It held that a partner, entirely unaware and uninvolved with another
partner's fraud, is immune from vicarious liability under 93A, even when the conduct
constituting fraud was authorized.'
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
Get
free access to the entire content for Mac, PC or Online
for 2-3 days and free samples
of all kinds of products.
for 2-3 days and free samples of all kinds of products.
https://bsmsphd.com
© 2007-2016 Abn Study Partner
No comments:
Post a Comment