Kirsten Kissinger-Campbell v. C. Randall Harrell , 418 F. App'x 797 ( 2011 )


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    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT           FILED
    ________________________ U.S. COURT  OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    FEBRUARY 11, 2011
    Nos. 09-15377 & 09-16424
    JOHN LEY
    ________________________                      CLERK
    D. C. Docket No. 08-00568-CV-T-27-TBM
    KIRTSEN KISSINGER-CAMPBELL,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    C. RANDALL HARRELL, M.D., P.A.,
    C. RANDALL HARRELL, M.D.,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    _________________________
    (February 11, 2011)
    Before DUBINA, Chief Judge, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.*
    ___________
    * Although United States District Judge David H. Coar of the Northern District of Illinois
    sat by designation in this case, he retired as an Article III Judge in December 2010. Accordingly,
    we decide this case by a quorum. See 11th Cir. R. 34-2.
    PER CURIAM:
    C. Randall Harrell, M.D., P.A. (“The Fountain of Youth”) and C. Randall
    Harrell, M.D., appeal from two district court orders denying their renewed motion
    for judgment as a matter of law and their request for a new trial, following a jury
    verdict for Plaintiff, Kirtsen Kisssinger-Campbell on a claim of tortious
    interference. Because we conclude that the district court did not err in dismissing
    these motions, we affirm.
    Defendants raise a bevy of claims in their appeal. They begin by arguing
    that the district court erred in not granting them judgment as a matter of law
    because there was no evidentiary basis for the verdict at trial. Next, they request a
    new trial on the ground that prejudicial hearsay was wrongly admitted. Defendants
    then contend that the jury’s award for emotional distress should be struck because
    the alleged damages lacked a causal connection with Plaintiff’s claim and because
    it is inconsistent with the damages award for the general tort claim for intentional
    interference. Finally, Defendants claim that their Rule 60(b)(2) and Rule 60(b)(3)
    motions should have been granted because newly discovered evidence
    demonstrates that the judgment at trial was likely inaccurate and that Plaintiff
    committed a fraud on the court, which denied Defendants an opportunity to
    2
    conduct a full and fair trial. For the following reasons, we believe that these claims
    lack merit.
    I. FACTS
    Defendant, C. Randall Harrell, M.D., is a registered cosmetic surgeon in the
    Palm Harbor, Florida area and directs his own practice, The Fountain of Youth
    Institute. The doctor and his practice are both defendants in this suit. Plaintiff,
    Kirtsten Kissinger-Campbell went to work for Defendant as an image consultant
    and assistant office manager sometime in September or October of 2005. As an
    image consultant, Kissinger-Campbell’s primary responsibility was in sales. She
    would meet with prospective clients and discuss with them their options as to
    services performed by Harrell. Kissinger-Campbell’s compensation consisted of a
    base salary and a monthly bonus. During her tenure at the Fountain of Youth,
    Kissinger-Campbell also accumulated some managerial responsibilities in the
    office. At the beginning of 2007, Harrell did not award Kissinger-Campbell her
    monthly sales bonuses for the months of January or February after announcing that
    the bonus formula would be changed for both her and her supervisor, Scott
    McCauley. McCauley’s bonus ultimately increased while Kissinger-Campbell’s
    decreased.
    3
    Prior to Plaintiff’s beginning employment with Harrell, Defendants formed a
    business relationship with My Choice Medical, Inc., (“My Choice”) a referral
    source and financing agent for cosmetic surgery patients. At some point in 2004 or
    2005, Harrell and My Choice entered into a business relationship whereby My
    Choice referred clients to Harell. This relationship appears to have been set forth in
    writing in a contract between My Choice and Penn Plastic Surgery of
    Pennsylvania, a company somehow associated with The Fountain of Youth. My
    Choice had its own image consultants, so Kissinger-Campbell had no role in
    bringing in customers who were referred by the company. By the beginning of
    2007, referrals from My Choice were becoming an increasingly large portion of
    Harrell’s clientele, making Kissinger-Campell’s position less important.
    In March 2007, Harrell informed Kissinger-Campbell that she was being
    removed from her sales position and placed in the role of receptionist.1 Because
    Kissinger-Campbell did not approve of her new position and because she did not
    believe that Defendants would pay her accrued bonuses, she decided to tender her
    letter of resignation on March 27, 2007. Kissinger-Campbell claims that she agreed
    1
    Plaintiff eventually sued Harrell on a breach of contract theory in Florida state
    court because of this change in employment responsibilities. This suit is ongoing and Defendants
    have attempted to use evidence gathered as part of its discovery in that case to assert their claims
    for fraud on the court in this case, as discussed below.
    Plaintiff also filed suit against Defendants for unpaid overtime. That suit was commenced
    in May 2007, the first of the three lawsuits Plaintiff filed against Defendant.
    4
    to stay on for another month to train a replacement sales person, but due to harsh
    treatment by Harrell, she abruptly decided to quit on April 2. Shortly thereafter,
    Kissinger-Campbell received a letter from Harrell that threatened suit against her.
    The letter asserted that her wages might be garnished due to libelous allegations
    that she had made about the practice.
    During the early months of 2007, Kissinger-Campbell exchanged several
    emails with Leanne Green, an image consultant for My Choice, who served the
    portion of the clientele that was referred to Harrell from 2005 to 2007. Plaintiff
    contacted Green after her demotion, but before she left Harrell’s office, and asked
    her whether she knew of any openings in the field and if she enjoyed her job at My
    Choice. Green suggested that Kissinger-Campbell possibly come to work at My
    Choice.
    Harell claims that this communication was an attempt on the part of Green to
    recruit Kissinger-Campbell away from Fountain of Youth and a potential violation
    of the contract between My Choice and Penn Plastic Surgery. He believed that this
    contract applied to his practice and that a confidentiality clause in the agreement
    prevented the recruiting of current employees from one company to the other.
    Kissinger-Campbell’s account is that the conversation was just a casual discussion
    5
    that she initiated because she was unhappy with her job and exploring her
    employment options.
    After her resignation, Kissinger-Campbell learned that My Choice was
    interested in hiring a new employee to cover the Florida area, and she applied for
    the position. Harrell learned of the email correspondence between Kissinger-
    Campbell and Green on April 16, 2007. He immediately contacted Vince Traposso,
    an officer at My Choice, and informed him of his belief that My Choice was in
    violation of the agreement. According to the Defendants, the contract has very
    broad language concerning the use of proprietary information. Plaintiff claims that
    the contract in question had no bearing on whether My Choice could hire her and
    that it could not be mistaken as having such a provision. Defendants argue that the
    contract’s broad confidentiality clause would at least preclude My Choice from
    hiring away any of the current employees of the Fountain of Youth. Harrell
    testified that he spoke to Trapasso about the contract because he was concerned
    that Green may have violated the contract and he wanted to ensure that such
    actions were avoided in the future. My Choice did not hire Plaintiff in April 2007,
    though it eventually hired her in August of that year. When My Choice did hire
    plaintiff, it was for another position covering Nashville and New Orleans, rather
    than Florida.
    6
    Trapasso was the ultimate decision-maker on My Choice’s human resources
    decisions and was responsible for the original decision not to hire Kissinger-
    Campbell. Donielle DiTota served under Trapasso and relayed his decision to
    Plaintiff. She testified that it was her understanding that Kissinger-Campbell was
    not hired in April 2007 because of the phone conversation between Harrell and
    Trapasso.
    Kissinger also interviewed with Medi-Weight Loss (“Medi-Weight”) in St.
    Petersburg, Florida. Plaintiff testified that the interview took place about “the third
    week of May” and that she believed that she had at least one other interview with
    Dr. Zbella, the owner of the franchise, possibly by phone. After the interview,
    Kissinger-Campbell discontinued her job search. However, she did not get a job
    with Medi-Weight and resumed searching for employment in mid-June 2007.
    Eva Gamaras, formerly a close friend of Kissinger-Cambell’s and a surgical
    technician employed by Harrell, testified that she had a conversation with Harrell
    around January of 2008 in which he said that he had ensured that Kissinger-
    Campbell would not get the job at Medi-Weight. Harrell also asked Gamaras to
    relay a message from him and his wife that they wanted to meet with Kissinger-
    Campbell to discuss a resolution to the lawsuit. Plaintiff declined the opportunity to
    meet with Harrell, telling Gamaras that she feared Harrell because he was
    7
    threatening to counter-sue for $250,000. Harrell was, allegedly, furious that
    Kissinger-Campbell had refused this invitation.
    In May 2007, Kissinger-Campbell filed suit for non-payment of overtime,
    pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 
    29 U.S.C. § 201
     et seq. On
    February 29, 2008, Plaintiff filed the complaint in the instant case in Florida state
    court. The complaint alleged that Defendants retaliated against her for the filing of
    the earlier lawsuit by interfering with her attempts to obtain a new job in the
    medical field. She brought claims for retaliation in violation of the FLSA and the
    Florida Whistle-blower’s Act, as well as a claim for tortious interference.
    Defendants successfully removed the case to the United States District Court for
    the Middle District of Florida shortly thereafter. The District Court found that it
    had jurisdiction on the basis of the FLSA claim.
    On June 5, 2009, the jury returned a verdict which found for the Plaintiff on
    the ground of tortious interference but found for the Defendants on the retaliation
    claims, under both the FLSA and the Florida Whistle-blower’s Act. Defendants
    filed several motions for judgment as a matter of law or, alternatively, for a new
    trial. Included in the final motion was evidence gathered from depositions of Dr.
    Zbella and his office manager at Medi-Weight, Sharon DeLuca, which were taken
    8
    in a subsequent case in Florida state court. The district court denied Defendants’
    motions.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Defendants’ claim that the evidence presented was insufficient to support the
    jury’s verdict on the claim of tortious interference or, in the alternative, that
    Harrell’s actions were privileged
    Defendants assert that no reasonable jury could have concluded that they
    tortiously interfered with Kissinger-Campbell’s attempts to obtain employment
    with My Choice or Medi-Weight. However, the district court laid out a substantial
    set of facts presented with respect to each job, on the basis of which the jury could
    have concluded that Kissinger-Campbell established a business relationship with
    each employer that Defendants tortiously interfered with.
    Under Florida law, the elements of a claim for tortious interference are: “(1)
    the existence of a business relationship, not necessarily evidenced by an
    enforceable contract; (2) knowledge of the relationship on the part of the
    defendant; (3) an intentional and unjustified interference with the relationship by
    the defendant; and (4) damage to the plaintiff as a result of the breach of the
    relationship.” Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc. v. Cotton, 
    463 So.2d 1126
    , 1127 (Fla.
    1985); KMS Restaurant Corp. v. Wendy's Int'l, Inc., 
    361 F.3d 1321
    , 1325 (11th Cir.
    9
    2004). Defendants’ sufficiency of the evidence challenges focus on the first
    element. With respect to that first element, “A protected business relationship need
    not be evidenced by an enforceable contract. However, ‘the alleged business
    relationship must afford the plaintiff existing or prospective legal or contractual
    rights.’ ” Gossard v. Adia Services, Inc., 
    723 So.2d 182
    , 184 (Fla. 1998) (quoting
    Register v. Pierce, 
    530 So.2d 990
    , 993 (Fla. App. 1st Dist. 1988)). “The test is
    whether there was ‘an understanding between the parties [which] would have been
    completed had the defendant not interfered.’ ” St. John’s River Mgmt. v. Fernberg
    Geological, 
    784 So.2d 500
    , 505 (Fla. App. 5 th 2001) (quoting Ethan Allen, Inc. v.
    Georgetown Manor, Inc., 
    647 So.2d 812
    , 814 (Fla. 1994)).
    As to the My Choice job, the district court made the following findings:
    (1) During her employment with Defendants, Plaintiff was a point of
    contact between Defendants and My Choice and worked closely with
    representatives of My Choice; (2) in April, 2007, shortly after Plaintiff
    left Defendants’ employment, Leeann Green (a representative of My
    Choice in Florida who resigned around the time that Plaintiff began her
    search for a new job) recommended Plaintiff to Donielle DiTota (My
    Choice’s office manager) for a position as a My Choice representative;
    (3) Plaintiff called DiTota to express her interest in employment as a My
    Choice representative in Florida and submitted a resume, which “kind of
    got things moving”; (4) DiTota, who described this period as one “when
    we were trying to hire [Plaintiff],” passed on Plaintiff’s resume to My
    Choice’s human resources department or to her boss Vince Taposso, who
    was a part-owner (and perhaps also head of the human resources
    department) of My Choice and was responsible for the hiring decisions;
    (5) in a telephone conversation initiated by Harrell (the existence of
    10
    which was corroborated to some extent by Harrell’s testimony (and the
    testimony of Scott McAuley, Defendants’ office administrator), Harrell
    “made it very clear, that employing [Plaintiff] would be breach of
    contract”; (6) My Choice declined to hire Plaintiff; (7) Harrell admitted
    to Eva Gamaras, a “surgical technologist” at his clinic, that he prevented
    Plaintiff from obtaining employment at My Choice and Medi Weight
    Loss; (8) Plaintiff received no response to her application until a few
    months later when DiTota explained to Plaintiff that My Choice’s
    contractual obligations to Defendants prevented My Choice from hiring
    Plaintiff; (9) a few months later, DiTota again recommended Plaintiff for
    a position as a My Choice representative; and (10) in part as a result of
    a change in ownership at My Choice, My Choice then hired Plaintiff as
    a My Choice representative.
    Doc. 8 at 6–8.
    The court’s findings demonstrate that considerable circumstantial evidence
    was presented to the jury upon which to base its judgment. Harrell points out that
    Trapasso, the ultimate decision-maker in the determination not to hire Kissinger-
    Campbell originally, was not called to testify. However, his testimony was not
    necessary for there to be sufficient evidence for a finding of tortious interference,
    as demonstrated by the findings of the district court.
    Defendants’ contention that Harrell was privileged to act, with respect to the
    My Choice claim, bears little discussion. Defendants refer vaguely to the contract
    without citing any language in it that would establish such a privilege.
    Furthermore, they offer no proof that Harrell or Fountain of Youth were parties to
    the contract.
    11
    Likewise, the district court made extensive findings of fact relating to the
    Medi-Weight job. Again, these findings of fact demonstrated that sufficient
    circumstantial evidence existed for the jury to find that Harrell tortiously
    interfered.2 The facts presented at trial established that Kissinger-Campbell had a
    serious interview with Dr. Zbella. Additionally, the testimony of Gamaras that
    Harrell admitted to her that “plaintiff had gotten a job or she had gotten a job at the
    Medi-Weight Loss Clinic or was seeking a position there, and he made sure she
    didn’t get it” was strong evidence. This was evidence on the basis of which the jury
    could have found that Kissinger-Campbell either had a job offer or had an
    understanding with Medi-Weight which would have been completed had Harrell
    not interfered. On that basis, the jury could have found that Harrell prevented
    Kissinger-Campbell from getting the job in question. Once again, it was not
    necessary for Kissinger-Campbell to elicit testimony from the person who
    ultimately decided whether to hire her because sufficient evidence had already been
    presented.
    B. Defendants’ hearsay challenge
    2
    The jury’s verdict does not indicate whether they found for Kissinger-Campbell
    on the basis of one or both jobs. This Court need only find sufficient evidence as to one business
    relationship to affirm. Regardless, we find that sufficient evidence was produced as to both
    claims.
    12
    Defendants claim that Kissinger-Campbell’s testimony that she “was
    excited” was hearsay because it was an implied assertion; meaning that the
    statement indicated that Zbella told her something to make her believe that she had
    gotten the job. We decline to reach the issue of whether such an implied assertion
    is inadmissible because we find that, even if there were error, the error was
    harmless. At least four reasons support our conclusion.
    First, the implied assertion is extremely weak. Although there could be an
    implication that Dr. Zbella said something to make plaintiff think she had an offer,
    a stronger inference is that plaintiff simply felt confident because she felt amply
    qualified and because she and the job were such a good fit. The jury could have
    understood the statement to mean something entirely different from what
    Defendants contend it was meant to convey.
    Second, the impliedly asserted inference is also weak because precisely the
    same implication was already before the jury in the form of plaintiff’s testimony
    that she interrupted her job search because she was confident of getting that job.
    Defendants do not allege that her testimony regarding her job search was hearsay.
    Even if the challenged testimony had not been admitted, there is still evidence that
    Plaintiff believed that she had gotten the job.
    13
    Third, the district court expressly told the witness in the presence of the jury,
    and contemporaneous with this testimony, that the witness was not supposed to
    report what Dr. Zbella said. Thus, the jury was clearly aware that it was
    inappropriate for Plaintiff to report anything that was discussed in the interview
    with Zbella. In order for the jury to have assumed that the testimony represented
    what Dr. Zbella said, it would have had to disregard the judge’s instruction. The
    law presumes that juries follow the instructions of the judge.
    Finally, there was strong evidence that Harrell had in fact interfered with
    Plaintiff, and had himself thought that Plaintiff either had an offer or was so close
    to obtaining an offer that it was his call which prevented her from getting the job.
    Gamaras’s testimony was sufficiently strong that the weak inference asserted by
    Harrell pales into insignificance.
    In light of the foregoing reasons, if the evidence was erroneously admitted,
    then that error was harmless.3
    C. Defendants’ challenges to the $35,000 mental or emotional damages
    Defendants’ claim that the emotional damages allegedly suffered by
    Kissinger-Campbell were non-compensatory is frivolous. The district court
    3
    It should be noted that the testimony in question is only relevant to the Medi-
    Weight claim. Even if this evidence had been excluded, it would not have affected the jury’s
    deliberation with respect to the My Choice claim.
    14
    correctly ruled that Harrell waived this claim by not asserting it in his rule 50(a)
    motion. Defendants cite Peer v. Lewis, No. 06-60146-CIV, 
    2008 WL 2047978
    , at
    *11 (S.D. Fla. May 13, 2008), for the proposition that a damages award may be
    modified even if it is not objected to in a Rule 50(a) motion. However, that case
    involved an award of monetary compensation to a candidate who lost an election; a
    matter the court deemed a clear violation of law. 
    Id.
     The instant claim is one of
    insufficiency of the evidence; a type of claim specifically distinguished by the Peer
    court. 
    Id.
     (“The issue here is not one of sufficiency of the evidence. It is a purely
    legal issue: whether a party can recover tort damages on the premise that he or she
    would have won an election but for the defendant’s tortious conduct.”) Because
    Defendants did not include this claim in their original motion for judgment as a
    matter of law, it was waived.4
    Additionally, Harrell’s claim that this award was duplicative lacks merit.
    Harrell fails to make any specific arguments as to why the damages award was
    duplicative or how the award represented a windfall to Kissinger-Campbell. There
    is simply no evidence that the jury’s award was improper.
    4
    The district court was also correct in rejecting this claim on the merits. Harrell offers no
    argument for why the damages in this case should be deemed overly remote. There is sufficient
    evidence in this case to support the jury’s determination that Harrell caused Kissinger-Campbell
    significant mental or emotional damage. Thus, there is no need for discussion of whether
    Defendants demonstrate plain error.
    15
    D. Defendants newly discovered evidence and fraud claims
    Defendants contend that the District Court abused its discretion by not
    granting a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence, under Rule
    60(b)(2). A motion seeking relief under 60(b)(2), based on newly discovered
    evidence, requires all of the following: (1) the evidence must be newly discovered
    since the trial; (2) the movant must have exercised due diligence in discovering the
    new evidence; (3) the evidence cannot be merely cumulative or impeaching; (4) the
    evidence must be material; and (5) the new evidence must be such that it would
    produce a different outcome in the underlying action. Waddell v. Hendry County
    Sheriff's Office, 
    329 F.3d 1300
    , 1309 (11th Cir. 2003); Toole v. Baxter Healthcare
    Corp., 
    235 F.3d 1307
    , 1316 (11th Cir. 2000). Review of a court’s decision to deny
    a motion for a new trial on the basis of Rule 60(b)(2) is scrutinized for abuse of
    discretion. Toole, 
    235 F.3d at 1316
    .
    As a preliminary matter, this claim may very well have been waived by
    Defendants’ failure to assert a claim under Rule 60(b)(2) to the court below, though
    they did assert a similar claim under Rule 59. Regardless, the claim lacks merit
    because the Defendants did not exercise due diligence. To demonstrate due
    diligence, the moving party must show why he did not have the evidence at the
    time of the trial. 11 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil § 2859
    16
    (2010). Thus, for example, the failure to locate a witness prior to trial, whom the
    movant later argues was important to the case, will be treated as a lack of due
    diligence. Id. This is precisely the situation here. Harrell was aware of the Medi-
    Weight claim no later than April, 2008 and very familiar with Dr. Zbella’s position
    in the practice. He could easily have deposed Zbella and discovered the identity of
    Sharon DeLuca. Defendants offer no convincing argument that they were unable to
    obtain the testimony in question from Zbella or DeLuca at trial. Their argument
    that they were not on notice that this testimony was important is unpersuasive. Also
    unpersuasive is their argument that they showed diligence by attempting to
    subpoena Zbella during trial. Simply put, Defendants could have (and potentially
    should have) procured before or during trial the testimony that they now seek to
    present. They failed to do so.
    Defendants also argue that the jury’s verdict should be set aside due to fraud
    perpetrated by Plaintiff. Rule 60(b)(3) allows a district court to “relieve a party or
    its legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding [based on] fraud
    . . . misrepresentation, or misconduct by an opposing party. To prevail on a
    60(b)(3) motion, the movant must present clear and convincing evidence that an
    adverse party has obtained a verdict through fraud, misrepresentation, or other
    misconduct.” Cox Nuclear Pharmacy, Inc. v. CTI, INC., 
    478 F.3d 1303
    , 1314 (11th
    17
    Cir. 2007). The “conduct complained of must be such as prevented the losing party
    from fully and fairly presenting his case or defense.” Rozier v. Ford Motor Co., 
    573 F.2d 1332
    , 1339 (5th Cir. 1978).
    Harrell argues that Kissinger-Campbell incorrectly stated the date of her
    interview with Dr. Zbella, intentionally perjuring herself in order to make it appear
    that she was applying for a position different from the one that DeLuca was hired
    to fill. The argument seems to turn on a question of fact, whether the date of the
    interview was that testified to by Kissinger-Campbell or that now belatedly
    asserted by Defendants. Rule 60(b)(3) “is aimed at judgments which were unfairly
    obtained, not at those which are factually inaccurate.” 
    Id.
     “Factually incorrect
    judgments are the subject of Rule 60(b)(2).” 
    Id.
     at 1339 n.4. Defendants fail to
    produce clear and convincing evidence of fraud. The testimony of Zbella and
    DeLuca merely indicates that there are conflicting accounts on precisely when
    certain past events occurred. This is not evidence of perjury or a conspiratorial
    scheme to concoct a false story, as Defendants allege.
    Likewise, Defendants’ assertion of a fraud in the form of false testimony
    regarding emails is not supported by clear and convincing evidence. Plaintiff’s
    correspondence with potential employers was not foreseeably relevant when she
    filed her first suit, a Fair Labor Standards Act overtime case. And by the time the
    18
    emails had apparent relevance, they had been deleted as a routine matter.
    Furthermore, the references to emails that were made at trial were either not made
    in front of the jury or were made as vague references to Kissinger-Campbell’s
    ability to speak to people she had networked with in the industry. There is not clear
    and convincing evidence that the failure to produce such emails prevented
    Defendants from fully and fairly presenting their case.5
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgement of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    5
    Defendants claim for the first time in their reply brief that the testimony of Gamaras can
    be discarded as inherently incredible. Although the argument is without merit, we decline to
    address this and other arguments that are raised for the first time in a reply brief. United States v.
    Jernigan, 
    341 F.3d 1273
    , 1284 n.8 (11th Cir. 2003). Allowance of such arguments would be
    inherently prejudicial to the Appellee, who is not given an opportunity to brief a response.
    19