Quarterman v. City of Springfield ( 2017 )


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    16-P-223                                                Appeals Court
    WILL QUARTERMAN    vs.   CITY OF SPRINGFIELD & another.1
    No. 16-P-223.
    Hampden.        November 9, 2016. - March 29, 2017.
    Present:    Kafker, C.J., Kinder, & Lemire, JJ.
    Alcoholic Liquors, License, Local licensing authority. Anti-
    Discrimination Law, Race, Damages, Attorney's fees.
    Practice, Civil, Judgment notwithstanding verdict, Motion
    to amend, Instructions to jury. Judgment, Amendment.
    Damages, Loss of profits, Attorney's fees.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    August 14, 2008.
    The case was tried before Daniel A. Ford, J., an award of
    attorney's fees was ordered by him, and motions for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict and to alter or amend the judgment
    were heard by him.
    Leonard H. Kesten for the plaintiff.
    Edward M. Pikula, City Solicitor, for the defendants.
    KINDER, J.       On April 13, 2006, the board of license
    commissioners (board) of the city of Springfield (city) denied
    1
    Peter Sygnator, individually and as chairman of the board
    of license commissioners.
    2
    plaintiff Will Quarterman's application for a liquor license.
    Quarterman, an African American, brought this action against
    board chairman Peter Sygnator and the city, claiming that denial
    of the application was discriminatory and in retaliation for
    Quarterman's earlier filing of a complaint with the
    Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD).
    Ultimately, a Superior Court jury rejected the claim of racial
    discrimination, but found that the city, through the actions of
    former Mayor Charles Ryan, had retaliated against Quarterman in
    violation of G. L. c. 151B, § 4(4).2    The jury awarded damages of
    $250,000 in lost profits and $100,000 for emotional distress.
    The city challenged the verdict in posttrial motions for
    judgment nothwithstanding the verdict (judgment n.o.v.), to
    alter or amend the judgment, and for a new trial.     Principally,
    the city argued that the evidence of retaliation and damages was
    insufficient.   In a comprehensive written decision, the trial
    judge denied the motions as to liability for retaliation, but
    allowed them, in part, as to damages.     The judge concluded that
    there was evidentiary support for the award of $100,000 for
    emotional distress.   However, he found that the evidence of lost
    profits was "lacking in substance."     He also reasoned that
    2
    The jury found that neither Sygnator nor Mayor Ryan
    discriminated against Quarterman, and that Sygnator did not
    retaliate against him. Mayor Ryan is not a named defendant in
    this action.
    3
    Quarterman had failed to establish standing to claim lost
    profits because the profits were not direct and personal to him.
    Accordingly, the judge reduced the damages from $350,000 to
    $100,000.   Quarterman challenges that ruling on appeal.
    On cross-appeal, the city argues that (1) the motions for
    judgment n.o.v. and to alter or amend the judgment should have
    been allowed in their entirety; (2) the judge erred in refusing
    to instruct the jury regarding the mayor's right to freedom of
    speech; (3) the judge abused his discretion in denying a motion
    in limine to admit findings in a related Federal case; and (4)
    the judge abused his discretion in awarding attorney's fees.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the order denying
    the motion for judgment n.o.v. as to liability for retaliation,
    and affirm the order to alter or amend the judgment by
    eliminating damages for lost profits.   We also conclude that the
    jury were properly instructed, and that the judge did not abuse
    his discretion with respect to the motion in limine and the
    award of attorney's fees.3
    Background.   We summarize the facts in the light most
    favorable to Quarterman, reserving some details for our
    discussion.   See Abramian v. President & Fellows of Harvard
    3
    In light of our ruling affirming the allowance of the
    motion to alter or amend the judgment, we need not address the
    motion for new trial, which was allowed only on the condition
    that the motion to amend or alter judgment was reversed. See
    Mass.R.Civ.P. 50(c), as amended, 
    428 Mass. 1402
    (1998).
    4
    College, 
    432 Mass. 107
    , 110 (2000).     Quarterman had been in the
    bar business in the city for several years.    In September, 2002,
    he opened a nightclub, Logan's Lounge, after obtaining a liquor
    license from the board.    The business operated without incident
    until April, 2004, when a brawl and shooting occurred there
    during an afterhours party.    Although Quarterman was not present
    at the time, police reports suggested that he was.     Immediately
    following the shooting, Quarterman voluntarily closed Logan's
    Lounge.   Shortly thereafter, the business was evicted from the
    property and closed permanently.
    In August, 2004, Quarterman and a new business partner,
    Paul Ramesh, applied to the board to transfer the liquor license
    to a new club called Halo that they planned to open in the
    entertainment district of the city.    Despite Quarterman's
    repeated requests for a hearing on the application, one was not
    convened until March, 2005.    In the intervening months, Sygnator
    raised multiple concerns about the interior design of the club,
    which Quarterman addressed.    There was also a concern about the
    proposed venue, which had previously been occupied by a
    nightclub called Asylum.    Asylum had posed problems for the city
    because of large crowds, excessive noise, vandalism, illegal
    drug use, and violence.
    On March 2, 2005, Quarterman filed the first of two
    complaints with the MCAD.     He alleged that the city, the mayor,
    5
    and Sygnator discriminated against him on the basis of race by
    failing to schedule a vote on his application to transfer the
    liquor license.    Meanwhile, the board held a hearing and voted
    three to two to deny the application.     The city, through its
    attorney, suggested to Quarterman and Ramesh that they address
    the concerns raised by the board and apply for a new license.
    In January, 2006, Quarterman and Ramesh applied for a new
    liquor license in the name of their new corporation, Exile
    Entertainment, Inc.     The hearing on the application was delayed
    from March 9, 2006, to April 13, 2006, at the mayor's request so
    that he could attend.    At the hearing, the mayor, who had never
    previously appeared before the board, argued against the
    application.   He also recruited other witnesses to speak in
    opposition to the application, including the police commissioner
    and a representative of American International College.     In
    support of his opposition, the mayor cited the shooting at
    Logan's Lounge, suggesting that Quarterman had been present when
    it had occurred.   The board voted three to one to deny the
    application.   At least one commissioner changed his vote based
    on the mayor's opposition.
    By contrast, immediately following the vote denying Exile a
    liquor license, the board voted to approve a liquor license for
    another nightclub in the entertainment district, the Alumni
    Club.   The mayor spoke in favor of that application.
    6
    After issuance of the board's final written decision
    denying his application, Quarterman filed a second complaint
    with the MCAD.    He again alleged that the city and Sygnator
    discriminated against him on the basis of race and engaged in
    retaliation.     Following a finding of probable cause by the MCAD,
    Quarterman removed the complaint to Superior Court by filing
    this action.
    Discussion.      Although the judge's memorandum of decision
    did not distinguish between the relief sought by the city in its
    motion for judgment n.o.v. and its motion to alter or amend the
    judgment, the motions addressed different issues.     The city
    clarified the relief sought by each motion in its joint
    memorandum in support of all posttrial motions:     "The [c]ity has
    moved, pursuant to Massachusetts Rule of Civil Procedure Rule
    50(b), [as amended, 
    428 Mass. 1402
    (1998),] for judgment in its
    favor notwithstanding the verdict as to liability for
    retaliation; moved, pursuant to Massachusetts Rule of Civil
    Procedure Rule 59(e), [
    365 Mass. 827
    (1974),] to alter or amend
    the judgment by deducting the amount of damages awarded for lost
    profits; and moved, pursuant to Massachusetts Rule of Civil
    Procedure Rule 59(a), [
    365 Mass. 827
    (1974),] for a new trial on
    the issue of liability for retaliation attributed to Mayor
    Ryan."   Thus, the city sought to address liability with its
    motion for judgment n.o.v. and motion for new trial, and damages
    7
    with its motion to alter or amend the judgment.   While the
    judge's decision and some of the pleadings conflate these
    issues, we address liability and damages separately as the city
    framed them at the outset.
    1.     Motion for judgment n.o.v. regarding liability for
    retaliation.   Relief is appropriate under a motion for judgment
    n.o.v. "[o]nly when no rational view of the evidence warrants a
    finding [for the nonmoving party] . . . ."    Mullins v. Pine
    Manor College, 
    389 Mass. 47
    , 56 (1983), quoting from Zezuski v.
    Jenny Mfg. Co., 
    363 Mass. 324
    , 327 (1973).    See J.W. Smith &
    H.B. Zobel, Rules Practice § 50.13, at 150 (2007).    Accordingly,
    in analyzing this motion we draw every reasonable inference in
    favor of Quarterman "without weighing the credibility of the
    witnesses or otherwise considering the weight of the evidence
    . . . ."   Bavuso v. Caterpillar Industrial, Inc., 
    408 Mass. 694
    ,
    695 n.1 (1990), quoting from McNamara v. Honeyman, 
    406 Mass. 43
    ,
    45 (1989).
    General Laws c. 151B, § 4(4), as inserted by St. 1946,
    c. 368, § 4(4), makes it unlawful "[f]or any person . . . to
    . . . discriminate against any person because he has opposed any
    practices forbidden under this chapter or because he has filed a
    complaint . . . ."    "Retaliation is a separate and independent
    cause of action" from a claim of discrimination under G. L.
    c. 151B,   
    Abramian, 432 Mass. at 121
    , but the basic framework of
    8
    the claim remains the same.   First, "the plaintiff bears the
    initial burden of establishing a prima facie case"; second, "the
    burden shifts to the [defendant] to articulate a legitimate
    reason for its actions"; and third, "the burden shifts back to
    the [plaintiff] to show that the [defendant's] asserted reason
    was not the true reason, but rather a pretext."   Handrahan v.
    Red Roof Inns, Inc., 
    43 Mass. App. Ct. 13
    , 14-15 (1997).      To
    establish a prima facie case of retaliation, Quarterman must
    prove that he "reasonably and in good faith believed that the
    [city] was engaged in wrongful discrimination, that [he] acted
    reasonably in response to [his] belief, and that the [city's]
    desire to retaliate against [him] was a determinative factor in
    its decision" to deny him a liquor license.    Tate v. Department
    of Mental Health, 
    419 Mass. 356
    , 364 (1995).   See 
    Abramian, supra
    .
    The city does not dispute that Quarterman believed the city
    discriminated against him or that he acted reasonably in
    response to that belief.   Rather, the city argues that there was
    insufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that denial of
    the liquor license was caused by the city through the actions of
    the mayor.   Further, the city contends that Quarterman failed to
    adequately rebut evidence that the license was denied for a
    legitimate, nonretaliatory reason.   Drawing all reasonable
    inferences in favor of Quarterman, we agree with the judge's
    9
    assessment that the evidence was sufficient to prove that it was
    more likely than not that Quarterman "suffered harm as a result
    of Mayor Ryan's action."
    The jury could have found that the 2006 liquor license
    application addressed the concerns the board had expressed at
    the 2005 hearing.   The capacity of the club had been decreased
    from 700 to 400, security had been increased, parking was added,
    and Quarterman's role in the business had been reduced.
    Considering evidence of these modifications in the light most
    favorable to Quarterman, the jury could reasonably have
    concluded that, but for the mayor's opposition, the application
    would have been approved.
    There was also evidence from which the jury could have
    inferred retaliatory animus.   After Quarterman filed the MCAD
    complaint naming the mayor as a defendant, the mayor took an
    unusual interest in Quarterman's liquor license application.      He
    had never before appeared to testify against an applicant, he
    requested and was granted a postponement of the hearing to
    ensure his attendance, and he recruited other witnesses to
    testify against the application.   He spoke forcefully against
    the application at the hearing, persuading at least one board
    member to vote against it.
    According to the city, Quarterman's application was denied
    for legitimate nonretaliatory reasons -- the board's concerns
    10
    about the location and size of the establishment, prior problems
    with Asylum at the same location, and Quarterman's troubled
    history at Logan's Lounge.    But, as set forth above, there was
    evidence that those issues had been previously raised and, in
    large part, addressed by Quarterman, such that the jury could
    have reasonably concluded the stated reasons were a pretext.
    Reasonable minds might disagree whether the mayor's intent
    in opposing the liquor license was to retaliate against
    Quarterman, or to protect the city and its residents.     But, in
    analyzing a motion for judgment n.o.v., we do not weigh the
    evidence.   Simply put, when considered in a light most favorable
    to Quarterman, the evidence was sufficient for the jury to
    conclude that by filing an MCAD complaint Quarterman engaged in
    legally protected conduct, that he suffered an adverse action in
    the denial of the liquor license, and that there was a causal
    connection between the two.     See Ritchie v. Department of State
    Police, 
    60 Mass. App. Ct. 655
    , 664 (2004).    Accordingly, there
    was no error in the denial of the motion for judgment n.o.v. as
    to liability for retaliation.
    2.   Motion to alter or amend the judgment as to damages.
    The judge allowed the city's motion to alter or amend the
    judgment in part, by reducing the damages from $350,000 to
    $100,000.   In doing so, he concluded that the evidence supported
    11
    an award of $100,000 for emotional distress damages, but not an
    award of $250,000 for lost profits damages.    We agree.
    Under Mass.R.Civ.P. 59(e), a motion to alter or amend "'is
    designed for . . . situations' where the judgment is incorrect
    because it lacks both legal and factual justification."     Shawmut
    Community Bank, N.A. v. Zagami, 
    419 Mass. 220
    , 223 (1994),
    quoting from Page v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    383 Mass. 250
    ,
    252 (1981).   In such circumstances, "the judge [is] not 'called
    upon to find different facts from the evidence, but merely to
    correct the judgment by striking out that portion which [is]
    erroneous because it lack[s] both legal and factual
    justification.'"   Page v. New Eng. Tel. & Tel. 
    Co., supra
    ,
    quoting from Mumma v. Reading Co., 
    247 F. Supp. 252
    , 260 (E.D.
    Pa. 1965) (affirming reduction of jury's award of $10,000 as
    nominal damages to $1 on a contract claim in the "absence of a
    showing of pecuniary loss").   See Spring v. Geriatric Authy. of
    Holyoke, 
    394 Mass. 274
    , 290-291 (1985) (affirming reduction of
    jury award from $50,000 to nominal damages of $1 on a breach of
    contract claim where "no actual damages were proved at trial").
    We review the order allowing the motion to alter or amend
    for an abuse of discretion.    See Gannett v. Shulman, 74 Mass.
    App. Ct. 606, 615 (2009).   A judge abuses his discretion only
    when he makes "a clear error of judgment in weighing" the
    relevant factors "such that the decision falls outside the range
    12
    of reasonable alternatives."   See Hoegen v. Hoegen, 89 Mass.
    App. Ct. 6, 9 (2016), quoting from L.L. v. Commonwealth, 
    470 Mass. 169
    , 185 n.27 (2014).
    We first address whether lost profits are a proper element
    of damages for a claim of retaliation.   "In the context of . . .
    G. L. c. 151B, compensatory damages are those damages which
    'make[] the aggrieved party whole,' . . . including those which
    are the 'natural and probable consequences' of the illegal
    conduct."   Conway v. Electro Switch Corp., 
    402 Mass. 385
    , 388
    (1988), quoting from Bournewood Hosp., Inc. v. Massachusetts
    Commn. Against Discrimination, 
    371 Mass. 303
    , 315-316 (1976).
    Typically, compensatory damages in such an action can be awarded
    for emotional distress, see Stonehill College v. Massachusetts
    Commn. Against Discrimination, 
    441 Mass. 549
    , 570-577 (2004);
    back pay, see DeRoche v. Massachusetts Commn. Against
    Discrimination, 
    447 Mass. 1
    , 15-16 (2006); front pay, see Haddad
    v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (No. 1), 
    455 Mass. 91
    , 102-106 (2009);
    and lost pension benefits, see Ventresco v. Liberty Mut. Ins.
    Co., 
    55 Mass. App. Ct. 201
    , 209-211 (2002).   Compensatory
    damages also can be awarded based on other damages incurred as a
    "direct consequence" of the action.   Massachusetts Commn.
    Against Discrimination v. Franzaroli, 
    357 Mass. 112
    , 115 (1970).
    Lost profits are the usual measure of damages in cases
    involving business torts, see Jet Spray Cooler, Inc. v.
    13
    Crampton, 
    377 Mass. 159
    , 169 (1979), and are typically awarded
    to businesses and corporations injured by another's conduct.
    See, e.g., Eldim, Inc. v. Mullen, 
    47 Mass. App. Ct. 125
    , 129-130
    (1999).
    Although claims for lost profits are not common in cases
    alleging discrimination and retaliation under G. L. c. 151B, we
    are aware of no authority prohibiting such claims as a potential
    remedy and we see no reason to preclude them as a matter of law.
    The provisions of c. 151B are to be "construed liberally for the
    accomplishment of its purposes."     G. L. c. 151B, § 9, as amended
    by St. 2002, c. 223, § 2.     The clear legislative purpose of
    c. 151B is "to afford victims of discrimination the legal remedy
    of compensatory damages."     Conway, supra at 387.   Bearing in
    mind these principles, we conclude that the natural and probable
    consequence of retaliation under c. 151B can, if supported by
    the evidence, include lost profits.4
    Having concluded that lost profits damages are recoverable
    under c. 151B, we turn to the evidence supporting Quarterman's
    claim of lost profits.   Quarterman was the only witness to
    testify about lost profits.    Despite the fact that Halo never
    4
    Other jurisdictions have held that lost profits damages
    are available in analogous circumstances. See Thompson v. Hales
    Corners, 
    340 N.W.2d 704
    , 716 (Wis. 1983) (affirming jury award
    of lost profits for civil rights violation); Johnson v. Alaska
    State Dept. of Fish & Game, 
    836 P.2d 896
    , 910-913 (Alaska 1991)
    (lost profit damages available as remedy for discriminatory
    restrictions on salmon fishing).
    14
    opened, he estimated that the business would have earned a
    profit of $700,000 to $800,000 in the first year of operation.
    He based this opinion on his prior experience as a bar owner,
    his knowledge of the profits from other clubs owned by Ramesh,
    and the success of a sports bar in the entertainment district.5
    There was no evidence regarding startup costs, retained earnings
    for improvements, or the distribution of corporate profits to
    the shareholders.   Quarterman's opinions were not supported by
    documentary evidence.   No shareholder agreement, employment
    agreement, business records, or tax returns were offered.      While
    Quarterman was "not required to prove [his] lost profits with
    mathematical precision," lost profit damages must be proved "to
    a reasonable degree of certainty."   Herbert A. Sullivan, Inc. v.
    Utica Mut. Ins. Co., 
    439 Mass. 387
    , 413 (2003) (quotations
    omitted).   Here, the judge found that "Quarterman's testimony
    about the alleged loss of profits was lacking in substance."
    Based on our review of the record, this determination was within
    the range of reasonable alternatives and, therefore, not an
    abuse of discretion.
    5
    According to Quarterman, Logan's Lounge made a $4,000 to
    $7,000 profit each Friday night, and a little less on Saturday.
    He testified that Sam's Sports Bar, which had a smaller capacity
    and served food, earned a profit of approximately $20,000 per
    week. He also testified that Ramesh's bar, the Zone, earned a
    profit of approximately $20,000 per week.
    15
    In considering the posttrial motions, the judge also
    concluded that, based on the evidence at trial, Quarterman
    lacked standing to claim lost profits.    As a general rule, a
    shareholder does not have standing to sue to redress an injury
    to the corporation in which he holds an interest.    See Pagan v.
    Calderon, 
    448 F.3d 16
    , 28 (1st Cir. 2005).    Here, it is
    undisputed that Quarterman applied for the liquor license in the
    name of Exile Entertainment, Inc., the closely held corporation
    in which he had a thirty percent ownership interest.6   Had Halo
    opened, it was Exile that would have operated the business and
    benefitted from any profits.    According to the city, Quarterman
    lacked standing because his claim to lost profits was merely
    derivative of Exile's corporate claim.    Quarterman argued that
    he had standing because the damages he suffered were direct,
    personal, and supported by adequate proof.    See 
    id. at 29
    (shareholders did not have standing because they failed to
    allege "a particularized, nonderivative injury").    In addressing
    this issue, the judge reasoned that:
    "If Quarterman and Ramesh, as directors of the corporation,
    had testified that they would have voted to declare a
    dividend and that Exile would have distributed all its
    profits to the shareholders, the jury would have been free
    to assess that testimony and, if they believed it, would
    have been warranted in concluding that Quarterman had
    indeed suffered a loss of 'profits,' in the form of a lost
    dividend."
    6
    Ramesh owned the other seventy percent.
    16
    Because there was no such evidence, the judge ruled that
    Quarterman had failed to prove the direct and personal injury
    necessary to establish standing to claim lost profit damages.
    Based on the record before us, we cannot say that this was an
    abuse of discretion.   Accordingly, we affirm so much of the
    order allowing the motion to alter or amend the judgment as
    eliminated the lost profits damages.7
    3.   Jury instruction.   The city argues that the judge erred
    in refusing to instruct the jury regarding the mayor's freedom
    of political speech.   "We review objections to jury instructions
    to determine if there was any error, and, if so, whether the
    error affected the substantial rights of the objecting party."
    Dos Santos v. Coleta, 
    465 Mass. 148
    , 153-154 (2013), quoting
    from Hopkins v. Medeiros, 48 Mass. App. Ct.600, 611 (2000).
    The city requested the following instruction:
    "As the Chief Executive Officer of the [c]ity, a [m]ayor is
    entitled to express the views of his administration and to
    state what political judgments seemed appropriate so long
    as they were not defamatory. 'The interest in remedying
    discrimination is weighty, but not so weighty as to justify
    a restriction on core political speech.' Bain v.
    Springfield, 
    424 Mass. 758
    , 766 (1997)."
    In declining to give the instruction as requested, the judge
    stated, "I just don't think it's necessary.   I think everyone
    7
    The judge concluded that there was no impediment to the
    jury's award of $100,000 in emotional distress damages because
    those damages were direct and personal to Quarterman. But for
    the city's argument on liability, it does not challenge that
    conclusion.
    17
    agrees that the mayor is entitled to express his views and state
    what his judgments are.   I don't think that's in dispute.    The
    issue is, in doing so did he discriminate?"    We agree.
    The language of the proposed instruction would have, by
    implication, suggested to the jury that the right to speak
    freely is superior to the right to be free from discrimination
    and retaliation.   That is not the law.   "In outlawing
    retaliation . . . the Massachusetts Legislature prohibited a
    type of conduct that can, and often does, include speech."
    Dixon v. International Bhd. of Police Officers, 
    504 F.3d 73
    , 83
    (1st Cir. 2007).   Here, the jury were accurately instructed that
    the city, through its representatives, was entitled to make its
    own policy, business, and governmental judgments.    But, it could
    not lawfully deny Quarterman a liquor license simply because he
    filed a complaint with the MCAD.    Those instructions were
    sufficient.   There was no error in the denial of the city's
    proposed instruction.8
    4.   Motion in limine.   In 2007, Quarterman filed an action
    against the city in Federal Court alleging discrimination in
    8
    The city's reliance on certain language in Bain, supra at
    766, is misplaced. There the Supreme Judicial Court held that a
    mayor had a right to express to the local newspaper that claims
    of discrimination and retaliation against him were meritless,
    and that such statements were not retaliatory. Here the mayor
    was not merely defending himself against accusations in the
    newspaper, but urging the board, an agency of the government
    that he headed, to take action that would adversely affect
    Quarterman.
    18
    connection with the denial of his 2005 liquor license
    application.   Following a bench trial in 2010, judgment entered
    for the defendants.   Prior to trial in the instant case, the
    city filed a motion in limine seeking to prohibit any evidence
    of retaliation, arguing that the issue had already been
    litigated in the Federal case.    The city appeals the denial of
    that motion.
    We need not dwell on this argument because another panel of
    this court has already done so.    The motion in limine was
    previously allowed by a different Superior Court judge who then
    dismissed the case sua sponte.    The dismissal was reversed by a
    panel of this court in a memorandum and order pursuant to rule
    1:28, and remanded for further proceedings.    See Quarterman v.
    Springfield, 
    83 Mass. App. Ct. 1103
    (2012).    In short, the panel
    held that the doctrine of issue preclusion did not apply because
    the issues in the Federal and State cases were not the same.
    "[T]he issue in the Federal Court litigation was whether the
    city displayed racial animus against Quarterman in denying his
    2005 liquor license transfer request; the issue raised in the
    Superior Court litigation is whether the city had racial animus
    and retaliated against Quarterman a year later, in 2006 . . . ."
    19
    
    Ibid. The city has
    given us no reason to revisit our resolution
    of that issue.9
    5.   Attorney's fees.   Following a nonevidentiary hearing
    and consideration of multiple affidavits regarding attorney's
    fees, the judge, in a thorough memorandum and order, awarded
    Quarterman $169,002.41 in attorney's fees and costs pursuant to
    G. L. c. 151B, § 9.    Based on the arguments advanced in its
    posttrial motions, the city requested a reduction in that award.
    The judge denied the motion, concluding that, even though he had
    eliminated lost profits damages, "[t]he time spent on proving
    the alleged loss of profits cannot be separated from the time
    spent on proving other aspects of the case, as those hours were
    inextricably intertwined."    On appeal, the city argues that the
    reduction in damages should result in a decrease in the
    attorney's fees.    We disagree.
    "The amount of a reasonable attorney's fee . . . is largely
    discretionary with the judge, who is in the best position to
    determine how much time was reasonably spent on a case, and the
    fair value of the attorney's services."    Fontaine v. Ebtec
    9
    To the extent that this section of the city's brief claims
    error in the failure to admit the MCAD findings at trial, the
    fleeting reference to the issue provides an insufficient basis
    for us to reasonably consider the claim. See Howe v. Tarvezian,
    
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 10
    , 12 (2008) ("Contentions lacking legal
    authority or reasoned explanation fall short of [appellate]
    argument"); Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended, 367 Mass 921
    (1975).
    20
    Corp., 
    415 Mass. 309
    , 324 (1993).    In general, when only some
    claims are successful, "no fee should be awarded for services
    [employed pursuing an] unsuccessful claim, unless the court
    finds that the unsuccessful claims are sufficiently
    interconnected with the claims on which [t]he plaintiff
    prevails."    Killeen v. Westban Hotel Venture, LP, 69 Mass. App.
    Ct. 784, 792-793 (2007) (quotations and citations omitted).
    Here, the judge concluded that the time expended on the claim of
    lost profits damages was "inextricably intertwined" with the
    other claims.    We discern no abuse of discretion in that order.
    Conclusion.     We affirm the order denying the motion for
    judgment n.o.v. as to liability for retaliation, and affirm the
    order allowing the motion to alter or amend the judgment by
    eliminating the award of $250,000 for lost profits.    The
    judgment awarding $100,000 in emotional distress damages is
    affirmed.    We also affirm the award of attorney's fees.
    So ordered.