Feliciano Munoz et al v. Rebarber Ocasio
Filing
380
ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL, AMENDED JUDGMENT, OR REMITTITUR dismissing 279 Motion requesting Order; denying 358 Motion to Set Aside Judgment; denying 358 Motion for New Trial Signed by Judge John Woodcock, Jr on 12/27/2023. (cs)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
FRED J. REBARBER-OCASIO,
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Plaintiff,
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v.
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LUIS FELICIANO-MUNOZ, et al.
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Defendants.
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____________________________________)
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LUIS FELICIANO-MUNOZ, et al.
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Plaintiffs,
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v.
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FRED J. REBARBER-OCASIO,
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Defendant.
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No. 3:18-cv-01218-JAW
No. 3:16-cv-02719-JAW
ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL, AMENDED JUDGMENT,
OR REMITTITUR
Counterclaim-defendant-Plaintiffs move this Court to vacate the judgment
issued against them after a jury trial, to allow a new trial, or both. Counterclaimdefendant-Plaintiffs allege that the jury erred as the verdict is against the weight of
the evidence and that the Court erred or abused its discretion in its management of
the trial. In the alternative, Counterclaim-defendant-Plaintiffs seek remittitur for
allegedly excessive damages.
The Court denies the Counterclaim-defendant-
Plaintiffs’ motion in its entirety as it is non-meritorious.
I.
BACKGROUND
On July 1, 2022, at the end of a nine-day trial, a federal jury issued a verdict
in favor of Fred J. Rebarber-Ocasio and against Luis Feliciano-Muñoz, Christel
Bengoa, and their conjugal partnership (Feliciano Defendants).
This judgment
granted $534,836.00 in damages to Mr. Rebarber for Mr. Feliciano’s gross negligence
in his management of Air America, Inc., found that Christel Bengoa and the
Bengoa/Feliciano conjugal partnership had benefitted from Mr. Feliciano’s actions
and granted Mr. Rebarber $141,400.00 against Ms. Bengoa and the conjugal
partnership, and denied Mr. Feliciano’s breach of contract claim against Mr.
Rebarber. Jury Verdict (ECF No. 270). The total verdict equaled $534,836.00 of
which Mr. Feliciano is liable for the entire amount and of which Ms. Bengoa and the
Bengoa/Feliciano conjugal partnership is liable for $141,400.00. J. (ECF No. 271).
On July 27, 2022, the Feliciano Defendants moved for a new trial or for a new
judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59. Mot. under Rule 59 for
New Trial and/or Am. J. (ECF No. 279). On August 8, 2022, Mr. Rebarber responded.
Resp. in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. under Rule 59 for New Trial and/or Am. J. (DN 279)
(ECF No. 281). In his opposition, Mr. Rebarber wrote:
Throughout the motion, Defendants/Plaintiffs mention instances in
which evidence was presented to the Jury yet fail to make a single
specific reference to the specific place in the transcripts or Court record
to support their arguments. For the reasons set forth herein, Mr.
Rebarber respectfully requests this Honorable Court deny
Defendants/Plaintiffs Motion Under Rule 59 for New Trial and/or
Amend Judgment (ECF No. 279).
Id. at 2. Mr. Rebarber argued that the Feliciano Defendants’ failure to provide a
transcript was grounds for summary dismissal of their motion. Id. at 7.
The Feliciano Defendants responded by ordering a transcript and moving the
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Court to allow them to support their Rule 59 motion with references to the trial
transcript. Mot. Regarding Trial Tr. (ECF No. 282). Over Mr. Rebarber’s objection,
the Court granted the Feliciano Defendants’ motion and ordered the Feliciano
Defendants to file status reports every twenty-eight days regarding their progress in
obtaining the transcript. Order (ECF No. 285); Order (ECF No. 287). The court
reporter completed the final transcript of the nine-day trial on February 26, 2023.
See Order Denying Mot. for Order and Setting Br. Sch. (ECF No. 341).
On March 27, 2023, Mr. Feliciano moved this court to amend the judgment
against him and his fellow defendant-plaintiffs and to allow a new trial. Mot. to Set
Aside J. as to Christel Bengoa, Conjugal Partnership Feliciano-Bengoa, Air America
Inc., Luis Feliciano, Mot. for New Trial (ECF No. 358) (Feliciano’s Mot.). On April
10, 2023, Mr. Rebarber responded in opposition. Resp. to Mot. in Opp’n to Defs./Pls.
Am. (ECF No. 360) (Rebarber’s Opp’n). A week later, on April 17, 2023, Mr. Feliciano
replied. Reply (ECF No. 361) (Feliciano’s Reply).
II.
THE PARTIES’ POSITIONS
A.
Luis Feliciano-Munoz’s Motion
The Feliciano Defendants base their motion for a new trial on claims that the
verdict was against the weight of the evidence, that the damages were excessive, and
that the trial was not fair. See Feliciano’s Mot. at 2-28. Based on these alleged
shortcomings and pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59, the Feliciano
Defendants request that the Court vacate the jury verdict, hold a new trial, or both.
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Id. at 2. In the alternative, the Feliciano Defendants seek remittitur for excessive
damages. Id. at 27-28.
1.
The verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence
The Feliciano Defendants argue that several pieces of evidence both
individually and collectively demonstrate that a reasonable jury would have held Mr.
Feliciano did not breach the contract, that Mr. Rebarber did breach the contract, and
accordingly that Mr. Rebarber, not the Feliciano Defendants, owed damages. See
Feliciano’s Mot. at 2-18.
First, the Feliciano Defendants argue that the “unchallenged evidence
demonstrated that the same, or almost the same parts that Feliciano had to repair,
or purchase new, had been found to be deficient by Luis Gonzalez, who was [Air
America’s] mechanic during Rebarber’s management.” Id. at 2-3. The Feliciano
Defendants state that despite “Rebarber’s awareness of these deficiencies and
discrepancies” there was no “adequate disclosure to Feliciano prior to the significant
stock purchase.” Id. at 3. The Feliciano Defendants then point to the testimony of
Luis González Acevedo and Frank Nieves, who both testified there was equipment
that needed to be replaced or fixed. Id. at 3-5.
Next, the Feliciano Defendants contend that Mr. Feliciano’s “unrebutted
testimony, as well as joint exhibit Number 2, the Stock Purchase Agreement of
December 17, 2014, along with the pre-purchase list made by Witness González
(Exhibit 1) and the list made by Nieves (Exhibit 3) were evidentiary demonstrations
that any reasonable jury would have considered sufficient to prove Feliciano had a
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right to reimbursement from Rebarber, for the expenses relating to parts and
improvements that had to be made,” id. at 6, and that Mr. Rebarber “was in breach
of [that] obligation.” Id. at 7.
The Feliciano Defendants then argue that Mr. Rebarber was unjustly enriched.
Id. They assert that Mr. Feliciano’s “unrebutted testimony summarized . . . a loss of
$1.8 million.” Id. They also point the Court to the “unchallenged testimony” by Mr.
Feliciano’s expert in aviation audits and operations, Luis Irizzary, “that the parts
listed by González were the same, or almost the same, as the parts listed by Nieves
and Fernandez.” Id. at 8. Therefore, they contend, a verdict finding a breach of
fiduciary duty on the part of Mr. Feliciano and a need for reimbursement to Mr.
Rebarber “is contrary to justice [and] would result in unjust enrichment of Rebarber.”
Id. at 7.
The Feliciano Defendants then turn to the stock purchase agreement and point
out that “Rebarber agreed to indemnify Feliciano from and against all costs,
expenses, among others, that he may suffer, directly or indirectly, due to Rebarber’s
breach of any of the representations and warranties made.” Id. at 8. Given that
agreement, the Feliciano Defendants contend the “jury did not hold Rebarber
accountable for any actions as Director of Operations or as a ‘consultant’ despite the
testimony on the record.” Id. at 9.
Next, the Feliciano Defendants assert that “[a] reasonable jury would have
found Rebarber not in compliance with his accord to provide consultation” because
Mr. Rebarber failed to communicate with Mr. Feliciano whenever he was called and
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did not communicate with Mr. Feliciano whatsoever from March 2014 to November
2015. Id. at 10. Furthermore, the Feliciano Defendants allege Mr. Rebarber did not
consult with him after he found out that one of the aircrafts, which would later be in
another accident resulting in a passenger’s death, had hit saltwater in an unreported
incident under Rebarber’s administration. Id.
Next, the Feliciano Defendants argue that “[a] reasonable jury would have
understood force majeure striking the company’s operations” after “the company was
hit with the passing of Hurricanes Irma and Maria.” Id. at 10-11.
The Feliciano Defendants once again point to “the testimony of Flight
Instruction and Aviation Expert Luis Irizarry,” who “concluded that the [Air
American] records were not reliable” and “did not adequately follow[] reporting
protocols.” Id. at 14. “In addition,” they claim, “Irizarry confirmed . . . that Rebarber
instructed pilots and mechanics not to write down discrepancies on the log books, to
avoid making repairs or purchasing new equipment.” Id. at 15. In turn, the Feliciano
Defendants argue, “[t]his evidence impeached Rebarber,” therefore he “should have
been deemed unreliable by any reasonable juror.” Id.
The Feliciano Defendants’ final piece of evidence that the verdict was contrary
to the weight of the evidence is that an expert witness offered by Mr. Rebarber, Ismael
Ortiz de Jesús, “acknowledged . . . there were record errors in the logbooks for the
airplanes during Rebarber’s administration of Air America.” Id.
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2.
The Court erred, causing the trial to be unfair to Mr.
Feliciano
The Feliciano Defendants argue that the Court committed multiple errors
during the trial that caused the trial to be unfair to them. See Feliciano’s Mot. at 1113, 15-16, 17-18.
First, the Feliciano Defendants argue there was “structural error” because the
jury was “exposed to extrinsic information which was inflammatory and unduly
prejudicial,” namely Mr. Feliciano’s prior civil cases, “without there being adequate
relevance, foundation or basis.” Id. at 11.
Next, the
Feliciano Defendants argue that “[i]n error and/or abuse of
discretion, the Court allowed” the jury’s “confusion” on the “applicable Law of
Corporations in Puerto Rico, and the roles of Officers, Directors and Stockholders” to
increase “by overruling Feliciano’s objections in Rebarber’s re-cross examination” to
things which were “outside the scope of the direct and re-direct examinations.” Id.
Due to this, the Feliciano Defendants argue, “the jury actually got so confused that
they rendered an unreasonable verdict determining breach of fiduciary duty, against
Feliciano.” Id. at 13.
The Feliciano Defendants then allege there was yet another “structural error
in the case” because Expert Witness Dr. Ramon Cao’s testimony and Exhibit FFF
“essentially invaded” the jury’s province and the jury “consumed a purported expert’s
response as to the ultimate question.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 15. To buttress this
assertion, the Feliciano Defendants say the jury “based their damages award” of
$534,836 on the “sum of what Cao testified was 20% of the goodwill value of Air
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America ($209, 836) and the value of 20% of the stocks in Air America ($325,000), at
the time of the 2014 80% stock purchase.”
Id.
This indicates to the Feliciano
Defendants that having Dr. Cao’s report as “Defendant’s Exhibit FFF, made the jury
rely on the findings, conclusions, and assessments of this witness, instead of
evaluating the evidence and reaching their own conclusions.” Id. at 16.
The Feliciano Defendants also take issue with Mr. Rebarber’s testimony. They
first argue that “Rebarber’s testimony should be afforded no weight as he lied on the
stand on more than once occasion.” Id. at 17. They then maintain “the jury was
confused and misled by Rebarber’s testimony,” because Mr. Feliciano’s fiduciary duty
was “misconceived as relating to Air America, Inc.’s loans from Yellow Media and
Feliciano.” Id. at 18. The Feliciano Defendants then say that Mr. Rebarber “was
allowed to define []gross negligence to the jury, in a way that was confusing the legal
standards . . . leading the jury to confuse such with a claim for defamation.” Id.
3.
Mr. Feliciano was not grossly negligent
The Feliciano Defendants then argue, “Rebarber did not present evidence that
Feliciano was grossly negligent and certainly did not overcome the presumption that
Feliciano acted with a reasonable degree of care, in good faith and in the best interest
of [Air America].” Id. at 21. Instead, “Rebarber would only refer to Economist Cao,
and state conclusory statements, not factual, only to confuse the matter with the
defamation claim.” Id.
To rebut the idea that Mr. Feliciano was negligent, the Feliciano Defendants
offer evidence to the contrary. This evidence includes portions of the testimony
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offered by Mr. Feliciano, Christel Bengoa, Rafael Fernandez, and Frank Nieves. Id.
at 22-23.
The Feliciano Defendants then dispute the evidence put forth by Mr. Rebarber
at trial: “The failure to conduct meetings of board of directors, or to consult Rebarber
on any corporate matters did not cause any damages to Rebarber. Rebarber cannot
claim any such damages as he relinquished his decision power to Feliciano. . . . With
20% of the vote, Rebarber would never defeat Feliciano’s 80% vote.” Id. at 24.
4.
No causal connection
The Feliciano Defendants argue that Mr. Rebarber “did not overcome the
foreseeability standard [of proximate cause] as a matter of law, because it was
impossible for Feliciano to foresee the passing of Hurricanes Irma and Maria and that
one of the airplanes would suffer an accident due to pilot error.” Id. at 26.
5.
Comparative Negligence
Next, the Feliciano Defendants point out that Puerto Rico is a comparative
negligence jurisdiction and argue “Rebarber is also liable for the loss of value of his
20% of [Air America’s] stock and the verdict should be diminished by 70%.” Id. at 27.
This, the Feliciano Defendants contend, is the case because: (1) “[t]he unchallenged
evidence showed that Rebarber failed to correct the deficiencies on the airplanes in a
timely and adequate manner which caused [Air America] to be overvalued and cause
Feliciano and [Air America] to invest large amounts of money to maintain [Air
America’s] operations,” and (2) “in 2014, right before selling 80% of [Air America’s]
stock to Feliciano, instead of making the needed repairs, Rebarber paid himself more
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than $500,000 in dividends that should have been used to maintain the airplanes.”
Id.
6.
Remittitur
The Feliciano Defendants argue that “[i]n the alternative, remittitur should be
ordered, under Rule 59, because the jury’s verdict exceed[ed] any rational appraisal
or estimate of the damages that could be based on the evidence before the jury.” Id.
at 27-28.
Specifically, they maintain that “[t]wenty percent of the value of the
company at the time of the stock purchases is $325,000 [and t]here was evidence that
the company assets were overvalued as the log books of the airplanes were unreliable
and failed to disclose[] the real situation of the airplanes. Therefore, the value of 20%
can never be greater than $325,000.”
Id. at 28.
Consequently, the Feliciano
Defendants submit, “[t]he rest of the damages claimed by Rebarber should be
dismissed.” Id.
B.
Fred Rebarber-Ocasio’s Response
1.
The jury was correct in finding Mr. Rebarber does not owe
Mr. Feliciano reimbursements
Mr. Rebarber argues that given myriad evidence offered by him at trial, the
Feliciano Defendants’ “argument[, namely] that the evidence did not support a
finding that Mr. Rebarber was not responsible . . . is erroneous.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at
22.
First, Mr. Rebarber takes issue with the Feliciano Defendants’ reliance on the
testimony of Mr. González and claims that “it can be gleaned from Mr. Luis
González’s testimony that in the months following April 2014, he has no personal
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knowledge of the condition of Air America’s aircraft, of Air America’s operations, or
anything regarding Air America and Mr. Rebarber.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at 10. To
support this contention, Mr. Rebarber points to the fact that “Mr. Luis González was
not an employee of Air America for months prior to the Stock Purchase Agreement
execution, but was in fact fired prior to April 29, 2014, for not complying with
instructions.” Id. at 8. Mr. González testified that “he did not have contact with the
company after being terminated and has no knowledge of the operations of the
aircraft following his termination.” Id. He similarly testified “he did not see the
airplane books after April 2014 and has no knowledge of who conducted inspections .
. . [or of] Air America’s operations after he left the company.” Id. In addition, Mr.
Rebarber points to multiple admissions by Mr. González, which impact the weight
his testimony should be given, including “that there are, in fact, a lot of items that
may not be working properly but could be deferred by the Minimal Equipment List
and the aircraft could still fly” and that “he has no evidence of any mechanic that was
releasing aircraft for flight without correcting items first.” Id. at 9.
Next, Mr. Rebarber tries to undermine the Feliciano Defendants’ use of Mr.
Nieves’ testimony.
Mr. Rebarber argues that despite the Feliciano Defendants’
claims to the contrary, “Mr. Nieves’ testimony proved that while he worked for Air
America, there were FAA inspections that took place, and that the items the FAA
took notice of and informed for correction were, in fact, corrected.” Id. at 10. Mr.
Rebarber then adds that “Mr. Nieves testified that during his time in Air America,
there were no FAA violations by the company.” Id. Moreover, Mr. Rebarber contends
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that while the Feliciano Defendants attempt to use Mr. Nieves’ testimony “to argue
that a reasonable jury could find that the list of parts mentioned during his deposition
is the same one that Mr. Luis González compiled,” “that is a conclusory statement
because the transcript of the deposition . . . does not indicate that to be the case.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber then contends Mr. Feliciano’s testimony “shows that he was
aware of the conditions of Air America at the time of executing the Stock Purchase
Agreement, and that there were no guarantees made by Mr. Rebarber as to the
conditions of the aircraft or number of pilots.” Id. at 13. He also maintains that Mr.
Feliciano’s testimony further shows “the aircraft continued to fly without problems
following the Stock Purchase Agreement and that all flight and maintenance
documents show the aircraft were compliant on December 17, 2014,” the date of the
sale. Id. To support this, Mr. Rebarber offers several admissions made by Mr.
Feliciano during his testimony, which include having hired three consultants, having
a legal advisor and at least two Airframe and Powerplant mechanics from Yellow
Media Group who could have advised him, Mr. Rebarber having produced everything
the consultants requested of him, and the “many conversations with Mr. Rebarber
during which he explained Air America’s operation to Mr. Feliciano” without making
guarantees of the plane conditions or number of pilots. Id. at 11. Mr. Rebarber also
notes “Mr. Feliciano admitted that there is nothing in the Stock Purchase Agreement
that states Mr. Rebarber prevented him from inspecting the company, and [] that he
has no written document stating that Rebarber did not allow him to inspect the
aircraft of the company.” Id. at 12.
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Mr. Rebarber then asserts that “it is clear Mr. Irizarry’s testimony was filled
with speculative conclusions and incomplete resources to provide a reliable opinion.”
Id. at 15. Therefore, Mr. Rebarber argues, Mr. Irizarry’s testimony supports neither
the Feliciano Defendants’ argument that the logbooks were unreliable nor their
argument that Mr. Rebarber encouraged documenting discrepancies. Id. In support,
Mr. Rebarber notes that “Mr. Irizarry is not a mechanic,” “he does not appear in the
records of the schools he states he attended,” “he admitted he had not interviewed
the Chief Pilot on staff or the Director of Maintenance . . . nor had he interviewed Mr.
Rebarber.” Id. at 14. Mr. Rebarber then argues there are other flaws including that
Mr. Irizarry’s review “was limited only from 2013 onward” and “Defendants /
Plaintiffs provided him with incomplete records for his review and thus, the scope of
his evaluation was limited.” Id. Moreover, Mr. Rebarber points out, “Mr. Irizarry
admitted to speculating in his testimony.” Id.
On top of that, Mr. Rebarber adds the testimony of Ismael Ortiz to show that
“while Air America’s logbooks may have contained errors, those errors were in fact
common and occur in small airlines like Air America. . .. Thus, it can be concluded
that no fraudulent entries or ill-intent were present in Air America’s logbooks, and
Mr. Feliciano was not misled in his purchase with faulty records.” Id. at 18.
Next, Mr. Rebarber disputes the Feliciano Defendants’ contention that Dr. Cao
“was allowed to testify on the ultimate question that should have been in the jury’s
purview.” Id. at 18. Rebuffing the point, Mr. Rebarber says “there is not a single
objection on ultimate issue or ultimate question by Defendants / Plaintiffs that can
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be found during the course of this testimony in the trial transcripts, and Defendants
/ Plaintiffs certainly did not point to one either.” Id. at 19. Therefore, Mr. Rebarber
argues, “this argument is meritless as the objection was not preserved.” Id.
Next, Mr. Rebarber takes issue with the Feliciano Defendants’ argument that
“there is no evidentiary support of Ms. Christel Bengoa’s or the Conjugal
Partnership’s actions causing damages.” Id. at 19. Instead, Mr. Rebarber argues,
“Ms. Bengoa was aware of everything that took place in this case, and having a
Conjugal Partnership with Mr. Feliciano and being part owner of Air America, she
and the conjugal partnership are both liable for all debts and obligations.” Id. Since
they “have not rebutted the presumption” of liability, Mr. Rebarber asserts they
“should remain liable.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber also defends his own credibility. First, he opines that “credibility
is a question for the jury to decide.” Id. at 20. Next, he argues that while the Feliciano
Defendants allege that Mr. Rebarber was noncompliant as a consultant or with the
Stock Purchase Agreement, his testimony demonstrates that is not the case. Id. at
20-22. Lastly, Mr. Rebarber argues “there was a relevance objection raised [about
whether Mr. Rebarber was credible] and the Court ruled on the objection. Thus, the
line of questioning [on his credibility] should not have been considered.” Id. at 22.
2.
The jury was correct in finding that Mr. Feliciano was
grossly negligent
Mr. Rebarber then argues that “the jury was correct in finding Mr. Feliciano
grossly negligent in his management of Air America. After Mr. Rebarber ran the
company successfully for over fourteen years, Mr. Feliciano proceeded to run Air
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America into the ground financially, running up a tally of unnecessary expenses, and
affirmatively excluding Mr. Rebarber, also an owner of the company, from all
financial and operational decisions.” Id. at 30. To support this contention, Mr.
Rebarber points to Mr. Feliciano’s admission that “there were no corporate
resolutions from Yellow Media to issue the loan to Air America,” that those
transactions were “neither consulted with nor communicated to Mr. Rebarber,” and
that “Air America is required to take loans from recognized financial institutions,
which Yellow Media is most certainly not.” Id. at 25. Additionally, Mr. Rebarber
points to Mr. Feliciano’s admissions that “he did not contact Rebarber to consult him
after purchasing,” that “they never held shareholder meetings,” that Mr. Feliciano
did not issue “a corporate resolution to sell one of Air America’s aircraft outright,”
“that he paid for personal items with Air America’s money,” “that he sold a Hummer
vehicle without issuing a Corporate resolution,” and that “a pilot for the company had
a fatal crash in which a passenger died, and there were falsified records found as well,
all while under Mr. Feliciano’s leadership.” Id. at 25-26. Moreover, Mr. Rebarber
adds, “Mr. Feliciano did not allow him to see the books once the deal was closed,
keeping him out of the loop and never calling him, not even after the hurricane and
despite Mr. Rebarber repeatedly requesting he do so.” Id. at 27. Mr. Rebarber then
builds on the argument, adding that Mr. Feliciano paid a “personal debt using an
asset” that did not belong to him, deprived the corporation of $393,000, an action that
“in itself is [] clear evidence of violation of his fiduciary duties, fraud and gross
negligence.” Id. at 28.
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3.
The jury was correct in finding a causal connection
between Mr. Feliciano’s acts and Mr. Rebarber’s damages
Mr. Rebarber then argues the testimony “shows a clear causal connection
between Mr. Feliciano’s acts and Mr. Rebarber’s damages.” Id. at 30. In particular,
Mr. Rebarber asserts “Mr. Feliciano chose not to consult anything with Mr. Rebarber.
. . . His actions consisting of dubious financial dealings, combined with the loss of Air
America’s airline certificate as a result of his faulty management of the company,
resulted in Air America’s worthlessness, thus causing Mr. Rebarber’s damages.” Id.
4.
The jury was correct in finding Mr. Rebarber not
comparatively negligent
Mr. Rebarber attempts to quickly do away with the Feliciano Defendants’
comparative negligence argument and claims: 1) the “cited testimony demonstrates
the airplanes were being maintained adequately prior to the December 17, 2014 Stock
Purchase Agreement,” and 2) that their argument that the verdict should be
diminished “should be disregarded for lack of support.” Id. at 30.
5.
Remittitur should not be granted
Mr. Rebarber argues the evidence shows the logbooks were up to date, “were
not unreliable,” and “errors in the logbooks were corrected soon after being recorded.”
Id. at 32-33.
Next, Mr. Rebarber attempts to distinguish the present case from Wortley v.
Camplin, 333 F.3d 284 (1st Cir. 2003), which the Feliciano Defendants cite, by stating
“Wortley consisted of a securities fraud violation in the state of Maine, versus the case
between the instant parties, which consists of breach of contract . . . in Puerto Rico.”
Id. at 33. At bottom, Mr. Rebarber argues Wortley is irrelevant here “since there are
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no allegations of Section 10b violations in this case. Thus, the market value argument
presented by Defendants / Plaintiffs to cap Mr. Rebarber’s damages is flawed.” Id.
Adding on, Mr. Rebarber points out that the Feliciano Defendants cite “no Puerto
Rico jurisprudence or law to support [his] damage cap argument.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber then takes issue with the Feliciano Defendants’ contention that
he “is barred from claiming ‘any part of the value of the airplanes, []or good will of
the company as all of that was included in the valuation for the stock purchase.’” Id.
at 34. In response, Mr. Rebarber claims that the “argument regarding capping Mr.
Rebarber’s damages to only the value of his stock remains unsupported by the
evidence and within their Rule 59 request, as they cite to no Puerto Rico precedent
that allows for this.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber concludes by asserting that Mr. Feliciano “had the opportunity
to convince the jury in a fair trial, of the merits of this case, nevertheless none of the
eight (8) jurors gave credit to his theory, based on the testimonies and the evidence
admitted.” Id.
C.
Defendant-Plaintiffs’ Reply
To begin, the Feliciano Defendants summarize their argument:
A new trial is warranted because the verdict is against the weight of the
evidence, the damages are excessive, and, the trial was not fair. . .. There
is no doubt that a mistake has been committed by the jury. A new trial
should be granted because the verdict was so clearly against the weight
of the evidence as to amount to a manifest miscarriage of justice.
Feliciano’s Reply at 1 (internal citations omitted).
1.
Weight of the evidence
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The Feliciano Defendants first respond to Mr. Rebarber’s argument “that
Gonzalez did not know anything about Air America’s (AA) operations after he was
fired a few months before the [stock purchase agreement],” by arguing this “assertion
does not invalidate the fact that Gonzalez made a list of parts and equipment prior
to the [stock purchase agreement] which contains essentially the same items as the
list made by Nieves and Fernandez after the [stock purchase agreement], nor the fact
that AA incurred in approximately $112,000 to repair and purchase said items.” Id.
at 2.
Next, they dispute Mr. Rebarber’s contention that “Nieves did not testify that
the list that he made corresponded to equipment that needed repairs or replacement
before the [stock purchase agreement].” Id. Instead, the Feliciano Defendants argue
that “Nieves testified that the list was precisely made, on December 17, 2014, three
days after the [stock purchase agreement].” Id.
Then the Feliciano Defendants take issue with Mr. Rebarber insisting “that
the [stock purchase agreement] constituted an ‘as is’ sale that did not guarantee the
conditions of the airplanes,” as well as with Mr. Rebarber saying that “Feliciano hired
three financial consultants and an airplane valuation expert . . . that the airplanes
were airworthy, and that Rebarber allowed Feliciano to conduct a full mechanical
inspection before the [stock purchase agreement].”
Id.
Instead, the Feliciano
Defendants argue, “Rebarber was impeached” because his “previous communications
with Perdomo . . . demonstrated that he did not allow a full mechanical inspection of
the airplanes.” Id. at 3. Moreover, the Feliciano Defendants point out, the “contract
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provides for reimbursement of all expenses that should have been made by AA during
Rebarber’s control. The [stock purchase agreement] makes no references to the FAA
and reimbursement of those expenses.” Id.
The Feliciano Defendants also dispute “that Irizarry’s testimony about faulty
recording is not reliable.” Id. To this they respond that even if it were unreliable,
“that argument does not invalidate the fact that the list prepared by Gonzalez prior
to the [stock purchase agreement] contains essentially the same items as the list
prepared by Nieves and Fernandez after the [stock purchase agreement].” Id.
Next, the Feliciano Defendants argue that Mr. Rebarber did hide things from
Mr. Feliciano. For example, they claim, “Rebarber hid [an] FAA investigation from
[him] because his FAA intervention took place only a few months before the [stock
purchase agreement]. If Rebarber had disclosed this information to Feliciano, [he]
would not have entered into the [stock purchase agreement] under the current
terms.” Id. at 3.
2.
Gross Negligence
Turning to gross negligence, the Feliciano Defendants argue that “Rebarber
failed to explain how the expenses needed to run the company adequately and the
exclusion of Rebarber from the decisions amounted to gross negligence.” Id. at 4.
With respect to “excluding Rebarber from all financial and operational decisions,” the
Feliciano Defendants maintain that “Rebarber relinquished said rights in exchange
for $1,300,000, when entering into the [stock purchase agreement] because he was no
longer an officer of the corporation and as a member of AA’s board of directors, he did
19
not have the majority vote.” Id. Furthermore, the Feliciano Defendants contend they
“had hired all the supervisory staff needed to run the airline, thus there was no need
to consult Rebarber.” Id.
The Feliciano Defendants also argue that the loans from Yellow Media and Mr.
Feliciano to AA were not against the bylaws as they “do not state such a prohibition
and [] do not contain a requirement for a corporate resolution for the president to
direct the corporation.” Id. at 5. Next, the Feliciano Defendants write that even if
they did not communicate with Mr. Rebarber at all, “Rebarber fails to explain how
that amounted to gross negligence that led to the closing of AA.
Neither
communicating corporate matters to Rebarber nor holding shareholder meetings
would have stopped hurricanes Irma and Maria which are the main reason for the
closing.” Id. Moreover, “Defendants exhibit QQQ demonstrate that Feliciano allowed
Rebarber access to corporate records.” Id.
In addition, the Feliciano Defendants defend Mr. Feliciano’s sale of an airplane
to repay $250,000 he claims Mr. Rebarber owed him. First, they argue that “Rebarber
authorized the sale and accepted the money without complaining and did not
reimburse it to AA knowing it was AA’s funds.” Id. They continue, adding that “AA’s
bylaws do not require a corporate resolution to sell any asset.” Id. The Feliciano
Defendants reiterate there was no fraud committed in the sale of the plane and that
by that point, Mr. Feliciano “had loaned more than $250,000 already to AA and
therefore the amounts offset each other.” Id. at 5-6. By the Feliciano Defendant’s
20
estimation, “[t]his same reasoning applies to the $35,000 audio equipment and to the
attorney and consultant fees for the [stock purchase agreement].” Id. at 6.
The Feliciano Defendants also attempt to refute that “a passenger d[ying]
during a crash that resulted from pilot error” indicates Mr. Feliciano was negligent,
arguing he “was not the pilot and there was no evidence that the error resulted from
[his] acts or omissions.” Id. Similarly, they claim “there is no connection” between
Mr. Feliciano and the allegations of his staff falsifying a training record. Id.
“In sum,” the Feliciano Defendants insist, “neither individually, nor
collectively, the arguments presented by Rebarber are sufficient to surpass the
business judgment rule presumption and demonstrate that Feliciano was grossly
negligent.” Id.
The Feliciano Defendants reiterate that the “jury was misled to confuse the
legal concept of fiduciary duty and gross negligence in the context of corporate law
with concepts such as defamation and/or tax report errors . . . or a fax transmittal
sheet error made by a secretary, not pertinent to the case.”
Finally, the Feliciano Defendants repeat their claim that Dr. “Cao’s testimony
as to the ultimate question constitute[s] structural error which requires a new trial.”
Id. at 7. If the Court finds there was sufficient evidence to prove gross negligence,
the Feliciano Defendants urge that “the judgment should only include the value of
the 20% of [Rebarber’s] stock which is the only property that he has in connection to
AA” as “Rebarber cannot claim loss of goodwill on a corporation that does not have
21
his name and the jury could not award damages for loss of good will because no
evidence of such damages was presented.” Id.
III.
LEGAL STANDARD
Under Rule 59, a trial court has discretion to grant a motion for a new trial in
a jury-tried case “for any of the reasons for which new trials have heretofore been
granted in actions at law in the courts of the United States.” FED. R. CIV. P. 59(a).
The First Circuit has limited this exercise of discretion, indicating that “[a] verdict
may be set aside and new trial ordered when the verdict is against the clear weight
of the evidence, or is based upon evidence which is false, or will result in a clear
miscarriage of justice.” Colon-Millin v. Sears Roebuck De Puerto Rico, Inc., 455 F.3d
30, 35 (1st Cir. 2006) (quoting Ahern v. Scholz, 85 F.3d 774, 780 (1st Cir. 1996));
accord Sánchez v. Foley, 972 F.3d 1, 16 (1st Cir. 2020). A Rule 59(a) motion for a new
trial “may [also] invoke the discretion of the court insofar as it is bottomed on the
claim that . . . the trial was not fair to the party moving.” Montgomery Ward & Co.
v. Duncan, 311 U.S. 243, 251 (1940); accord Rivera Castillo v. Autokirey, Inc., 379
F.3d 4, 13 (1st Cir. 2004). Similarly, the motion “may raise questions of law arising
out of alleged substantial errors in admission or rejection of evidence or instructions
to the jury.” Montgomery Ward & Co., 311 U.S. at 251.
“‘A district court is free to independently weigh the evidence’ when assessing
whether to grant a motion for a new trial.” Sánchez, 972 F.3d at 16 (quoting Jennings
v. Jones, 587 F.3d 430, 436 (1st Cir. 2009)). This is so because “[t]he decision to grant
a new trial is squarely within the trial court’s discretion.” Velazquez v. Figueroa-
22
Gomez, 996 F.2d 425, 427 (1st Cir. 1993) (citing Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc.,
449 U.S. 33, 36 (1980)). Nonetheless, “[i]n general, conflicting testimony or a question
as to the credibility of a witness are not sufficient grounds for granting a new trial.”
Blomquist v. Horned Dorset Primavera, Inc., 925 F.3d 541, 551 (1st Cir. 2019)
(quoting United States v. Garcia, 978 F.2d 746, 748 (1st Cir. 1992)). Instead, “a jury’s
verdict on the facts should only be overturned in the most compelling circumstances.”
Velazquez, 996 F.2d at 427 (quoting Wells Real Estate. Inc. v. Greater Lowell Bd. of
Realtors, 850 F.2d 803, 811 (1st Cir. 1988)).
IV.
DISCUSSION
A.
An Overview
Having presided over this hard-fought, nine-day trial, the Court views this case
as an ideal one for jury resolution and further views the jury verdict as entirely
consistent with both the trial evidence and the law. The central witnesses were Mr.
Feliciano and Mr. Rebarber, both of whom are intelligent, capable men, and had more
than their day in court. Considering all the evidence, it is apparent that the jury
found Mr. Rebarber more convincing than Mr. Feliciano and, apart from the fact that
such credibility determinations are squarely within the aegis of a jury, the Court
would affirm the verdict not simply because it is required to do so except in the most
compelling circumstances—which are not present here, but also because the Court is
convinced that the jury’s assessment and verdict are manifestly correct.
1.
Luis Feliciano and the Purchase of Air America
23
Mr. Feliciano is an accomplished person with a decided knack for marketing.
The son of a doctor, Mr. Feliciano spent the first years of his life in Spain, where his
father studied medicine. June 22, 2022 Trial Tr. at 83:9-11 (ECF No. 306) (Feliciano
Test. June 22). Subsequently, the family moved to Puerto Rico where Mr. Feliciano
attended elementary, middle, and high school. Id. at 83:19-22. After high school, Mr.
Feliciano spent seven years at the University of Puerto Rico, but did not earn his
degree, id. at 83:25-84:3, and spent some time in the commonwealth of
Massachusetts, studying marketing and finance. Id. at 84:2-3. Mr. Feliciano also
worked as a floor salesman at a men’s clothing store and as a receiver and sorter for
UPS, but while in college, he developed his own company, called LAF, which focused
on business promotion. Id. at 84:25-85:10. It was during this period in college that
Mr. Feliciano discovered he has a talent for marketing and developed his own
business, marketing to clubs and restaurants, filling them with customers on their
off-days, and splitting the increased proceeds with the businesses. Id. at 85:11-21.
Then during his fourth or fifth year of college, Mr. Feliciano marketed what he
described as “massive events.”
Id. at 85:22-24.
He publicized events called
“Mascomambo,” huge social events in which everything sold for only $1.00. Id. at
85:23-86:5. These social events were held Island-wide and attracted as many as 7,000
people. Id. at 86:5-9. Mr. Feliciano then partnered with a company in Scottsdale,
Arizona and put on an event called “The Great Rubber Duck Race.” Id. at 86:21-87:5.
Mr. Feliciano obtained a franchise for this event for all of Latin America, and for ten
years held events throughout Central America and the Caribbean. Id. at 87:13-23.
24
Mr. Feliciano testified that he ran The Great Rubber Duck Race for non-profit
foundations, such as the Muscular Dystrophy Foundation and a spina bifida center
in Mayaguez. Id. at 87:24-88:13. Mr. Feliciano said that he worked with Wal-Mart
on special events, and Wal-Mart would “give us the task and we would identify
foundations and then run projects and use proceeds for them.” Id. at 88:14-19.
In 1995, Mr. Feliciano became a partner in a business that involved so-called
banner towing in which an airplane would tow a banner with an advertising message.
Id. at 90:4-95:17. In 2001, Mr. Feliciano’s company, LAF, bought the Puerto Rico
banner towing operation, including two airplanes and specialized equipment. Id. at
95:21-97:5. The banner towing business continued until January 2014, when “the
digital market came into outdoor advertising.” Id. at 97:6-98:11. Mr. Feliciano
acknowledged that he did not know how to fly an airplane and did not know how to
fix one. Id. at 97:15-20. To address the operations part of the business, Mr. Feliciano
hired a Chief Pilot, who “took care with all the operational parts, complying with all
the regulations, which he knew in detail,” id. at 97:10-13, and which Mr. Feliciano
confessed he “didn’t know.” Id. at 97:14.
In 2001 through 2003, Mr. Feliciano and his wife, Ms. Bengoa, began a
business called Yellow Media. Id. at 98:16-99:12. Mr. Feliciano named the business
“Yellow Media” because he had taxi cabs, phone booths, and airplanes painted yellow.
Id. at 98:22-100:7. Mr. Feliciano, whose nickname is Tito, testified that he became
known as “Tito with the yellow plane.” Id. at 98:23-00-12.
25
In 2014, when Air America came for sale, since Mr. Feliciano “had done pretty
well in aviation,” he “saw an opportunity, because American Eagle had left Puerto
Rico” and he “believe[d he] had been somewhat successful in aviation” so he “could
migrate to that.” Id. at 100:11-14. Mr. Feliciano emphasized that “the news that
American Eagle was leaving” created “a big hole in Puerto Rico,” because the “rates
for travel to the neighboring islands had gone up substantially because the volume
had dropped.” Id. at 103:12-22. Mr. Feliciano’s plan was “to take Rebarber’s company
to a level to be able to compete in that market.” Id. 103:24-25.
Mr. Feliciano had a vision that would allow him to transform the aircraft into
“[f]lying works of art.” Id. at 106:6-8. Mr. Feliciano explained that he had developed
a concept he called “Taxi Gallery” in which his taxi cabs were “wrapped in flexible
vinyl.” Id. at 105:3-4. When wrapped in white vinyl, Puerto Rican artists would “use
acrylic paints and then turn the vehicle into a work of art.” Id. at 105:4-8. By doing
so, Yellow Media’s sales “multiplied fivefold.” Id. at 105:1-2. At Air America, Mr.
Feliciano planned to “invite artists to paint the aircraft with Caribbean cultural
elements and, that way, we could budget very little for advertising, marketing and
public relations.” Id. at 105:23-106:5. “[W]ith just the investment of transforming
the airplane into a work of art,” Mr. Feliciano “believed that we were going to get
headlines or be on the front pages of printed media in Puerto Rico, St. Thomas.” Id.
at 106:13-16. Mr. Feliciano did not mention his idea to Mr. Rebarber. Id. at 106:1718.
26
On December 17, 2014, Mr. Feliciano entered into a purchase and sale
agreement to buy eighty percent of the shares of Air America from Mr. Rebarber for
$1,300,000. Id. at 110:11-111:9. Mr. Rebarber retained the remaining twenty percent
of the stock and the corresponding ownership interest. Id. at 111:10-11. Mr. Feliciano
paid $100,000 to Mr. Rebarber in November 2014 to demonstrate his intention to
purchase Air America. Id. at 111:12-15. In December 2014, Mr. Feliciano paid Mr.
Rebarber an additional $950,000, leaving $250,000 owed for the total purchase. Id.
at 111:13-21.
2.
Fred J. Rebarber and Air America
Fred J. Rebarber made himself into a highly competent airline owner and
operator. Natively very bright, detail-oriented, and business-savvy, Mr. Rebarber by
dint of talent and hard work, personally built a small charter airline in Puerto Rico
by learning about airplanes and the airline business from the ground up. Born in
New York City, Mr. Rebarber moved between New York and Puerto Rico as he grew
up. June 28, 2023 Trial Tr. at 102:19-103:1 (ECF No. 335) (Rebarber Test. June 28,
2023). At age thirteen, Mr. Rebaber returned to Puerto Rico with his mother and
younger brother, and they lived in public housing. Id. at 103:2-10. Mr. Rebarber
attended local schools and ultimately graduated from high school. Id. at 103:17104:6.
While in high school, at age 16, Mr. Rebarber began working after school for a
gasoline station that had a garage. Id. at 103:23-1. Mr. Rebarber was curious about
cars and became fascinated by how things work, and as he began to learn about car
27
parts, his employer would send him to a local car parts store to pick up parts. Id. at
104:4-12. Mr. Rebarber got to know the owner of the car parts store, and, after a
while, the owner offered him a parttime job, which Mr. Rebarber accepted. Id. at
104:15-19. Mr. Rebarber continued to work at this local auto parts store while
attending college at the University of Puerto Rico in Carolina. Id. at 105:9-106:8.
As time went on, Mr. Rebarber was offered a job at a larger auto parts chain
with 25 to 30 stores, called Garcia Motors, and he accepted. Id. at 106:6-18. This job
led to another job with an auto parts wholesaler, and this new job came with sales
commissions, leading Mr. Rebarber to make three times more in commissions than
in salary. Id. at 106:19-107:5. At this point, Mr. Rebarber was twenty-two to twentythree years old. Id. at 107:5.
After a couple of years, Mr. Rebarber had managed to save some money and
contemplated starting his own business. Id. at 107:6-10. In 1984, with some money
borrowed from his father and his own saved money, at age twenty-eight, Mr.
Rebarber opened an auto parts store that exclusively stocked Japanese car parts. Id.
at 107-11-17. The store did very well and within a couple of years, Mr. Rebarber
opened a second store. Id. at 107:19-21.
On his way to his auto parts stores, Mr. Rebarber used to pass a sign that read:
“Learn to Fly. Isla Grande Flying School.” Id. at 107:22-108:1. One day, he turned
around and went in the flying school to find out about learning to fly. Id. at 108:1-2.
Mr. Rebarber took to flying the way he took to auto mechanics and found it “easy”
and “fun.” Id. at 108:8-9. At this point, he was thirty years old. Id. at 9-10. Mr.
28
Rebarber earned his pilot’s license and found that “everything clicked” with flying; he
found it simple and “just loved it.” Id. at 109:13-22.
Mr. Rebarber found that aviation has “so many different steps.” Id. at 110:45. From a private pilot’s license, he obtained a high performance sign off, which
allowed him to fly bigger airplanes with retractable gears. Id. at 110:5-11. Mr.
Rebarber then stepped up a level and bought an airplane, a 300 horsepower Cessna
210. Id. at 110:12-13. Mr. Rebarber obtained his IFR 1 license and kept “constantly
learning.” Id. at 110:14-16. For less than a year, Mr. Rebarber worked as a pilot for
a business in Florida that catered to people in need of dialysis, flying dialysis
equipment to the patients, and while doing so, he became certified to operate a
seaplane. Id. at 112:2-18.
While he was in Florida, Mr. Rebarber said that his auto parts business
suffered because he was not there. As he was getting ready to leave his Florida job
and return to Puerto Rico to attend to his auto parts business, the owner of the
dialysis equipment delivery business told Mr. Rebarber that he was going into
another business and suggested to Mr. Rebarber that he purchase the company’s
aircraft. Id. at 112:19-22. Mr. Rebarber explained that to operate a commercial
airline, a business must obtain a certificate from the FAA. Id. at 111:1-10. The owner
of the Florida business, Paradise Flights, had an FAA certificate, so when Mr.
Rebarber purchased the shares of Paradise Flight, he also obtained an FAA
IFR stands for instrument flight restriction, a certification that allows a pilot to fly with
instruments. See June 24, 2022 Trial Tr. at 104:12-14. An IFR license is an FAA certification. See
June 28, 2022 Trial Tr. at 51:24-52:3 (ECF No. 335) (Test. of Ortiz de Jesus).
1
29
certificate.
Id. at 112:19-25.
Mr. Rebarber flew the plane to Puerto Rico and
transferred the certificate to Puerto Rico. Id. at 113:1-4.
At that point, Mr. Rebarber had an FAA certificate that allowed him to operate
one plane with one pilot. Id. at 113:7-11. After performing extensive research and
learning about the FAA certification process, he was successful in obtaining an FAA
certification that allowed him to operate multiple pilots. Id. at 113:21-23. At the
same time in 1994, he was working to improve his auto parts business, and when he
was approached to sell his airline company with the certificates, he agreed to do so.
Id. at 113:23-114:8. Mr. Rebarber was now operating only his auto parts business,
but he began to regret having sold the airline, thinking that it had a lot of potential.
Id. at 114:9-11. He began to look around for another airline to develop. Id. at 114:1819.
Mr. Rebarber explained that the FAA opens the door for new certificates
whenever they need more money, id. at 114:21-115:2, and that “[t]he door opened.”
Id. at 114:20. Mr. Rebarber put in an application and undertook the “intense, long”
FAA process to obtain another certification. Id. at 115:3-5. This process requires
knowledge of the general operations manuals, the training manuals, and “a lot of
work.” Id. at 115:3-7. Mr. Rebarber described the FAA as extremely well-organized,
and rule-bound, but since the FAA had written everything down, over the next three
years he studied to learn the FAR, Federal Aviation Regulations. Id. at 115:9-17.
In 2000, Mr. Rebarber started Air America. Id. at 116:2. But it took him ten
years to work with the FAA and obtain the various agency authorities to run the
30
aviation business he had envisioned: “multi engine, municipal aircraft, municipal
pilots all authorized, authority to fly at night.” Id. at 116:2-5. Mr. Rebarber explained
the FAA regulatory and inspection process, involving operations and maintenance,
and he testified at length about his knowledge of the FAA regulations and the
imperative that Air America comply with them. Id. at 116:10-122:4.
3.
Luis Feliciano and Fred Rebarber
The jury could well have found that there was an extreme contrast between
the backgrounds of Mr. Feliciano and Mr. Rebarber in terms of their knowledge and
understanding of the aviation business. Mr. Feliciano, though a capable person, had
no background or experience in the aviation business and viewed the purchase of Air
America as a marketing opportunity, whereas Mr. Rebarber had extensive experience
literally from the ground up with all aspects of aviation from maintenance to piloting
to FAA regulations. Mr. Rebarber gained his knowledge of how to run a small
aviation business through years of accumulated knowledge in each facet of aviation.
But Mr. Feliciano, who is not a pilot, not a maintenance person, and not an FAA
regulatory specialist, had purchased a business that required all these skills.
A jury could have found, based on this contrast, that the problems Mr.
Feliciano encountered after his purchase of Air America were problems of his own
making. This is so because Mr. Feliciano purchased a business in a highly specialized
area without any specialized knowledge. And when a fleet of airplanes turned out to
be much more complicated than a fleet of taxi cabs and the business floundered, a
31
jury could reasonably have found that Mr. Feliciano looked for someone or something
other than himself to blame.
B.
The Jury Verdict Is Not Against the Clear Weight of the
Evidence
The Feliciano Defendants offer a slew of reasons why they believe the jury’s
verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence. See Pl.’s Mot. at 2-22.
The First Circuit has made clear that “conflicting testimony or a question as to
the credibility of a witness are not sufficient grounds for granting a new trial.”
Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d at 427.
Therefore, the Court first addresses several
arguments made by Mr. Feliciano that attempt to relitigate “conflicting testimony”
and “questions as to the credibility of a witness.” Id. As these arguments do not
present sufficient grounds for granting a new trial, the Court rejects them.
The Feliciano Defendants’ first argument is that the “unchallenged evidence
demonstrated that the same, or almost the same parts that Feliciano had to repair,
or purchase new, had been found to be deficient by Luis Gonzalez, who was AA’s
mechanic during Rebarber’s management.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 2-4. Mr. Feliciano
badly overstates his case. The evidence was challenged and readily falls under the
categories of “conflicting testimony” and “questions as to the credibility of a witness.”
Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d at 427.
To use one example, the Feliciano Defendants assert that Luis González
Acevedo’s testimony supports their argument that Mr. Rebarber did not properly
maintain the fleet of airplanes and overvalued them, thereby misleading Mr.
Feliciano. See Feliciano’s Mot. at 3-4. Mr. Rebarber, in turn, argues that following
32
his firing in April of 2014, Mr. González had “no personal knowledge of the condition
of Air America’s aircraft, of Air America’s operations, or anything regarding Air
America and Mr. Rebarber.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at 10. Mr. Rebarber points to several
admissions by Mr. González that limit “the weight his testimony should be given.”
Id. at 9. In his reply, the Feliciano Defendants argue that even if Mr. González was
fired, that “does not invalidate the fact that [he] made a list of parts and equipment
prior to the [stock purchase agreement] which contains essentially the same items as
the list made by Nieves and Fernandez after the [stock purchase agreement].”
Feliciano’s Reply at 2.
At the core of this disagreement is a factual dispute about how much credibility
the jury should have given to Mr. González. The first potential problem with Mr.
González’s testimony is that his knowledge was limited in time. Mr. González was
employed by Air America from September 2, 2013, when it was owned by Mr.
Rebarber, to April 2014, before it was owned by Mr. Feliciano. June 21, 2022 Trial
Tr. (ECF No. 305) (González Test. June 21, 2022). The Stock Purchase Agreement
was executed December 17, 2014. See Joint Ex. II at 1 (ECF No. 276) (SPA). Mr.
Rebarber fired Mr. González “nine months before [Mr. Rebarber] sold Air America.”
Rebarber Test, June 28, 2023 at 123:3-4. Thus, Mr. González was not employed at
any time during Mr. Feliciano’s ownership, and he admitted that after Mr. Rebarber
terminated him, he did not have any contact with Air America. González Test. June
21, 2021 at 128:14-17, 130:22-131:1.
33
Another potential problem with Mr. González's testimony is that on April 29,
2014, Mr. Rebarber fired him for failing to comply with his work guidelines. Id. at
113:13-21. Mr. González insisted during his testimony that, even though he was fired
for not doing his job, he had in fact been “doing it excellently well” and he was not
getting proper cooperation from others. Id. at 114:8-12. By contrast, Mr. Rebarber
testified that he fired Mr. González because he had completed an AD note (Advisory
Directive) by memory and “[y]ou don’t do AD notes by recollection,” “that’s a no. That’s
a no-no. You don’t do that.” Rebarber Test, June 28, 2023 at 122:7-123:7.
The Feliciano Defendants’ argument that the jury was compelled to accept the
testimony of Mr. González in these circumstances is simply untenable. A reasonable
jury could well have completely discounted Mr. González’s testimony because he not
only never worked during Mr. Feliciano’s ownership of Air America, but also because
Mr. Rebarber fired him for asserted incompetence. A reasonable jury could have
accepted Mr. González’s testimony, but they were not required to do so.
As “trial judges do not sit as thirteenth jurors,” the Court refuses to step in and
override the jury’s choice. Rodríguez-Valentin v. Doctors' Ctr. Hosp. (Manati), Inc.,
27 F.4th 14, 21 (1st Cir. 2022); see also Feliciano-Hernandez v. Pereira-Castillo, 663
F.3d 527, 537 (1st Cir. 2011) (“[O]ne may not argue that the verdict was against the
weight of the evidence simply by citing to the evidence which was favorable to one's
position. If evidence was offered to the contrary, the jury was free to accept or reject
each party's evidence, and in most cases, a court is not warranted in overriding the
jury's choice”).
34
The Feliciano Defendants’ arguments about Mr. Nieves’, Mr. Irizzary’s, Mr.
Rebarber’s, and Mr. Feliciano’s testimony—and Mr. Rebarber’s responses to those
arguments—travel a similar road: they invite the Court to substitute its judgment
for that of the jury on how these testimonies should have been weighed.
See
Feliciano’s Mot. at 3-6 (arguing Mr. Nieves’ testimony was “sufficient to prove
Feliciano had a right to reimbursement from Rebarber”); Rebarber’s Opp’n at 10
(offering multiple of Mr. Nieves’ admissions to the contrary). See also Feliciano’s Mot.
at 6 (arguing Mr. Feliciano’s “unrebutted testimony . . . were evidentiary
demonstrations that any reasonable jury would have considered sufficient to prove
Feliciano had a right to reimbursement from Rebarber”); Rebarber’s Opp’n at 11-12
(offering Mr. Feliciano’s admissions to argue the opposite). See also Feliciano’s Mot.
at 14-15 (arguing Mr. Irizzary’s testimony impeached Mr. Rebarber); Rebarber’s
Opp’n at 13 (“Irizzary’s testimony was filled with speculative conclusions and
incomplete resources to provide a reliable opinion”). See also Feliciano’s Mot. at 15
(arguing Mr. Ortiz’s testimony demonstrated that errors in the logbooks misled Mr.
Feliciano into the purchase); Rebarber’s Opp’n at 14 (arguing the opposite). See also
Feliciano’s Mot. at 17 (“Rebarber’s testimony should be afforded no weight as he lied
on the stand on more than one occasion); Rebarber’s Opp’n at 20-22 (arguing he was
credible).
The First Circuit has made it clear that “conflicting testimony or a question as
to the credibility of a witness are not sufficient grounds for granting a new trial.”
Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d at 427. Again, the Court declines to act as a thirteenth
35
juror and disrupt the judgment of a jury simply because the Feliciano Defendants
dislike how the jury weighed the evidence. See Rodríguez-Valentin, 27 F.4th at 21.
Discounting the Feliciano Defendants’ contention that the Court must accept
their versions of the evidence, the Court turns to the remainder of the Feliciano
Defendants’ argument that the jury’s verdict was contrary to the weight of the
evidence.
The balance of the Feliciano Defendants’ argument as to the weight of the
evidence is tripartite. The first line of argument points to exhibits the Feliciano
Defendants claim are sufficient to override the jury’s determination. Feliciano’s Mot.
at 6-10. The second posits that a “reasonable jury would have understood force
majeure striking the company’s operations” after “the company was hit with the
passing of Hurricanes Irma and Maria.” Id. at 10-11. The third alleges the Court
made multiple structural errors. Id. at 11, 13, 16, 18.
Regarding the first argument, the Feliciano Defendants point to the Stock
Purchase Agreement of December 17, 2014, the pre-purchase list made by Mr.
González, and the list made by Mr. Nieves to argue that Mr. Feliciano “had a right to
reimbursement from Rebarber, for the expenses relating to parts and improvements
that had to be made.” Id. at 6. Specifically, the Feliciano Defendants argue that
“[b]ased on Section C2 of the Agreement identified as Joint Exhibit 2, a reasonable
jury would have found Rebarber was in breach of the obligation to reimburse.” Id. at
7.
36
Section C(ii) of the agreement indicates that: “[a]ny unrecorded or undisclosed
expenses and liabilities related with the operations of the Corporation prior to this
date (the ‘Unrecorded Expenses’) found by the Purchaser after the date hereof, shall
be paid by Seller to the Corporation upon claim thereof by Purchaser or the
Corporation supported by adequate evidence.” SPA at 2. The Feliciano Defendants
highlight text in this section which reads: “All expenses incurred by the Corporation
prior to the date hereof shall run on the account of the Seller. . . . In addition, any
expenses incurred by the Corporation after the date hereof that should have been
incurred by the Corporation prior to this date, will be on the account of the Seller and
shall be considered Unrecorded Expenses.” Id.; see Feliciano’s Mot. at 8-9. The
Feliciano Defendants also point to Article IV, paragraph A, of the stock purchase
agreement, Feliciano’s Mot. at 9, which reads as follows:
Seller agrees to indemnify and save and hold harmless the Purchaser
from and against all losses, claims, causes of action, obligations, suits,
costs, damages, expenses . . . and liabilities which the Purchaser . . . may
suffer or incur or be compelled to or be subject to and which are caused
by or arise directly or indirectly by reason of the breach of any
representations and warranties of the Seller contained herein.
SPA at 8. The Feliciano Defendants once again proffer an interpretation of
Clause C(ii) that was rejected by the jury.
As the Feliciano Defendants describe it, the “genesis of this case” is Mr.
Feliciano’s “contractual claim against Rebarber for reimbursement of all expenses
incurred by Feliciano for repairs or replacement of parts and equipment related to
AA’s airplanes that should have been conducted by Rebarber prior to Feliciano’s
purchase from Rebarber of 80% of AA’s stock.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 2. But the Feliciano
37
Defendants’ expansive interpretation of the SPA is not the only possible
interpretation of Clause C(ii). In fact, considering the context of the sale, namely a
sale of stock, the Feliciano’s interpretation is strained.
The contested clause appears in Article I of the SPA, addressing Sale and
Purchase of Shares. SPA at 1. This Article delineates the Buyer’s agreement to
purchase and the Seller’s agreement to sell shares in Air America. Clause C within
Article I addresses “Deliveries,” such as delivery of the shares. Id. at 2. Within the
“Deliveries” section of Article I, Clause C(ii) reads:
The Corporation and/or Seller have satisfied 100% of any known accrued
expenses and debt of the Corporation. Any unrecorded or undisclosed
expenses and liabilities related with the operations of the Corporation
prior to this date (the “Unrecorded Expenses”) found by the Purchaser
after the date hereof, shall be paid by Seller to the Corporation upon
claim thereof by Purchaser or the Corporation supported by adequate
evidence. If Seller fails to reimburse the Corporation, in addition to any
rights available at law to collect the Unrecorded Expenses, Purchaser
shall have the right to deduct or set-off the Unrecorded Expenses from
face value of the Note. All expenses incurred by the Corporation prior
to the date hereof shall run on the account of the Seller; and all expenses
incurred by the Corporation after the date hereof will run on the account
of the Corporation. In addition, any expenses incurred by the
Corporation after the date hereof that should have been incurred by the
Corporation prior to this date, will be on the account of the Seller and
shall be considered Unrecorded Expenses.
SPA at 2.
From the Court’s perspective, this Clause is no more than a delineation of the
temporal liability of the Seller and the Buyer: before the sale, the expenses rest with
Mr. Rebarber and after the sale, the expenses rest with the Feliciano Defendants.
The clause first places the obligation to pay “known accrued expenses and debt of the
Corporation” prior to sale on Mr. Rebarber.
38
The clause addresses so-called
“Unrecorded Expenses.” Thus, for example, if one of Air America’s airplanes bought
gas on an Air America account on December 16, 2014 and if it had not yet been
recorded and paid by Mr. Rebarber, then Mr. Rebarber would have been responsible
for this so-called “Unrecorded Expense” whenever it posted, but if one of its airplanes
bought gas on December 18, 2014, the Feliciano Defendants would be responsible to
make payment.
The Feliciano Defendants focus on the following language in Clause C(ii):
In addition, any expenses incurred by the Corporation after the date
hereof that should have been incurred by the Corporation prior to this
date, will be on the account of the Seller and shall be considered
“Unrecorded Expenses.”
SPA at 2. The apparent purpose of this clause is to prevent Mr. Rebarber from
incurring expenses prior to sale, slow walking payment, not recording those expenses,
and foisting them on the Feliciano Defendants after the sale. Thus, if Air America
had incurred a large bill for gasoline on December 10, 2014, hidden the bill, and then
claimed that the Feliciano Defendants owed it, the Feliciano Defendants could set off
their payments by deducting the pre-December 17, 2014 expense.
But the Feliciano Defendants interpret this clause as Mr. Rebarber’s warranty
of the condition of the airplanes at the moment of purchase, saying that if they
discovered a repair to the aircraft—that in their view should have been made before
December 17, 2014—they had a right to charge that post-December 17, 2014 expense
against the amount the Feliciano Defendants owed Mr. Rebarber. But the SPA
makes plain that “there are no warranties, representations or other agreements
between the parties in connection with the subject matter hereof except as set forth
39
specifically herein.” SPA at 12. The Court views the “genesis of the case” from the
Feliciano Defendants’ perspective to have been grounded on a dubious and faulty
premise.
But, even if the Court accepts the Feliciano Defendants’ strained
interpretation of the SPA, their motion for new trial still fails in the face of the
adverse jury verdict. In all of this, they seem to miss the crucial detail that in order
to be indemnified of expenses incurred, they must provide “adequate evidence.” See
SPA at 2.
To be clear, the Feliciano Defendants do provide arguably weighty
evidence, in the form of these portions of the agreement and the lists created by Mr.
González and Mr. Nieves. Nonetheless, “one may not argue that the verdict was
against the weight of the evidence simply by citing to the evidence which was
favorable to one’s position.” Berger v. Colon, 215 F.3d 1311, 2000 WL 525945 at *1
(1st Cir. 2000). In cases, like this one, where “evidence was offered to the contrary,
the jury [is] free to accept or reject each party’s evidence, and in most cases, a court
is not warranted in overriding the jury’s choice.” Id. Instead, “a jury’s verdict on the
facts should only be overturned in the most compelling circumstances.” FigueroaGomez, 996 F.2d at 427.
These circumstances do not meet that very high threshold. Here, a reasonable
jury, based on trustworthy testimony presented at trial, could readily have found that
Mr. Rebarber disclosed all necessary information to Mr. Feliciano, that Mr. Feliciano
was aware of the conditions of the aircraft, that Mr. Feliciano and his consultants
were able to inspect the aircraft, and that the aircraft flew well at the time of the
40
purchase and after the Agreement. See June 21, 2022 Trial Tr. 128:14-24, 129:16-19;
June 23, 2022 Trial Tr. at 63:8-25, 64:1-6, 72:14-17, 73:3-20, 75:8-10, 80:2-7, 81:5-25,
82:10-22, 99-102, 103:1-25, 114:17-18, 116:13-19, 119:18-120:3.
Once again, the heart of this inquiry is the weighing of the testimony offered
by the parties’ witnesses.
As there is ample evidence to support both parties’
positions, the Court does not find that the jury’s verdict for Mr. Rebarber is clearly
against the weight of the evidence and therefore does not overturn the jury’s verdict
or award a new trial on this ground.
The Feliciano Defendants also argue that a reasonable jury “would have
understood force majeure striking the company’s operations” given Hurricanes Irma
and Maria. However, a reasonable jury, which after all consisted of residents of
Puerto Rico who also endured Hurricanes Irma and Maria, could also consider Mr.
Feliciano’s actions before the hurricanes as relevant to, if not the outright cause of,
the downfall of Air America.
Specifically, Mr. Rebarber offered evidence that Mr. Feliciano “never held
shareholder meetings,” “did not contact Rebarber to consult him,” took a loan from a
company other than a recognized financial institution, “paid for personal items with
Air America’s money,” as well as that there were “falsified records” during Mr.
Feliciano’s leadership. See June 23, 2022 Trial Tr. at 105-08 (ECF No. 324); June 24,
2022 Trial Tr. at 4-5, 38-41 (ECF No. 323); June 29, 2022 Trial Tr. at 33-35 (ECF No.
338). Given all this evidence, the Court declines to upset the jury’s verdict as it was
not clearly contrary to the weight of the evidence.
41
C.
Mr. Feliciano’s Claims of Court Error are Unmeritorious
To support their request for a new trial or vacated judgment, the Feliciano
Defendants also allege that the Court made multiple errors throughout the trial. All
these allegations turn on whether the Court’s evidentiary rulings were proper. See
Feliciano’s Mot. at 11, 13, 16. Such issues are properly raised in a motion for a new
trial so the Court considers them. See Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Duncan, 311 U.S.
243, 251 (1940).
Much like overturning a jury verdict because it is against the weight of the
evidence, courts “do not grant new trials unless it is reasonably clear that prejudicial
error has crept into the record or that substantial justice has not been done.”
Caldrello v. Mercedes Benz of North America, Inc., 488 F. Supp. 2d 129, 131 (D. Conn.
2007) (citing 11 CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT,
ARTHUR R. MILLER & MARY KAY
KANE, FEDERAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE § 2803 (3d ed.); and United States v. Landau,
155 F.3d 93, 104 (2d Cir. 1998)). Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 61 indicates that:
[u]nless justice requires otherwise, no error in admitting or excluding
evidence—or any other error by the court or a party—is ground for
granting a new trial, for setting aside a verdict, or for vacating,
modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order. At every stage
of the proceeding, the court must disregard all errors and defects that
do not affect any party's substantial rights.
FED. R. CIV. P. 61.
At times, the Feliciano Defendants allege “structural error.” Feliciano’s Mot.
at 11 (“This was structural error, for it made the jury weigh[] character evidence
against Feliciano, in an unduly prejudicial context”). Despite the allegations, they
cite no authority for their claims of structural error arising from evidentiary rulings.
42
Regardless, the Feliciano Defendants’ argument misses the mark. In 1993, in
Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619 (1993), the United States Supreme Court
discussed what it termed “structural error.” The Brecht Court described a spectrum
of error, ranging from “[t]rial error,” which is subject to a harmless error analysis, to
“the other end of the spectrum of constitutional errors,” which amount to “‘structural
defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism, which defy analysis by ‘harmless
error’ standards.” Id. at 629 (quoting Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 309
(1991)).
If a true structural error occurs, the Supreme Court requires “automatic
reversal,” because structural errors ‘infect the entire trial process.” Id. at 629-30.
But as the First Circuit has pointed out, “[t]he Supreme Court has limited the
definition of structural error to those errors that ‘infect the entire trial process,’”
United States v. Fazal-Ur-Raheman-Fazal, 355 F.3d 40, 47-48 (1st Cir. 2004) (quoting
Brecht, 507 U.S. at 630), and has “classified an error as structural in only ‘a very
limited class of cases.’” Id. at 48 (quoting Johnson v. United States, 520 U.S. 461, 468
(1997)). “Examples include denial of counsel, presence of a biased trial judge, racial
discrimination in the selection of a grand jury, denial of self-representation at trial,
denial of a public trial, and offering a defective reasonable doubt instruction.” Id.
(internal citations omitted). Again, the Feliciano Defendants cite no authority for
their contention that the Court’s evidentiary rulings rise to the level of constitutional
error and so infected the entire trial process to require automatic reversal.
The Court rejects the Feliciano Defendants’ claim of structural error and
instead reviews the trial transcript for substantial error, in line with the Rules of
43
Civil Procedure. See FED. R. CIV. P. 61. Put simply, the Court reviews first to see if
there was in fact error, and if so, to determine whether the error was harmless or
affected Mr. Feliciano’s substantial rights. See id.
1.
First Error Claim: The Jury Was Exposed to
Extrinsic Information Which Was Inflammatory and
Unduly Prejudicial
The Feliciano Defendants first direct the Court to the June 23, 2022 Trial Tr.
at 60:2-18 (ECF No. 324). Feliciano Mot. at 11. The full context of the questioning
begins on the prior page on cross-examination by Attorney Mercado:
Q. Good afternoon, Mr. Feliciano. In your testimony yesterday, we
heard about your biography, your different activities as a businessman;
is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. We heard about your different projects that you experienced, your
experience in aviation and, obviously, how you ended up with this
company here, [Air] America and your business with Mr. Rebarber.
One of the projects that you mentioned was the - The Court: I’m sorry, I don’t think that either I or the Court Reporter
can hear you, Mr. Mercado.
Q. One of the projects was called Rubber Ducky and mentioned there
was also one in Wal-Mart. Isn’t it true there was some differences that
ended up in a claim from you against Wal-Mart. That is a yes or no.
A. Yes.
Q. Also you said that some of the projects that you had involved Isla
Grande Flying School, correct?
A. Correct.
Q. Isn’t it true that you ended up suing Isla Grande Flying School in
case number KAC 20090870.
Mr. Feliciano, you also mentioned your experience in how you got
into the business of towing banners, the airplane that tows banner to
make advertising by the beaches mostly. You said that one of the was a
44
guy from audit wide and fell in love with Puerto Rico and stayed here.
That was Marcelo, right?
A. Yes.
June 23, 2022 Trial Tr. at 59:13-60:18.
At this point, Mr. Olmo objected and asked to approach the bench, which the
Court allowed. The following colloquy ensued:
Mr. Olmo-Rodriguez: Marcelo is mentioned in a lawsuit where I was
the lawyer for Feliciano and he was the lawyer for the other party. That
lawsuit ended up in a confidential agreement; therefore, I believe he
should not be discussing that matter here because we wouldn’t be able
to go into it about it.
Mr. Mercado: I’m not discussing about it. I am just saying because he
mentioned those projects. I’m not going to say anything confidential.
The Court: I assume it was filed in Federal Court and if I were to look
it up on the docket, there would be a docket entry on it.
Mr. Olmo-Rodriguez: Yes. The thing is that the agreement was
confidential, that we cannot go into that.
The Court: Wait a minute.
I think he has a right to ask whether or not he sued because that’s a
matter of public record and that’s as far as you are going to go, am I
correct?
Mr. Mercado: That as far, yes.
The Court: Thank you.
Id. at 60:19-61:17.
Attorney Mercado finished his questioning on this topic:
Q. I will repeat the question again.
Isn’t it true that Marcelo Ramos, that he was working with
banners, the same Marcelo sued for damages and breach of cont[r]act in
case 05-1960 in this Federal Court?
45
A. Correct.
Id. at 61:20-24.
As for questions about lawsuits with Wal-Mart and Isla Grande Flying School,
Mr. Feliciano never objected at trial, and a “defendant who does not object to
admission of evidence during trial waives objection and cannot raise it for the first
time in [a] motion for new trial.” Brown v. Crown Equip. Co., 460 F. Supp. 2d 188,
197 (D. Me. 2006) (quoting Maeem v. McKesson Drug Co., 444 F.3d 593, 610 (7th Cir.
2006)).
Even though Mr. Feliciano now claims that the Court erroneously allowed the
admission of character evidence when it allowed testimony about Mr. Feliciano’s
lawsuit involving Marcelo Ramos, Mr. Feliciano did not object at trial on that basis.
Mr. Feliciano’s sole trial objection was that the lawsuit was controlled by a
confidentiality agreement and should not be admitted.
When the Court asked
whether the fact of the lawsuit was a matter of public record, Attorney OlmoRodriguez conceded that it was. Because Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez limited his trial
objection to confidentiality and because he acknowledged that the fact of the lawsuit
was public, the Court’s ruling was necessarily correct.
Moreover, on redirect
examination, the Court allowed Mr. Feliciano, over objection, to explain each of the
lawsuits and the results, which he described as favorable to himself. June 24, 2022
Trial Tr. at 111:7-114:13 (ECF No. 323) (June 24, 2023 Trial Tr.).
Under Federal Rule of Evidence 103(a)(1), error may not be predicated upon a
ruling that admits or excludes evidence “unless a substantial right of the party is
46
affected and . . . a timely objection or motion to strike appears on the record.” As Mr.
Feliciano objected only to the Ramos lawsuit, the Court turns to whether the
reference to the lawsuit between Mr. Ramos and Mr. Feliciano affects “a substantial
right” of Mr. Feliciano. Clearly it does not. During direct examination, Mr. Feliciano
had touted his success in the business world and his altruism by describing raising
money through Wal-Mart and other business for charitable causes. The fact that he
became involved in litigation with Wal-Mart and other companies tends to undercut
the impression of business benevolence that his direct testimony had created.
If Mr. Feliciano had objected to this testimony as improper character evidence
under Federal Rule of Evidence 404, the Court could have addressed that objection
at the time and considered whether to give a limiting instruction. But because Mr.
Feliciano never objected on that basis during trial, because the brief testimony was
otherwise relevant, and because Mr. Feliciano was allowed to rebut any negative
inference, the Court rejects his claim of error.
2.
Second Error Claim: The Court Allowed the Jury to be
Confused on the Applicable Law by Overruling Mr.
Feliciano’s Objections during Mr. Rebarber’s Re-Cross
Examination
a.
Alleged Improper Re-cross-Examination of Luis
Feliciano
Next, the Feliciano Defendants assert that “[i]n error and/or abuse of
discretion, the Court allowed” the jury’s “confusion” on the “applicable Law of
Corporations in Puerto Rico, and the roles of Officers, Directors and Stockholders” to
increase “by overruling Feliciano’s objections in Rebarber’s re-cross examination” to
47
things which were “outside the scope of the direct and re-direct examinations.”
Feliciano’s Mot. at 11. Due to this, they argue, “the jury actually got so confused that
they rendered an unreasonable verdict determining breach of fiduciary duty, against
Feliciano.” Id. at 13.
In their motion, the Feliciano Defendants point to an exchange with the Court
during Attorney Mercado’s cross-examination of Mr. Feliciano as a basis for error.
Feliciano Mot. at 11-12. Specifically, they claim that the Court erred because it
allowed Attorney Mercado to question Mr. Feliciano on matters beyond the scope of
direct examination. Id. at 11 (“First, the court, despite timely objections, allowed the
continuation of the questioning in re-cross examination outside of the re-direct
examination”).
This objection is frivolous. One of the issues before the jury was the condition
of the airplanes when Mr. Rebarber sold Air America to Mr. Feliciano. On redirect
examination of Mr. Feliciano, Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez asked Mr. Feliciano about an
appraisal of the Air America aircraft by Verlyn Wolfe, an appraisal expert, hired by
Mr. Feliciano before the sale. Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez explained Mr. Feliciano’s
position in his opening statement:
When Feliciano purchased the company, he hired an appraisal, an
appraiser, and that person made an appraisal of the airplanes based on
those logbooks of the planes that did not contain all the real information
about the planes because Rebarber did not allow people to write on the
logbooks.
So the logbooks did not reflect the reality of the planes, therefore when
Feliciano purchased his appraisal expert viewed those logbooks that
appeared that the planes were in good condition and that’s how
Feliciano acquired the company.
48
Trial Tr. June 21, 2022 at 28:21-29:5 (ECF No. 305).
As stated by Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez, whether Mr. Wolfe’s aircraft appraisals
were accurate and whether they had been based on accurate information supplied by
Mr. Rebarber were factual issues before the jury critical to the positions of the parties.
On cross-examination on Friday, June 24, 2022, for example, Attorney Mercado
questioned Mr. Feliciano about Mr. Wolfe’s appraisals, and Mr. Feliciano conceded
that Mr. Rebarber had not made the plane appraisals; Mr. Wolfe had. June 24, 2022
Trial Tr. at 29:10-21. But Mr. Feliciano responded that Mr. Wolfe’s appraisal was
only as good as the records that Mr. Rebarber provided. Id. 29:10-30:4 (“Because he
let himself be guided by some documents that were incorrect of inaccurate”).
On redirect examination of Mr. Feliciano on Friday, June 24, 2022, Mr. OlmoRodriguez asked Mr. Feliciano about Mr. Wolfe’s aircraft appraisals, and Mr.
Feliciano repeated that Mr. Wolfe’s appraisals were based on information contained
in Air America’s airplane logbooks and Mr. Wolfe’s market values assumed their
accuracy:
Q. Okay. Okay. So this is Mr. Wolfe saying that the current market
values, by him, the values that he did assume that each aircraft has
complete logbooks and records since new. If logbooks are missing, there
would be a deduction in value. Is that what it says?
A. That is correct.
Q. What did you understand that to mean?
A. That some of the items on the value has attachments, that that would
be incorrect, the values would be less.
49
Q. It says appraisals were generated using your spreadsheets and
pictures.
A. Correct.
Q. Are those the ones Rebarber provided to you?
A. That is correct. Rebarber provided them and I sent the pictures.
Q. Now, it says the present market values are all assume and if not, they
will value less.
A. That is correct, they will value less.
Id. at 117:4-21. Consistent with Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez’s opening statement, Mr.
Feliciano testified that the Wolfe appraisals were incorrect because they were based
on inaccurate information supplied by Mr. Rebarber.
Clearly then, the accuracy of Air America’s logbooks was a central factual issue
in the case. In addition to Mr. Feliciano’s testimony, Luis Irizarry, Mr. Feliciano’s
aviation expert, testified that Air America’s logbooks were inaccurate. June 27, 2022
Trial Test. at 91:22-24 (Mr. Irizarry testified that Air America’s logbooks “are not
reliable at all”). Mr. Rebarber and his expert vigorously challenged the claim that
Air America’s logbooks were inaccurate.
Ismael Ortiz de Jesus, Mr. Rebarber’s
aviation expert and former safety inspector for the FAA, explained that by regulation,
both the pilot and the mechanic bear responsibility to make sure an aircraft’s
logbooks are accurate.
June 28, 2022 Trial Tr. at 40:18-22. Furthermore, Mr.
Irizarry testified that the FAA performed base inspections for Air America and
reviewed its records to determine their accuracy. Id. at 43:22-44:3. Mr. Rebarber
testified repeatedly about the significance of the logbooks in terms of aircraft safety
50
and FAA oversight, at one point describing the allegations as “crazy” because “you
can’t fly an airplane when you have a discrepancy list.” June 28, 2023 Trial Test. at
130:23-131:8.
Moreover, on recross-examination, Attorney Mercado questioned Mr. Feliciano
about his claim that Mr. Wolfe’s aircraft appraisals were based on faulty information.
Attorney Mercado pointed out that Mr. Wolfe had told Mr. Feliciano that he had
checked the FAA registry and that “all the airplanes were airworthy.” June 24, 2022
Trial Tr. at 12:13-18. Mr. Feliciano agreed, but he added that this was “according to
the records. According to the records.” Id. Mr. Feliciano asserted that under his
interpretation of the SPA, Mr. Rebarber was responsible for paying for “more than
1,000 parts” in the purchased aircraft. Id. at 12:19-22.
When Attorney Mercado asked Mr. Feliciano to explain how the parts he
claimed were Mr. Rebarber’s responsibility were not reflected in the aircraft logbooks,
Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez objected on the ground that these questions went beyond
the scope of his redirect examination. Id. at 13:3-5. The Court overruled his objection.
Id. When Attorney Mercado probed further on whether the logbooks reflected the
contested parts, Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez again objected as beyond the scope of
redirect examination, id. at 13:22-23, and the Court again overruled his objection. Id.
at 13:24. Attorney Mercado asked Mr. Feliciano whether the planes would have had
to have been grounded if the logbooks had indicated defective parts. Id. at 15:23-23.
Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez objected a third time on the ground that the questioning
was beyond the scope of redirect examination. Id. at 15:25-16:1. The Court overruled
51
him for a third time and reminded Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez that it, not he, controlled
examination. Id. at 16:2-3.
Later on during cross-examination, having reviewed the logbooks, Mr.
Feliciano was able to identify only four inaccurate entries in the logbooks out of the
forty or “more than 1,000 parts”:
Q. Okay, so your testimony is that, out of 40 items in the books, there
are four items, and they are April 2015 on 62749, April 2015 on 49
Tango, March 2015 on 985 Zulu, and 30PT on July 2016.
A. That’s what I found.
Id. at 39:21-25. A reasonable jury could have found that Attorney Mercado’s crossexamination of Mr. Feliciano badly undercut Mr. Feliciano’s credibility because he
had alleged that the logbook contained numerous inaccuracies, but when pressed on
cross-examination, he was only able to identify four.
The Court views as baseless Mr. Feliciano’s objection to the Court’s control of
examination under Federal Rule of Evidence 611.
Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez
questioned Mr. Feliciano closely on redirect examination about whether the
information Mr. Rebarber had given Mr. Wolfe for his appraisals had been accurate,
and in the Court’s view, Mr. Mercado had the perfect right on recross-examination to
question Mr. Feliciano about the fact that the FAA had declared the airplanes
airworthy and that the logbooks had not revealed any of the problems that Mr.
Feliciano had repeatedly asserted. The Court firmly rejects Mr. Feliciano’s claim of
error.
b.
Alleged Improper Impeachment of Luis Feliciano
About a Clerical Error
52
In their motion, the Feliciano Defendants argue:
Second, it was improper impeachment of Feliciano, to allow numerous and
continuous questions regarding a clerical error in a fax transmittal sheet, not
contained in the substantive documents of the corporation, which led the jury
to be confused as to the Board of Directors of the Corporation, particularly the
role of the secretary.
Feliciano Mot. at 12 (citing June 27, 2023 Trial Tr. at 27:2-29:25). The Feliciano
Defendants claim that the Court “recognized the predicament,” and pointed out that
the Court said that the jury was going to be “miserably confused about this.” Id. at
13 (citing June 27, 2023 Trial Tr. at 33:24-34:19).
i.
The Secretary’s Mistake
One of the issues in this case was Mr. Rebarber’s contention that Mr. Feliciano
had been self-dealing from Air America, benefitting himself personally to the
detriment of Mr. Rebarber, who remained a twenty percent minority shareholder
after the sale. To support his contention, Mr. Rebarber presented evidence that after
he bought the company, Mr. Feliciano was not sufficiently careful with Air America’s
corporate form, specifically an apparent mistake Air America made during Mr.
Feliciano’s ownership in its filings with the Puerto Rico Secretary of State.
Under the terms of the PSA, Mr. Feliciano held the offices of president,
secretary, and treasurer of Air America. June 27, 2023 Trial Tr. at 40:15-18. During
Attorney Mercado’s initial cross-examination of Mr. Feliciano, it turned out that on a
series of documents Air America transmitted to the Puerto Rico Secretary of State for
the years 2014 to 2018, Brenda Gullien, Mr. Feliciano’s secretary, incorrectly listed
herself as the corporation’s Secretary.
June 24, 2022 Trial Tr. at 44:1-47:14.
53
Attorney Mercado challenged Mr. Feliciano about this repetitive mistake, and Mr.
Feliciano responded (1) that it was “a silly error,” id. at 46:14-16, and (2) that
Attorney Mercado was making “a fuss” of it. Id. at 47:8-9. Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez
did not object to any of this cross-examination. Id. at 44:1-47:14.
By the time Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez objected, Attorney Mercado had moved
to a different topic: whether Mr. Feliciano had properly accounted for Mr. Rebarber’s
continued role as a shareholder. Id. at 47:15-48:25. On this point, Attorney Mercado
questioned Mr. Feliciano about whether the shareholders of Air America were acting
as the directors of the corporation. Id. at 48:22-25. During this questioning, Attorney
Olmo-Rodriguez objected to the line of questioning on the ground that Attorney
Mercado was conflating the roles of shareholder and director.
Id. at 47:19-21
(“Objection, Your Honor. The question makes reference to two different things. He
is (mixing) two concepts, Your Honor”). The Court allowed Mr. Feliciano to answer
the question if he could. Id. at 47:22. Mr. Feliciano rejected Attorney Mercado’s
implication, contending instead that he was the “sole director.” Id. at 48:22-25.
Attorney Mercado raised the question of secretarial error again on recrossexamination.
June 27, 2022 Trial Tr. at 26:25-31:4.
This time, Mr. Feliciano
responded variously that (1) it was Ms. Guillien’s mistake, (2) it was Mr. Rebarber’s
CPA’s mistake, (3) it was Mr. Feliciano’s mistake, and (4) it was an insignificant
detail. Id. at 26:25-29:25. At this point, Attorney Mercado asked for tax reports from
2014 through 2018 to be admitted, but as Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez had not seen
these documents, the Court took a recess and allowed the lawyers to review the
54
documents. Id. at 30:1-31:4. Up to this point, Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez had not
objected to any of this recross examination.
Upon return from recess, the Court admonished Attorney Mercado that he had
gone “substantially beyond the confines of redirect” and Attorney Mercado responded
that he only had “three more questions and that’s it.” Id. at 31:6-17. After this,
Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez objected for the first time to this recross examination on
the grounds that it exceeded redirect. Id. at 31:21-23. Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez also
objected on the ground that Joint Exhibit 3, a Consent of Shareholders of Air America,
signed by both Mr. Rebarber and Mr. Feliciano, stated that Mr. Feliciano would be
the sole Director and Treasurer, and that Attorney Mercado was “misleading the
jury.” Id. at 31:24-32:4.
In response to Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez’s second objection, namely the
asserted conflation of the roles of stockholder and director, the Court observed that
the SPA provided that shareholders acting as directors would control the corporation
and if there was a separate agreement to a different effect, it would be a jury issue as
to whether there was a conflict between the agreements, and which of the two
controlled. Id. at 32:5-33:2. Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez agreed that Joint Exhibit 3
did not eclipse the SPA, and so the Court asked Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez what he
wanted the Court to do. Id. at 33:3-5. Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez responded:
I would like you to allow me a redirect to clear this up, or not allow Mr.
Mercado to continue and strike the remarks from those questions.
Id. at 33:6-8. The Court granted Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez’s request for further
redirect examination:
55
I think you have [a tension] between the Stock Purchase Agreement and
this unanimous written consent. I will allow you to clear it up if you
wish to do so.
Id. at 33:9-11. Attorney Mercado responded that Mr. Feliciano had testified that
listing Ms. Guillien as the secretary was a “silly error” but it was a sworn statement.
Id. at 33:22-23. The Court informed Attorney Mercado that he had “made that point.”
Id. at 33:24.
The Court turned to the apparent conflict between the roles of shareholder and
director as set forth in the SPA and the unanimous consent, and said that the tension
did not necessarily mean that Mr. Rebarber, who was still a shareholder, had
relinquished his rights as a shareholder to act as a director of Air America for all
purposes, but the Court warned counsel that the jury was going to be “miserably
confused about this.” Id. at 33:24-34:17. The Court allowed Attorney Mercado to
“[a]sk your two or three more questions,” id. at 34:18-19, but Attorney Mercado
elected not to pursue this line of questioning.
Id. at 35:15-38:9.
As the Court
promised, it allowed Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez to engage in further redirect
examination, and Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez asked Mr. Feliciano about the
unanimous written consent of the shareholders and whether the document confirmed
that, as of the date of the purchase, he and Mr. Rebarber had agreed that he would
be president, secretary, and treasurer. Id. at 40:6-19.
ii.
Merits of the Secretarial Mistake Issue
With this detailed background, the Court rejects Mr. Feliciano’s badly
conflated claim of error. First, contrary to his implication, Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez
56
made no contemporaneous objection to Attorney Mercado’s questioning of Mr.
Feliciano about the secretarial mistake. Second, when Attorney Mercado questioned
Mr. Feliciano again during recross-examination on the secretarial error, Mr. OlmoRodriguez, once again, made no contemporaneous objection.
Third, when Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez objected to Attorney Mercado’s
questions about the roles of shareholder and director, he requested that the Court
grant him relief in one of multiple alternatives: allow him to clarify the matter on
further redirect examination, deny Attorney Mercado the right to ask any further
questions on the topic, or strike the testimony.
Contrary to Attorney Olmo-
Rodriguez’s current argument, the Court granted Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez one of
the forms of relief he requested and allowed him to question Mr. Feliciano on further
redirect examination.
Fourth, it was the Court, not Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez, who intervened
concerning improper recross-examination by Attorney Mercado, and the Court
restricted Attorney Mercado from further questioning.
Fifth, after the Court’s
admonition, presumably based in part on the Court’s discouragement, Attorney
Mercado did not further pursue this line of questioning, thus satisfying Attorney
Olmo-Rodriguez’s second form of requested relief. The Court was not required on
pain of new trial to grant all three forms of Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez’s requested
relief.
57
Sixth, Attorney Mercado’s recross-examination brought out Mr. Feliciano’s
obstinacy, blame-shifting, and obfuscation, all of which went to his credibility before
the jury.
Seventh, Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez mischaracterizes the Court’s comment
about jury confusion. The Court’s comment about the jury being miserably confused
was not about the secretarial error but about the roles of shareholder and director in
a closed corporation, which it allowed Attorney Olmo-Rodriguez to clarify on further
redirect examination.
In short, this entire issue is a manufactured controversy, amounts to a
sideshow, and is not grounds for vacating the judgment or for a new trial. Mr.
Feliciano has failed to demonstrate that the Court committed any error at all, much
less structural error or error meriting a new trial. See Nieves-Villanueva, 133 F.3d
at 102.
3.
Third Error Claim: Dr. Cao’s Expert Witness Testimony
and Exhibit Invaded the Jury’s Province
The Feliciano Defendants allege there was yet another “structural error in the
case” because the admission of expert witness Ramon Cao’s testimony and Exhibit
FFF “essentially invaded” the jury’s province, and the jury “consumed a purported
expert’s response as to the ultimate question which they were supposed to find
through the judicial process instead.”
Feliciano’s Mot. at 15.
To buttress this
assertion, they point out that the jury “based their damages award” of $534,836 on
the “sum of what Cao testified was 20% of the goodwill value of Air America
($209,836) and the value of 20% of the stocks in Air America ($325,000), at the time
58
of the 2014 80% stock purchase.” Id. This suggests to the Feliciano Defendants that
having Dr. Cao’s report as “Defendant’s Exhibit FFF, made the jury rely on the
findings, conclusions, and assessments of this witness, instead of evaluating the
evidence and reaching their own conclusions.” Id. at 16.
Mr. Rebarber responds by arguing that “there is not a single objection on [the]
ultimate issue question by Defendants/ Plaintiffs that can be found during the course
of this testimony in the trial transcripts. . . . Thus, this argument is meritless as the
objection was not preserved.” Id. at 19.
In their argument, the Feliciano Defendants cite no rule of evidence, no
statute, and no caselaw. The Court “has no obligation to supply what counsel failed
to provide.” PR Recovery & Dev. JV, LLC v. Lopez-Lopez, No. 22-1205 (ADC), 2023
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54722, at *7 (D.P.R. Mar. 29, 2023). “Undeveloped arguments not
supported by legal authorities are deemed waived and/or abandoned.” United States
v. Pérez-Veláquez, 488 F. Supp. 2d 82, 87 (D.P.R. 2007) (citing United States v.
Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990)). The Court could deem his argument waived.
However, as the Feliciano Defendants’ contention is readily resolved against
them on the merits, the Court will also discuss the merits of the issue.
Their
challenge must be under Federal Rule of Evidence 704, which deals with witness
opinions on the ultimate issue. Contrary to their argument, Rule 704 states that
“[a]n opinion is not objectionable just because it embraces an ultimate issue.” FED.
R. EVID. 704(a) (emphasis supplied). The sole exception is that in “a criminal case,
an expert witness must not state an opinion about whether the defendant did or did
59
not have a mental state or condition that constitutes an element of the crime charged
or of a defense. Those matters are for the trier of fact alone.” FED. R. EVID. 704(b)
(emphasis supplied).
“Rule 704 permits expert testimony that tackles the ultimate issue of a case . .
.. The ultimate issue that Rule 704 refers to, does not, however permit expert
testimony that proffers legal conclusions.” Cotto-Vazquez v. United States, No. CV
16-2807 (SCC), 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48474, at *59 (D.P.R. Mar. 11, 2021) (citing
FED. R. EVID. 704; and Nieves-Villanueva, 133 F.3d at 99-100). The narrow issue,
then, is whether Dr. Cao’s testimony merely speaks to the ultimate issue or crosses
the line into legal conclusions.
During his testimony, Dr. Cao explained that “[Mr. Rebarber] says that he
suffered some financial damages from the sale of Air America. Then I was asked to
evaluate not from a legal point of view, I do not do legal opinions, and to quantify [the
damages].”
June 27, 2022 Trial Tr. at 81:17-20 (emphasis supplied).
Dr. Cao
explained his methodology in creating the report, id. at 82:6-23, before recounting
what assumptions underpinned his findings. Id. at 83:4-85:6. Dr. Cao used his
technical knowledge of corporate financial documents to help the jury determine the
appropriate damages. See, e.g., id. at 87:3-17; id. at 88:7-13, 18-24; see generally id.
at 87-99.
Mr. Feliciano points to no testimony where Dr. Cao proffers a legal conclusion
on any legal questions and the Court’s review of the entirety of Dr. Cao’s testimony
produces none.
The Court concludes that Dr. Cao appropriately testified in
60
accordance with Federal Rule of Evidence 704 to the ultimate issue without offering
any legal conclusions and that accordingly there was no error in allowing his
testimony.
4.
Fourth Error Claim: There is no Evidentiary Basis for a
Damage Award against Christel Bengoa or the Conjugal
Partnership
In the fourth claim of error, the Feliciano Defendants blankly assert:
Without there being any support in evidence, the jurors also
unreasonably awarded damages attributable to Christel Bengoa and the
Bengoa/Feliciano Conjugal Partnership in the amount of $141,400.00.
Such amount was never supported by the evidence during trial. No
reasonable jury would have awarded such an amount against such
parties in this case, as the number was random, not resulting from any
summation or subtraction from any amounts testified to or presented
into evidence. No reasonable jury would have rendered such an award
as to these defendants and for this, the judgment should be set aside and
relief granted to prevent an injustice.
Feliciano Mot. at 16.
Again, in their argument, the Feliciano Defendants cite no rule of evidence, no
statute, and no caselaw. They do not even cite any part of the voluminous record,
requested trial transcripts, or several exhibits. The Feliciano Defendants’ argument
consists solely of plainly declaratory sentences, as if by stating a proposition, they
have proven it.
However, the law requires more. Once again, the Court “has no obligation to
supply what counsel failed to provide.” Lopez-Lopez, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54722,
at *7.
“Undeveloped arguments not supported by legal authorities are deemed
waived and/or abandoned.” Pérez-Veláquez, 488 F. Supp. 2d at 87. The Court also
61
could deem his argument waived.
Nonetheless, in excess of caution, the Court
reaches the merits.
“Article 1308 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico provides that the conjugal
partnership shall be liable for ‘all debts and obligations contracted during the
marriage.’” F.D.I.C. v. Monterrey, Inc., 847 F. Supp. 997, 1004 (D.P.R. 1994), aff’d 45
F.3d 423 (1st Cir. 1995) (quoting P.R. Laws, tit. 31, § 3661 (1990)). The “burden of
proof rests initially on the spouse who denies [her] liability or that of the marital
community.” Id. at 1004-05 (quoting WRC Props., Inc. v. Santana, 116 D.P.R. 1, 27
(1985)). However, the burden “may be easily inverted.” Id. (quoting WRC Props., 116
D.P.R. at 27). Even so, “[a] mere denial that the conjugal partnership benefitted from
the spouse’s dealings is not sufficient to rebut the presumption delineated by Article
1308.” Kodak Ams., Ltd. v. Caribbean Photo & Imaging Co., 242 F. Supp. 2d 117, 120
(D.P.R. 2002).
During her trial testimony, Ms. Bengoa confirmed that she does not have a
prenuptial agreement with Mr. Feliciano. July 28, 2023 Trial Tr. at 62:14-15. Ms.
Bengoa also confirmed that she is a part-owner of both Air America and Yellow
Media. Id. at 62:16-20. There was evidence in the record that Mr. Feliciano had the
title to four aircraft owned by Air America that were transferred to Yellow Media, a
company owned by both Mr. Feliciano and Ms. Bengoa. June 24, 2022 Trial Tr. at
40:1-6, 14-18. This evidence is sufficient to create the presumption that Ms. Bengoa
is liable as a conjugal partner to Mr. Feliciano for the amount of the jury award, and
Ms. Bengoa has asserted no evidence in this record, nor outside of it, to rebut the
62
marital community presumption.
The Court, therefore, denies the Feliciano
Defendants’ objections to the jury award against Ms. Bengoa and the conjugal
partnership.
5.
Fifth Error Claim: The Court allowed Mr. Rebarber to
Confuse the Jury on the Correct Legal Standard for Gross
Negligence
The Feliciano Defendants contend that Mr. Rebarber “was allowed to define
[]gross negligence to the jury, in a way that was confusing the legal standards . . .
leading the jury to confuse such with a claim for defamation.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 18.
To support this contention, they point to the following interchange during Mr.
Rebarber’s testimony:
Q. That’s regarding the airline, but regarding the corporation. What is
gross negligence? Why are you alleging gross negligence of Mr.
Feliciano?
A. So, we signed the Stock Purchase Agreement and we also signed the
Unanimous Consent of the Shareholders. So this is a corporate
document on how he is going to proceed as president and the duties that
he was supposed to do.
He didn’t do anything. Everything here that he signed and I signed on
that day, from not changing me from Agent of Service of the corporation
to his name, to loans, getting loans that were unauthorized, by using me
as a manager of a corporation with a lame excuse that I was
untrustworthy.
You look at everything that he has done is just careless, bad faith. I
mean, any problems that he would have found is not acceptable that he
didn’t call me personally and say, “hey, what do you think about this?”
I now know if you look at the proposal letter where he said he has the
monies to invest, he has the Human Resources to turn my company into
a regional airline, and what he did to that effect, and he did to all the
corporate duties that he was supposed to do is evident that he had it all
planned.
63
He took two months, two months after he took control of the companies,
he took months to pay his personal debts, invoices that weren’t even
invoiced to Air America. It was invoiced to him, the lawyers’ fees. His
due diligence agents, he paid from Air America. A $35,000 home theater
for his personal use he paid from Air America. In his deposition, he said
again, “Oh, it was a mistake.” These and many more. Not paying back
the $250,000 that he paid me by selling a corporate seat. At least, he
should have returned that money to the corporation, but no, he never
did.
That’s all grossly negligent . . ..
June 30, 2023 Trial Tr. at 21:17-22:15.
The Feliciano Defendants take this question out of context. This question
followed an unobjected-to line of questioning where Mr. Rebarber was asked to
describe the factual basis for his various claims against the Feliciano Defendants.
See id. at 16:13-16 (“Mr. Rebarber, you are claiming in your suit against Mr.
Feliciano, obviously his wife in the conjugal partnership, illegally benefited from the
company. Why so? Why is that?”); id. at 16:20-21 (“You are also claiming that Mr.
Feliciano was grossly negligent in managing the corporation. Why is that?”). Mr.
Rebarber answered each of these questions with his view of the evidence, not with
legal pronouncements.
Following these questions, Attorney Mercado asked Mr.
Rebarber why he was making a gross negligence claim about the way Mr. Feliciano
had handled Air America as a corporation, not for a legal definition of gross
negligence.
Notably, Mr. Olmo-Rodriguez failed to object to this question and response. “It
is a basic tenet of our law that in order to preserve an evidentiary issue for review,
the party opposing the admission of the evidence must make a timely objection.”
64
United States v. Merserve, 271 F.3d 314, 324 (1st Cir. 2001) (citing FED. R. EVID.
103(a)(1)). Where a party failed to properly preserve an objection, a “court may take
notice of a plain error affecting a substantial right.” FED. R. EVID. 103(d). “[P]lain
error ‘entails a quadripartite showing: (1) that there was error; (2) that it was plain;
(3) that the error affected substantial rights; and (4) that the error affected the
fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’” Meserve, 271 F.3d
at 321-22 (quoting United States v. Eirby, 262 F.3d 31, 36 (1st Cir. 2001)).
Applying these principles, the Court easily concludes that there was no error,
much less plain error. As the context of the question makes clear, Mr. Rebarber was
being asked why he was claiming that Mr. Feliciano had been grossly negligent. This
is much like a contention interrogatory, where the party is asked to set forth the facts
supporting its contentions. See Mass. Elektron N. Am., Inc. v. Applied Chemistries,
Inc., 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 225266, at *9 (D. Mass. July 26, 2019) (“Contention
interrogatories are a proper means to establish the factual and legal bases for the
adverse party’s claims”). Allowing this commonly accepted convention did not affect
the Feliciano Defendants substantial rights. Nor did it affect the fairness, integrity,
or public reputation of judicial proceedings. Mr. Rebarber was asked to explain to the
jury the factual basis for his gross negligence claim against Mr. Feliciano. There is
nothing at all improper about the question.
Furthermore, Mr. Rebarber’s response did not allude to or define a legal term.
See June 30, 2022 Trial Tr. at 21:17-23:21 (ECF No. 339). To the contrary, in his
testimony, Mr. Rebarber described his perception of the facts and his motivation for
65
filing suit. See id. Instead, in line with this line of questioning, Attorney Mercado
asked Mr. Rebarber to describe the factual basis for his claim that Mr. Feliciano was
grossly negligent in his handling of the corporation: “That’s regarding the airline, but
regarding the corporation. What is gross negligence? Why are you alleging gross
negligence of Mr. Feliciano?” It appears that Attorney Mercado made a slip of the
tongue when he asked, “What is gross negligence?” He immediately clarified his
question: “Why are you alleging gross negligence of Mr. Feliciano?” The Feliciano
Defendants have seized upon Attorney Mercado’s slip of the tongue, which he
immediately corrected, as a ground for a new trial. If Mr. Rebarber had answered
the question by instructing the jury on the law, it would be one thing. But Mr.
Rebarber’s response was to the clarified question and did not touch on the legal
definition of gross negligence.
Even if Mr. Feliciano were correct that Mr. Rebarber’s testimony led the jury
to confuse legal standards (which the Court does not conclude), the Court’s jury
instructions 2 clearly defined gross negligence for the jury in writing prior to their
2
The relevant jury instructions read:
REBARBER’S BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY CLAIM AGAINST
FELICIANO
Mr. Rebarber has asserted that Mr. Feliciano breached fiduciary duties under
Puerto Rico law and in doing so, caused him damages. Mr. Rebarber must prove each
element of his claim by a preponderance of the evidence.
...
To overcome this presumption, Mr. Rebarber must establish that Mr.
Feliciano’s conduct was grossly negligent. Gross negligence consists of a complete lack
of care or so small a degree of diligence that justifies the belief that the defendant acted
with complete indifference for the interest and welfare of the other party.
66
deliberations and instructed them to follow that standard. 3 See Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102 (“In a civil case, the party asserting error bears the burden of
demonstrating that the error was harmful, i.e., that it affected that party's
substantial rights. In determining whether an error affected a party's substantial
right[s], the central question is whether this court can say with fair assurance . . .
that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error”) (internal citations
omitted).
Indeed, the Court adopted virtually verbatim Mr. Feliciano’s proposed
definition of gross negligence under Puerto Rico law. Compare Pl.’s Proposed Jury
instructions at 2 (ECF No. 202) (“As used in Puerto Rico, gross negligence consists of
complete lack of care or so small a degree of diligence that justifies the belief that the
defendant acted with complete indifference for the interest and welfare of the other
party”), with Jury Instructions, July 1, 2023 Trial Tr. at 115:21-24 (“Gross negligence
consists of a complete lack of care or so small degree of diligence that justifies the
belief that the defendant acted with complete indifference for the interest and welfare
of any other party”).
3
The relevant jury instructions on their general duty reads as follows:
General Rules Concerning Jury Duties
It is your duty as jurors to follow the law as stated in the instructions of the
Court, and to apply these rules of law to the facts as you find them from the evidence
in the case.
You are not to single out one instruction alone as stating the law but must
consider the instructions as a whole.
Neither are you to be concerned with the wisdom of any rule of law stated by
the Court. Regardless of any opinion you may have as to what the law ought to be, it
would be a violation of your sworn duty to base a verdict upon any other view of the
law than that given in the instructions of the Court; just as it would be a violation of
your duty, as judges of the facts, to base a verdict upon anything but the evidence in
the case.
67
Again, the Court rejects the Feliciano Defendants’ claim of error.
The
contention line of questions posed to Mr. Rebarber were proper, Mr. Rebarber’s
response referred exclusively to facts, not law, and the Court clearly instructed the
jury as to the proper legal standard for gross negligence. Therefore, the Feliciano
Defendants’ fifth claim of error is unavailing.
D.
The Jury’s Finding that Mr. Feliciano Was Grossly Negligent
Was Not Against the Clear Weight of the Evidence
The parties agree that Article 4.03 of Puerto Rico’s General Corporation Law,
14 LPRA sec. 3563 (2011), is at the core of the dispute about Mr. Feliciano’s alleged
gross negligence. Article 4.03 outlines, in relevant part, that: “Directors and officers
shall be obliged to devote to the affairs of the corporation and to the exercise of their
duties the attention and care which in a similar position and under analogous
circumstances a responsible and competent director or officer would execute in
applying his/her business judgment in good faith.” Id. (emphasis supplied).
The parties disagree, however, on the outer contours of a director’s obligations.
On the one hand, the Feliciano Defendants emphasize the business judgement rule
and argue it is for Mr. Rebarber to rebut the “presumption that in making a business
decision, directors acted on an informed basis, in good faith, and in the honest belief
that the action taken was in the best interests of the company.” Feliciano’s Mot. at
19. Further, the Feliciano Defendants argue that “in Puerto Rico, gross negligence
consists of complete lack of care or so small a degree of diligence that justifies the
belief that the defendant acted with complete indifference.” Id. at 20. Therefore, they
contend, gross negligence is a “difficult threshold to reach,” id., and Mr. Rebarber
68
failed to meet this burden because he “did not present evidence that Feliciano was
grossly negligent and certainly did not overcome the presumption that Feliciano acted
with a reasonable degree of care, in good faith and in the best interests of AA.” Id. at
21. The Feliciano Defendants claim that Mr. Rebarber “would only refer to Economist
Cao, and state conclusory statements, not factual, only to confuse the matter with a
defamation claim.” Id.
In response, Mr. Rebarber situates the obligation of directors in a broader
context by pointing to Article 2.03 of the Corporations Law, 14 LPRA § 3523 (2011).
Rebarber’s Opp’n at 23-24. Article 2.03 outlines that “[t]he authority and powers
conferred on . . . directors and officers shall be enjoyed and shall be exercised . . . for
the benefit of the corporation’s shareholders and for the prudent management of the
corporation, their business and affairs, as well as for the promotion of their objectives
[and] purposes.”
14 LPRA § 3523 (2011).
This greater context, Mr. Rebarber
contends, “sets forth the specific obligation to carry out [the corporation’s] tasks in a
capable and responsible manner, but always in accordance with the interests of the
entity.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at 24. “Naturally,” he continues, “failure to observe these
duties . . . could generate personal responsibility.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber next counters the Feliciano Defendants’ claim that no factual
evidence was provided; he points to Mr. Feliciano’s admissions that both the Yellow
Media loan to Air America and the transfer of four aircraft from Air America to Yellow
Media
were
completed
without
a
corporate
resolution,
consultation,
or
communication with Mr. Rebarber, that Mr. Feliciano never held shareholder
69
meetings, and that Mr. Feliciano bought personal items with Air America’s money.
Id. at 25-26 (citing June 24, 2022 Trial Tr. at 37-40 (ECF No. 323); June 23, 2022
Trial Tr. at 105-108 (ECF No. 324)). Mr. Rebarber also refers to his own testimony,
during which he stated that “Mr. Feliciano did not allow him to see the books once
the deal was closed, keeping him out of the loop and never calling him, not even after
the hurricanes and despite Mr. Rebarber repeatedly requesting he do so” and that
Mr. Feliciano paid a personal debt to Mr. Rebarber using the proceeds of the sale of
one of Air America’s aircraft. Id. at 27-28 (citing June 29, 2022 Trial Tr. at 63, 68
(ECF No. 338); June 23, 2022 Trial Tr. at 40, 53 (ECF No. 324)).
After weighing the evidence presented, the jury found Mr. Feliciano was
grossly negligent. In fact, as earlier noted, the jury did so using the same definition
of gross negligence Mr. Feliciano proposed to the Court at trial and now cites in his
post-trial motion. Compare Feliciano’s Mot. at 20 (“As used in Puerto Rico, gross
negligence consists of complete lack of care or so small a degree of diligence that
justifies the belief that the defendant acted with complete indifference”), with Jury
Instructions, July 1, 2023 Trial Tr. at 115:21-24 (“Gross negligence consists of a
complete lack of care or so small degree of diligence that justifies the belief that the
defendant acted with complete indifference for the interest and welfare of any other
party”). As the jury finding of gross negligence is not contrary to the weight of the
evidence, the Court declines to upset it.
The Court’s independent assessment of the evidence is entirely consistent with
the jury verdict. Even under Mr. Feliciano’s narrower reading of the obligations of a
70
director, he failed to meet them. The evidence demonstrates that Mr. Feliciano used
the assets of Air America improperly for personal gain and ignored the best interests
of his minority shareholder by purchasing personal items and paying off personal
debts. These acts, among others, are palpably inconsistent with Mr. Feliciano’s
obligations under Puerto Rico law to act in the best interest of all the shareholders as
a director.
As Mr. Rebarber presented evidence that supports the jury’s finding that Mr.
Feliciano was grossly negligent and did not act with a reasonable degree of care, in
good faith, or in the best interests of Air America, the Court holds the jury’s
determination was not against the clear weight of the evidence. Thus, the Court
denies the Feliciano Defendants’ motion to vacate judgment or for a new trial on this
issue.
E.
The Jury’s Finding That There Was a Causal Connection
Between Mr. Feliciano’s Actions and Mr. Rebarber’s Damages
Was Not Against the Weight of the Evidence
The Feliciano Defendants also argue that the jury was incorrect in its finding
that Mr. Feliciano’s negligence was linked to Air America’s demise. Feliciano’s Mot.
at 25. This is so, they claim, because the causal nexus “cannot be satisfied unless the
plaintiff proves that the injury was reasonably foreseeable and thus, could have been
avoided had the defendant acted with due care.” Id. at 25-26 (citing Grajales-Romero
v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 194 F.3d 288, 296 (1st Cir. 1999); and Woods-Leber v. Hyatt
Hotels of P.R., Inc., 124 F.3d 47, 50-51 (1st Cir. 1997)). By the Feliciano Defendants’
estimation, “Rebarber did not overcome the foreseeability standard . . . because it was
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impossible for Feliciano to foresee the passing of Hurricanes Irma and Maria and that
one of the airplanes would suffer an accident due to pilot error.” Id. at 26.
Mr. Rebarber takes no issue with the legal standard put forth by the Feliciano
Defendants. Instead, he argues that a “review of the testimony . . . shows a clear
causal connection between Mr. Feliciano’s acts and Mr. Rebarber’s damages.”
Rebarber’s Opp’n at 30. Mr. Rebarber characterizes Mr. Feliciano’s “dubious financial
dealings, combined with the loss of Air America’s airline certificate as a result of his
faulty management” as the catalysts leading to Air America’s worthlessness and
ultimately the damages Mr. Rebarber faced. Id.
At trial, the jury weighed the evidence before it and found Mr. Feliciano’s
actions and inactions caused Mr. Rebarber’s damages. That finding is consistent with
and not against the clear weight of the evidence as a reasonable jury could find that
Mr. Feliciano undermined the financial security of Air America long before
Hurricanes Irma and Maria, through his comingling of personal and business funds.
See, e.g., June 24, 2022 Trial Tr. at 5:19-25, 36:7-25, 37:1-14, 38:1-23, 39:1-9; June 23,
2022 Trial Tr. at 105:18-22, 106:10-25, 107:1-25, 108:15-24, 113:8-12; June 29, 2022
Trial Tr. at 57:16-25, 58:1-2, 63:1-7, 68:1-9, 108:14-25, 110:1-11.
As Mr. Rebarber presented sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding
that Mr. Feliciano’s negligence was the cause of Mr. Rebarber’s damages, the Court
holds the jury’s determination was not against the clear weight of the evidence. Thus,
the Court denies the Feliciano Defendants’ motion to vacate judgment or for a new
trial on this issue.
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F.
The Jury’s Finding that Mr. Rebarber Was Not Comparatively
Negligent Was Not Against the Weight of the Evidence
The Feliciano Defendants also maintain that “[t]he unchallenged evidence
shows that Rebarber failed to correct the deficiencies on the airplanes in a timely and
adequate manner which caused AA to be overvalued and caused Feliciano and AA to
invest large amounts of money to maintain AA’s operations.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 27.
They further argue that “instead of making the needed repairs, Rebarber paid himself
more than $500,000 in dividends that should have been used to maintain the
airplanes in adequate condition. Therefore, Rebarber is also liable for the loss of
value of his 20% of AA’s stock.” Id.
Mr. Rebarber asserts that the “already cited testimony demonstrates the
airplanes were being maintained adequately prior to the December 17, 2014 Stock
Purchase Agreement.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at 31. Therefore, he contends, the Feliciano
Defendants’ “argument should be disregarded for lack of support.” Id.
The Feliciano Defendants’ comparative negligence claim once again falls on
precept that juries are the best judges of conflicting testimony. The testimony they
offer suggests Mr. Rebarber did not correct the deficiencies on the airplanes in a
timely and adequate matter. Mr. Rebarber’s more persuasive testimony and evidence
prove precisely the opposite.
As the First Circuit has made clear that “conflicting testimony or a question as
to the credibility of a witness are not sufficient grounds for granting a new trial,”
Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d at 427, the Court refuses to act as a thirteenth juror and
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disrupt the judgment of a jury of Mr. Feliciano’s peers. See Rodríguez-Valentin, 27
F.4th at 21; see also Feliciano-Hernandez v. Pereira-Castillo, 663 F.3d 527, 537 (1st
Cir. 2011) (“[O]ne may not argue that the verdict was against the weight of the
evidence simply by citing to the evidence which was favorable to one's position. If
evidence was offered to the contrary, the jury was free to accept or reject each party's
evidence, and in most cases, a court is not warranted in overriding the jury's choice”).
The Court denies the Feliciano Defendants’ motion for a vacated judgment or a new
trial on this ground because Mr. Rebarber offered sufficient evidence so that the jury’s
verdict is not clearly against the weight of the evidence.
G.
Remittitur is Not Appropriate
Having decided that the Feliciano Defendants are not entitled to vacating the
judgment or to a new trial, the Court turns to their alternative argument: that
remittitur should be ordered under Rule 59 “because the jury’s verdict exceeds any
rational appraisal or estimate of the damages that could be based on the evidence.”
Feliciano’s Mot. at 28 (citing Astro-Med, Inc. v. Nihon Kohden Am., Inc., 591 F.3d 1,
13 (1st Cir. 20009)).
“The standard of review of damage awards places an enormous burden on the
party challenging the award.” Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d at 428. “A party seeking
remittitur ‘bears a heavy burden of showing that an award is grossly excessive,
inordinate, shocking to the conscience of the court, or so high that it would be a denial
of justice to permit to stand.’” Sánchez v. Foley, 972 F.3d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 2020) (quoting
Currier v. United Techs. Corp., 393 F.3d 246, 256 (1st Cir. 2004).
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“In reviewing an award of damages, the district court is obliged to review the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party,” in this case Mr.
Rebarber. Wortley v. Camplin, 333 F.3d 284, 297 (1st Cir. 2005); accord E. Mountain
Platform Tennis, Inc. v. Sherwin–Williams Co., 40 F.3d 492, 502 (1st Cir.1994).
Courts will not “upset a jury’s damage award unless it ‘exceeds any rational appraisal
or estimate of the damages that could be based on the evidence before the jury.’”
Sánchez, 972 F.3d at 17 (emphasis supplied) (quoting Smith v. Kmart Corp., 177 F.3d
19, 29 (1st Cir. 1999)). The rationale is that “[t]ranslating legal damage into money
damages is a matter peculiarly within a jury’s ken,” Smith v. Kmart Corp., 177 F.3d
19, 30 (1st Cir. 1999), therefore courts “rarely will override the jury’s judgment on the
appropriate amount of damages to be awarded.” Brown v. Freedman Baking Co., 810
F.2d 6, 11 (1st Cir. 1987). Accord Velazquez v. Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d 425, 428
(1st Cir. 1993).
In reviewing the evidence, the Court keeps in mind that the
“paramount focus in this analysis is the evidence presented at trial.” Gutierrez
Rodriguez v. Cartagena, 882 F.2d 553, 579 (1st Cir. 1989).
A review of the evidence presented at trial shows the jury award for damages
has a “substantial basis in the evidence.” Tejada Bautista v. Fuentes Agostini, 258 F.
Supp. 2d 18, 22 (D.P.R. 2003). While the Feliciano Defendants argue that “[t]here
was evidence that the company assets were overvalued as the log books of the
airplanes were unreliable and failed to disclose the real situation of the airplanes,”
Feliciano’s Mot. at 28, Mr. Rebarber retorts that “the logbooks were not unreliable”
as “maintenance was kept accordingly and errors in the logbooks were corrected soon
75
after being recorded.” Rebarber’s Opp’n at 32-33. As this issue of weighing conflicting
testimony was decided by the jury, the Court does not reweigh it. Instead, the Court
points out as it did above that there is a substantial basis in the evidence to support
the conclusion that both the valuation of the company at the time of the Agreement
signing and the damages award are accurate. See, e.g., June 28, 2022 Trial Tr. at
82:5-99:13 (ECF No. 335); June 22, 2022 Trial Tr. at 10:1-23, 11:11-19, 74:17-20,
74:25-75:1 (ECF No. 306); June 23, 2022 Trial Tr. at 744:13-25, 75:8-10, 81:5-9, 81:2125, 82:10-15, 99-102, 114:17-18, 119:18-22, 120:1-3 (ECF No. 324).
The Feliciano Defendants also urge that the “rest of the damages claimed by
Rebarber should be dismissed [because] Rebarber cannot claim any part of the value
of the airplanes, nor good will of the company as all of that was included in the
valuation for the stock purchase and is therefore included in the value of 20% of the
stock.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 28. Similarly, they contend that “Rebarber cannot claim
damages to his morale or reputation as he can only claim the value of his stock.” Id.
In response, Mr. Rebarber points out that the Feliciano Defendants cite “no
specific language in the [stock purchase agreement] that imposes such a limitation,”
and contends that this argument “is unsupported and should not be considered.”
Rebarber’s Opp’n at 34.
In reply, the Feliciano Defendants further develop their claim, saying
“Rebarber cannot claim loss of goodwill on a corporation that does not have his name
and the jury could not award damages for loss of goodwill because no evidence of such
76
damages was presented . . . The name Air America is property of AA, therefore if it
lost any goodwill, only AA can claim it from Feliciano.” Feliciano’s Reply at 7.
Mr. Rebarber accurately points out that the Feliciano Defendants cite “no
specific language in the [stock purchase agreement] that imposes such a limitation”
in the calculation of damages. Rebarber’s Opp’n at 34. Adding on, Mr. Rebarber
points out that they cite “no Puerto Rico jurisprudence or law to support [his] damage
cap argument.” Id. The Feliciano Defendants do cite Wortley v. Camplin, 333 F.3d
284, 297 (1st Cir. 2003), for the proposition that “Rebarber can only be awarded the
market value of the stock.” Feliciano’s Mot. at 28.
But as Mr. Rebarber points out, Wortley is readily distinguishable from the
present case. See Rebarber’s Opp’n at 33. The Wortley court was addressing the fair
market value limitation of damages in the context of an alleged violation of §10b of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. See Wortley, 333 F.3d at 296 (“When there has
ben a violation of Section 10-b, the ordinary measure of damages is for a defrauded
seller to recover the difference between what the seller received for the shares and
the fair market value of the shares at the time of the sale”).
Mr. Feliciano points the Court to no precedent that suggests this fair market
value limitation applies to buyers as well as sellers, much less cases outside of the
§10b context. The Court is independently aware of none. Absent sufficient authority
to ground Mr. Feliciano’s basis for remittitur, the Court declines to engage with this
argument. See Cardona Román v. Univ. of P.R., No. CV 10-1363(DRD), 2012 WL
13170522, at *7 (D.P.R. Feb. 14, 2012) (declining to tackle conclusory and
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unsupported arguments); Rios-Pineiro v. United States, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
159459, *10 (D.P.R. March 31, 2010) (same).
As the award has a substantial basis in evidence, the amount awarded to Mr.
Rebarber by the jury is not “grossly excessive, inordinate, shocking to the conscience
of the court, or so high that it would be a denial of justice to permit to stand.” Sánchez,
972 F.3d at 17. The Feliciano Defendants cite no precedent to support their argument
to the contrary. Therefore, the Court will not upset the jury’s damages award and
denies the Feliciano Defendants’ motion for remittitur on the grounds of excessive
damages.
V.
CONCLUSION
The Court DISMISSES as moot Plaintiffs’/Counterclaim Defendants’ Motion
under Rule 59 for New Trial (ECF No. 279) and DENIES Plaintiffs’/Counterclaim
Defendants’ Motion to Set Aside Judgment as to Christel Bengoa, Conjugal
Partnership Feliciano-Bengoa, Air America Inc., Luis Feliciano-Munoz, and their
Motion for New Trial (ECF No. 358).
SO ORDERED.
/s/ John A. Woodcock, Jr.
JOHN A. WOODCOCK, JR.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Dated this 27th day of December, 2023
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