After the bankruptcy court rejected CET’s claim that it was entitled to IDL’s intellectual property under the terms of the parties’ licensing agreement, CET sued Crotty for alleged fraudulent statements made in the course of negotiating the IDL settlement. Judge Sanders dismissed the fraud case and sanctioned CET $100,000 after finding that CET and Preston knowingly brought claims against Crotty which were “wholly insubstantial, frivolous and not advanced in good faith.”
In the instant action, Crotty sued CET and Preston, alleging claims of malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and civil conspiracy arising from CET’s failed fraud case. Defendants counterclaimed, asserting that certain factual allegations in Crotty’s complaint (which “attack[ed] Preston’s professional reputation and business ethics”) coupled with Crotty’s conspiracy claim constituted tortious interference. In response, Crotty argued that the counterclaims should be dismissed under the Commonwealth’s anti-SLAPP statute, G.L. c. 231, § 59H.
Judge Salinger agreed. The anti-SLAPP statute bars civil claims that are based on a party’s “exercise of its right of petition under the constitution of the United States or of the commonwealth,” and the “commencement of litigation is quintessential petitioning activity.” Reasoning that Defendants’ counterclaims were “based solely on Crotty’s actions in filing his complaint,” Judge Salinger ruled that Crotty had satisfied his burden.
According to Judge Salinger, the burden then shifted to Defendants to establish either that: (1) Crotty’s claims were “devoid of merit” or (2) Defendants’ “primary purpose in asserting counterclaims was to seek compensation for unlawful injury.”
As to whether Crotty’s claims lacked merit, Defendants asserted that many of Crotty’s allegations were “unnecessary and serve[d] only to impugn Preston’s character.” Judge Salinger observed, however, that “claims are not devoid of merit merely because they could have been stated differently. If a civil complaint has reasonable factual and legal support, that does not disappear by adding additional, unnecessary allegations.”
As to the primary purpose of Defendants’ counterclaims, Judge Salinger ruled that Defendants could not establish that the primary purpose of their counterclaims was to seek damages—rather than an attempt to “chill Crotty’s exercise of his right to petition for relief in court”—where Defendants’ “counterclaim is based solely on petitioning activity in the same action.” Judge Salinger also considered the “course of [the parties’] prior proceedings,” which included Judge Sanders’ finding in CET’s failed fraud suit that “Preston deliberately had CET assert baseless claims against Crotty in an effort to gain an unfair advantage.”
Judge Salinger ultimately dismissed Defendants’ tortious interference counterclaims and awarded Crotty his reasonable legal fees and costs as provided by the anti-SLAPP statute.
The Business Litigation Session of the Massachusetts Superior Court: BLS-2
Docket Number: 1984CV03971-BLS2
Case Name: Thomas J. Crotty v. Continuum Energy Technologies, John T. Preston, and Others
Date of Decision: May 12, 2020
Judge: Kenneth W. Salinger