GEORGE A. O'TOOLE, Jr., District Judge.
The plaintiff's claims in this case all center on the allegation that the defendant, CT Mason, Inc. d/b/a Mason Capital Partners ("CTM") wrongfully ceased paying client referral fees to it, Jackson Financial Services, LLC ("JFS"), in breach of the parties' contract. This case was referred to a magistrate judge for full pretrial management. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment, and CTM moved to amend its answer to add two affirmative defenses. The magistrate judge issued two Reports and Recommendations ("R&Rs"), the first (dkt. no. 151) recommending that the defendant's motion to amend be denied, and the second (dkt. no. 152) recommending that both motions for summary judgment be denied. The defendant filed objections to both R&Rs.
The original complaint (dkt. no. 1) contained a single count for breach of contract. It alleged that in 1991, Albert D. Mason and Jackson Financial Co., Inc. ("Jackson Financial") (a different entity from the present plaintiff) entered into a written "Investment Advisor Referral Agreement," pursuant to which Mason, an individual, agreed to pay Jackson Financial a referral fee for each investment client that Jackson Financial referred to Mason. The complaint alleged that in 2004 the Referral Agreement was assigned by Jackson Financial to the present plaintiff, JFS, pursuant to a written "Acknowledgement and Consent Agreement," executed by "the defendants." It further alleged a breach of that agreement by "the defendants," identified by the complaint as Mason, Albert D. Mason, Inc. d/b/a Mason Capital Partners, and CT Mason, Inc. d/b/a Mason Capital Partners. The plaintiff later moved to amend the complaint by adding additional counts for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and violation of Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 93A. The new claims were "based on the very same overall nucleus of facts" as the original breach of contract claim. (
At some point, the plaintiff settled with Mason and Albert D. Mason, Inc., leaving CTM as the only defendant in this action.
It is undisputed that CTM did not execute either written agreement. Indeed, CTM was not in existence at the time the agreements were executed, having been incorporated in 2006. Nor is there any allegation that thereafter CTM executed any writing purporting to bind it to the terms of the Referral or Consent Agreements. If, therefore, the amended complaint is construed as pleading only breach of the written agreements, a claim against CTM for liability under an express written contract (as the amended complaint seems plainly to allege) cannot succeed, and CTM would be entitled to summary judgment on that claim, as well as on the related claims that are dependent on the contract claim.
Arguably, however, the amended complaint might instead be construed, as the magistrate judge found, to plead against CTM breach of an implied-in-fact contract entered into by the parties through the course of their conduct.
The contract alleged in the amended complaint is that CTM agreed to pay the plaintiff a fee for each client the plaintiff referred to CTM. At least at first blush, such a contract appears to fall within the scope of the statute. There has been no argument (yet, at least) that there is a writing signed by CTM that could satisfy the statute.
It is SO ORDERED.