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Nanoventions v. Daniels
Mones Law Group, Stuart Matthew Mones, Atlanta, for appellant.
Steven Daniels, Pro Se.
Bonnie Hutchinson, Pro Se.
811Nanoventions Holdings, LLC ("Nanoventions"), appeals from the trial court’s final order and judgment as to BIW Enterprises, LLC ("BIW"), entered on April 19, 2022;1; its order and judgment as to defendants Steven Daniels a/k/a Steven Daniel ("Daniels") and Bonnie Hutchinson entered on December 12, 2018; and its order denying Nanoventions’s motion for reconsideration entered on March 8, 2019. On appeal, Nanoventions claims that the trial court erred in denying its demand for damages and attorney fees against Hutchinson, including those fees mandated by OCGA § 16-14-6 (c). We reverse the trial court’s judgment as to the availability of damages against Hutchinson and remand for further proceedings as to the amount of damages awarded against Hutchinson and fees properly awarded against her, Daniels, and BIW.
Construed in favor of the judgment, the record shows that, over several years while serving as Chief Financial Officer, Daniels stole nearly $2 million from his employer, Nanoventions. Some of those stolen funds were used to fund BIW, a Georgia limited liability corporation of which Daniels was a member. BIW’s purpose was to provide consulting for medical marijuana co-ops. Some of the stolen funds were used to purchase a home owned jointly by Daniels and Hutchinson, who was Daniels’s fiancée at the time in question. Daniels’s theft was eventually discovered by Nanoventions, and he was arrested, indicted, and convicted of various offenses in Forsyth County, Georgia related to the theft.
Nanoventions sued Daniels, Hutchinson, BIW, Karen Jacobs, Ronnie Hicks, and multiple other individuals and entities (collectively, 812"unspecified defendants"). The complaint consisted of nine counts:2 Counts 1-3 (violations of OCGA § 16-14-4 (a), (b), and (c), respectively, of the Georgia Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations ("RICO") Act); Count 4 (fraud against Daniels only); Count 5 (conversion against Daniels only); Count 6 (breach of fiduciary duty against Daniels only); Count 7 (unjust enrichment); Count 8 (punitive and treble damages); and Count 9 (bad-faith attorney fees pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11).
In a previous appeal,3 this Court described the relevant procedural history of this litigation as follows:
… Over the course of the litigation, the trial court dismissed several of the unspecified defendants from the action without prejudice and Nanoventions filed a "Dismissal without prejudice and acknowledgment of service," purporting to dismiss the other unspecified defendants.
The trial court granted summary judgment to Nanoventions on most of its claims against Daniels, and the court subsequently entered a judgment awarding Nanoventions damages against Daniels in the amount of $6,147,729.93. [H]owever, the trial court denied Nanoventions’ request for summary judgment as to its claim for conversion (Count 5), concluding that there were genuine disputes of material fact. In addition, the summary judgment order did not address Nanoventions’ claim for unjust enrichment (Count 7). The trial court entered a default judgment against BIW, reserving the issue of damages. The trial court also entered a default judgment against Hutchinson [after striking her answer as a discovery sanction], but ultimately concluded that Nanoventions was not entitled to collect damages from her. And … the trial court entered … [an order] granting judgment on the pleadings to Jacobs and Hicks.
Case No. A21A0167 (June 18, 2021). Nano-ventions filed a motion for reconsideration of the court’s order and judgment as to Daniels and Hutchinson, which the court denied. Nanoventions filed a direct appeal, which we dismissed, explaining that Nanoventions’s conversion and unjust enrichment claims against Daniels remained pending, the issue of damages against BIW remained pending, and Nanoventions’s 813failure to follow the required interlocutory appeal procedures under OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) deprived us of jurisdiction over the appeal.
Back in the trial court, Nanoventions’s claims for conversion and unjust enrichment against Daniels were voluntarily dismissed without prejudice. The court held a hearing on the issue of damages against BIW and entered a "Final Order and Judgment" on April 19, 2022, awarding Nanoventions com- pensatory damages of $135,000 against BIW, along with attorney fees and costs of $123,737.50 and post-judgment interest. Nanoventions then filed this direct appeal.
1. We first consider whether the trial court erred when it concluded that Nanoventions was not entitled to damages against Hutchinson because the complaint did not plead RICO violations against her with sufficient particularity.
[1] The trial court entered default judgment against Hutchinson based on her "willful" failure over a period of years to comply with its discovery orders. This Court has held that a party who has had a default judgment entered against it as a discovery sanction has forfeited the right to argue that the complaint against that party is inadequately pled. "By [her] wilful contempt of the orders of discovery," Hutchinson "has as a sanction suffered a default judgment and thereby forfeited any claim that the … complaint fails to state a cause of action." Jones v. Zezzo, 162 Ga. App. 281, 283, 290 S.E.2d 312 (1982).
[2, 3] Further, as in Zezzo, this complaint states a cause of action because it alleges that Hutchinson participated in the conspiracy to plunder Nanoventions’s assets and to benefit from that plunder. See Zezzo, 162 Ga. App. at 283, 290 S.E.2d 312 (). Although at least two acts by members are necessary to ground a RICO conspiracy claim, an individual member of that conspiracy need undertake only one act to be found to have participated in it. See Faillace v. Columbus Bank & Trust Co., 269 Ga. App. 866, 868 (2) (a) (i), 605 S.E.2d 450 (2004) () (emphasis supplied).
[4] Here, the trial court found in 2015, when it granted Nanoventions’s preliminary injunction, that (as an investigator testified) Daniels and Hutchinson used stolen funds to purchase their Cumming residence, the deed to which was held by both of them, by means of a single 2012 wire transfer of approximately $241,000. Hutchinson’s obtaining of benefit from that act—accepting the deed paid for with her partner’s ill-gotten gains—was sufficient to render her a member of the conspiracy adequately pled in this complaint. See Whaley v. 814State, 343 Ga. App. 701, 704 (1), 808 S.E.2d 88 (2017) (). It follows that the trial court erred when it concluded that Nanoventions had failed to state a claim against Hutchinson and declined to award damages against her for that reason. We therefore reverse the trial court’s order declining to award damages against Hutchinson and remand the case to the trial court with direction to conduct a damages hearing with respect to the damages sought from Hutchinson.
[5] 2. Nanoventions argues that the trial court erred in refusing to award it attorney fees as mandated by OCGA § 16-14-6 (c). "Because this question is a legal one, we review the record de novo and apply a plain legal error standard of review." (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Stewart Ausband Enterprises v. Holden, 349 Ga. App. 295, 297 (1), 826 S.E.2d 138 (2019).
OCGA § 16-14-6 (c) provides in relevant part:
Any person who is injured by reason of any violation of Code Section 16-14-4 [] shall have a cause of action for three times the actual damages sustained and, where appropriate, punitive damages. Such person shall also recover attorney’s fees in the trial and appellate courts and costs of investigation and litigation reasonably incurred.
(Emphasis supplied.)
[6] Here, the trial court awarded attorney fees in the full amount incurred against BIW, but declined to do so against Daniels or Hutchinson, and we have not found any binding authority on the question of whether RICO attorney fees may or must be awarded jointly and severally. See, e.g., Dee v. Sweet, 218 Ga. App. 18, 20-21 (2) (a), 460 S.E.2d 110 (1995) (physical precedent only) ("[I]n light of the practical difficulties required in allocating attorney fees to specific claims in RICO cases, we will not require it unless the unsuccessful claims and those not receiving awards of attorney fees are distinctly different claims for relief based on different facts and legal theories.") (citation and punctuation omitted); Inter Agency, Inc. v. Danco Financial Corp., 203 Ga. App. 418, 418, 417 S.E.2d 46 (1992) (); Functional Prod. Trading, S. A. v. JITC, LLC, 2014 WL 3749213 at *22 (N.D. Ga. 2019) (). We therefore vacate the trial court’s attorney fees rulings with respect to Daniels, Hutchinson, and BIW, and in addition to the direction given to the trial court in Division 1, we direct the trial court to elicit briefing and conduct a hearing on the issue of attorney fees against these three defendants (keeping in mind that OCGA § 16-14-6 (c) states that...
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