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Prism Grp., Inc. v. Slingshot Techs. Corp.
Defendant Slingshot Technologies Corporation (Slingshot) appeals from an amended judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Prism Group, Inc. (Prism). Following the jury-waived trial, a judge of the Superior Court allowed Prism's motion to amend the pleadings to conform to the evidence presented at trial, adding claims for breaches of two contracts not pleaded in the original complaint. The judge subsequently found in Prism's favor on both of those claims. The sole issue presented is whether the judge erred in allowing Prism's motion to amend. While we discern no abuse of discretion in the allowance of that motion, we conclude that Slingshot should have been given the opportunity, as it requested, to present additional evidence. Consequently, we vacate the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
Background. "We summarize the facts as found by the judge, supplemented by undisputed information from the record, with certain facts reserved for later discussion." Schultz v. Tilley, 91 Mass. App. Ct. 539, 540 (2017). The president of Slingshot, Adam Pasternack, and the president of Prism, Nick Baran, have had a business relationship since at least August 2004. At that time, Pasternack was the president of another company named Rocket Messaging, Inc. (Rocket), which provided outbound fax broadcasting services. In 2004, Rocket entered into an agreement with Prism to pay approximately a fifty-five to sixty percent commission for fax broadcast customers that Prism procured for Rocket (the Rocket agreement).3 Prism referred a number of customers to Rocket in 2004 and 2005 and was paid pursuant to the Rocket agreement.
In early 2006, Baran, on behalf of Prism, contacted Pasternack regarding a new customer, Curaspan, Inc. (Curaspan). Curaspan was a health services company. Its need for fax services pertained to the transmission of protected health care information to various parties. Nearly all communications in response to Baran from Pasternack concerning Curaspan appeared under the Slingshot logo. Slingshot agreed to pay Prism a commission of fifteen percent on Curaspan's invoices.4 About seven years later, in 2013, Prism brought another health services company named eClinical Works (eClinical) to Slingshot. Like Curaspan, eClinical also used Slingshot's fax services to send protected health care information to various parties. Slingshot agreed to pay Prism a ten percent commission on eClinical's invoices.5
Eventually, Slingshot stopped making the Curaspan and eClinical commission payments to Prism. Prism then filed suit against Slingshot and Rocket for, among other claims, breach of contract.6 Specifically, as alleged in the complaint, the breach of contract claim was based on the Rocket agreement. Prism alleged that Slingshot was the successor corporation or alter ego of Rocket.7 Summary judgment entered in Slingshot's favor on the theory that it was liable as a successor corporation, and the case proceeded to trial on the theory that Slingshot was liable for breach of contract as Rocket's alter ego.
At the start of trial, the issue whether Prism's complaint also alleged breaches of the Curaspan and eClinical agreements arose. Counsel for Slingshot maintained that neither one of those contracts was at issue if only because, as stated in opening arguments, those contracts "were never [pleaded] in this case." Regardless, Baran testified extensively about the Curaspan and eClinical agreements during Prism's case-in-chief. The issue arose again when Slingshot moved for a directed verdict and the judge noted that "there [were] various theories at play," including whether Prism had a "separate and distinct contractual claim against Slingshot based on an agreement other than the [Rocket agreement]." However, the judge explicitly declined to address the issue at that time, noting that he would give Prism an opportunity to persuade him that its complaint alleged breaches of the Curaspan and eClinical agreements.
After the close of all evidence, Prism submitted a motion pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 15 (b), 365 Mass. 761 (1974), to amend its pleadings to conform to the evidence to allege breaches of the Curaspan and eClinical agreements. The motion was allowed. In a written memorandum and order, the judge explained that the parties were aware throughout discovery and at trial that the Curaspan and eClinical agreements existed between Slingshot and Prism, independent of the Rocket agreement, and that Slingshot was not prejudiced by the allowance of Prism's motion to amend the complaint to conform to the evidence presented on those agreements. On the issue of liability, the judge ultimately found that Slingshot was not liable under the Rocket agreement but that it was liable under the newly pleaded Curaspan and eClinical agreements. The judge explained that Baran, on behalf of Prism, knew when he negotiated the Curaspan and eClinical agreements that Prism was not entitled to the commission rate established in the Rocket agreement and that the Curaspan and eClinical agreements governed instead. The judge found that Prism performed its obligations under the Curaspan and eClinical agreements and that Slingshot breached those agreements when it failed to pay Prism the agreed-upon commissions for its services.
Slingshot argues that the judge abused his discretion in allowing Prism's motion to amend its pleadings to conform to the evidence because Slingshot never consented, either explicitly or implicitly, to a trial on Prism's claims for breaches of the Curaspan and eClinical agreements. Slingshot primarily relies on the fact that it asserted, throughout trial, that Prism never pleaded breaches of those agreements.8
Discussion. Massachusetts Rule of Civil Procedure 15 (b), 365 Mass. 761 (1974), provides that "issues not raised by the pleadings [but] tried by express or implied consent of the parties ... shall be treated in all respects as if they had been raised in the pleadings." To find implied consent under rule 15 (b), "it must [a]t least ... appear that the parties understood [that] the evidence [was] aimed at the unpleaded issue" (quotations and citation omitted). Allen v. Allen, 86 Mass. App. Ct. 295, 304 (2014). Rule 15 (b) further provides as follows:
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