Abdallah v. Rago

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 24, 2016
DocketN15C-03-043 JAP
StatusPublished

This text of Abdallah v. Rago (Abdallah v. Rago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abdallah v. Rago, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

JOHN A. PARKINS, JR. NEW CASTLE COUNTY COURTHOUSE JUDGE 500 NORTH KING STREET, SUITE 10400 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3733 TELEPHONE: (302) 255-2584

October 24, 2016

Nabil Abdallah Wilson B. Davis, Esquire 48 Fairway Road Tanisha L. Merced, Esquire Apartment 3A New Castle County Law Department Newark, Delaware 19711 87 Reads Way New Castle, Delaware 19720-1648

Re: Nabil Abdallah v. Joseph Rago and New Castle County C. A. No. N15C-03-043 JAP

Dear Mr. Abdallah and Counsel:

This is a ruling on Defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to

prosecute.

Background

This personal injury case arises from a November 28, 2013 motor

vehicle accident. At approximately 3:00 a.m. Defendant Joseph Rago, a

Master Corporal in the New Castle County police department, was

responding to an emergency in his patrol vehicle. His emergency lights were

on and his siren was activated when he entered an intersection controlled by

a traffic light. Plaintiff, who had the green light, entered the intersection and

his vehicle was struck by the County Police car. Plaintiff, then represented by counsel, filed suit on March 6, 2015, and

Defendants’ counsel deposed him the following October. At his deposition,

Plaintiff testified under oath that he was unable to work or drive as a result

of the injuries he suffered in the accident. Unknown to Plaintiff, Plaintiff was

surveilled immediately after the deposition. He was videotaped leaving the

building in which the deposition took place, driving to a nearby industrial

park where he entered and drove a commercial vehicle for a company known

as “All American Logistic.” A few days after the deposition, Plaintiff, his

counsel, and Defendants’ counsel appeared at mediation. During the

mediation the defendants showed Plaintiff the videotape, whereupon Plaintiff

abruptly left the mediation. A few days later Defendants’ counsel was

contacted by Plaintiff’s counsel or the mediator (it is not clear which) and the

parties worked out a settlement. Not long thereafter, Plaintiff’s counsel

wrote to the court that the matter had been settled.

Apparently Mr. Abdallah had second thoughts about the settlement

and refused to sign the papers. Defendants eventually filed a motion to

enforce settlement, and Plaintiff’s counsel filed a motion to withdraw his

appearance. The court conducted a hearing attended by Defendants’

counsel, Plaintiff’s counsel, and the Plaintiff himself. The court granted

Plaintiff’s counsel to withdraw and denied Defendants’ motion to enforce

settlement. The court advised Plaintiff of his right to retain a new attorney

or represent himself. Mr. Abdallah never found an attorney willing to

represent him, so he proceeded pro se throughout the rest of the case.

2 Thereafter the case was replete with Plaintiff’s repeated failures to

comply with his obligations, even though the court took pains to explain

those obligations and advise him of the consequences of a failure to do so.

The following summarizes the progress (actually the lack thereof) of the

matter after Mr. Abdallah undertook to represent himself.

 At the February 26, 2016 hearing in which the court granted

Plaintiff’s counsel’s motion to withdraw, the court directed

Plaintiff (who was present at that hearing) to appear in court for

a status conference on March 17, 2016. The same day the

court sent Mr. Abdallah and Defendant’s counsel a letter

confirming the March 17 date and directing them to appear.

 Mr. Abdallah did not appear at the March 17 conference nor did

he advise the court he would be unable to attend. Defendants’

counsel was present. At the conference the court scheduled the

pretrial conference for April 12, 2016 and required submission

of the pretrial order no later than April 7, 2016.

 The same day as the conference the court sent a letter to Mr.

Abdallah advising him of the deadlines and telling him that

“[f]ailure to comply with these deadlines will result in dismissal

of these claims.” (bold in original)

 Mr. Abdallah did not appear at the pretrial conference. Even

though not required to do so, prior to the scheduled conference

Defendants’ counsel prepared a draft pretrial order and sent it

3 to Mr. Abdallah. Counsel reported they had heard nothing from

Mr. Abdallah since February 26, 2016.

 The court would have been justified in dismissing the matter for

failure to prosecute at this juncture. Nonetheless it decided to

give Mr. Abdallah another chance. As such, it entered an order

directing Mr. Abdallah to show cause why his case should not

be dismissed for failure to prosecute.

 Mr. Abdallah timely responded to the order. In the response he

wrote:

Please be advised that [it] was only upon receiving and reading the letter of “ORDER” which was sent to me by yourself or the Superior Court of the State of Delaware that I became aware or fully aware that I had failed to meet letter’s deadlines which I was warned about in its March 17, 2016 scheduling letter.

Later in his response he continued:

Mr. Judge Parkins, please be advised that I did not receive any documentation informing me to appear before the court for a pretrial Conference at/on April 16, 2016 and therefore I had no knowledge that I was to do so.

 On April 29, 2016, the court reviewed the evidence and found

that Mr. Abdallah had received the notices and that his

response to the order to show cause was without merit. Despite

this, the court still did not dismiss the case. Rather, it found

that sanctions were in order. The court declined to enter

sanctions until Mr. Abdallah and Defendants had an

4 opportunity to weigh in on the issue of sanctions. It therefore

scheduled a hearing on sanctions for May 16, 2016.

 Mr. Abdallah attended the May 16 hearing. Here, the court gave

Mr. Abdallah yet another chance. It ordered him to pay the

county $200 (in two $100 monthly increments) to partially

defray the cost of having to send its attorneys to attend the

hearing which Mr. Abdallah did not attend. It also ordered Mr.

Abdallah to produce copies of his income tax returns (which

were relevant to his claims for lost wages) by June 30, 2016 and

expert reports by July 30, 2016. The court confirmed this in a

written order issued the same day.1 At the hearing the court

explained the importance of the expert reports and the

consequences of not providing them:

THE COURT: Mr. Abdallah, I don't mean to lecture you but I need to let you know, physicians don't need to do this and they don't do it for free. You need to make arrangements to pay him for that and you need to do that sooner rather than later because he needs to put this on his calendar. And what I don't want is to have everybody get ready for trial and start the first day of trial, only to find out that you haven't made arrangements to have your physician come and testify.

MR. ABDALLAH: One main thing I'm just curious to know is that I just want to know without a physician coming in and testifying for me, does that mean that my case cannot continue, can I still be able to go to trial?

1 As testament to the court’s leniency, the court gave Mr. Abdallah an extra day to produce his expert witness reports, requesting them on or before July 31, 2016.

5 THE COURT: You cannot go to trial without a physician.

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Abdallah v. Rago, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abdallah-v-rago-delsuperct-2016.