Abednego v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC

63 V.I. 153, 2015 V.I. LEXIS 95
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedAugust 10, 2015
DocketCase No. SX-09-CV-571
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 63 V.I. 153 (Abednego v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abednego v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC, 63 V.I. 153, 2015 V.I. LEXIS 95 (visuper 2015).

Opinion

BRADY, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(August 10, 2015)

THIS MATTER is before the Court on a motion filed by 198 former plaintiffs (“Former Plaintiffs”), through their counsel Lee J. Rohn, Esq., requesting relief from an order that the District Court of the Virgin Islands issued dismissing the Former Plaintiffs from this action while it was before that court on removal. St. Croix Renaissance Group LLLP (“SCRG”), a former defendant also dismissed by the same order as the Former Plaintiffs, reappeared on remand to oppose the Former Plaintiffs’ motion. Defendants Alcoa, St. Croix Alumina, LLC, and Century Aluminum Company joined SCRG’s opposition.

[159]*159Also pending before the Court are two motions to dismiss filed by the defendants (and related ancillary motions by both parties requesting additional time and leave to exceed page limitations), the plaintiffs’ motion to amend the complaint to substitute a personal representative, and finally a motion by counsel for the plaintiffs for leave to withdraw. The first motion to dismiss, filed by St. Croix Alumina, LLC, Alcoa, Inc., and Glencore, Ltd. jointly (hereinafter “Alumina Defendants”), requests dismissal of the complaint due its failure to state a claim for relief as to any individual plaintiff. The Alumina Defendants argue that the complaint — which asserts (after following three amendments) seven different claims on behalf of approximately 2,800 former members of a federal class action lawsuit — is deficient because none of the plaintiffs pleaded any of their claims with particularity as to themselves or as to any of the defendants. The second motion to dismiss, filed by Century Aluminum Company individually, also requests that the complaint be dismissed for failure to state a claim, but — among other grounds — because the statute of limitations has run for all of the plaintiffs. Specifically, Century Aluminum argues that none of the plaintiffs can benefit from equitable tolling principles that would stop the clock on the statute of limitations during the time when the individual plaintiffs were members of the class action lawsuit. The plaintiffs responded in opposition to the Alumina Defendants’ motion to dismiss, but have not responded in opposition to Century Aluminum’s motion even though they requested additional time and despite responding in opposition to a motion Century Aluminum filed to deem its motion to dismiss unopposed.

The remaining motions were filed by the plaintiffs and by their counsel, respectively. In the one motion, the plaintiffs ask to amend their “mass” complaint for a fourth time, but only to substitute a personal representative for the estate of one plaintiff who passed away. In the other motion, Attorney Rohn seeks leave to withdraw as counsel for two plaintiffs: a father in his individual capacity and as next of friend to his minor son. None of the defendants have opposed either motion.

For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant the Former Plaintiffs’ motion for relief and reinstate their claims. By dismissing rather than severing the Former Plaintiffs’ claims the District Court was in error because precedent binding on that court directs that claims should be severed, not dismissed, if the statute of limitation may have run. And because the Court will vacate the District Court’s order and reinstate the [160]*160Former Plaintiffs’ claims, the Court must deny without prejudice the Alumina Defendants’ motion to dismiss. Joining together more than 2,800 plaintiffs in one complaint was improper and should not have been allowed. But the remedy at this point is not to dismiss their complaint for failure to state claims as a group, but rather to sever the claims of each plaintiff (including the Former Plaintiffs) and order them to refile individual, verified complaints. Additionally, since the Court cannot tell from the current complaint which plaintiffs were formerly members of a federal class action lawsuit, the Court must also deny without prejudice Century Aluminum’s motion to dismiss. Finally, the Court will grant the plaintiffs’ motion to amend their complaint and their counsel’s motion to withdraw. But like all the other approximately 2,800 plaintiffs, both the personal representative and the father (individually and as next of friend) will have to refile individual, verified complaints. Once the individual complaints are refiled, the Court will then create a master case file and docket and consolidate the individual cases under the master docket for further pre-trial proceedings.

BACKGROUND

Although this action was initially filed in the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands in 2009, litigation over the claims at issue actually began ten years earlier in the District Court of the Virgin Islands when a class was certified in 1999 under the case Josephat Henry v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC. Litigation proceeded in the class action for nearly a decade until 2008 when the District Court decertified the class, concluding that “the overwhelming majority of questions ... including those having to do with liability, cannot be answered on a class-wide basis because they will require individualized answers based on personal circumstances.” Henry v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC, 1999-cv-0036, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43755, *2 (D.V.I. June 3, 2008).

Once the class was decertified, the federal court lost jurisdiction. So former members of the Henry class joined together and on December 3, 2009 filed a single, 209-page complaint in the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands. The December 3, 2009 complaint (of which the caption comprises some 70 or so pages with another 130 pages devoted just to listing each party individually) was brought by the same counsel, Lee J. Rohn, Esq., who represented the Henry class locally. The complaint named approximately 2,800 plaintiffs, including minor plaintiffs and, as [161]*161defendants, named St. Croix Alumina, LLC, Alcoa, Inc., and Glencore, Ltd. (also known as Clarendon, Ltd.). The plaintiffs asserted claims for personal injury and property damage allegedly caused by the former aluminum refinery on St. Croix allowing bauxite and a byproduct of bauxite (often referred to as “red dust”) to accumulate on and around the grounds of the refinery. Eventually, the red dust became airborne and, according to the plaintiffs’ allegations, was deposited in, on, and around their homes, persons, and personal property. Further damage occurred in 1998 when Hurricane Georges struck St. Croix and caused large quantities of the red dust to be disbursed around the island.

The plaintiffs asserted as count one that that the operation of the aluminum refinery constituted an abnormally dangerous condition for which the defendants should be held strictly liable. In count two they alleged a claim of negligence per se for the defendants’ failure to follow federal and territorial laws and regulations. In count three they alleged a claim for public nuisance and in court four a claim for private nuisance. Counts five and eight alleged negligence while count six alleged intentional infliction of emotional distress and count seven negligent infliction of emotional distress. And, although mistakenly labeled as count nine, the plaintiffs also asserted a demand for punitive damages. Notably •because the complaint does not specify who has which claims, all eight claims are, presumably, asserted by every plaintiff against each of the defendants with each plaintiff seeking damages, including punitive damages, and injunctive relief from every defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
63 V.I. 153, 2015 V.I. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abednego-v-st-croix-alumina-llc-visuper-2015.