alibozak v. watts

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2024
Docket22-cv-493
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
alibozak v. watts, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Windsor Unit I Docket No. 22-CV-493

GARY ALIBOZEK, Plaintiff

V.

NORMAN WATTS and WATTS LAW FIRM, P.C., Defendants

DECISIONS ON PENDING MOTIONS

Plaintifl' Gary Alibozek was represented by Defendant Norman Watts in an age discrimination case against his employer, General Electric Company.‘ Mr. Alibozek applied for - an open position and a younger employee who had worked at GE for less time was selected for the job. In that Underlying Case, summary judgment was granted to General Electric Company. i Mr. Alibozek now brings this suit against Mr. Watts and Watts Law Firm, P.C., 2 alleging several causes of action based on Mr. Watts’s representation of him in the Underlying Case against '

General Electric.

The Amended Complaint sets forth four causes of action: Negligence/Legal Malpractice; Breach of Contract; Consumer Fraud; and Negligent Misrepresentation. '

There are several pending motions in the case, including a Motion for Summary Judgment on all counts filed by Defendant Watts. The motions are addressed in the order in _ which they were filed, except that the Motion for Summary Judgment is addressed last.

2 Motion #7: Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel GE to respond to subpoena

Plaintifl' sought discovery material from GE by informally sending a subpoena to a GE i

representative who had previously provided discovery in the Underlying Case from GE’s files 5

without formal service. GE declined to provide the requested documents due to lack of proper service of the subpoena and also claimed that the request was unduly burdensome. Plaintiff’s . counsel seeks to compel production of the documents without service of the subpoena, claiming E that formal service would add time and expense. GE is not a party to this lawsuit, and any prior i agreement in the Underlying Case regarding modes of making and responding to discovery '

requests does not apply.

1 Alibozek v. General Electric Company, 270-5-17 Rdcv, hereinafter described as the Underlying Case. 2 Hereinafter the term Watts will refer to both Mr. Norman Watts and Watts Law Firm, P.C.

1 Plaintiff’s counsel also sought personnel records of employees without requesting the addresses of those employees to give them notice as required by l6 V.S.A. §l69la(c), and sought numerous records going back several years in time, which GE claimed would be unduly burdensome. Plaintiff has shortened the retroactive date to 10 years based on the understanding that GE keeps records for 10 years.

The court denies the motion for several reasons. Plaintiff’s counsel failed to properly serve the subpoena and seek the addresses of employees in a timely manner within the pretrial scheduling order. Moreover, the court concludes that a large volume of material was requested that constituted a much more burdensome request than the single personnel file thatGE had previously agreed to provide without service of subpoena.

Perhaps most important is that there is no showing that the significant volume of material sought, some of which is very dated, even if it had been timely requested, would be within the scope of discoverable material pursuant to V.R.C.P. 26 (b), which allows discovery “relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional t0 the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake. .and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery .-

outweighs its likely benefit.” Mr. Alibozek was denied promotion to the position for which he applied in December of 2014. Plaintiff has not explained how documents from 10 years prior to that date, relating to other employees, would be relevant to the critical issue of whether the reason given for the decision not to promote Mr. Alibozek was a pretext.

For these reasons, the motion is denied, and thereis no reason to delay ruling on Defendant’s motion for summary judgment.

Motion #9: GE’s Motion for a Protective Order This request was essentially a motion to quash made by GE in its Opposition to the Motion to Compel GE to comply with the subpoena described above. For the reasons stated above, the Plaintiff ’s motion has been denied. GE’s motion is therefore moot.

Motion #10: Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel the Attorney General’s Office to Allow Forensic Audit Mr. Alibozek and his wife contend that they listened to audio recordings provided by the Attorney General’s Office in the Underlying Case, that she took noteson what was said, and that _a portion of what they listened to contained a heated argument that is no longer on the audio file.

Plaintiff’s counsel seeks to have a forensic expert examine the original file at the Attorney General’s Office. The attorney for the State contends that they had their own forensic audit done which showed no missing portion of the interview.

The starting point 0f the analysis is that the written notes kept by Mr. Alibozek’s wife as she listened to the interview, in particular the format she used of identifying what was said by what speakers as identified by initials, suggest the possibility that there may be a missing section

2 of the interview. Thus, if there were a showing that the alleged missing portion actually contained material pertinent to Plaintiff’s claim of pretext, the court would consider granting the request for Plaintiff to engage an independent forensic audit. The court assumes the accuracy of the Alibozeks’ contention of the content of the missing material. However, there has been no reasonable showing that the alleged missing portion of the interview contained content relevant under the standard of V.R.C.P. 26 (b) to Plaintiff ’s claim in this malpractice case. Thus, the delay, use of parties’ time, and expense of the requested forensic audit is not justified. The motion is denied.

Motion #12: Plaintiff’s Motion for a Final Protective Order

Plaintiff previously filed a Motion for Protective Order, Motion #5 (corrected as Motion #6), in response to a subpoena Defendant served on special disciplinary counsel for production of communications from Plaintiff ’s counsel related to an independent professional responsibility disciplinary proceeding. Plaintiff’s counsel claimed that her communications to special disciplinary counsel were protected attorney work product. In a ruling issued October 17, 2023, the court denied the motion without prejudice to refile, specifically providing that “if the motion 'is refiled, specific attention is requested as to the provision of an adequate basis for gdetermination of the applicability of the privilege.” Motion #12 is Plaintiff’s refiling of the request. In the motion, Plaintiff claims that the information in the communication was a “matter of common interest” between herself and special disciplinary counsel and thus could be shared with an attorney with'a common interest :while retaining its character as Plaintiff’s attorney work product.

V The court concludes that the purposes, standards, and procedures of a tort case and a professional responsibility disciplinary proceeding are distinct, and attorneys working on the two different cases do not have the type of “common interest” that allows sharing of information while retaining the benefits of the attorney work product privilege. Thus the motion is denied.

Motion #14: Plaintiff’s Motion to Approve a Third Amended ADR Schedule

Critical discovery deadlines had already passed before this motion was filed. See Order fof April 18, 2023. Nojustification has been shown for retroactively extending discovery ideadlines, nor has any valid reason been shown that further discovery is needed before consideration of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. The motion is denied.

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