Carlos Warehouse v. Thomas

64 V.I. 173, 2016 V.I. LEXIS 45
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedMay 12, 2016
DocketCase No. SX-13-SM-448
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 64 V.I. 173 (Carlos Warehouse v. Thomas) 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
Carlos Warehouse v. Thomas, 64 V.I. 173, 2016 V.I. LEXIS 45 (visuper 2016).

Opinion

BRADY, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

(May 12, 2016)

THIS MATTER is in the Appellate Division on review from the Magistrate Division. Carlos Warehouse commenced an action in the Small Claims Division against Emril F. Thomas to recover a debt she owed for furniture purchased on credit. After a hearing, the Magistrate Court dismissed Carlos Warehouse’s complaint with prejudice. Carlos Warehouse appealed. For the reasons stated below, the dismissal must be reversed and the matter remanded to the Magistrate Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Carlos Warehouse, a St. Croix business selling furniture, appliances, and electronics, filed a complaint on December 31, 2013 in the Small Claims Division of the Superior Court against Emril Thomas. The complaint alleged that Thomas owed $897.00 for merchandise she purchased from the store. Although the complaint did not allege further detail, two documents were attached that provided additional information. The first attachment, invoice number 18879, showed that Thomas bought furniture from Carlos Warehouse on December 21, 2006. The furniture cost $3,000 and Thomas paid half upfront, which left a balance of $1,500 to be paid. The second attachment, a payment ledger, showed that the balance for invoice 18879 was $1,097.00 and further that Thomas had made two payments, both in October 2013 and both for $100.00 apiece. The remaining balance showed as $897.00, which corresponded to the allegations in the complaint.

The Clerk’s Office docketed the complaint, by letter informed Carlos Warehouse of the case number1 and the Superior Court magistrate [178]*178assigned, and by notice that a hearing was scheduled for February 4, 2014. At the February 4, 2014 hearing, Sobrina Leonce appeared on behalf of Carlos Warehouse. Thomas did not appear because the Marshal’s Office had not been able to effect service. The court continued the matter to March 4, 2014 to allow additional time for service.

On March 4, 2014, Leonce again appeared for Carlos Warehouse. Thomas also appeared. Neither party was sworn. The hearing began with Leonce informing the court of a “mistake on the complaint.” (Hr’g Tr. 3:5-6, Mar. 4, 2014.) The amount Thomas owed was $507, Leonce explained, not $897 as the complaint alleged. The court asked Leonce if Thomas agreed on the amount. Leonce responded that Thomas “agrees that she owes $507, but she does not agree that she owes the court costs or the $50 that we paid the process server.” Id. at 3:15-17. When the court asked Thomas if she still owed $507 to Carlos Warehouse, Thomas admitted that she did. But she said Carlos Warehouse did not give her a “timeframe” to pay in full. Id. at 4:14. Thomas too noted a mistake, that Carlos Warehouse listed “the wrong item” in its complaint. Id. at 4:24. Invoice 18879 was for a bedroom set she purchased in 2006. She had “finished paying for that a long time ago,” she told the court. Id. at 5:4. What she still owed for, she said, was a sofa and a loveseat that she bought in 2011. Thomas then passed to the court the invoices and other records she brought that showed the date and amount of her payments and the amount she still owed. See id. at 5:23. Thomas’s records corresponded to Leonce’s representation that the remaining balance was $507.00.

Because of the discrepancy Thomas pointed out, the Magistrate Court turned back to Leonce to ask whether Thomas “owed them anything toward the bedroom set” she bought in 2006. Id. at 6:12. Leonce answered, “No. No, Your Honor. Just the living room set.” Id. at 6:13-14. The court then asked Leonce why Thomas should “pay the court costs” if she no longer owes anything for the 2006 purchases. Id. at 6:21-22. Carlos Warehouse “shouldn’t even be in the court,” the Magistrate Court remarked. Id. at 7:6-7. Leonce explained that “the wrong receipt number” was listed on the payment ledger. Id. at 7:3. And the reason Carlos [179]*179Warehouse wanted Thomas to pay court and process server costs, Leonce said, was “because the last time [Thomas] made a payment” on the 2011 purchase “was in October” 2013, and she did not pay again “until after she got served” for this case. Id. at 7:9-11. When asked if she had proof to support her characterization of Thomas’s payment history, Leonce conceded that she did not.

Based on the parties’ representations, the Magistrate Court dismissed Carlos Warehouse’s case because the complaint and the documents attached claimed that Thomas owed for merchandise bought in 2006. Yet, both parties agreed that the 2006 purchase had been fully paid. The court concluded that the 2011 purchase was “a completely separate transaction” that was “not in front of’ it. Id. at 7:19, 8:6. The Magistrate Court reduced its dismissal to writing in an order issued the same day except the order decreed that Carlos Warehouse’s complaint was dismissed with prejudice.

Ten days later, Carlos Warehouse filed a petition for review of the Magistrate Court’s order. In support, Carlos Warehouse attached to its petition copies of invoices and other records showing Thomas’s purchases and payments. Carlos Warehouse also filed a request for a transcript of the March 4, 2014 hearing. The Clerk’s Office docketed the review proceeding in the Appellate Division and informed Carlos Warehouse by letter of the requirements associated with internal appeals from the Magistrate Division, including the requirement to file a brief on appeal. In a letter dated April 14, 2014 and docketed April 15, 2014, Carlos Warehouse asked the Court to construe its March 14, 2014 petition as its brief on review. Thomas did not respond to Carlos Warehouse’s letter. The court reporter submitted the transcript on April 17, 2014. By order entered May 14, 2014, the Court granted Carlos Warehouse’s motion, but only as to its right to file a brief. As to Thomas’s right, the May 14, 2014 Order granted her leave to file a responsive brief, which she did by letter dated June 26, 2014 and docketed June 27, 2014. Like Carlos Warehouse, Thomas also provided copies of her payment receipts and a ledger reflecting her payments.

DISCUSSION

“The Magistrate Division of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands has original jurisdiction over all non-felony traffic offenses, petty criminal offenses, small claims actions, landlord and tenant actions, probate matters, and civil domestic violence and civil stalking actions.” [180]*180David v. People, SX-15-RV-007, 2016 V.I. LEXIS 15, at *8-9 (V.I. Super. Ct. App. Div. Feb. 22, 2016) (unpublished) (citations omitted). “Superior Court magistrates — and Superior Court judges sitting in the Magistrate Division — serve as the trial court.” Id. at *9 (internal citation omitted). Like a trial court the magistrate court “presid[es] over the case from commencement through dismissal or issuance of a judgment.” Id. Once a written judgment or dismissal order is entered, the time to appeal the magistrate court’s decision starts. The magistrate court’s decision is not deemed final and appealable to the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands until the decision has been “reviewed and affirmed by a judge of the Appellate Division of the Superior Court or the time to seek review in the Appellate Division . . . expire[s].” Ascencio v. Caribe Home Ctr., Inc., SX-12-SM-459, 2013 V.I. LEXIS 74, at *4-5 (V.I. Super. Ct. App. Div. Oct. 23, 2013) (unpublished);

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 V.I. 173, 2016 V.I. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlos-warehouse-v-thomas-visuper-2016.