Chadbourne v. Casco Aerie 565, Fraternal Order of Eagles

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 28, 2022
DocketCUMcv-21-366
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chadbourne v. Casco Aerie 565, Fraternal Order of Eagles (Chadbourne v. Casco Aerie 565, Fraternal Order of Eagles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chadbourne v. Casco Aerie 565, Fraternal Order of Eagles, (Me. Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-2021-366 ) RONALD CHADBOURNE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ORDER ON UNOPPOSED ) MOTION TO DISMISS CASCO AERIE #565 FRATERNAL ) ORDER OF EAGLES and ) MATTHEW HALL, ) ) Defendants. )

Before the Court is Defendants Casco Aerie #565 Fraternal Order of Eagles and

Matthew Hall's Motion to Dismiss pursuant to Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).

Counts I, III, and IV of Plaintiff Ronald Chadbourne's Amended Complaint are pending.

Defendants seek dismissal of Count IV, only. 1

Mr. Chadbourne has not opposed the pending motion to dismiss. Accordingly, the

Court need not reach the merits of the motion. Petit v. Lumb, 2014 ME 117, 'I[ 8, 103 A.3d

205 ("When a motion is unopposed, the court need not reach the merits of the motion

because, under Rule 7(c)(3), the adverse party has waived any objection to it."). The

Court, therefore, grants the motion and dismisses Count IV of the Amended Complaint,

Negligent Service of Liquor/Maine Liquor Liability Act. The remaining counts of the

Amended Complaint are undisturbed.

1 By Order dated August 11, 2022, the Court granted Mr. Chadbourne' s Motion to Amend as to Count IV, which was reasserted following dismissal without prejudice, and denied the motion as to the proposed Counts V, VI, and VII, and the proposed reasserted Count II. Counts I and III of the original Complaint had not been dismissed at the time of filing of the Motion to Amend. Although the Court did not address Counts I and III at length in its August 12 Order, they were incorporated in the Amended Complaint as accepted. The entry is:

Defendants' unopposed Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED. Count IV of Plaintiff's Amended Complaint is DISMISSED.

The Clerk is directed to incorporate this Order into the docket by reference

pursuant to Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 79(a).

Dated: _ _,_/""D+/,1""'i.'--cl(1-/=JO"'--'J=J-""-­ / I Kennedy, Justice uperior Court

Page 2 of 2 (

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-21-366 RONALD CHADBOURNE,

Plaintiff V. ORDER

CASCO AERIE# 565, FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES, et al., Plaintiff-Daniel Warren, Esq. Defendants Defendant- Neal Weinstein, Esq.

Before the court is a motion by defendant Casco Aerie #565, Fraternal Order of Eagles to

dismiss and a motion to amend by plaintiff Ronald Chadbourne.

This case arises out of an alleged assault of Chadbourne by a person named Matthew Hall

at the Casco Aerie Eagles Lodge on August 22, 2020. The original complaint brought by

Chadbourne named both the Casco Aerie and Hall as defendants. Claims of negligence and assault

were asserted against Hall (Counts I and III). Claims under the Dram Shop statute and claims for

negligent service of liquor to Matthew Hall were asserted against the Casco Aerie (Counts II and

IV) based on the theory that employees of the Casco Aerie should not have served an allegedly

intoxicated Hall with alcohol.

Defendants Casco Aerie and Hall, represented by the same attorney, filed a joint answer

denying Chadbourne's claims and asserting various affirmative defenses.

On October 12, 2021 the Casco Aerie filed a motion to dismiss Counts II and IV, asserting

that Chadbourne's claims against the Casco Aerie were barred pursuant to 28-A M.R.S. § 2504

because Chadbourne was over 18 and because he had not complied with the applicable time limits

under the Maine Liquor Liability Act. 28-A M.R.S. § 2513.

REC'D CUMB CLERKS OFC AUG 11 '22 pw'.J: 18 In a letter docketed on November 4, 2021 plaintiffs counsel informed the court that the

parties had agreed to the dismissal of counts II and IV. On that basis the court (McKeon, J.) granted

the Casco Aerie's motion on November 22, 2021.

Five months later the Casco Aerie filed a motion to be dismissed from the action, stating

that plaintiffs counsel had declined to sign a stipulation to that effect. Plaintiff responded by filing

a motion to amend on April 1, 2022. That motion attached a proposed amended complaint that (1)

reasserted counts II and IV against the Casco Aerie and (2) added three more counts against the

Casco Aerie - for intentional spoliation of evidence, negligent spoliation of evidence, and

fraudulent concealment (Counts V, VI, and VII). These counts are all based on the claim that the

Casco Aerie erased video footage of the events involved with the alleged assault. The Casco Aerie

objects to the proposed amendment.

In their submissions the parties have focused on the spoliation claims. Plaintiff contends

that the court should recognize a tort of spoliation in Maine although the Law Court has not done

so. The Casco Aerie, for its part, primarily objects on factual grounds. It contends that it had a

practice of recording over video footage after 7 days, that Chadbourne was fully aware that there

was video footage, that he viewed that footage after the incident, and that he did not make a copy

or request that one be provided. Affidavits provided by the parties are in sharp disagreement over

these issues. See Chadbourne Affidavit sworn to March 22, 2022 vs. Hanlon Affidavit sworn to

October 28, 2021.

The court cannot resolve factual disputes on motions to dismiss and on motions to amend.

The issue on such motions is solely whether amendments should be granted under Rule 15, which

provides that leave shall be freely granted when justice so requires, and whether the pleading in

question states a cognizable claim.

2 Bypassing the factual disputes with respect to the alleged spoliation, the court can resolve

the proposed addition of spoliation claims as a matter of law because the court is not prepared to

recognize a tort of spoliation. The Law Court has not done so, and at least four Superior Court

decisions have declined to recognize spoliation claims. Simpson v. Cumberland County, CV-04­

765, 2011 Me. Super. LEXIS 73 (Superior Court Cumberland April 1, 2011) (Mills, J.); Santiago

v. Wade, CV-08-457, 2009 Me. Super. LEXIS 45 (Superior Court Cumberland March 11, 2009)

(Crowley, J.); (Breen v. Lucas, 2005 Me. Super. LEXIS 67 (Superior Court Kennebec July 4, 2005)

(Marden, J.); Butler v. Mooers, CV-00-737, 2001 Me. Super. LEXIS 93 (Superior Court

Cumberland June 15, 2001) Crowley, J.). See Gagne v. D.E. Jansen Inc., 298 F.Supp.2d 145, 147­

48 (D. Me. 2003). The court agrees with the ruling in Gagne that spoliation not an independent

cause of action; rather the potential remedy for any spoliation would be the exclusion of evidence,

the drawing of an adverse inference, or an appropriate jury instruction.

Accordingly, the court will deny Chadbourne's motion to add counts V and VI.

Chadbourne's Count VII (fraudulent concealment) is essentially a spoliation claim recharacterized

as fraud. Fraudulent concealment requires an alleged failure to disclose a fact, not a failure to

disclose evidence. Chadbourne' s motion to amend is denied as to Count VII.

That leaves Chadbourne' s reassertion of counts II and IV. Those are counts that were

previously dismissed, but that dismissal was stated to be by agreement and was therefore without

prejudice. See M.R.Civ.P 4l(a) (unless otherwise stated in a notice of dismissal, the dismissal is

without prejudice). Moreover, although the motion to amend is after the original deadline set in

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Related

Gagne v. D.E. Jonsen, Inc.
298 F. Supp. 2d 145 (D. Maine, 2003)
Catherine Duffy Petit v. William Lumb
2014 ME 117 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2014)

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