Colt v. New Jersey Tr. Corp.

2022 NY Slip Op 03343
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 24, 2022
DocketIndex No. 158309/17 Appeal No. 14967 Case No. 2021-01180
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 NY Slip Op 03343 (Colt v. New Jersey Tr. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colt v. New Jersey Tr. Corp., 2022 NY Slip Op 03343 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Colt v New Jersey Tr. Corp. (2022 NY Slip Op 03343)
Colt v New Jersey Tr. Corp.
2022 NY Slip Op 03343
Decided on May 24, 2022
Appellate Division, First Department
Oing, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: May 24, 2022 SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION First Judicial Department
Troy K. Webber
David Friedman Jeffrey K. Oing Peter H. Moulton Tanya R. Kennedy

Index No. 158309/17 Appeal No. 14967 Case No. 2021-01180

[*1]Jeffrey Colt, et al., Plaintiffs-Respondents,

v

New Jersey Transit Corporation, et al., Defendants-Appellants.


Defendants appeal from the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Adam Silvera, J.), entered October 6, 2020, which denied their motion to dismiss the action.


DeCotiis, FitzPatrick, Cole & Giblin, LLP, New City (John A. Stone of counsel), for appellants.

Sullivan Papain Block McGrath Coffinas & Cannavo, P.C., New York (Brian J. Shoot and Eric K. Schwarz of counsel), for respondents.



OING, J.

The constitutional dilemma concerning the doctrine of sovereign immunity continues unabated (see Taylor v New Jersey Tr. Corp., 199 AD3d 540 [1st Dept 2021]; Fetahu v New Jersey Tr. Corp., 197 AD3d 1065 [1st Dept 2021]; Henry v New Jersey Tr. Corp., 195 AD3d 444 [1st Dept 2021]; Belfand v Petosa, 196 AD3d 60 [1st Dept 2021]). Like the current action, each of the cited cases involves tortious conduct perpetrated by defendant New Jersey Transit Corporation (NJT) and its employees in the operation of its commuter buses in New York City. In this action, on February 9, 2017, defendant NJT employee Ana Hernandez, operating a NJT bus on West 40th Street and Dyre Avenue, struck plaintiff Jeffrey Colt, a pedestrian crossing Dyre Avenue in the crosswalk with the pedestrian traffic signal in his favor. According to Hernandez's EBT testimony, the accident occurred when she was driving from the main platform in the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City, where she had just discharged her passengers, to the basement of the Terminal to pick up passengers for a return trip to New Jersey.

Plaintiff and his wife, Betsy Tsai, suing derivatively, commenced this action against NJT and Hernandez with the filing of their summons and complaint on September 18, 2017. NJT eventually served its answer, on January 5, 2018, which asserted the following affirmative defenses: "Plaintiffs' recovery, and/or claims in this litigation [] against Defendants is barred by lack of jurisdiction over NJT," "Plaintiffs' recovery should be barred as this Court lacks jurisdiction," and "Defendants are immune from suit."

In July 2020, almost three years after plaintiffs commenced the action, before the completion of discovery, and after the expiration of the New Jersey statute of limitations,[FN1] NJT, relying on the recent United States Supreme Court decision in Franchise Tax Bd. of Cal. v Hyatt (587 US __, 139 S Ct 1485 [2019]), moved to dismiss the action on the ground that it was immune from suit in New York under the doctrine of sovereign immunity. In opposition, plaintiffs made several arguments: the accident occurred in New York City, NJT was not an arm of the State so as to be entitled to the sovereign immunity defense, NJT consented to suit, plaintiffs could not have commenced their action in New Jersey because New Jersey court rules require their action to be venued in "the [New Jersey] county in which the cause of action arose" (New Jersey Rules of Court 4:3-2), and NJT should be estopped from contending that it was immune from suit because it had vigorously litigated the case [*2]for nearly three years. In denying the motion, Supreme Court noted that defendants had taken "three years to raise a jurisdictionally based objection" and reasoned that, "[t]o hold NJT immune from suit for negligence in motor vehicle accidents in New York would constitute a miscarriage of justice to the victims of accidents involving NJT vehicles, which operate in New York on a daily basis."

We have previously held that NJT is an arm of the State of New Jersey and that, as such, it is entitled to invoke the doctrine of sovereign immunity (see Fetahu, 197 AD3d at 1065, citing Karns v Shanahan, 879 F3d 504, 512-519 [3d Cir 2018]; see also Muhammad v New Jersey Tr., 176 NJ 185, 194, 821 A2d 1148, 1153 [2003] [NJT is a public entity under the New Jersey Tort Claims Act]). We have also held that its employees sued in their official capacity in which NJT would be vicariously liable for their negligence are entitled to avail themselves of the doctrine (see Belfand, 196 AD3d at 63 n 2, citing Karns, 879 F3d at 519 n 5; see also NJ Stat Ann § 59:2-2[a] [under the New Jersey Tort Claims Act, "[a] public entity is liable for injury proximately caused by an act or omission of [an employee of the entity] within the scope of his employment"]). We have further held that New Jersey's consent to suit within its borders under its Tort Claims Act is not an express consent to suit in New York or any other sister state (see Belfand, 196 AD3d at 69). Further, unlike Taylor, Fetahu, Henry and Belfand, in which NJT never asserted an immunity-based defense, in this case NJT pleaded such a defense in varying forms in its answer. Plainly, these defenses had to include the sovereign immunity defense, because it had been in existence since 1979 (see Belfand, 196 AD3d at 72, citing Nevada v Hall, 440 US 410 [1979]). As we noted in Belfand, the defense was dramatically altered by Hyatt, but it did not have its genesis in that decision (id. ["The Hyatt Court dramatically altered the sovereign immunity analysis by moving the decision as to whether sovereign immunity should be honored from the forum state, guided by principles of comity, to the sister state being sued, which will decide, as a matter of discretion, whether to consent to the forum state's jurisdiction"]). These threshold findings entitle NJT to seek dismissal of this action based on the sovereign immunity defense. The final hurdle that NJT must overcome is whether it expressly and unambiguously waived its sovereign immunity defense (id. at 73).

Under the procedural circumstances of this action, NJT did not undertake a litigation strategy that could be deemed an express, voluntary waiver of this defense (see Belfand, 196 AD3d at 70). Although three years had elapsed since the filing of the complaint, discovery in this action had not been completed, the note of issue had not been filed, plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment had not been decided, no pretrial conference or trial date had been scheduled, and this action [*3]was never tried. Under these circumstances, NJT did not expressly and unambiguously waive the sovereign immunity defense. This finding, however, does not end the inquiry.[FN2] Rather than making a clear pronouncement on sovereign immunity, unlike the dissent's invocation of the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution to justify embracing Hyatt, we see unresolved issues (see Belfand v Petosa, 196 AD3d 60).

Plaintiffs argue that they could not have commenced their action in New Jersey under New Jersey law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Colt v. New Jersey Tr. Corp.
2022 NY Slip Op 03343 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 NY Slip Op 03343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colt-v-new-jersey-tr-corp-nyappdiv-2022.