Firstenberg v. Monribot

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 2015
Docket32,549
StatusPublished

This text of Firstenberg v. Monribot (Firstenberg v. Monribot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Firstenberg v. Monribot, (N.M. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number: ___________

3 Filing Date: March 5, 2015

4 NO. 32,549

5 ARTHUR FIRSTENBERG,

6 Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

7 v.

8 RAPHAELA MONRIBOT,

9 Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant

10 and

11 ROBIN LEITH,

12 Defendant.

13 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY 14 Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge

15 Arthur Firstenberg 16 Santa Fe, NM

17 Pro Se Appellant

18 Graeser & McQueen, LLC 19 Christopher L. Graeser 20 Santa Fe, NM 1 Joseph L. Romero Trial Lawyer LLC 2 Joseph L. Romero 3 Santa Fe, NM

4 for Appellee 1 OPINION

2 SUTIN, Judge.

3 {1} Arthur Firstenberg sued his neighbor, Raphaela Monribot, and Robin Leith, the

4 owner-lessor of Ms. Monribot’s residence,1 for injunctive relief and monetary

5 damages under the theories of nuisance and prima facie tort. In his complaint, Mr.

6 Firstenberg alleged that because he suffers from a condition called electromagnetic

7 sensitivity (EMS)2 that renders him acutely sensitive to electromagnetic radiation, his

8 health was adversely affected by Ms. Monribot’s use, within her own residence, of

9 various electronic devices that generate electromagnetic radiation, including a cell

10 phone, a Wi-Fi modem, dimmer switches, and a microcell. After nearly three years

11 of litigation, having held an evidentiary hearing regarding the admissibility of expert

12 scientific testimony, the district court determined that Mr. Firstenberg lacked

13 admissible evidence of general causation and, therefore, granted summary judgment

14 in favor of Ms. Monribot and Ms. Leith (Defendants). Mr. Firstenberg appeals from

15 the court’s summary judgment order. As will be discussed in this Opinion, Mr.

1 16 Throughout this Opinion, we refer to the house and property owned by Ms. 17 Leith and leased by Ms. Monribot as “Defendants’ property.” 2 18 The parties, the witnesses, and the district court variously refer to Mr. 19 Firstenberg’s condition as electromagnetic hypersensitivity, electromagnetic 20 sensitivity, and idiopathic environmental intolerance attributed to electromagnetic 21 fields. For ease of reference, we use the acronym EMS throughout this Opinion in 22 reference to Mr. Firstenberg’s condition. 1 Firstenberg raises several points of error related to the district court’s summary

2 judgment order and to various district court orders that preceded the court’s summary

3 judgment.

4 {2} The electric lines and meter serving Mr. Firstenberg’s property were located

5 on Defendants’ property. In an effort to force Mr. Firstenberg to relocate and cease

6 using the electric lines and meter on Defendants’ property, Ms. Monribot filed

7 counterclaims against Mr. Firstenberg, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and

8 trespass damages. The court, having determined that Mr. Firstenberg had an implied

9 easement by necessity that permitted him to access the equipment, granted partial

10 summary judgment in favor of Mr. Firstenberg as to all of Ms. Monribot’s

11 counterclaims. Ms. Monribot cross-appeals from this and other district court rulings.

12 Ms. Leith is not a party in this appeal.

13 {3} As to Mr. Firstenberg’s appeal, we conclude that his arguments do not

14 demonstrate that the district court’s summary judgment in favor of Ms. Monribot as

15 to his claims of prima facie tort and nuisance was in error. We hold that Mr.

16 Firstenberg’s remaining arguments provide no basis for reversal, and we affirm the

17 district court’s summary judgment in favor of Ms. Monribot. As to Ms. Monribot’s

18 cross-appeal, we conclude that the issues raised therein provide no basis for reversal.

2 1 BACKGROUND

2 {4} This case comes to us with a lengthy and complicated factual and procedural

3 history. As background, we provide only those facts that are necessary to illuminate

4 the appellate issues. Further facts are provided, as necessary, in the body of this

5 Opinion.

6 {5} Mr. Firstenberg claims that he suffers from EMS, the numerous symptoms of

7 which are triggered by electromagnetic radiation, such as radio waves emitted from

8 cell phones, computers, electrical transmission lines, and similar devices. Mr.

9 Firstenberg claims, further, that owing to “chemical” and electromagnetic

10 sensitivities, he has been declared totally and permanently disabled by the United

11 States Social Security Administration and that since 1992 Mr. Firstenberg has been

12 collecting social security disability benefits on that basis.

13 {6} Mr. Firstenberg and Ms. Monribot met in 2008 when Ms. Monribot responded

14 to his Craigslist ad seeking a personal cook. Mr. Firstenberg hired Ms. Monribot to

15 cook his meals, and he ate his meals in her house; this arrangement lasted

16 approximately one month until Ms. Monribot went to Europe for four months. While

17 she was in Europe, Ms. Monribot sublet her house to Mr. Firstenberg, and later, Mr.

18 Firstenberg purchased the house. Approximately one year later, Ms. Monribot

19 returned to Santa Fe and moved into a house (owned by Ms. Leith) that was next door

3 1 to Mr. Firstenberg’s house. The day after Ms. Monribot moved in next door to him,

2 Mr. Firstenberg became so ill that he thought he “could die[,]” and his symptoms

3 recurred every time he returned to his house.

4 {7} Mr. Firstenberg attributed his illness to Ms. Monribot’s use, within her own

5 home, of a cell phone and a number of dimmer switches, and later, to her Wi-Fi and

6 microcell. Ms. Monribot refused Mr. Firstenberg’s requests to replace her dimmer

7 switches with regular switches, use a land-line instead of a cell phone, to turn off her

8 Wi-Fi, and to unplug her computer at night; she later refused Mr. Firstenberg’s offer

9 of $10,000 to comply with his requests. Mr. Firstenberg stated that because Ms.

10 Monribot would not comply with these requests, he was unable to use his house for

11 more than a few minutes at a time without suffering EMS symptoms that were caused

12 by radiation from Ms. Monribot’s electronic devices “entering” and “leak[ing]” into

13 his house. Accordingly, Mr. Firstenberg filed the present lawsuit.

14 {8} Mr. Firstenberg’s original complaint, filed on January 4, 2010, for nuisance and

15 prima facie tort named only Ms. Monribot as a Defendant. He later filed a first

16 amended complaint, in which Ms. Leith was added as a defendant and indispensable

17 party, and a second and third amended complaint.3 His complaint for prima facie tort

3 18 References to Mr. Firstenberg’s “complaint” throughout this Opinion are to 19 his third amended complaint, with references to earlier iterations delineated 20 accordingly.

4 1 was founded on allegations that, in summary, Ms. Monribot, who knew of Mr.

2 Firstenberg’s EMS, “bombard[ed Mr. Firstenberg’s] residence with electromagnetic

3 radiation, which she knew would injure [him]”; that she did so intentionally, with the

4 certainty that injury would necessarily result to Mr. Firstenberg; that her use of

5 electronic devices “rendered [Mr. Firstenberg’s] home extremely difficult to inhabit

6 and have caused him years of inconvenience and acute and chronic pain and

7 suffering”; and that Ms. Monribot’s conduct “had no valid purpose and was

8 unjustifiable” because she could use a land-line, cable instead of Wi-Fi, and engage

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