GABRIEL, HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ v. JOHNSTON'S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC.

CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 2012
DocketCA 11-02517
StatusPublished

This text of GABRIEL, HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ v. JOHNSTON'S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC. (GABRIEL, HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ v. JOHNSTON'S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC.) 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
GABRIEL, HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ v. JOHNSTON'S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC., (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department

587 CA 11-02517 PRESENT: SMITH, J.P., FAHEY, PERADOTTO, AND LINDLEY, JJ.

HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ GABRIEL, ALSO KNOWN AS CESAR MENDEZ, ET AL., PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS-RESPONDENTS,

V OPINION AND ORDER

JOHNSTON’S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC., DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT, ET AL., DEFENDANTS. (ACTION NO. 1.) ------------------------------------------------- HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ GABRIEL, ALSO KNOWN AS CESAR MENDEZ, ET AL., PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,

V

ANTHONY A. DEMARCO, ANTHONY W. DEMARCO, ANTHONY DEMARCO & SONS, INC., DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS, ET AL., DEFENDANTS. (ACTION NO. 2.) ------------------------------------------------- HUGO RAFAEL RAMIREZ GABRIEL, ALSO KNOWN AS CESAR MENDEZ, ET AL., PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS-RESPONDENTS,

RAYTHEON COMPANY, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT. (ACTION NO. 3.)

MICHAELS & SMOLAK, P.C., AUBURN (MICHAEL G. BERSANI OF COUNSEL), FOR PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS-RESPONDENTS AND PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS.

COSTELLO, COONEY & FEARON, PLLC, SYRACUSE (DONALD S. DIBENEDETTO OF COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT JOHNSTON’S L.P. GAS SERVICE, INC.

LAW OFFICE OF FRANCIS E. MALONEY, JR., SYRACUSE (FRANCIS E. MALONEY, JR., OF COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT ANTHONY A. DEMARCO.

BOND, SCHOENECK & KING, PLLC, OSWEGO (SCOTT J. DELCONTE OF COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT RAYTHEON COMPANY. -2- 587 CA 11-02517

DAVIDSON & O’MARA, P.C., ELMIRA (THOMAS F. O’MARA OF COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT ANTHONY DEMARCO & SONS, INC.

Appeal and cross appeals from an order of the Supreme Court, Oswego County (James W. McCarthy, J.), entered August 5, 2011 in a personal injury action. The order, inter alia, denied those parts of plaintiffs’ motion for a protective order relating to the taking of certain depositions and trial testimony via video and denied, without prejudice, the cross motions of defendants Raytheon Company and Johnston’s L.P. Gas Service, Inc. for dismissal of the claims of the majority of plaintiffs against them.

It is hereby ORDERED that the order so appealed from is unanimously modified on the law by vacating that part of the third ordering paragraph concerning the depositions of plaintiffs and granting those parts of plaintiffs’ motion for a protective order permitting the undeposed plaintiffs who have returned to Guatemala to be deposed in Guatemala via video conference and permitting the plaintiffs who have returned to Mexico and Guatemala to testify at trial by video and as modified the order is affirmed without costs.

Opinion by FAHEY, J.:

I

The primary issue on this appeal is whether Supreme Court erred in denying those parts of plaintiffs’ motion for a protective order permitting certain plaintiffs who have not been deposed and have left the United States for Guatemala to be deposed in Guatemala via video conference and allowing those plaintiffs who have left the United States for either Mexico or Guatemala to testify at trial by video. We conclude that the court abused its discretion in denying those parts of plaintiffs’ motion with respect to both the depositions and the trial testimony.

II

These consolidated actions had their genesis in an October 6, 2005 propane gas explosion at a farm camp in Schroeppel, New York that killed one migrant worker and injured nine others. Plaintiffs are the nine injured workers, six of whom are citizens of Guatemala and three of whom are citizens of Mexico. All plaintiffs were in the United States as illegal, undocumented farm workers at the time of the explosion, and they were employed by defendant Anthony DeMarco & Sons, Inc. (DeMarco, Inc.). Defendants Anthony A. DeMarco, Anthony W. DeMarco and DeMarco, Inc. (collectively, DeMarco defendants) provided living quarters for plaintiffs and owned the building where the explosion occurred. Defendant Raytheon Company (Raytheon) allegedly manufactured a stove involved in the explosion, and defendant Johnston’s L.P. Gas Service, Inc. (Johnston) allegedly filled some propane tanks at the explosion site.

After the explosion, plaintiffs commenced these actions seeking -3- 587 CA 11-02517

damages for injuries they sustained in that accident, and the matter proceeded to the point that seven of the nine plaintiffs had been deposed by all defendants. Plaintiff Hugo Rafael Ramirez Gabriel, also known as Cesar Mendez (Mendez), had been deposed only by Johnston, and plaintiff Lucio Jimenez Gabriel, also known as Marco Antonio Jimenez (Gabriel), remained undeposed.

The foregoing depositions followed a round of discovery motion practice undertaken by plaintiffs and designed to compel completion of the depositions and medical examinations of plaintiffs by November 2008. The impetus for that motion practice was obvious: plaintiffs sought to go on record before leaving the United States, either voluntarily or otherwise. By order entered August 8, 2008, the court directed that the depositions of the seven plaintiffs who then remained in the United States were to take place during the first two weeks of November 2008, and that any medical examinations of those plaintiffs undertaken on behalf of defendants were to occur by November 30, 2008, with the caveat that the examination of plaintiff Ledis Vasquez Lopez (Lopez) was to occur by November 17, 2008. At that time, Mendez and Gabriel had returned to Guatemala, and Lopez had been granted a voluntary departure by the United States Immigration Court that required him to leave the country by November 19, 2008.

III

By February 2011, only three of the nine plaintiffs remained in the United States. Five of the plaintiffs, i.e., Gabriel, Mendez, Lopez, Ernesto Diaz Vasquez (Vasquez) and Alvaro Reynoso Jimenez, also known as Rolando Perez (Jimenez), had returned to Guatemala, and one plaintiff, Vidal Zacarias Angel, also known as Jose Manuel Perez (Angel), had returned to Mexico. The remaining three plaintiffs, Eusemo Bravo Lopez, also known as Hugo Roblero (Eusemo), Benai Salas Mejias, also known as Rogelio Gonzalez (Mejias), and Ediberto Ramirez Perez (Perez) remained in the United States. Eusemo and Mejias, however, expected to leave the United States shortly, and only Perez planned to stay in the country indefinitely.

On February 15, 2011, plaintiffs moved, inter alia, for a protective order permitting those plaintiffs who had returned to Guatemala and had not been deposed by all defendants to be deposed via video conference. Plaintiffs also sought a protective order permitting those plaintiffs who had returned to Mexico and Guatemala to have their trial testimony taken by video conference. In support of the motion, plaintiffs’ attorney in these actions explained the immigration status of each plaintiff, noted that plaintiffs would assume the cost of video conferencing and indicated that video conferencing was feasible in both Guatemala and Mexico. Moreover, plaintiffs’ immigration attorney submitted an affidavit in which she described her unsuccessful attempts to obtain visas for Gabriel and Mendez and explained that such applications were expensive—each application came with a $140 fee and resulted in $500 in transportation expenses—and arduous in view of the 16-hour round trip from the village in which those plaintiffs reside to the United States Embassy in Guatemala City. The letters denying the visa applications -4- 587 CA 11-02517

for Gabriel and Mendez submitted with the affidavit of plaintiffs’ immigration attorney establish that the subject applications were denied because those plaintiffs were “foreigners who . . .

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