Haines v. Great N. Paper, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 22, 2002
DocketPENcv-00-109
StatusUnpublished

This text of Haines v. Great N. Paper, Inc. (Haines v. Great N. Paper, Inc.) 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
Haines v. Great N. Paper, Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, SS. Docket No. CV-00-109

. bod UL - PEV~ aliijacea,

i i

Vernon Haines, for himself and 0/b/o

The Fin and Feather Club, ‘FILED AND EXTER ed Plaintiffs SUPERIOR COURT FEB 11 2002 Vv. | PENOBSCOT COUNTY

Great Northern Paper, Inc. et al, ORDER

Defendants -

and me “ " Rich Timber Holdings, LLC, FFB 14 2002

Party-in-Interest

Pending before the court are the plaintiffs’ motion for joinder, the motions for summary judgment filed by all parties and various motions relating to the record on summary judgment.

In this action, the plaintiffs seek declaratory relief and money damages for breach of a contract executed by plaintiff Fin and Feather and defendant Great Northern Paper, Inc. ("GNP"), under which GNP agreed not to impose access fees for the non-commercial use of its forest lands by Maine residents. In count 1, the plaintiffs allege that GNP breached the contract because it conveyed land to third parties who then imposed access fees to that land. The plaintiffs seek relief in count 2 against defendant Great Northwoods, LLC, one of the grantees of GNP's property, based on

allegations that it was subject to the prohibitions created by the contract

executed by the plaintiffs and GNP, and that it violated the provisions of the agreement by imposing access fees for the use of land covered by the contract. In count 3, the plaintiffs allege that defendant McDonald Investment Co., Inc. ("McDonald"), another grantee of property subject to the agreement, is liable for breach of contract based on an analysis similar to that alleged in count 2. Finally, in count 4, the plaintiffs allege that the defendants denied them access to or egress from great ponds in violation of 17 M.R.S.A. § 3860.!

A. Motion for joinder

In their motion for joinder dated June 7, 2001, and filed on June 8, 2001, the plaintiffs request leave to join Yankee Forest, LLC ("Yankee") as a defendant.

The plaintiffs filed their original complaint in May 2000 and an amended complaint in June 2000. A scheduling order was issued on July 27, 2000. Under that order, all parties were to be joined no later than November 27, 2000, unless otherwise ordered by the court. In that order, April 1, 2001, was fixed as the discovery deadline.

On April 2, 2001 (the day after the discovery deadline), the plaintiffs filed a motion to amend their complaint to add four parties as defendants. One of the proposed new defendants had been a party-in-interest in the original amended complaint, and, by order of court, any claim against that party had been dismissed. See note 1 supra. Another of the proposed new

defendants was Yankee Forest, LLC, who is the subject of the plaintiff's

IThe complaint also named three parties as parties-in-interest. Two of those parties-in-interest successfully moved to dismiss the complaint as against them. The third party-in-interest, Rich Timber Holdings, LLC, did not file a motion to dismiss and therefore remains in this. case. motion at bar. The plaintiffs’ motion to amend their complaint was denied by order dated May 18, 2001. Thus, the pending motion is the plaintiff's second effort to join Yankee as a party-defendant.

The basis for the pending motion is identical to that underlying the plaintiffs’ earlier motion: the motion rests on allegations that Yankee acquired an ownership interest in some of the land that is the subject of the contract executed by GNP and the plaintiffs, and Yankee is bound by the provisions of that contract. In their memorandum filed in support of the motion, the plaintiffs note that Yankee acquired its interest in April 1999 -- more than one year prior to the commencement of this action. The reasons supporting the denial of the plaintiffs’ first motion to join Yankee as a party apply here: the motion to join was filed well after the presumptive deadline for joinder of parties under the terms of the scheduling order, they have not shown cause for that substantial delay and discovery had closed more than two months before the pending motion was filed. The plaintiffs argue that if Yankee is not joined as a party to this action, Yankee may not be bound by the outcome of this case. Under the circumstances noted above, however, this possible effect does not warrant the disruption to the orderly pretrial process established in the scheduling order.

B. Motion for summary judgment

(1) Record on summary judgment

On June 4, 2001, the plaintiffs filed their motion for summary judgment. The motion was accompanied by a statement of material fact that, on its face, is defective, because none of the material facts is

"supported by a record citation as required by" M.R.Civ.P 56(h)(4). See M.R.Civ.P. 56(h)(1). Accompanying the motion and the defective SMF, the plaintiffs filed a seven page affidavit of Vernon Haines and seventeen documents that collectively consist of hundreds of pages and consume nearly an entire court file folder.

On the same date as the plaintiffs’ filing, GNP and party-in-interest Rich Timber Holdings, LLC ("Rich") filed a motion for summary judgment on the counts that set out claims against them, namely, counts 1, 2 and 4. The remaining two defendants, Great Northwoods and McDonald, also filed a motion for summary judgment on June 4. The statements of material fact accompanying the latter two motions comply with the requirements of rule 56(h). The plaintiffs filed an objection to the two motions for summary judgment. However, the plaintiffs did not file a reply statement of material fact in response to the statements of material fact supporting the defendants’ motions.

The defendants and the party-in-interest filed objections to the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment. The objection of GNP and Rich was filed on June 25, and the objection of Great Northwoods and McDonald was filed on June 28. Both of those objections contained arguments (presented either directly or by reference) that the plaintiffs’ statement of material fact did not satisfy the requirements of rule 56(h). GNP and Rich also filed a joint opposing statement of material fact in response to the plaintiffs’ statement. See M.R.Civ.P. 56(h)(2). (In that opposing statement, GNP and Rich sought leave to amend their opposing statement if the plaintiffs were given leave to amend their original SMF to include record references. At that time, the plaintiffs had not filed such a motion for

leave.) The opposing SMF responded to each of the plaintiffs' statements and added two additional facts beyond those asserted by the plaintiffs. Additionally, on June 25, GNP and Rich filed an independent motion to strike the plaintiffs' submissions because of the defective rule 56(h) statement.

The plaintiffs did not file a response to these objections within the seven days permitted by rule, see M.R.Civ.P. 7(d), and they did not file a reply statement of material facts to address the two additional statements of material fact included in the opposing statement of material fact filed by GNP and Rich. See M.R.Civ.P. 56(h)(3). Instead, on July 18, the plaintiffs filed a motion to amend their original statement of material fact to include record references. Those filings were accompanied by an objection to the motion to strike filed by GNP and Rich. The plaintiffs also filed two opposing statements of material fact; one was in response to the summary judgment motion filed by GNP and Rich, and the other was in response to the summary judgment motion filed by Great Northwoods and McDonald.

(a) Record on _ plaintiffs' motion

The elements of a rule 56(h) statement of material fact are made clear by the terms of the rule itself and by interpretive caselaw:

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