KOVALEV v. LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 13, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-00552
StatusUnknown

This text of KOVALEV v. LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA (KOVALEV v. LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KOVALEV v. LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA SERGEI KOVALEV : CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 22-552 LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA HOLDINGS : MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. June 13, 2024 Serial Philadelphia litigant Sergei Kovalev is now suing Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings claiming its agents assaulted and battered him when asking him to leave its private testing center while he filmed them performing services in the hope of proving they harmed him. He pulled out his cell phone to videotape his communications with Labcorp employees who asked for his birthday. They asked him to leave its private business when he would not comply with their requests. He refused to leave. He claims the employees then assaulted him and engaged in offensive touching of his cell phone taping them in his hand. We carefully and repeatedly studied the video on Mr. Kovalev’s cellphone which he claims is absolute proof. He is correct but not in his favor. His cellphone video confirms no reasonable person would find Labcorp employees harassed, assaulted, or battered him. The evidence is now before us with the parties’ agreement the video tells the story. No reasonable person could possibly find an assault or battery based on Mr. Kovalev’s video. We grant Labcorp’s Motion for summary judgment and dismiss the remainder of Mr. Kovalev’s case with prejudice. Our denial based on undisputed video evidence requires we deny post-deadline discovery and cross-motions for sanctions including for Mr. Kovalev’s repeated refusal to comply with court ordered discovery.

I. Undisputed Facts Philadelphian Sergei Kovalev went to four different Labcorp patient service centers in Philadelphia on November 30, 2021 for prescribed lab work.' He left the first two centers dissatisfied with their service. He then self-registered for his lab work at a third center using his driver’s license and waited in the reception area.” A Labcorp employee at the third center called his name and asked for his date of birth and health insurance card.? Mr. Kovalev refused to provide his date of birth and instead gave the employee his driver’s license and health insurance card.* The Labcorp employee again asked Mr. Kovalev for his date of birth but he refused asserting privacy rights under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.° The employee refused Mr. Kovalev’s driver’s license and called her supervisor.® The supervisor told the employee to accept Mr. Kovalev’s driver’s license as proof of his date of birth.’ The employee asked Mr. Kovalev to remove his mask to compare his face with the photo on the driver’s license.’ Mr. Kovalev refused to remove his mask.? Mr. Kovalev alleges the Labcorp employee began shouting at him to leave the premises or she would call the police.'!° Mr. Kovalev then began recording on his cell phone his interaction with Labcorp employees on November 30, 2021. Mr. Kovalev began to record his interaction with Labcorp employees “[t]o prevent imminent physical attack by [its] out-of-control, totally unbalanced and dangerous employees, and to deter/discourage [its] employees from criminal activities of physically attacking [him] ... .”!! There is no dispute Mr. Kovalev’s video is in the record for our consideration on summary judgment.'? Mr. Kovalev asserts his one minute and ten second video (total of seventy seconds) “clearly show[s] assault and battery” by Labcorp’s employees precluding summary judgment. We reviewed the video (with audio) and conclude it wholly contradicts Mr. Kovalev’s allegations.

His video confirms Mr. Kovalev did not leave. He instead used his cell phone to videotape his interaction with the Labcorp employees. Mr. Kovalev eventually left for a fourth Labcorp patient service center where he successfully completed his lab work." Mr. Kovalev sued multiple Labcorp entities, its Chief Executive Officer, and Labcorp employees. Mr. Kovalev filed yet another pro se case in this Court seeking relief.!° He first sued multiple Labcorp entities, its Chief Executive Officer, and Labcorp employees in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, later removed by Defendants. Mr. Kovalev filed an amended Complaint asserting twenty claims, including civil rights violations alleging Labcorp’s African American employees discriminated against him because he is white.'® Judge Pratter, in a forty-five page opinion, dismissed all of Mr. Kovalev’s claims against all parties except for a common law assault and battery claim against Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings.'!’ Judge Pratter also denied Mr. Kovalev’s motion to amend his complaint without prejudice. '® He now stands on assault and battery allegations plainly contradicted by his videotape. Mr. Kovalev alleges the conduct of Labcorp’s employees caused him to “fear for his life, safety, and well—being.”'? Mr. Kovalev alleges Labcorp’s employees: e “shouted” at him to leave and threatened him with calling the police;7° e “cornered” him and “display[ed] extreme hostility against a White person Plaintiff [sic] to the point that [he] started to fear for his life and realized that these [employees] most likely would physically attack him” and the two employees “stay[ed] right next to [him] and ... display{ed] all signs of imminent physical attack against [him] if he [did not] leave Labcorp immediately”;?! e when one employee “started shouting at [him], she rose from her chair, as it appeared for preparation to attack [him] physically”; Mr. Kovalev alleges a Labcorp employee battered him:

e “Hit[] with her open hand [his] cellular telephone that he was holding in his hand and she almost knocked [his] telephone out of his hand.” Mr. Kovalev later mentioned (but did not plead mindful of Rule 11) another touching when he asserted a Labcorp employee “grabb[ed] his arm without his permission and she ... physically push[ed] him forward” to the exit and “with her open hand hit, crushed, and smashed [his] hand and his cellular phone ... [held] in his hand.”*4 Mr. Kovalev chose not to depose the Labcorp employees seen and heard on the videotape. He relies entirely upon his videotape. II. Analysis Labcorp moved for summary judgment arguing Mr. Kovalev cannot show a prima facie case of assault and battery. Mr. Kovalev responded the cell phone video proves Labcorp employees assaulted and battered him. Mr. Kovalev relies entirely on the cell phone video he asserts shows Labcorp employees assaulted and battered him, including “grabbing” his arm, physically pushing him, and hitting, crushing, and smashing, with open hand, his cell phone he held in his hand. He alleges conduct placing him in fear of his life. The video contradicts Mr. Kovalev’s story. The Supreme Court directs where a plaintiff's version of events “is so utterly discredited by the record” — here, the lynchpin video — no reasonable jury could find a genuine fact issue and we may enter summary judgment in favor of Labcorp.”° A. There is no basis to find assault or battery under Pennsylvania law. Mr. Kovalev continues to argue his videotape ‘‘automatically” proves Labcorp employees assaulted and battered him during the seventy-second video. We see no possible basis for this conclusion. Assault is an intentional tort under Pennsylvania law defined as “an act intended to put another person in reasonable apprehension of an immediate battery, and which succeeds in causing

an apprehension of such battery.”*° The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 21 defines civil assault: “(1) An actor is subject to liability to another for assault if (a) he acts intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with the person of the other or a third person, or an imminent apprehension of such a contact, and (b) the other is thereby put in such imminent apprehension.

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Bluebook (online)
KOVALEV v. LABORATORY CORPORATION OF AMERICA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kovalev-v-laboratory-corporation-of-america-paed-2024.