Termont Superior Court Filed 07/16/25 Orange UUnit
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Orange Unit Case No. 25-CV-00670 5 Court Street
Chelsea VT 05038 802-685-4610 www.vermontjudiciary.org Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al
ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Title: Motion to Dismiss; Motion ; for Mediation to be Deemed Previously Satisfied (Motion: 2; 4) Filer: Andrew J. Marchev; Bruce Martin; Debra Martin Filed Date: May 01, 2025; May 15, 2025
The motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
Defendants Lucas Martin, Samantha Walsh, and the Martin Family Farm, LLC
have filed the present motion seeking to dismiss Plaintiffs Bruce and Debra Martin's
complaint. The Court finds, upon review of the pleadings and briefing that
Defendant's motion goes to the factual issues in dispute on counts , Il, IV, V, and |
VII, and is Denied in Part for these claims. The motion does, however, provide
sufficient grounds for claims Ill, VI, VIl, and IX, and their motion is Granted in Part,
and these three counts are Dismissed as a matter of law.
Standard for a Motion to Dismiss
Entry Regarding Motion Page 1 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al Dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is
appropriate “where there exist no facts or circumstances that would entitle the
plaintiff to relief.” Amy’s Enterprises v. Sorrell, 174 Vt. 623, 623 (2002). The Court
must assume that all factual allegations contained in the complaint are true.
Richards v. Town of Norwich, 169 Vt. 44 (1999). “The purpose of a motion to
dismiss for failure to state a claim is to test the law of a claim, not the facts which
support it.” Levinsky v. Diamond, 140 Vt. 595, 600 (1982) (quotations omitted),
overruled on other grounds in Muzzy v. State, 155 Vt. 279, (1990).
Factual Background
Plaintiffs allege in the complaint the following material facts. Plaintiffs own a
205-acre dairy farm located at 1626 Baptist Street in Williamstown, Vermont that
they leased to Defendant Martin Family Fam, LLC through an agreement (the
“Lease”) executed on December 29, 2022. On the same date, Plaintiffs also sold
Defendant Martin Family Farm, LLC an assortment of farm machinery, equipment,
and a herd of dairy cattle, through two bills of sale. Under the Lease, the Martin
Family Farm, LLC was granted the right to exclusively occupy, use, and possess the
farmland and buildings for the purpose of operating a dairy and livestock farm. The
term of the Lease was ten years, and the rate of rent was $800 plus the costs,
expenses of maintenance and repair, insurance, and other costs laid out in the
Lease to maintain the property. The Lease did except the horse barn and horse
Entry Regarding Motion Page 2 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al pens from this exclusive right of occupancy as well as providing a way for the
parties to share other areas, if they reached a separate agreement.
None of the documents submitted by Plaintiffs indicate that either
Defendants Lucas Martin or Samantha Walsh were named as parties or guarantors
on the Lease or parties to the two bills of sale. Both Lucas Martin and Samantha
Walsh are alleged to be owners of Martin Family Farm, LLC.
On December 17, 2024, the Plaintiffs mailed to the Martin Family Farm, LLC
and its owners a notice of termination. The notice alleged the following:1
1) Breach of the Lease by Defendant Martin Family Farm, LLC, ending its Organic Dairy Contract.
2) Breach of Section (7) of the Lease by not making repairs and replacement to buildings on the farm.
3) Breach of the Lease by additional damages to and failure to repair and maintain the premises.
4) Breach of the Lease by assigning a portion of the premises to a third party, Jen Lambert.
5) Breach of the Lease by failing to have Plaintiffs named as additionally insured on the Defendant’s insurance policy for the farm.
1 Plaintiffs’ notice contains 20 numbered paragraphs. Some paragraphs contain specific allegations of breach that correspond to specific portions of the Lease. Others are more narrative and recite facts that Plaintiffs believed relevant to the termination. The list below is what the Court was able to distill from the letter as actual bases for the termination and omits the discussion on attempts as mediation offered by Plaintiffs.
Entry Regarding Motion Page 3 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al 6) Breach of the Lease by failing to either repair or confirm repairs to the farmhouse to address issues raised by an inspection performed by the Vermont Division of Fire and Safety.
The letter gave Defendants 30 days to vacate the property in accordance with
Section 11 of the Lease. When Defendants did not vacate, Plaintiffs filed the
present complaint.
Plaintiffs’ Complaint and Claims
In their complaint, Plaintiffs list nine different causes of action against
Defendants. They include: Court I (Breach of the Lease—Loss of Organic Valley
Contract); Count II (Failure to Maintain and Repair Buildings and Perform
Maintenance); Count III (Failure to Comply with Property Insurance); Count IV
(Violation of Assignment Provision); Count V (Breach of the Covenant of Good Faith
and Fair Dealing); Count VI (Fraudulent Conversion); Count VII (Unjust Enrichment);
Count VIII (Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress); and Count IX (Conversion
Using Failed Promise).
For purposes of the present motion to dismiss, the Court will address these
claims in the following manner. Counts I, II, III, IV, V, and IX. are contractual claims
based on alleged breaches of the Lease. Count VI concerns Defendants’ use of feed
stored on the premises, but not included in either bill of sale, to feed the dairy herd.
Count VII concerns the allegedly unauthorized use of Plaintiffs’ business account to
Entry Regarding Motion Page 4 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al pay Defendants’ expenses. Count VIII concerns Defendants’ alleged actions to
cause Plaintiffs to lose their housing.
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Breach of Contract Claims
1. Count I Breach of Contract (Cancelling the Organic Valley Contract)
Defendants contend that the first Count should be dismissed because there
is no language in the parties’ Lease that requires Defendants to maintain the
Organic Valley contract. While Defendants are correct that there are no provisions
in the contract expressly requiring them to maintain this specific contract, the Lease
states that the purpose of the contract is the “running of a dairy farm, and assorted
other purposes related to supporting a dairy and livestock farming operation.”2
Plaintiffs’ contention, as the Court understands, is that by cancelling the Organic
Valley contract, Defendant Martin Family Farm, LLC, effectively left the dairy
farming business and ceased to operate as a dairy farm. Defendants contend
otherwise, but this is factual dispute for which the factual record, at the very least,
needs to be developed to understand what Defendants’ activities were after the
contract cancellation. This would include what farming activities continued, what
activities ceased, and what activities were modified. For these reasons, a motion to
2 This purpose is stated in both the Preamble and Statement of Purpose as well as Section 3.1 of the
Lease.
Entry Regarding Motion Page 5 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al dismiss would be inappropriate at this time, and the motion to dismiss is Denied as
to Count I.
2. Count II (Failure to Maintain and Repair)
Plaintiffs’ second count concerns Section 3 of the Lease and breaches that
arose from Defendant’s alleged failures to maintain the property. While Defendants
note that the law does not require tenants to perform repairs to improve the
property, Plaintiffs’ complaint appears to encompass more than just normal wear
and tear. Moreover, it will require the Court to go beyond the pleadings to
understand the nature and condition of the property at the time of the Lease, the
nature of Defendants’ use, and the extent and specific damages that Plaintiffs are
alleging before the Court can determine whether the damages alleged constitute a
breach of Section 7 of the parties’ lease. For these reasons, a motion to dismiss
would be inappropriate at this time, and the motion to dismiss is Denied as to Count
II.
3. Count III (Failing to Maintain Insurance)
This Count concerns an alleged breach that Plaintiffs claim arose because
they allege that Defendants did not maintain the required insurance policy over the
farm and herd that would name Plaintiffs as additional insureds. Defendants
contend that Plaintiffs are mistaken, and that the Defendants had insurance on the
Entry Regarding Motion Page 6 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al property at all relevant times, proof of which they provided to Plaintiffs in
negotiations. Defendants have attached a copy of their insurance certificates that
name Plaintiffs as additional insureds as part of their answer. Plaintiffs do not
respond to this argument in the opposition to Defendant’s motion. While a motion
to dismiss is normally limited to the pleadings, a Court may consider documents
referenced in the pleadings that effectively merge into the pleadings. Wolfe v. VT
Digger, 2023 VT 50, ¶ 12. If they do not merge into the pleadings, the Court may
also consider them under the rules for summary judgment. Nash v. Coxon, 152 Vt.
313, 314–15 (1989). In either case, the Court will allow these insurance documents
as they are necessarily involved in the pleadings in this case and respond to the
Lease provisions under Section 8. The insurance certificates establish that
Defendants had a general liability insurance policy on the farm, a farm liability policy
over the dairy operations, and a policy over the farmhouse. In all cases, Plaintiffs
were named as additional insured.
In reviewing the complaint and termination letter, Plaintiffs’ position is less of
a definitive statement that Defendants lacked insurance and more of a presumption
that there was none in place because Plaintiffs’ since because their prior policy over
the farm had been cancelled, and they had not received sufficient notice of a
replacement policy. While this lack of notice would be reasonable cause for
concern, it does not, in and of itself constitute a breach of the Lease. In light of
Entry Regarding Motion Page 7 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al Defendant’s undisputed production of these certificates, and the lack of any
opposition by Plaintiffs, the Court finds that there are no grounds as a matter of law
for Plaintiff’s breach of contact claim based on allegation of Defendant’s failure to
maintain insurance required under the Lease. The record indicates that Defendants
are in compliance with their obligations under Section 8 of the Lease. Therefore,
Defendant’s motion to dismiss is Granted in Part, and Count III is Dismissed.
4. Count IV (Violation of the Assignment)
This claim concerns Plaintiffs’ allegations that Defendants breached the
lease by assigning portions of it to third-party to use the dairy barn and facilities.
Defendants contend that there has been no assignment of the Lease. While they do
not deny making an agreement with a third-party, they argue that the agreement
was only a sublet the property for a limited period of time, and that all rights and
responsibilities under the Lease remain with them. In this respect, Defendants
focus their argument on the distinction between an assignment and a sublease.
They contend the former is prohibited under section 9 of the Lease, but the latter is
permitted in the absence of any restriction to the contrary. Courts have
distinguished between assignments and subleases and have allowed the latter even
when there is language restricting the former. See Rocklen. Inc. v. Radulesco, 522
A.2d 846, 849 (Ct. App. 1987) (“The basic distinction between an assignment and a
sublease is that by the former, the lessee conveys his whole interest in the
Entry Regarding Motion Page 8 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al unexpired term, leaving no reversion in himself; the latter transfers only a part of the
leased premises for a period less than the original term.”).
There are two problems with Defendant’s position. First, the Restatement
(Second) of Property notes that the freedom to transfer leasehold interest through
either a sublease or assignment may be inherently limited where the lease envisions
the tenant to perform significant personal services. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
PROPERTY, LANDLORD & TENANT § 15.1(2), cmt. c (2024 update). As the Restatement
notes:
If the landlord's expectations under the lease as to personal services of the tenant may be fulfilled only by a person with the special qualifications of the tenant, and the special qualifications were a primary motivation for the landlord to enter into the lease with that particular tenant, the landlord is entitled to have the person of his choice continue as the tenant. In such situation, the interest of the tenant in the leased property is not transferable without the consent of the landlord, but, of course, the lease could provide otherwise.
Id. Given the language in the Lease concerning the purpose and intent of the Lease
to allow Defendants to establish a dairy farming operation, this issue presents a
factual issue that will require more development by the parties to understand their
intent and whether Defendants were specially selected to perform this service as
well as whether the third-party sublease interfered or displaced those obligations.
Entry Regarding Motion Page 9 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al Second, even if the Court were to apply the assignment/sublease distinction,
there is an issue of factual development. Neither the complaint nor Defendants’
motion lay out the nature of the subtenancy. Some of the information indicates that
this was a short-term arrangement, but until the parties have established evidence
showing whether the subtenant was or was not in control of the farm and all
dairying operations, the nature of her sublease, and confirmation that the sublease
has ended and is of no further effect, any motion to dismiss is premature.
For these reasons, a motion to dismiss would be inappropriate, and the
motion to dismiss is Denied as to Count IV.
5. Count V (Breach of the Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing)
In their complaint, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants’ cancellation of the
Organic Valley contract, assignment of the lease, and failure to share business
records constitute a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
The covenant of good faith and fair dealing is an implied term that is included
in every contract in Vermont. Carmichael v. Adirondack Bottled Gas Corp. of
Vermont, 161 Vt. 200, 208 (1993). The promise is that each party will not act in a
manner that undermines or destroys the other’s right to receive their benefits from
the contract. Id. The covenant functions in a fact-specific and contextual manner
to protect against behavior that violates “community standards of decency, fairness
Entry Regarding Motion Page 10 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al or reasonableness.” Id. at 208–09 (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS §
205, cmt. a (1981)).
Given the fact-specific nature of such claims, the Court cannot as a matter of
law rule out the possibility that the actions cited by Plaintiffs are more than just
breaches of the contract. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants sought to undermine the
intent and purpose of the agreement through the changes and decisions that they
made. While Defendants dispute whether some of these changes occurred, whether
they have the impact that Plaintiffs imply, and even Defendants’ intent, the Court is
not in a position to weigh or determine if these actions are as harmless as
Defendants contend them to be.
Furthermore, while neither party has acknowledged this in their filings, it is
readily deducible that the parties are related, and there is some implication that
Plaintiffs were retiring from dairy farming and turning over the business to a family
member. In such a case, the Court could foresee that if Defendants agreed to such
a transition and obtained favorable terms but then acted to radically alter the
farming business, then they could conceivable have acted in a manner to undermine
the transaction. Given that such a scenario is possible and would violate the
covenant of good faith and fair dealing, dismissal, as a matter of law, is
inappropriate at this juncture.
Entry Regarding Motion Page 11 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al While the Court does not make a finding that such actions occurred, the
plausible development under the facts is sufficient to allow Plaintiffs’ claims to
continue. For these reasons, a motion to dismiss would be inappropriate, and the
motion to dismiss is Denied as to Count V.
6. Count VI (Conversion of Animal Feed)
In this claim, Plaintiffs claim that the feed stored in the barn was not intended
to go to Defendants. The claim of conversion, as Defendants note, require Plaintiffs
to establish (1) that they own the property; (2) that Defendants appropriated the
property; and (3) that the Defendants exercised dominion over it in exclusion and
defiance to the owner’s right. Montgomery v. Devoid, 2006 VT 127, ¶ 12.
In looking at the facts as pled, the Court finds there is nothing in either the
Lease or bill of sale expressly discussing the feed, but the documents do indicate
(1) that Plaintiffs were transferring their herd of cattle to Defendants and not
retaining any cattle; (2) were transferring possession and use of all premises
(including the barn where the cattle feed was stored); and (3) were setting up an
agreement to establish Defendants as the new operators of the dairy farm. All of
these facts suggest that the cattle feed was to be included in the transfer.
Moreover, Plaintiffs do not allege that Defendants refused to allow them to remove
the feed or thwarted any effort to use or sell the feed. It was neither wrongful or
Entry Regarding Motion Page 12 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al contrary to the parties’ agreement that Defendants would exercise control of the
barn and use the equipment and materials found within the barn for the stated
purposes of the agreement.
Plaintiffs do not allege or include any allegations that the feed left in the barn
was intended to be retained by Plaintiffs or held separate from the parties’ larger
agreement. Plaintiffs’ reliance on the absence of an express term of transfer does
not, by itself, give rise to a claim of conversion. Plaintiffs would need to allege some
wrongdoing by Defendants to establish a claim of conversion that would show
wrongful dominion or exclusion under the third prong of a conversion claim.
Montgomery, 2006 VT 127, at ¶ 12. Absent such allegations, this claim fails as a
matter of law. Based on this, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is Granted in Part, and
Claim VI is Dismissed.
7. Count VII (Unjust Enrichment)
The nature of this claim is based on the allegation that Defendants took
control of milk funds that should have gone to Plaintiffs. As Defendants note in
their motion to dismiss, there is some ambiguity in Plaintiffs’ pleadings regarding
the timing of the Organic Valley contract and Plaintiffs’ transfer of the farming
operations to Defendants. For the purpose of the pleading, however, Plaintiffs’
claim is fairly clear. They believe they are entitled to some of the Organic Valley
Entry Regarding Motion Page 13 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al funds, which Defendants have spent. Plaintiff have posited that they are either
entitled to these funds by contract or because it represents their work, and it would
be inequitable to deprive them of the value of this revenue. Under Vermont’s notice
pleading standards, this is sufficient to make out a claim for these funds. Bock v.
Gold, 2008 VT 81, ¶ 4 (discussing Vermont’s notice pleading standards).
Defendants’ objections look to narrow the factual basis of Plaintiffs’ claims in
this area, and as such, they are ripe for discovery and possibly a motion for
summary judgment. For purposes of the present motion, Defendants do not point to
any undisputed factual basis that would show that (1) the Organic Valley contract
and any revenue in the business account post-dated the parties’ transfer and (2)
that none of the funds claimed by Plaintiffs were related to work done by Plaintiffs
for which they might reasonably entitled to an equitable claim. Hirchak v. Hirchak,
2024 VT 81, ¶ 26 (outlining the elements of an unjust enrichment claim).
For purposes of the present motion, however, the Court cannot, on the
present record, dismiss Plaintiffs claims as a matter of law. Therefore, a motion to
dismiss would be inappropriate, and the motion to dismiss is Denied as to Count
VII.
Entry Regarding Motion Page 14 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al 8. Count VII (Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress)
The basis for Plaintiffs’ claim of Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
concerns actions that Plaintiffs attribute to Defendants regarding the foreclosure of
their home in 2024. These facts involve allegations that Defendants cancelled
Plaintiffs’ homeowner insurance, sent texts that alienated other members of the
parties’ extended family to shun Plaintiffs, and that Defendants affirmatively hoped
that Plaintiffs would lose their home.
As Defendants note, a key element of an Intentional Infliction of Emotional
Distress claim requires allegations of “outrageous conduct.” Colby v. Umbrella, Inc.,
2008 VT 20, ¶ 10. The Vermont Supreme Court has noted that outrageous conduct
must demonstrate extreme and shocking behavior.
Plaintiff’s burden of proof on a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress is a heavy one. He must demonstrate that defendants’ conduct was so outrageous as to surpass “‘all possible bounds of decency, and . . . be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.’”
Gallipo v. City of Rutland, 163 Vt. 83, 94 (1994) (quoting Demag v. American Ins.
Cos., 146 Vt. 608, 611 (1986) and RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 46 cmt. d
(1965)). In this respect, the key issue is not a party’s intent, but the nature of the
actions. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 46 cmt. d (“Generally, the case is one in
Entry Regarding Motion Page 15 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al which the recitation of the facts to an average member of the community would
arouse his resentment against the actor, and lead him to exclaim, ‘Outrageous!’”).
While the question of outrageous conduct is a fact-specific one, it is the Court’s role
to conduct an initial review determine if the alleged behaviors may “reasonable be
regarded as so extreme and outrageous as to permit recovery.” Id. at cmt. h.
In this case, the facts recited by Plaintiffs do not constitute outrageous acts.
If established, the alleged actions could be deemed to be mean and heartless, but
they do not shock the conscience or constitute behavior beyond all possible bounds
of decency. They are, unfortunately, enough common to families in conflict, but they
do not represent shock or atrocious behavior.
For these reasons, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is Granted in Part, and
Claim VIII is Dismissed.
9. Count IX (Conversion Using False Promises)
Plaintiffs’ final claim concerns what they allege are various failures by
Defendants to perform on promises given in the parties’ Lease and Bills of Sale.
Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants failed to continue the dairy farming
obligations that were the purpose of the transfer. This claim is nearly identical in
substance to Plaintiffs’ first breach of contract count, which relies on the allegation
that Defendants failed to maintain and operate the dairy farm by cancelling the
Entry Regarding Motion Page 16 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al Organic Valley contract. As explained above, the Court understands that this first
count addresses the dairy farming purpose in the parties’ Lease.
The problems with Plaintiffs’ final count is that by couching these issues
under the claim of conversion, the documents filed with the Court do not
demonstrate that Plaintiffs had any ownership or claim of title in the cattle or farm
equipment. The bills of sale contained in Plaintiffs’ complaint do not state any
conditions on the sale of the cattle and equipment to Defendants. None of the cited
documents limit Defendants’ ability to sell, trade, or otherwise use the livestock and
equipment as they saw fit. Unlike the Lease that has express language concerning
the purpose and intent, there is no such language concerning the cattle or
equipment. To the extent that Plaintiffs allege that there was such language
implied in the transaction, Plaintiffs’ claim would be for a breach of contract, not
conversion, and it would be controlled by the language reasonable drawn from the
bills of sale that transferred titles of the cattle and equipment. Prue v. Royer, 2013
VT 12, ¶ 20 (noting that title documents control the terms and conditions of
property transfers and trump any implied or oral intent).
Conversion, as Defendants correctly note, begins with allegations and
evidence that Plaintiffs owned the property, that Defendants appropriated the
property, and that the appropriation was in exclusion and defiance of Plaintiffs’
rights. Montgomery, 2006 VT 127, at ¶ 12. In this case, Plaintiffs’ have provided no
Entry Regarding Motion Page 17 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al credible allegation that they had an ownership interest in the cattle or equipment
following the execution of the bills of sale. For these reasons, Defendants’ motion
to dismiss is Granted in Part, and Claim IX is Dismissed.
Remaining Issues
Based on the Court’s decision, there are several issues that need to be
resolved. First, it is not clear which claims correspond to which Defendants. The
breach of contract claims would appear to only extend to the Martin Family Farm,
LLC as this Defendant was the only party to the various Leases and Bills of Sale.
Given that several of Plaintiffs’ non-breach of contract claims have survived the
motion to dismiss, the parties need to clarify this issue.
The Court also recognizes that there is an issue of discovery still pending,
which must be completed before a motion for summary judgment becomes
appropriate. The Court notes that Plaintiffs have filed a motion for summary
judgment. This motion does not facially comply with the standards of Rule 56,
which requires the moving party to file a statement of undisputed material facts
separate from any legal argument. This statement must make specific references to
either documents in evidence or admissible materials, such as affidavits,
depositions, pleadings, or admissions. V.R.C.P. 56(c); Cassani v. Hale, 2010 VT 8, ¶
20. If the parties have also not completed discovery, then summary judgment is
Entry Regarding Motion Page 18 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al likely not appropriate. Doe v. Doe, 172 Vt. 533, 534–35 (2001) (mem.) (ruling that
summary judgment was premature before the responding party had an opportunity
to complete discovery).
Finally, there is the issue of mediation. Plaintiffs have filed a motion seeking
to set aside the mediation requirement under V.R.C.P. 16.1 based on their pre-
complaint mediation. The Court is not persuaded that this requirement has been
fully satisfied. In light of the Court’s ruling on Defendants’ motion to dismiss, it
would appear at a minimum that the earlier mediation did not include the entire
universe of claims that Plaintiffs presently seek to assert, and the case is now in a
different posture in light of the Court’s current ruling, which has struck several of
Plaintiffs claims but has allowed others to continue.
In light of this landscape, the Court finds that the next logical step is to set
this matter for a status conference with the parties to take up the issues of
discovery, identification of which claims lie against which Defendants, the role a
second mediation could play, and the timing and formatting of any motions for
summary judgment.
ORDER
Based on the foregoing, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is Denied in Part as
to Plaintiffs’ claims under Count I, II, IV, V, and VI. It is Granted in Part against
Entry Regarding Motion Page 19 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al Plaintiffs’ claims under Count III, VII, VIII, and IX. These four Counts are Dismissed
for the reasons stated in this Order.
The Court will set this matter for a 30-minute status conference at its next
available date to take up the discovery, mediation, and motion practice issues
discussed in this decision. At that time, the Court will take up Plaintiffs’ motion to
dismiss the parties from any further mediation.
Electronically signed on 7/14/2025 2:11 AM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 9(d)
__________________________________ Daniel Richardson Superior Court Judge
Entry Regarding Motion Page 20 of 20 25-CV-00670 Bruce Martin et al v. Lucas Martin et al