mayer v. mt mansfield

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 5, 2024
Docket22-cv-3852
StatusPublished

This text of mayer v. mt mansfield (mayer v. mt mansfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
mayer v. mt mansfield, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Veunont Superior Court Filed 24 Lamo'Ola/16 e nit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT 1 fl4 CIVIL DIVISION Lamoille Unit Case N0. 22-CV-03852 154 Main Street Hyde Park VT 05655 802-888—3887 fifi wwwvermontjudjciaryorg

Aaron Mayer v. Mt Mansfield Company, Inc , et a1 ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Title: Motion to Compel (Motion: 5) Filer: Nicholas]. Seldon Filed Date: March 19, 2024

The motion is GRANTED.

The present motion to compel concerns Plaintiff Mayer’s efforts to depose Gary Gendimenico, an employee for Defendant VR US Holdings II, LL, the owner and operator of the Stowe Mountain Resort. The issue between the parties is whether Mayer may ask for Gendimenico’s opinion about a walking path under V.R.E. 701. For the reasons laid out below, the Court grants Plaintiff s Motion.

Background This matter concerns an alleged slip and fall that occurred on Defendant’s property in December 2019. Plaintiff alleges that he was walking from a gondola lift station back to his car when he slipped and fell on a patch of ice and injured his knee and back. Defendant has asserted,

among other defenses, that Plaintiff was not walking on an established or maintained pathway. On March l9, 2024, Plaintiff started the deposition of Gary Gendimenico, a 24-year

employee of Stowe Mountain Resort, who, as Senior Lift Operations Manager, was in charge of the lift operators and lift terminals at the Resort at the time of Plaintiffs fall. After establishing Gendimenico’s background and experience and familiarity with the property, Plaintiff also established that Gendimenico had reviewed the map that Mayer had created purporting to Show his

route of travel from the gondola to his fall. Plaintist counsel then asked Gendimenico, “\What

opinions did [he] make about the walking route that Mr. Mayer and his family took to the gondola?” (Pltf. EX. 1, at 15:8—10.) Following this question, counsel for the Defendant objected and instructed the witness not to answer the question or any other questions about his opinion. Plaintiff’s counsel asserted the

Entry Regarding Motion Page 1 of 5 22—CV—03852 Aaron Mayer v. Mt Mansfield Company, Inc , et a1 right to ask such questions under V.R.E. 701. Defendant’s counsel then made an objection under V.R.C.P. 26(b)(2)(B).1 Defendant’s counsel offered to continue the deposition but stated that he would continue to instruct Gendimenico not to answer any questions about any opinions he might or might not have concerning the incident and walkway. Plaintiff, stating that Defendant had no right to instruct the deponent not to answer ended the deposition and has filed the immediate motion to compel. Legal Analysis While both parties have framed the present issue as a question of admissibility under V.R.E. 701, the Court must begin its analysis with the rules governing discovery and depositions. This is because the issue of admissibility is not properly before the Court and is generally not an issue during the process of taking a deposition, except when the Rules require the assertion of an objection to preserve or to give the opposing party an opportunity to course correct. See Nichols v. Brattleboro Retreat, 2009 VT 4, ¶ 8 (noting that parties, unless they stipulate to the contrary do not have an affirmative obligation to raise an objection during a deposition because it remains the proponent’s burden to establish the foundation for the admission of the deposition). The relevant rules governing depositions may be found at V.R.C.P. 26, 30, and 32. Rule 26, particularly subsection (b), sets out the general scope of discovery and available limitations to enforce this scope. Rule 30 governs the process of depositions, and Rule 32 governs the use and purpose of depositions. Defendant defines the scope of its objection under V.R.C.P. 26(b)(2)(B). This section, however, is a more general limitation to the scope of discovery, and it must be read in conjunction with the more specific objection provisions that are found in Rule 30(d), which covers what kind of objections may be lodged during a deposition, and Rule 32(d), which addresses the effect of objections or other errors and irregularities in depositions. Under V.R.C.P. 30, an examiner has discretion to ask a broad range of questions so long as they are relevant to the subject matter of the action. WRIGHT & MILLER, 8A FED. PRAC. & PROC. (CIVIL) § 2113 (3d ed.) (2022 update). Unlike at trial, where an adverse party is limited to the scope

1 Rule 26(b)(2)(B) has three subparts. Discovery may be limited under this section if (i) the discovery sought is

unreasonably cumulative or duplicative; (ii) party has already had ample opportunity to obtain the information; or (iii) the proposed discovery is outside the scope permitted under Rule 26(b)(1) (relevant, nonprivileged, proportional to the needs of the case, and the benefit outweighs the burden). Of these three categories, Defendant only seems to be contending, and the record appears to only support an objection premised on 26(b)(2)(B)(iii).

Entry Regarding Motion Page 2 of 5 22-CV-03852 Aaron Mayer v. Mt Mansfield Company, Inc , et al of the direct examination, an “examiner may ask about anything relevant to the subject matter of the action, regardless of whether it was raised on direct examination.” Id. Under the Rules, a party seeking to object during a deposition must state the objection in a concise and non-argumentative and non-suggestive manner. V.R.C.P. 30(d)(1). The objecting party may instruct a party not to answer in only three circumstances: (1) as necessary to preserve a privilege; (2) to enforce a court-ordered limitation on evidence; or (3) to make a motion that the deposition is being done in bad faith. V.R.C.P. 30(d)(1), (3). In the present matter, Defendant’s instructions not to answer do not appear to fall into any one of these three reasons. The question of Gendimenico’s opinion is not a matter of privilege. It is not subject to a court ordered limitation. There is no allegation or evidence of bad faith in Plaintiff’s questions. Instead, Defendant’s objection appears to be one of relevance and admissibility. To the issue of relevance, the Court cannot, at this time, make any determination of whether Gendimenico’s opinion is relevant because it has not been stated, and there has not been a proffer to the substance. Given his experience and familiarity with the site, it is not unreasonable to understand that Gendimenico could have a relevant opinion about the condition, care, or suitability of the area for walking, but until an opinion is rendered, the Court cannot rule on the relevance. As the parties’ briefs indicates, the bulk of their dispute centers on whether Gendimenico’s opinion, as a fact witness, is admissible under the limitations and elements of V.R.E. 701. This issue, however, is also premature. The 1996 Reporter’s Notes to Rule 32 states that “Objections during a deposition should ordinarily be limited to those that would be waived under Rule 32(d)(3) if not timely made.” V.R.C.P. 32, rptr. n. 1996. In this case, the parties had agreed at the outset to stay any objections except to form and privilege. (Pltf. Ex. 1, at 3:14–16.) This practice is generally consistent with the Rules of Civil Procedure and its specific discovery provisions under Rule 32. As Wright & Miller notes: Rule 32(b) must be read in connection with Rule 32(d)(3), dealing with objections as to the taking of a deposition. Taken together these provisions make it clear that if the matter offered is within the scope of discovery, objection to its admissibility as evidence should be made at the trial or hearing when the deposition is offered in evidence and not at the taking of the deposition, unless the ground of the objection is one that might have been obviated or removed if made when the deposition was being taken.

WRIGHT & MILLER, 8A FED. PRAC. & PROC.

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Related

State v. Koveos
732 A.2d 722 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
Nichols v. Retreat
2009 VT 4 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2009)

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