NELSON v. CLAUSSEN

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 20, 2024
Docket3:23-cv-01896
StatusUnknown

This text of NELSON v. CLAUSSEN (NELSON v. CLAUSSEN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NELSON v. CLAUSSEN, (D.N.J. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

MITCHELL NELSON, et al., Plaintiffs, Civil Action No. 23-01896 (RK) (JBD) Vv. OPINION DON CLAUSSEN, et al., Defendants.

KIRSCH, District Judge THIS MATTER comes before the Court upon numerous motions and cross motions to dismiss. More than forty named Defendants! move to dismiss Plaintiffs Mitchell Nelson’s, Sarah E. Hearn-Nelson’s, and Paulina Giraldo-James’ Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”). (ECF Nos. 11, 12, 13, 58, 63, 68, 69, and 85.) Several Defendants also move for sanctions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“Rule”) 11.2 (ECF Nos. 71 and 75.) Plaintiffs oppose these motions and, in their opposition, again request to amend their complaint. (See ECF No. 90.) The Court has

' The named Defendants are: (1) Don Claussen; (2) Derek Debree; (3) Marisha Barlatier Sirois; (4) Julie Swartwood; (5) Leslie Krause; (6) Lynn Maccia; (7) Robert Kellner; (8) Monroe Jason Moyer; (9) Matt Maccia; (10) William S. Rustico; (11) William Schreiber; (12) Kristine L. Claussen; (13) Adam Sirois; (14) Ravi Sarma; (15) Teresa Kellner; (16) Craig Reinauer; (17) Susan Glass; (18) Monmouth Hills, Inc.; (19) Ariadne Goerke; (20) Marguerite Ann Goerke Downey; (21) Carol Ann Goerke Taylor; (22) Nancy Goerke Bell; (23) Leland Clayton Currier; (24) William Frank Currier; (25) Access Property Management, Inc. (“Access”); (26) Louise Krinsky; (27) Fox & Roach LP d/b/a Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Fox & Roach (“Fox & Roach’); (28) OceanFirst Financial Corporation (“OceanFirst”); (29) Trident Abstract Title Agency (“Trident”); (30) Joseph A. Gabas; (31) Taylor Callahan; (32) Gina Dimaggio; (33) Koren Gassaro; (34) Morgan Engineering LLC (“Morgan”); (35) Lauren Plump; (36) Dave von Steenburg; (37) Cutolo Barros, LLC; (38) Gregg S. Sodini; (39) Hubert C. Cutolo; (40) Daniel Barros; and (41) Biancamano & Distefano. (ECF No. 77 (“SAC”) at 2.) In addition, Plaintiffs name “John/Jane Does 1-15, and ABC Corporations 1-5.” Ud. at 2.) One of the cross motions for dismissal—that of Defendants Taylor Callahan, Gina Dimaggio, Joseph A. Gabas, Koren Gassaro—joins Defendants OceanFirst’s and Trident’s motion for sanctions. (See ECF No. 85 at 9-10 (joining ECF No. 71).)

considered the parties’ submissions and resolves the matter without oral argument pursuant to Rules 78 and Local Civil Rule 78.1. For the reasons set forth below, the motions and cross motions to dismiss are GRANTED, (ECF Nos. 11, 12, 13, 58, 63, 68, 69 and 85), and Counts I through V of the SAC are dismissed with prejudice. The motions for sanctions are DENIED without prejudice. (ECF Nos. 71 and 75.) 1. BACKGROUND The operative Complaint now before the Court is the SAC—the third complaint filed on behalf of Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs are and have been represented by the same legal counsel throughout the entirety of this litigation. The Court will not attempt to recite the full, tortured procedural history of this case. Instead, the Court cites the May 1, 2024 Memorandum Order (ECF No. 76) issued by the Honorable J. Brendan Day U.S.M.J. and incorporates by reference pages one through eight of same. (See id. at 1-8.) Accordingly, the Court only briefly recites the background relevant to the present dispute. Plaintiffs are three “recent homebuyers” in a housing development in Monmouth Hills Historical District of Middletown Township, New Jersey. (SAC § 2.) One plaintiff is Jewish; a second plaintiff is a non-U.S. citizen; and the third plaintiffis Latina “whose partner and father of her only child is African American.”? (Id. § 2, 9, 10, 11.) The SAC is a 33-paged, 149-paragraphed pleading which nonetheless is jumbled and exceedingly difficult to discern. As best as the Court can make out, the SAC appears to claim that Plaintiffs’ homeowner’s association is siphoning contributed monies from the homeowners, concealing environmental hazards from same, and discriminating against homeowners within Plaintiffs’ community on the basis of religion,

3 The Court notes for the record that it believes this refers to Plaintiffs’ Counsel who frequently appears to reference himself in the pleadings as Plaintiff Giraldo-Nelson’s partner and the father of their child. He is not a party to this litigation. (See RICO Case St. at 17, 33, 40 and infra note I1.)

citizenship, and race. Inflammatory allegations notwithstanding—which include grandiose claims of “witness tampering,” “extortion,” and “tax evasion” Plaintiffs claim Defendants’ misdeeds affect both “interstate and foreign commerce” with a trans-Atlantic reach to the Netherlands. (See id. 1, 5(m), 6, 100, 126.) As described below, the sheer volume of the scattershot allegations does not compensate for or distract from the SAC’s patent factual and legal deficiencies. Plaintiffs’ litigation “strategy” can be described as follows. Each time that Plaintiffs have been confronted with motions to dismiss, Plaintiffs have either filed—or sought to file—an amended complaint. With each amended complaint, Plaintiffs have added both defendants and causes of action. The initial Complaint was filed on April 4, 2023—almost 18 months ago. (See ECF No. 2.) The initial Complaint named some twenty-eight individual and business entities as defendants, a number that does not include additional unnamed individuals and corporations. (See id.) The first round of motions to dismiss, (see ECF Nos. 11, 12, 13), was met with Plaintiffs’ first Amended Complaint (“FAC”); the FAC added four new defendants. (See ECF No. 15 (“FAC”); see also ECF No. 76 at 2.) At that point, the total number of named defendants was thirty-two. (See FAC.) Additionally, the FAC increased the initial Complaint’s four counts (with three causes of action) to six counts (with five causes of action). (See id.) Among other causes of action is a purported violation of the Federal Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692, et seq. (See id. J 56, 119.) In response to the FAC, Defendants either renewed their previously filed motions to dismiss or, in the case of the newly-added defendants, filed motions to dismiss. (See, e.g., ECF No. 19 at 2; ECF No. 58 at 2; ECF No. 59-2 at 8; ECF No. 69 at 1; see also ECF No. 35 at 1.) In response, Plaintiffs moved again to amend their complaint, and this time, sought to file a RICO Case Statement. (See ECF Nos. 53, 54, 55.)

WhilJeu dDgaey M'esm ora Onrddruea mutho rtihfizelie gnso fte h SAC,i mta kecsla er tahitdt di so simpto lpytua ne ntd oP lnatiidfiafltso'ar niytca sn dfi,nl altyoa, l ltoihwCs o utor t attetmopa tddr ses thel itoafnDy e fnedanmtotsion's todi smsi osn teh mer4i Tthse. MemoranOdrudmea rl scohn ricol ePslainrteipffesfaa'ilt ue rdtoe asbeib dy Court-ordered deadlfaiinleeut osrc ,o pmlwyi tLho cCailv Riulsl, ae swella sP lnatiirffesp'e aptleeda ding errrosa nmdis ctioitnatsot hreec rodR.eg retbtuaatbp ltPylal yni,ts i'affn tair ceescn apsublya ted the foilnl[goT:w] phreo cecdhuartoahsl[a Pt] lahianvcteai uffstseh dr otuhgehi r seraimaeln dmtehneutinsrt, i amnendlo yn -comfiplliinaagnnsdt, thefaiirl utroea dhetroet heC ourtd'isr ectives-and notwithtshtuean nddeirnsgis genreimdoi'usssg iavbiontughtse legal suofftfi hcpeir eonpcoSysA eC(da sw elalst hien itial complaaniFdAn Ct) -the wCioglurlra ttnh mte o titooan m end.

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Bluebook (online)
NELSON v. CLAUSSEN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-claussen-njd-2024.