Redding Life v. Sordoni Skanska, No. (X02) Cv-01-0166392-S (Aug. 20, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11866
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 20, 2001
DocketNo. (X02) CV-01-0166392-S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11866 (Redding Life v. Sordoni Skanska, No. (X02) Cv-01-0166392-S (Aug. 20, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redding Life v. Sordoni Skanska, No. (X02) Cv-01-0166392-S (Aug. 20, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11866 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

CORRECTED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON APPLICATIONS FOR COMMISSIONS TO TAKE OUT-OF-STATE DEPOSITIONS FOR USE AS EVIDENCE IN ARBITRATION PROCEEDING
The plaintiff, Redding Life Care, LLC ("Redding"), has applied to this Court under General Statutes § 52-412 (c) for the issuance of commissions to take out-of-state depositions of three individuals — Keith B. Morse of Colorado, Ralph J. Viglietti of New Jersey, and Glenn Kurth of Massachusetts. Its claimed purpose for so doing is to preserve the proposed deponents' testimony for later use as evidence in a currently pending arbitration proceeding entitled Inthe Matter of Redding Life Care, LLC and Sordoni Skanaka ConstructionCo., AAA Case No. 12 1100110 99.

Redding's three applications were attached to and made parts of a Complaint dated May 7, 2001, which was duly served upon defendant Sordoni Skanska Construction Company ("Sordoni"), its opponent in the pending arbitration, then returned to the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Stamford-Norwalk at Stamford. Thereafter, the case was transferred, by agreement of counsel, to the Complex Litigation Docket in the Judicial District of Waterbury, where it was argued on July 23, 2001. By this Memorandum of Decision, the Court hereby ORDERS that the plaintiff's applications as to Keith B. Morse and Ralph J. Viglietti be GRANTED IN PART, but that its application as to Glenn Kurth be DENTED IN ITS ENTIRETY.

I
General Statutes § 52-412 (c) provides as follows:

(c) Any party to a written agreement for arbitration may make application to the Superior Court, or, when the court is not in session, to a judge thereof, having jurisdiction as provided in subsection (b), for an order directing the taking of depositions, in the manner and CT Page 11867 for the reasons prescribed by law for taking depositions to be used in a civil action, for use as evidence in an arbitration.

To obtain relief under this statute, an applicant must establish: (1) that it is a party to a written arbitration agreement; (2) that it wishes to take one or more depositions to preserve testimony for later use as evidence in an arbitration proceeding under that agreement; and (3) that its reasons for seeking to preserve such testimony are such as would justify the taking of an evidentiary deposition in a civil action.

Redding and Sordoni agree that they both are parties to a written arbitration agreement, and that under that agreement they are currently parties to a pending arbitration proceeding. The agreement is part of a written Construction Management Agreement ("CMA") between Redding, as Owner, and Sordoni, as Construction Manager, for the construction of a life care facility in Redding, Connecticut known as Meadow Ridge (the "Project"). The pending arbitration concerns a series of disputes. between Redding and Sordoni as to conduct by each which allegedly violated the contractual rights of the other under the CMA. Redding claims, inter alia, that Sordoni wrongfully terminated the CMA in June 2000, stopped all work on the Project at that time, and later threatened its subcontractors and suppliers to intimidate them and prevent them from returning to work on the Project following termination. Sordoni, in turn, claims that the termination was fully justified by Redding's own conduct, including: interfering with and delaying Sordoni's work on the Project; failing to timely review requests for changes and to negotiate change orders; failing to issue, process and pay change orders; failing to pay the cost of the work; failing to make payments of sums due and owing for which the Project Architect had certified payment; failing to incorporate value engineering and automatic savings into the Project; and failing and refusing to grant appropriate extensions of time.

Redding and Sordoni further agree, or at least do not dispute, that each of the persons Redding now seeks to depose is an out-of-state resident who, because of his non-residency, could properly be deposed to preserve his relevant testimony for later use as evidence in a civil trial. The classic justification for taking an evidentiary deposition of a potential witness is the witness' likely unavailability to appear or testify at trial. Out-of-state residents are typically unavailable to appear or testify at trial because they are beyond the reach of a Connecticut subpoena. Accordingly, Section 13-31 (a)(4) of the Connecticut Practice Book expressly provides that "[t]he deposition of a witness . . . may be used by any party for any purpose if the judicial authority finds: . . . (D) that the party offering the deposition has been unable to procure the attendance of the witness by subpoena[.]" CT Page 11868

Against this background, the only issue that divides these parties as to Redding's three applications for commissions to take out-of-state depositions is whether Redding's true purpose for taking such depositions is to preserve the deponents' testimony for use as evidence in the arbitration. Insisting that that is indeed its purpose, Redding has sought to demonstrate that each proposed deponent has special knowledge about matters at issue before the arbitrators, and thus that all should be deposed to preserve their testimony for later use as evidence in the arbitration. Sordoni responds that Redding's true purpose is not to preserve the deponents' testimony, but rather to obtain broad discovery not permitted by the arbitrators, and otherwise to disrupt, and ultimately to undermine, the arbitration. The deponents' proposed testimony, it argues, would merely be cumulative of other witnesses' testimony; many of the documents sought to be produced at their depositions bear no relation to the only testimony they might legitimately be asked to give for later use as evidence in the arbitration; and the sheer number and timing of the proposed depositions — eighteen (18) in total,1 all to be conducted in the middle of Sordoni's case-in-chief before the arbitrators — suggests the purpose of frustrating Sordoni's right to a fair, efficient arbitration proceeding.

For the following reasons, the Court agrees with Redding that two of its proposed deponents, Keith B. Morse and Ralph J. Viglietti, have special knowledge of matters in dispute before the arbitrators, and thus that their testimony about those matters should be preserved by deposition for use as evidence in the arbitration. On the other hand, the Court agrees with Sordoni that there is no comparable statutory justification either for ordering an evidentiary deposition of proposed deponent Glenn Kurth or for requiring compliance by Mr. Morse or Mr. Viglietti with the overbroad requests for production of documents which Redding has attached to their proposed notices of deposition. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Mr. Kurth should not be deposed at all, and that Messrs. Morse and Viglietti need not produce any documents at their respective depositions without further order of this Court.

II
Proposed deponent Keith B. Morse was Sordoni's lead estimator on the Project from March 1998, when the Project was bid, until April 1999, just two months before developing problems between Redding and Sordoni led to an initial five-week work stoppage by Sordoni.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redding-life-v-sordoni-skanska-no-x02-cv-01-0166392-s-aug-20-2001-connsuperct-2001.