Rossi v. Doka USA, Ltd.
This text of 2020 NY Slip Op 2098 (Rossi v. Doka USA, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Rossi v Doka USA, Ltd. |
| 2020 NY Slip Op 02098 |
| Decided on March 26, 2020 |
| Appellate Division, First Department |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports. |
Decided on March 26, 2020
Richter, J.P., Gische, Mazzarelli, Gesmer, JJ.
10689N 156072/13 590168/14
v
Doka USA, Ltd., et al.,Defendants-Respondents. [And a Third-Party Action]
StolzenbergCortelli LLP, White Plains (Terrence James Cortelli of counsel), for appellant.
Biedermann Hoenig Semprevivo, Ne York (Philip C. Semprevivo of counsel), for respondents.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Debra A. James, J.), entered September 26, 2018, which granted defendant Doka USA Ltd.'s motion to dismiss the complaint as against it, and denied plaintiff's cross motion for sanctions against Doka, unanimously modified, to deny defendant's motion, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
Plaintiff, a carpenter, was injured while installing concrete walls at the building that would become 4 World Trade Center. The walls were created using a reusable form system distributed to plaintiff's employer by defendant Doka. Doka's system employed tracks, so that a form could be filled with concrete, pushed into place along the track, and then pulled out again once the concrete had set. The form was moved back and forth on the track by use of a ratchet, approximately three feet in length, that attached to a bolt. Doka supplied the ratchets to plaintiff's employer, but denies that it manufactured or designed the ratchets. Doka provided training on how to use the system, including the ratchets, to the foremen working for plaintiff's employer. The foremen in turn trained the workers, including plaintiff. Plaintiff testified at his deposition that the ratchets frequently broke, and he remembered this happening on at least 10 occasions. In an email dated December 22, 2010, just over one month before the accident, Doka's senior account manager told two other Doka employees that he had been informed of several defective ratchets at the World Trade Center site.
Occasionally a form would not be situated evenly on the track and would become "bound," meaning difficult to move. According to plaintiff, workers had been trained to apply as much force to the ratchet as necessary when this happened. Although plaintiff testified that he had not been instructed to do so in training, it was common for workers to use their feet to add additional leverage on the ratchet, and that the foreman was aware of the practice. On the day of the accident, plaintiff was in the process of closing up a wall. According to Doka, this was supposed to be a task completed by two people working together in order to make sure the form moved evenly on the track and did not get bound. Plaintiff was working with a partner that day, but when he was injured he was apparently moving the wall by himself. The wall became bound, and plaintiff used his right foot to apply pressure onto the shaft of the ratchet. He testified that when he did this, the gears in the ratchet broke, propelling the ratchet forward and with it plaintiff himself, causing his knee to hit a brace that was directly in front of him. Plaintiff was not certain whether the ratchet was new, or whether it had any particular markings or labels on it, but based on past experience he was certain that it was a Doka ratchet because it had come in a package that contained other Doka materials.
Immediately after the accident, plaintiff saw his partner pick up the ratchet and inspect it. Plaintiff was advised to go see a site medic who was located on a lower floor. However, the medic was not there and plaintiff went home. Plaintiff does not know what happened to the ratchet after the accident, and the ratchet has never been recovered.
Plaintiff commenced this action over two years after the accident, asserting, inter alia, a product liability cause of action sounding in defective design. Doka served a notice of inspection demanding that plaintiff produce the ratchet that injured him, at which time he admitted he did not possess it.
Plaintiff served his own demand on Doka seeking emails "pertaining to any complaints of defective and malfunctioning Doka wrench/ratchet[s]." Doka conducted a broad search, but asserts that it failed to identify any emails concerning defective wrenches or ratchets supplied by Doka to plaintiff's employer for the project. In September of 2014, over one year after the action was commenced, Doka underwent a company-wide replacement of its email system. Any emails predating the replacement became irretrievable.
Doka moved for spoliation sanctions, arguing that the absence of the ratchet that allegedly broke at the time of plaintiff's injury entitled it to dismissal of the complaint. Plaintiff filed a cross motion, seeking to strike Doka's answer for spoliation, arguing that it destroyed relevant emails. The motion court granted Doka's motion, and dismissed the complaint as against it. The court held that the loss of the ratchet warranted dismissal because it meant that Doka could not "exclude the various possibilities that the accident was caused by misuse, alteration, or poor maintenance' . . . rather than some design or manufacturing defect." The court denied plaintiff's cross motion, finding that he had failed to establish spoliation based on Doka's alleged destruction of emails. The court reasoned that Doka searched its emails in April of 2014, when it was first notified that plaintiff alleged a defective ratchet, and that at that time, it could not locate any responsive emails. Hence, plaintiff had not established that the data lost during the subsequent email changeover actually resulted in the loss of relevant emails.
The issue on Doka's motion is not whether the ratchet plaintiff was using when he was injured was defectively designed. Rather, it is whether plaintiff forfeited any opportunity to establish a design defect at trial because, in the immediate aftermath of an accident that resulted in substantial trauma to his knee, he failed to secure the ratchet for purposes of a lawsuit. To answer that question, we must review the law of spoliation generally, and the law of spoliation as it applies to design defect cases specifically.
To obtain sanctions for spoliation, a party must establish that the non-moving party had an obligation to preserve the item in question, that the item was destroyed with a "culpable state of mind," and that the destroyed item was relevant to the party's claim or defense (see VOOM HD Holdings LLC v EchoStar Satellite LLC, 93 AD3d 33, 45 [1st Dept 2012]). A party can be deemed to have had a "culpable state of mind" for purposes of a spoliation sanction even if it engaged in no more than ordinary negligence (id.). However, "striking a pleading is usually not warranted unless the evidence is crucial and the spoliator's conduct evinces some higher degree of culpability" (Russo v BMW of North America, LLC, 82 AD3d 643 [1st Dept 2011]).
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2020 NY Slip Op 2098, 181 A.D.3d 523, 121 N.Y.S.3d 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rossi-v-doka-usa-ltd-nyappdiv-2020.