State v. International Fidelity Insurance

181 Misc. 2d 595, 694 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 320
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 Misc. 2d 595 (State v. International Fidelity Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. International Fidelity Insurance, 181 Misc. 2d 595, 694 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 320 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold J. Hughes, J.

Plaintiff moves, pursuant to CPLR 3212, for an order granting it summary judgment. The defendant opposes plaintiffs motion and cross-moves for summary judgment on the ground that the State has spoliated evidence.

Golden Distributors, LTD (Golden) was permitted by the State’s Department of Taxation and Finance (Department) to purchase and resell cigarette tax stamps. Section 472 of the Tax Law allows agents to purchase cigarette tax stamps on credit when authorized by the State. Payment is due within 30 days of purchase. The State will authorize credit purchases only for agents/wholesalers who obtain credit bonds that guarantee payment of the tax stamps.

Defendant International Fidelity Insurance Company (IFIC) provided seven bonds for Golden, which totaled $3,350,000. The bonds had an effective date of September 23, 1988. In October and November of 1990, Golden purchased tax stamps totaling $8,567,281.89. Golden thereafter submitted 69 checks payable to the Department in payment for the stamps. All 69 checks were dishonored.

On December 6, 1990 a supervisor from the Department forwarded a letter to IFIC demanding payment on the seven [597]*597bonds. IFIC responded by letter dated December 21, 1990 indicating that the bonds had been terminated on November 16, 1989, and declined payment. The Department thereafter conducted a search for the bond cancellation notices. When it failed to locate the seven purported notices, the Department reiterated its demand for payment and on January 17, 1991 requested copies of the cancellation notices together with proof of mailing. Affidavits by Department supervisors and employees state that if the Department had received a notice of cancellation it would have sent a termination letter to IFIC. Termination letters state that the Department would accept termination of the bonds 30 days from the receipt of the notice of cancellation. The Department alleges that no termination letter was sent on the subject bonds, and defendant does not challenge this.

The bonds at issue could be canceled only ‘by the service of written notice by the Surety.” IFIC provided the Department with an affidavit from Dorothy Gaddie, sworn to on February 19, 1991. Ms. Gaddie was employed by IFIC during November of 1989. She stated that she: typed the notices of cancellation for the subject bonds; addressed them to the State Department of Taxation and Finance; placed the notices in envelopes; prepared each envelope for mailing by certified mail, return receipt requested; and then sent each of them to the mailroom to be mailed that day. Ms. Gaddie then states, with significantly less specificity, that she retained file copies of the notices at her desk until she received the green return receipts “signed by whoever signed on behalf of the addressee.” She concludes: “When I received the green cards back I stapled them to each of the Notices of Cancellation and gave them to the Underwriter handling the account, for further disposition and eventual filing.” Ms. Gaddie made no mention of the location of the green receipt cards or whether a search had been made for them.

IFIC has provided the court with an affidavit by Grover L. Wilkins, ostensibly to establish the office mailing procedures of IFIC. In November of 1989, Mr. Wilkins was the supervisor of the Microfilm Section of the National Archives and Records Administration. The relationship of this subdivision to the mailroom and mailroom personnel has not been explained. According to Wilkins, a designated mailroom worker would walk through IFIC’s offices and pick up mail from designated bins. The mailroom personnel would then weigh and meter each item and place the appropriate postage on each envelope. All [598]*598outgoing mail would be placed in an enclosed pouch provided by the United States Postal Service. The pouch would then be taken to the lobby of the IFIC building, where a Postal Service employee would pick up all of the pouches for all of the tenants in- the building.

For certified mail, IFIC would retain the white slip that contains a unique, nine-digit certified mail number. The white slip also has a space where the addressee’s name and address are to be written. Mr. Wilkins also mentions the green receipt card which accompanies the certified mail item to the post office. The nine-digit number from the white slip is typed on the green card. IFIC would purchase stacks of the white slips for certified mail directly from the post office, typically in groups of 50 to 100.

Wilkins stated that if he could compare the Department’s certified mail log from November of 1989 to white slips retained by IFIC he could “probably determine” whether numbers on the logs came from IFIC. “For example, had a number on the log been only fifty or one-hundred numbers away from a number on one of International’s white slips, it would have been almost certain that the numbers originated from the same stack of white slips, in which case, the number on the log would likely indicate that it originated from International.” Left unsaid is the fact that IFIC, in addition to losing the green return receipt cards, failed to retain the white slips for the certified mail purportedly sent to the Department. Mr. Wilkins would only be able to compare numbers from certified mail sent to other entities during the same time period.

A Department employee, James Bailey, states that the Taxation and Finance mailroom has a log that records incoming certified mail. The mail is solely recorded by the unique nine-digit numbers, and thus does not contain the mailee’s name or address. The November 1989 certified mail logs were destroyed by the Department in November of 1993, pursuant to. regular office procedure. IFIC argues that in destroying logs, the State spoliated evidence, entitling IFIC to summary judgment.

The First Department has held that dismissal of a complaint was warranted where a plaintiff had negligently lost a key piece of evidence which defendants never had an opportunity to examine (Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, Alexander & Ferdon v Penguin Air Conditioning Corp., 221 AD2d 243). Federal courts, in spoliation cases, inquire whether a party was under a duty to preserve the evidence (see, Hasen v Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., 887 F Supp 669). One articulated standard is [599]*599whether the party “should have known that the destroyed evidence was relevant to pending, imminent or reasonably foreseeable litigation” (Shaffer v RWP Group, 169 FRD 19, 24 [ED NY 1996]).

Here, the Department was not on notice that the November 1989 certified mail logs were relevant or key pieces of evidence to litigation that was reasonably foreseeable. The Department was aware that IFIC was claiming service of notices of cancellation by certified mail, but the Department was not informed until July 9, 1999, that IFIC employees could probably, likely and presumably compare numbers from one of the logs to numbers on certified mail that IFIC had shipped to other entities to determine whether such mail probably, likely or presumably came from IFIC. When requested to provide proof of mailing of the cancellation notices in January of 1991, IFIC did not provide the Department with certified mail green receipt cards, or white slips, or even a range of numbers from the certified mail stacks. Under the circumstances, IFIC has failed to demonstrate that the logs are a relevant piece of evidence or that they were negligently lost or destroyed.

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Related

State v. International Fidelity Insurance
272 A.D.2d 726 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
181 Misc. 2d 595, 694 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-international-fidelity-insurance-nysupct-1999.