United States v. Acquest Transit LLC

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJune 3, 2020
Docket1:09-cv-00055
StatusUnknown

This text of United States v. Acquest Transit LLC (United States v. Acquest Transit LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Acquest Transit LLC, (W.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff, v. DECISION AND ORDER 09CV55S ACQUEST TRANSIT LLC, et al.,

Defendants.

I. INTRODUCTION Before this Court are the parties’ Motions for Summary Judgment (Docket Nos. 267 (defendants), 269 (plaintiff United States (hereinafter the “Government”))) and their respective Objections (Docket Nos. 337 (defendants’ Objections), 338 (plaintiff’s Objections), 339 (defendants’ Objections to denial of their Motion for Summary Judgment), 340 (amended defense Objection to denial of Motion for Summary Judgment)) to the 103-page Report & Recommendation from Magistrate Judge Leslie Foschio, United States v. Acquest Transit LLC, No. 09CV55, 2018 WL 3861612 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 14, 2018), on those motions (among others) (Docket No. 334, the “Report” or “R&R”). Familiarity with that comprehensive Report is presumed. Defendants’ second set of Objections (Docket No. 339) is terminated in favor of the amendment (Docket No. 340). Also, before this Court is an appeal from the denial of plaintiff’s Motions (Docket Nos. 293 (Steven Apfelbaum), 294 (Ray Kagel and Dr. Susan Kagel, 296 (Dr. Alan Busacca) to strike portions of defense expert opinions considered in that Report. This Order addresses plaintiff’s appeal from the denial of these Motions and so much of defendants’ Objections regarding the admissibility of certain hearsay testimony from a deceased witness; the pending Summary Judgment Motions will be addressed in a separate Decision & Order. The parties exchanged responses (Docket Nos. 342, 343; see also Docket No. 341 (Rule 72 certification)) but did not file any replies and the matter was deemed

submitted without oral argument. For future reference in this (and subsequent) Decision and Order some of the common shorthand, abbreviations, and acronyms for some key terms used in herein include: Acquest, Acquest Transit, LLC; Army Corps, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; CWA, Clean Water Act (or the “Act”); EDI, Earth Dimensions, Inc.; EPA, Environmental Protection Agency; PCC, prior converted cropland; Realmark, Realmark Properties; Report, Report and Recommendation, Docket No. 334, of Aug. 14, 2018, 2018 WL 3861612; TNW, Traditional Navigable Waterway; USDA, United States Department of Agriculture.

For the reasons stated below, plaintiff’s appeal from the denial of Motions to Strike (Docket Nos. 293, 294, 296) is granted in part (for a portion of Docket No. 294) and denied in part (for the other motions). Defendants’ Objection (Docket No. 337) as to admission of the Grand Jury testimony of the late Patrick Huntress is sustained and that evidence is not admissible in this action. II. BACKGROUND A. Objections 1. Defendants’ First Set of Objections (Docket No. 337) Defendants filed two sets of Objections (Docket No. 337; see Docket No. 340,

Defs. Amended Objections at 1 n.1, noting defendants filing distinct Objections). In their first Objections (addressing the Government’s Motion for Summary Judgment, see Docket No. 337, Defs. Memo. at 1; Docket No. 340, Defs. Memo. at 1), they raise three issues; pertinent to this Decision and Order and addressed herein, defendants argue that the Magistrate Judge erred in admitting Grand Jury testimony of a deceased witness (Patrick Huntress) who was never cross-examined by defendants (Docket No. 337, Defs. Memo. at 1, 9-12; cf. Docket No. 334, R&R at 75-76, 2018 WL 3861612, at *26). They contend that Patrick Huntress’s Grand Jury testimony (on his excavation activities on defendants’ Amherst, New York, parcel (hereinafter the “Site”)) (Docket No. 270, Pl. Ex. 15, Patrick Huntress’s Grand Jury Tr.) should not have been admitted as an agent’s

admission against interest, cf. Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(1), because the statement was hearsay and defendants lacked the opportunity to cross examine this witness before his death (Docket No. 337, Defs. Memo. at 9; see Docket No. 334, R&R at 75, 2018 WL 3861612, at *26). They contend that the Magistrate Judge erred in considering the Government’s novel arguments in its reply (Docket No. 297, Pl. Reply Memo. at 9-10 & 10 n.7; cf. Docket No. 334, R&R at 76-77, 2018 WL 3861612, at *27) without affording defendants an opportunity to rebut (Docket No. 337, Defs. Memo. at 10, see also id. at iv, Local Rule 72(c) certification). Although defendants filed their own reply (Docket No. 299) after the Government’s (Docket No. 297), defendants did not seek leave to file a sur-reply and defendants’ reply did not discuss the use of decedent’s Grand Jury testimony. 2. The Government’s Objections (Docket No. 338)—Appeal from Motions to Strike Defense Experts As part of its Objections to the Report, the Government argues that the Magistrate Judge erred in denying plaintiff’s motions to strike portions of defense expert opinions (Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 17-25). One expert, Ray Kagel (see Docket No. 294, Pl. Motion to Strike; Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 17-21), conducted wetland hydrology study on the Site on 2012-13 using monitoring wells (Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 17). The Government contends that the Magistrate Judge abdicated his gatekeeper function

under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 597 (1993), by not addressing the unreliability of the well studies conducted by Kagel in 2012-13 to determine conditions of the Site in 2006 given the significant changes on the Site in the interim (id.; but cf. Docket No. 334, R&R at 37-46, 2018 WL 3861612, at *14-17). The Government argues that Ray Kagel did not explain how he determined placement of the test wells relative to existing ditches and other disturbed places (Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 18). The Government next claims that Ray Kagel conducted his well testing without considering usual protocols for studying prior wetland hydrology (id.; Docket No. 294, Pl. Memo. at 7- 8 (citing 1987 Army Corps Wetlands Delineation Manual), 7 n.3 (other authorities on protocol to be used for determining pre-disturbance wetland hydrology); Docket No. 323,

Pl. Reply Memo. at 3). The Government further complains that Ray Kagel also failed to collect data during the wetter start of the growing season rather than one month into that season (Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 18). The Government also argues that Ray Kagel’s dye experiment, attempting to detect the dye downstream for the issue of significant nexus of the Site’s wetlands to a TNW, lacked a scientific basis (Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 19-21; but cf. Docket No. 334, R&R at 46-52, 2018 WL 3861612, at *17-19). Defendants respond (Docket No. 342, Defs. Memo. at 2-9) that Magistrate Judge Foschio’s denial of the Government’s motions was not clearly erroneous. Defendants

counter that the Magistrate Judge applied the correct definition of wetland hydrology, that a water table within twelve inches of the surface is merely an indicator of hydrology and not dispositive of it (as the Government argues, but cf. Docket No. 338, Pl. Memo. at 19 (under Army Corps Manual, soil saturation is the “primary indicator,” emphasis in original)) (Docket No. 342, Defs. Memo. at 2-3). As for well locations, defendants conclude that plaintiff can raise this in cross-examination (id. at 4). They defend the use of Kagel’s well study because the Site is an appropriate method to determine its hydrology and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineering (“Army Corps”) atypical situation method of wetland delineation either is not applicable here or Ray Kagel considered the factors for applying the atypical method (id.). Defendants contend that Ray Kagel’s

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Bluebook (online)
United States v. Acquest Transit LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-acquest-transit-llc-nywd-2020.