Vose v. Tang & Maravelis, P.C.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedApril 12, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-00434
StatusUnknown

This text of Vose v. Tang & Maravelis, P.C. (Vose v. Tang & Maravelis, P.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vose v. Tang & Maravelis, P.C., (D.R.I. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

CARLTON VOSE, : Plaintiff, : : v. : C.A. No. 22-00434-MSM-PAS : TANG & MARAVELIS, P.C., and : BRIAN GOLDBERG, : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN, United States Magistrate Judge. Pro se Plaintiff Carlton Vose has filed two motions1 to extend and/or stay the pretrial schedule for this diversity-based legal malpractice claim, which has been pending since December 9, 2022, against his former lawyer and the lawyer’s law firm: the first (ECF No. 20) seeks an extension of the fact discovery deadline by thirty days; the second (ECF No. 22) seeks an extension, effectively a stay, of the case until sixty days after he is released from incarceration at an unknown date in the future.2 As grounds for the motions, Plaintiff claims that he is now incarcerated and is being arbitrarily denied access to the law library by a correctional officer (whom he declines to name3) in violation of his constitutional rights. ECF No. 22. On reply,4

1 Plaintiff also asks the Court to expedite a bail motion he filed in a different case. See Vose v. Neronha, 23-cv- 84MSM, ECF No. 47. Plaintiff is advised that the Court will not consider the merits of a bail motion in the context of this civil legal malpractice case.

2 Plaintiff had provided no estimate how long such an open-ended stay might last.

3 The Court observes that this refusal to identify the accused miscreant is not a new tactic for Plaintiff. In proceedings before the Rhode Island Committee on Character and Fitness, he initially relied on a claim of misconduct by a member of the Committee, whom he declined to identify, as a reason to derail those proceedings. In re Vose, 93 A.3d 33, 35-39 (R.I. 2014).

4 Plaintiff’s reply (ECF No. 26) was originally docketed in error as a new motion; this has been corrected. I have considered it as the reply. As clarification, the Court notes that Defendants did not need to file an opposition to ECF No. 26., which they did yesterday. Plaintiff is directed not to file a reply to ECF No. 27. Plaintiff alternatively seeks to stay the pretrial deadlines until after “the federal court has addressed the persistent and ongoing violations of the Plaintiff’s constitutional rights,” which include denial of law library access, denial of access to computers and printers, interference with mail and confiscation of legal work. ECF No. 26 at 1-2, 5. Both motions have been referred to me for determination. After filing the two motions, Plaintiff filed a new federal action – Vose v.

Adult Correctional Institutions, 24-cv-116MSM – for declaratory relief to address the Adult Correctional Institutions’ (“ACI”) unconstitutional limits on his access to the law library. I. Procedural and Factual Background This case, based on diversity jurisdiction, was brought by Plaintiff, claiming to be a Florida resident, against a law firm, Tang & Maravelis, P.C. (“T&M”), alleged to be a Massachusetts professional corporation, and Attorney Brian Goldberg, alleged to reside in Rhode Island. ECF No. ¶¶ 1-3. At the time of the filing of the complaint, Plaintiff was an attorney licensed to practice in Massachusetts; his longstanding and unsuccessful “legal battle” to be admitted to practice in Rhode Island, which the complaint alleges is “extremely relevant to this

case,” is described in In re Vose, 93 A.3d 33. See ECF No. 1 at 1. This decision notes that Plaintiff passed the Rhode Island bar examination and quotes Plaintiff as asserting that he has been “practicing law in Providence Superior Court since 2010.” Id. at 35, 39. Beginning with his arrest in 2015, the State of Rhode Island has brought various criminal charges against Plaintiff.5 ECF No. 1 at 3-4. For representation in these criminal cases, Plaintiff engaged Attorney Goldberg of T&M. Id. at 3 & ¶¶ 7-9. The trial on the charges of elder abuse ended in a jury verdict of guilty on December 12, 2019, and the imposition of an incarcerative

5 These include seven counts of abuse/neglect and/or exploitation of an adult (Plaintiff’s mother) with severe impairment; obstruction of police officer; and obtaining property by false pretenses. See State v. Vose, 287 A.3d 997 (R.I. 2023); State v. Vose, Case No. P2-2018-0354A (R.I. Super. Ct.); State v. Vose, Case No. P2-2016-2326A (R.I. Super Ct.); State v. Vose, Case No. P3-2016-2655A (R.I. Super. Ct). sentence of five years, two to serve. Id. ¶ 12; Vose, 287 A.3d at 999. Plaintiff now alleges that Attorney Goldberg “failed to provide adequate representation and legal services” and failed to disclose a conflict of interest between himself and the Attorney General and the Deputy Attorney General; these allegations seemingly impact not only the case in which Plaintiff was found guilty but also his other pending criminal cases. Id. ¶¶ 10, 16. As reflected in Rhode Island’s public

docket, in each criminal case, Attorney Goldberg withdrew and the Superior Court appointed the Public Defender to continue representing Plaintiff. See Vose, Case No. P2-2016-2326A; Vose, Case No. P2-2018-0354A; Vose, Case No. P2016-2655A. Meanwhile, after the guilty verdict in the elder abuse criminal case, Plaintiff remained released pending appeal. Vose, Case No. P2-2016-2326A. The Supreme Court affirmed the Superior Court judgment in a decision that issued on February 1, 2023. Vose, 287 A.3d 997. Plaintiff failed to appear for the advisement of the Supreme Court decision on March 13, 2023, and remained a fugitive seemingly in Florida until November 6, 2023, when he was held without bail as a violator. Vose, Case No. P2-2016-2326A; see Vose v. Suttell, No. 1:23-cv-00039MSM,

2023 WL 6621149, at *1, 5 n.11 (D.R.I. Oct. 11, 2023) (“Mr. Vose is an attorney” and “a convicted felon”; “a warrant issued when Mr. Vose failed to appear”; “Mr. Vose does not contest that he is currently in Florida and, indeed, files his memoranda with a Florida address.”). On December 12, 2023, the Superior Court ordered Plaintiff immediately to begin serving the previously-imposed sentence; he was remanded to the ACI where he since has been in custody. Vose, Case No. P2-2016-2326A. That is, for the first eleven months6 that this legal malpractice case has been pending, Plaintiff was not incarcerated but was at liberty, seemingly for some of

6 In ECF Nos. 15 &16, Plaintiff alleges that he has been incarcerated since October 23, 2023. If true, that means he was unimpaired by incarceration for the first ten and a half months after he filed this case. the time in Florida. Further, throughout the time that this case has been pending, Plaintiff has been represented by legal counsel in connection with his remaining state court criminal cases. In addition, throughout the period that this case has been pending, Plaintiff has been a prolific litigant in this Court: making filings in connection with at least four cases.7 This pattern of activity in making court filings continued after Plaintiff was incarcerated.8 Most recently, as

Defendants point out, ECF No. 24 at 4, Plaintiff continued to defend Massachusetts disciplinary proceedings against him by engaging an attorney who entered an appearance before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court on February 29, 2024. In re Vose, BD-2020-031, Docket No. 29 (Mass. Feb. 29, 2024). Focusing on this case, the Court finds credible Defendants’ representation that Plaintiff has not initiated any discovery throughout the time that it has been pending. See ECF Nos. 23 at 1; 24 at 1.

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Bluebook (online)
Vose v. Tang & Maravelis, P.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vose-v-tang-maravelis-pc-rid-2024.