West v. Rochkind

66 A.3d 1145, 212 Md. App. 164, 2013 WL 2360994, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 30, 2013
DocketNo. 0041
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 A.3d 1145 (West v. Rochkind) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Rochkind, 66 A.3d 1145, 212 Md. App. 164, 2013 WL 2360994, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 65 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

MOYLAN, J.

This case is about lead paint poisoning, but the appeal calls for us to analyze the use of the process of elimination to prove a necessary constituent element of lead paint poisoning. In order to infer backward from a subsequent effect to a particular antecedent cause by using the process of elimination, it is necessary for the proponent actually to eliminate all but one of the eligible causes. The process of elimination, as its name implies, demands some efficacious eliminating. A graphic illustration of the process of elimination in action is Dow v. L & R Properties, Inc., 144 Md.App. 67, 796 A.2d 139 (2002), the case that is the fulcrum of this appeal.

We hasten to point out that our analysis in this case does not go to the ultimate proof of causation, but only to the use of the cause-and-effect relationship to infer a critical fact that enters into the ultimate question of causation.

[166]*166The Case Before Us

In this lead paint case, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees, NBS, Inc., and Stanley Rochkind, who owned and operated a residential property, 1814 Lorman Street, from May 4, 1990, through June of 2001. The appellant, Dominique West (“Dominique”), alleged that he sustained injury from having ingested lead paint while living with his grandparents at 1814 Lorman Street from his birth in 1989 through February 10, 1992.

The case was necessarily based on circumstantial evidence because no lead paint tests were ever conducted on 1814 Lorman Street and the property has since been razed. Answers to interrogatories and deposition testimony by Dominique’s mother, Yarrell Duppins, revealed that Dominique either resided or spent substantial amounts of time at a variety of different residences during the first six years of his life—including 1814 Lorman Street, 428 Cummings Court, 1311 Ballard Way, and 2696 Aisquith Street. Judge Lawrence P. Fletcher-Hill ultimately ruled that Dominique had not made out a prima facie case of negligence against the appellees. He reasoned that, given Dominique’s uncertain residential history and the lack of any direct evidence that 1814 Lorman Street ever contained lead paint, Dominique could not point to 1814 Lorman Street as the source of his lead poisoning. We agree with Judge Fletcher-Hill and, for the following reasons, shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

A Chaotic Residential History

Dominique was born prematurely, at 29 weeks, on June 28, 1989. He weighed two-and-a-half pounds at birth. The evidence as to precisely where Dominique lived for the first six years of his life was ambiguous in the extreme. Dominique exhibited elevated blood lead levels in capillector screening tests performed on August 21, 1990, December 19, 1990, and March 11, 1991. Of present pertinence is that those test results all listed Dominique’s address as 1814 Lorman Street. Dominique also exhibited elevated blood lead levels in capillec[167]*167tor screening tests performed on January 21, 1992 and August 5, 1992, and in a confirmatory venipuncture test performed on April 22, 1992. Those test results all listed Dominique’s address as 428 Cummings Court. In answers to interrogatories signed by Dominique, he provided the following peripatetic residential history:

Birth-1992: 1814 Lorman Street
1992-1994: 1311 Ballard Way
Birth-1995: 428 Cummings Court
1994- 1995: ? ? ? Lakebrook Circle
1995- Present: 2696 Aisquith [Street]

In a deposition taken on March 3, 2011, Dominique’s mother, Yarrell Duppins, testified that she resided at 1627 Appleton Street at the time Dominique was born. When asked whether “anybody else live[d] there besides you, Willie West, Helen Brown, and after he was born, Dominique?” she replied “No.” Later in the deposition, however, she testified that her son, Dominique, went to stay with his grandparents (her mother and father) at 1814 Lorman Street “immediately after birth from the hospital.” For the first 11 months of Dominique’s life, however, the appellees were not yet the owners of 1814 Lorman Street.

Yarrell Duppins also testified that her parents, Ethel and Calvin Duppins, were awarded legal custody of Dominique when he was four years old, i.e., in 1993 or 1994. That assumption of legal custody, however, only occurred after the Duppinses had moved away from 1814 Lorman Street. Ethel Duppins leased 1814 Lorman Street from some time before Dominique was born until she moved out on February 10, 1992. In an earlier deposition, taken on November 11, 2009, moreover, Yarrell Duppins had testified that, “most of the time,” when she was living at various other addresses, including 1627 Appleton Street, 428 Cummings Court, 2430 Druid Hill Avenue, and 1311 Ballard Way, she would provide her parents’ address (1814 Lorman Street) instead of her own when seeking medical treatment.

[168]*168Dominique was evaluated at the Kennedy Krieger Institute for behavioral problems in August of 1998, when he was nine years old. By that point, Dominique’s legal guardian was his grandmother, Ethel Duppins. The Kennedy Krieger report states: “Dominique has been living with the Duppins [his grandparents] since the age of five. Prior to that period, he had lived with his mother.” That report effectively excluded 1814 Lorman Street as a place of residence, for by the time that Dominique was five his grandparents had moved away from Lorman Street. Over the span of 20 years, of course, memories inevitably had dimmed. Above and beyond the memory problem, however, the living arrangements for the infant Dominique appear to have been haphazardly pillar to post.

Summary Judgment

Rochkind and NBS filed a motion for summary judgment on December 9, 2011; Dominique responded on December 29, 2011. In opposing summary judgment, Dominique freely acknowledged that no test for lead paint had ever been done at 1814 Lorman Street and that no direct evidence, therefore, existed to identify that address as a source of Dominique’s lead paint exposure. Dominique argued, however, that, even in the absence of direct evidence, circumstantial evidence can suffice to establish the site of the exposure. His primary reliance for that proposition was on Dow v. L & R Properties. In Dow, to be sure, the identification of the situs of the lead paint exposure had been based exclusively on circumstantial evidence.

Judge Fletcher-Hill held a hearing on February 10, 2012, and orally granted summary judgment in favor of NBS and Rochkind. He explained:

Because in this case there is no direct evidence of whether the property at 181k Lorman contained lead based paint or not, the only basis on which the plaintiff could proceed would be a Dow-like circumstantial theory. Dow certainly doesn’t articulate the only circumstances in which there might be circumstantial proof of lead exposure. But the [169]*169critical fact in Dow was that the plaintiff could establish that the property at issue was the exclusive possible place where the plaintiff was exposed to lead and therefore, that, combined with the age of the property and the high blood lead levels of that plaintiff amounted to

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Bluebook (online)
66 A.3d 1145, 212 Md. App. 164, 2013 WL 2360994, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-rochkind-mdctspecapp-2013.