Xavier v. Treasure Bay V.I. Corp.

67 V.I. 251
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedFebruary 23, 2017
DocketCase No. SX-09-CV-450
StatusPublished

This text of 67 V.I. 251 (Xavier v. Treasure Bay V.I. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xavier v. Treasure Bay V.I. Corp., 67 V.I. 251 (visuper 2017).

Opinion

WILLOCKS, Administrative Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(February 23, 2017)

THIS MATTER is in the Appellate Division on Petition for Review from the Jury Trial Division. Clement Xavier appeals an order a Superior Court magistrate1 issued, granting a motion filed by Treasure Bay Virgin [255]*255Islands Corporation (doing business as Divi Carina Bay Casino) (“Treasure Bay”) to compel arbitration and stay further proceedings. A Superior Court judge requested that Treasure Bay’s motion be designated to a magistrate pursuant to Section 123(b) of Title 4 of the Virgin Islands Code. After the parties went to arbitration, Xavier brought this internal review. Treasure Bay responded by hling a Motion to Strike the Petition and to Dismiss the review, claiming that Xavier should have hied a motion for reconsideration instead. For the reasons stated below, the Court agrees that this matter must be dismissed from the Appellate Division. Therefore, Treasure Bay’s Motion to Dismiss will be granted. Its Motion to Strike will be denied because Xavier has the right to hie papers in his own case and because the arguments the parties raised on review present important questions of hrst impression. Rather than strike these arguments from the record, the Court will allow them to remain on hie for the assigned judge’s consideration.

BACKGROUND

Clement Xavier sued Treasure Bay because a chair he was sitting on at the casino toppled over and caused him to fall to the floor. His complaint, hied September 18, 2009 and amended on September 28, 2009, alleged negligence and sought damages for his injuries. The Civil Division of the Clerk’s Office processed Xavier’s complaint and assigned his case at random to Judge Darryl Dean Donohue, Sr. After Xavier’s attorney paid the hling fee, the Civil Division transferred Xavier’s case to the Jury Trial Division for all further proceedings because Xavier had demanded a trial by jury. Treasure Bay answered Xavier’s amended complaint and the parties began to exchange discovery.

A few months later, on April 12, 2010, Treasure Bay hied a motion to compel arbitration and to stay, claiming that Xavier had joined the casino’s Beachcombers Gold Club, a rewards program in which members accrue points while gambling that can be redeemed for food, drinks, and other items at the casino and a nearby resort. The membership form Xavier signed included an arbitration clause. According to Treasure Bay, Xavier’s negligence claim was within the scope of the arbitration clause in the membership agreement. After Xavier failed to timely respond, [256]*256Judge Donohue referred Treasure Bay’s motion to a Superior Court magistrate pursuant to Section 123(b) of Title 4 of the Virgin Islands Code. Pursuant to standard court procedure, the Clerk’s Office designated the motion at random to Magistrate Miguel A. Camacho.

A year later, Xavier filed a response in opposition to Treasure Bay’s motion and six weeks after that, Treasure Bay filed its reply. Yet throughout — after Treasure Bay had motioned to compel arbitration and after the motion was designated to a magistrate — both parties continued to exchange discovery and even deposed witnesses. Then, by order dated June 11, 2012, but not entered until July 2, 2012, Magistrate Camacho granted Treasure Bay’s motion to compel. In response, Xavier filed a timely motion for reconsideration, contending that excerpts from his deposition purportedly showed that he could not afford to pay for arbitration because he had become totally disabled after filing his lawsuit against Treasure Bay. According to Xavier, his deposition constituted “newly discovered” evidence that warranted reconsideration. Xavier did not specify, however, whether he was asking Magistrate Camacho to reconsider his own decision or asking Judge Donohue to reconsider Magistrate Camacho’s decision. Before either the magistrate or the judge could request clarification, Xavier withdrew his motion because he and Treasure Bay had reached an agreement on the arbitration costs.

At this point, the parties should have gone to arbitration. They did not. Not until Judge Robert A. Molloy, who succeeded Judge Donohue,2 issued an order on May 20, 2014 and directed the parties to provide an update. Almost two years had passed by then. In response, the parties informed the court jointly the next day, May 21, 2014, that mediation was scheduled for June 2014.

Six months later, Xavier filed this Petition for Review.

In his December 2, 2014 Petition, Xavier acknowledged that he did not know if the arbitration award had “yet been filed in either the Magistrate’s Division and/or the Superior Court.” (Pl.’s [sic] Pet. for Review 1, filed [257]*257Dec. 3, 2014.3) Nonetheless, he proceeded to file a petition for review because he wanted to have “the Magistrate’s Order to arbitrate” reviewed and reversed “as contrary to existing law regarding the issue of waiver.” Id. Two weeks later, Treasure Bay (now through different counsel) filed a Motion to Strike Xavier’s Petition and to Dismiss it as “untimely and procedurally deficient.” (Def.’s [sic] Mot. to Strike and Dismiss Pet. for Review 2, filed Dec. 17,2014 (hereinafter “Resp.’s Mot.”).) The next day, December 18, 2014, the Clerk’s Office transferred Xavier’s case to the Appellate Division. A day after that, December 19, 2014, Xavier filed his response to Treasure Bay’s Motion to Strike and to Dismiss. He also filed a separate motion to vacate the arbitration award.

For reasons unclear from the record, Xavier filed another response two months later. In this response, filed February 23, 2015, Xavier referred to himself as the appellant, not the plaintiff, and raised a new argument: that Treasure Bay’s motion to compel arbitration was dispositive, because it effectively sent his negligence claim to another forum. Magistrate Camacho could not have ruled on the motion, Xavier argued, he could only have recommended a ruling to Judge Donohue. Treasure Bay replied on March 6, 2015 and rejected Xavier’s arguments as misplaced. Treasure Bay also included in its reply a request that the court grant a motion it filed the same day. That motion sought leave to file under seal a motion to lift the stay Magistrate Camacho imposed, which is technically still in effect as no order has issued yet to lift it, and to confirm the arbitrator’s award and enter judgment on it.

On March 10, 2015, the Clerk’s Office sent Xavier’s counsel a briefing letter that acknowledged receipt of Xavier’s Petition and notified his attorney that the petition had been randomly assigned to the undersigned judge in the Appellate Division. The letter further informed Xavier’s counsel of the filing fee and other requirements (such as filing briefs and requesting a transcript) associated with internal reviews in the Appellate Division.

Xavier later filed a motion to waive the transcript requirement (since the parties never appeared in person before the magistrate). He also paid the filing fee on June 24, 2015. Nothing further has been filed to date [258]*258except a response Treasure Bay filed on December 1, 2015, stating that it did not oppose Xavier’s request to waive the transcript, and a notice Xavier filed on October 14, 2016, to alert the Court to a recent decision issued by another Superior Court judge, In re Cases Removed to the District Court of the Virgin Islands, SX-98-CV-109 et seq., 2016 V.I. LEXIS 154 (Super. Ct. Sept. 21, 2016).

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Bluebook (online)
67 V.I. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xavier-v-treasure-bay-vi-corp-visuper-2017.