Seman Belfand, Plaintiff-Respondent, v Raymond Petosa, et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Index No. 155496/12 Appeal No. 13251 Case No. 2020-00715
Appellate Division, First Department
June 03, 2021
2021 NY Slip Op 03522
Cynthia S. Kern, J.P., Jeffrey K. Oing, Anil C. Singh, Peter H. Moulton JJ.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided and Entered: June 03, 2021
SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION
First Judicial Department
Cynthia S. Kern, J.P., Jeffrey K. Oing, Anil C. Singh, Peter H. Moulton JJ.
Defendants appeal the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Robert R. Reed, J.), entered on or about January 17, 2020, which denied their motion to dismiss the action.
William Schwitzer & Associates, P.C., New York (Howard R. Cohen of counsel), for respondent.
OING, J
This appeal asks us to address an issue of constitutional magnitude — whether the United States Supreme Court‘s recent decision in Franchise Tax Bd. of California v Hyatt (__ US __, 139 S Ct 1485 [2019]) (Hyatt) requires us to dismiss, based on the doctrine of sovereign immunity, a trial-ready action in which an entity of a sister state is the named defendant. We hold that defendant New Jersey Transit Corporation (New Jersey Transit) waived its sovereign immunity, and therefore affirm the trial court‘s denial of its motion to dismiss the complaint.
Plaintiff, Seman Belfand, commenced this action in August 2012 to recover damages for personal injuries he allegedly sustained as a result of a March 8, 2012 motor vehicle accident in which a commuter bus owned by New Jersey Transit and operated by a New Jersey Transit employee, defendant Raymond Petosa (Petosa), rear-ended his vehicle on 12 Avenue and
On May 22, 2013, plaintiff moved for summary judgment. New Jersey Transit opposed by proffering the affidavit of defendant Petosa, which challenged plaintiff‘s version of the accident. Specifically, contrary to plaintiff‘s assertions that he was stopped at a red traffic signal when rear-ended by the bus Petosa was operating, Petosa claimed that plaintiff cut in front of his bus and stopped short, leaving no chance for him to avoid colliding with plaintiff‘s vehicle. The motion court denied the motion finding that factual issues were present. Pre-trial proceedings continued.
On May 17, 2016, due to plaintiff‘s lack of cooperation with discovery, New Jersey Transit moved by order to show cause for a conditional order of preclusion,1 which it subsequently withdrew. Prior to trial, New Jersey Transit conceded Petosa‘s negligence, and its own vicarious liability, leaving damages as the sole remaining issue for trial. Plaintiff prevailed at the damages trial. During the damages trial, however, plaintiff introduced medical evidence concerning injuries that he had not pleadеd in his bill of particulars. The trial court granted New Jersey Transit‘s motion for a mistrial. By orders to show cause dated January 6, 2017 and February 22, 2017, New Jersey Transit sought to strike plaintiff‘s fourth and fifth supplemental bill of particulars so as to preclude plaintiff from introducing any evidence concerning his newly pleaded injuries at the second trial. The motion court decided the motions on June 8, 2017 and adjourned the matter for trial on the issue of damages.
During jury selection for the second trial, New Jersey Transit raised the issue of sovereign immunity and subject matter
Plaintiff argued that New Jersey Transit was not entitled to sovereign immunity. Although under sovereign immunity, a state or state entity that is immune from suit in its own state courts is also immune from suit in sister state courts, plaintiff argued that was not the case for New Jersey Transit. He pointed to the
The trial court denied the motion, agreeing with plaintiff‘s argument premised on the
Our resolution of the sovereign immunity issue requires a brief review of the genesis of that doctrine and the enactment of the
This recognition was tested early in our nation‘s history. In 1793, the Supreme Court assumed original jurisdiction over a matter commenced by a South Carolina citizen against the State of Georgia (see Chisholm v Georgia, 2 US 419 [1793]). In the immediate aftermath of Chisholm, the
“That a state may not be sued without its consent
Hall involved an automobile collision on a California highway in which California residents sustained injuries when their vehicle collided with a vehicle driven by a University of Nevada employee, who was engaged in official business for the university at the time of the accident. The California residents commenced an action in California state court against the administrator of the driver‘s estate, the University of Nevada, and the State of Nevada. The parties conceded that the driver was operating a vehicle owned by the State of Nevada while engaged in official business and that the university was an instrumentality of the State of Nevada.
In response to Nevada‘s motion to quash service upon it, the California Supreme Court held that as a matter of California law the California plaintiffs could sue the State of Nevada in California court. The matter reаched the Supreme Court on the issue of whether a state may invoke sovereign immunity to prevent it from being sued in a sister state court, and, if immunity did not bar the suit, whether the forum‘s state or the sister state‘s laws governing liability should apply. Noting that the
The Hyatt case involved a citizen of Nevada suing the Franchise Tax Board of California (Board) in Nevada state court claiming that the Board committed various torts against him while it conducted tax audits primarily in Nevada.3 The Supreme Court granted certiorari in order to revisit the issue decided in Hall, namely, “whether the Constitutiоn permits a State to be sued by a private party without its consent in the courts of a different State” (Hyatt, 139 S Ct at 1490).4 The Court held that the US Constitution does not permit a nonconsenting state to be sued in another state‘s
Hyatt holds that a state may be sued by a private citizen in a sister state only when it has consented to such suits. New Jersey Transit did not expressly consent to being sued in this New York action and argues that the trial court erred in relying on the
The
The inquiry is not at an end. Consent is but one form in which a state permits itself to be subject to suits in another state. In the context of the
“The classic description of an effective waiver of a constitutional right is the intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right оr privilege. Courts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver of fundamental constitutional rights. State sovereign immunity . . . is constitutionally
Notwithstanding the strict parameters governing a waiver of a state‘s sovereign immunity, a state may still be deemed to have waived its immunity by voluntarily invoking a court‘s jurisdiction (see College Sav. Bank, 527 US at 675-676) or by its litigation conduct in that court (see Lapides v Board of Regents of the Univ. System of Georgia, 535 US 613). Although the principle of waiver was recognized throughout the two decades during which the Hyatt case was litigated, the Hyatt Court apparently declined to address it because California had “raised an immunity-based argument from [the] suit‘s inception” (Hyatt, 139 S Ct at 1491 n 1). Under these circumstances, waiver of inter-state sovereign immunity is unresolved. The issue of what constitutes a waiver, which necessarily is factual in nature, is ripe for resolution.
There is no dispute that New Jersey Transit did not make a voluntary appearance in this action. It then argues that it made no clear statement by its litigation conduct that it was submitting to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state, pointing out that it has taken a defensive posture from this action‘s inception because it had no legitimate legal basis for objecting to New York‘s jurisdiction until seven years after the action was commenced, when Hyatt was decided, in 2019. These arguments are an oversimplification of this substantive constitutional issue. The issue is whether New Jersey Transit undertook a litigation strategy that can be deemed a voluntary waiver of its sovereign immunity. Lapides v Board of Regents of the Univ. System of Georgia (535 US 613 [2002], supra), is instructive.
In Lapides, a professor employed by the Georgia state university system commenced an action in Georgia state court
The Court framed the issue as whether a state waives its sovereign immunity when it removes a case from state court to federal court. It observed that “where a State voluntarily becomes a party to a cause and submits its rights for judicial determination, it will be bound thereby and cannot escape the result of its voluntary act by invoking the prohibitions of the
“an interpretation of the
The Court rejected Georgia‘s argument that its motive for removal was benign, i.e., not to obtain litigation advantages for itself, but to provide its codefendants, the officials sued in their personal capacities, with the generous interlocutory appeal provisions available in federal, but not in state, court.
“A benign motive . . . cannot make the critical difference
The record is clear that New Jersey Transit did not place plaintiff or the court on notice of its sovеreign immunity defense by asserting it in its responsive pleading, and only raised the defense seven years after the action‘s commencement, ostensibly based on the Hyatt decision. In addition, New Jersey Transit moved for orders of preclusion due to plaintiff‘s lack of cooperation in discovery, sought on two separate occasions to strike plaintiff‘s newly pleaded injuries, and successfully moved for a mistrial after such evidence was presented at the first trial. Further, although it opposed plaintiff‘s motion for summary judgment on liability, New Jersеy Transit conceded liability prior to trial, leaving damages as the sole remaining issue.
We reject New Jersey Transit‘s argument that the sovereign immunity defense was not available at the time it served its answer in this action. The doctrine of sovereign immunity as it applies to states has been available at least since the Supreme Court decided Hall (440 US 410) in 1979. The Hyatt Court dramatically altered the sovereign immunity analysis by moving the decision as to whether sovereign immunity should be honored from the forum state, guided by principles of comity, to the sister state being sued, which will dеcide, as a matter of
We find that these circumstances are not the kind of case-specific costs that Hyatt deemed insufficient to resolve an important constitutional question (see Hyatt, 139 S Ct at 1499). They, instead, amount to substantial reliance interests that compel their consideration (id.). Applying the equitable factors enunciated in Lapides, and weighing the facts herein, we find that, on balance, New Jersey Transit‘s litigation conduct induced substantial reliance on that conduct by plaintiff and our courts, and is inescapably a clear deсlaration to have our courts entertain this action. Under these circumstances, we hold that New Jersey Transit‘s litigation conduct in this action is an affirmative invocation of our courts’ jurisdiction and should be deemed a waiver of its sovereign immunity so as to provide our courts with subject matter jurisdiction over the action.
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Robert R. Reed, J.), entered on or about January 17, 2020, which denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the action, should be affirmed, without costs.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Robert R. Reed, J.), entered on or about January 17, 2020, should be affirmed, without costs.
Opinion by Oing, J. All concur.
Kern, J.P., Oing, Singh, Moulton, JJ.
THIS CONSTITUTES THE DECISION AND ORDER OF THE SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION, FIRST DEPARTMENT.
ENTERED: June 3, 2021
