GEORGE SANTOLI et al., Respondents, v 475 NINTH AVENUE ASSOCIATES, LLC, et al., Appellants, and SPIELER & RICCA ELECTRICAL CO., INC., Respondent. VJB CONSTRUCTION CORP. et al., Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants, v R & J CONSTRUCTION CORP. et al., Third-Party Defendants-Respondents. (And a Second Third-Party Action.)
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, First Department
38 A.D.3d 411 | 833 N.Y.S.2d 40
The complaint in this action asserts common-law and Labor Law causes of action for personal injuries allegedly suffered by a carpenter while he was working on a construction project. Defendants VJB and Kajima evidently were joint venturers in an entity (nonparty Kajima/VJB Services, LLC [K/VJB]) that served as construction manager for the project in question; defendant 475 Ninth was the owner. VJB answered the amended verified complaint in March 2004, and served a third-party
At a preliminary conference held on March 18, 2004, the IAS court issued an order that, inter alia, directed VJB to produce, within 45 days, daily construction logs, safety meeting minutes, progress photos and other construction records for a period of three months up to and including the date of the incident, among other documents. As of the beginning of 2005, VJB still had not produced the aforementioned categories of documents, notwithstanding that two intervening compliance conference orders, issued in June and October of 2004, had directed the parties to complete all outstanding document discovery by stated deadlines. Accordingly, a further order, dated January 13, 2005, directed that all outstanding document discovery be completed by February 4, 2005, and provided that failure to comply with the order‘s directives would result in a conditional order of preclusion.
A conference was held on March 17, 2005, at which the court determined that VJB still had not complied with its outstanding discovery obligations. Accordingly, the court issued an order dated March 17, 2005 (the March 2005 order), which directed VJB to “respond to all discovery requested on or before March 31, 2005, or its answer and 3d [sic] party complaint will be stricken.”2
On April 28, 2005, yet another compliance conferenсe was held. At the conclusion of this conference, the court issued an
By order to show cause dated June 3, 2005, VJB, along with the other parties with which it wаs then jointly represented (475 Ninth, Kajima, K/VJB, VJB/475, and, as subrogee of the foregoing, Liberty), moved to vacate the March 2005 and April 2005 orders and to strike plaintiffs’ bill of particulars, among other relief. Also in June 2005, certain third-party defendants moved to dismiss a second third-party complaint that VJB and the aforementioned parties jointly represented with it had filеd and served in May 2005. By order entered October 5, 2005 (the October 2005 order), the IAS court denied VJB‘s motions, and granted the motion to strike the second third-party complaint. VJB, 475 Ninth, Kajima, VJB/475 and Liberty now appeal from the March 2005 order, the April 2005 order, and the October 2005 order.
To begin, we note that the March 2005 and April 2005 orders, which were not issued on motions made on notice, are not appealable as of right (see Postel v New York Univ. Hosp., 262 AD2d 40, 41 [1999]), and the appeals from such orders are therefore dismissed. The propriety of the striking of VJB‘s pleadings is reviewable, however, on the appeal from the October 2005 order, which denied the application, made on notice, to vacate the March 2005 and April 2005 orders (id. at 42).
We conclude that the IAS court properly exercised its discretion under
We are not persuaded by VJB‘s argument that the March 2005 and April 2005 orders should have been vacated based on plaintiffs’ failure to prove that they served the March 2005 order in accordance with its terms, which required plaintiffs to “serve this order upon VJB by 3/18/05 in hand and by mail.” The record does not contain any prоof that such service was made, although it does establish that VJB‘s counsel received the March 2005 order from plaintiffs no later than March 21, 2005.4 At the oral argument of the motion to vacate, which was held on June 9, 2005, the IAS court repeatedly told VJB‘s counsel, Michael J. Devereaux, Esq., that it would reinstate VJB‘s plead-
VJB‘s remaining arguments for reinstatеment of its pleadings are also unavailing. Contrary to VJB‘s argument that its pleadings should not have been stricken as against those parties that had not served any discovery demands upon it, all parties to the action were entitled to expect VJB to comply with discovery obligations that had been incorporated in court orders for a year before the conditional order of preclusion was finally issued. We note that it would have served no purpose for each party to the action to serve a duplicative demand for documents that VJB was already obligated to produce. VJB‘s contention that the documents it failed to produce were not under its control, but under the control of K/VJB, is both unpreserved, since it was not raised before the IAS court, and thoroughly refuted by the transcript of the deposition of VJB‘s vice-president, who, to reiterate, testified that he would have been able to retrieve such documents on two days’ notice. The contention that the order for the conditional preclusion of VJB‘s answer and third-party complaint did not give it notice that its affirmative defenses and cross claims were also at risk is without merit, since cross claims and affirmative defenses are both pleaded in the answer. While VJB accurately states that it complied with the portion of the March 2005 order directing it to produce a witness for deposition by April 8, 2005, such partial compliance does not save VJB from the consequences of its failure to comply with the order‘s separate and independent directive that it complete document discovery by March 31, 2005 or face preclusion. Similarly without merit are VJB‘s attempts to excuse its discovery default by pointing to alleged deficiencies in other parties’ discovery compliance; its claim that the IAS court struck its pleadings based solely on the unsupported assertions of opposing counsel; and its claim that it was entitled to have a stenographer record the April 28 conference (see Feuer v HASC Summer Program, 247 AD2d 429, 430 [1998]).
We note that the March 2005 order expressly applied only to “VJB, the general contractor,” and the subsequent April 2005 order, by its terms, struck the pleadings of “VJB” only, not of all parties represented by the same counsel. Thus, it appears
The October 2005 order is also being appealed to the extent it denied a motion by VJB and the parties jointly represented with it to strike plaintiffs’ original and supplemental verified bills of particulars. To the extent the denial of relief regarding plaintiffs’ bills of particulars is not rendered academic by our affirmance of the striking of VJB‘s pleadings, the IAS court properly denied the motion on the ground that plaintiffs have “adequately particularized the alleged injuries and damages” in the papers they have served to datе.
This appeal also challenges the portion of the October 2005 order that granted the motion by certain third-party defendants to strike the second third-party complaint that VJB and the parties jointly represented with it filed and served in May 2005, after VJB‘s pleadings had been stricken. VJB‘s pretext for filing a second third-party complaint was plaintiffs’ circulation in April 2005 of a proposed further amended complaint adding K/VJB, the joint venture entity, as an additional defendant. However, it is undisputed that plaintiffs merely circulated this proposed complaint among the other parties with a proposed stipulation agreeing to the amendment. The stipulation was never executed, and, as previously indicated, the proposed complaint was never filed, nor did plaintiff ever move for leave to amend. In any event, even if the complaint had been amended, that would not have relieved VJB of the consequences of its violation of the conditional preclusion order, which was a determination on the mеrits (see Tejeda v 750 Gerard Props. Corp., 272 AD2d 124, 125 [2000]). However, since, as previously discussed, the preclusion order apparently applied only to VJB, and not to 475 Ninth, we modify to reinstate the second third-party complaint solely to the extent it is asserted by 475 Ninth, which did not previously assert any third-party claims.5 We note that the remaining entities on whose behalf the second third-party complaint was asserted either are no longer parties to the action (Kajima and VJB/475) or never have been parties to the action (K/VJB and Liberty).
