Smith, L. v. CMS West ( 2023 )


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  • J-A19019-23
    
    2023 PA Super 218
    LARRY SMITH AND KELLY SMITH,                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    H/W                                          :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    Appellants              :
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :   No. 1002 EDA 2022
    CMS WEST, INC., CMS WEST LLC,                :
    CMS WEST PARENT LLC, STONEMOR                :
    PARTNERS LP, STONEMOR                        :
    CEMETERY PRODUCTS LLC,                       :
    STONEMORE GP LLC, STONEMOR,                  :
    INC., STONEMOR HOLDING OF                    :
    PENNSYLVANIA, LLC, STONEMOR                  :
    OPERATING LLC, STONEMOR,                     :
    PENNSYLVANIA LLC, STONEMOR                   :
    PENNSYLVANIA SUBSIDIARY, LLC,                :
    CRETEX COMPANIES, INC., ELK                  :
    RIVER MACHINE COMPANY, SQUARE                :
    D COMPANY, SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC                :
    USA, INC., SAMPLE, INC.,                     :
    FREDERICK SAMPLE D/B/A SAMPLE,               :
    INC., MIDDLE DEPARTMENT                      :
    INSPECTION AGENCY, INC. AND                  :
    JOHN DOES (1-20)                             :
    Appeal from the Order Entered April 3, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Civil Division at No: 200702048
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    OPINION BY STABILE, J.:                              FILED OCTOBER 30, 2023
    Appellants, Larry Smith (“Smith”) and Kelly Smith, his wife (collectively,
    “Appellants”), appeal from the March 7, 2022 order entered in the Court of
    ____________________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A19019-23
    Common Pleas of Philadelphia County transferring this case from Philadelphia
    County to Butler County based on forum non conveniens. Appellants contend
    that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the petition to transfer
    filed by several defendants named in Appellants’ suit for damages relating to
    a hand amputation sustained by Smith at a cement facility in Butler County.1
    The trial court offered the following background, based on the
    allegations set forth in Appellants’ Amended Complaint:
    On August 8, 2018, [Smith] was working as a lawful business
    invitee at the Semper Concrete facility owned and operated by
    [CMS West], located at 858 New Castle Road, Butler, PA 16001.
    On that day, [Smith] was operating a batching and mixing cement
    system (hereinafter “cement mixer”). As part of the cement
    mixer’s operation, users were required to intermittently use a
    hand scraper to remove concrete build-up from the mixing paddles
    inside the cement mixer while the mixer was energized and
    running. While following the facility’s approved cement mixer
    cleaning procedures, the cement mixer amputated [Smith’s] right
    hand.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/22, at 1-2 (citations to Amended Complaint omitted).
    Appellants initiated the instant action by complaint filed on July 30, 2020
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, alleging, inter alia,
    negligence and strict liability. Various defendants filed preliminary objections
    ____________________________________________
    1 The motion was filed by the following defendants named in Appellants’ suit:
    Middle Department Inspection Agency, Inc. (“MDIA”); StoneMor Operating,
    LLC, StoneMor Pennsylvania, LLC, StoneMor Pennsylvania Subsidiary, LLC,
    StoneMor, Inc., StoneMor Partners LP, StoneMor Cemetery Products, LLC,
    StoneMor GP, LLC, and StoneMor Holding of Pennsylvania, LLC (collectively
    “StoneMor”); and CMS West, Inc., CMS West Parent, LLC, and CMS West, LLC,
    (collectively “CMS West”). We refer to all of these parties collectively as
    “Appellees.”
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    J-A19019-23
    challenging both personal jurisdiction and venue.         By orders entered on
    February 9, 2021, the trial court sustained preliminary objections of just one
    defendant (Cretex Companies, Inc.) and dismissed that defendant based on
    lack of personal jurisdiction. All other preliminary objections were overruled.2
    On July 8, 2021, MDIA, StoneMar, and CMS West jointly filed a petition
    to transfer venue for forum non conveniens pursuant to Pa.R.Civ.P.
    1006(d)(1), seeking transfer to Butler County. As the trial court recounted:
    In     [Appellees’]     petition,     [Appellees]    included      the
    affidavits/certifications of four (4) witnesses who all explained that
    traveling from Butler County to Philadelphia County would present
    hardships. During the pendency of the petition to transfer, this
    court also considered a separate discovery motion in which
    defense counsel sought a protective order to prohibit [Appellants’]
    counsel from taking “venue-related” depositions of a group of
    witnesses that [Appellants] sought to depose in order to counter
    the hardships presented in [Appellees’] petition to transfer. [On
    October 28, 2021, this] court denied [Appellees’] motion for
    protective order and further ordered that [Appellants] were
    allowed to submit, within thirty (30) days of the order, up to six
    (6) affidavits of witnesses of their choosing to present to the court
    in its consideration of the motion to transfer. [Appellants’]
    counsel, thereafter, submitted three (3) deposition transcripts and
    ____________________________________________
    2 Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1028(a)(1) authorizes the filing of
    preliminary objections based on, inter alia, improper venue. However, “[o]f
    the three grounds available to challenge venue, only improper venue may be
    raised by preliminary objection as provided by Rule 1006(e). Forum non
    conveniens and inability to hold a fair and impartial trial are raised by petition
    as provided by Rule 1006(d)(1) and (2).” Pa.R.Civ.P. 1028 (a)(1), Note.
    Therefore, forum non conveniens was not before the trial court when it ruled
    on the defendants’ preliminary objections.
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    one (1) affidavit of witness to establish that Philadelphia was a
    more convenient forum. This court, considering the entire record,
    found that the witnesses presented by [Appellees] in the petition
    to transfer would suffer substantial hardships both monetary
    and/or hardships due to medical reasons. This court decided that
    Philadelphia County was, in fact, an oppressive and vexatious
    forum and entered an order on March [7], 2022, transferring the
    matter to Butler County.
    Id. at 2-3 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    Appellants filed a motion for reconsideration, proposing four alternative
    forms of relief as follows:
    (1) to vacate the March [7], 2022 order and deny the petition to
    transfer, (2) to vacate the March [7], 2022 order and schedule oral
    arguments on the issue of forum non conveniens, (3) to vacate
    the March [7], 2022 order and allow [Appellants] to take
    additional depositions related to the issue of forum non
    conveniens, or (4) to vacate the March [7], 2022 order and order
    the matter transferred to Allegheny County.
    Id. at 3.      By order entered on April 5, 2022, the trial court denied
    reconsideration. In the interim, Appellants filed a timely notice of appeal on
    April 1, 2022.    Both Appellants and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P.
    1925.
    Appellants present two issues for our consideration, which we have
    reordered for ease of discussion:
    1. Whether the trial court abused its discretion or erred as a
    matter of law in granting [Appellees’] motion to transfer venue
    for forum non conveniens based on the inconvenience affidavits
    of a mere four individuals in a complex case certain to have
    dozens of witnesses, where [Appellants’] evidence in
    opposition – even in the absence of being able to engage in the
    discovery that is routinely allowed in these matters –
    demonstrated that Philadelphia County was much more
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    convenient than Butler County for far more than four other
    likely witnesses?
    2. Whether the trial court abused its discretion or erred as a
    matter of law in failing to allow [Appellants] to take the
    targeted forum non conveniens depositions that Pa.R.Civ.P.
    206.7(d) authorizes to create the factual record necessary to
    fully and fairly oppose [Appellees’] motion to transfer venue for
    forum non conveniens from [Appellants’] chosen forum of
    Philadelphia County to Butler County, Pennsylvania?
    Appellants’ Brief at 6-7.
    As this Court reiterated in Powers v. Verizon Pennsylvania, LLC, 
    230 A.3d 492
     (Pa. Super. 2020), “We review a trial court’s order transferring venue
    due to forum non conveniens for an abuse of discretion.”           
    Id.
     at 496
    (citing Walls v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 
    979 A.2d 847
    , 850 n.3 (Pa. Super. 2009)).
    “An abuse of discretion occurs if, inter alia, there was an error of law or the
    judgment was manifestly unreasonable. When reviewing for errors of law, the
    appellate standard of review is de novo and the scope of review is plenary.”
    Wright v. Consolidated Rail Corp., 
    215 A.3d 982
    , 990 (Pa. Super. 2019)
    (citation omitted).
    In Powers, we explained:
    We will uphold a trial court’s order transferring venue based on
    forum non conveniens “[i]f there exists any proper basis” for the
    trial court’s determination. Connor v. Crozer Keystone Health
    Sys., 
    832 A.2d 1112
    , 1116 (Pa. Super. 2003) (internal citation
    omitted). “[A] trial court’s order on venue will not be disturbed if
    the order is reasonable after a consideration of the relevant facts
    of the case.” See Mateu v. Stout, 
    819 A.2d 563
    , 565 (Pa. Super.
    2003).
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    J-A19019-23
    Powers, 230 A.3d at 496. We further acknowledged that “a plaintiff’s forum
    choice should be ‘rarely . . . disturbed,’ is entitled to great weight, and must
    be given deference by the trial court.” Id. (quoting Wood v. E.I. du Pont
    de Nemours & Co., 
    829 A.2d 707
    , 711 (Pa. Super. 2003)). Nevertheless, “a
    plaintiff's choice of venue is not absolute or unassailable.”    Id. at 496-97
    (quoting Connor, 
    832 A.2d at 1116
    ) (internal citation omitted).
    With these standards in mind, we turn to Appellants’ first issue in which
    they assert that the trial court abused its discretion by granting Appellees’
    petition to transfer. They contend that the trial court’s ruling was “based on
    the inconvenience affidavits of a mere four individuals” despite Appellants’
    evidence in opposition, which “demonstrated that Philadelphia County was
    much more convenient than Butler County for far more than four other likely
    witnesses.” Appellants’ Brief at 7. To put Appellants’ issue in context, we
    must begin with Pa.R.Civ.P. 1006, which governs venue transfers and provides
    in relevant part:
    For the convenience of parties and witnesses the court upon
    petition of any party may transfer an action to the appropriate
    court of any other county where the action could originally have
    been brought.
    Pa.R.Civ.P. 1006(d)(1).3 As this Court recognized in Powers,
    [i]n seeking forum transfer under Rule 1006(d)(1), “the
    defendant must show more than that the chosen forum is merely
    ____________________________________________
    3 There is no dispute that this action could have been initiated in Butler County
    as the county where the cause of action arose. Pa.R.Civ.P. 1006(a)(2).
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    J-A19019-23
    inconvenient to him[,]” Cheeseman v. Lethal Exterminator,
    Inc., 
    549 Pa. 200
    , 
    701 A.2d 156
    , 162 (1997) (footnote omitted),
    as the rule permits transfers only if the chosen forum is oppressive
    and vexatious for the defendant. Bratic v. Rubendall, 
    626 Pa. 550
    , 
    99 A.3d 1
     (2014).
    Powers, 230 A.3d at 496.
    In Bratic, our Supreme Court noted that in Cheeseman, decided 17
    years earlier, the Court had “clarified the factors on which a trial court may
    rely when ruling on a forum non conveniens motion, holding a petition to
    transfer venue should be granted only if the defendant ‘demonstrat[es], with
    detailed information on the record, that the plaintiff's chosen forum is
    oppressive or vexatious to the defendant.’” Bratic, 
    99 A.3d at 7
     (quoting
    Cheeseman, 
    701 A.2d at 162
    ). The Court recognized that
    the defendant may meet his burden by establishing . . . [that] trial
    in the chosen forum is oppressive to him; for instance, that trial
    in another county would provide easier access to witnesses or
    other sources of proof, or to the ability to conduct a view of
    premises involved in the dispute.     But, we stress that the
    defendant must show more than that the chosen forum is merely
    inconvenient to him.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Cheeseman, 
    701 A.2d at 162
    ).               Moreover, “while Rule
    1006(d)(1) on its face allows transfer based on ‘the convenience of the
    parties[,]’ Pa.R.C.P. 1006(d)(1), convenience or the lack thereof is not the
    test our case law has established: the moving party must show the chosen
    forum is either oppressive or vexatious.” Id. at 8. And, again, trial courts
    “are vested with considerable discretion when ruling on a such a motion, and
    ‘[i]f there exists any proper basis for the trial court’s decision to transfer
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    J-A19019-23
    venue, the decision must stand.’”      Id. (quoting Zappala v. Brandolini
    Property Management, Inc., 
    909 A.2d 1272
    , 1284 (Pa. 2006)).
    Here, although the trial court indicated that it considered the entire
    record, it specifically addressed the four affidavits submitted in support of
    Appellees’ petition to transfer.   The affidavits were sworn out by Richard
    Round, John Donley, Daniel Rager, and Dale Robertson.
    Richard Round was a building code inspector for MDIA who conducted
    the inspection of the cement facility in 2005. He explained that traveling more
    than 300 miles from his Butler County residence would cause significant
    financial hardship and would interfere with family obligations.    Trial Court
    Opinion, 9/2/22, at 4-5.
    John Donley was the manager of the Semper Concrete facility at the
    time of Smith’s injury.    In his affidavit, he explained that traveling to
    Philadelphia would present a hardship because he is the primary caregiver for
    his wife who suffers from coronary heart disease. Id. at 5.
    Daniel Rager was the foreman at Semper Concrete on the day of Smith’s
    injury. Furloughed after that day, traveling to Philadelphia would present a
    financial hardship for him. Id. Moreover, as Appellees note, Donley and Rager
    “are central witnesses in the case. Indeed, both men were present when the
    accident occurred, the OSHA investigation worksheet refers only to them.
    [Smith’s] own handwritten statement submitted to OSHA identifies only
    them, and [Smith’s] own discovery responses identify Mr. Donley far more
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    J-A19019-23
    often than anyone else as a crucial witness.” Appellees’ Brief at 19 (emphasis
    in original) (references to reproduced record omitted).
    Finally, Dale Robertson was a laborer at Semper Concrete on the date
    of the accident. His affidavit reflected that he had been unemployed due to
    COVID-19 and that traveling to Philadelphia would present a financial hardship
    to him and would cause him to incur costs that would put undue financial
    strain on him. Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/22, at 5.
    The trial court indicated that, based on the four affidavits, “it was clear”
    that all four defense witnesses would “experience undue hardships if required
    to travel to Philadelphia County for trial instead of Butler County.”         Id.
    However, the court also considered three deposition transcripts and an
    affidavit presented by Appellants in opposition to Appellees’ assertion of
    hardship. The first deposition was of James Kuntz, an Area Vice-President for
    StoneMor, who testified that despite living about two miles from the Butler
    County line, traveling to Philadelphia for trial would not present a hardship
    because he travels to Philadelphia on a regular basis.          Id. (citation to
    deposition testimony omitted). Amy Green, Director of Safety and Compliance
    for StoneMor, testified that traveling to Philadelphia would not create a
    hardship for her, but later indicated she did not care whether she testified in
    Philadelphia or Butler County.    Id. at 6.   StoneMor employee, Marc Bing-
    Zaremba, testified that traveling to Philadelphia would not be a hardship for
    him. Id. Finally, by affidavit, StoneMor executive Mark Miller, who is expected
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    J-A19019-23
    to testify about various StoneMor entities and the manner in which they
    conduct business, see Appellants’ Supplemental Response in Opposition to
    Petition to Transfer, 10/21/21 (R. 860a), indicated that it would be
    “oppressive, vexatious, and inconvenient” for him to appear in Butler County.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/22, at 6.
    Although the trial court considered the representations by various
    potential StoneMor witnesses who indicated that traveling to Philadelphia
    would not be a hardship, the court concluded that “the hardships presented
    by [Appellees’] witnesses formed a sufficient basis to transfer the matter to
    Butler County.” Id. While all four of Appellees’ witnesses presented sufficient
    information for the court to “determine the veracity and weight of the financial
    and/or personal hardships that traveling from Butler County to Philadelphia
    would present to      each witness,”    Appellants’ supplemental deposition
    transcripts and the Miller affidavit “did little to convince this court that
    [Appellants’] selected witnesses would encounter hardships if required to
    travel to Butler County.” Id.
    We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s grant of Appellees’
    petition to transfer. In fact, we find it consistent with our Supreme Court’s
    decision in Bratic, which recognized that “distance alone is not dispositive,
    but it is inherently part of the equation.”    Bratic, 
    99 A.3d at 9
    .      As our
    Supreme Court observed:
    While typically the fact that the site of the precipitating event was
    outside of plaintiff’s choice of forum is not dispositive, it is
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    J-A19019-23
    axiomatic that when the case involves a transfer from Philadelphia
    to a more distant county . . ., factors such as the burden of travel,
    time out of the office, disruption to business operations, and the
    greater difficulty involved in obtaining witnesses and sources of
    proof are more significant.
    
    Id.
     (internal quotations and citations omitted).       While Bratic involved a
    transfer from Philadelphia County to Dauphin County, a distance of
    approximately 100 miles, the instant case involves a transfer from
    Philadelphia County to Butler County, “the site of the precipitating event,” 
    id.,
    a distance of approximately 300 miles.        As the Court noted in Bratic, “As
    between    Philadelphia     and   adjoining    Bucks   County,   the    situation
    in Cheeseman, we speak of mere inconvenience; as between Philadelphia
    and counties 100 miles away, simple inconvenience fades in the mirror and
    we near oppressiveness with every milepost of the turnpike and Schuylkill
    Expressway.” Id. at 10.
    If inconvenience fades in the mirror and oppressiveness nears in that
    100-mile stretch between Philadelphia and Harrisburg, oppressiveness is
    certainly reached before someone embarks on a 300-mile journey leaving
    from Bulter, traveling past Bedford, Breezewood, and through the turnpike’s
    tunnels, before reaching Harrisburg, with another 100 miles still to go before
    arriving in Philadelphia.
    We find that the trial court properly exercised its considerable discretion
    when, after considering the entire record, it determined that Appellees carried
    their burden of demonstrating oppressiveness warranting the transfer of this
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    J-A19019-23
    case to Butler County.4       Because a proper basis exists for the trial court’s
    decision to transfer venue, that decision must stand. Bratic, 
    99 A.3d at 8
    .
    Appellants’ first issue fails.
    Appellants next ask whether the trial court abused its discretion by
    failing to permit Appellants to undertake additional discovery. Specifically,
    Appellants contend that the trial court abused its discretion or committed error
    of law by failing to issue a rule to show cause in response to Appellees’ petition
    to transfer venue and by “failing to allow [Appellants] to take the targeted
    forum non conveniens depositions that Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.7(d)[5] authorizes to
    create a factual record necessary” to oppose Appellees’ petition to transfer
    venue.       Appellants’ Brief at 6.     Appellants’ argument is premised on its
    erroneous interpretation of Rule 206.1 as a rule applicable to a petition to
    transfer venue.
    Rule 206.1(a) provides as follows:
    (a)     As used in this chapter, “petition” means
    (1)     an application to strike and/or open a default judgment or a
    judgment of non pros, and
    ____________________________________________
    4 In the Conclusion to its opinion, the court reiterated the deference granted
    to trial courts in ordering a transfer; noted that Appellees satisfied their
    burden of demonstrating oppressiveness; and indicated it considered the
    entire record in rendering its decision. Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/22, at 8.
    5 Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.7(d) provides that “[t]he respondent may take depositions,
    or other such discovery as the court allows.”
    - 12 -
    J-A19019-23
    (2)    any other application which is designated by local rule,
    numbered Local Rule 206.1(a), to be governed by Rule
    206.1 et seq.
    Note: A petition for relief from a judgment by confession is
    governed by Rule 2959.
    Motions are governed by Rule 208.1 et seq.
    Rule 206.1(a)(2) authorizes each court of common
    pleas to designate applications which are to proceed
    in the manner of a petition under Rule 206.1 et seq.
    Rule 239.2(a) requires each court which has made
    that designation to promulgate a local rule, numbered
    Local Rule 206.1(a), listing the applications to be
    determined pursuant to Rule 206.1 et seq.
    Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.1(a) (emphasis added). The petition at issue here is clearly
    not an application to strike and/or open a default judgment or a judgment of
    non pros under Rule 206.1(a)(1). Therefore, we consider whether the Court
    of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County has designated a petition to transfer
    venue as a “petition” under Rule 206.1(a)(2).       If so, then Rule 206.6(a)
    dictates that “[a] rule to show cause shall be issued as of course upon the
    filing of the petition.”
    In accordance with Rule 239.2(a), Philadelphia County has promulgated
    Local Rule 206.1(a) (Designation of Petitions), which provides:
    (1) In addition to petitions to open default judgment and petitions
    to open judgment of non pros, the following applications are
    designated “petitions” and are governed by the procedures set
    forth in Pa.R.C.P. 206.1 et seq.:
    (i) Petition to Appoint Arbitrator;
    (ii) Petition to Appoint A Receiver;
    (iii) Petition to Compel Arbitration;
    (iv) Petition to Confirm Arbitration Award;
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    (v) Petition to Confirm Settlement;
    (vi) Petition for Contempt;
    (vii) Petition to Set Aside Arbitration Award;
    (viii) Statutory Petitions; and
    (ix) Petition to Appoint a Sequestrator[.]
    Phila. Civ. R. 206.1(a)(1). Because a petition to transfer venue is not included
    in Philadelphia County’s definition of “petition,” Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.6(a) and
    206.7(d) do not apply.
    Even though the trial court was not under any obligation to issue a rule
    to show cause or to permit Appellants to undertake additional discovery, the
    court nevertheless did authorize Appellants to submit additional affidavits
    limited to the issue of forum non conveniens. The trial court appropriately
    rejected Appellants’ assertions regarding the court’s October 28, 2021 order
    that authorized additional discovery, stating:
    [Appellants] also make a bald assertion that this court did not
    afford the parties an opportunity to take full and complete
    discovery on the limited issue of forum non conveniens. To the
    contrary, this court specifically allowed [Appellants] to cherry pick
    six (6) witnesses of their choosing and provide this court with
    affidavits limited to the issue of forum non conveniens in its
    October 28, 2021 order. Accordingly, this court did not commit
    an error of law or abuse of discretion when it specifically allowed
    [Appellants] to take additional discovery and provide the court
    with affidavits on the issue of forum non conveniens.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/22, at 8 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    Appellants suggest that the court’s explanation “fails to persuade, and
    indeed confirms that the trial court abused its discretion,” because “the only
    potential witnesses from whom [Appellants] could obtain affidavits—without
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    running afoul of ethical rules prohibiting ex parte contacts . . . were witnesses
    under Appellants’ control.” Appellants’ Brief at 22.
    We first note that Appellants seem to have lost sight of the fact that a
    defendant, as the moving party, bears the burden of demonstrating that a
    plaintiff’s choice of forum is oppressive or vexatious.     If Appellants were
    challenging venue in Butler County, attempting to move the case to
    Philadelphia County, Appellants’ claimed inability to secure affidavits might
    come into play.      However, here, it was Appellees’ burden to demonstrate
    oppressiveness or vexatiousness, not Appellants’ burden to defend its choice
    of venue initially or demonstrate oppressiveness to themselves or their
    witnesses. See Moody v. Lehigh Valley Hosp., 
    179 A.3d 496
    , 508 (Pa.
    Super. 2018) (plaintiff did not have burden to prove that transferee county
    “was oppressive to certain individuals, and such evidence was irrelevant to
    the inquiry herein.”).6
    ____________________________________________
    6 In Tranter v. Z&D Tour, Inc., No. 1746 EDA 2022 (Pa. Super. filed October
    11, 2023), a panel of this Court reversed a trial court’s transfer from
    Philadelphia County based on forum non conveniens after concluding that
    ambulance drivers, firefighters, paramedics, and a coroner who responded to
    a fatal bus crash in Westmoreland County were not key witnesses for the
    defense and that the defense failed to establish how their testimony would be
    relevant to or necessary to the appellees’ defense. By contrast, in the instant
    case, the defense established, inter alia, that Appellant’s co-workers—plant
    manager Donley and foreman Rager—were “central” or “critical” witnesses
    whose testimony would be relevant and necessary in this hand amputation
    case involving a cement mixer located in the Semper Concrete facility located
    in Butler County. Therefore, we find Tranter distinguishable.
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    It is also important to recognize that, contrary to Appellants’ assertion,
    Appellants were not foreclosed from conducting forum non conveniens
    depositions. See Appellants’ Brief at 12. As Appellees observe:
    Over many months, the parties engaged in extensive forum non
    conveniens discovery, and counsel cooperated to schedule the
    seven depositions that [Appellants] took. [Appellees’] counsel
    also offered other depositions that [Appellants] refused. Thus, the
    trial court neither precluded nor expressly allowed depositions or
    other discovery because they were already ongoing.
    In particular, . . . [Appellants] deposed three of [Smith’s] co-
    workers, John Donley, Dan Rager, and Dale Robertson, he
    deposed the building code inspector, Richard Round, and he
    rejected offers to depose [Smith’s] other two co-workers, Floyd
    Fisher and Jason Palmer. Having either deposed or refused to
    depose witnesses who are, by any reasonable measure, highly
    relevant to this case, [Appellants] chose to depose three
    additional StoneMor employees [i.e., James Kuntz, Amy Green,
    and Marc Bing-Zaremba].
    Appellees’ Brief at 48.
    Appellees suggest that “the numerous affidavits, depositions, and briefs
    submitted in this case went far beyond what is routine.” Appellees’ Brief at
    51 (referencing review of case law on pages 35-38). They further note:
    The trial court simply placed reasonable limitations on additional
    burdensome and largely irrelevant venue discovery. This middle-
    ground approach was especially necessary and appropriate after
    it because apparent that—as illustrated by [Appellants’]
    submission of an affidavit from Deborah Lasky, who had no
    relevant information and left StoneMor’s employ nine years before
    the accident—[Appellants] were seeking discovery from Appellees’
    former and current employees based on their proximity to
    Philadelphia, not based on whether they had relevant information.
    
    Id.
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    J-A19019-23
    We find no abuse of discretion or error of law with respect to the scope
    of discovery authorized by the trial court.       Appellants’ second issue lacks
    merit.
    Finding no merit in either of Appellants’ issues, we shall not disturb the
    trial court’s March 7, 2022 order transferring venue from Philadelphia County
    to Butler County.
    Order affirmed.
    Date: 10/30/2023
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1002 EDA 2022

Judges: Stabile, J.

Filed Date: 10/30/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2023