SER Potomac Trucking and Excavating v. Hon. James W. Courrier, Jr., Judge ( 2016 )


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  •                               STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA ex rel.
    POTOMAC TRUCKING AND EXCAVATING, INC.,
    FILED
    Petitioner                                                                October 6, 2016
    released at 3:00 p.m.
    RORY L. PERRY, II CLERK
    vs.)   No. 16-0183 (Grant County Civil Action No. 14-C-62)               SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    THE HONORABLE JAMES W. COURRIER, JR.,
    Judge of the Circuit Court of Grant County, West Virginia
    and SHIRLEY BERGDOLL,
    on behalf of Joshua Bergdoll,
    a protected person,
    Respondents
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Petitioner Potomac Trucking and Excavating, Inc. (“Potomac Trucking”), by counsel
    Trevor K. Taylor and Tiffany A. Cropp, petitions this Court to invoke its original jurisdiction
    pursuant to Rule 16 of the West Virginia Rules of Appellate Procedure. Respondents are the
    Honorable James W. Courrier, Jr., Judge of the Circuit Court of Grant County (“the circuit
    court”), and Shirley Bergdoll,1 the plaintiff below, who is represented by counsel, Dino S.
    Colombo and Travis T. Mohler. Petitioner seeks to prohibit the circuit court from enforcing
    an order granting a motion to compel Potomac Trucking to produce a 2003 Peterbilt semi-
    truck and trailer (“truck and trailer”) for inspection and other testing at the location at the
    home of Potomac Trucking’s employee and truck driver, which is where the subject truck
    was routinely parked by the employee. The circuit court further ordered that Ms. Bergdoll’s
    expert was allowed “to be inside the subject truck at various spots on the driveway [while
    Potomac Trucking’s employee operates the truck and trailer] to determine sight lines and to
    determine what could and could not be seen by . . . [Potomac Trucking’s] employee while
    backing the truck out of the driveway.” Having thoroughly reviewed the appendix record, the
    1
    Joshua David Bergdoll was the original plaintiff in the case. Ms. Bergdoll was
    substituted as plaintiff in the case by an agreed order entered on April 10, 2015, following
    the death of Mr. Bergdoll due to causes unrelated to the accident.
    1
    parties’ briefs and oral arguments, the applicable law and all other matters before the Court,
    we conclude that Potomac Trucking is entitled to relief and grant the writ of prohibition as
    moulded. As this case presents no new or substantial question of law, its proper disposition
    is by memorandum decision as contemplated by Rule 21 of the West Virginia Rules of
    Appellate Procedure.
    On March 7, 2014, Douglas Wratchford, a Potomac Trucking employee, was backing
    a truck and trailer owned by Potomac Trucking out his residential driveway onto Route 28/55
    near Petersburg, West Virginia, when the truck and trailer collided with a vehicle driven by
    Mr. Bergdoll.2 The accident occurred at approximately 5:45 a.m. A complaint against
    Potomac Trucking3 was filed as a result of the accident wherein Ms. Bergdoll alleged causes
    of action against Potomac Trucking for vicarious liability, “negligent and wreckless [sic]
    conduct[,]” and negligent entrustment.
    According to the allegations in the complaint, Mr. Wratchford parked and/or stored
    the truck and trailer at his personal residence “where there was no safe method for the truck
    and trailer to enter or exit this location.” Thus, Ms. Bergdoll alleged that “oncoming traffic
    had no warning that Mr. Wratchford would be backing the . . . truck and trailer into active
    lanes of traffic o[n] Rt. 28/55.” Ms. Bergdoll also alleged that Mr. Bergdoll “was lawfully
    operating his vehicle in the westbound lane of Rt. 28/55 and clearly had the right-of-way[]”
    when “Mr. Wratchford improperly and negligently backed . . . [the] truck and trailer into the
    immediate path of Joshua Bergdoll’s . . . [vehicle], causing a collision.”
    Pursuant to West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 34 (also referred to as “Rule 34”),
    Ms. Bergdoll served “Plaintiff’s Request for Production of Documents and Other Tangible
    Things and Entry Upon Land for Inspection” (hereinafter “request for production”) upon
    Potomac Trucking. Ms. Bergdoll requested, in relevant part:
    2
    Mr. Wratchford was not named as a defendant in the original complaint. Ms.
    Bergdoll filed a motion for leave to file her first amended complaint to add Mr. Wratchford,
    individually, as a defendant. No order granting that motion has been entered by the circuit
    court.
    3
    Ms. Bergdoll also alleged a negligence cause of action against a second defendant,
    Anna Turpin. Following the collision, Mr. Wratchford reportedly exited the truck and trailer
    and attempted to warn and flag vehicles approaching the scene. Ms. Turpin, who was also
    traveling on Route 28/55, failed to adhere to the warnings being conveyed by Mr. Wratchford
    and struck the rear of Mr. Bergdoll’s vehicle. Ms. Bergdoll settled with Ms. Turpin and Ms.
    Turpin was dismissed from this action.
    2
    1.	    That Defendant Potomac Trucking and Excavating, Inc.
    produce and permit the plaintiff [Ms. Bergdoll] to inspect
    and/or test the following tangible things:
    a.	    The 2003 Peterbilt Truck Tractor which
    was involved in the March 7, 2014[,]
    collision . . . ;
    b.	    The trailer which was involved in the
    March 7, 2014[,] collision . . . .
    Such inspection is to take place at 3112 North
    Fork Highway, Petersburg, WV 26847 at a time
    and date that is mutually convenient to all parties
    involved, but not later than 30 days after the
    Service of this Request.
    2.	    That the plaintiff be permitted to enter the property
    located at 3112 North Fork Highway, Petersburg, WV
    26847 where the above-described tractor and trailer were
    parked on March 7, 2014[,] and to inspect, measure,
    survey, and photograph such land at the same time and
    date upon which the inspection described in Request 1 is
    conducted. This inspection of property is specifically
    limited to the portions of the property on which the
    tractor-trailer were parked, the driveway, and any
    portions of the property on which the tractor-trailer may
    have been able to drive and or turn around. This
    inspection does not include or request access or entry to
    any dwelling or other building on the property.
    Potomac Trucking filed objections to the request for production. According to
    various letters contained within the appendix record, the parties attempted to resolve Potomac
    Trucking’s objections which, in relevant part, were grounded in producing the truck and
    trailer at Mr. Wratchford’s residence as he was not a party to the suit and his property was
    beyond the control of Potomac Trucking. Thus, Potomac Trucking indicated that it would
    only make the truck available for inspection at its facility as it was Potomac Trucking’s
    position that Rule 34 did not require that the truck and trailer be taken to Mr. Wratchford’s
    personal residence for the inspection to be performed. Conversely, Ms. Bergdoll’s position
    was that her request that the truck and trailer be produced at Mr. Wratchford’s residence was
    reasonable. Ms. Bergdoll’s attorney also informed Potomac Trucking’s counsel she was
    3
    “willing to pay” for the cost of the fuel and related expenses in getting the truck and trailer
    to the Wratchford residence and that she would “take care of traffic control with the local
    authorities.”
    Because the parties reached an impasse on the issue of where the production of the
    truck and trailer was to occur for the inspection to take place, Ms. Bergdoll filed a motion
    to compel on December 7, 2015. In the motion to compel, Ms. Bergdoll sought to have
    Potomac Trucking “produce the relevant truck and trailer for inspection and other testing at
    the location where the truck was routinely parked by its employee, Douglas Wratchford. . .
    .” Ms. Bergdoll stated in the memorandum in support of her motion that the purpose of the
    inspection was “‘to evaluate what could or could not be seen by either Mr. Wratchford or Mr.
    Bergdoll as the truck and trailer were being backed out of Mr. Wratchford’s property.’”
    Potomac Trucking responded to the motion by arguing that Ms. Bergdoll failed to
    designate a reasonable place for the inspection to take place under Rule 34. According to
    Potomac Trucking “[e]ssentially, the purpose of Plaintiff’s requested inspection at the
    designated location, Douglas Wratchford’s property, is to have Potomac Trucking . . .
    perform an accident recreation for and on behalf of her and her expert.” Potomac Trucking
    continued:
    Nothing in the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure
    imposes an obligation upon a party to litigation to perform for
    or be a party to an accident recreation that the other party wishes
    to perform. Likewise, the Rules do not mandate an accident
    vehicle be produced at the location of the accident so the
    accident scene can be inspected and/or the accident recreated.
    If Plaintiff wishes to conduct an accident recreation, she may do
    so. However, she can neither compel Potomac Trucking . . . to
    conduct it for her, nor can she compel Potomac Trucking . . . to
    provide any equipment it owns and/or possesses to use in the
    recreation. Indeed, Plaintiff’s request fails to take into account
    the burden or the liability imposed upon Potomac Trucking . . .
    by this request. . . .
    After a hearing4 on the motion to compel, the circuit court, by order entered February
    1, 2016, granted Ms. Bergdoll’s motion to compel. In the order, the circuit court noted that
    Potomac Trucking had agreed to allow Ms. Bergdoll to inspect the truck and tractor and had
    4
    There is no transcript from the January 11, 2016, hearing in the appendix record.
    4
    agreed to allow the inspection of its employee’s property. The court found the only issue
    before it was
    whether the Plaintiff is entitled to inspect the subject truck and
    trailer at Mr. Wratchford’s property where the truck was
    routinely parked and stored and where the accident occurred
    and, if so, is it a “reasonable . . . manner of making the
    inspection and performing the related acts” to allow the
    plaintiff’s expert to be inside the subject truck at various spots
    on the driveway, while the Defendant’s employee operates the
    tractor, to determine sight lines and to determine what could and
    could not be seen by Defendant’s employee while backing the
    truck out of the driveway.
    The circuit court then determined that the location specified by Ms. Bergdoll for the
    inspection of the truck was reasonable because it was where the collision occurred, it was
    where the Potomac Trucking routinely parked the truck and it was only three-and-one-half
    miles from Potomac Trucking’s office. Further, the circuit court found that Ms. Bergdoll
    had “agreed to pay the cost of fuel and other related expenses associated with the
    transportation of the vehicle to Mr. Wratchford’s property and arrange for traffic control with
    the local authorities.” The circuit court also found that “it is the opinion of this Court that
    the plaintiff’s inspection of Defendant’s truck and trailer at the Defendant’s employee’s
    driveway and having the truck and trailer backed out of the driveway to determine the
    driver’s line of sight is within the scope of Rule 34 of the West Virginia Rules of Civil
    Procedure.” Based upon the circuit court’s findings, it ordered Potomac Trucking to
    produce the subject truck and trailer at the accident location and have its employee operate
    the truck for an accident recreation, with Ms. Bergdoll’s expert inside the truck
    at various spots on the driveway to determine sight lines and to
    determine what could and could not be seen by Defendant’s
    employee while backing the truck out of the driveway. The
    Court does not place a limit on the number of times the subject
    truck can be backed out of the driveway; however, the Court
    emphasizes that the parties should act reasonably. . . .
    We have previously held:
    “‘Prohibition lies only to restrain inferior courts from
    proceedings in causes over which they have no jurisdiction, or,
    in which, having jurisdiction, they are exceeding their legitimate
    5
    powers, and may not be used as a substitute for [a petition for
    appeal] or certiorari.’ Syl. Pt. 1, Crawford v. Taylor, 
    138 W. Va. 207
    , 
    75 S.E.2d 370
     (1953).”
    Syl. Pt. 3, State ex rel. Hoover v. Berger, 
    199 W. Va. 12
    , 
    483 S.E.2d 12
     (1996). Further,
    [i]n determining whether to entertain and issue the writ
    of prohibition for cases not involving an absence of jurisdiction
    but only where it is claimed that the lower tribunal exceeded its
    legitimate powers, this Court will examine five factors: (1)
    whether the party seeking the writ has no other adequate means,
    such as direct appeal, to obtain the desired relief; (2) whether the
    petitioner will be damaged or prejudiced in a way that is not
    correctable on appeal; (3) whether the lower tribunal’s order is
    clearly erroneous as a matter of law; (4) whether the lower
    tribunal’s order is an oft repeated error or manifests persistent
    disregard for either procedural or substantive law; and (5)
    whether the lower tribunal’s order raises new and important
    problems or issues of law of first impression. These factors are
    general guidelines that serve as a useful starting point for
    determining whether a discretionary writ of prohibition should
    issue. Although all five factors need not be satisfied, it is clear
    that the third factor, the existence of clear error as a matter of
    law, should be given substantial weight.
    Id. at 14-15, 483 S.E.2d at 14-15, Syl. Pt. 4. Lastly, “‘[a] writ of prohibition is available to
    correct a clear legal error resulting from a trial court’s substantial abuse of its discretion in
    regard to discovery orders.’ Syllabus Point 1, State Farm [Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.] v. Stephens,
    
    188 W. Va. 622
    , 
    425 S.E.2d 577
     (1992).” Syl. Pt. 2, State ex rel. Med. Assurance of W. Va.,
    Inc. v. Recht, 
    213 W. Va. 457
    , 
    583 S.E.2d 80
     (2003). It is with the foregoing standards in
    mind that we undertake an examination of the issue before us.
    The issue is whether the circuit court erred when it ordered Potomac Trucking not
    only to produce its truck and trailer for inspection at the scene of the accident, but also to
    supply a driver who was required to move the truck and trailer at the direction of Ms.
    Bergdoll or her expert at the inspection location. Potomac Trucking argues in this case the
    inspection ordered by the court pursuant to Rule 34 is not reasonable because it involves
    Potomac Trucking having to take part in a recreation of the subject accident using its truck
    and its employee “at the direction of and for the benefit of” Ms. Bergdoll.
    6
    Conversely, Ms. Bergdoll argues that the circuit court did not err in its determination
    that it was reasonable under West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 34 to allow the inspection
    of the truck to take place where Potomac Trucking’s employee routinely parked the truck for
    eight years. Further, Ms. Bergdoll maintains that she is not asking for a recreation: “she is
    simply asking the Petitioner to move the truck to different locations on the driveway to
    determine what can, or cannot, be seen from the vantage point of the truck driver.”5
    West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 34 provides:
    (a) Scope. Any party may serve on any other party a
    request (1) to produce and permit the party making the request,
    or someone acting on the requestor’s behalf, to inspect and copy,
    any designated documents (including writings, drawings,
    graphs, charts, photographs, phono-records, and other data
    compilations from which information can be obtained,
    translated, if necessary, by the respondent through detection
    devices into reasonably usable form), or to inspect and copy,
    test, or sample any tangible things which constitute or contain
    matters within the scope of Rule 26(b) and which are in the
    possession, custody or control of the party upon whom the
    request is served; or (2) to permit entry upon designated land or
    other property in the possession or control of the party upon
    whom the request is served for the purpose of inspection and
    measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling the
    property or any designated object or operation thereon, within
    the scope of Rule 26(b).
    (emphasis added). Further, Rule 34(b) provides that any “request shall specify a reasonable
    time, place, and manner of making the inspection and performing the related acts.”
    (emphasis added).
    5
    Ms. Bergdoll also argues that because the order concerns discovery, it is not
    appealable until the litigation has ended and it is not subject to a writ of prohibition unless
    it involves “the probable invasion of the attorney-client privilege or work-product immunity.”
    As set forth supra, where a circuit court commits a substantial abuse of discretion in ruling
    on a discovery matter, a party may seek a writ of prohibition to correct any legal error. See
    Med. Assurance of W. Va., Inc., 213 W. Va. at 461, 
    583 S.E.2d at 84
    , Syl. Pt. 2.
    7
    The resolution of this issue requires the Court to look no further than the language
    contained in Rule 34. Rule 34 expressly allows a party “to inspect and copy, test, or sample
    any tangible things which constitute or contain matters within the scope of Rule 26(b) and
    which are in the possession, custody or control of the party upon whom the request is
    served[.]” (emphasis added). Under the language of Rule 26(b), the tangible things must be
    “relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action[.]” Finally, Rule 34(b) requires
    that “the place[] and manner of making the inspection” shall be “reasonable.”
    Under the express language of Rule 34, Ms. Bergdoll can “inspect” the truck and
    trailer that is the focus of her complaint and Potomac Trucking has not taken issue with
    allowing an inspection of the truck and trailer. Likewise, we do not find error in the circuit
    court’s determination that the inspection of the truck and trailer occur at the personal
    residence of Potomac Trucking’s employee, Mr. Wratchford. Mr. Wratchford testified
    during his deposition that he routinely parked the truck and trailer at his personal residence
    for eight years. Also, this location is where the accident occurred and it is only three-and-a­
    half miles from Potomac Trucking’s office.6
    The problem, however, is not with the circuit court ordering that the truck and trailer
    be produced for inspection. Instead, it is the circuit court’s agreeing with Ms. Bergdoll’s
    request that “the Petitioner . . . move the truck to different locations on . . . [Mr.
    Wratchford’s] driveway to determine what can, or cannot, be seen from the vantage point of
    the truck driver.” While Ms. Bergdoll insists that she is not asking Potomac Trucking to
    participate in her accident recreation, we find the contrary to be true. Further, because the
    express language of Rule 34 does not contemplate discovery requiring an opposing party to
    participate in the recreation of an accident at the direction of the party seeking the discovery
    under the rule, we find that the circuit court committed a substantial error. There simply is
    no authority to support the circuit court’s directing Potomac Trucking and its employee to
    operate a truck and trailer at the direction of Ms. Bergdoll’s expert. As Rule 34 provides no
    support for such an order by the circuit court, we cannot find that this portion of the circuit
    court’s order is reasonable under the rule.
    Consequently, there was no error committed by the circuit court in ordering the
    inspection of the subject truck and trailer at the driveway of the personal residence of Mr.
    Wratchford, Potomac Trucking’s employee. It was clear legal error on the part of the circuit
    6
    Further, even though Potomac Trucking does not have control or possession of its
    employee’s property as the employee is not a named defendant, Potomac Trucking agreed
    to work with its employee to allow Ms. Bergdoll’s expert to go onto the employee’s property
    to inspect the portion of the property where the truck and trailer were routinely parked.
    8
    court, however, to order Potomac Trucking to have its employee participate in an accident
    recreation. In so ordering, the circuit court exceeded its authority and legitimate powers as
    it acted outside the scope of West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 34.
    Writ granted as moulded.
    ISSUED: October 6, 2016
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Menis E. Ketchum
    Justice Robin Jean Davis
    Justice Brent D. Benjamin
    Justice Margaret L. Workman
    Justice Allen H. Loughry II
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-0183

Filed Date: 10/6/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/6/2016