J-A03010-22
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
AITA SUSI, M.D. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant
v.
PETER PAN BUS LINES, INC.
Appellee No. 508 EDA 2021
Appeal from the Order Entered February 5, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
Civil Division at No.: 200802819
BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED JULY 26, 2022
Appellant, Aita Susi, M.D., appeals from an order granting the motion of
Appellee, Peter Pan Bus Lines, Inc., to dismiss this personal injury action under
the doctrine of forum non conveniens with leave for Appellant to refile this
action in Massachusetts. After careful review, we affirm.
On September 2, 2020, Appellant, a Pennsylvania citizen, filed a one-
count complaint in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County alleging
negligence against Appellee and John Doe Co.1 The complaint alleged that
Appellee is a Massachusetts corporation with a principal place of business in
Massachusetts, is authorized to do business within Pennsylvania, and
maintains a facility in Philadelphia County, thus making Philadelphia County a
proper venue for this action. The complaint alleged that on September 6,
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1 Throughout these proceedings, Appellant never identified this defendant.
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2018, Appellant hit her head on the door of Appellee’s bus while traveling from
Boston to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, while backing out of the bus’s luggage
carriage. Appellant sought damages for her injuries.
On October 23, 2020, Appellee filed both an answer to the complaint
and a motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 5322(e) in order for Appellant to refile the matter in Massachusetts. On
November 18, 2020, the court issued a rule to show cause allowing discovery
and supplemental briefs on the forum non conveniens issue.
In response, Appellee filed affidavits of three witnesses, all of whom are
employed by Appellee and likely will be called to testify in this matter. The
first witness, Gary Zimmerman, drove the bus in the underlying incident on
the date of the incident. Zimmerman resides in Suffolk County, Massachusetts
and reports to Providence, Rhode Island or Chelsea, Massachusetts in the
course of his employment. The second witness, Ed Caouette, was another
operator of the bus on the date of the incident. Caouette resides in Chepachet
County, Rhode Island, and reports to Providence, Rhode Island in the course
of his employment. Zimmerman and Caouette averred that they would testify
about the incident in question, Appellee’s safety protocols during travel, and
protocols for reporting incidents. The third witness, Chas Bradshaw, is
Appellee’s safety manager and reports to the same locations as Zimmerman.
Bradshaw was responsible for Appellee’s initial investigation in this case.
Bradshaw averred that he would testify about the route the bus was traveling
on the date of the incident, safety measures and protocols bus drivers must
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follow during travel, and any relevant safety maintenance or repairs the
subject bus has undergone. All three witnesses stated that it would cause
significant disruption to their employment and personal life to travel
approximately 300 miles to participate in this litigation.
Appellant provided two sworn affidavits in this matter, one signed by
Appellant and the other by Appellant’s counsel. Appellant’s affidavit identified
ten potential fact witnesses and seven expert medical provider witnesses
whom she claimed were based in Pennsylvania. Appellant did not explain what
connection nine of these individuals had to the matter or the nature of their
intended testimony. With regard to the other witness, Barbara Billings,
Appellant merely averred that Billings picked her up near the scene of the
accident. Appellant alleged that it would be costly to pay expenses for her
witnesses to travel to Massachusetts to testify. Appellant did not submit any
affidavits from any witnesses identified in her affidavit. Nor did she take
discovery from Appellee or its witnesses relating to the forum non conveniens
issue.
Appellant stated that her attorneys of choice are based in Philadelphia
and are not licensed to practice in Massachusetts. She alleged that it would
be costly to pay expenses for her attorneys to travel to Massachusetts to
litigate this case.
On February 5, 2021, the trial court entered an order granting Appellees’
motion to dismiss with prejudice to be refiled, if Appellant so chose, in
Massachusetts. The court observed that Massachusetts’ three-year statute of
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limitations would not expire until September 8, 2021, making an alternative
forum available. Appellant filed a timely appeal to this Court, and both
Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
Appellant raises the following issue in this appeal:
1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion and rule in a matter
contrary to law in granting Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss the case
pursuant to forum non conveniens by:
(a) Finding that Appellee established weighty reasons
under the law for dismissal due to forum non
conveniens when the private and public factors did not
weigh strongly favor dismissal;
(b) Finding that Appellee established that the private
factors strongly favored dismissal and outweighed
Appellant’s choice of forum when Appellee did not
establish factors pursuant to the law including relative
ease to access of sources of proof, compulsory
process or attendance of unwilling witnesses when
Appellee proffered less witness than Appellant, the
sources of proof are just as easily accessible in
Pennsylvania and Appellant is a Pennsylvania
resident;
(c) In finding that Appellee established public factors
that strongly favored dismissal and outweighed
Appellant’s choice of forum when the matter has a
strong nexus to Pennsylvania, would not burden
Pennsylvania juries and when Pennsylvania Courts
could easily apply Massachusetts law.
(d) In finding that the Appellee met its burden under
forum non conveniens when the legal standards
established by This Honorable Court favor the matter
remaining in Pennsylvania.
Appellant’s Brief at 5-6.
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The doctrine of forum non conveniens permits the trial court to dismiss
a case in whole or in part if it “finds that in the interest of substantial justice
the matter should be heard in another forum[.]” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5322(e). The
party seeking dismissal bears the burden of proof. Failor v. FedEx Ground
Package System, Inc., 248 A.3d 527, 535 (Pa. Super. 2021). Our courts
lack the authority to transfer matters to courts of our sister states; rather,
when appropriate, our courts should dismiss the action to permit refiling in
another state. Rahn v. Consolidated Rail Corporation, 254 A.3d 738, 747
n.6 (Pa. Super. 2021).
The forum non conveniens doctrine “provides the court with a means of
looking beyond technical considerations such as jurisdiction and venue to
determine whether litigation in the plaintiff’s chosen forum would serve the
interests of justice under the particular circumstances.” Id. at 747. Two main
factors guide the determination on whether the plaintiff has chosen a proper
forum. Id. at 748. One is whether the plaintiff has an available alternative
forum to refile claims if they are dismissed. Id. Appellant does not claim that
at the time the trial court dismissed this lawsuit, the statute of limitations
barred her from refiling this action in Massachusetts, so we need not analyze
this factor further.
The second factor, which the parties dispute, is whether “weighty
reasons” justify the court’s decision to altering the plaintiff’s choice of forum.
Id. The plaintiff’s choice of forum must be given a high degree of deference,
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but to a lesser extent where the plaintiff chooses a foreign forum in which to
litigate his claims. Id. The assessment of “weighty reasons” implicates both
public and private factors. Id. Private factors include:
the relative ease of access to sources of proof; availability of
compulsory process for attendance of unwilling, and the cost of
obtaining attendance of willing, witnesses; possibility of view of
premises, if view would be appropriate to the actions; and all other
practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and
inexpensive. There may also be questions as to the enforceability
of a judgment if one is obtained. The court will weigh relative
advantages and obstacles to a fair trial.
Id. Public factors include:
Administrative difficulties follow for courts when litigation is piled
up in congested centers instead of being handled at its origin. Jury
duty is a burden that ought not to be imposed upon the people of
a community which has no relation to the litigation. There is
appropriateness, too, in having the trial ... in a forum that is at
home with the state law that must govern the case, rather than
having a court in some other forum untangle problems in conflict
of laws, and in law foreign to itself.
Id. “It is within the trial court’s discretion to weigh some of these factors
more heavily than others,” because “weighing the factors is not an exercise in
counting numbers.” Lyndes v. Penn Central Corporation, 254 A.3d 725,
738 (Pa. Super. 2021).
Forum non conveniens requires the court to consider the relative
convenience of the forum state and the state proposed by the defendant as
the proper forum. Failor, 248 A.3d at 537 (in personal injury action brought
in Philadelphia by plaintiff who resided in Hagerstown, Maryland,
determination of forum non conveniens required court to consider relative
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convenience of Pennsylvania and Maryland, not Philadelphia and Hagerstown;
court abused its discretion by dismissing case on ground that Philadelphia was
inconvenient forum).
We review orders on motions to dismiss under forum non conveniens
for abuse of discretion. Rahn, 254 A.3d at 747. “This standard applies even
where jurisdictional requirements are met. Moreover, if there is any basis for
the trial court’s decision, the decision must stand.” Id. “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.” Id. “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.”
Id.
The trial court held that Appellee provided sufficient evidence to
demonstrate that the private factors “weigh[ed] heavily” in Appellee’s favor,
based on a qualitative comparison of Appellant’s and Appellee’s proposed
witnesses, the location of all safety and maintenance records in Massachusetts
and Appellee’s principal place of business in Massachusetts. Trial Ct. Op.,
8/10/21, at 6-8. Appellant claims that the trial court abused its discretion and
“misapplied the private factors” because: (1) Appellee “only” identified three
witnesses who would need to travel to Philadelphia, whereas Appellant
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identified nine fact witnesses and seven expert witnesses; (2) the location of
the bus and accident is irrelevant; and (3) Appellant’s choice of forum and
counsel is purportedly entitled to great weight. We hold that the court’s
analysis of private factors was a proper exercise of its discretion.
First, Appellant argues that Appellee only listed three fact witnesses
from Rhode Island or Massachusetts, whereas Appellant listed nine fact
witnesses and seven expert witnesses from Pennsylvania. To begin, the
location of Appellant’s expert witnesses is not given significant weight in forum
non conveniens analysis, because experts are selected by the parties and are
available virtually anywhere in the United States. Aerospace Fin. Leasing,
Inc. v. New Hampshire Ins. Co., 696 A.2d 810, 814 (Pa. Super. 1997).
With regard to the number of fact witnesses, the weighing of private factors
is not an exercise in counting numbers . . . The party seeking the
transfer must clearly specify the key witnesses to be called and
must make a general statement of what their testimony will cover.
The emphasis must be on this showing rather than on numbers.
One key witness may outweigh a great number of less important
witnesses.
Bochetto v. Dimeling, Schreiber & Park, 151 A.3d 1072, 1083 (Pa. Super.
2016). Appellee submitted affidavits from three fact witnesses, two bus
drivers and one safety manager, which described the substance of each
witness’s testimony. These witnesses, who reside either in Massachusetts or
Rhode Island, asserted that traveling to Philadelphia to participate in this
litigation would cause significant disruption to their personal and professional
life. Two of the three witnesses were the driver and operator, respectively, of
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the bus in question, who will testify about safety protocols and incident
reporting procedures. The third witness is the person responsible for initial
investigations into personal injury complaints involving travel on Appellee’s
busses. Appellant, on the other hand, failed to provide any affidavit from her
proposed fact witnesses or describe the nature of their testimony beyond
labeling each witness as a “damage” witness or “medical provider.” Moreover,
Appellant’s witnesses live in “the Pennsylvania area” and have no connection
with the vicinity of the accident. Thus, the trial court properly exercised its
discretion by focusing on the quality of each party’s fact witnesses instead of
their quantity and determining that the quality of Appellee’s witnesses
weighed in favor of Appellee. See Rahn v. Conrail, 254 A.3d 738, 753 (Pa.
Super. 2021) (trial court did not abuse its discretion where it afforded more
weight to witnesses defendants identified, noting that “[appellant] failed to
present a sufficient factual basis to allow the support [of] its claims with
respect to the witnesses’ . . . testimony . . . [and] did not indicate how these
particular witnesses could offer specific testimony that would be relevant to
[appellant’s] claims”).
Next, Appellant argues that the location of the bus and alleged incident
are irrelevant. The trial court found that the bus and its relevant maintenance
records are in Massachusetts, making it easier for an inspection of the bus to
take place in Massachusetts. Appellant claims that these facts are immaterial,
declaring that the location of the accident is irrelevant and that no need exists
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for the jury to view or inspect the bus. It is well settled, however, that the
site of the incident is an appropriate factor in forum non conveniens analysis.
See Stevens v. Penn Central Corp., 251 A.3d 789, 810-11 (Pa. Super.
2021) (trial court properly determined that inspection of location of incident
may be necessary, where “Appellees averred it would be important to visit
[the site] during trial . . . [and] [t]he trial court specifically accepted Appellees’
argument and concluded the necessity of viewing the work premises weighed
in favor of dismissal”); Hurt v. Penn Cent. Corp., 250 A.3d 1227, 1239 (Pa.
Super. 2021) (same). We have also recognized the relevance of the location
of evidence in forum non conveniens analyses. Stevens, 251 A.3d at 810-
11; Hurt, 250 A.3d at 1239; see also Flaxman v. Burnett, 574 A.2d 1061,
1067 (Pa. Super. 1990) (forum non conveniens motion properly granted
where, inter alia, all evidence was located in another county). We hold that
the trial court properly found that the location of the bus weighs in favor of
litigating this matter in Massachusetts.
Next, Appellant insists that the trial court ignored the fact that Appellant
resides in Pennsylvania and gave no weight to her choice of counsel and the
fact that a trial in Massachusetts would deprive her of counsel of her choice.
The trial court, however, gave adequate consideration to both Appellant’s
residence and her forum choice. The trial court explicitly stated in its opinion
that “[t]his Court did take note and considered the fact that [Appellant]
resides closer to Philadelphia than Massachusetts,” Trial Ct. Op. at 9, but
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notwithstanding Appellant’s residence and forum choice, dismissal was
appropriate. As for Appellant’s claim that the court deprived her of counsel of
her choice, we have held in the past that the location of the plaintiff’s counsel
is not a compelling consideration:
[T]he trial court correctly declined to give compelling weight to
this factor, noting that it is unsupported by any case law . . .
Indeed, we have approved in the past a trial court’s observation
that [t]he only discernible contact that this case has with
Pennsylvania is the location of plaintiffs’ counsel, and we refuse to
recognize this as a compelling consideration . . . Plaintiffs cite no
law to the contrary, and we are told of no reason why Plaintiffs
may not continue to benefit from the expertise of their chosen
counsel by using him as a consultant if the litigation is outside of
Pennsylvania.
Bochetto, 151 A.3d at 1085. This logic applies as convincingly to this case
as it did in Bochetto.
For these reasons, we conclude that the trial court properly exercised
its discretion in its private factors analysis.
Turning to public factors, Appellant contends that the trial court failed
to consider two links to Pennsylvania; Appellant’s residence in Pennsylvania
and Appellee’s operation of a bus terminal in Pennsylvania. As discussed
above, the court gave due consideration to Appellant’s residence in
Pennsylvania but still found that dismissal was appropriate. Appellee’s
Philadelphia bus terminal has no relation to Appellant’s case. Appellant did
not travel to or from this bus terminal in connection with the alleged incident
and has never alleged any other facts that implicate the Philadelphia terminal
in this suit. Pennsylvania courts have recognized that such marginal
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connections between a party’s business activities in the forum and the claims
at issue weigh in favor of granting forum non conveniens motions. This Court
has held that “[i]n considering the public interest as it relates to a plaintiff’s
choice of forum under Section 5322(e), our case law recognizes that imposing
jury duty and court costs on communities with no relation to the plaintiff’s
claim weighs in favor of transferring a case.” Wright v. Consolidated Rail
Corp., 215 A.3d 982, 996 (dismissal on forum non conveniens grounds was
proper where “the only connection a Philadelphia jury would have to this case
is that of, perhaps, being familiar with [appellee], which the trial court
concludes has a ‘signature local name’ and maintains a ‘public presence.’ . . .
However, the repetitive shoulder injuries complained of by [Appellant] were
not caused in connection with any of [appellee’s] activities occurring in
Philadelphia”).
The trial court also observed correctly that Massachusetts law governs
this incident, and it would be appropriate for a Massachusetts jury to apply
Massachusetts law.
Two decisions that Appellant relies upon heavily, Failor and Robbins
v. Consol. Rail Corp., 212 A.3d 81 (Pa. Super. 2019), are distinguishable
from this case. In Failor, the plaintiff, a Pennsylvania resident, brought suit
in Philadelphia against an entity that maintained a principal place of business
and regularly transacted business in Pennsylvania, for injuries resulting from
a Maryland accident. The defendant moved to dismiss or to transfer the
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matter to another Pennsylvania county on forum non conveniens grounds.
The trial court dismissed the action, but we reversed for two main reasons.
We first noted that “the court premised this decision on the basis that
Hagerstown, Maryland was a more convenient forum than Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, not Maryland and Pennsylvania as a whole . . .” Id. at 536.
Second, the trial court considered the plaintiff’s difficulty and inconvenience
in litigating the case in Philadelphia, but the plaintiff’s difficulty was not a valid
forum non conveniens factor. Id. at 537.
Here, unlike Failor, the trial court correctly weighed the relative
inconvenience of litigating this matter in Pennsylvania on the one hand, where
the only connection to this matter is Appellee’s unrelated bus terminal, and
Massachusetts on the other, where the incident occurred, and where the site
of the incident, critical trial witnesses, and evidence are located. Furthermore,
unlike in Failor, there is no indication that the trial court based its decision or
analysis on the inconvenience to Appellant of litigating the matter in
Pennsylvania.
Failor is further distinguishable on its facts. There, numerous private
and public factors weighed in favor of finding that Pennsylvania was not an
inconvenient forum, since “the Failors have lived in Pennsylvania; Failor
received all medical treatment in Pennsylvania; the trailer he was driving was
scheduled to return to Pennsylvania; Shelley DePriest, the only FedEx Ground
employee with firsthand knowledge of the incident, resided in Pennsylvania at
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the time of giving her affidavit; Mr. White and Mr. Belasco [two other FedEx
employees listed as witnesses] only work twenty miles from the Pennsylvania
border; and FedEx Ground’s principal place of business is in Pennsylvania.”
Id., 248 A.3d at 537. The present case is far different. The bus in question
operates solely in Massachusetts, all of Appellee’s witnesses reside over 300
miles away in or near Massachusetts, and Appellee is a Massachusetts
registered corporation with a principal place of business in Massachusetts.
In Robbins, the plaintiff, an Indiana resident, filed suit through an
estate representative against two Pennsylvania incorporated entities in
Philadelphia for personal injuries sustained while the decedent worked at the
defendants’ Indiana facility. The trial court denied the defendants’ motion to
dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds, and we affirmed. We held that
Pennsylvania was not an inconvenient forum based on the specific facts in that
case. The decedent’s employment records “were located within miles of the
Pennsylvania state border in Mount Laurel, New Jersey.” Id., 212 A.3d at 86.
The plaintiff identified and described four Philadelphia-based employees of
defendants as trial witnesses, whereas defendants identified two witnesses,
neither of whom resided in Indiana or Pennsylvania. Id. at 85. Further, “the
policies and procedures related to the decedent’s exposure to chemicals and
cancer-causing substances were determined at Consolidated Rail’s
headquarters in Philadelphia.” Id. at 85-86. The defendants also conceded
that no party would likely view the work site at issue. Id. at 90. None of
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these facts apply here. Appellee is a Massachusetts corporation, and its
records concerning safety and inspection practices, as well as the incident at
issue, are in Massachusetts. Appellee identified three critical witnesses from
Massachusetts and Rhode Island and explained the nature of their testimony,
whereas Appellant’s witnesses reside in Pennsylvania, and Appellant failed to
explain the nature of their testimony. Appellee also averred, and the trial
court accepted, that a jury view of the bus, which is in Massachusetts, may
be necessary. Accordingly, Appellant’s reliance on Robbins is misplaced.
In short, the trial court acted within its discretion by determining that
private and public factors were weighty enough to justify dismissal of this case
with leave to refile it in Massachusetts. We affirm the court’s order dismissing
this case.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 7/26/2022
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