J-A11034-22
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
WILLIAM R. KENDALL AND ANNETTE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
STEMHAGEN, H/W : PENNSYLVANIA
:
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
: No. 2274 EDA 2021
FORD MOTOR COMPANY AND :
JAGUAR LAND ROVER NORTH :
AMERICA, LLC AND FORD MOTOR :
COMPANY T/D/B/A JAGUAR CARS :
DIVISION AND JAGUAR CARS C/O :
FORD MOTOR COMPANY AND FORD :
MOTOR COMPANY T/D/B/A JAGUAR :
CARS, INC. AND JAGUAR CARS, INC. :
C/O FORD MOTOR COMPANY AND :
FORD MOTOR COMPANY T/D/B/A :
PREMIER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP AND :
FORD MOTOR COMPANY T/D/B/A :
ASTON MARTIN JAGUAR LAND :
ROVER AND JAGUAR CARS LTD. AND :
BENNETT JLR, LLC AND BENNETT :
JLR, LLC T/A JAGUAR ALLENTOWN, :
LANDROVER ALLENTOWN AND :
MALONIE MCDONALD AND JOSEPH :
MCDONALD :
Appeal from the Order Entered October 4, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
No(s): 190801452
BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.
MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED AUGUST 31, 2022
William R. Kendall and Annette Stemhagen (“Appellants”) appeal from
the order transferring venue from Philadelphia County to Bucks County on the
basis of forum non conveniens. Appellants assert the trial court utilized the
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wrong standard in deciding the motion and abused its discretion in
determining that litigating the case in Philadelphia would be oppressive. We
affirm.
In August 2017, in Hillstown Township, Bucks County, Malonie McDonald
crashed into the driver’s side of William R. Kendall’s car as he drove into an
intersection. Kendall was trapped inside of his vehicle until he was extracted
by a rescue crew, and he suffered a traumatic brain injury. Aside from
McDonald and Kendall, there were two eyewitnesses to the accident: Kimberly
Shoemaker (a passenger in Kendall’s car) and Samuel Suder (a bystander).
Appellants sued the manufacturers and retail sellers of Kendall’s car,
bringing claims of strict liability, negligence, and breach of warranty.
Appellants also sued McDonald and her husband, Joseph McDonald, for
negligence and loss of consortium. Appellants brought their suit in Philadelphia
County.
The McDonalds filed a motion to transfer venue to Bucks County on the
basis of forum non conveniens. The motion alleged the accident took place in
Bucks County, and that “trial in Bucks County would provide easier access to
witnesses and other sources of proof.” Mot. to Transfer Venue, 6/22/21, ¶¶
4-5, 35. It further alleged that “[w]ith the exception of [Appellants,] who are
Montgomery County residents, all of the potential witnesses . . . either reside
and/or work in Bucks County.” Id. at ¶ 36. According to the motion, “[t]hese
witnesses include dozens of first responders and police officers, Kimberly
Shoemaker, Samuel Suder, and [the McDonalds.]” Id. at ¶ 37. The motion
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alleged that Shoemaker, Kendall’s passenger, resides in Chester County, and
Suder, the bystander, resides in Bucks County when he is not attending
graduate school in Georgia. Id. at ¶¶ 15-16. The motion stated that the
accident was investigated by a local Bucks County police department, and that
all three emergency medical service agencies that responded to the accident
are located outside of Philadelphia, as is the Lehigh Valley Hospital, where
Kendall was transported following the accident. Id. at ¶¶ 10-12. The motion
also alleged that “it is anticipated that a jury will be asked to view the area of
the accident in-person given the layout of the intersection where the accident
occurred.” Id. at ¶ 39.
The motion further argued that the McDonalds are Bucks County
residents, and venue in Philadelphia “would be particularly oppressive and
burdensome,” to them. Id. at ¶¶ 17, 38. It alleged the McDonalds’ residence
is “37.5 miles, or nearly an hour drive, away from City Hall in Philadelphia,
but only 12.7 miles, or approximately twenty (20) minutes, away from the
Bucks County Courthouse.” Id. at ¶ 21. According to the motion, “[d]ue to
the time and distance it takes to travel to and from Philadelphia, and because
of . . . Joseph McDonald’s ongoing personal health issues, [the McDonalds] do
not travel to Philadelphia for any reason.” Id. at ¶ 20. The motion asserted
that trial in Philadelphia would require the McDonalds to stay in a hotel during
the length of trial and “possibly miss important doctors’ appointments that
may be difficult to reschedule.” Id. at ¶ 22; see also id. at ¶ 38.
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Attached to the motion were the unnotarized affidavits of Joseph and
Malonie McDonald. Joseph stated that he was 72 years old and has “ongoing
personal health issues that make it difficult for [him] to travel long distances
or for long periods of time.” Affidavit of Joseph McDonald, undated, at ¶ 6.
Malonie stated she was 69 years old and responsible for driving her husband
to his doctors’ appointments and attending them with him. Affidavit of Malonie
McDonald, undated, at ¶¶ 5-6. Defendant Jaguar Land Rover North America,
LLC joined the motion.
In their response, Appellants asserted that trial in Bucks County would
not provide any additional access to evidence or witnesses. They alleged that
neither Shoemaker nor Suder reside in Bucks County, and that as Shoemaker
admitted at her deposition that she had taken both cocaine and heroin on the
day of the collision, she was of minimal relevance as a witness. Mem. of Law
in Opp. To Mot. to Transfer Venue, 7/13/2021, at 10-11. Appellants also
argued “[t]here has already been significant paper and informal discovery,”
including “an inspection of the subject car in [Chester County].” Id. at 4.
Appellants claimed that “accident premises views are rarely necessary,” and
asserted that medical records are not located in Bucks County and are equally
accessible from either venue. They further contended it would be unlikely
there would be a need for all emergency responders to testify at trial. Id. at
8-10.
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The court held a hearing on the motion, at which the McDonalds
testified.1 Malonie testified she is the only driver in the household and is “a
country road driver” who is not comfortable driving in the city. N.T., 9/29/21,
at 46, 49. She stated she drives north on the Northeast Extension of the
Pennsylvania Turnpike approximately every six weeks. Id. at 47. She
estimated she has not traveled to center city Philadelphia in approximately 10
years. Id. at 48. Malonie testified that she has “pinched nerves in [her] back
that [she’s] being doctored for with a pain management doctor,” and has
trouble with long drives because when she sits “for a period of time, it’s painful
when [she gets] out of the car.” Id. at 51. She stated she has had shots for
the pain in the past. Id. She testified, “it would be tough to drive back and
forth the hour-and-a-half each way,” into Philadelphia, and the McDonalds
would likely need to get a hotel room for the duration of the trial. Id. at 48.
She stated staying in Philadelphia would be disruptive to her visits with her
son, who comes over for dinner when his wife works 12-hour shifts as a nurse,
and that she takes care of her son’s dog during the day. Id. at 49.
Joseph McDonald testified regarding his medical condition. He is an
insulin-dependent diabetic, and injects insulin, which needs constant
refrigeration, 3-4 times a day. Id. at 53. He has been diagnosed with
polyneuropathy, which makes it difficult for him to feel his feet and extremities
and limits how far he can walk. Id. at 53-54. He suffers from irritable bowl
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1 The hearing was held via video-conferencing.
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syndrome (“IBS”), which requires immediate bathroom access. Id. at 53.
Joseph said that due to his ailments, “an hour-and-a-half drive into the city,
that alone would preclude [him] from being able to be in attendance.” Id. at
53.
The court granted the motion, and Appellants appealed. They present
the following issues:
A. Whether trial court erred, misapplied the law and thereby
abused its discretion in changing venue under Pa.R.C.P. 4006
where the moving parties established, at most, inconvenience in
attending trial in Philadelphia?
B. Whether trial court erred, misapplied the law and thereby
abused its discretion in transferring venue from Plaintiffs’ choice
of county, Philadelphia, to Bucks County, where the parties
seeking the transfer failed to establish that litigating the case in
Philadelphia was “oppressive” to them?
C. Whether trial court erred and abused its discretion in finding
oppression by reason of Defendant’s claimed limitations on access
to evidence and proofs, where much of the evidence was not
present in Bucks County, where such evidence as was claimed to
have been in Bucks County was: in the nature of cumulative
evidence: where Defendants had already availed themselves of
key depositions of collision witnesses via video depositions: and
where defendants already had access to a key item of evidence,
the Kendall car, which was located in Chester County?
Appellants’ Br. at 4-5 (suggested answers omitted).
Appellants first argue the trial court applied the wrong standard in
deciding the motion. They claim that rather than giving great deference to
their choice of forum and granting a transfer only upon a finding that trial in
Philadelphia would be oppressive or vexatious, the court adopted a standard
of mere inconvenience by considering geography as dispositive. Id. at 18, 21.
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Appellants contend that moreover, geography should weigh in their favor.
They assert that the McDonalds only showed that they live 25 minutes closer
to the courthouse in Bucks County than to City Hall in Philadelphia and did not
establish that travel to Philadelphia would be oppressive. Appellants maintain
that this is especially so considering that Philadelphia neighbors Bucks County
and there is public transportation between the two, including regional rail
lines. Appellants point out that this Court has previously stated that it is
“reluctant to transfer cases from Philadelphia to the surrounding counties
based on forum non conveniens.” Id. at 20 (quoting Raymond v. Park
Terrace Apartments, Inc., 882 A.2d 518, 521 (Pa.Super. 2005)). They
contrast the facts of this case with those of Bratic v. Rubendall, 99 A.3d 1
(Pa. 2014), which involved the need for seven trial witnesses to make a 100-
mile one-way journey to the plaintiffs’ chosen forum.
Appellants next argue that the McDonalds’ testimony does not support
a finding of oppression. They argue the court should not have considered
Malonie’s testimony that trial in Philadelphia would be disruptive because her
son comes to her house for dinner at times, or that Malonie dog-sits for her
son during his working hours, as neither circumstance amounts to oppression.
Appellants also argue that although Malonie testified that she has pinched
nerves in her back that hurt if she drives “for a period of time,” she conceded
that it would be possible for her “to drive back and forth the hour-and-a-half
each day.” Appellants’ Br. at 24 (citing N.T. at 164, 166). Appellants point out
that while Malonie referred to herself as a “country road driver” who is not
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comfortable driving in the city, she also testified that she drives on the
northeast extension of the turnpike every six weeks. Id. at 25-26 (citing N.T.
at 163-64). Finally, while Joseph testified to medical conditions that make it
difficult for him to travel, Appellants argue that Malonie could drive both of
them to the city. In Appellants’ view, “these are health problems that [Joseph]
would have to live with wherever the trial occurs, whether in Doylestown or
Philadelphia.” Id. at 27.
Appellants further argue that trial in Philadelphia would not prevent
access to any evidence. They contend the jury will be unlikely to need to see
the site of the accident. Id. at 28 (citing Johns v. First Union Corp., 777
A.2d 489, 492 (Pa.Super. 2001)). They argue that the bulk of Kendall’s
medical records are not located in Bucks County, as his treatment for the
subject accident has been in Lehigh, Chester, and Montgomery Counties. They
point out that his medical records are electronically accessible, in any event.
Appellants further argue that the McDonalds have only identified one police
officer whom they might call as a witness and did not establish he would find
it oppressive to travel to Philadelphia. They also contend that the testimony
of additional emergency personnel would be cumulative. Finally, according to
Appellants, the residences of the other witnesses, aside from Malonie, do not
weigh heavily in favor of Bucks County—Kendall asserts that he cannot testify
due to his brain injury, Shoemaker lives in Chester County, and Suder attends
school in Georgia.
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We employ an abuse of discretion standard when reviewing a trial
court’s order transferring venue due to forum non conveniens. Powers v.
Verizon Pennsylvania, 230 A.3d 492, 496 (Pa.Super. 2020). We must affirm
the order if there is “any proper basis for the trial court’s decision to transfer
venue.” Bratic, 99 A.3d at 8 (citation omitted); accord Doe v. Bright
Horizons Children’s Ctr., LLC, 261 A.3d 1065, 1069 (Pa.Super. 2021),
appeal denied, No. 521 EAL 2021 (Pa. 2022). “[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.” Powers, 230 A.3d at 496 (citation omitted).
Upon petition, a court may transfer an action to any other county where
it could have originally been brought, “[f]or the convenience of parties and
witnesses.” Pa.R.C.P. 1006(d)(1). However, a plaintiff’s choice of forum “is
entitled to great weight,” and a defendant seeking such a transfer must
establish that the plaintiff’s chosen forum is “oppressive or vexatious.”
Powers, 230 A.3d at 496, 498 (quoting Bratic, 99 A.3d at 1). It is not
sufficient if the defendant shows “mere inconvenience”; at the same time,
“there is no burden to show near-draconian consequences.” Id. at 499
(quoting Bratic, 99 A.3d at 10).
In determining whether the defendant has met this burden, the court
must consider the private and public interest factors involved in the opposing
venues, such as “the relative ease of access to sources of proof,” “availability
of compulsory process,” the “possibility [to] view [the] premises [involved in
the dispute],” and the issue of imposing jury duty “upon the people of a
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community which has no relation to the litigation.” Id. at 497 (quoting Wright
v. Consolidated Rail Corporation, 215 A.3d 982, 991-92 (Pa.Super.
2019)). However, these factors are only relevant “insofar as they bear directly
on the ultimate test” of whether the moving defendant has shown the chosen
forum to be oppressive or vexatious. Id. at 498 (quoting Bratic, 99 A.3d at
8).
In Powers, this Court affirmed transfer of venue from Philadelphia to
Bucks County. We noted that while the travel time between the two counties
alone “may be viewed as merely inconvenient” to the defendants, venue in
Bucks County would make it easier to access both lay and professional
witnesses and the site of the accident in dispute. Powers, 230 A.3d at 500.
We therefore found no abuse of discretion by the trial court in concluding the
defendant sustained its burden in establishing oppressiveness and transferring
venue to Bucks County. Id.; see also Mateu v. Stout, 819 A.2d 563, 567
(Pa.Super. 2003) (affirming transfer from Philadelphia County to Bucks
County where the accident occurred in Bucks County and all the parties, fact
witnesses, and medical witness were located outside of Philadelphia County).
Here, the trial court acknowledged that the moving parties bear the
burden to establish trial in the plaintiffs’ chosen forum would be vexatious or
oppressive rather than merely inconvenient. Trial Court Opinion
accompanying Order, filed Oct. 4, 2021, at 2 (unpaginated). Relying on
Powers, the trial court found the applicable standard was met because
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(1) travel time for most, if not all, critical witnesses will be reduced
by a trial in Bucks County, (2) there will be better access to critical
evidence if a site visit is necessary, and (3) travel time for most,
if not all, non-party professional witnesses, such as police and fire
responding to the scene, will be reduced.
Id. at 3. The court observed that the crucial eyewitness, Suder, “could easily
be noticed for trial in Bucks County” and that “most of the witnesses are
located in Bucks County, whereas no identified witness or item of evidence
was within Philadelphia County,” and “there is no substantial relationship to
any activities, events, or transactions which occurred in Philadelphia County.”
Id. In addition, the court found the McDonalds’ testimony “very credible” and
concluded that “because of their age and health concerns that travel to
Philadelphia County for a lengthy trial would be an unreasonable hardship.”
Id. It stated the concerns voiced by the McDonalds were not “‘mere
inconvenience,’ but under the totality of the circumstances are specific
assertions of undue hardship and burden.” Id. at 4; see also id. at 3 (stating
“the hardship to [the McDonalds] was more than mere inconvenience”).
The trial court did not abuse its discretion. Contrary to Appellants’
assertions, the trial court did not employ a standard of mere inconvenience,
nor did it find that the distance between Philadelphia and Bucks counties
dispositively favored transfer to Bucks County. Rather, the court considered
appropriate factors, such as the location of the trial evidence and witnesses,
in reaching its conclusion that holding trial in Philadelphia would be oppressive
not only for the parties but also for witnesses. The court moreover considered
the McDonalds’ age and health concerns, which increase their difficulty in
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traveling a distance that might only pose an inconvenience to others. These
considerations were reasonable and proper, and supported transfer. Bratic,
99 A.3d at 8; Powers, 230 A.3d at 496. Therefore, we affirm the granting of
the forum non conveniens transfer.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 8/31/2022
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