J-A22040-22
2022 PA Super 207
ERIE INSURANCE EXCHANGE A/S/O : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
BATES COLLISION, INC., JAMES : PENNSYLVANIA
MYERS, ANITA MORGAN, LOSSIE :
AUTO SERVICE, AND BENEDICTINE :
SISTERS OF ERIE, INC. :
:
Appellant :
:
: No. 1482 WDA 2021
v. :
:
:
UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE :
ASSOCIATION :
:
:
v. :
:
:
BATES COLLISION, INC. :
Appeal from the Judgment Entered November 12, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County Civil Division at No(s): No.
12888-18
BEFORE: OLSON, J., DUBOW, J., and COLINS, J.*
OPINION BY COLINS, J.: FILED: December 6, 2022
Appellant, Erie Insurance Exchange (Plaintiff), as subrogee of its
insured, Bates Collision, Inc. (Bates Collision), and four other of its insureds,
appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County (trial
court) granting summary judgment for defendant United Services Automobile
Association (Defendant) in an action that Plaintiff brought against Defendant
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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for damages from loss of evidence in a fire investigation. For the reasons set
forth below, we affirm.
On January 22, 2017, a fire occurred at Bates Collision’s automotive
collision repair shop in Wesleyville, Erie County, Pennsylvania, damaging the
building and the 16 vehicles that were in the building. Pennsylvania State
Police Fire Marshal Report. One of the vehicles at Bates Collision at the time
of the fire was a 2013 BMW 3 Series 335i owned by Robert Bailey and insured
by Defendant (the BMW vehicle). Id.; Complaint ¶¶3-4; Answer ¶¶3-4. The
BMW vehicle was being repaired by Bates Collision following a collision with a
deer and was the only vehicle in the building that sustained burn damage in
the fire; the other vehicles sustained only smoke damage or smoke damage
and damage from falling debris. Pennsylvania State Police Fire Marshal
Report. Four of the other vehicles that were in the building were owned by
James Myers, Anita Morgan, Lossie Auto Service, and Benedictine Sisters of
Erie, Inc. and were also insured by Plaintiff. Plaintiff paid Bates Collision
$1,587,000.10 for losses from the fire under two policies of insurance and
paid its other four insureds a total of $35,317.05 for the damage to their
vehicles.
Following its initial investigation, Plaintiff concluded that the fire may
have been caused by the BMW vehicle and, on January 26, 2017, put BMW of
North America (BMW) on notice of a potential claim. 1/26/17 Letter from
Plaintiff’s Attorney to BMW. On February 7, 2017, Plaintiff scheduled a joint
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inspection of the fire scene for February 22, 2017 and experts for Plaintiff,
BMW, and Defendant inspected the fire scene on that date. 2/7/17 Letter
from Plaintiff’s Attorney; Complaint ¶14; Answer ¶14; Breneman Dep. 37, 92-
94. In the letter scheduling the joint inspection and a follow-up email on
February 15, 2017 confirming the joint inspection, both of which were sent to
Defendant and BMW, Plaintiff’s attorney’s office stated that “[a]fter the
inspection, USAA [Defendant] will retain the BMW for possible future
examination.” 2/7/17 Letter from Plaintiff’s Attorney; 2/15/17 email from
Plaintiff’s Attorney’s office. After the joint inspection, Defendant’s expert
advised Defendant that the BMW vehicle needed to be wrapped and held for
future examination and Defendant had the BMW vehicle towed to Insurance
Auto Auction (IAA). Breneman Dep. 102, 118; Jurado Dep. 121; 2/23/17
Letter from Jurado to Plaintiff’s Attorney.
On February 23, 2017, Plaintiff emailed a letter to Defendant and its
expert stating:
This will confirm that USAA [Defendant] took possession of the
BMW and will have it wrapped, secured and preserved for possible
future examinations.
Please provide the storage location for the BMW.
We may want to conduct a future invasive examination of the
vehicle and/or its components. Please make sure the car is
preserved in its current condition and is not in any way altered or
disturbed.
2/23/17 Letter from Plaintiff’s Attorney to Defendant and Defendant’s Expert.
Defendant responded the same day by a letter stating:
Please be advised, the 2013 BMW 335XI 4D 4X4 is located at:
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Insurance Auto Auction
49 Bairdford Rd
Gibsonia, PA 15044
724-443-7881
Stock number: 19311412
We have requested that the vehicle be wrapped and preserved for
potential additional investigation.
2/23/17 Letter from Jurado to Plaintiff’s Attorney.
Plaintiff contacted Defendant and BMW on April 25, 2017 scheduling a
invasive examination of the BMW vehicle for June 30, 2017. 4/25/17 Letter
from Plaintiff’s Attorney to Defendant and BMW. IAA, however, had sold the
BMW vehicle at a salvage auction on March 28, 2017. Heffley Dep. 36. The
BMW vehicle was sold by IAA because Defendant had not sufficiently
communicated to IAA the need for IAA to put a “hold” on the BMW vehicle.
Jurado Dep. 141, 165, 168; Lowry Dep. 55-56.
On November 9, 2018, Plaintiff filed this action against Defendant,
alleging that Defendant’s failure to preserve the BMW vehicle caused it to lose
the ability to pursue a subrogation claim “against the manufacturer or the
owner of the vehicle or anyone involved in maintaining the vehicle” and
seeking damages of $1,624,217.15 (the $1,622,317.15 that it paid its
insureds plus its insureds’ deductibles) on a theory of promissory estoppel.
Complaint ¶¶9-11, 15-26 & ad damnum clause. Defendant in its answer to
Plaintiff’s complaint asserted, inter alia, that any damages from inability to
pursue a claim for the fire losses were speculative and that Plaintiff had no
cause of action for loss of the BMW vehicle. Answer ¶¶30-33, 36. On January
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14, 2019, Defendant joined Bates Collision as an additional defendant, alleging
that if the fire originated in the BMW vehicle, it was caused by Bates Collision’s
negligence in storing and repairing the BMW vehicle. Docket Entries at 3;
Complaint Against Additional Defendant ¶¶17-26; Amended Complaint
Against Additional Defendant ¶¶17-26.
Following discovery, Plaintiff and Defendant filed cross-motions for
summary judgment. In support of their summary judgment filings, both
parties filed deposition transcripts and documents concerning their
communications and the loss of the BMW vehicle and also filed affidavits and
certifications of experts concerning the cause of the fire. Plaintiff’s expert
opined that the fire originated in the engine compartment of the BMW vehicle
in the area of the power steering unit and stated that based on his preliminary
investigation, he believed that the fire “was likely caused” by insufficient
welding of electrical contact pins in the power steering unit, which had been
the subject of a BMW recall of different models manufactured in different years
than the BMW vehicle. Adams Certification ¶¶12-16 & Ex.5. Plaintiff’s expert
stated, however, that he could not determine that this defect existed or caused
the fire without an invasive examination in which he could examine the
electrical contacts in the power steering unit for looseness and arcing and that
the failure to preserve the BMW vehicle prevented him from conducted that
examination. Id. ¶¶17-20. Defendant’s expert did not dispute that the fire
originated in the BMW vehicle’s engine compartment in the area of the power
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steering unit, but opined that any defect in the power steering unit was not a
manufacturing defect, but was more likely caused by damage to the BMW
vehicle in the accident or the damaged condition of a recycled power steering
unit that Bates Collision used to repair the BMW vehicle, which was from a
2014 vehicle that had been damaged in an accident. Mazza Affidavit ¶¶6-7,
13, 22-30, 34. Defendant’s expert further opined that the fire was caused by
Bates Collision’s negligence in leaving the BMW vehicle’s battery energized
while the BMW vehicle was in its shop for repairs. Id. ¶¶8-9, 11, 35-36.
On November 12, 2021, the trial court denied Plaintiff’s motion for
summary judgment, granted Defendant’s cross-motion for summary
judgment, and directed that judgment be entered in favor of Defendant and
against Plaintiff. Trial Court Order, 11/12/21. The trial court concluded that
Plaintiff’s claim was barred by Pyeritz v. Commonwealth, 32 A.3d 687 (Pa.
2011), in which our Supreme Court held that Pennsylvania does not recognize
a cause of action for damages for negligent spoliation of evidence. Trial Court
Opinion, 11/12/21, at 12-16; Trial Court Opinion, 2/8/22, at 6-12, 22-29.
The trial court also held that Plaintiff’s evidence did not satisfy the elements
of promissory estoppel cause of action and that Plaintiff had no subrogation
cause of action against Defendant because Defendant did not cause the fire
that damaged Plaintiffs’ insureds’ building and vehicles. Trial Court Opinion,
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11/12/21, at 14-16; Trial Court Opinion, 2/8/22, at 12-29. This timely appeal
followed.1
Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment
on the following grounds: 1) Plaintiff contends that Pyeritz does not bar a
claim for spoliation brought on a theory of promissory estoppel and 2) it
contends that the evidence was sufficient to satisfy the elements of a cause
of action for promissory estoppel. Appellant’s Brief at 3-4. Our standard of
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1 Although it does not appear that the trial court made any express ruling
concerning the claims against Bates Collision as an additional defendant, we
conclude that its order disposed of all claims and parties and is therefore an
appealable final order for two reasons. First, the trial court in fact dismissed
the claims against Bates Collision by stating that its order concluded the
litigation. Trial Court Order, 11/12/21 (ordering that the “Prothonotary of Erie
County is to enter judgment in favor of Defendant United Services Automobile
Association and against Erie Insurance Exchange thereby concluding this
litigation; no award to Defendant USAA for damages or counsel fees”).
Second, even if the order did not dismiss the claims against Bates Collision, it
would still be final because the only claims that could exist in this action
against Bates Collision are claims by Defendant for contribution and
indemnity. While Defendant’s complaint joining Bates Collision pled sole
liability to Plaintiff in addition to asserting claims that Bates Collision was liable
to Defendant for contribution or indemnity, Complaint Against Additional
Defendant ¶¶25-26; Amended Complaint Against Additional Defendant ¶¶25-
26, neither party contends that Plaintiff could have a cause of action against
Bates Collision. Moreover, Plaintiff as a matter of law cannot have a cause of
action against Bates Collision because Plaintiff is suing Defendant as subrogee
of its insureds and Bates Collision is Plaintiff’s insured. Joella v. Cole, 221
A.3d 674, 677 (Pa. Super. 2019) (a party suing as subrogee cannot recover
damages from its own insured). Where the defendant’s claim against an
additional defendant is limited to contribution or indemnity if that defendant
is held liable to the plaintiff and the court has determined that the defendant
is not liable, the claim against the additional defendant is moot and does not
prevent the dismissal of all other claims from being a final order. Oliver v.
Ball, 136 A.3d 162, 166 n.2 (Pa. Super. 2016).
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review of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment is de novo and our
scope of review is plenary. Pyeritz, 32 A.3d at 692; American Southern
Insurance Co. v. Halbert, 203 A.3d 223, 226 (Pa. Super. 2019). We
conclude that the trial court correctly held that Pyeritz bars Plaintiff’s claim
and therefore do not reach the issue of whether Plaintiff satisfied the elements
of a claim for promissory estoppel.2
In its seminal decision in Pyeritz, our Supreme Court considered the
question whether Pennsylvania recognizes a cause of action against a third
party not otherwise liable to the plaintiff for damages caused by the third
party’s negligent spoliation of evidence and held that “Pennsylvania law does
not recognize a cause of action for negligent spoliation of evidence.” 32 A.3d
at 689, 691, 695. That case, like this action, involved a request to preserve
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2 Plaintiff lists four other issues in this appeal, Appellant’s Brief at 4-5. Three
of those other issues are not separate issues at all. Two of those issues,
concerning burdens and practices in insurance investigations and public policy,
are arguments as to why Pyeritz should not apply to Plaintiff’s claim. The
issue of whether the trial court failed to consider the evidence in the light most
favorable to Plaintiff is a necessary part of the issue of whether the trial court
erred in holding that Plaintiff’s evidence on the summary judgment motions
was insufficient to satisfy the elements of promissory estoppel. With respect
to the remaining additional issue listed by Plaintiff, whether the trial court
erred in holding that Plaintiff lacking standing to pursue a subrogation claim
against Defendant, Plaintiff concedes that its subrogation rights in this action
are its rights to assert a claim for the damages suffered by its insureds and
that its only claim against Defendant is for promissory estoppel, not
subrogation. Appellant’s Brief at 45-46. This issue therefore cannot constitute
a basis that could support a cause of action against Defendant if Pyeritz bars
Plaintiff’s promissory estoppel claim or if the elements of a cause of action for
promissory estoppel are not satisfied.
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evidence, disposal of the evidence after a representation that the evidence
would be retained, and a claim for damages for the loss of recovery in a tort
case that depended on the evidence that was destroyed.
In Pyeritz the plaintiffs were the estate and family of a decedent who
had fallen to his death from a hunting tree stand when the belt that lashed
him to the tree stand broke. 32 A.3d at 689. Following decedent’s death, the
Pennsylvania State Police took possession of the pieces of the tree stand belt
and less than a month later, an attorney for the plaintiffs sent the trooper in
charge of the investigation a letter stating that the attorney might want the
trooper to retain the tree stand belt “[b]ecause of the extreme need to see
that there is no spoliation of this evidence.” Id. at 689-90. The trooper
advised the plaintiffs’ counsel that the State Police would have to retain the
pieces of the belt until a coroner’s jury determination of the cause and manner
of death. Id. at 690. While the belt pieces were in the State Police’s
possession prior to the coroner’s jury proceeding, plaintiff’s counsel and a
representative of a tree stand belt manufacturer took photographs of the belt
pieces. Id. Less than a month after the coroner’s jury determination that
decedent’s death was accidental, the plaintiffs’ attorney asked the trooper to
keep the pieces of the belt in the evidence room at the State Police barracks
and the trooper agreed to the request. Id. The barracks, however, were later
relocated to a new building and the trooper who had agreed to retain the
pieces of the belt was assigned to a different barracks. Id. One month after
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the barracks were relocated, the trooper to whom the case was reassigned
destroyed the pieces of the belt because the investigation had been
completed. Id.
The Pyeritz plaintiffs brought a product liability action against two tree
stand belt manufacturers, which settled for $200,000, and brought a
negligence action against the State Police for failing to preserve the belt,
seeking as damages the loss of a greater award or settlement that the
plaintiffs contended that they could have obtained if the belt pieces had not
been destroyed. 32 A.3d at 690-91. The trial court granted summary
judgment, the Commonwealth Court affirmed, and the Supreme Court granted
allowance of appeal on the issue of “[w]hether Pennsylvania recognizes, and
if so whether Petitioners have alleged, a cause of action for negligent
spoliation of evidence[.]” Id. at 691.
The Supreme Court rejected this cause of action on the ground that a
gratuitous agreement to a request to indefinitely retain evidence is not a
sufficient basis to impose a legal duty and on the ground that recognition of
the cause of action was against public policy because there is no way of
knowing whether the evidence, if it been preserved, would support or negate
the claim for which the damages are sought and the damages in such an action
are therefore speculative. 32 A.3d at 693. With respect to the latter ground
for rejecting a spoliation cause of action, the Court reasoned:
Although it may have been reasonably foreseeable to the troopers
that the loss of the evidence might harm Appellants in their quest
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for damages in a civil lawsuit against the belt’s manufacturer, we
hold that as a matter of public policy, this is not a harm against
which Appellees should be responsible to protect. The primary
reason is that the tort would allow the imposition of liability where,
due to the absence of the evidence, it is impossible to say
whether the underlying litigation would have been
successful. It could very well be true in this case, for example,
that if the belt had not been destroyed, it would have undermined
Appellants’ suit against the manufacturers and they would not
have realized even the $200,000 settlement they now have in
hand. Of course, in some cases, one party may have already
finished testing the evidence by the time it is destroyed, or as
here, photographs or other representations of the evidence may
still exist. However, depictions are an inadequate substitute for
the evidence itself, as other parties cannot inspect and test the
evidence independently, which deprives them of the raw material
they need to mount a potentially successful claim or defense. If
we were to recognize the tort, the inability of the parties to
assess meaningfully the impact of the missing evidence on
the underlying litigation would result in potential liability
based on speculation.
Id. at 693-94 (emphasis added).
Although the Supreme Court in Pyeritz discussed a tort cause of action
and analyzed the elements of negligence, it held that no cause of action for
negligent spoliation (as opposed to intentional spoliation) exists, not that no
tort action for such spoliation (as opposed to a non-tort cause of action) exists.
Nothing in the opinion suggests that mere changing of the label on the claim
to promissory estoppel would alter the result. To the contrary, the speculative
nature of the damages that the Court held required rejection of the cause of
action is the same regardless of the theory of liability. Moreover, the Court
considered the existence of a gratuitous agreement relied on by the plaintiff
in rejecting the cause of action and specifically rejected this Court’s language
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in Elias v. Lancaster General Hospital, 710 A.2d 65, 68 (Pa. Super. 1998)
that a special relationship, such as an agreement or voluntary assumption of
a duty to preserve the evidence, could support liability for negligent spoliation.
32 A.3d at 693-94. In addition, the Supreme Court rejected the Pyeritz
plaintiffs’ alternative claim that the State Police were liable for spoliation of
the evidence on a theory of breach of an implied contract for bailment,
regardless of whether such a bailment was shown, on the ground that the
damages sought were for negligent spoliation of evidence. Id. at 691 n.2;
see also id. at 695 (Eakin, J., concurring).
The factors on which the Supreme Court relied in rejecting a spoliation
cause of action are equally present in Plaintiff’s promissory estoppel cause of
action in this case. The basis of Plaintiff’s claim, as in Pyeritz, is a gratuitous
indefinite commitment to preserve an item of evidentiary value for the benefit
of the requesting party. Plaintiff’s claim is for the same type of damages, loss
of recovery in a lawsuit in which the spoliated item was critical evidence, and
has the identical speculative nature that caused the Supreme Court to reject
the spoliation cause of action in Pyeritz – there is no way to tell whether
further examination of the BMW vehicle would support or refute the claim of
manufacturing defect. Indeed, Plaintiff brought no action against BMW and
Plaintiff conceded to the trial court that it could not show that the fire was
caused by a manufacturing defect or by any condition of the BMW vehicle for
which it could have recovered damages. N.T. Summary Judgment Argument
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at 9, 29-31, 41. This case, like Pyeritz, also involves negligent spoliation.
The loss of the evidence was the result of a failure by Defendant to adequately
communicate to IAA, the party that disposed of the BMW vehicle, that it
needed to hold the BMW vehicle, not an intentional destruction or disposal of
the BMW vehicle by Defendant.
Although no Pennsylvania case has specifically addressed whether
Pyeritz bars or permits a non-tort claim for damages caused by negligent
spoliation of evidence, Pennsylvania federal cases have characterized Pyeritz
as broadly holding that no cause of action for damages for negligent spoliation
exists under Pennsylvania law without limiting this statement to tort liability.
Schwartz v. Taylor, 2021 WL 949481 at *3 (E.D.Pa. C.A. No. 17-3799 March
11, 2021); Marinkovic v. Battaglia, 2019 WL 4600207 at *13-*14 (W.D.Pa.
Cases Nos. 1:14-cv-49, 2:18-cv-388 September 23, 2019); Turturro v.
United States, 43 F. Supp. 3d 434, 459-60 (E.D. Pa. 2014), aff’d, 629 Fed.
Appx. 313 (3d Cir. 2015).3
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3 One very recent Pennsylvania federal district court opinion, Atlantic States
Insurance Co. v. Copart, Inc., 2022 WL 3722081 (E.D.Pa. No. 5:22-cv-
1177 August 29, 2022), addressed a promissory estoppel claim for spoliation
and held that the facts alleged by the plaintiff were insufficient to satisfy the
elements of promissory estoppel, but did not consider whether Pyeritz bars
such a claim. Slip op. at *5. This opinion not only does not decide the issue
before us, but any implication from its consideration of the promissory
estoppel claim on the merits that Pyeritz permits such a cause of action would
have no persuasive value, as the Atlantic States Insurance Co. court’s
analysis of the negligence claim plainly disregarded Pyeritz by holding that a
negligent spoliation claim based on a special relationship and assumed duty
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Plaintiff argues that this Court should follow a California decision,
Cooper v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 99 Cal.Rptr.3d
870 (Cal. App. 2009), that allowed a promissory estoppel cause of action for
spoliation, that Pyeritz is distinguishable, and that public policy
considerations require recognition of its promissory estoppel cause of action.
None of these arguments has merit.
In Cooper, the California court held that the plaintiff injured in an
automobile accident that he contended was caused by a defective tire could
recover damages from his insurer on a promissory estoppel theory where the
insurer disposed of the tire despite representations that it would preserve the
tire. 99 Cal.Rptr.3d at 873, 882-92. Cooper, however, not only is not based
on Pennsylvania law, but its reasoning is not consistent with Pyeritz and it
involved a situation where the damages were not as speculative as here. In
Cooper, the court allowed the promissory estoppel cause of action for
spoliation based on the fact that the insurer assumed a duty and had a special
relationship with the plaintiff as a result of its promises to preserve the tire.
99 Cal.Rptr.3d at 882-85, 892. Pyeritz specifically rejected both assumed
duty by gratuitous promises to retain evidence and a special relationship
between the parties as bases for liability for spoliation. 32 A.3d at 693-94.
In addition, unlike this case, the speculative nature of damages that is the
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can exist, slip op. at *3, even though Pyeritz rejected both of these factors
as bases for a negligence claim for spoliation. 32 A.3d at 693-94.
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basis for rejecting spoliation suits was substantially reduced in Cooper, as
there was expert opinion in Cooper that there was a manufacturing defect in
the tire, 99 Cal.Rptr.3d at 886-87, not the mere possibility that a defect would
be found if further examination had occurred.
Plaintiff argues that Pyeritz is distinguishable because the claim was
against the government and would impose burdens outside the government’s
function. While Pyeritz did involve a government defendant and the Court
mentioned that the retaining of evidence for a private civil suit was outside
the government function, 32 A.3d at 693, the Court did not limit its rejection
of the cause of action to government entities. Rather, the Court rejected the
cause of action without regard to the type of defendant, id. at 689, 695 & n.7,
and discussed the burden on non-government parties as a reason for rejecting
the spoliation cause of action, stating:
To the extent recognition of the tort would encourage the
preservation of evidence, that benefit is outweighed by the
financial burden the tort would impose. If it were recognized,
businesses and institutions would be forced to preserve evidence,
at considerable expense, for a myriad of possible claims that
might never be brought.
Id. at 694.
The public policy considerations that Plaintiff asserts are that practices
in the insurance industry allegedly required Defendant to retain the BMW
vehicle until the investigation or litigation is complete and that failure to
recognize a cause of action will create unnecessary additional litigation and
expense. Nothing in the insurance industry practices argued by Plaintiff, which
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concern which party routinely holds and preserves evidence, however,
negates the key public policy rationale of Pyeritz that the damages caused
by loss of evidence are too speculative to permit a cause of action. Moreover,
denial of a cause of action does not require burdensome litigation to preserve
evidence. Other steps to ensure that evidence is in fact preserved, such as
payment of storage costs by the party that wishes to retain the evidence,
express agreements as to how long evidence is held, and express agreements
giving the party that wishes to retain the evidence authority to control its
storage and disposal, could achieve protection of evidence without litigation.
Because our Supreme Court clearly held in Pyeritz that Pennsylvania
does not recognize a cause of action to recover damages caused by negligent
spoliation of evidence and Plaintiff’s promissory estoppel claim against
Defendant is an action to recover damages for negligent spoliation of evidence
based on the same kind of a gratuitous agreement to indefinitely preserve
evidence for the plaintiff’s benefit and speculative damages that the Supreme
Court held did not permit a cause of action, the trial court properly held that
Plaintiff as a matter of law had no cause of action against Defendant. We
therefore affirm the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of
Defendant and against Plaintiff.
Order affirmed.
Judge Olson joins this Opinion.
Judge Dubow files a Dissenting Opinion.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 12/6/2022
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