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Opinion Summaries

Posted Date Name of Case (Docket Number) Type
March 24, 2022 DEBORAH MARINO, ET AL. VS. ABEX CORPORATION, ET AL. (L-0836-10, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-1523-19)

The court considered defendant Ford Motor Company's (Ford) appeal from a final judgment awarding plaintiff Deborah Marino, Executrix for the Estate of Anita Creutzberger, (decedent) damages for decedent's death from peritoneal mesothelioma. Ford contended that the trial court erred in ruling that Ford violated a consent order and in implementing sanctions.

Decedent's husband and son worked at several Ford car dealerships where brake dust would spread and cover them. They brought dust home on their clothing where it was laundered by decedent. Decedent's estate sued Ford alleging decedent was exposed to asbestos from Ford brakes and that this exposure caused her mesothelioma. Among other allegations, the estate asserted that Ford negligently violated its duty to protect dealership workers and their families by failing to provide them with the same warnings and guidance for handling its asbestos products that it provided to its own employees.

The parties resolved a discovery dispute with a consent order. Ford agreed to search for Ford training materials that referred to asbestos or handling asbestos products and to produce any responsive documents and a corporate witness having knowledge of facts relating to Ford's training.

During the deposition of this designated witness, the employee denied any knowledge of relevant training manuals and any recent testimony regarding the same. Plaintiff's counsel confronted the employee with a 1974 Ford training manual, which the employee admitted he had seen and then confirmed he had been questioned about in another case a few months earlier.

The trial court, upon plaintiff's motion, sanctioned Ford by: (1) directing verdict to plaintiff on the issues of duty and breach; and (2) ordering that the jury be advised that Ford violated a court order and withheld evidence, so duty and breach of duty had been resolved against them. The court subsequently concluded that the sanctions order necessarily included a directed verdict on general, but not specific, causation. Ford appealed.

This court's review found little support for Ford's claims that it acted in good faith in responding to plaintiff's discovery requests and did not violate the consent order. The trial court's sanctions directly corresponded to the violation. The trial court's subsequent inclusion of a directed verdict on general causation flowed from the fact that a duty to warn only exists when the product is dangerous. Ford presented experts to opine against specific causation of decedent's mesothelioma, but these experts also discussed general causation, mooting Ford's argument that it was prejudiced by the order's directed verdict for general causation.

The court discerned no abuse of the trial court's discretion to impose sanctions for violating the consent order and affirmed.

Appellate
March 24, 2022 M.A.P. VS. E.B.A. (FD-09-0282-21, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) (A-1057-21)

In this appeal, the court considered whether two of the seven subsections of New Jersey's Uniform Interstate Family Support Act's long arm statute permitted exertion of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident alleged to have fathered a child through a sexual relationship with a New Jersey resident that occurred in New York. The court held that the out-of-state act that allegedly caused conception, even though coupled with the nonresident's knowledge that plaintiff was a New Jersey resident, could not be the nonresident's "act" under N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.129(a)(5), which authorizes personal jurisdiction when "the child resides in this State as a result of the [nonresident's] acts or directives." The court also found unavailing N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.129(a)(7), which allows for the exertion of personal jurisdiction whenever commensurate with due process, because the nonresident defendant lacked sufficient contacts with this State. As a matter of first impression, the court also held that the policies underlying N.J.R.E. 408 precluded consideration in the jurisdictional analysis of a letter sent to plaintiff by defendant's New Jersey lawyer proposing an amicable resolution.

Appellate
March 17, 2022 Aleice Jeter v. Sam’s Club (A-2-21 ; 085880)

The mode of operation rule does not apply to the sale of grapes in closed clamshell containers. Selling grapes in this manner does not create a reasonably foreseeable risk that grapes will fall to the ground in the process of ordinary customer handling. The Court stresses that dispositive motions should not be made or decided on the eve of trial, without providing the parties with a reasonable opportunity to present their cases through testimony and argument.

Supreme
March 16, 2022 State v. Anthony Sims, Jr. (A-53-20 ; 085369)

The Court declines to adopt the new rule prescribed by the Appellate Division and finds no plain error in the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to suppress his statement to police. The Court also concurs with the trial court that the victim’s testimony at the pretrial hearing was admissible under N.J.R.E. 804(b)(1)(A)’s exception to the hearsay rule for the prior testimony of a witness unavailable at trial, and that the admission of that testimony did not violate defendant’s confrontation rights.

Supreme
March 14, 2022 STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. E.R. (18-08-1800, 18-08-1838 AND 18-12-2955, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-1294-19)

Defendant E.R. appealed from her judgments of conviction, arguing the trial court erred when it entered an order affirming the prosecutor's denial of her application for admission to the pretrial intervention program (PTI), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12. The court concludes the State: (1) failed to detail the level of mental health supervision defendant required, considering her lack of a criminal history and her recent, significant efforts to rehabilitate herself; (2) neglected to explain how the level of supervision defendant would receive on PTI differed significantly from the level she would receive on probation and why the necessary level of supervision through PTI would be inadequate; and (3) failed to address why defendant's lack of criminal history and compliance with mental health treatment were not weighed in favor of her entry into PTI. Accordingly, the court vacates the underlying order denying defendant entry into the PTI program, and remands for further proceedings.

Appellate
March 14, 2022 Richard Rivera v. Union County Prosecutor’s Office (A-58-20 ; 084867)

*OPRA does not permit access to internal affairs reports, but those records can and should be disclosed under the common law right of access -- subject to appropriate redactions -- when interests that favor disclosure outweigh concerns for confidentiality. The Court provides guidance on how to conduct that balancing test.

Supreme
March 14, 2022 IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF BORDENTOWN, ETC. (L-1579-15, BURLINGTON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-0357-20)

This court addressed whether an amended agreement between the Township of Bordentown and the Fair Share Housing Center satisfied the Township's Third Round obligations under Mount Laurel. This court held the trial court correctly found the amended agreement sets forth a plan that provides a realistic opportunity for the Township to meet its Mount Laurel obligations. We also reiterated that performing work for developers in other Mount Laurel cases does not in-and-of-itself create a conflict of interest for the special master appointed by the trial judge.

Appellate
March 10, 2022 IN THE MATTER OF MICKEY YOUNG, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION) (A-0400-20)

The sole issue raised in this administrative appeal is whether an appointing authority may unilaterally reduce a sanction from major to minor discipline after the employee is served with a Final Notice of Disciplinary Action (FNDA). Because the Civil Service Act and accompanying regulations generally permit an employee to appeal only major disciplinary actions, the reduction in sanction divests the Civil Service Commission of jurisdiction to hear the employee's appeal from an adverse administrative decision.

The court reviewed the statutory and regulatory schemes and rejected the employee's argument that the governing provisions prohibit the appointing authority from reducing the penalty after an FNDA has been issued. The court also found unavailing the employee's contention that the reduction in penalty and resulting divestiture of the Commission's jurisdiction violated his right to due process. In doing so, the court distinguished the present matter – involving a reduction in penalty – from its prior decision in Hammond v. Monmouth County. Sheriff's Department, 317 N.J. Super. 199 (App. Div. 1999), which held an appointing authority may not add charges to the FNDA.

Because the court determined no provision of the Act or accompanying regulations proscribed the appointing authority's inherent discretion to reduce a penalty after an FNDA has been issued to a Civil Service employee, the court concluded the Commission properly upheld the Administrative Law Judge's initial decision, dismissing the employee's complaint on summary decision for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Appellate
March 10, 2022 DENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATES SOUTH JERSEY, PA, ET AL. VS. RRI GIBBSBORO, LLC, ET AL. (L-3993-20, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-0320-21)

The court holds an attorney cannot be disqualified for a conflict of interest pursuant to RPC 1.9 and RPC 1.10(b) based solely on the content of the initial pleadings where the factual basis for the alleged conflict of interest is contested. The two-pronged analysis required by City of Atlantic City v. Trupos, 201 N.J. 447, 467 (2010) mandates a factfinding before a court can conclude disqualification is required because an attorney represented a former client in a substantially related matter.

Appellate
March 9, 2022 STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. MICHELANGELO TROISI (2019-22, MERCER COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-1324-20)

Defendant, Michelangelo Troisi, appeals the Law Division order denying his de novo appeal of a guilty finding against him in Princeton Municipal Court for violating N.J.S.A. 39:4-97.3, use of hands-free and hand-held wireless communication devices while driving. At the municipal court trial, defendant argued that the manner in which he was using his cell phone while driving was not a violation of the plain meaning of the statute. Defendant testified and admitted that his conduct in the car required him to divert his attention from steering his vehicle on a public road for enough time to enter his six-digit passcode, open the Google Maps app, and place the cursor in the search window. The municipal court judge found defendant guilty of violating N.J.S.A. 39:4-97.3 and imposed a fine.

Defendant appealed de novo to the Law Division, which found defendant guilty of the traffic violation for substantially the same reasons as the municipal court: defendant's actions in his car exceeded the bounds of the statute.

Applying well-established principles of statutory construction, the court held that making multiple keystrokes on a cellphone to locate and use an app such as Google Maps while driving would constitute an offense under N.J.S.A. 39:4-97.3 and that the Law Division and municipal court did not abuse their discretion in finding that defendant's conduct was a violation. The court also held that the statute was not unconstitutionally vague because it fairly puts motorists on notice of what category of activity is impermissible.

Appellate
March 8, 2022 Kathleen M. Moynihan v. Edward J. Lynch (A-64-20 ; 085157)

The palimony agreement, as written and signed, without the attorney review requirement, is enforceable. That portion of N.J.S.A. 25:1-5(h), which imposes an attorney-review requirement to enforce a palimony agreement, contravenes Article I, Paragraph 1 of the New Jersey Constitution. The parties did not enter an oral palimony agreement.

Supreme
March 7, 2022 GRANDVUE MANOR, LLC VS. CORNERSTONE CONTRACTING CORP., ET AL. (L-1602-20, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-3702-20)

The court affirmed an order dismissing plaintiff's complaint and compelling arbitration under a construction Agreement to build a home in New York.

Plaintiff entered into the Agreement with defendant, a construction company headquartered in Connecticut. The Agreement contained a choice of law provision to govern by the law of the place where the project was located, excluding that jurisdiction's choice of law rules, and a provision providing that, if the parties selected arbitration as the method of binding dispute resolution, then the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) would govern. Thus, the parties selected the law of New York, the place of the project, and the FAA to govern the Agreement.

Plaintiff sued defendants in New Jersey alleging defendants had not achieved substantial completion of the project, breached the contract and the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, committed fraud and negligent misrepresentation, breached New York lien law, breached their fiduciary duties, committed conversion, unjustly enriched themselves, and violated the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -224, and the New Jersey Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization Act (RICO), N.J.S.A. 2C:41-1 to -6.2.

The trial court delivered an oral opinion dismissing the complaint for the matter to be submitted to arbitration. The court concluded that, under New Jersey law, the arbitration provision is clear and unambiguous as to the requirement that the parties submit to arbitration and as to the parties' waiver of their right to a jury trial. The court noted that the litigants are sophisticated parties that freely entered into the Agreement to build a house for over $10 million.

The court considered whether the law of New Jersey or New York applied to the enforceability and construction of the arbitration provision. Here, the parties clearly and unambiguously chose New York law, where the project was located. Thus, the law of New York applied.

The court then concluded a New York court would likely enforce the arbitration provision as it was less broad than those the New York Court of Appeals upheld in Singer v. Jefferies & Co., 575 N.E.2d 98, 99-101 (1991), Atlas Drywall Corp. v. Dist. Council of New York City & Vicinity of United Bhd. of Carpenters & Joiners, 177 A.D.2d 612, 612-14 (2d Dept. 1991), and Nationwide Gen. Ins. Co. v. Invs. Ins. Co. of Am., 332 N.E.2d 333, 335 (1975). Moreover, Congress and the New Jersey Legislature have declared policies favoring arbitration. Martindale v. Sandvik, Inc., 173 N.J. 76, 84-85 (2002). Here, the court discerned no error in the order compelling arbitration because the arbitration provision is clear and unambiguous in waiving the right to a jury trial and covers the alleged disputes.

Appellate
March 7, 2022 STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. BARRY BERRY STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. KENNETH DANIELS STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. LEVELL BURNETT (17-06-1583, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) (A-1068-18/A-1594-18/A-1884-18)

The court consolidates the appeals brought by three codefendants who were tried together for drug and firearms offenses. All three were charged and convicted for the "kingpin" offense, leader of a narcotics trafficking network, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-3. The State at trial relied principally on recorded jailhouse telephone conversations to establish defendants' roles in the drug trafficking conspiracy. The case hinges on what it means to be a "high-level" member of the conspiracy.

All three defendants moved for judgment of acquittal at the close of the State's case. The trial judge addressed defendants' motions collectively and did not analyze the facts pertaining to each defendant's individual role. The court concludes that the trial judge erred in denying the acquittal motion of the lowest-ranking defendant, Berry. While there can be multiple "leaders" within a given drug trafficking organization, not every participant in a drug trafficking conspiracy meets the definition of being a leader. Even giving the State the benefit of all favorable inferences from the evidence, the court concludes the State failed to prove that Berry exercised substantial authority and control over others. Berry essentially forwarded messages and instructions from codefendant Daniels, who was incarcerated in county jail. While that was an important function, the court notes that a participant may perform an essential function in the operations of an illicit drug operation without necessarily being a high-ranking member of that network for purposes of the leader offense.

Appellate
March 7, 2022 MATHEW T. SULLIVAN VS. BOARD OF REVIEW, ET AL. (BOARD OF REVIEW, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR) (A-1664-20)

The court affirms the Board of Review (Board) decision, which denied a re-hearing after the Appeals Tribunal and agreed with the Division of Unemployment and Temporary Disability Insurance (Division) decision to seek repayment of unemployment benefits improperly awarded to petitioner.

Petitioner voluntarily left employment in October 2019, before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Petitioner filed for and was awarded unemployment benefits for eight weeks, beginning in April 2020. In July 2020, the Division notified petitioner that he was not eligible for unemployment benefits under N.J.S.A. 43:21-5 because he did not leave for good cause attributable to work and his circumstances did not meet the criteria the under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 9001 to 9141. Thus, he was ineligible for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) benefits. The Division imposed the refund for petitioner to repay the improper unemployment benefits.

Petitioner appealed, and the Appeal Tribunal affirmed that petitioner was disqualified for such unemployment benefits. The Board agreed. Petitioner brought this appeal, arguing that because the Division erroneously gave petitioner the funds, it is estopped from seeking a refund.

The court agreed after considering the CARES Act's expansion of benefits under the PUA, petitioner was not eligible for benefits during the relevant time period. The Division is required to seek repayment from individuals who are ineligible for unemployment benefits, and petitioner did not show that he was in fact eligible, and the Board's decision was not administered arbitrarily, capriciously, or unreasonably. Further, the State is not estopped from seeking repayment because petitioner did not show a manifest injustice by the Division's decision to seek the required repayments it erroneously awarded.

Appellate
March 7, 2022 Libertarians for Transparent Government v. Cumberland County (A-34-20 ; 084956)

Most personnel records are confidential under OPRA. But under the law’s plain language, certain items qualify as a government record including a person’s name, title, "date of separation and the reason therefor." N.J.S.A. 47:1A-10. To the extent that information appears in a settlement agreement, the record should be available to the public after appropriate redactions are made.

Supreme
March 4, 2022 STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. STEPHEN P. MAROLDA (06-08-1382, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-4556-19)

As part of an illegal gambling investigation, which included wiretap evidence, defendant was charged with third-degree promoting gambling, third-degree conspiracy to promote gambling, and second-degree financial facilitation of criminal activity. The Bergen County Prosecutor's Office also filed a civil forfeiture complaint against numerous bank accounts and other assets held by defendant and his company. Pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement, defendant waived his right to indictment, pled guilty to third-degree promoting gambling, and consented to the civil forfeiture of $3 million, in exchange for a recommended sentence of probation conditioned upon 180 days in jail and the dismissal of the charges filed against his wife.

At the plea hearing, defendant acknowledged he accepted bets for some of his employees, naming two of them, and admitted to participating in "a pay-and-collect situation with both of those individuals" and the bookmaker. Defendant further admitted he maintained written records of the bets that indicated the amount he needed to collect from the employees. On November 3, 2006, defendant was sentenced in accordance with the plea agreement. That same day he signed a consent order to enter judgment forfeiting $3 million in the civil forfeiture action. Defendant did not appeal his conviction or sentence or file a motion for relief from the forfeiture judgment.

On September 30, 2019, almost thirteen years after he was sentenced, defendant filed a first petition for post-conviction relief (PCR). Defendant sought an evidentiary hearing, withdrawal of his guilty plea, and the return of the forfeited funds. He argued that the time limitation imposed by Rule 3:22-12(a)(1) should be relaxed. Defendant raised claims of actual innocence, newly discovered evidence, ineffective assistance of counsel, and that the BCPO withheld exculpatory evidence. Defendant recanted his admissions during the plea hearing and contended that he never acted as a bookmaker.

The PCR court denied the petition without an evidentiary hearing, rejecting defendant's claims that trial counsel was ineffective and noting defendant received the benefit of a favorable plea deal. The PCR court also rejected defendant's claims of newly discovered evidence, actual innocence, that his plea was coerced, and that the prosecutor withheld exculpatory evidence. The PCR court further concluded that defendant did not demonstrate excusable neglect, his claims were speculative and had no basis in fact, and were time barred.

The court affirmed, noting that defendant pled guilty, was sentenced, and signed the consent order for judgment of forfeiture in 2006, his term of probation ended in 2007, and the county prosecutor he accused of misconduct resigned in January 2016, yet he waited until September 2019 to file his petition. The court found no exceptions applied to the five-year time limitation imposed by Rule 3:22-12 and that enforcing the time-bar did not result in a fundamental injustice.

The court rejected defendant's argument that the time limit for filing his petition should be relaxed due to his actual innocence and declined to apply a federal equitable doctrine to override the clear mandate of Rule 3:22-12.

The court also rejected defendant's claim that the forfeited funds must be returned as a matter of law. The court noted defendant did not contest the civil forfeiture action, consented to the forfeiture of $3 million, had not filed for relief pursuant N.J.S.A. 2C:64-8, and did not file a motion for relief from the forfeiture judgment under Rule 4:50-1. The court held that defendant was bound by the forfeiture judgment and any attempt to set it aside must be filed in the Civil Part and was now time barred by Rule 4:50-2.

Appellate
March 3, 2022 STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. RAKIM P. WILLIAMS (17-12-0602 AND 18-08-0471, MERCER COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-4156-19)

At issue in this appeal is the propriety of the prosecutor's closing remarks on a seven-minute segment of surveillance footage, included as part of the one-hour video recording admitted in evidence but not played for the jury by either side during trial. Although the trial judge denied the prosecutor's request to play the previously unseen segment on summation, the judge afforded the jurors the option of viewing this footage during their deliberations.

Upon the jury's ensuing request, the seven-minute segment was played for the first time in open court. Because defendant was not afforded an opportunity to address the footage, the court concludes the prosecutor's remarks exceeded the bounds of proper conduct and the trial judge's evidentiary decision compounded the error, thereby denying defendant a fair trial. Accordingly, the court vacates defendant's conviction for possession of a weapon by a convicted felon and remands for a new trial.

Appellate
March 2, 2022 Sylvester & Yongjie Tuohy v. Director, Division of Taxation (13607-2018)

Tax Court: Sylvester and Yongjie Touhy v. Director, Division of Taxation, Docket No. 013607-2018; opinion by Bedrin Murray, J.T.C., decided March 1, 2022. For plaintiffs – Sylvester Tuohy and Yongjie Tuohy (Self-Represented); for defendant – Miles Eckardt, Deputy Attorney General (Matthew Platkin, Acting Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney).

Held: Defendant’s motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of a complaint challenging the assessment of New Jersey gross income tax ("NJ GIT") for tax year 2014 is granted. Plaintiffs contend that defendant improperly added back into their gross income the following: (1) dividends, (2) capital gains, and (3) wages withheld to fund a § 403(b) retirement plan. In addition, plaintiffs argue that defendant erroneously calculated their resident tax credit under N.J.S.A. 54A:4-1 for income subject to tax in other states or political subdivisions. As to the resident tax credit calculation, the court holds plaintiffs are collaterally estopped from relitigating this issue because they unsuccessfully litigated the same issue in the Tax Court for a prior tax year. Even if the principle of collateral estoppel was not applied, plaintiffs’ allegations are without merit based on statutory, regulatory, and case law. With regard to plaintiffs’ challenge to the addition of dividends, capital gains, and certain wages to their 2014 gross income, the court finds their arguments to be unsupported by statutory or regulatory law, or precedent. Thus, plaintiffs have failed to overcome the presumption of validity accorded to defendant’s interpretation of the relevant NJ GIT statutes. Therefore, summary judgment in favor of defendant is appropriate.

Tax
Feb. 28, 2022 Branchburg Hospitality LLC v. Twp. pf Branchburg (011494-2021)

Tax Court: Branchburg Hospitality LLC v. Township of Branchburg, Docket No. 011494-21, opinion by Fiamingo, J.T.C., decided February 24, 2022. For plaintiff – Farhan Ali McCarter & English, LLP, attorneys); for defendant - Wesley E. Buirkle (DiFrancesco Bateman Kunzman, Davis, Lehrer & Flaum, P.C., attorneys).

HELD: Plaintiff timely appealed the decision of the County Board of Taxation which dismissed plaintiff’s petition pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:4-34 (Chapter 91) for tax year 2021. Defendant moved before this court to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint for (a) lack of subject matter jurisdiction; (b) failure to pay taxes pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1 and (c) failure to respond to a request for income and expense statement pursuant to Chapter 91. The court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court found that plaintiff’s prior filing and withdrawal of a direct appeal as to which a judgment of dismissal was entered, did not bar plaintiff from filing an appeal at the County Board of Taxation for the same tax year, or from appealing the resultant decision of the County Board of Taxation to the Tax Court. The court however dismissed the complaint for failure to pay real property taxes as required by N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1(b) since plaintiff failed to produce sufficient proofs of the impact of COVID-19 on its ability to pay the taxes due. As a result, the court did not reach the merits defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to comply with Chapter 91.

Tax
Feb. 25, 2022 IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF W.S. (FA-01-0058-16)

In this adoption matter, the court examined whether a minor child, W.S., who was born in Mexico, is considered a "habitual resident" of the United States at the time of her adoption in order to comply with the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Co-Operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption (Hague Adoption Convention). Petitioner, S.S., sought to amend a Final Judgment of Adoption that was entered on December 21, 2016, to reflect that the adoption of W.S. was in compliance with the Hague Adoption Convention which will resolve W.S.’s immigration status and allow W.S. to return to the United States.

The court’s opinion highlighted the Supreme Court of the United States decision in Monasky v. Taglieri, 140 S. Ct. 719 (2020), which directly addressed the definition of "habitual residence" under the Hague Adoption Convention. In accordance with the new guidance set forth in the Monasky decision, the court concluded that W.S. was a "habitual resident" of the United States, not Mexico, at the time of her adoption on December 21, 2016, and held that the adoption complied with the requirements of the Hague Adoption Convention.

Trial