Friedman v. Martinez
Friedman v. Martinez
Opinion of the Court
*90In reversing a partial summary judgment entered in defendants' favor, we reject the notion that plaintiffs-in alleging an invasion of their privacy in an office building's restroom-could only claim the presence of a hidden recording device by demonstrating their images were actually captured.
*91Here, more than sixty women claimed, among other things, that their privacy was invaded when defendant Teodoro Martinez, a janitor employed by defendant CRS Facility Services, LLC, placed and maintained hidden surveillance equipment for approximately six months to a year
After a considerable period of discovery, defendants moved for partial summary judgment, seeking to dismiss the claims of thirty-five plaintiffs who were unable to assert that their images could be found in the eight hours of footage seized during the police investigation. The motion judge concluded that to defeat summary judgment these plaintiffs were required to show that a recording device was present when they used the women's restroom and that, to prove a device's presence, each plaintiff needed to assert her image appeared in existing footage:
The bottom line is [plaintiffs] still have to prove the camera was there.... The only way they can do that is by looking at the video to establish they were there.
Because this group of plaintiffs failed that test, the judge granted defendants' partial summary judgment motions.
*92The dismissed plaintiffs sought reconsideration without success; three plaintiffs, however, identified their images in the available materials and partial summary judgment was vacated as to them.
Two years later, the building's owner and property managers sought the entry of summary judgment dismissing the claims of the remaining plaintiffs. They argued, among other things, that the janitor's wrongdoing was unforeseeable and that it would be unreasonable to impose on them a duty to ensure that someone like this janitor would not commit intentional torts of this sort. Another judge denied that motion, and, during jury selection, the remaining plaintiffs and defendants settled.
With all issues as to all parties resolved, the group of plaintiffs, whose claims were dismissed, appeal.
We turn first to plaintiffs' appeal and thereafter explain why we do not reach the issues posed in the cross-appeal.
I
In reversing the partial summary judgment entered against the group of plaintiffs now before us, no reiteration of what we said about the essential elements of the right to privacy in Soliman v. Kushner Cos.,
With these general principles in mind, we start with the unremarkable conclusion that a surreptitious placement of a recording device in a restroom constitutes an intrusion on a user's solitude or seclusion that a reasonable person would find highly offensive. No one questions that here. See Soliman,
In rejecting defendants' construct, we agree with the view of Iowa's highest court that the intrusion-on-seclusion tort "protects against acts that interfere with a person's mental well-being"; consequently we hold that a "secret use of an electronic listening or recording device is abhorrent" to the "spirit and purpose" of this tort regardless of whether "someone ... actually see[s] or hear[s] the private information." Koeppel v. Speirs,
*94[d]irect evidence that an actual viewing occurred can be difficult to establish, and a person who is inclined to secretly place a camera in a private area can easily incapacitate the camera when it is not in use so as to minimize any responsibility upon discovery.
[Ibid. ]
Clandestine intrusions of this nature injure the victim's "peace of mind" and the "comfort associated with the expectation of privacy."
Like other state appellate courts, we hold that a victim of such an intrusion need not provide evidence of her captured image to prove an intrusion occurred. See Johnson v. Allen,
The motion judge also took a far more restrictive view of plaintiffs' proofs than permitted by the Brill
For these reasons, we reverse the partial summary judgment entered on behalf of all moving defendants
II
The issues presented in the cross-appeal arrive in an unusual way. After *495entry of the partial summary judgment discussed above, the property's owner and managers moved for summary judgment against the remaining plaintiffs, arguing, among other things, they had no duty to prevent the janitor's actions or that it would otherwise be unreasonable to impose liability because of the absence of any prior occurrences on the premises. Because that motion was filed and denied approximately two years after the summary judgment discussed above, we are asked to review an order entered at a time when the only plaintiffs now involved were no longer active participants.
In this circumstance, we deem the most appropriate course is to leave the merits of the cross-appeal for another day and allow the *97case to proceed as if the now-restored plaintiffs' claims had not been previously dismissed as, indeed, they should not have been. Once those remaining issues are finally adjudicated, the owner and property managers may seek review if they remain aggrieved by the order denying their summary judgment motion. Stated another way, our ruling on the appeal warrants a turning back of the clock to that day in 2014 when the judge mistakenly granted the partial summary judgment that inspired plaintiffs' appeal. Because the denial of summary judgment is never binding until entry of final judgment, R. 4:42-2, the trial court remains free to revisit or leave in its place the existing ruling about the owner and managers' liability. Certainly, there was nothing compelling about the motion's disposition that would have invited interlocutory review at the time it was made, and now that the matter requires further proceedings we do not view it advisable to consider those issues at the present time. Of course, our disposition of the cross-appeal should not be viewed as intimating any particular view about the merits of the parties' arguments on the issues raised in the cross-appeal.
III
For all these reasons, we reverse the partial summary judgment against plaintiffs and remand for further proceedings. In declining to review the order questioned in the cross-appeal, we recognize the property owner and managers may pursue those issues upon entry of a final judgment if they remain aggrieved by its existence.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
This estimate comes from a statement given by Martinez to a police investigator that the investigator repeated at his deposition in this matter.
The other defendants who have responded to this appeal are Ruben Sabillon, Jamar Sailor, and their employer, Planned Security Services, Inc., which provided security for a tenant that employed many of the plaintiffs.
As noted, the judge first dismissed the claims of thirty-five plaintiffs. On reconsideration, three obtained reinstatement of their claims. The notice of appeal, however, identifies only thirty appellants.
If we were to adopt the motion judge's approach we would also insulate from liability one who intrudes into a victim's seclusion or solitude without a recording device, such as one who bores a hole in a wall or installs a one-way mirror to secretly peep in on others. The thesis urged by defendants and adopted by the motion judge would bar any remedy for such an intrusion unless the tortfeasor was actually caught in the act.
Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Partial summary judgment in favor of all defendants was granted on the slim reed we have now discarded. Some defendants may very well have other defenses not implicated by this appeal. Only the owner and property managers seek relief, on other grounds, by way of their cross-appeal. In addition, we do not address plaintiffs' other pleaded causes of action because the motion judge also gave them no consideration in dismissing the claims of these plaintiffs.
Defendants seek to attach some significance to Villanova v. Innovative Investigations, Inc.,
We are mindful that the dismissed plaintiffs certainly were entitled to respond to this later motion because the partial summary judgment that dismissed their claims was not a final and appealable order. Indeed, experience demonstrates the advisability of parties remaining involved in such circumstances. See generally Rogers v. Spady,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.