Court Opinion

ID: 2831721
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-08-27 20:06:44.952045+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:31:44.866331
License: Public Domain

REPORTED

  IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

             OF MARYLAND

                  No. 178

          September Term, 2014

     DOUGLAS STIDHAM, etc. et al.

                     v.

R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., INC., et al.

     Kehoe,
     Arthur,
     Kenney, James A., III
        (Retired, Specially Assigned),

                    JJ.

           Opinion by Arthur, J.

     Filed: August 27, 2015
       In Gress v. ACandS, Inc., 150 Md. App. 369, 387-89 (2003), this Court held that a

circuit court erred in refusing to permit the joinder of wrongful death claims against

asbestos defendants with wrongful death claims against tobacco defendants, where the

plaintiffs alleged that their decedent’s death had resulted from the synergistic effect of

exposure to asbestos fibers and tobacco smoke.

       The Gress Court recognized that the circuit court had not entered a final,

appealable judgment in that case, because it had not adjudicated the claims against the

asbestos defendants and had declined to certify its ruling as final under Md. Rule 2-

602(b). We reached the merits nonetheless, because we reasoned that we had the

authority to enter a final judgment on our own initiative under Md. Rule 8-602(e)(1)(C).

       The Court of Appeals reversed our decision in Gress on the procedural ground that

an appellate court may not enter a final judgment under Rule 8-602(e) when the circuit

court has been asked to enter a final judgment under Rule 2-602(b), but has properly

exercised its discretion to decline to do so. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. Gress,

378 Md. 667, 682 (2003). The Court of Appeals did not address whether the circuit court

had erred in dismissing the claims against the tobacco defendants.

       The substantive issue, of whether a circuit court may refuse to permit the joinder

of wrongful death claims against asbestos defendants with wrongful death claims against

tobacco defendants, is now before us again. In this case, the plaintiffs, whose claims

against the tobacco defendants were dismissed earlier in the litigation, have acquired a

final judgment by resolving all pending claims against the asbestos defendants.

Ironically, however, the acquisition of the final judgment has rendered the case moot,
because it is impossible to join the cigarette manufacturers with the asbestos defendants

now that the plaintiffs have disposed of all claims against the latter class of defendants.

       Even though we must dismiss the appeal on the ground that it is moot, the appeal

“‘presents a recurring matter of public concern which, unless decided, will continue to

evade review[.]’” La Valle v. La Valle, 432 Md. 343, 352 (2013) (quoting Office of the

Pub. Defender v. State, 413 Md. 411, 423 (2010)). We feel constrained to address the

merits for the guidance of litigants and courts when confronted with a similar issue, and

to reaffirm the substantive reasoning of the decision in Gress.

                          FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       On January 24, 2008, Jack F. Stidham, a retired electrician, filed a complaint in the

Circuit Court for Baltimore City against 38 defendants, most of which had been asbestos

manufacturers or distributors. Mr. Stidham contended that he had developed lung cancer

because of his exposure to asbestos. He pursued legal theories of strict liability, breach of

warranty, and negligence. The circuit court placed his case on the asbestos docket.

       Mr. Stidham died on December 3, 2008. Shortly thereafter, in April 2009, Mr.

Stidham’s son filed an amended complaint, adding himself, his siblings, and his mother

as parties to the action. The amended complaint also added several new counts.

       On May 1, 2009, the Stidhams filed a second amended complaint. In that

complaint, the Stidhams added several tobacco companies as defendants and asserted

claims against the tobacco and asbestos defendants, both individually and jointly. The

second amended complaint alleged that the tobacco and asbestos defendants failed to

warn Mr. Stidham that concurrent exposure to asbestos and tobacco products increased

                                             -2-
the dangers that he faced, a concept known as the “synergy” theory. See Gress, 150 Md.

App. at 375 (“[a]ccording to appellants, because the combination of asbestos exposure

and cigarette smoking acted in ‘synergy’ and multiplied the risk of developing lung

cancer, cigarette smokers who were exposed to asbestos had a much greater chance of

developing lung cancer and other disease than non-smokers who were exposed solely to

asbestos”); see also Carter v. Wallace & Gale Asbestos Settlement Trust, 439 Md. 333,

356-57 (2014) (“while there are many variables that go into the causal effects of tobacco

and asbestos exposure, there is evidence that the effect is multiplicative in nature”).

       The Stidhams’ amended complaint describes, in great detail, the synergistic effect

of concurrent exposure to asbestos and tobacco. Although exposure to each of these

carcinogens presents a risk of lung cancer, the Stidhams allege that concurrent exposure

exponentially increases the risk. The Stidhams specifically allege that the tobacco

defendants had internal, corporate knowledge about the increased risk posed by

concurrent exposure to cigarettes and asbestos.

       On June 1, 2009, the tobacco defendants moved to dismiss the second amended

complaint, arguing that the Stidhams could not properly join the claims against them with

the claims against the asbestos defendants. The circuit court granted the motion to

dismiss. Though the court did not discuss its reasoning on the record, the parties agree

that the court reiterated its 2002 ruling in Van Daniker v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass

Corp., Case No. 24-X-97-139541, a case in which the circuit court granted a similar

motion to dismiss on grounds of improper joinder. The Van Daniker ruling is the ruling

that this Court reviewed in Gress.

                                             -3-
       In October 2010, the Stidhams moved to “reinstate” the tobacco defendants.

Later, in January 2011, the Stidhams moved to voluntarily dismiss the Wallace and Gale

Asbestos Settlement Trust, which they thought was the last asbestos defendant against

which they had pending claims. On October 14, 2011, the circuit court issued orders

denying the motion for reinstatement and dismissing the Wallace and Gale trust, with

prejudice.

       Believing that they had a final judgment, the Stidhams appealed. Upon a review

of the record, however, this Court identified several pending and unadjudicated claims

that the Stidhams had asserted, as well as several pending and unadjudicated cross-claims

and third-party claims. This Court dismissed the appeal because of the absence of an

appealable, final judgment. Stidham v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc., No. 1922,

Sept. Term 2011 (filed Mar. 11, 2013).

       The case returned to the circuit court, which ordered all parties to show cause why

any claims should remain open for further adjudication. After none of the parties

responded, the circuit court filed an order entering a final judgment as to all parties on

April 2, 2014. The order recited that the court had dismissed the claims against the

tobacco defendants “without prejudice with the right to refile.”

       The Stidhams took another timely appeal.

                                             -4-
                                   QUESTIONS PRESENTED

          The Stidhams present two questions, which we have rephrased and consolidated as

follows: Did the circuit court err or abuse its discretion in granting the tobacco

defendants’ motion to dismiss on grounds of misjoinder?1

          The tobacco defendants, on the other hand, have moved to dismiss the appeal.

They contend that the circuit court has yet to enter a final judgment, because it gave the

Stidhams the “right to refile.” They also contend that the case is moot, because it is no

longer possible to join the tobacco defendants with the asbestos defendants (the latter

having been dismissed).

          Although we conclude that the circuit court has entered a final, appealable

judgment, we must dismiss the appeal as moot, because we can afford no effective

remedy for the dismissal of the tobacco defendants now that all of the asbestos

defendants have been dismissed as well. Nonetheless, because the case involves matters

of public concern that are capable of repetition, but are difficult if not impossible to

review in accordance with the constraints of the final judgment rule, we shall address the

merits.

     1
         The Stidhams phrased their questions as follows:
          1.    Did the lower court err in granting the Cigarette Defendants’ Motion
                to Dismiss based on alleged misjoinder with the Stidhams’
                previously filed claims against the Asbestos Defendants?
          2.    Did the lower court err when it denied the Stidhams’ Motion for
                Reinstatement of their claims against the Cigarette Defendants after
                all claims as to the Asbestos defendants had been fully resolved?

                                              -5-
       We conclude that the circuit court should not have dismissed the tobacco

defendants without first considering possible procedural safeguards under Rule 2-212(b)

to prevent embarrassment, delay, expense, or prejudice.

                                THE MOTION TO DISMISS

       Before discussing the questions presented by the Stidhams in this appeal, we

address the tobacco defendants’ motions to dismiss.

       A.     Final Judgment

       In general, under Maryland law, an appellate court has jurisdiction over an appeal

only if the trial court has entered a final judgment. See Md. Code (1974, 2014 Repl.

Vol.), § 12-301 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article; Schuele v. Case

Handyman & Remodeling Servs., 412 Md. 555, 565 (2010); Addison v. Lochearn Nursing

Home, 411 Md. 251, 261 (2009). “A final judgment is an order that ‘has the effect of

putting [the plaintiff] out of court’” (Spivery-Jones v. Receivership Estate of Trans

Healthcare, Inc., 438 Md. 330, 353-54 (2014) (quoting American Bank Holdings, Inc. v.

Kavanagh, 436 Md. 457, 463 (2013)) and of denying the plaintiff “the means of further

prosecuting or defending rights and interests in the subject matter of the proceeding.”

Kavanagh, 436 Md. at 463 (citation omitted).

       A judgment may be final and appealable even if the trial court does not adjudicate

the merits of the plaintiff’s claims. See, e.g., Brewster v. Woodhaven Bldg. & Dev., Inc.,

360 Md. 602, 617 (2000) (order transferring case because of improper venue or forum

non conveniens is final judgment because “the party challenging the order is put out of

the particular court that grants the order”); Ferrell v. Benson, 352 Md. 2, 6-7 (1998)

                                            -6-
(order transferring case from circuit court to district court is final judgment because it

puts plaintiff out of circuit court).

       In Moore v. Pomory, 329 Md. 428, 432 (1993), the Court of Appeals held that a

dismissal “without prejudice” was a final, appealable judgment if it did not grant the

plaintiff leave to amend. The Court explained that “a dismissal of the plaintiff’s entire

complaint ‘without prejudice’ does not mean that the case is still pending in the trial

court and that the plaintiff may amend [the] complaint or file an amended complaint in

the same action.” Id. To the contrary, upon a dismissal without prejudice and without

leave to amend, “the case is fully terminated in the trial court.” Id. “The effect of the

designation ‘without prejudice’ is simply that there is no adjudication on the merits and

that, therefore, a new suit on the same cause of action is not barred by principles of res

judicata.” Id.

       In view of Moore, the order in this case did not lack finality merely because it

dismissed the claims against the tobacco defendants “without prejudice”; it would lack

finality only if it granted the Stidhams leave to amend. Thus, the question becomes

whether a dismissal with “the right to refile” equals a dismissal “with leave to amend.”

It does not.

       When the circuit court stated that the Stidhams had “the right to refile,” the court

plainly did not intend to allow the Stidhams to amend their pleading to address some

deficiency in their allegations against the tobacco defendants. The court had already

dismissed the tobacco defendants on the basis of improper joinder and had declined to

permit the Stidhams to reinstate the claims against them. Consequently, in recognizing a

                                             -7-
“right to refile,” the court was simply reiterating that res judicata would not bar the

Stidhams from filing a new complaint against the tobacco defendants. In this regard, we

note that the phrase “without prejudice with the right to refile” comes directly from the

Van Daniker order, which unquestionably envisioned that the plaintiffs could not amend

their pleading to assert claims against the tobacco defendants in the pending action, but

could only “refile” a completely new lawsuit against the tobacco defendants.

       In summary, when the circuit court dismissed the case without prejudice and with

leave to refile the claims against the tobacco manufacturers, it put the Stidhams out of

court and denied them the means of further prosecuting their claims in that action. In so

doing, the court entered an appealable, final judgment. Accordingly, we deny the motion

to dismiss on grounds of the absence of appellate jurisdiction.

       B.     Mootness

       “A case is moot when there is no longer an existing controversy when the case

comes before the Court or when there is no longer an effective remedy the court could

grant.” Prince George’s Cnty. v. Columcille Bldg. Corp., 219 Md. App. 19, 26 (2014)

(quoting Suter v. Stuckey, 402 Md. 211, 219 (2007)). Here, the Stidhams have no

effective remedy. Because of the dismissal of all of the asbestos defendants, there are no

parties with which the tobacco defendants can be joined. See Black’s Law Dictionary 853

(8th ed. 2004) (defining “joinder” as “[t]he uniting of parties or claims in a single

lawsuit”). Nor can the claims against tobacco defendants be “reinstated,” because there

is “no case left to which the dismissed defendants could be rejoined or reinstated.”

Silbersack v. ACandS, Inc., 402 Md. 673, 687 (2008).

                                             -8-
       Despite our determination that this case is moot, we are nonetheless entitled to

reach the merits when a case “‘presents a recurring matter of public concern which,

unless decided, will continue to evade review[.]’” La Valle v. La Valle, 432 Md. 343, 352

(2013) (quoting Office of the Pub. Defender v. State, 413 Md. 411, 423 (2010)); see also

Comptroller of the Treasury v. Zorzit, 221 Md. App. 274, 292 (2015). This, in our view,

is such a case.

       The issues in this case involve recurring matters of public concern: there are

currently 700 pending cases in which plaintiffs have attempted to join claims against

tobacco defendants with claims against asbestos defendants. Appellees’ Brief at 4-5.

The circuit court, however, has required such plaintiffs to bring two separate actions

against two classes of joint tortfeasors even though they are alleged to have acted

concurrently, to cause a single, indivisible injury that is incapable of apportionment.

Carter, 439 Md. at 357 (holding that damages for wrongful death from lung cancer

allegedly caused by synergistic effect of exposure to asbestos and tobacco were

indivisible and incapable of apportionment); see Gress, 150 Md. App. at 384-89 (holding

that plaintiffs were entitled to join claims against tobacco defendants and asbestos

defendants in one action where alleged damages from concurrent exposure were

indivisible and could not be apportioned). A categorical bar on joinder might

unintentionally have a deleterious effect on the public interest in access to the courts and

in the expeditious administration of justice, because requiring completely separate actions

in these complex, costly cases threatens to increase the duration and expense of litigation.

                                             -9-
See Gress, 150 Md. App. at 388 n.10. “A trial court’s time is a valuable public

commodity that should not be wasted.” Id. at 382.2

         These issues have evaded and continue to evade appellate review. A number of

plaintiffs, including the Stidhams, have sought appellate review of the Van Daniker ruling

in five cases, but have failed each time for lack of a final judgment. If the circuit court

routinely employs Van Daniker to dismiss the claims against tobacco defendants and

declines to certify its ruling as a final judgment under Rule 2-602(b), an appellate court

cannot certify the ruling as a final judgment and cannot review the merits of the decision.

Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. Gress, 378 Md. at 682; see also Brown &

Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. Culbertson, 387 Md. 501, 502 (2005). Furthermore, except

in extraordinary circumstances (which have yet to arise in any reported case), a party may

not take a direct appeal from the circuit court’s discretionary decision not to certify such a

ruling as a final judgment. Silbersack, 402 Md. at 687. Indeed, when the plaintiffs

ultimately obtain an appealable, final judgment (as the Stidhams have done by dismissing

the remaining asbestos defendants), the case automatically becomes moot.

         In other words, the Stidhams (and other similarly situated plaintiffs) have no right

to appeal from an interlocutory order dismissing claims because of alleged misjoinder

     2
       The court’s ruling also raises difficult practical concerns for litigants. For
example, as this Court pointed out in Gress, what happens if the asbestos defendants
prevail at trial after the court has refused to permit the joinder of the claims against the
tobacco defendants? In a subsequent action against the tobacco defendants, does the
asbestos judgment collaterally estop the plaintiffs from arguing that concurrent exposure
to asbestos and tobacco had a synergistic effect on the development of the cancer? Gress,
150 Md. App. at 382 n.8.

                                              -10-
because the order is not final. At the same time, however, they have no right to appeal

from a final judgment because the final disposition of the claims against the other

defendants renders the case moot.

         Because a court ruling on a matter of public concern should not be insulated from

appellate review in this way, we are persuaded to reach the merits even though the case is

moot. See, e.g., La Valle, 432 Md. at 353 (considering moot issue of whether court may

extend domestic-violence protective order against private party after order has expired);

Armstrong v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 169 Md. App. 655, 666 (2006)

(considering moot issue of whether City Council action would have been subject to

judicial review as “zoning action,” “so that all interested persons will know what

procedural avenue for seeking judicial review is applicable in a given situation”); see also

In re Justin D., 357 Md. 431, 444-45 (2000) (in CINA case, considering moot issue of

whether court could delegate questions of visitation to Department of Social Services,

because “it is common practice for the juvenile court in Montgomery County to enter

orders of this kind, so the issue presented by appellants is a recurring and important one,”

and because “orders of this kind that are appealed will almost always be replaced by

subsequent orders before this Court will have the opportunity to review them”).3

     3
       In addition to arguing that the judgment is not final and that the issues are moot,
the tobacco defendants cite Brannan v. Wallace & Gale Asbestos Settlement Trust, 208
Md. App. 164 (2012), for the proposition that the Stidhams cannot pursue claims against
other tortfeasors because they have allegedly received full compensation from the
asbestos defendants. The short answer to that assertion is that the record currently
contains nothing to suggest that the Stidhams have received full compensation.

                                            -11-
                                            JOINDER

         Rule 2-212(a), concerning permissive joinder of parties, provides, in relevant part,

as follows:

         All persons may be joined in one action as defendants if there is asserted
         against them jointly, severally, or in the alternative any right to relief in
         respect to or arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of
         transactions or occurrences, and if any question of law or fact common to
         all defendants will arise in the action.

         In other words, under Rule 2-212(a), a plaintiff may join multiple defendants who

are alleged to be jointly, severally, or alternatively liable to the plaintiff, if “(1) the issues

in the litigation arise out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions,

and (2) there is a common question of law or fact with respect to all or part of the action.”

Paul V. Niemeyer and Linda Schuett, Maryland Rules Commentary 143 (3d ed. 2003).4

         “The joinder rules were enacted ‘to remedy the procedural and substantive defects

in the law which prevented the resolution in one action of the rights and obligations of all

parties whose connection with the case arose out of the same source and occurrence.’”

Gress, 150 Md. App. at 385 (quoting Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Royal Crown

Bottling Co., 243 Md. 280, 287 (1966)). “Joinder of parties, in some cases, simplifies

and expedites proceedings, avoids duplicative costs, and eliminates multiple trials.”

Gress, 150 Md. App. at 385. “The purpose behind the joinder of parties rules is ‘to

simplify and expedite proceedings and to avoid the useless duplication, expense and

     4
      “Permissive joinder” is to be distinguished from “required joinder” under Rule 2-
211. Required joinder defines the parties whom a plaintiff must join if the action is to
proceed. Permissive joinder, by contrast, defines the parties whom a plaintiff may (or
may not) elect to join.

                                               -12-
possible uncertainty of more than one trial.’” Carter, 439 Md. at 349 n.7 (2014) (quoting

Allen & Whalen, Inc. v. John C. Grimberg Co., 229 Md. 585, 588 (1962)).

       If we look to the salient considerations under the plain language of Rule 2-212(a),

it is very clear that the tobacco defendants and the asbestos defendants “may be joined in

one action as defendants[.]”

       First, there can be no serious dispute that the tobacco defendants and the asbestos

defendants are alleged to be jointly and severally liable to the Stidhams within the

meaning of Rule 2-212(a). In holding that it was inappropriate to apportion the damages

for a wrongful death caused by exposure to both asbestos and tobacco, the Court of

Appeals recognized that the asbestos defendants and the tobacco defendants were

concurrent tortfeasors that were jointly and severally liable for the same, indivisible

injury. See Carter, 439 Md. at 352-53. Similarly, in Gress, 150 Md. App. at 386-87, this

Court recognized that the two sets of defendants are concurrent tortfeasors because the

plaintiffs “alleged that [the decedent’s] exposure to asbestos products and [his] cigarette

smoking occurred during the same time period[.]”

       Second, the Stidhams claim that Mr. Stidham was “injured by the combined effects

of cigarette smoke and exposure to asbestos products.” Gress, 150 Md. App. at 387.

Consequently, for purposes of Rule 2-212(a), the claims against the asbestos defendants

“arise out of the same series of occurrences” as the claims against the tobacco

defendants. Gress, 150 Md. App. at 387.

       Third, as in Gress, “the case[] at bar involve[s] numerous common questions of

law and fact” within the meaning of Rule 2-212(a). Those questions include “(1) the

                                            -13-
question of whether there is scientific merit in appellants’ ‘synergy’ theory, and (2) the

question of what all of the appellees knew or should have known about the synergistic

effect of cigarette smoking and exposure to asbestos.” Gress, 150 Md. App. at 387-88.

As in Gress, the tobacco defendants “do not argue to the contrary.” Id. at 388.5

         Finally, “there are important policy reasons for joining the two categories” of

defendants. Gress, 150 Md. App. at 388. Most notably, “‘in the separate suits it is open

to each defendant to prove that the other was solely responsible, or responsible for the

greater part of the damage, and so defeat or minimize recovery[.]’” Id. at 388 n.10

(quoting Prosser and Keeton on Torts 327 n.25 (5th ed. 1984)). In addition, “‘time and

expense are doubled.’” Id.

         In dismissing the claims against the tobacco defendants, the circuit court did not

appear to have engaged in the required analysis under Rule 2-212(a). The court took no

express notice of whether the tobacco defendants and the asbestos defendants were

alleged to be liable jointly, severally, or alternatively to the Stidhams, and the court did

not discuss whether the claims “ar[ose] out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series

of transactions or occurrences[.]” Md. Rule 2-212(a). Nor did the court consider

     5
       The tobacco defendants assert that Gress is “contrary to the Circuit Court’s
findings of fact in Van Daniker.” Appellees’ Brief at 18 n.5. The Van Daniker court,
however, heard no evidence and made no “findings.” Rather, it made a number of
unspecific factual assertions in support of its ruling. In any event, the tobacco defendants
do not explain precisely how the Gress Court’s statements are “contrary” to any specific
“findings.” They certainly do not explain where the circuit court mentioned, let alone
made, any “findings” about the presence of any common questions of law and fact, such
as the validity of the synergy theory or the extent of the defendants’ knowledge about the
synergistic effect of cigarette smoking and exposure to asbestos.

                                             -14-
whether “any question of law or fact common to all defendants w[ould] arise in the

action.” Id. In brief, the court denied joinder without expressly evaluating any of the

specific factors that are relevant, under the rule, to the propriety of permissive joinder.

       In premising the dismissal on the Van Daniker order, the circuit court expressed

concern about the practical consequences of joinder. In light of “a unique set of practices

and procedures [that] have developed under the asbestos docket,” the court forecast that

“a joint trial . . . will cause confusion to the jury.” It stated its view that those practices

and procedures would be “prejudicial” to the tobacco defendants if “they were added

now.” It also stated that the joinder of the tobacco defendants “would disrupt the orderly

procedures that the asbestos docket now has in place.”

       Although the record lacks specific information about the court’s unique practices,

about the specific prejudice that those practices might inflict on the tobacco defendants,

or about the potential disruption of the asbestos docket that joinder might engender, we

do not gainsay the circuit court’s concerns. Nonetheless, the permissive joinder rule

provides the court with discretion to employ what it calls “safeguards” to address those

concerns. Under Rule 2-212(b), “[t]he court may make such orders as will prevent a

party from being embarrassed, delayed, or put to expense by the inclusion of another

[party] who asserts no claim against the party and against whom the party asserts no

claim, and may order separate trials or make other orders to prevent delay or prejudice.”

       To be sure, the language of Rule 2-212(b) is broad enough to include the safeguard

of dismissal without prejudice where it may be warranted, but a court should not resort to

dismissal as a routine remedy in cases where joinder is otherwise proper. This is

                                              -15-
especially so in cases like this one, where the damages are indivisible (Carter, 439 Md. at

351, 356-57), and the asbestos defendants have an incentive to limit their own liability by

emphasizing the culpability of the tobacco defendants, and vice versa.

         Rather than dismissal, the court might first consider such safeguards as

establishing different discovery tracks for the different classes of defendants or retaining

the short-form pleadings that it has devised for claims involving asbestos defendants.

The court might also consider ordering separate proceedings on discrete sub-issues that

affect discrete parties, such as the identity of the asbestos-containing products to which

the plaintiff was exposed. See Niemeyer & Schuett, Maryland Rules Commentary, supra,

143-44. The court or the parties themselves will undoubtedly have other reasonable

suggestions for appropriate safeguards.

         Dismissal remains an option, provided that no safeguard can afford adequate

protection. In the first instance, however, the court, in the exercise of its discretion,

should first endeavor to “tailor an order for the conduct of the litigation” so as prevent

embarrassment, delay, expense, or prejudice. Id. at 143.6

                                                    MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK
                                                    OF APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                                                    DENIED; APPEAL DISMISSED AS
                                                    MOOT; COSTS TO BE EVENLY
                                                    DIVIDED BETWEEN APPELLANTS
                                                    AND APPELLEES.

     6
      In this case, the tobacco defendants complain that the Stidhams amended the
complaint to add them as defendants only a few months before the scheduled trial,
without giving them adequate time to conduct discovery and prepare. The belated
amendment might have given the circuit court grounds to strike the amended complaint
under Md. Rule 2-341(a) had the defendants requested that remedy.

                                             -16-