Direct General Insurance Company v. Creamer et al
Filing
71
ORDER denying 51 the motion for a protective order or to quash and granting in part and denying in part 62 and 63 the motions to compel. The deadline for Delvis Eason to produce the discovery, as directed, is January 21, 2025. The Court declines to order either party to pay the opposing party's expenses incurred in making or opposing the motions. See the order for details. Signed by Magistrate Judge Patricia D. Barksdale on January 6, 2025. (KG)
United States District Court
Middle District of Florida
Jacksonville Division
DIRECT GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
NO. 3:23-cv-380-TJC-PDB
v.
SEAN L. CREAMER & DELVIS T. EASON,
Defendants.
Order
Delvis Eason moves for a protective order or to quash a subpoena issued
to a law firm. Doc. 51. Direct General Insurance Company moves to compel
answers to interrogatories, Doc. 62, and responses to requests for production,
Doc. 63. The Court heard arguments on the motions. See Doc. 67. The order
entered on February 21, 2024, Doc. 33, provides an overview of the litigation.
The deadline for Eason to produce the discovery, as directed, is January 21,
2025.
Eason’s Motion for a Protective Order or to Quash
Applying Rules 1, 26(b)(1), 26(c), and 45(d), Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, Eason’s motion, Doc. 51, is denied.
Direct General resolved some of Eason’s concerns by narrowing the scope
of the requested discovery and clarifying that it is not requesting privileged
documents. See Doc. 51 at 10; Doc. 59 at 3?4. Contrary to Eason’s argument,
the requested discovery relates to a claim or defense; specifically, the requested
discovery relates to the totality of the circumstances considered to determine
whether a settlement was realistically possible. See Barry v. GEICO Gen. Ins.
Co., 938 So. 2d 613, 618 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006) (explaining that the insurer has
the burden of showing, under the totality of the circumstances, the absence of
a realistic possibility of settlement within the policy limits). Documents after
December 15, 2019, are relevant because, according to Direct General, its
adjuster continued to reach out to Eason’s counsel about policy-limit
settlement checks previously tendered. See Doc. 59 at 12.
The cases cited by Eason are non-binding and too fact-specific to be
persuasive in this action, with its own unique facts. See Doc. 59 at 10?11.
Eason’s complaint that the law firm must conduct “an onerous privilege
review,” Doc. 51 at 11, 15?16, is more appropriately made by the law firm.
Moreover, without specifics, the Court is unable to determine how onerous the
law firm’s review would be. Eason’s claims of “several hours” on one hand and
“an exorbitant amount of time” on the other is unhelpful. See Doc. 51 at 16.
The period Eason disputes—December 15, 2019, to March 25, 2020, see Doc. 51
at 6?7; Doc. 59 at 11— is only a little more than three months.
In short, the law firm must respond to the subpoena, as limited by Direct
General.
Direct General’s Motion to Compel Answers to Interrogatories
Applying Rules 1, 26(a), 26(e), 33, and 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, Direct General’s motion to compel answers to interrogatories,
Doc. 62, is granted in part and denied in part.
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The motion is denied concerning number two of the first set, Doc. 62-1
at 6, and numbers one and two of the second set, Doc. 62-4 at 6. “An
interrogatory is not objectionable merely because it asks for an opinion or
contention that relates to fact or the application of law to fact[.]” Fed. R. Civ.
P. 33(a)(2). But an interrogatory “that purport[s] to require a detailed
narrative of the opposing parties’ case [is] generally improper because [it is]
overbroad and oppressive.” Middle District Discovery (2021) at Section IV.C.2.
The interrogatories are overbroad and oppressive in this way.
The motion is denied concerning numbers three and four of the first set,
Doc. 62-1 at 7. Eason must provide the information through his initial
disclosures and supplemental initial disclosures, as required by Rules 26(a)
and 26(e), or he faces sanctions under Rule 37(c). The case management and
scheduling order, Doc. 27, as amended, Docs. 38, 42, provides the deadlines for
Rule 26(a) disclosures and the final pretrial statement, which, under Local
Rule 3.06, must include “a list of each witness … with a notation of … the
likelihood the witness will testify and … each objection to the witness’s
testifying,” and “a list of each expert witness, with a notation of … the
substance of the testimony and … each objection to the witness’s testifying.”
Local Rule 3.06(b)(5)–(6).
The motion is granted concerning number five of the first set, Doc. 62-1
at 7. Eason must answer the interrogatory without objection. The
interrogatory relates to whether Eason knew about Direct General’s attempts
to settle the claim for the policy limit, whether Eason intended to provide
Direct General an opportunity to settle the claim, and whether Eason gave
Direct General a reason for declining to extend the deadline to return the
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financial affidavit. As explained, December 15, 2019, is not the cut-off date for
relevancy.
The motion is granted concerning numbers seven and eight of the first
set, Doc. 62-1 at 8?9. Eason must answer the interrogatories without objection.
“The grounds for objecting to an interrogatory must be stated with specificity.
Any ground not stated in a timely objection is waived unless the court, for good
cause, excuses the failure.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b)(4). Eason asserts, for the first
time in his response to the motion to compel, that the interrogatories are
improper contention interrogatories and irrelevant. Compare Doc. 62-3 at 6–7,
with Doc. 66 at 7–8. Although Eason may be correct about the nature of the
interrogatories, see Doc. 68 at 48, he has waived these grounds by failing to
timely raise them. He fails to defend his original objections. See Doc. 66 at 7?9.
The motion is granted concerning number ten of the first set, Doc. 62-1
at 10. Eason must amend his answer to the interrogatory in accord with his
counsel’s agreement at the hearing. See Doc. 68 at 48–50.
The motion is granted concerning number three of the second set, Doc.
62-4 at 7. Eason must answer the interrogatory without objection. The
interrogatory, like the request for the law firm’s documents, relates to Direct
General’s claim.
The motion is granted concerning numbers six through nine of the
second set, Doc. 62-4 at 8?9. Eason must answer the interrogatories. Whether
or not the subparts should be counted individually toward the 25-interrogatory
limit under Rule 33(a)(1), the discovery is not abusive or otherwise
unwarranted. To the extent Direct General has exceeded the limit, the Court
exercises its discretion to extend the limit.
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Direct General’s Motion to Compel Responses to Requests for Production
Applying Rules 1, 26(a)(1), 34, and 37, Direct General’s motion to compel
responses to requests for production, Doc. 63, is granted in part and denied
in part.
The motion is granted concerning numbers one through four of the first
set of requests, Doc. 63-1 at 4. Eason must respond to the requests without
objection. As explained, December 15, 2019, is not the cut-off date for
relevancy. Moreover, Eason fails to detail the asserted burden he will face in
producing the documents. See Doc. 65.
The motion is granted concerning number five of the first set of
requests, Doc. 63-1 at 5. Eason must respond to the request without objection.
He makes the argument that the request is an improper contention request,
Doc. 65 at 11–12, for the first time in his response to the motion to compel.
Compare Doc. 63-2 at 4, with Doc. 65 at 11–12. Therefore, he has waived this
ground by failing to timely raise it. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b)(4). His argument
concerning work product, Doc. 65 at 12?13, is unpersuasive; the protection of
work product does not apply to counsel’s selection of documents for initial
disclosures under Rule 26(a)(1) and thus should not apply here. The cases on
which Eason relies are non-binding and inapposite. They concern the selection
of documents to prepare a witness for a deposition. See Sporck v. Peil, 759 F.2d
312, 316 (3rd Cir. 1985) (holding that counsel’s selection process used to cull
documents and place into a notebook for a party to examine before his
deposition represents counsel’s mental impressions and legal opinion about
“how the evidence in the documents relates to the issues and defenses in the
litigation”); James Julian, Inc. v. Raytheon Co., 93 F.R.D. 138, 144 (D. Del.
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1982) (similar); Shelton v. Am. Motors Corp., 805 F.2d 1323, 1329 (8th Cir.
1986) (similar).
The motion is denied concerning number one of the second set of
requests, Doc. 63-4 at 4. Direct General’s counsel stated at the hearing that the
retainer agreement between Eason and his counsel in this action is relevant
because the day on which Eason signed the agreement is unclear. Doc. 68 at
33. Eason’s counsel agreed to disclose the signature date. Doc. 68 at 34. Beyond
this resolution, Direct General fails to show relevancy.
The motion is denied as moot concerning number two of the second set
of requests, Doc. 63-4 at 4. Eason has explained that no responsive documents
exist. See Doc. 65 at 11.
The Parties’ Requests for Sanctions
Applying Rule 37(a)(5), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Court
declines to order either party to pay the opposing party’s expenses incurred in
making or opposing the motions. Eason’s motion was substantially justified
because reasonable minds could disagree on the dispute. The Court denied in
part and granted in part Direct General’s motions.
Ordered in Jacksonville, Florida, on January 6, 2025.
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