Miller v. Garibaldi's Inc. et al
Filing
70
ORDER denying 60 Motion to Compel; granting in part and denying in part 61 Motion to Compel. The parties respective requests to recover the costs of bringing these motions are DENIED. Signed by Magistrate Judge G. R. Smith on 12/15/16. (jlm)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
SAVANNAH DIVISION
JASON MILLER, on his own
behalf and all similarly situated
individuals,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CV414-007
GARIBALDI’S, INC., a Georgia
for-profit corporation, and THE
OLDE PINK HOUSE, INC., a
Georgia for-profit corporation, )
)
Defendants.
)
ORDER
Before the Court is a discovery dispute in this Fair Labor
Standards Act (“FLSA”) collective action. Miller is the lead plaintiff and
a former server at Garibaldi’s Café, owned by defendant Garibaldi’s, Inc.
Doc. 1 at ¶ 6. He claims its “tip pool” practices deprived him, and all
similarly situated individuals, of the FLSA-mandated minimum wage.
Doc. 60 at 1-2; doc. 1 at ¶¶ 31-43. The Court conditionally certified a
collective action, doc. 36, and 21 individuals, including Miller, are joined
as plaintiffs. Doc. 61 at 1. Those plaintiffs now move to compel
Garibaldi’s to produce documents, doc. 60, while Garibaldi’s moves to
compel depositions and written discovery responses, doc. 61.
I. BACKGROUND
Employers can pay less than the generally applicable minimum
wage if an employee’s tips make up the difference between the general
minimum wage and the tipped minimum wage. The difference between
the general and tipped minimums is commonly referred to as a “tip
credit.” See Markov v. Golden Isles Cruise Lines, Inc. , 2016 WL 1117584
at * 8 (S.D. Ga. March 21, 2016) (citing Montano v. Montrose Rest.
Assocs., Inc. , 800 F.3d 186, 188 (5th Cir. 2015)). An employer can only
claim a tip credit if certain conditions are met.
See, id. ; 29 U.S.C.
203(m). If an employer takes a tip credit and the credit is later shown to
have been illegitimate, the employer is liable under the FLSA.
See
Kubiak v. S.W. Cowboy, Inc. , 164 F. Supp. 3d 1344, 1355 (M.D. Fla. 2016)
(“If an employer fails to satisfy any [of the tip-credit] preconditions, the
employer may not claim the tip credit, regardless of whether the
employee suffered actual economic harm as a result.”)
This case involves a tip credit claim based on a tip pool. See doc. 1
at 1111 37-41 (alleging mismanaged tip pool precludes defendants from
2
claiming tip credit); doc. 60 at 2; doc. 62 at 1. The FLSA does not
prohibit pooling employees’ tips, but only allows it “among employees
who customarily and regularly receive tips.” 29 U.S.C. 203(m).
Plaintiffs allege that Garibaldi’s distributed funds from the tip pool to
ineligible employees. See doc. 1 at 39. Garibaldi’s concedes that if the tip
pool were not limited to regularly and customarily tipped employees, it
“would be effectively invalidated, resulting in measurable damages to the
Plaintiffs.” Doc. 62 at 3.
II. ANALYSIS
A.
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel
1.
Job Title Documents
Plaintiffs originally sought to compel production of all documents
“referencing” certain job titles and “referring” to employees holding
those titles. Doc. 60 at 4-5, 9. Garibaldi’s objected that producing the
documents would require it “to search all of its files, including electronic
files, for every time any of these [job titles] appear in its establishment or
in its computer system.” Doc. 62 at 16. In their reply brief plaintiffs
concede that their original request “appears” to be moot because
3
Garibaldi’s has “produced most if not all of the documents which
reference the [specified] job titles.” Doc. 65 at 2.
Despite suggesting mootness, plaintiffs assert that, “to the extent
that Defendant continues to rely on its objections and refuses to produce
job descriptions, manuals, policies and procedures[,] and other
documents that speak specifically to the nature and duties [of the
identified types of employees] performed and continue to perform,
Defendant should be compelled to produce such documents.”
Id.
(emphasis added). That follow-up request clearly alters the scope of the
originals. Instead of requesting all the documents referring to the titles
and employees who held them, plaintiffs now request only documents
discussing “the nature and duties” of the specified types of employees. If
Garibaldi’s has produced all of the documents -- which plaintiffs concede
is possible -- then the request for an order is moot. If Garibaldi’s objects
to the narrowed request -- its stated objection clearly does not apply,
given that the request does not require an exhaustive review of every
document in Garibaldi’s possession -- there is no indication that the
parties have attempted to resolve this uncertainty. They were dutybound to do so before imposing on this Court.
4
See Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(a)(1) (stating motion to compel must include certification of attempt
to obtain production without court action); see also S.D. Ga. Civ. L. R.
26.5 (reminding counsel of the requirement to confer). Accordingly,
plaintiffs’ motion to compel production the job title documents is
DENIED .
2.
Tip Records
Plaintiffs also seek to compel production of “tip records,” doc. 62 at
15, or “tip pool records,” doc. 60 at 2, 9. Garibaldi’s argues that the
records requested are irrelevant and that the “requests are overly broad,
burdensome[,] and not proportional to the needs of this case.” Doc. 62 at
3. If the documents are irrelevant, the overbreadth objection is moot.
The question of relevance, therefore, will be addressed first.
Relevance is a threshold for discovery, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)
(“Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that
is relevant to any party’s claim or defense”), albeit a low one. As
Garibaldi’s succinctly states in its motion to compel, “[r]elevance is
broadly construed by courts and ‘encompasses any matter that bears on,
or reasonably could lead to other matter that could bear on, any issue
that is or may be in the case.’” Doc. 61 at 7 (quoting Oppenheimer Fund,
5
Inc. v. Sanders , 437 U.S. 340, 351 (1978)). “Rule 26, quite simply, sets
forth a very low threshold for relevancy, and thus, the court is inclined to
err in favor of discovery rather than against it.”
McCleod v. Nat’l R.R.
Passenger Corp., 2014 WL 1616414 at * 3 (S.D. Ga. Apr. 22, 2014)
(quotes and cite omitted).
Plaintiffs argue that the tip records are relevant for two reasons:
(1) they are probative of who received disbursement from the tip pool,
and (2) they are probative of the amount that each plaintiff contributed
to the pool, thus the amount of damages each plaintiff can recover.
See
doc. 60 at 3-4; doc. 65 at 3-7. Garibaldi’s responds that (1) the tip records
are not relevant 1 to the issue of who received disbursements from the tip
pool because the identity of the recipients is not in dispute, 2 and (2) that
1
Garibaldi’s makes much of the fact that Rule 26(b) has been amended to alter the
scope of discoverable information. See doc. 62 at 5-6. Those changes, although
substantive and substantial, do not change the definition of “relevance.” Instead,
they emphasize requirements already present in the Rules, like proportionality. See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26, advisory committee’s note to 2015 amendment (“Restoring the
proportionality calculation to Rule 26(b)(1) does not change the existing
responsibilities of the court and the parties to consider proportionality . . ..”); Sibley
v. Choice Hotels Int’l , 2015 WL 9413101 at * 2 (E.D.N.Y. Dec. 22, 2015) (“While
proportionality factors have now been incorporated into the Rule 26(b)(1) definition,
those factors were already a part of Federal discovery standards, appearing in Rule
26(b)(2)(C)(iii)”).
2
Although it characterizes the identity of employees receiving distributions from the
tip pool as “undisputed,” on the same page of its brief it softens that assertion -stating only that the identities of the recipients “have not and cannot be disputed by
6
plaintiffs cannot recover the tips they contributed, whether the pool was
valid or not. See doc. 62 at 2-3.
Despite Garibaldi’s assertion that there is no dispute over who
received distributions from the tip pool, plaintiffs do dispute the issue.
Doc. 65 at 3 (stating that assertion that the issue is undisputed is
“inaccurate”); see also doc. 68 at 9 (disputing identities of employees
receiving distributions from tip pool). Given the ongoing dispute 3
concerning the identities of the recipients of the pool, the tip records are
not irrelevant.
The parties vigorously disagree about the relevance of the tip
records to damages. Specifically, they dispute whether the plaintiffs are
entitled to recover all the tips that they contributed to the pool, if it is
Plaintiff.” Doc. 62 at 2. If Garibaldi’s claims that there is no dispute of material fact
as to the identities of the recipients of distributions from the tip pool, then it is free
to move for summary judgment on that issue. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a) (permitting
motion for summary judgment on any claim or defense or any part of a claim or
defense). Until then, the possibility of summary judgment does not justify allowing
it to resist otherwise proper discovery requests.
3
There is even a dispute about whether the issue is disputed. In opposition to
Garibaldi’s motion to compel, plaintiffs claim “it is undisputed that Defendants’ [sic]
required their servers[,] including all Plaintiffs[,] to contribute to a tip pool from
which its managers received tips.” Doc. 64 at 10. Garibaldi’s counters that whether
“managers” received funds from the tip pool “is the central and highly contested
issue in this case.” Doc. 68 at 8 (emphasis added). Although the parties’ back and
forth on this issue obscures rather than illuminates, one thing is clear -- the issue of
who received disbursements from the tip pool, either in terms of the titles of those
employees or the individual employees themselves, is disputed.
7
invalidated. See doc. 62 at 6-15; doc. 65 at 3-7. However, that argument
goes to the merits of plaintiffs’ claim, not the discoverability of the
documents. Plaintiffs have asserted a claim to recover,
inter alia,
“improperly retained tips.” Doc. 1 at 9. Garibaldi’s argument that the
tip records are not discoverable is, in essence, an argument that that
claim fails as a matter of law. Doc. 62 at 3 (arguing the tip records are
irrelevant because “the FLSA does not permit as a measure of damages
the return of the tips collected from the Plaintiff-servers if the tip pool is
invalidated”). That argument should be addressed in a dispositive
motion ( e.g. a motion for judgment on the pleadings or motion for
summary judgment). In the absence of a final disposition of plaintiffs’
claim, the tip records are relevant to a pending issue, and thus,
discoverable.
Garibaldi’s additionally objects to the burden of producing the tip
records. Doc. 62 at 15. It alleges that “the tip records sought . . . consist
of thousands of envelopes containing thousands of documents.”
Id.
Plaintiff’s reply claims, on the contrary, that they “seek[] only the single
sheet of paper for each server each shift that documents the amount of
tips each server was required to contribute to Defendant’s tip pool (and
8
the distributees of such tips).” Doc. 65 at 7. Plaintiffs have again
modified -- charitably, they have clarified -- the scope of their requests, 4
without any suggestion that the modification was communicated to
Garibaldi’s, and Garibaldi’s maintained its refusal to comply. In the
absence of a certification that the parties have conferred, plaintiffs’
motion to compel production of the tip records is DENIED .
3.
Directions To The Parties
Although plaintiffs are not entitled to an order compelling
responses to its original requests, much less sanctions or fees, the
documents requested are discoverable, and the requests, as stated in
plaintiffs’ reply brief, mitigate the concerns expressed in Garibaldi’s
objections. In order to facilitate the most efficient resolution of this
dispute, and given the Court’s considerable discretion to control
4
Plaintiffs do not acknowledge the shift in scope. Doc. 65 at 7. The original
requests sought “[a]ny and all writings evidencing the distributions of tips
Defendants retained” and “[a]ny and all writings evidencing amounts to tips [sic]
Defendants retained.” Doc. 60 at 2-3. Garibaldi’s interpretation of those requests as
including, for example, credit card receipts showing the amounts that servers were
tipped, see doc. 62 at 15, is reasonable. Garibaldi’s suggestion that the requests, even
as written, would include “data regarding the total sales of food and beverages . . .
[and] a copy of every credit card receipt for every table the server serviced whose
occupants used a credit card to pay for their meal,” doc. 62 at 15, strains credulity.
Disagreements about the scope of requests should be settled during the parties’
conference, before moving to compel.
9
discovery, within 30 days from the date that this Order is served,
Garibaldi’s shall produce the following documents to plaintiffs’ counsel:
(1)
To the extent not already produced, all job descriptions,
manuals, policies and procedures, and other documents that
speak specifically to the nature of the duties that Garibaldi’s
“MODs,” “Managers on Duty,” or “Maître Ds,” performed at
any time relevant to this action; and
(2)
Each “check-out” or “close-out” sheet 5 for each server for
each shift that documents the amount of tips each server was
required to contribute to the tip pool and the recipients of
distributions from the tip pool.
If Garibaldi’s objects to producing the documents, it should confer
with plaintiffs and attempt to resolve its objections. If amicable
resolution is impossible, then Garibaldi’s must move the Court to modify
this Order, and show cause why the documents should not be produced.
It must do so within 21 days from the date that this Order is served.
B. Garibaldi’s Motion To Compel
Garibaldi’s seeks to compel discovery from plaintiffs who “opted
in” to this case. An employee who alleges that he has been paid less than
5
Garibalid’s explains that it objects to producing the “check-out envelopes with their
recording of each dollar amount tipped out to the maître d’s, bartenders, server
assistants[,] and food runners.” Doc. 62 at 3. It identifies “check-out” or “close out”
sheets as “the front” of the “check out” envelope. Id. at 2-3; 2 n. 1. It has attached
an example of a “check out envelope” to its brief. See doc. 62-5. The Court interprets
the plaintiffs’ request for “the single sheet of paper” as limited to the “check out” or
“close out” sheet, as exemplified by doc. 62-5 at 2.
10
the minimum wage can bring an action against his employer “for and in
behalf of himself . . . and other employees similarly situated.” 29 U.S.C.
§ 216(b). The similarly situated employees are not considered plaintiffs,
however, unless their written consent is filed with the court.
Id.
Individuals who have consented to join are referred to as “opt-in
plaintiffs.”
But opt-in plaintiffs can create difficulties in discovery. See Perrin
v. Papa John’s Int’l, Inc. , 2014 WL 4749547 at *3 (E.D. Mo. Sept. 24,
2014) (pointing out “disputes regarding the proper scope of
individualized discovery from opt-in FLSA plaintiffs are common”).
Courts have relied on the specific features of each case to resolve such
disputes, even where the number of plaintiffs is relatively low. Compare
Daniel v. Quail Int’l , Inc., 2010 WL 55941 (M.D. Ga. Jan. 5, 2010)
(allowing individual discovery in 36-plaintiff FLSA action), with Morales-
Arcadio v. Shannon Produce Farms, Inc. , 2006 WL 2578835 (S.D. Ga.
Aug. 28, 2006) (refusing to compel discovery responses from eleven opt-in
plaintiffs in 45-plaintiff FLSA action). Much of the parties’ dispute here
focuses on whether Garibaldi’s is entitled to “individualized discovery”
from opt-in plaintiffs.
11
1. Deposition Attendance
Garibaldi’s has conducted 17 depositions in this case. It has
deposed 14 of the 21 plaintiffs, and several have been deposed more than
once. See doc. 61 at 5; doc. 68 at 6. Garibaldi’s wants to depose the
seven opt-in plaintiffs that it has yet to depose, doc. 61 at 5, and plaintiffs
object.
An order compelling the additional depositions is not appropriate
here. Garibaldi’s was required, yet failed, either to secure a stipulation
or seek the Courts permission to hold more than 10 depositions. See Fed.
R. Civ. P. 30(a)(2)(A)(i) (“A party must obtain leave of court . . . if the
parties have not stipulated to the deposition and [] the deposition would
result in more than 10 depositions being taken . . . by the defendants”).
Depositions of any additional plaintiffs, therefore, required either
stipulation or the Court’s leave.
With no stipulation and faced with plaintiff’s objection, 6 Garibaldi’s
was required to seek the Court’s leave for the additional depositions. See
6
Garibaldi’s suggests that plaintiffs’ counsel has implicitly waived any objection to
the depositions through failing to raise the issue by motion, as contemplated in the
parties’ Rule 26(f) Report, doc. 48 at 2-3, and by cooperating with scheduling and
taking depositions. Doc. 61 at 11-12. It has submitted selected email correspondence
with plaintiffs’ counsel concerning the schedule in support of that assertion. See doc.
12
Advanced Sterilization Prods., etc. v. Jacob , 190 F.R.D. 284, 286 (D.
Mass. 2000) (Rule 30 requires that “in the absence of a stipulation, a
party seeking to take more than ten depositions must explicitly seek and
obtain leave of court before that party can commence any depositions in
excess of the ten-deposition limit”). Since it failed to do so, it is not
entitled to an order compelling depositions now. Garibaldi’s request for
such an order, then, is DENIED, as is its alternative request for
dismissal based on plaintiffs’ failure to attend their depositions.
It may be appropriate for Garibaldi’s to take the additional
depositions that it now seeks to compel. But it thus far has failed to
make a sufficient showing of necessity. Garibaldi’s argument focuses on
whether it is entitled to “individualized discovery” in this action, see doc.
61 at 9-12, and, as discussed above, it may well be. However, even if they
61-1 at 4-41. In order to modify the limits on discovery imposed by the Federal
Rules, parties must stipulate to those modifications, and the emails do not show that.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 29(b) (permitting stipulation to modification of “other procedures
governing or limiting discovery”); Libertarian Party of Ohio v. Husted , 302 F.R.D.
472, 478 (S.D. Ohio 2014) (refusing to enforce alleged informal stipulation where
correspondence submitted in support was subject to alternative interpretations);
Marfork Coal Co. v. Smith , 2011 WL 111880 at * 4 n. 8 (S.D. W. Va. Jan. 13, 2011)
(finding letter conceding to a request for extension of time for discovery was not a
“stipulation,” for Rule 29 purposes; such a stipulation “is a separate written
document signed by the attorneys for the parties setting forth specifically their
agreement respecting changes in discovery procedure”). Although neither party
discusses whether the additional depositions were stipulated to, given the plaintiffs’
current opposition, the Court assumes they were not.
13
were entitled to such discovery, it would be subject to the Federal Rules,
including the 10-deposition limit. See Faust v. Comcast Cable Commc’ns
Mgmt., LLC , 2013 WL 1395933 at * 3 (D. Md. April 3, 2013). “Because
[the Rule 30(a)] limit is intended to curb abusive discovery practices, it
stands to reason that a party wishing to conduct more than 10
depositions has the burden of persuading the court that these additional
depositions are necessary. This showing cannot be based upon general
assertions. Rather, ‘the moving party must make a particularized
showing why extra depositions are necessary.’” Moore v. Abbott Labs. ,
2009 WL 73876 at * 1 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 8, 2009) (quoting Schiller Am., Inc.
v. Welch Allyn, Inc. , 2007 WL 2702247 at * 1 (S.D. Fla. Sept. 14, 2007)).
Garibaldi’s motion does not make a sufficiently particularized
showing of necessity to grant it leave to take additional depositions. The
issues it identifies as the likely subjects of the depositions 7 may be proper
subjects for discovery, but it is not clear that depositions are necessary to
solicit that information, see doc. 64 at 6 (arguing Garibaldi’s records
7
Garibaldi’s suggests that the additional depositions would cover “each Plaintiff’s
contact with any maître d’s, their observation of the duties and conduct of the maître
d’s, the length of employment and rate of pay in order to determine each Plaintiff’s
damages, and each Plaintiff’s recollections and records pertaining to the allegedly
invalid tip pool, including whether each Plaintiff received notice of the tip pool details
as required by 29 U.S.C. § 203(m).” Doc. 61 at 12-13.
14
provide information on damages and notice). Garibaldi’s also argues that
the additional depositions would not be cumulative or duplicative
because “there were several persons employed as maître d’s during
different periods of time” relevant to this case, and “[e]ach plaintiff
worked with different maître d’s.” Doc. 68 at 5. Even assuming that
there was no overlap between plaintiffs and maître d’s, Garibaldi’s has
not established that depositions of each individual plaintiff is necessary
to determine whether the maître d’s were proper recipients of tip pool
distributions.
Given the Court’s broad discretion to control discovery and
scheduling, and Garibaldi’s diligent efforts to schedule the depositions
prior to the close of discovery, the Court will give it a chance to seek
leave to conduct them. But the parties must first confer and determine
whether plaintiffs will stipulate to the additional depositions. If they
will, that stipulation should be reduced to writing, including a schedule
for the additional depositions, and filed with the Court. If plaintiffs will
not stipulate to the additional depositions within 21 days from the date
that this Order is filed, then Garibaldi’s may move the Court for leave to
15
hold the additional depositions, showing why each of the additional
depositions is necessary.
2. Written Discovery
It is undisputed that “nine Plaintiffs have failed to respond to the
Defendant’s written discovery requests.”
See doc. 61 at 6; doc. 64 at 3
(explaining that any plaintiff’s failure to respond to discovery “was due
almost entirely to a lack of communication with undersigned counsel”).
Because several plaintiffs have failed to respond, Garibaldi’s requests an
order “compelling the Plaintiffs . . . to respond fully to Defendant’s
written discovery requests.” Doc. 61 at 7.
Nothing in the Federal Rules allowed plaintiffs to ignore properly
served discovery requests.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(a)(1) (allowing “a
party” to service interrogatories “on any other party”); 33(b)(2) (“The
responding party must serve its answers and any objections within 30
days after being served.”) (emphasis added); 33(b)(3) (“Each
interrogatory must, to the extent it is not objected to, be answered
separately and fully in writing under oath.”); 34(a) (allowing “a party” to
serve requests to produce “on any other party”); 34(b)(2)(A) (absent
here-inapplicable exception, requiring requests be answered “in writing
16
within 30 days after being served”); 34(b)(2)(B) (“[T]he response must
either state that inspection and related activities will be permitted as
requested or state with specificity the grounds for objecting to the
request, including the reasons.”). “As a general rule, when a party fails
to object timely to discovery requests, such objections are waived.”
United Steelworkers of Am., AFL-CIO-CLC v. Ivaco, Inc. , 2002 WL
31932875 at * 4 (N.D. Ga. Jan. 13, 2003); see also Limu Co., LLC v.
Burling , 2013 WL 1482760 at * 1 (M.D. Fla. April 11, 2013) (quotes and
cites omitted) (stating “[t]here is substantial legal precedent supporting
the general rule that if a party fails to respond in writing within thirty
days of being served with a request for production of documents, it is
appropriate for the court to find that the party’s objections are waived,
unless the court finds good cause and excuses that failure” and collecting
cases). Under the Rules, then, plaintiffs could respond, object, or seek a
protective order, under Rule 26(c).
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c). They did
none of those things, so the Court GRANTS Garibaldi’s request for an
order compelling responses to its written discovery from plaintiffs
Richard Nagro, Kenneth Sheets, Thomas Medders, Matthew Riggs, Chris
Graham, Lenion Brooker, Blair Ritzert, Madeline Austin, and Todd
17
Jones. The plaintiffs shall serve answers to Garibaldi’s discovery
requests within 30 days from the date that this Order is served. Failure
to comply with this Order shall result in a recommendation that the
recalcitrant plaintiffs’ claims be dismissed.
3. Interrogatory No. 10
Garibaldi’s wants this Court to overrule plaintiffs’ objection to its
interrogatory requesting that plaintiffs “describe all reasons, both
factual and legal, which support the allegation” that “Defendants
knowingly, willfully, or in reckless disregard of the rights of Plaintiffs
failed to pay minimum wages required.” Doc. 61 at 17. Plaintiffs insist
that such would require disclosure of material protected by attorneyclient privilege or the work-product doctrine. Doc. 61-6 at 7.
Notwithstanding their objection, plaintiffs respond with a legal
conclusion -- “that Defendants knowingly, willfully or in reckless
disregard of the rights of Plaintiffs failed to pay minimum wage as
required by law.” Id.; see also, doc. 61 at 17.
18
Contention interrogatories are nothing new, 8 and with them a
party is free to learn “the principal or material facts which support an
allegation or defense.” Moses v. Halstead , 236 F.R.D. 667, 674 (D. Kan.
2006) (quotes and cites omitted). Further, plaintiffs’ objection on the
basis of attorney-client privilege and work product protection are iffy, at
best.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26, advisory committee’s note to 1970
amendment (given amendment to allow contention interrogatories, “a
party and his attorney . . . may be required to disclose, to some extent,
mental impressions, opinions, or conclusions”). Contention
interrogatories may not, however, reach questions of “pure law.” S ee
Fed. R. Civ. P. 33, advisory committee’s note to 1970 amendment (even
“under the new language interrogatories may not extend to issues of
‘pure law,’ i.e. , legal issues unrelated to the facts of the case”).
Garibaldi’s interrogatory is proper, therefore, to the extent it seeks
“opinions or contentions that call for the application of law to facts,” and
8
“As this court previously explained: “Contention’ interrogatories are
interrogatories that seek to clarify the basis for or scope of an adversary’s legal
claims. The general view is that contention interrogatories are a perfectly
permissible form of discovery, to which a response ordinarily would be required.’”
Eller v. Liberty Cnty. Ga. , 2010 WL 2402770 at * 1 (S.D. Ga. Jun. 14, 2011) (quoting
Starcher v. Corr. Med. Sys., Inc. , 144 F.3d 418, 421 (6th Cir. 1998)).
19
the “principal or material facts” supporting plaintiffs’ allegation. 9 See
Moses , 236 F.R.D. at 674.
Plaintiffs’ bare, conclusory restatement of the contention whose
support the interrogatory sought is facially insufficient. In fact, it verges
on sanctionable conduct, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 (allowing sanctions for
advancing frivolous argument in motion presented to the court). Even if,
as plaintiffs’ contend, the facts supporting the contention are “wellknown” to Garibaldi’s, doc. 64 at 10 , it obviously does not follow that the
alleged relationship between those facts and the contention at issue is
also well-known.
Plaintiffs’ response states that their counsel “offered to submit a
supplemental response to the interrogatory and is still willing to do so.”
Id. at 9 n. 7. Garibaldi’s, apparently, was unaware of that offer. 10 See
9
Garibaldi’s request, as written, seeks “all reasons, both factual and legal”
supporting the allegation. Doc. 61 at 17. Contention interrogatories “are overly
broad and unduly burdensome on their face if they seek ‘all facts’ supporting a claim
or defense, such that the answering party is required to provide a narrative account
of its case. Thus, the general rule . . . is that interrogatories may properly ask for the
‘principal or material’ facts which support an allegation or defense.” Moses , 236
F.R.D. at 674 (internal quotes and cites omitted). The parties should bear that
limitation in mind as they confer about the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ supplementary
response.
10
Garibaldi’s reply brief argues that the supplement plaintiffs offer in their response
is insufficient to show that the alleged violation of the FLSA was knowing, willful, or
20
doc. 68 at 8. Garibaldi’s is entitled to a complete response to
Interrogatory No. 10, but if plaintiffs are willing to voluntarily
supplement their response, then there is no action for the Court to take.
Accordingly, Garibaldi’s motion to compel further response to
Interrogatory No. 10 is DENIED without prejudice. If plaintiffs fail to
supplement their response, as offered, or if Garibaldi’s contends that the
supplemental response remains insufficient, it is free to renew its motion
to compel, including its request for sanctions.
III. CONCLUSION
To summarize: Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel (doc. 60) responses to
its original discovery requests is DENIED , while Garibaldi’s Motion to
Compel (doc. 61) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. The
parties’ respective requests to recover the costs of bringing these motions
are DENIED .
It is clear that discovery in this case has not progressed smoothly.
As the parties confer, as contemplated above, they should remember that
reckless. Doc. 68 at 8-12. As the parties confer about the sufficiency of plaintiffs’
supplemental response, they are reminded that a contention interrogatory is not,
indeed cannot be, insufficient because it fails to provide adequate proof of the
contention. If a contention is shown to be factually unsupported, the proper response
is a motion for summary judgment.
21
they each have an obligation to ensure that discovery is conducted in a
manner consistent with the letter and spirit of the Federal Rules.
See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(g); id. advisory committee’s note to 1983 amendment
(“Rule 26(g) imposes an affirmative duty to engage in pretrial discovery
in a responsible manner that is consistent with the spirit and purposes of
Rules 26 through 37.”). Rather than meet and confer, the parties here
slowly worked out much of their dispute through their briefs before this
Court. That obviously wastes this Court’s time. Just as obviously, the
Court could not function if it had to routinely stop and address every
discovery spat, including those otherwise resolvable through a genuine,
good-faith effort on the part of counsel. That’s precisely why discovery is
supposed to be self-enforcing, and thus why the obligation to confer is
enforced. Sua sponte sanctions await those who casually disregard this
reminder.
The Court has amended the Scheduling Order in this case to
extend the dispositive motions deadline until 45 days after the resolution
of the parties’ discovery motions. Doc. 69. Given the additional
conference and discovery contemplated in this Order, the parties should
consider, when they confer, whether an additional extension is necessary.
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If they determine that it is, then they should move within 21 days from
the date that this Order is served and propose any additional Scheduling
Order modifications.
SO ORDERED, this 15th day of December, 2016.
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
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