Rollins v. Cargill, Inc. et al
Filing
62
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER denying 39 Motion for In Camera Inspection of Records; granting in part and denying in part 44 Defendant Cargill Meat Solutions Corporation's Motion for Sanctions; denying 51 Plaintiff's Motion to File Under Seal Plaintiff's Response to Defendant Cargill Meat Solution's Motion for Sanctions; and denying as moot 53 Defendants' Motion to Strike Plaintiff's Response to Defendants' Motion for Sanctions. See Memorandum and Order for additional details. Signed by Magistrate Judge Gerald L. Rushfelt on 8/24/2012. (bw)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
RONALD ROLLINS,
Plaintiff,
v.
CARGILL, INC., et al.,
Defendants.
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
Case No. 11-1147-EFM
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The Court has the following motions under consideration: (1) Motion for In Camera
Inspection of Records (ECF No. 39); (2) Defendant Cargill Meat Solutions Corporation’s (CMSC)
Motion for Sanctions (ECF No. 44); (3) Plaintiff’s Motion to File Under Seal Plaintiff’s Response
to Defendant Cargill Meat Solution’s Motion for Sanctions (ECF No. 51); and (4) Defendants’
Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions (ECF No. 53). For the
reasons that follow, the Court denies the motions of Plaintiff and the defense motion to strike. It
grants in part and denies in part the motion for sanctions.
I.
Nature of the Matter Before the Court
By his complaint Plaintiff alleges he was terminated from his employment with Defendant
because of age discrimination and in retaliation for his complaints about alleged food safety
violations.1 During his employment Plaintiff took more than 5,300 documents that he did not return
upon his termination.2 He has kept them confidential, showing them only to his attorney and
providing them to Defendants as initial disclosures in this case. Defendants have demanded that
Plaintiff destroy or return the documents.
1
2
See Pretrial Order § 2.
For ease of reference, the Court will refer to these documents as “the documents” or “the
5,300 documents”.
By his motion for inspection Plaintiff asks the Court to (1) order Defendants to designate
which of the documents it considers to be confidential or trade secrets; (2) review the designated
documents to determine whether they are confidential or trade secrets; (3) inspect the designated
documents “to determine whether they are relevant, material, or reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of evidence admissible at trial”; and (4) “enter appropriate orders for their retention,
production, use at trial and post trial destruction.”3 On June 21, 2012, Defendant CMSC responded
to the motion for inspection and moved for sanctions.4 Eighteen days later, on July 9, 2012, Plaintiff
moved to file under seal his response to the motion for sanctions and his reply to the response to his
earlier motion for inspection..5 Defendants then moved to strike his response/reply as untimely.6
Plaintiff responded that the filing is timely.7 The motions are fully briefed and ready for ruling.
II.
MOTION TO FILE UNDER SEAL AND MOTION TO STRIKE
Plaintiff seeks leave to file a response/reply under seal. Defendants move to strike the
response/reply as untimely. The response/reply is untimely. Unless the Court orders otherwise, D.
Kan. Rule 6.1(d) sets a fourteen-day period for filing a response to a non-dispositive motion and the
same time period for filing a reply to a response. The Court has not extended that time period.
Plaintiff did not file his motion for leave to file under seal before the fourteen-day period to file his
response/reply expired. He argues Fed. R. Civ. P. 6(d) extends the fourteen-day period by three days;
3
See Mot. Inspection ¶¶ 5-6.
4
See Mot. for Sanctions at 1.
5
See Mot. File Under Seal at 1.
6
See Mot. Strike at 1.
7
See Pl.’s Resp. Defs.’ Reply to Pl.’s Resp. Opp’n Defs.’ Mot. Sanctions (ECF 60) at 1-2.
2
thus making his filing timely.8 But the fourteen-day period includes “the additional 3-day period
allowed under Fed. R. Civ. P. 6(d).”9 Defendant has filed a reply memorandum to the response.
Given the untimeliness of the proposed filing, the Court denies Plaintiff leave to file it under seal.
The Court otherwise denies the motion to strike as moot.
III.
MOTIONS FOR IN CAMERA INSPECTION AND FOR SANCTIONS
Plaintiff moves for in camera review of the documents he obtained during his employment.
Defendant CMSC responded to that motion with its motion for sanctions. Both motions in general
address the same subject matter, i.e., what action if any the Court should take with regard to documents–over 5,300 in number–which Plaintiff took from Defendant CMSC without its permission
during the course of his employment and before this law suit was filed.
The basic facts behind these motions are not in dispute.10 On August 10, 1994, Plaintiff
signed a “Confidential Information and Invention Agreement.” He thereby agreed not to disclose
any confidential or trade secret information of CMSC while employed or even after his employment
ends.11 Through that Agreement he also agreed to return all confidential information and materials
after his employment terminated.12 In 1996 or 1997 he obtained permission to take documents home
as part of his duties on a safety committee.13 During the last year or so of his employment he also
8
See id.
9
See D. Kan. Rule 6.1(d).
10
Compare Mot. Inspection (setting out basic facts) with Mot. Sanctions (setting out basic
facts and including portions of a deposition transcript of Plaintiff).
11
See Dep. Pl. at 69-70, attached as Ex. A to Mot. Sanctions.
12
See id. at 70.
13
See id. at 239-40.
3
took documents home for informational purposes and record keeping – some of which were
designated as confidential or trade secrets.14 Although he was not expressly permitted to take them
home, they were relevant and necessary to his job duties, and no one told him he could not take them
home.15 He stated he did not know that he needed permission to take them home and that he wanted
to preserve food safety issues he had raised at work.16 After his termination no one asked him to
return any documents, and he did not remember the instructions from his 1994 Agreement.17
Plaintiff admits the documents belong to Defendants. He says they have indeed been provided to Defendants; albeit his counsel has retained copies for use at trial. He contends the documents are relevant evidence to support his instant claim for employment discrimination. He asks for
the privilege of retaining copies. He further asks that Defendants be ordered to designate which of
the documents they consider to be confidential or trade secret. He proposes that the Court then conduct an in camera inspection to make a similar assessment of them and “determine whether they are
relevant, material,” or otherwise discoverable. Defendant CMSC by contrast asks the Court to order
immediate return of both originals and copies of the documents. It also asks for sanctions against
Plaintiff.
A.
Motion for In Camera Inspection
Plaintiff seeks in camera review of documents that he obtained during the course of his
employment. He cites no rule in support of his motion. The Court knows of no rule or statute that
14
Id. at 240-44.
15
Id. at 241-42.
16
Id. at 242-43.
17
Id. at 243.
4
proposes for it to conduct the in camera review as Plaintiff proposes. He apparently addresses the
discretion of the Court to resolve a dispute arising from a tortious conversion of personal property
and not from any discovery procedure in this case. Defendant suggests that its own review of the
documents to determine their relevancy, materiality, and discoverability would allow for a more
productive use of judicial resources than an in camera inspection, as proposed by Plaintiff.
The Court agrees with Defendant that an in camera inspection of these 5,300 documents
would be a poor use both of its time and its judicial function. When appropriate, the Court can and
will conduct an in camera inspection of documents. In limited circumstances it may do so to
determine the existence of privilege or work product, after the parties have asserted those characterizations. Similarly, a party may make an initial determination that its documents are confidential
or trade secret. That more commonly leads to a protective order to restrict their use. It does not
require some pro forma judicial determination as to the accuracy of the characterization. Nor does
the Court generally conduct in camera inspections simply to determine if proffered documents will
indeed be admissible evidence at trial. It will address those questions when the documents are
offered at trial or when they have been identified as trial exhibits and are the subject of motions in
limine.
In this instance Plaintiff does not ask the Court to examine documents to determine the
applicability of privilege or work product. Nor does the Court find that Defendants have designated
specifically any of the documents as confidential or otherwise subject to protection afforded by the
protective order entered in this case. In the absence of appropriate authority to conduct the requested
in camera inspection, the Court declines to undertake such inspection. It finds such an undertaking
unnecessary to the resolution of these motions. A pretrial and wholesale review of documents to
5
determine their possible admissibility and use at trial is an undertaking for the parties and their
counsel, rather than the Court, to pursue. The Court denies the motion for inspection.
B.
Motion for Sanctions
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26, 33, 34, and 36, Defendant CMSC moves for sanctions for
Plaintiff’s “failure to return documents he took from CMSC without permission.”18 It seeks an order
to recover its property and sanction Plaintiff for his allegedly deceptive acts. Although it thus cites
four rules of discovery, Defendant has not shown how any of them specifically relate to the alleged
misconduct of Plaintiff. The parties agree that he took the documents prior to his termination of
employment in January 2010, some sixteen months before this law suit was filed. They appear also
to agree that Plaintiff has a duty to return the documents to Defendant. Consequently, the Court
views his failure to be a tortious conversion of personal property, rather than a violation of discovery
rules. The briefing suggests that Defendant indeed has considered if necessary a separate tort action
against Plaintiff, perhaps for replevin and damages. That possibility, of course, does not resolve the
current question of how the documents may be used in this litigation, if at all.
Inasmuch as the parties have submitted this question to the Court, it will address it as best
it can to achieve a resolution as fair as possible to all of them. By its citation of cases, Defendant
more appropriately suggests an inherent power for the Court to sanction a party. If Rules 26, 33, 34,
and 36 do not specifically apply, the Court nevertheless looks more broadly to the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. And Rule 1 does call upon it to construe and administer the rules “. . . to secure
the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding.”
18
See Mot. Sanctions at 2.
6
The federal courts have the inherent power “to prevent abuses, oppression, and injustice.”19
This includes the power to sanction “to regulate its docket, promote judicial efficiency and deter
frivolous filings.”20 Federal courts may also sanction litigants through their “inherent authority to
ensure that parties abide by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, protect the integrity of the judicial
system, and prevent abuse of the judicial process.”21 Through their inherent power, courts may
sanction a party for misappropriating property or confidential information of an opposing party.22
They may likewise decline to exercise their inherent authority to sanction when the conduct does not
appear to warrant it.23 Given “their very potency, inherent powers must be exercised with restraint
and discretion.”24 Whether to impose sanctions under the Court’s inherent power is within the sound
discretion of the Court.25 The party seeking sanctions has the burden to show that sanctions are
warranted.26 In determining whether conduct warrants sanctions, the courts consider “the totality of
19
Gumbel v. Pitkin, 124 U.S. 131, 144 (1888).
20
RTC v. Dabney, 73 F.3d 262, 267 (10th Cir. 1995).
21
Coleman-Hill v. Governor Mifflin Sch. Dist., 271 F.R.D. 549, 552 (E.D. Pa. 2010).
22
See Jackson v. Microsoft Corp., 211 F.R.D. 423, 430-32 (W.D. Wash.2002), aff’d 78 Fed.
App’x 588 (9th Cir.2003); Fayemi v. Hambrecht and Quist, Inc., 174 F.R.D. 319, 323-25
(S.D.N.Y.1997); Glynn v. EDO Corp., No. JFM-07-01660, 2010 WL 3294347, at *3 (D. Md. Aug.
20, 2010); Ashman v. Solectron Corp., No. C 08-1430JF(HRL), 2008 WL 5071101, at *2 (N.D. Cal.
Dec. 1, 2008).
23
See Mike v. Dymon, Inc., No. 95-2405-EEO, 1996 WL 427761, at *6 (D. Kan. July 25,
24
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 44 (1991).
25
See Rogler v. Standard Ins. Co., 30 F. App’x 909, 914 (10th Cir. 2002).
26
See id. (stating no disagreement with District Court on that matter).
1996).
7
the circumstances.”27
Defendant CMSC seeks an order for Plaintiff to return all “documents he took from CMSC
without permission” and to sanction him for his “self help” discovery.28 It proposes that “[s]anctions
may include dismissal of the action, restriction regarding the use of the documents at trial, disqualification of counsel, and/or monetary sanctions.”29
Although the basic facts about acquisition of the documents are not in dispute, the parties
characterize them differently. Defendant CMSC emphasizes the conduct of Plaintiff as wrongful and
as discovery misconduct. It does not convince the Court, however, that his conduct is so egregious
as Defendant suggests. Admittedly he took the documents during his employment, which terminated
long before this law suit was filed. There is no suggestion he took them to facilitate this or any other
legal action. The Court finds no contention that he has misused them to the detriment of Defendant
or has shown them to anyone other than his attorney. Upon his termination Plaintiff did not return
the documents, although he had a duty to do so by virtue of the agreement he had signed sixteen
years earlier. His retention of them appears to be a continuing conversion by failure to timely return
them to Defendant as their lawful owner. Counsel for Plaintiff asserts and CMSC does not dispute,
however, that all the documents have been provided to it in the course of this litigation, notwithstanding her controversial retention of copies for use as evidence.
Both parties appear to agree that some, if not all, of the documents are confidential or contain
trade secrets and are thus within the scope of the confidentiality agreement that Plaintiff had earlier
27
In re Baker, 744 F.2d 1438, 1440 (10th Cir. 1984); accord Davis v. Miller, 571 F.3d 1058,
1064 (10th Cir. 2009).
28
Mot. Sanctions at 9.
29
See id.
8
signed. But the Court otherwise finds nothing specific as to which or how many of the documents
fall within either category. Was it 5,300 or simply a half-dozen or so? Plaintiff proposes that CMSC
be required to make that designation. To support its own motion, Defendant could have done so, but
there is no suggestion that it did. It does not deny having been provided with all the documents. It
does assert that they include confidential information and trade secrets. But it does not suggest that
all the documents fall within those categories. Whether or not they are either confidential or trade
secret generally involves questions of fact, moreover, to be substantiated by affidavit, sworn testimony, or other satisfactory proof. A mere suggestion in the brief seldom suffices. The Court is left
with the uncertainty as to the number. It can note as a general proposition that employers sometimes
can and do provide employees with documents that are neither confidential nor trade secrets and
sometimes with the intent that they be distributed to family, friends, and others.
Plaintiff suggests that Defendant should have provided some of the documents either in
response to discovery requests in this case or as part of its disclosures, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
26. The Court agrees with Defendant that its duty to provide disclosures relates only to items it
intends to use in support of its defense, not to those Plaintiff may use to prove his claim. Defendant
has not addressed its alleged failure, however, to provide documents in response to discovery
requests.
Considering all the relevant circumstances, the Court finds that Defendant CMSC has carried
its burden to show that some sanction is warranted. Accordingly, it will exercise its inherent power
to direct that Plaintiff re-deliver to Defendant all the documents in question, approximately or
slightly more than 5,300 in all. It will authorize counsel for Plaintiff, however, to retain copies only
of those documents that he intends to offer into evidence and to provide to Defendants a list of them.
9
CMSC relies on various cases from other jurisdictions to support its request for sanctions.
But the totality of the circumstances distinguish this case from those cases in material respects. The
acquisition of the documents here appears to have occurred during the ordinary course of employment, before any litigation had commenced. There is no allegation that Plaintiff rifled through files
or documents that were outside the scope of his employment. Although some of the documents may
be trade secrets or other confidential information, there is no allegation that he took any document
protected by a privilege or as work product. CMSC, furthermore, provides no detail about the
confidentiality of the documents to accurately gauge the need to maintain their confidentiality. There
is no suggestion, moreover, that Plaintiff has misused the documents by revealing them to
competitors or the general public. He instead held the documents in confidence – only showing them
to his attorney in this case and then disclosing them to Defendants in his initial disclosures. That
disclosure as well as Plaintiff’s testimony on deposition does not show an individual who is acting
with deception or an improper motive. Finally, CMSC does not allege that it has been harmed in any
way by the conduct of Plaintiff in taking the documents. Plaintiff also asserts, and CMSC does not
controvert the suggestion, that the documents he took are relevant to his claims and discoverable.
Nor does it oppose the suggestion that they should have been produced to Plaintiff in response to
whatever requests for discovery he may have served. Under these facts the Court does not find that
additional sanctions are appropriate.
Defendant suggests Plaintiff should seek production of relevant documents through legitimate
discovery, as provided by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and not be allowed to retain the
benefits of “self-help” discovery. As a general proposition, the Court agrees. As already noted,
however, the Court finds no adequate, detailed explanation as to why such discovery has not led to
10
such production in this case. Now discovery has closed. The Court must determine as a matter of
ultimate fairness, therefore, whether justice for both parties is better served by a ruling that would
permit Plaintiff to benefit from his own conversion of Defendant’s personalty or by a contrary
finding that would effectively immunize all 5,300 documents from further use in this case, even if
some of them may be admissible evidence upon an issue of alleged discrimination in employment.
To create that kind of immunity could lead to resolving this case upon these collateral matters, not
upon the merits. And it could accord to the Defendant a benefit beyond the repair of any damage it
has shown by the misconduct of Plaintiff. Fed. R. Civ. P. 1 leads the Court to find a more equitable
solution.
The parties agree that Plaintiff should return all documents to CMSC, apparently pursuant
to his signed agreement. They disagree as to whether his counsel may retain copies or otherwise
have access to them without seeking them through conventional discovery procedures. Because the
parties appear to agree that Plaintiff should return the documents, the Court will direct Plaintiff to
return to Defendant all original documents within twenty days of the date of this Memorandum and
Order. But within that time he shall also identify to CMSC and retain copies only of any documents
he intends to use as evidence in this case. Defendants may designate any of the documents that are
either confidential or trade secret and subject to the Protective Order entered in this case. By its
rulings the Court does not purport to determine any issue that may arise between the parties in the
event Defendants or either of them files any separate action for conversion.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For reasons thus stated, the Court denies the Motion for In Camera Inspection of Records
(ECF No. 39). It grants in part and denies in part Defendant Cargill Meat Solutions Corporation’s
11
Motion for Sanctions (ECF No. 44), as herein set forth. It denies Plaintiff’s Motion to File Under
Seal Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant Cargill Meat Solution’s Motion for Sanctions (ECF No. 51
and Defendants’ Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions (ECF
No. 53).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated in Kansas City, Kansas on this 24th day of August, 2012.
S/Gerald L. Rushfelt
Gerald L. Rushfelt
U.S. Magistrate Judge
12
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?