Wagner Aeronautical, Inc. et al. v. National Institute for Aviation Research et al.
Filing
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER granting in part and denying in part 1 Motion to Enforce Rule 45 Subpoena and Request for Expedited Hearing. Signed by Magistrate Judge Kenneth G. Gale on 10/7/21. (tl)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
WAGNER AERONAUTICAL, INC.;
)
MAMMOTH FREIGHTERS LLC; WILLIAM )
WAGNER; and WILLIAM TARPLEY
)
)
Movants,
)
)
v.
) Case No. 6:21-MC-104-JWB-KGG
)
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR AVIATION
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RESEARCH, WICHITA STATE
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UNIVERSITY,
)
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Respondent.
)
)
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON EMERGENCY MOTION TO ENFORCE
RULE 45 SUBPOENA AND REQUEST FOR EXPEDITED HEARING
Now before the Court is Movants’ Emergency1 Motion to Enforce Rule 45
Subpoena and Request for Expedited Hearing. Movants move, pursuant to Fed. R .Civ.
P. 45, to enforce their subpoena for non-party National Institute for Aviation Research
(“NIAR”), a department of Wichita State University (“WSU”), to produce certain
documents. Movants assert that the objections by Respondent to the subpoena are without
merit, that the requested documents are discoverable, and that the subpoena should be
enforced. Opposing the motion, Respondent argues that it has already complied with the
request and the request for documents is overly broad and unduly burdensome. For the
1
This Court understands that this dispute is part of expedited discovery ordered in support of a
pending hearing on motion for Preliminary Injunction. However, the use of the word
“emergency” is, at best, hyperbole.
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following reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART the
Movants’ emergency motion.
I.
Background
The Movants are plaintiffs in a lawsuit pending in the Southern District of
California which was initiated on May 25, 2021. (Doc. 2). The Movants allege the
misappropriation of trade secrets regarding their program to convert passenger jets into
cargo freighters. They claim that the defendants in the pending case used those trade
secrets to create a competing aircraft conversion program with NIAR. NIAR/WSU
(hereinafter “WSU”) is not a party to the pending action. With the leave of the Southern
District of California, the Movants engaged in expedited discovery in support of a
preliminary injunction filed on June 21, 2021 (Doc. 9, at 6). On July 28, 2021, the
Movants served WSU with a subpoena with acceptance of service confirmed the next
day. (Doc. 2, at 5).
In accordance with the court’s2 scheduling order, WSU served its responses and
objections on July 30 claiming the requests were vague, overbroad, and burdensome. It
also objected to the August 13 deadline. WSU and the Movants met and conferred on
August 3 and August 6 to come to an agreement. The Movants had depositions scheduled
on August 19 and 20. After the August 6 meet and confer, the Movants claim that WSU
said it would produce whatever documents it could by the August 13 deadline. Request
No. 1 was re-defined as:
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The court in the Southern District of California.
2
Request No. 1: For the time period of June 1, 2019 to the present, Aall
documents and communications related to any Wagner Aeronautical, Inc. or
Mammoth Freighters LLC passenger-to-freight conversion program,
including any internal NIAR communications discussing a Wagner
Aeronautical passenger-to-freight conversion program P2F conversion
program created or developed by Wagner Aeronautical, Inc., William
Wagner, William Tarpley, or Mammoth Freighters LLC.
(Doc. 9, at 2). WSU was under the following understanding of the scope of the request:
Request No. 2: For the time period of June 1, 2019, to December 31, 2020,
all business plans and planning documents related to the Sequoia/NIAR
conversion program – including scheduling documents (such as conversion
schedules, development schedules, FAA certification schedules,
manufacturing schedules, and engineering schedules) and estimates of
necessary resources to complete the conversion (such as facility
requirements, engineering head-counts, engineering hours estimates, and
personnel estimates) – that were created, drafted, or prepared provided to
NIAR by David Dotzenroth or Charles Wiley Dotzenroth via email,
personal delivery or some other means.
(Doc. 9, at 2–3). WSU later notified Movants that it would make its first production by
August 17 and complete production by August 20, which caused the Movants to
reschedule their depositions. The Movants believe that WSU has repeatedly delayed
producing relevant documents. However, the Respondent does not believe the short
deadlines could be met reasonably. WSU produced 67 documents on August 20, and over
100 more after the initial filing of the present motion. (Doc. 13, at 2). The Movants claim
that the documents were insufficient and request further response from WSU. The district
court in California has pushed back proceedings in order to allow more time for WSU to
complete its production.
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II.
Legal Standard
Rule 26(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures govern the scope of discovery.
The scope of discovery pursuant to a Rule 45 subpoena mirrors that of party discovery
permitted by Rule 26. In re EpiPen Mktg., Sales Pracs. & Antitrust Litig., No. 17-md2785, 2018 WL 2445100, at *2 (D. Kan. May 31, 2018). The relevancy standards under
Rule 26 are what define the permissible scope of a Rule 45 subpoena. Id. “Parties may
obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim
or defense and proportional to the needs of the case.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b). As such, for
the information to be discoverable, the requested information must be nonprivileged,
relevant, and proportional to the needs of the case. Holick v. Burkhart, No. 16-1188-JTMKGG, 2018 WL 372440, at *2 (D. Kan. Jan. 11, 2018). Relevance is “construed broadly
to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to other matter that
could bear on, any issue that is or may be in the case.” Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v.
Sanders, 437 U.S. 340, 351 (1978); see also Smith v. MCI Telecomm. Corp., 137 F.R.D.
25, 27 (D. Kan. 1991).
A party may file a motion to compel when the responding party fails to permit
discovery. Sperry v. Corizon Health, No. 18-3119-EFM-ADM, 2020 WL 5642343, at *3
(D. Kan. Sept. 22, 2020). The initial burden rests with the party seeking discovery, but
the moving party need not address all proportionality considerations. Id. Once the initial
burden has been established, the legal burden regarding the defense of a motion to
compel resides with the party opposing the discovery request. See Swackhammer v.
Sprint Corp. PCS, 225 F.R.D. 658, 661, 662, 666 (D. Kan. 2004) (stating that the party
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resisting a discovery request based on overbreadth, vagueness, ambiguity, or undue
burden/expense objections bears the burden to support the objections). Thus, “the
objecting party must specifically show in its response to the motion to compel, despite
the broad and liberal construction afforded by the federal discovery rules, how each
request for production or interrogatory is objectionable.” Carter v. Union Pac. R.R., No.
20-2093-DDC-KGG, 2021 WL 1250958, at *2 (D. Kan. Apr. 5, 2021) (Gale, J.) (citing
Sonnino v. Univ. of Kansas Hosp. Auth., 221 F.R.D. 661, 670–71 (D. Kan. 2004)).
III.
Analysis
The proper procedure for obtaining documents from non-parties is to service them
with a subpoena in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 45. Only after the entity fails to
comply with the subpoena, does the party seeking production move the court for an order
compelling production or inspection. See Johnson v. Kraft Foods N. Am., Inc., 236
F.R.D. 535, 540 (D. Kan. 2006) (“The appropriate procedure to compel non-parties to
produce documents is to serve them a subpoena as set forth in Rule 45 of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure.”). Rule 45 also provides that motions to quash or enforce a
subpoena are heard in the district where compliance is required. Fed. R. Civ.
P. 45(d)(2)(B)(i) (“[T]he serving party may move the court for the district where
compliance is required for an order compelling production or inspection.”).
a. Meet and Confer Requirement
The Respondent first objects that the meet and confer requirement has not been
met. (Doc. 9, at 10). A motion to compel “must include a certification that the movant has
in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the person or party failing to make
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disclosure or discovery in an effort to obtain it without court action.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(a)(1). The local rules further state that a court “will not entertain any motion to
resolve a discovery dispute” unless a reasonable effort has been made to confer regarding
the motion's underlying issue(s) prior to the filing of the motion. D. Kan. Rule 37.2
(emphasis added). The local rule also requires the certification to describe with
particularity the steps taken by all counsel to resolve the issue in dispute. These
requirements encourage parties to resolve discovery disputes “without judicial
intervention.” Cotracom Commodity Trading Co. v. Seaboard Corporations, 189 F.R.D.
456, 459 (D. Kan. 1999); see also VNA Plus, Inc. v. Apria Healthcare Group, Inc., No.
98–2138–KHV, 1999 WL 386949, at *1 (D. Kan. June 8, 1999). Local Rule 37.2
provides that a reasonable effort to confer “means more than mailing or faxing a letter to
the opposing party. It requires that the parties in good faith converse, confer, compare
views, consult, and deliberate, or in good faith, attempt to do so.”
Here, WSU takes issue with the fact that the Movants gave little time to comply
with the requests for production. (Doc. 9, at 10–11). They characterize the Movants’
efforts as sending one email demanding production followed by the present Motion. (Id.).
In the Movants’ Reply, they contend that the meet and confer process should not be
characterized as one email that demanded production but should be viewed within the
context of the proceeding two weeks. (Doc. 13, at 5). The Court agrees this is
appropriate. The parties met on August 3 and August 6 regarding the requests for
production in dispute. Following the meetings on August 3 and 6, the parties exchanged a
series of emails over the course of the next couple weeks. WSU ended up sending 67
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documents to which Movants believed was inadequate and led to the email that WSU
contends fails the Meet and Confer Requirement. The Court is satisfied that the single
email was not the sum of the parties’ efforts to reach a resolution. There was more than
one time the parties met regarding the requests for production in dispute and was
followed by further inquiries by both parties. Accordingly, WSU’s objection for failure to
meet and confer is overruled.
b. Subpoena Requests in Dispute
The Respondent contends that it has complied with the subpoena in dispute, and
therefore, there is nothing to compel. (Doc. 9, at 12). The Movants, on the other hand,
contend that the initial 67 documents produced were deficient. (Doc. 2, at 10).
Subsequently, the Respondent produced more than 100 additional documents after the
present motion, to which Movants claim are still deficient. (Doc. 13, at 2). In support of
their assertion, they point out that the defendants, who are a party to the lawsuit pending
in the Southern District of California, identified documents that WSU should have
produced but were not part of the production.
The Plaintiff bears the burden of putting forth evidence that the objecting party
withheld evidence. See Stouder v. M&A Tech., Inc., No. 09-4113-JAR, 2011 WL 768738,
at *4 (D. Kan. Feb. 28, 2011). It is true that a Court cannot compel a party to produce
documents outside the scope of what is being requested. Lawson v. Spirit AeroSystems,
Inc., No. 18-1100-EFM-ADM, 2020 WL 473295, at *6 (D. Kan. Jan. 29, 2020).
However, a party must fully comply with the request for production. Skepkek v. Roper &
Twardowsky, LLC, No. 11-4102-KHV, 2014 WL 289470, at *2 (D. Kan. Jan. 27, 2014).
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The Movants contend that as a part of Request No. 2, WSU was supposed to
produce documents sent by party-defendants, David Dotzenroth and Charles Wiley
Dotzenroth. (Doc. 2, at 11–12). Request No. 2 asks WSU to produce business plans and
scheduling documents provided to David Dotzenroth or Charles Wiley Dotzenroth.
However, they allege those documents were never produced by WSU because the partydefendants provided them with emails and documents that should have been under the
scope of Request No. 2. And they claim this is sufficient evidence to support an inference
of deficient production. The Movants also point to the fact that WSU had collected about
12,000 documents regarding the matter, and claim it would be unlikely that such a small
number of documents pertain to their request. (Doc. 2,at 11; Exhibit 1).
WSU asserts that they already have produced, or will produce, all documents for
Requests Nos. 1 and 2. WSU further argues that the 24-hour deadline imposed was too
little time to fully comply with the request in its entirety. In response to Movants’
allegation that they withheld relevant documents; they claim that a renewed search
revealed no such email. Movants claim that their renewed search was inadequate because
it did not include the relevant email addresses. (Doc. 13, at 3). There appears to be
dispute regarding whether the search undertaken would have been inclusive of the email
addresses in question. (Doc. 16, at 1; Doc. 20, at 1–2).
Movants have pointed to prior discovery rulings from the Southern District of
California. (Doc. 2, at 12–13). WSU is not bound by rulings from the Southern District of
California court relating to this discovery. However, it does not appear that there is a
substantive dispute over the scope of the requests as modified by prior agreement of the
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parties. Further, Movants have not met their burden that WSU has withheld evidence.
WSU claims to not have possession of the disputed documents from party-defendants and
have been in the process of producing documents related to the requests. However,
WSU’s objection that the requests include, in part, documents the Movant has already
received from another party is not valid. See, e.g., In re EpiPen Mktg., Sales Pracs. &
Antitrust Litig., No. 17-md-2785-DDC-TJJ, 2018 WL 6061669, at *2 (D. Kan. Nov. 19,
2018) (overruling an objection that non-parties may have produced documents to the
moving party). The motion is granted to the extent that WSU is withholding documents it
believes the Movants have already received from other sources.
IV.
Conclusion
Movants have not met its burden of proving that documents are being withheld.
So, the Motion is granted only to the extent that WSU is not producing documents
because they believe the Movants have already obtained them from other sources. There
are not exceptional circumstances sufficient to require referring this motion back to
California. Requests for attorneys fees are denied. WSU is ordered to comply with the
requests within 14 days of the date of this Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated October 7, 2021, at Wichita, Kansas
/S KENNETH G. GALE
Kenneth G. Gale
U.S. Magistrate Judge
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