South Pointe Wholesale, Inc. v. Vilardi
Filing
49
MEMORANDUM, OPINION, AND ORDER by Magistrate Judge H. Brent Brennenstuhl on 9/5/2017 GRANTING IN PART and DENYING IN PART 37 Motion to Quash. Movants shall comply with the subpoenas to the extent the requests are relevant as discussed in this order. cc: Counsel(JWM)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
BOWLING GREEN DIVISION
CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:17-CV-00052-GNS
SOUTH POINTE WHOLESALE, INC.
PLAINTIFF
VS.
MARIE T. VILARDI
DEFENDANT
MEMORANDUM, OPINION,
AND ORDER
Before the Court is the joint motion on behalf of non-parties Halas Trading, Inc., Wire
Frame Consulting, Inc. and Healthy Concepts, Inc. to quash subpoenas for production of
documents served on them by Plaintiff South Pointe Wholesale, Inc. (DN 37). South Pointe has
responded in support of the subpoenas (DN 44).
Nature of the Case
According to South Pointe’s complaint, South Pointe is a Kentucky Corporation
organized in 2001 and operates as a pharmaceutical distributor.
South Pointe purchases
inventory either directly from pharmaceutical manufacturers or from other distributors. These
purchases require price negotiations conducted by either distributor or vendor employees or
independent brokers working on a commission basis (DN 1, p. 2).
South Pointe hired Defendant Marie T. Vilardi on March 8, 2004 as a pharmaceuticals
purchaser. South Pointe provided Vilardi and two other employees with office space in New
York, and Vilardi had access to South Pointe’s computer server in Kentucky. Vilardi also made
periodic trips to Kentucky for in-person meetings. In 2006 Vilardi purchased a forty-five percent
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ownership in South Pointe and was elected to South Pointe’s board of directors. She was later
elected as vice president and chief operating officer (Id. at p. 4-5).
In 2015 other South Pointe employees became suspicious that Vilardi was making
purchases that were not in the company’s best interests and South Pointe began restricting
Vilardi’s purchasing autonomy. In 2017 South Pointe obtained information indicating that
Vilardi was performing work for a South Pointe competitor. As a result, South Pointe terminated
Vilardi’s employment on March 14, 2017 (Id. at p. 6-7). Subsequent to her termination, South
Pointe conducted further investigation and concluded that Vilardi had worked for other
competitors and engaged in self-dealing (Id. at p. 8-11). South Pointe’s complaint against
Vilardi alleges violation of fiduciary duties under Kentucky statutes (Id. at p. 11-12).
Vilardi has asserted counterclaims against South Pointe. She contends she made two
loans to South Pointe, one in 2006 in the principal sum of $300,000.00 and another in 2007 in
the principal sum of $205,000.00.
These loans were made because South Pointe “was in
desperate financial condition,” and were both demand notes. She states she made demands for
repayment, along with interest, and South Pointe is in default on its repayment obligation (DN
10, p. 9-10). Vilardi further contends that her termination from employment was wrongful and
motivated by age discrimination. As a shareholder in South Pointe, Vilardi claims that she has
been wrongfully denied access to South Pointe’s business and financial records to which she is
entitled under Kentucky law and demands an accounting (Id. at p. 10-11).
Motion to Quash
South Pointe has issued individual subpoenas to the three non-party movants for
production of business records. Halas Trading states that it is owned by Vilardi’s husband and is
engaged in lending money and has no involvement in the pharmaceuticals business (DN 37, p.
2
1). Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts are both controlled and operated by Vilardi (Id. at p. 2).
The movants do not elaborate on the nature of their business operations, but a prior pleading
Vilardi filed suggests that they are engaged in the pharmaceutical market and are competitors of
South Pointe (see DN 28 at p. 8-9).1
From Halas, South Pointe seeks production of documents related to any loans it may have
made to Vilardi, Wire Frame or Healthy Concepts.
Regarding Wire Frame and Healthy
Concepts, South Pointe seeks broad production of documents related to their business operations,
including correspondence related to Vilardi’s services to any entity in the pharmaceutical
industry, payments related to those services, financial records, and tax records.
Movants argue that the subpoenas issued to Halas seek information about loans to
Vilardi, Wire Frame or Healthy Concepts. They note that none of South Pointe’s claims involve
money borrowed by Vilardi or loans which Halas may have made. As to Wire Frame and
Healthy Concepts, movants note that, while South Pointe’s complaint contends Vilardi breached
fiduciary duties by working for various competitors, neither of these businesses are mentioned.
Moreover, movants note that South Pointe’s complaint discusses activities beginning in 2015,
however the subpoenas seek information dating back to 2006. The movants also contend that the
requests are overbroad because they are unlimited in time or cover an eleven-year period or seek
“all documents” across a wide spectrum of inquiry. As to financial statements, movants argue
that these would only show cash flow, revenue and expenses in generalized categories, and
profits and losses. Movants assert that these bear no relevance to any alleged breach of fiduciary
duty. Likewise, payroll records of every employee working for these entities are unlikely to
reveal discoverable information. The tax information requested, they further contend, is not
1
Vilardi initially challenged the subpoenas with her own motion to quash, DN 28. The undersigned concluded that
she failed to demonstrate standing to challenge subpoenas issued to non-parties and denied the motion at DN 35.
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reasonably likely to produce specific information related to South Pointe’s claims or defenses.
Finally, movants claim that Rule 45(a)(1)(A)(iv) requires that every subpoena set out the text of
Rule 45(d) and (e), and that the subpoenas delivered to them lacked the required information.
South Pointe’s Response
South Pointe agrees that its complaint makes no mention of any of the three entities upon
which it has served subpoenas and that the timeframe specified in the complaint begins in 2015.
South Pointe asserts, however, that since filing the complaint it has conducted additional
investigation which now casts a wider net of suspicion.
Although Vilardi was required to produce a sworn statement identifying every entity in
the pharmaceutical industry which had compensated her directly or indirectly since 2006 (DN 9),
South Pointe alleges that she failed to list Able Wholesalers of Tennessee, LLC, which paid Wire
Frame and thereby indirectly Vilardi. South Pointe also contends that it discovered a data file on
its computer server which Vilardi inadvertently saved there, and which reflects financial registers
for both Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts for July 1, 2015 to September 30, 2015. These
registers, South Pointe asserts, demonstrate that the entities received commissions from South
Pointe competitors and which directly benefited Vilardi. Vilardi’s 2012 and 2013 federal tax
returns reflect substantial income for both Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts, which South
Pointe argues are indications that she has utilized the entities to funnel commissions from
competitors longer than South Pointe initially suspected.
Further, South Pointe has discovered invoices Vilardi saved to the server. One dated in
2009 shows billings to Wire Frame for products that South Pointe was also buying and selling at
that time. Another 2010 invoice shows Healthy Concepts billing a distributor for commissions
earned for sales both to South Pointe and a competitor. Given this additional information, South
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Pointe argues that it should be permitted to delve into Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts’
business records, as South Pointe believes it will thereby uncover additional actions constituting
breaches of Vilardi’s fiduciary duty.
As to Halas, South Pointe argues that it believes the discovery will establish that Vilardi
misrepresented the source of the money she loaned to South Pointe and the true interest rate she
was passing along to South Pointe.
If true, South Pointe asserts this would constitute an
additional breach of Vilardi’s fiduciary duty.
South Pointe responds to the movants’ complaints that the subpoena was technically
deficient by stating that it cannot independently verify whether or not copies of the provisions of
Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d) and (e) were attached. In the interest of full compliance, South Pointe
states that it has sent the movants’ counsel revised subpoenas with the required text, thereby
remedying any deficiency.
Analysis
A party “may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to a
party’s claim or defense.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). The discovery must be “proportional to the
needs of the case, considering importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in
controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’ resources, the
importance of the discovery in resolving the issues and whether the burden or expense of the
proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.”
Id.
“Information within this scope of
discovery need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable.” Id.
When a party seeks discovery from a non-party, it must demonstrate good cause to justify
production. Perez v. Off Duty Police Servs., No. 3:13-CV-935-DJH-LLK, 2015 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 58015, at *3 (W.D. Ky. May 4, 2015). Only after a showing of relevance and good cause
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does the presumption for enforcement of the subpoena arise. Id. Here, the movants argue that
the information South Pointe seeks is not relevant to its claims against Vilardi as set forth in its
complaint or its defenses against her counterclaim. South Pointe contends that the information
sought from the movants is necessary to follow-up on post-complaint discoveries of additional
breaches of Vilardi’s fiduciary duties.
The current version of the rule and the associated commentary demonstrate that a party is
to be held to discovery within the scope of the claims and defenses asserted in the pleadings, and
may not employ discovery as a means of investigating whether additional claims might be
available. The 2000 amendments to Rule 26(b)(1) replaced prior language defining relevant
discovery as that relating to the “subject matter” of the litigation the more restrictive “claim or
defense” language. “The rule change signals to the court that it has the authority to confine
discovery to the claims and defenses asserted in the pleadings, and signals to the parties that they
have no entitlement to discovery to develop new claims or defenses that are not already
identified in the pleadings.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) Advisory Committee’s Note (2000
Amendment). “This limitation ensured that discovery would no longer be used to troll for new
claims or causes of action, but that the requested discovery was relevant to the specific claims
and defenses before the court.” Franklin v. United States, No. 12-1167 KBM/LFG, 2013 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 191416, at *5 (D.N.M. Aug. 28, 2013); see also Monte H. Greenwalt Revocable
Trust v. Brown, No. 2:12-cv-01983, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 178802, at *7 (D. Nev. Dec. 19,
2013) (“This prevents litigants from engaging in ‘fishing expeditions’ that may expose the
defendant to claims not previously asserted in the plaintiff’s complaint.”). As described by
another court:
Rule 26(b)(1) permits a party to obtain discovery that is relevant to
“any party’s claim or defense.” If a complaint states a claim, then
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a party may engage in liberal discovery and “fish” for evidence to
support that claim. . . . However, Rule 26(b)(1) does not authorize
what [plaintiff] seeks: to fish for evidence to support new claims
that are not contained in the complaint. This would frustrate the
fundamental goals of Rule 8 and Rule 26, which exist to provide a
defendant with “fair notice” of the claims against it and “avoid
surprise at trial.”
Haigh v. Constr., Indus. & Laborers Joint Pension Trust for S. Nev., Plan A & Plan B, No. 2:14cv-1545-JAD-VCF, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53930, at *14 (D. Nev. April 24, 2017) (citations
omitted).
The 2000 amendments to Rule 26(b)(1) contemplated that “party-controlled discovery”
would focus on claim and defense issues, but the Court nonetheless retained discretion to allow
additional discovery on a more broad “subject matter” basis, when appropriate to the particular
case. “When judicial intervention is invoked, the actual scope of discovery should be determined
according to the reasonable needs of the action. The court may permit broader discovery in a
particular case depending on the circumstances of the case, the nature of the claims and defenses,
and the scope of the discovery requested.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) Advisory Committee’s Note
(2000 Amendment). The 2015 amendment “deletes the former provision authorizing the court,
for good cause, to order discovery of any matter relevant to the subject matter involved in the
action.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) Advisory Committee’s Note (2015 Amendment). While the
amendment removed language authorizing substantial discretion by the Court, it also made clear
that latitude is required in some situations:
The distinction between matter relevant to a claim or defense and
matter relevant to the subject matter was introduced in 2000. The
2000 Note offered three examples of information that, suitably
focused, would be relevant to the parties’ claims or defenses. The
examples were “other incidents of the same type, or involving the
same product”; “information about organizational arrangements or
filing systems”; and “information that could be used to impeach a
likely witness.”
Such discovery is not foreclosed by the
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amendments. Discovery that is relevant to the parties’ claims or
defenses may also support amendment of the pleadings to add a
new claim or defense that affects the scope of discovery.
Id.
Consequently, South Pointe’s subpoena requests must be evaluated in light of whether
they are relevant to a claim or defense set out in the complaint or response to Vilardi’s
counterclaim or are otherwise within the scope discussed in the 2015 amendment note.
A. Halas Subpoena
South Pointe’s subpoena to Halas requests the following information:
1. Produce every correspondence between you, your shareholders,
owners, members, employees, agents, and/or Marie Vilardi
regarding any loan that you have made to Marie Vilardi, Wire
Frame Consulting, Inc., or Healthy Concepts, Inc., including
but not limited to, any correspondence requesting the loan,
stating the basis for the loan, establishing the terms of the loan,
modifying the terms of the loan, or mentioning payment of the
indebtedness.
2. Produce every document regarding or relating to any loan that
you have made to Marie Vilardi, Wire Frame Consulting, Inc.,
or Healthy Concepts, Inc., to include but not limited to,
evidence of indebtedness, the terms of the loan, evidence of
payment, and any modifications to the loan or its terms.
(DN 37 p. 2).
Movants argue that these requests have no relevance to South Pointe’s complaint that
Vilardi breached her fiduciary duties to South Pointe beginning in 2015 by acting on behalf and
for the benefit of South Pointe’s competitors. Nothing about Vilardi’s loans to South Pointe is
mentioned in the complaint and Halas is not a competitor in the pharmaceuticals industry.
The complaint contains two counts alleging breach of statutory fiduciary duty “as
particularly set forth in paragraphs 29-57” (DN 1, p. 11 & 12). The factual background in South
Pointe’s complaint recites the history of the business relationship between the parties and alleges
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that Vilardi’s employment with a direct competitor, Taiga Distribution, was a breach of her
fiduciary duty, beginning in 2016. The complaint also alleges that Vilardi engaged in a selfdealing transaction involving the purchase of Amoxicillin in 2017. The complaint further alleges
that Vilardi breached her fiduciary duty by acting as an agent of competitor Drug Place of
Kentucky in 2016.
There is no allegation that Vilardi breached a fiduciary duty by
misrepresenting the terms and interest rate of a loan.
That the complaint does not make mention of the loan does not preclude the discovery
requested. “The role of discovery . . . is to find support for properly pleaded claims, not to find
the claims themselves.” Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc. v. Chung, No. 3:15-cv-4108-D, 2017 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 101619, at *83 (N.D. Tex. June 26, 2017) (quoting Torch Liquidating Trust ex rel.
Bridge Assocs. L.L.C. v. Stockstill, 561 F.3d 377, 392 (5th Cir. 2009)). This is because “[t]he
discovery rules are designed to assist a party to prove a claim it reasonably believes to be viable
without discovery, not to find out if it has any basis for a claim.” Micro Motion, Inc. v. Kane
Steel Co., Inc., 894 F.2d 1318, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (emphasis in original). Here South Pointe
has made a claim for breach of fiduciary duty. What it now seeks to discover is whether Vilardi
engaged in any other conduct that breached her fiduciary duty in addition to those actions
specifically described in the complaint. Thus, South Pointe is not fishing for new claims; rather
it is fishing for additional facts in support of the claim of breach of fiduciary duty. This qualifies
as “other incidents of the same type” as identified in the 2015 advisory committee note. See, e.g.
Robert Half Int’l Inc. v. Ainsworth, No. 14cv2481-WQH (DHB), 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
104038, at *39-40 (S.D. Cal. Aug. 6, 2015) (Plaintiff allowed to conduct discovery of whether
persons in addition to named defendants engaged in solicitation of its employees, even though
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plaintiff was “not currently aware of such facts,” as such actions could constitute “other incidents
of the same type” as contemplated by the advisory committee notes.).
However, the movant’s concerns about the breadth of the discovery requests are valid.
South Pointe contends that it has reason to believe that Vilardi misrepresented the interest rate of
the loans. Thus discovery related to whether Halas was the source of the money Vilardi loaned
to South Pointe and the amount of interest Halas may have charged would be relevant to the
claim of breach of fiduciary duty. However, the scope of the subpoena goes far beyond those
questions and delves into any loan Halas may ever have made to Vilardi for any purpose. The
subpoena also seeks information about any loan Halas may ever have made to Wire Frame or
Healthy Concepts for any purpose. The subpoena to Halas must be restricted to information
about any loan it made to Vilardi which she in turn loaned to South Pointe. If Halas, which is
operated by Vilardi’s husband, responds that it does not know the purpose to which Vilardi
applied the loan proceeds, then additional discovery may be relevant to ferret out transactions.
B. Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts Subpoenas
South Pointe’s subpoenas to Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts request the following
information:
1. Produce every document or correspondence in the possession
of your owners, members, employees or agents related to
services provided by Marie Vilardi to any entity in the
pharmaceutical industry.
2. Produce financial statements from 2006 to 2017, including but
not limited to, your general ledger, cash flow statements, profit
and loss statements, and year-end balance sheets.
3. Produce payroll records from January 1, 2006 to present.
4. Produce records of every payment received between January 1,
2006 and present from any entity or person in the
pharmaceutical industry related to services provided by Marie
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Vilardi, whether it is a cancelled check, deposit slip, evidence
of wire transfer, or otherwise.
5. Produce every correspondence between any of your owners,
members, employees or agents and/or any third party entity or
person from January 1, 2006 to the present regarding the sale
or purchase of pharmaceuticals.
6. Produce every correspondence between any of your owners,
members, employees or agents and/or any third party entity or
person in the pharmaceutical industry from January 1, 2006 to
the present regarding any arrangement to compensate Health
[sic] Concepts, Inc. [or Wire Frame Consulting, Inc.] or Marie
Vilardi related to services provided by Marie Vilardi.
7. Produce every W2 and Form 1099 received from any entity in
the pharmaceutical industry between January 1, 2006 to
present.
8. Produce each of your federal and state tax return, including all
schedules and attachments, from 2006 to the present, together
with every K-1 or other document provided to each of your
members in each tax year.
(DN 37 p. 2-3).
Topic 1 - The movants challenge the first request as overly broad because it is not limited
in terms of subject matter or time. South Pointe responds with agreement that the request should
be limited. Although Vilardi’s fiduciary duties would not have arisen prior to November 30,
2006, South Pointe contends that is should have to opportunity to review documents dating from
January 1, 2006 to the present to “place all conversations, agreements, and relationships in
proper context” (DN 44, p. 7). As to scope, South Pointe asserts that it is reasonable to request
information regarding “services provided by Marie Vilardi to any entity in the pharmaceutical
industry” because this goes to the heart of whether she was engaged in activities for other entities
which conflicted with her duty to South Pointe.
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While the movants cite two cases for the general proposition that “all documents”
requests are overly broad, they fail to consider the context of those cases. In Cardinal Aluminum
Co. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., No. 3:14-CV-857-TBR-LLK, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95361, at *13
(W.D. Ky. July 22, 2015), the court held that a request for “all” documents related to equipment
owned or operated by the plaintiff was excessive when the litigation “concerns insurance
coverage for a specific piece of machinery . . . based on a narrow question . . . .” In Pioneer Res.
Corp. v. Nami Res. Co., L.L.C., No. 04-465-DCR, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49658, at *3-4 (E.D.
Ky. July 18, 2006) the court held that a request for “all documents” numbering in the thousands
related to an audit was excessive when the audit was based on the requesting party’s own
documents, and of which it already had copies. Here, South Pointe’s requests are specific to
documents reflecting services Vilardi performed for any entity in the pharmaceutical industry
during the time when she owed a fiduciary duty to South Pointe, and are not overly broad.
However, the undersigned is not persuaded that South Pointe has demonstrated the relevance of
any documents pre-dating the beginning of Vilardi’s duty. Should production reveal that the
temporal scope should be extended to an earlier date in order to achieve a full understanding of
the documents produced, South Pointe can make that argument at the appropriate time. For the
present, the request is limited to documents generated after November 30, 2006.
Topic 2 – Movants contend this request is irrelevant as the financial statements and
payroll records would only show things such as cash flow, revenue and expenses in generalized
categories, and profits and losses. Movants assert that this information cannot demonstrate that
Vilardi breached any duty to South Pointe or assist South Pointe in its defense.
South Pointe responds by questioning the veracity of Movants’ characterization of what
the requested information will reveal.
South Pointe believes the request is for detailed
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documents and will show individual transactions of payments and receipts. South Pointe makes
an additional argument that, in anticipation that Vilardi will take the positon that she is entitled to
deduct any expenses from commissions awarded as damages, it should be entitled to verify those
expenses.
The undersigned does not agree with South Pointe that the documents it has requested
will demonstrate whether Vilardi breached a duty. The documents requested are ones which will
only provide a broad picture of Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts’ financial transactions. While
South Pointe anticipates an argument by Vilardi, she has not yet advanced the argument so as to
make the information relevant. The undersigned concludes that the documents requested in topic
2 are not at this time relevant.
Topic 3 – Movants argue that payroll records for every employee for the last eleven years
are irrelevant to South Pointe’s claim or defense. South Pointe responds that it must be able to
identify “who has aided Vilardi’s tortious conduct and determine what they were paid” (DN 44,
p. 8). South Pointe further contends that this will provide it guidance on what additional persons
it may wish to depose. The undersigned is not persuaded that the requested information is
relevant. It is one thing to inquire as to the identities of employees, it is entirely another to
request payroll records. South Pointe has failed to demonstrate the relevance of what other
employees may have been paid. The undersigned therefore concurs with Movants that the
information requested in topic 3 lacks relevance at this time.
Topic 4 – Movants argue that the request is overbroad because of the length of time
involved. The undersigned concurs with South Pointe that, while the request is broad, it is not
excessively so in light of the relevance of the information requested. The temporal scope,
however, is limited to matters dating back to November 30, 2006.
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Topics 5 and 6 – Movants object to these requests as being overbroad in scope and time.
South Pointe responds that it requires the information because it will reflect on whether Vilardi
was selling or purchasing pharmaceuticals on behalf of any pharmaceutical entity while serving
on South Pointe’s board of directors.
Given that Movants have made only a generalized
objection based on overbreadth and the “any and all” nature of the requests, the undersigned
cannot conclude that the requested information is not relevant to South Pointe’s claim.
Moreover, Movants have not demonstrated any undue burden associated with the requests. As
before, the temporal scope is limited to beginning at November 30, 2006.
Topics 7 and 8 - Movants argue that tax documents and returns are not relevant to South
Pointe’s claims of breach of fiduciary duty, particularly since the requests make no effort to limit
the scope to anything specific to Vilardi. South Pointe contends that the requests are focused
because they are limited to tax documents received from pharmaceutical industry entities. As
Vilardi owns Wire Frame and Healthy Concepts, South Pointe reasons that any receipt of income
from a competitor would represent a conflict of duty. South Pointe also asserts, in response to
the Movants’ argument that the request includes tax returns and forms provided to members
other than Vilardi, that it believes Vilardi is the sole member of the entities and, if this is
incorrect, is willing to limit the scope of the request to Vilardi. South Ponte believes that the tax
return information is relevant to what the Movants and Vilardi have “reported to the federal and
state governments under penalty of perjury the income received from Vilardi’s tortious conduct”
(DN 44, p. 11) as well as information about expenses.
The undersigned concludes that the information sought in topic 7 is relevant, however
only to the extent that the forms W-2 or 1099 relate to services provided after November 30,
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2006. The information sought in topic 8 is relevant, but with regard to the portion requesting K1 forms, only those provided to Vilardi are relevant.
The undersigned notes that the Movants have made a general contention that the
information sought in all the requests is “confidential commercial information which could cause
harm or disadvantage” (DN 37, p. 8). The Movants do not explain how the disclosure of the
information to South Pointe would result in economic disadvantage. The undersigned cannot
conclude from such a broad and unsupported claim that discovery should not be permitted on
that basis. If the Movants have a legitimate concern that disclosure of the information would
cause a business disadvantage, the Movants have the option of collaborating with South Pointe to
prepare an agreed protective order (as Vilardi has already done at DN 34), or moving the Court
for entry of a protective order upon showing good cause. See Owens v. Liberty Life Assur. Co.,
No. 4:15-CV-00071-JHM-HBB, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 115477, *6 (W.D. Ky. Aug. 29, 2016).
C. Technical Deficiency of the Subpoena Form
In response to Movants’ complaint that the subpoena did not technically conform to Fed.
R. Civ. P. 45(a)(1)(A)(iv) because it did not contain the text of Rule 45(c) and (e), South Ponte
states that, if there was such a deficiency, it has cured the deficiency by subsequent
correspondence to Movants’ counsel “sending subpoenas with the text of Fed. R. Civ. P. (c), (d),
(e), and (g) attached” (DN 44, p. 14). South Pointe attached a copy of the re-issued subpoena as
an exhibit (DN 44-7).
Technical compliance with Rule 45, including the required language, is important
because a subpoena must have legal force if it is to be enforced by sanctions. Shulman v.
Amazon, No. 13-5-DLB-REW, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113506, at *15 (E.D. Ky. Aug. 15,
2014); Shulman v. Amazon.com.KYDC LLC, No. 5:13-CV-05-DLB-REW, 2014 U.S. Dist.
15
LEXIS 114586, at *8 (E.D. Ky. June 17, 2014).
However, upon learning of a technical
deficiency, a party may cure those deficiencies. See State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. CPT Med.
Servs., P.C., No. 04 CV 5045 (ILG), 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56683, at *10 (E.D.N.Y. July 23,
2008). Here, it appears South Pointe has adequately cured the technical deficiencies.
ORDER
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the motion of non-party movants Halas Trading Inc.,
Wire Frame Consulting, Inc. and Healthy Concepts, Inc. to quash subpoenas issued by Plaintiff
South Pointe Wholesale, Inc. (DN 37) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The
movants shall comply with the subpoenas to the extent the requests are relevant as discussed in
this order.
September 5, 2017
Copies:
Counsel
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