B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Machinery, LLC et al
Filing
134
OPINION and ORDER Reopening Discovery and Directing Defendants to File Renewed Motion for Sanctions. Signed by District Judge Thomas L. Ludington. (KWin)
Case 1:18-cv-11425-TLL-PTM ECF No. 134, PageID.4189 Filed 12/29/21 Page 1 of 14
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
NORTHERN DIVISION
B&P LITTLEFORD, LLC,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No. 1:18-cv-11425
Honorable Thomas L. Ludington
United States District Judge
PRESCOTT MACHINERY, LLC,
and RAY MILLER,
Defendants.
_________________________________________/
OPINION AND ORDER REOPENING DISCOVERY AND DIRECTING DEFENDANTS
TO FILE RENEWED MOTION FOR SANCTIONS
This matter is before this Court on remand from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. See
B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC, No. 20-1449, 2021 WL 3732313, at *1 (6th Cir.
Aug. 24, 2021). In May 2018, Plaintiff B&P Littleford, LLC (“B&P”) filed a complaint against
Defendants Prescott Machinery, LLC (“Prescott”) and its president, Ray Miller (“Miller”). ECF
No. 1. B&P alleges that Defendants misappropriated its mechanical drawings in violation of state
and federal trade-secret law. Id. In September 2019, this Court granted summary judgment for
Defendants on their statute-of-limitations defense. B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC,
417 F. Supp. 3d 844 (E.D. Mich. 2019). Several months later, this Court sanctioned B&P’s
attorney, John B. Hardaway III, for withholding information during discovery. B&P Littleford,
LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC, No. 18-11425, 2020 WL 1847915 (E.D. Mich. Apr. 13, 2020). In
August 2021, the Sixth Circuit reversed summary judgment for Defendants, vacated the sanction,
and remanded the case for further proceedings. B&P Littleford, 2021 WL 3732313, at *10.
For the reasons stated below, discovery will be reopened, the parties will be granted leave
to file new dispositive motions, and Defendants will be directed to file a new sanctions motion.
Case 1:18-cv-11425-TLL-PTM ECF No. 134, PageID.4190 Filed 12/29/21 Page 2 of 14
I.
A.
The Sixth Circuit aptly summarized the relevant facts in its opinion. See generally id. From
1995 to 2008, Ray Miller served as B&P’s president and CEO. Id. After being discharged for
misconduct, he started his own company, Prescott. Id. Both B&P and Prescott specialize in the
manufacture and design of industrial equipment. Id. B&P alleges that Miller misused his position
at the company to acquire five confidential drawings that he later used to compete with B&P when
he obtained a Navy contract for the rebuilding of a vertical planetary batch mixer in China Lake,
California (“China Lake Project”).1 Id. at *3–4.
Miller acknowledges that he obtained two sets of B&P drawings after departing B&P but
denies misappropriating either. Instead, he claims that he stumbled across the first set in 2013
while cleaning out an abandoned filing cabinet, and that he received the second set from a former
B&P salesman he employed, Edmond Henry. Id. at *3. Henry prepared and submitted Prescott’s
bid for the China Lake Project, but Miller claims that he did not learn about the bid until after it
was accepted. Id.
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment advanced two arguments: (1) that the threeyear statute of limitations barred B&P’s claims because B&P had reason to know in 2012 of the
alleged misappropriation; and (2) that B&P’s drawings were not trade secrets because B&P did
not take reasonable precautions to ensure their secrecy. See ECF No. 72 at PageID.1906.
Defendants’ statute-of-limitations argument relied largely on B&P’s statements to the FBI.
In 2015, B&P sent a complaint to the FBI (“2015 Complaint”), signed by Mr. Hardaway, detailing
1
B&P allegedly learned of the China Lake misappropriation after a vendor associated with the
project forwarded Prescott’s drawings to B&P. B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC, No.
20-1449, 2021 WL 3732313, at *3 (6th Cir. Aug. 24, 2021).
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its suspicions regarding Miller and Prescott. B&P Littleford, 2021 WL3732313, at *2. In sum,
B&P claimed that Miller had misappropriated “the entire electronic files of B&P’s technical
drawings.” ECF No. 78-2 at PageID.2791. B&P claimed that it first became aware of Miller’s
misappropriation in 2012, when vendors began suggesting that Miller was using B&P drawings.
See id. at PageID.2791–93. Ultimately, the FBI declined to prosecute B&P. B&P Littleford, 2021
WL3732313, at *2.
B&P did not disclose the 2015 Complaint to Defendants until May 6, 2019—one year after
B&P initiated the case, and one day before the deposition of B&P’s CEO. Id. at *4. In a
contemporaneous email, B&P claimed that the untimely disclosure was “inadvertent.” ECF No.
72-13 at PageID.2211.
As Defendants correctly noted in their summary-judgment briefing, “a claim for
misappropriation arises only once for statute of limitations purposes—at the time of the initial
misappropriation, subject to the discovery rule.” ECF No. 72 at PageID.1923 n.22 (quoting
Amalgamated Indus. v. Tressa, Inc., 69 F. App’x 255, 261 (6th Cir. 2003) (per curiam)
(unpublished)). Based on the 2015 Complaint, Defendants argued that B&P’s claim accrued in
2012, when it first had reason to suspect Miller’s misappropriation. See id. at PageID.1927. In
response, B&P maintained that before it caught Miller “red-handed” with the China Lake drawings
in 2018, it merely had a “general sense of malfeasance”—which was not enough to survive a
motion to dismiss. See ECF No. 83 at PageID.3189. After reviewing the record, this Court found
that B&P must have been aware of Miller’s misappropriation in 2012:
Plaintiff’s 2015 complaint to the FBI demonstrates that Plaintiff was aware of the
misappropriation as early as 2012. Regarding the China Lake project, Plaintiff
attempts to characterize its discovery of the misappropriation to have occurred in
2018. However, Plaintiff’s 2015 letter to the FBI states that Miller possessed “the
entire electronic files of B & P’s technical drawings” since 2012. ECF No. 78-2 at
PageID.2791. The drawings for the China Lake project were presumably among
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those taken by Miller since[,] according to Plaintiff, the Mixer was installed in the
1960s and would therefore be present in the “entire electronic files of B&P.”
B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC, 417 F. Supp. 3d 844, 855 (E.D. Mich. 2019).
Consequently, this Court held that B&P’s claims were untimely and declined to reach Defendants’
second ground for summary judgment. Id. at 857.
A few weeks after summary judgment was entered, Defendants filed a motion for
attorney’s fees against B&P and Mr. Hardaway, which was later granted in part. See ECF No. 94
at PageID.3407 (first citing 18 U.S.C. § 1836(b)(3)(D); and then citing MICH. COMP. LAWS §
445.1905); B&P Littleford, LLC v. Prescott Mach., LLC, No. 18-11425, 2020 WL 1847915 (E.D.
Mich. Apr. 13, 2020). As relevant, this Court found that given his involvement in the 2015
Complaint, Mr. Hardaway must have known that B&P’s claims were untimely when this case was
initiated. B&P Littleford, 2020 WL 1847915, at *13. Mr. Hardaway was therefore ordered to pay
Defendants’ attorney fees and costs. Id. at *15.
B.
On appeal, the Sixth Circuit had a different view of the case. See B&P Littleford, 2021 WL
3732313, at *10. The Sixth Circuit agreed with this Court that “the first discovered (or
discoverable) misappropriation of a trade secret commences the limitation period,” and that
“[e]ach new misuse or wrongful disclosure . . . [merely] augment[s] a single claim of continuing
misappropriation.” Id. at *6. But the Sixth Circuit disagreed that B&P’s suspicion of
misappropriation in 2012 necessarily triggered the limitations period, given several hypothetical
circumstances that might have pertained. See id. at *6–8.
First, it was unclear whether this case involved one continuing misappropriation or multiple
independent misappropriations with different limitations periods. See id. at *6 (“[N]othing in
MUTSA, DTSA, or relevant caselaw suggests that a misappropriation of one trade secret can
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trigger the limitations period for a claim based on the misappropriation of a different trade secret.”).
As the Sixth Circuit explained, “the determination of whether disclosed information is a trade
secret,” or “whether disclosed information constitutes one trade secret or many,” is a “fact-specific
inquiry.” Id. But by the time the case was on appeal, it was apparently “undisputed that Defendants
did not actually possess B&P's entire electronic files.” Id. at *7. And because of certain limitations
placed on discovery earlier in the case, “it [was] unclear what documents or drawings Defendants
did have, when they had them, and how they got them.” Id. As a result, “a reasonable jury could
conclude that the acquisition and use of the China Lake drawings in 2017 or 2018 was a new
misappropriation” that started a new limitations period. Id. (emphasis added).
Second, even if Henry’s delivery of the China Lake drawings was part of a continuing
misappropriation, B&P had plausibly tolled the limitations period by conducting a reasonable
investigation. Id. at *8; see also Adcor Indus.v. Bevcorp, LLC, 252 F. App’x 55, 62 (6th Cir. 2007)
(“[T]he discovery rule requires the owner of a trade secret to conduct a timely and reasonable
investigation after learning of possible misappropriation, not to prematurely file.”). As the Sixth
Circuit explained, there was some evidence that B&P had “attempted to unearth evidence of
misappropriation but was stymied by a lack of documentation,” until learning of the China Lake
drawings in 2018. B&P Littleford, 2021 WL 3732313, at *8.
For these reasons, the Sixth Circuit reversed summary judgment for Defendants and
remanded for “further proceedings.” Id. at *8, *10.
The Sixth Circuit did not address Defendants’ second ground for summary judgment or
explain how this Court should proceed on remand. But it did suggest that discovery should be
reopened to further explore when and how Defendants obtained B&P’s drawings. See, e.g., id. at
*7 (“[A]s a result of the court’s denial of B&P’s requests for broad discovery to assess the scope
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of Defendant’s misappropriation and its order limiting discovery to the China Lake mixer, it is
unclear what documents or drawings Defendants did have, when they had them, and how they got
them.”); 2 id. at *8 (“[S]ummary judgment was premature and further factual development is
required.”).
With respect to Mr. Hardaway and his sanctions, the Sixth Circuit vacated the sanctions
award but declined to reverse the sanctions generally. The Sixth Circuit explained that:
B&P’s complaint is not frivolous and so sanctioning Hardaway for bringing this
suit was clearly erroneous. . . . Withholding that FBI complaint until a week before
the discovery deadline and the day before Slovin’s deposition, however, inhibited
Defendants’ ability to make follow-up discovery requests and to ask detailed
questions about the document at that deposition. The 2015 FBI Complaint,
moreover, was prepared and signed by Hardaway and was relevant to
understanding the nature of Defendants’ alleged misappropriation and when B&P
became aware of it. Despite Hardaway’s arguments that he was not “principally in
charge of discovery,” his signature was on B&P’s pleadings and his name was
included in the signature block of various submissions filed by B&P in connection
with discovery. A district court has broad discretion regarding discovery and trial
matters and we do not conclude that the imposition of sanctions against Hardaway
was an abuse of that discretion.
Id. at *9. Accordingly, the Sixth Circuit ordered this Court “to take up the motion for sanctions in
light of the pleadings, record, and rulings in the case, and if appropriate, to fashion an award for
any fees and costs that were ‘reasonably incurred’ by Defendants as a direct result of Mr.
Hardaway’s misconduct.” Id. at *10.
III.
Following a post-remand status conference, this Court directed the parties to file
supplemental briefing addressing: (1) whether discovery should be reopened; (2) whether
additional summary judgment motions should be filed; and (3) whether an additional sanctions
motion should be filed. ECF No. 129 at PageID.4138. The parties and Mr. Hardaway have since
2
B&P’s request to “broad[en] discovery” is discussed further in Section III.A.i, infra.
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filed responsive briefing. See Pl.’s Supp. Brief, ECF No. 130; Defs.’ Supp. Brief, ECF No. 131;
Hardaway’s Supp. Brief, ECF No. 132. Each issue is addressed in turn below.
A.
The first issue is whether discovery should be reopened. In B&P’s view, the Sixth Circuit
essentially resolved this issue insofar as it reversed summary judgment on the statute of limitations
and called for “further factual development.” See ECF No. 130 at PageID.4149 (quoting B&P
Littleford, 2021 WL 3732313, at *8). By the same token, B&P argues that further discovery is
necessary to resolve Defendants’ second ground for summary judgment—their reasonableprecautions argument. See id. at PageID.4156. Although the Sixth Circuit’s holding was
technically limited to Defendants’ statute-of-limitations defense, B&P argues that Defendants’
reasonable-precautions argument implicates the same set of facts. See id. (claiming that
Defendants’ reasonable-precautions argument “squarely implicates how Miller himself came upon
certain drawings”).
For their part, Defendants argue that their second ground for summary judgment should be
resolved immediately. See ECF No. 131 at PageID.4165–67. They correctly note that “neither the
Sixth Circuit nor this Court addressed” that ground. Id. at PageID.4167. And in their view, the
Sixth Circuit’s reversal does not justify “start[ing] this action anew.” Id. at PageID.4172.
Reopening discovery is within this Court’s broad discretion. See FED. R. CIV. P. 16(b)(4)
(allowing district courts to modify scheduling orders “for good cause”); Marie v. Am. Red Cross,
771 F.3d 344, 366 (6th Cir. 2014) (“District courts have broad discretion under the rules of civil
procedure to manage the discovery process and control their dockets.”). In deciding whether to
reopen discovery, courts typically consider five factors:
(1) when the moving party learned of the issue that is the subject of discovery; (2)
how the discovery would affect the ruling below; (3) the length of the discovery
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period; (4) whether the moving party was dilatory; and (5) whether the adverse
party was responsive to prior discovery requests.
Marie, 771 F.3d at 366 (cleaned up). “[T]he overarching inquiry in these overlapping factors is
whether the moving party was diligent in pursuing discovery.” Id.
This is not the first time this Court has considered these factors in this case. In June 2019,
just before Defendants filed their motion for summary judgment, B&P filed a motion to reopen
discovery. ECF No. 69. Ultimately, this Court denied B&P’s motion as untimely, finding that B&P
had been dilatory. See ECF No. 86 at PageID.3321 (noting that B&P “amended its complaint at
the end of the discovery period and on the eve of the dispositive motion deadline”). But having
reviewed the record—and being more fully advised than before as to the relevant procedural
background—this Court now takes a different view of this case and the earlier discovery
proceedings.3 Before elaborating further, additional background is needed.
i.
Since serving its first set of discovery requests in July 2018, B&P has consistently sought
discovery from Defendants regarding the total number of B&P drawings in their possession and
how Defendants obtained them. See Prescott’s Resp. to Pl.’s First Set of Interrog., ECF No. 21-2
at PageID.356 (asking Prescott to identify “all of Plaintiff’s confidential, proprietary, and/or trade
secret information that Defendant [Miller] has received”). And since that time, Defendants have
consistently refused to provide that information.
The issue was first presented to Magistrate Judge Patricia T. Morris in October 2018, when
B&P filed a motion to compel. ECF No. 21. During the motion hearing, Defendants argued that
3
B&P has not formally asked this Court to revisit the order denying its motion to reopen. But to
the extent that doing so is necessary, this Court has the “inherent power to reconsider interlocutory
orders,” particularly in light of the Sixth Circuit’s decision. See Mallory v. Eyrich, 922 F.2d 1273,
1282 (6th Cir. 1991); see also id. (noting that district courts may “modify, or even rescind, such
interlocutory orders”).
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discovery should be limited to the China Lake Project, because B&P had not specifically alleged
other instances of misappropriation in its complaint. See November 20, 2018, Hr’g Tr., ECF No.
32 at PageID.616; see also id. at PageID.626–27 (“When you look at the complaint, they’re saying
there are five drawings . . . The claim doesn’t go beyond that.”). In response, B&P claimed that it
had limited its complaint to what it knew at the time, as broader allegations might have offended
Rule 11. See id. at PageID.641–42. In the end, Judge Morris agreed that B&P had limited the scope
of discovery by including specific allegations in its complaint; she therefore denied B&P’s motion.
Id. at PageID.650–51. Simply stated, B&P could not seek discovery beyond the China Lake Project
due to the way it drafted its complaint. See id.
But the situation changed in January 2019, when Defendants produced “nearly 1,000 pages
of production . . . [containing] highly technical and detailed engineering schematics.” Pl.’s Mot.
to Amend Compl., ECF No. 41 at PageID.885–86. Based on an expert analysis of that production,
B&P concluded that Defendants had misappropriated an additional 22 drawings. Id. On March 11,
2019, B&P served a copy of a proposed amended complaint on Defendants and asked for their
consent to file it. Id. In addition to the five original drawings and the 22 others produced in
discovery, B&P’s amended complaint alleged that Defendants had misappropriated some
unspecified number of “additional” drawings. See Pl.’s Proposed Am. Compl., ECF No. 41-1 at
PageID.903. When Defendants refused to consent, B&P filed a motion to amend on April 5, 2019.
ECF No. 41. The parties eventually stipulated to the motion, and on April 24, 2019, this Court
entered an order allowing B&P to file its amended complaint, ECF No. 44, which it filed the
following day, ECF No. 45.
By the time B&P filed its amended complaint, time was of the essence; the May 13, 2019
discovery cutoff was just a few weeks away. See Second Am. Scheduling Order, ECF No. 42 at
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PageID.973. By all appearances, B&P acted with an appropriate sense of urgency. On April 26,
2019—the day after B&P filed the amended complaint—B&P sent a letter to Defendants, asking
them to supplement their responses to several discovery requests. See Pl.’s E-mail, ECF No. 47-3.
Those requests concerned, among other things, the total number of B&P drawings that Defendants
had acquired. See Defs.’ Resp. to Pl.’s First Am. Set of Interrog., ECF No. 47-2 at PageID.1086.
When Defendants refused to supplement their responses, B&P filed another motion to compel,
which was again referred to Judge Morris. ECF No. 47.
But like before, B&P’s efforts proved unfruitful. During the motion hearing, Defendants
argued that they had no duty to supplement discovery responses that they had served before B&P
filed its amended complaint.4 See June 4, 2019, Hr’g Tr., ECF No. 116 at PageID.4063–64. In
response, B&P contended that regardless of Defendants’ duty to supplement, they should have
treated B&P’s email as a new discovery request. Id. at PageID.4068–69. But as Judge Morris
noted, even if B&P’s email were a new discovery request, the 30-day response period would have
extended beyond the discovery cutoff. See id. at PageID.4084; see also FED. R. CIV. P. 33(b)(2).
Consequently, Judge Morris denied B&P’s motion as untimely. ECF No. 116 at PageID.4084.
Even so, Judge Morris remarked that if B&P “[wanted] to seek an amendment of the discovery
cutoff, [it was] welcome to . . . take [that] up with [the undersigned].” Id.
On June 13, 2019, B&P took Judge Morris’s advice and filed a motion to reopen discovery
for an additional 30 days. ECF No. 69. Unfortunately, because this Court was relatively unfamiliar
with the discovery proceedings—partly because neither party furnished this Court with a copy of
the June 2019 transcript—it concluded that B&P had been dilatory and denied the motion to
reopen. See ECF No. 86 at PageID.3322.
4
Notably, the parties never filed the transcript of this hearing. It was not docketed until after
summary judgment had been entered for Defendants, while the case was pending on appeal.
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ii.
Having reconsidered the five factors outlined in Marie v. American Red Cross, 771 F.3d
344 (6th Cir. 2014), this Court will reopen discovery. To begin, the second, fourth, and fifth
factors—which address the materiality of discovery, diligence of the movant, and responsiveness
of the nonmovant—each weigh in B&P’s favor. See id. at 366. As explained in Section III.A.i,
supra, the information B&P seeks is plainly material; B&P has diligently pursued that information;
and Defendants have rebuffed B&P at every turn. Cf. id.
Materiality is particularly significant here. Although previously more cautious in its
allegations, B&P now alleges that Defendants misappropriated an unspecified number of
“additional” drawings, beyond those already identified in the amended complaint. ECF No. 45 at
PageID.995. It is elementary that “[p]arties 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)(1). Whether Defendants have other B&P drawings and how Defendants
obtained them are both questions that lay at the heart of this case. Therefore, B&P should at least
have an opportunity to learn the answers.
In contrast, only the first and third Marie factors weigh against reopening discovery, and
neither is persuasive. The first factor addresses when the movant learned of the outstanding
discovery; the third addresses the overall length of discovery. See Marie, 771 F.3d at 366.
Regarding the first factor, B&P has known since at least 2018 that Defendants were withholding
relevant information. Ordinarily, that length of time would weigh heavily against it. But by all
accounts, B&P never ignored this information and vigorously pursued a remedy, filing two
motions to compel, a motion to amend, and a motion to reopen discovery. Indeed, it seems that the
only reason B&P has not already obtained the information it seeks is because it was overly cautious
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and drafted a rather narrow complaint—an unusual mistake for a plaintiff to make.
As to the third factor, the scheduling order was entered in July 2018 and amended three
times, with discovery concluding on May 13, 2019. See Scheduling Order, ECF No. 14; First Am.
Scheduling Order, ECF No. 35; Second Am. Scheduling Order, ECF No. 42; Order Extending
Dates, ECF No. 60. In other words, the parties received 10 months of discovery. Although 10
months is not trivial amount of time—and should have been sufficient—it is unsurprising that B&P
needs more time given the contentiousness of this case.
As indicated, three factors weigh in favor of reopening discovery and two weigh against it.
Thus, on balance, the five Marie factors weigh in favor of reopening discovery.
iii.
This Court is also persuaded to reopen discovery given the natural implications of the Sixth
Circuit’s decision for Defendants’ second ground for summary judgment.
To prevail on their second ground for summary judgment, Defendants must show that there
is no genuine dispute of material fact that B&P failed to take reasonable precautions to maintain
the secrecy of its drawings. See Giasson Aerospace Sci., Inc. v. RCO Eng’g, Inc., 680 F. Supp. 2d
830, 839 (E.D. Mich. 2010). In discussing the facts on appeal, the Sixth Circuit noted that “the
record lacks key details regarding [the China Lake] drawings, . . . including what specific parts
they concerned . . . and how [Defendants] obtained them.” B&P Littleford, 2021 WL 3732313, at
*7. Presumably, those “key details” would shed considerable light on whether B&P took
reasonable precautions to protect its drawings. Notably, in drafting the argument section of their
motion for summary judgment, Defendants devoted less than two full pages to their reasonableprecautions argument; in total, the reasonable-precautions argument received less than five pages
of briefing between the motion, response, and reply.
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Ultimately, resolving Defendants’ second ground for summary judgment now—without
any additional discovery—would risk another “premature” decision or—even worse—an invasion
of the fact-finding role specifically vested in the jury. See id. at *8.
iv.
For all the reasons discussed in Section III.A, supra, discovery will be reopened for an
additional 90 days. To avoid extending the discovery period any further, the parties are strongly
urged to immediately resolve any discovery issues between them.
B.
The next issue is whether additional summary-judgment briefing is appropriate. “[D]istrict
courts may in their discretion permit renewed or successive motions for summary judgment . . . .”
Lexicon, Inc. v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am., 436 F.3d 662, 670 n.6 (6th Cir. 2006); see also Whitford v.
Boglino, 63 F.3d 527, 530 (7th Cir. 1995) (per curiam) (“[T]he denial of summary judgment has
no res judicata effect, and the district court may, in its discretion, allow a party to renew a
previously denied summary judgment motion or file successive motions, particularly if good
reasons exist.”).
It seems likely that, with an additional 90 days of discovery, either B&P or Defendants
could develop a persuasive case for summary judgment. Further, given the backlog of criminal
cases awaiting trial, it is unlikely that additional motion practice would meaningfully delay trial in
this case. For these reasons, the parties will be granted leave to file new motions for summary
judgment according to the scheduled provided in Section IV, infra.
C.
The final issue is whether additional motion practice is necessary to resolve Mr.
Hardaway’s sanctions. Mr. Hardaway and the parties agree that the issue should be resolved as
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expeditiously as possible; Defendants, in specific, have requested an evidentiary hearing. Defs.’
Supp. Br., ECF No. 131 at PageID.4175. But given the Sixth Circuit’s clarification of the
applicable standard for sanctions, see B&P Littleford, 2021 WL 3732313, at *10, this Court may
be able to resolve the issue without a hearing.
Therefore, Defendants will be directed to file a renewed motion for sanctions setting forth
the legal and factual basis for their request. Consistent with the Sixth Circuit’s order, Defendants’
motion must address the “fees and costs that were ‘reasonably incurred’ by [them] as a direct result
of Hardaway’s misconduct in discovery.” Id. at *10. This Court will only conduct a hearing if
necessary to resolve a disputed question of law or fact.
IV.
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that discovery in this case is REOPENED from the date of
this Order until April 5, 2022.
Further, it is ORDERED that the parties are GRANTED leave to file new motions for
summary judgment on or before April 29, 2022.
Further, it is ORDERED that Defendants are DIRECTED to file a new motion for
sanctions on or before January 19, 2022.
A new scheduling order will be entered consistent with this Order and providing all other
necessary dates.
Dated: December 29, 2021
s/Thomas L. Ludington
THOMAS L. LUDINGTON
United States District Judge
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