CPI Card Group, Inc. et al v. Dwyer et al
Filing
565
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 490 Motion to Compel; granting in part and denying in part 500 Motion to Compel; granting in part and denying in part 517 Motion to Compel(Written Opinion) Signed by Magistrate Judge Becky R. Thorson on 10/4/2018. (TMM)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
CPI Card Group, Inc. et al.,
Civ. No. 17-3983 (SRN/BRT)
Plaintiffs,
v.
John Dwyer, et al.,
ORDER ON MOTIONS TO COMPEL
Defendants.
Adam Gregory Chandler, Esq., Charles B. Rogers, Esq., James J. Long, Esq., Karen D.
McDaniel, Esq., Mira Vats-Fournier, Esq., and William Fitzsimmons, Esq., Briggs &
Morgan, PA, counsel for Plaintiffs.
Richard R. Voebel, Esq., Ryan, A. Olson, Esq., and Scott D. Blake, Esq., Felhaber,
Larson, Fenlon & Vogt, PA, counsel for Defendant Dwyer.
A. Robert Fischer, Esq., Gina K. Janeiro, Esq., and Janet M. Olawsky, Esq., counsel for
Defendants Multi Packaging Solutions, Inc., John Searfoss, and Ken Glinert.
Now before the Court are three motions: (1) Motion to Compel Discovery by
Plaintiffs CPI Card Group, Inc. and CPI Card Group-Minnesota, Inc. (the “CPI
Plaintiffs”) (Doc. No. 500); (2) Motion to Compel Discovery and Related Relief by
Defendants Multi Packaging Solutions, Inc., John Searfoss, and Ken Glinert (the “MPS
Defendants”) (Doc. No. 490); and (3) Motion to Compel Discovery by Defendant John
Dwyer (Doc. No. 517). The Court held a hearing on these motions on October 3, 2018.
(Doc. No. 564.) They are resolved as follows:
I.
CPI’s Motion to Compel
Plaintiffs move for an Order compelling the MPS Defendants to supplement
document productions and produce responsive documents to other document requests.
(Doc. No. 500.) As discussed herein, Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel (Doc. No. 500) is
GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The individual requests are discussed
below.
1.
The CPI Plaintiffs’ First Set of Documents to MPS. MPS must
supplement written discovery responses to Request Nos. 15 and 16 by October 31, 2018,
to include documents generated in 2018. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1).
2.
The CPI Plaintiffs’ Second Set of Document Requests to MPS. CPI
agrees that its motion as to Request No. 2 is satisfied by supplementation of initial
disclosures. This supplementation is due on October 5, 2018. (See Doc. No. 545, Second
Amended Pretrial Scheduling Order.)
CPI’s motion to compel documents responsive to Request No. 3 is denied without
prejudice. CPI has not made any showing that documents subject to discovery have been
withheld and CPI has not identified disputes relating to privilege logs.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Requests Nos. 5 and 6 is granted. Discovery
responsive to these requests is relevant to multiple claims and is proportional pursuant to
Rule 26. MPS has not shown any burden to this relevant discovery. “A party claiming
requests are unduly burdensome cannot make conclusory allegations, but must provide
some evidence regarding the time or expense required.” Vallejo v. Amgen, Inc., --- F. 3d ---, 2018 WL 4288360, at *5 (8th Cir. Sept. 10, 2018). Paragraph Six of the Declaration
submitted in opposition to CPI’s motion, setting forth the number of hours related to past
discovery efforts, does not satisfy this requirement. (See Doc. No. 552, Declaration of
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Janet M. Olawsky, ¶6.) To the extent the requests call for the production of emails,
Plaintiffs must identify no more than five email custodians for this search by October 10,
2018. Defendants may apply search terms to locate responsive ESI documents as a tool in
addition to other traditional efforts.
MPI must produce these documents by October 31, 2018.
3.
CPI’s Third Set of Document Requests. CPI’s motion to compel
complete responses to Request No. 1 is granted in part and denied in part. MPS must
produce written communications, including emails, letters, and presentations between
MPS and the Specified Parties1 after January 1, 2017, relating to potential work on
Transaction Cards, including but not limited to request for proposals and responses to the
same. Discovery responsive to these requests is relevant to multiple claims and is
proportional pursuant to Rule 26. MPS has not shown any burden to this relevant
discovery. To the extent the requests call for the production of emails, Plaintiffs must
identify no more than five email custodians for this search by October 10, 2018.
Defendants may apply search terms to locate responsive ESI documents as a tool in
addition to other traditional efforts.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Request No. 2 is granted in part and denied
in part. MPS must produce responsive documents to the “nine” accounts by October 10,
2018. The remaining documents must be produced by October 31, 2018. Discovery
responsive to these requests is relevant to multiple claims and is proportional pursuant to
1
For clarity, the Specified Parties are defined as the Prohibited Accounts. (See Doc.
No. 271 at 5.)
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Rule 26. As set forth above, MPS has not shown any burden to this relevant discovery.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Request No. 3 is granted in part and denied
in part. MPS must provide documents that show sales in dollars and units of the Specified
Parties related to Transaction Cards since January 1, 2015. To the extent MPS’s business
records do not include costs of manufacture/production and gross profits earned by
customer project and/or program, MPS is not required to generate or create such
documents. Finally, if the sales in dollars of the Specified Parties relating to Transaction
Cards since January 1, 2015, are reported on a monthly basis, versus a quarterly basis, the
monthly records must be produced. Responsive documents for the nine customers must
be produced by October 10, 2018. The remaining documents must be produced by
October 31, 2018. Discovery responsive to these requests is relevant to multiple claims
and is proportional pursuant to Rule 26. As set forth above, MPS has not shown any
burden to this relevant discovery.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Request Nos. 4 is granted in part and denied
in part. MPS must produce MPS Sales forecasts about business and prospective business,
and/or expected business with the Specified Parties relating to Transaction cards from
January 1, 2017 through the present. Defendants are not required to produce “all
documents relating to the sales forecasts” as that part of the request is overly broad and
not sufficiently tailored to be proportional to the needs of the case. Documents subject to
this part of the Order must be produced by October 31, 2018.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Request Nos. 6 and 7 are granted as to the
Specified Parties. Discovery responsive to these requests is relevant to multiple claims
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and is proportional pursuant to Rule 26. MPS has not shown any burden to this relevant
discovery. To the extent the requests call for the production of emails, Plaintiffs will
identify no more than five email custodians for this search. Defendants may apply search
terms to locate responsive ESI documents as a tool in addition to other traditional efforts.
These documents must be produced by October 31, 2018.
CPI’s motion to compel responses to Request No. 5 is denied without prejudice for
a lack of a showing of relevance.
4.
CPI’s First Set of Document Requests to Searfoss and Glinert.
Defendants Searfoss and Glinert have agreed to supplement their responses. Responses
must be supplemented by October 31, 2018.
5.
Withdrawn Subpoena to Catalyst Card Company. Plaintiffs’ motion to
compel MPS to supplement all of the past discovery responses to include documents now
in MPS’s possession and control through its acquisition of Catalyst is denied without
prejudice, except as to the documents MPS agreed to produce. Those documents must be
produced by October 31, 2018. If additional Catalyst documents are still sought, the
parties must meet and confer to attempt to agree on (a) the particular document requests
that CPI contends should apply; and (b) how to reasonably target relevant and
proportional documents from the Catalyst materials. Disputes about this category of
documents must be filed by October 19, 2018.
II.
MPS Defendants’ Motion to Compel
The MPS Defendants move for an order compelling Plaintiffs to provide a list
identifying each trade secret upon which its allegations are based, to provide “complete
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answers” to discovery requests as previously ordered by Magistrate Judge Noel, and to
amend the protective order to stop Plaintiffs’ abuse of the Attorney Eyes Only (“AEO”)
Designation. (Doc. No. 490.) As discussed herein, the MPS Defendants’ Motion to
Compel (Doc. No. 490) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The
individual requests are discussed below.
1.
Motion to Supplement MPS Defendants’ Trade Secret Interrogatories
(MPS Interrogatory Nos. 4–5, Searfoss Interrogatory No. 5, Glinert Interrogatory
No. 5.) The CPI Plaintiffs have disclosed alleged trade secrets with sufficient particularity
to require Defendants to participate in the discovery at issue in the multiple motions to
compel. Further, as indicated above, much of the discovery sought is relevant to other
claims in the litigation, in addition to trade secret misappropriation claims.
While the Court will not require Plaintiffs to supplement before Defendants are
required to respond to Plaintiffs’ discovery, further supplementation by CPI is warranted.
Plaintiffs must supplement their Interrogatory responses to disclose the facts that they
know about. They also must designate the information they contend is subject to their
trade secret misappropriation claims. To the extent Plaintiffs have knowledge of facts to
connect a particular Defendant with misappropriation, disclosure or misuse of a particular
trade secret or certain confidential information, that information must also be included.
Plaintiffs should avoid caveats or reservations that make it appear that the facts disclosed
are just examples. Plaintiff cannot respond in a “summary fashion” or say that “certain
aspects” of a general description include a trade secret. (Doc. No. 493, Declaration of
Janet M. Olawsky, Ex. 1.) Further, Plaintiffs’ objection that disclosure of the alleged
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trade secrets calls for a legal conclusion is overruled. Contention interrogatories are a
permissible form of discovery and requiring a supplemental response is not premature at
this stage of discovery. Indeed, a supplemental response will be important in order to
efficiently complete all fact discovery by December 17, 2018. (See Doc. No. 545, Second
Amended Pretrial Scheduling Order.) The October 1, 2018 fact discovery deadline was
extended on September 28, 2018, only to permit the parties additional time to respond to
written discovery already served and to take fact depositions.2 To the extent Plaintiffs
possess relevant information, they must respond.
The Court appreciates that Plaintiffs require additional discovery before more final
answers are served. If Plaintiffs discover new information following their
supplementation, or better understand the information they have, based on diligently
pursued discovery, they will likely have good cause to supplement their answers before
the close of discovery. A telephone status conference is set for November 9, 2018, at
9:00 a.m. to discuss the status of fact discovery and the issue of supplementation. The
supplementation required by this Order requires Plaintiff to identify what is currently
known and alleged as to each Defendant. This supplementation is due by October 31,
2018.
For purposes of the settlement conference set for October 16, 2018, Plaintiffs must
2
The Second Amended Scheduling Order remains in place. The parties are
reminded that the Second Amended Scheduling Order provided that “[i]f any party seeks
to amend the scheduling order to allow for any additional written discovery, they must
show good cause and, because the deadline has passed, extraordinary circumstances.”
(Doc. No. 545.) The deadline expired on September 25, 2018. (See id.)
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provide Defendants’ counsel with a summary list of any known additional trade secrets or
confidential information believed to have been misappropriated, disclosed, or misused
that are not yet included in the interrogatory answers by October 10, 2018. This
summary list can be more fully developed as required above and incorporated into the
supplemental answers due by October 31, 2018.
2.
Motion to Supplement Damages Interrogatories (MPS Interrogatory
No. 14, Searfoss Interrogatory No. 16, Glinert Interrogatory No. 16.) Plaintiffs must
supplement by October 31, 2018. For purposes of the settlement conference, Plaintiffs
must provide a settlement demand and the rationale for the demand prior to the settlement
conference. This demand and rationale must be included in the confidential settlement
letter to the Court. The parties’ confidential settlement letters are due to chambers via
email at thorson_chambers@mnd.uscourts.gov on October 12, 2018 by 4:00 p.m.
Attachments more than twenty pages must be hand-delivered to chambers by 4:00 p.m.
on that same date.
3.
Attorney’s Eyes Only Designation. CPI must initiate a meet and confer
with all of the Defendants3 about AEO designations. Plaintiffs must prepare and present a
proposed definition of the material that is subject to the AEO category. The definition
must include temporal limits that would apply to such designations. The parties should
also meet and confer to discuss how to re-designate documents pursuant to the parties’
agreements or the Court’s ruling on an amended protective order. The parties’ joint or
This includes Defendant Dwyer, who also objects to Plaintiffs’ AEO designations.
(Doc. Nos. 517, 520.)
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separate proposals for an amended protective order must be submitted no later than
October 19, 2018. The Court will make its ruling after the receipt of these materials.
No later than October 12, 2018, the parties must identify, by bates number, any
AEO documents that they believe must be de-designated for purposes of the settlement
conference. To the extent the parties do not agree on de-designation, then they must
discuss how more general information might be shared with clients to assist in
understanding and evaluating settlement positions. The parties must include their
agreements or proposals on this issue in their settlement letters.
III.
Defendant Dwyer’s Motion to Compel
Defendant Dwyer moves for an Order compelling Plaintiffs to identify trade
secrets it claims Defendants misappropriated, review documents and deposition
testimony it has designated as AEO and designate them consistent with the applicable
Protective Order and law, and withdraw the errata sheet executed by Ms. Peggy O’Leary,
CPI’s Rule 30(b)(6) designee. (Doc. No. 517.) The Court addressed the first request
above. The Court granted the request to strike the errata sheet at the hearing. The Bone
Care case, cited by Plaintiffs, has no connection to the circumstances of this case. See
Bone Care Int’l, LLC v. Pentech Pharm., Inc., No. 08-cv-1083, 2010 WL 3894444 (N.D.
Ill. Sept. 30, 2010). Plaintiffs in this case seek to incorporate all answers to
interrogatories into all answers at a deposition. Plaintiffs’ position has no merit.
Therefore, Defendant Dwyer’s Motion to Compel (Doc. No. 517) is GRANTED IN
PART at this time.
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IV.
The Parties’ Motions for Sanctions are Denied
V.
Supplementation of All Written Discovery
CPI’s request for an order that requires Defendants to search for all 2018
documents that would be responsive to past document requests is DENIED without
prejudice. The parties must meet and confer regarding the supplementation of discovery
and present joint or competing proposals to the Court by October 19, 2018. The Court
will discuss the scope and timetable for supplementation at the November 9, 2018
telephone status conference.
VI.
ESI Protocols for Completing Document Production
The parties previewed potential disputes relating to ESI protocols for the
production of discovery that was served months ago. This is concerning to the Court,
especially when the parties were required, pursuant to the Amended Scheduling Order
dated May 15, 2018, to submit a proposed order regarding preservation, disclosure, and
production of Electronically Stored Documents no later than July 2, 2018. The Court
expects that the parties will fully meet and confer to attempt to resolve any disputes
regarding the production of documents. If disputes cannot be resolved, the following
process will apply to disputes regarding ESI:
(a) The parties must jointly send a short email to the Court describing the dispute
and the parties’ positions;
(b) The parties must inform the Court whether they agree to IDR
(c) If IDR is not agreed to, the parties must simultaneously file formal motions
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setting forth their positions and proposal by October 19, 2018 at 5:00 p.m. The briefs are
limited to ten pages and a detailed proposed order, setting forth the proposed ESI
protocol, must be included in Word format and sent to Chambers via email at
thorson_chambers@mnd.uscourts.gov.
Date: October 4, 2018.
s/ Becky R. Thorson
BECKY R. THORSON
United States Magistrate Judge
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