Management Registry, Inc. v. A.W. Companies, Inc. et al
Filing
403
ORDER granting in part 327 Motion for Sanction; granting in part 344 Motion for Sanctions. See Order and R&R for additional details. (Written Opinion) Signed by Magistrate Judge Katherine M. Menendez on 4/20/2020. (BJP)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
Management Registry, Inc.
Case No. 0:17-cv-5009-JRT-KMM
Plaintiff,
v.
ORDER AND
REPORT AND
RECOMMENDATION
A.W. Companies, Inc., et al.
Defendants.
This matter is before the Court on Management Registry, Inc.’s (“MRI”),
allegations of numerous instances of discovery misconduct on the part of the defendants
and their counsel, Alexander Loftus. [MRI Pet., ECF No. 327.] Also before the Court is
an earlier request for fees concerning the plaintiff’s motion to compel the defendants’
document production. [See Pl.’s Mot. to Compel, ECF No. 219; Order (June 24, 2019),
ECF No. 239; Morris Decl., ECF No. 240; Defs.’ Resp., ECF No. 248.] And finally, the
Court had previously taken under advisement MRI’s request that terminable sanctions be
entered against the defendants based on their conduct and that of their counsel during the
discovery period, and the Court addresses that request now. [Pl.’s Renewed Mot., ECF
No. 344; Order (Nov. 15, 2019), ECF No. 359.]
For the reasons that follow, the Court recommends that MRI’s requests for
dispositive sanctions be denied. The Court also orders that MRI’s requests for attorneys’
fees and costs be granted in part pursuant to Rules 37(a)(5) and 37(b)(2). Further, the
Court recommends that defense counsel, Alexander Loftus, be sanctioned pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1927 and the Court’s inherent power for conduct that has vexatiously multiplied
these proceedings. And finally, the Court recommends that pursuant to its inherent
powers the District Court instruct the jury in this case regarding the defendants’ conduct
during the discovery stage of this litigation.
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I.
Background
This case was filed on November 3, 2017. Since the beginning, the Court has
made persistent and often frustrating attempts to manage the litigation to a point where a
resolution on the merits can occur. Unfortunately, due to the conduct of the defendants
and their counsel, MRI has been unable to obtain relevant information during the
discovery period and was forced to incur otherwise unnecessary legal fees and discovery
expenses. First, it took significant and preventable efforts for MRI to obtain a usable
production of the defendants’ electronically stored information. When the Court
repeatedly instructed the defendants and their current counsel to take steps to remedy the
flaws in the initial attempted production, they failed to comply. This deprived MRI of
meaningful discovery in the case for many months. Second, when the defendants finally
gave MRI a production it could use, MRI learned that the defendants had taken an
unreasonably narrow view of what information was discoverable without disclosing any
of those omissions to opposing counsel. Simply put, after promising for months that all
requested information would be found in the besieged production once it could be used,
the truth was that substantial relevant and responsive information had not been included
at all. Third, after MRI successfully moved to compel additional discovery, the
defendants and their counsel have continued to obstruct the discovery process,
demonstrating an unwillingness to comply with the Court’s Orders and otherwise fulfill
their obligations to participate in discovery in good faith. Because the Court recommends
significant sanctions against the defendants in this matter, the Court discusses the
unfortunate history of this litigation in significant detail.
Early Stages
On January 23, 2018, now-retired Magistrate Judge Franklin L. Noel entered a
Scheduling Order, which set a November 1, 2018 deadline for completion of discovery
and a trial-ready date of July 19, 2019. [ECF No. 105.] On May 7, 2018, the case was
reassigned to the undersigned Magistrate Judge as a result of Judge Noel’s retirement.
[ECF No. 128.] Not long after the reassignment, MRI brought a motion for a protective
order concerning the acceptable format for the production of electronically stored
information (“ESI”), and Defendant Wendy Brown brought a cross-motion to compel.
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[ECF Nos. 129, 131, 136, 140.] Generally, the defendants took the position that
documents needed to be produced in an organized, readily searchable format, with Bates
labeling and an indication of which documents were responsive to which requests. [See
ECF No. 145.] However, due to a conflict of interest that arose after these motions were
briefed, the defendants’ counsel, attorneys at Sapentia Law Group, moved to withdraw.
[ECF Nos. 148, 151.] The Court stayed discovery for a short period until the motion to
withdraw was resolved. [ECF No. 156.] In July 2018, attorneys with the Stinson Leonard
Street law firm, including Richard Pins, entered appearances on behalf of the defendants.
[ECF Nos. 160–62.] The Court granted Sapentia Law Group’s motion to withdraw on
September 5, 2018. [ECF No. 164.]
ESI Production
On September 24, 2018, the Court held a telephonic conference concerning MRI’s
motion for a protective order and Ms. Brown’s motion to compel discovery. [ECF
No. 167.] In relevant part, the Court denied MRI’s motion for a protective order and
required Plaintiff to produce documents according to the following parameters:
(a) The production from Plaintiff must explain (through Bates stamps,
indexing, or otherwise) which documents being produced are
responsive to which requests.
(b) The production from the Plaintiff must be in a searchable format.
(c) The Plaintiff must review its responsive documents to determine
which documents are subject to confidentiality designations.
[Order (Sept. 26, 2018) (“9/26/28 Order”), ECF No. 168 at 1–2.] In October 2018, the
Court modified the scheduling order, setting an April 15, 2019 deadline for completion of
discovery and an October 1, 2019 trial-ready date. [ECF No. 171.]
The issue of how ESI should be produced came up again in December of 2018.
Mr. Pins and James Morris, counsel for MRI, had exchanged increasingly contentious
communications about the reciprocal discovery obligations of both sides and compliance
by MRI with the September 26th Order. The September 26th Order had discussed only
MRI’s obligation to produce its documents in a particular manner, but because no motion
related to the defendants’ production was pending, it did not explicitly say that this
requirement applied to both sides. [Morris Decl. (June 3, 2019) (“6/3/19 Morris Decl.”)
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¶ 16, ECF No. 225.] Mr. Pins assured Mr. Morris that the defendants intended to produce
documents in the same way that they had requested MRI make its ESI production. [Id.
¶ 18.] Subsequently, however, Mr. Pins indicated that he expected a one-sided production
from MRI in December 2018 based on the September 26th Order. [Id. ¶ 20.]
On December 18, 2018, the parties emailed letters to the Court in advance of a
December 19th telephone conference. Mr. Morris’s letter indicated that after the
September 26th Order was issued, he contacted Mr. Pins to explain “we will definitely be
seeking the same level of production from the Defendants, inasmuch as we have only
gotten flat PDFs so far, and certainly need all of the metadata, computer documents, email communications, etc. so that we can conduct similar analyses related to Defendants
herein.” [Letter from J. Morris to Menendez, M.J. (Dec. 18, 2018), ECF No. 225-1.]
During the December 19, 2018 telephone conference, the Court ordered the defendants to
produce ESI in the same manner as the Court had required of MRI, advising that the
defendants could not fairly have demanded a level of organization from MRI while
refusing to abide by similar expectations in their own. [See Mins. (Dec. 19, 2019), ECF
No. 173;1 see also 6/3/19 Morris Decl. ¶ 26.]
Difficulties Using ESI
On January 11, 2019, Mr. Morris sent Mr. Pins a lengthy letter identifying the
areas of defendants’ document production that MRI believed to be deficient. [Letter from
J. Morris to R. Pins (Jan. 11, 2019), ECF No. 225-2.] By February 2019, it became clear
that MRI was having difficulty using or even opening the ESI production it had received
from the defendants. [6/3/19 Morris Decl. ¶¶ 34–37.] On February 8, 2019, Mr. Pins
acknowledged that the ESI production was a “corrupt file, and re-issued the production.”
1
The relatively brief minute entry for the December 19th telephone conference, which
was conducted pursuant to the Court’s informal discovery dispute process, does not
reflect the Court’s Order regarding the format required for the defendants’ production.
Nevertheless, that obligation was plainly communicated to all counsel during the call.
Not only does Mr. Morris describe his recollection of the Courts Order in a declaration
[ECF No. 225 ¶ 26], but the Court itself recalls issuing the Order during the call.
Moreover, the defendants have not seriously contested that the Court ordered them to
produce discovery in an organized and searchable form that corresponded to the format
required for MRI’s production.
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[Id. ¶ 35.] The parties contacted the Court and a telephone conference was set for March
6, 2019. However, it quickly became clear during the call that the parties had not engaged
in sufficient efforts to resolve the discovery issues before bringing them before the
undersigned for resolution of any specific dispute. [ECF No. 175.]
The Court held a follow-up conference on March 13, 2019. [ECF No. 177.]
During that call, it appeared that “significant progress [had been made] in resolving [the
parties’] outstanding disagreements related to discovery.” [ECF No. 178.] In particular, in
a March 13, 2019 letter, Mr. Morris represented that the parties had reached the following
agreement:
Defendants will supplement Plaintiff’s discovery responses consistent with
the manner in which the Court required indexing and identification in
Paragraph I.(a) of the Court’s September 26, 2018 Order. In particular,
relative to the [Requests for Production], Defendants will either identify
that the items have been produced or restate our objection and the reason
therefore. Defendants will also provide a matrix, akin to that produced by
MRI, that identifies which documents are responsive to which requests.
Deadline: April 5, 2019.
[Letter from James Morris to Menendez, M.J. (Mar. 13, 2019) (on file with the Court).]
Essentially, the defendants agreed to do what the Court had required during the
December 19, 2018 telephone conference. The Scheduling Order was modified yet again,
with a new discovery deadline of August 16, 2019, and a trial-ready date of February 3,
2020. [ECF No. 180.] However, the Court’s optimism that discovery would finally get on
track proved to be misplaced.
On April 4, 2019, a notice of substitution of counsel was filed for the defendants.
Out of the case were Mr. Pins and the other Stinson Leonard Street lawyers. Alexander
Loftus and Ryan Moore, attorneys at the Stoltmann Law Offices in Chicago, entered
notices of appearance for the defendants. [ECF No. 184.] Unfortunately, shortly after
Mr. Loftus and Mr. Moore became involved, the contentiousness that marked earlier
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periods in the litigation returned and, indeed, intensified.2 [See Order (May 8, 2019) at 2
(“5/8/2019 Order”), ECF No. 203.]
Although prior to his withdrawal from the case, Mr. Pins had agreed the
defendants would make a supplemental or corrected production on April 15, 2019, when
Mr. Morris and his co-counsel reviewed the defendants’ production of ESI, it became
apparent that it remained unusable. [6/3/19 Morris Decl. ¶¶ 46–48.] Significant portions
of the defendants’ ESI would not “render” at all, making it impossible for MRI’s counsel
to review the information. [Id. ¶ 49.] Microsoft Excel spreadsheets had to be removed
from the discovery production set and reviewed one-by-one on a computer, thereby
eliminating metadata and erasing any indication of whether they were associated with
emails or other documents. [Id. ¶ 50.] Some documents had no Bates numbers at all and
other documents bore duplicative Bates labeling, such that multiple entirely unrelated
documents shared the same numbers. [Id. ¶ 51; see Order (June 24, 2019) at 1 n.1
(“6/24/19 Order”), ECF No. 239.] In other words, the production of ESI was substantially
useless and otherwise a mess. Mr. Loftus acknowledged that he too was having
difficulties with the production and originally indicated that he would take steps to
remedy the issues. [6/3/19 Morris Decl. ¶¶ 53, 55.] That promise was hollow.
MRI’s counsel attempted to resolve the issues regarding the workability of the
defendants’ production without involving the Court, but those communications quickly
broke down. [6/3/19 Morris Decl. ¶¶ 56–66.] Given the enormity of the problems with
the production of the defendants’ ESI, Mr. Morris suggested that the defendants overhaul
it, but Mr. Moore indicated that this was a “nonstarter.” Instead, Mr. Moore suggested
that the parties “draft stipulations around the issues [MRI] raised.” [Id. ¶ 67.] Mr. Moore
asked MRI’s counsel to particularly describe the issues they were having even though
Mr. Loftus had already acknowledged the problems that existed with the defendants’
2
Mr. Loftus introduced himself to this litigation by filing an overbroad motion to compel
without first adequately meeting and conferring with opposing counsel or even
completing a review of the information that MRI had already produced. When instructed
by the Court to engage in a meaningful meet and confer, he flatly refused to comply with
that Order. [5/8/2019 Order at 5.] Though, at that point, the Court found Mr. Loftus’s
noncompliance “astonishing” [id.], given the history of his conduct in the litigation, little
that he does remains surprising today.
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production. [Id. ¶¶ 69–70.] Though defense counsel indicated that they were looking for a
third-party discovery vendor to address the issues on May 13, 2019, MRI had heard
nothing about the issue by May 24, 2019. [Id. ¶ 74.]
MRI’s Motion to Compel
Eventually, on June 3, 2019, MRI brought a motion asking the Court to compel
the defendants: to produce documents in compliance with the September 26, 2018 and
December 19, 2018 Orders; to provide supplemental discovery responses as Mr. Pins had
agreed to prior to his withdrawal; and to issue appropriate sanctions. [ECF No. 219; ECF
No. 220 at 10.] The defendants responded, characterizing MRI’s motion to compel as
“tantamount to kicking and screaming,” accusing MRI’s counsel of “huffing and
puffing,” and asserting that the defendants had complied with all prior Court Orders.
[ECF No. 228 at 1.] Ignoring the fact that the Court had ordered the defendants to make
the same type of organized production required of MRI during the December 18, 2018
phone conference, defense counsel asserted that “there is no Order specifying the
formatting of production….” [Id. at 2.]
On June 18, 2019, the Court held a hearing on MRI’s motion to compel and for
sanctions. [Mins. (June 18, 2019), ECF No. 237.] Despite the strident and dismissive
character of the defendants’ written response, at the hearing, Mr. Loftus struck a
conciliatory tone. He “conceded that the production received by MRI from the defendants
was flawed in many ways,” candidly referring to several aspects of the production as
“stupid.” [6/24/19 Order at 1; see Tr. of Mot. Hr’g at 26, 29, 30, ECF No. 246.]
Based on the showing made by MRI and Mr. Loftus’s concessions, the Court
granted MRI’s motion to compel and issued a written Order on June 24, 2019. First,
defendants were required to “regenerate the entire production through their recently
retained third-party vendor.” [6/24/2019 Order at 2, ¶ 1(a).] Second, the Court permitted
MRI to take four follow-up depositions that had been frustrated by the unworkable state
of the defendants’ original production. [Id. ¶ 1(b).] Third, MRI was instructed to inquire
with its third-party vendor to determine “whether it is possible to merge the defendants’
re-production with MRI’s own efforts to organize the original data received from the
defendants.” The Court directed MRI to provide it with information regarding the costs of
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merging the productions, and the Court indicated it would consider requiring the
defendants to pay for MRI’s vendor to complete that process.3 [Id. ¶ 1(c).] Finally, the
Court set a schedule for MRI to submit an affidavit stating the expenses, including
attorney’s fees, incurred in bringing the motion to compel. However, the Court directed
MRI to exclude the expenses and fees it incurred because of the defendants’ unusable
original production, declining to award those substantial costs at that time. [Id. at 2–3,
¶ 1(d).]
Additional Problems
Unfortunately, the Court’s June 24th Order granting MRI’s motion to compel did
not end the difficulties that MRI experienced in obtaining a useful production from the
defendants. On July 8, 2019, MRI filed a Status Update Regarding Defendants’
Production Issues. [ECF No. 249.] Counsel for the parties, along with representatives
from Logikcull and Bluestar CS, the parties’ respective discovery experts, had held a
conference on June 28, 2019 in an attempt to address the ESI issues. [Id. at 1.] On July 1,
2019, the defendants provided an “overlay” that was intended to allow MRI’s counsel to
merge the first production with the newer production so that all the work Mr. Morris and
his team had done would not be lost. Unfortunately, Mr. Morris received an error
message when he attempted to upload the overlay and Excel documents and other
attachments would still not render. [Id. at 2.] As troubling, the documents that were
visible suggested that the defendants’ additional production included only documents
responsive MRI’s original Request for Production No. 2; there was no indication that any
documents had been produced in response to many of the other document requests. [Id. at
3–4.]
On July 18, 2019, MRI filed a Second Status Update Regarding Court Order
Compelling Discovery. [ECF No. 254.] Mr. Loftus had suggested “that images would be
3
This portion of the Order was intended to address the fact that MRI had already engaged
in significant work to review and make sense of the defendants’ original flawed
production. If possible, the Court’s aim was to ensure that the defendants’ re-production
would not require MRI to re-review and re-organize everything MRI had previously
received, potentially doubling portions of its litigation costs because of problems that the
defendants created.
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provided for all files with images, which would require a new Bates Number extension;
and, exporting the production, with metadata fields with prior Bates Numbers and
apparently another ‘new’ Bates Number.” [Id. at 1.] Mr. Morris asked Mr. Loftus to
explain how this would work with the original Bates numbers that had been produced
and, characteristic of much of his approach to the meet-and-confer process in this case,
Mr. Loftus suggested “it’s up to you to tell us what you need.” [Id. at 1–2.] Mr. Morris
insisted that the proverbial ball was in the defendants’ court to take the steps necessary to
resolve the issues caused by the production. [Id. at 2.]
In a follow-up letter to Mr. Loftus, Mr. Morris provided a list of the specific
requirements that would need to be met for the “overlay” to work properly and noted that
during the June 28, 2019 conference call with the Court, the defendants’ discovery expert
from Relativity indicated an understanding of what would be needed to achieve those
ends. [ECF No. 258.] Mr. Loftus suggested that the problems MRI was experiencing with
the overlay occurred because MRI’s counsel never uploaded a particular volume of the
ESI production. [ECF No. 260.] He also asserted that it appeared MRI was requesting an
entirely new production rather than a workable overlay of the original production. [Id.]
Mr. Morris reiterated that, in fact, the additional pages from the volume Mr. Loftus
referenced had never been received by MRI and that MRI never asked for an entirely new
production. [ECF No. 261.] Mr. Loftus again insisted that MRI had already received
everything it needed as evidenced in a “Sharefile Report,” but again MRI informed him
that this was a corrupt file. [ECF Nos. 262, 267.]
July 31st Order and First Sanctions Motion
In the face of the seemingly endless problems with the defendants’ production, the
Court held yet another phone conference on June 24, 2019. In relevant part, the Court
“addressed ongoing and serious problems with the defendants’ production of
documents.” [7/31/2019 Order at 1, ECF No. 269.] During the call and in its follow-up
Order, the Court echoed Mr. Morris’s frustration that the defendants had still not
complied with the Court’s June 24, 2019 discovery Order. [Id. at 1.] Mr. Morris was
instructed to file a letter specifically describing the problem that rendered the production
unusable and describing any technical solution MRI requested. Mr. Loftus and
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Mr. Moore were then ordered to file a letter two days after Mr. Morris’s letter was filed,
explaining how the defendants would comply with MRI’s requests and when that
compliance would occur. Alternatively, if the defendants were unable to comply, they
would be required to offer a specific proposal for resolving the issue. [Id. at 2.]
Unfortunately, when the parties filed their letters, the Court was provided no assurance
that the defendants had complied with the June 24th Order. [Id.]
The Court’s July 31, 2019 Order included the following instructions based on the
failure of the defendants to demonstrate compliance with the June 24, 2019 Order:
On or before August 2, 2019, the defendants are required to ensure that the
third-party discovery vendors for both sides have direct communication
concerning the ongoing technological issues with the defendants’ document
production. On or before August 12, 2019, the defendants shall verify that
they have fully complied with the Court’s June 24, 2019 Order regarding
their document production. If technical issues remain or the defendants are
otherwise unable to truthfully verify that all technical issues with their
document production have been remedied by the deadline established
herein, plaintiff has until August 19, 2019, to file a formal motion to
compel and for any other relief if believes is appropriate under the
circumstances.
[Id.] The Order placed the onus squarely on the defendants to arrange for the discovery
vendors to have direct discussions on how to resolve the remaining technical issues and
for the defendants to follow that up by informing the Court of the status of their efforts to
solve the problems. They did neither.
On August 13, 2019, MRI filed a motion seeking sanctions, including dispositive
sanctions, against the defendants pursuant to Rule 37 for violating multiple discovery
Orders. [ECF No. 280; ECF No. 281 at 2–3.] Though they had been ordered to ensure
that the parties’ third-party discovery vendors had direct communication regarding the
issues with defendants’ production of ESI, neither defendants nor their counsel had
reached out to MRI’s vendor, LogikCull. [ECF No. 281-1.] Defendants also ignored the
August 12, 2019 deadline to notify the Court of the defendants’ efforts to fix the ongoing
production issues, submitting nothing to the Court to verify either that they had solved
the problems or that technical issues prevented them from finding a fix.
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On August 19, 2019, the Court held a status conference to discuss the timing of
the hearing on the plaintiff’s sanctions motion. [ECF No. 287.] Because it appeared that
the defendants had finally provided a usable replacement document production to the
plaintiffs in the days after the motion was filed, the Court encouraged counsel for MRI to
narrow the relief requested “or update the record after evaluating the document
production which has finally occurred.” [Id.] On August 30, 2019, MRI filed a document
modifying the request for relief sought in its motion for sanctions. [ECF No. 291.]
Although Mr. Morris acknowledged that a somewhat workable document set had at long
last been produced, MRI detailed additional difficulties its LogikCull vendors had with
the three separate load files defense counsel had provided. As has been typical of defense
counsel’s approach to the technical issues throughout this litigation, Mr. Loftus attempted
to place the burden on MRI to solve the problem. [See id. at 4–6.] Nonetheless, MRI
withdrew its request for the most serious dispositive sanctions against the defendants
because it had at last received a somewhat usable set of discovery.
Now that Mr. Morris was at last able to review the long-awaited production, at
least in large part, a new problem emerged. Although the defendants had long asserted
that all responsive documents were contained in the data set, in fact, entire categories of
documents were missing. In modifying the motion for sanctions’ earlier request for relief,
Plaintiff’s counsel sought to compel additional discovery. [Id. at 6.] MRI asked for the
following: (1) a detailed response to Mr. Morris’s January 11, 2019 letter regarding
discovery issues; (2) a full production of documentation, including financial records,
information from Defendant Milan Batinich, and compliance with the September 26,
2018 Order regarding the indexing of the ESI production; (3) a one-sided extension of the
discovery deadline so that the plaintiff could complete its discovery efforts;
(4) permission to take four additional depositions as permitted in the June 24, 2019
Order; (5) an award of attorney’s fees and costs incurred in connection with the discovery
issues caused by the defendants and their counsel; (6) an appropriate limiting instruction
and similar sanctions regarding the evidence that defendants would be allowed to offer to
rebut the plaintiff’s expert report regarding damages; and (7) any other appropriate relief.
[Id. at 9–10.] Incredibly, despite the fact that the Court had encouraged MRI to modify its
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request for relief, the defendants filed a motion to strike this submission from the record,
which the Court denied. [ECF No. 292; Text Only Order (Sept. 4, 2019), ECF No. 295.]
The Court held a hearing on MRI’s modified motion for sanctions on September
10, 2019. Mr. Moore attended the hearing on behalf of the defendants, but unfortunately
Mr. Loftus did not. [ECF No. 297.] The Court made several rulings from the bench and
issued a written Order on September 13, 2019. [9/13/2019 Order, ECF No. 300.] The
Court declined to issue any limiting instructions regarding the defendants’ counterclaim
because the issue had not been sufficiently briefed. [Id. ¶ 3.] Although MRI’s modified
request sought to compel additional discovery, Mr. Moore stated that he was not prepared
to discuss the adequacy of the defendants’ production, their ability to produce additional
information, or whether various documents had been produced. He even stated that he
was unaware of the contents of the production that had been at issue for so long because
he had not reviewed it. He believed only the issue of sanctions was before the Court.4 As
a result, the Court instructed MRI to provide the defendants with a letter describing the
alleged deficiencies with the defendants’ production; defendants’ counsel were required
to respond to that letter; and a follow-up phone conference was scheduled. [Id. at 2–3,
¶¶ 4(a)–(c).] Further, the Court required MRI to file a petition supporting its request for
the attorneys’ fees and costs sought as sanctions, set a response deadline for the
defendants, and permitted a reply. [Id. at 3, ¶ 5.] The Court noted that MRI’s earlier
request for attorney’s fees in connection with the plaintiff’s motion to compel that led to
the June 24, 2019 Order remained pending. [Id.]
In its September 27, 2019 Petition for Attorneys’ Fees and Costs, MRI sought an
award of over $460,000 in fees and costs “related to Defendants’ recalcitrance.” [ECF
No. 327.] The Petition is supported by Declarations from Mr. Morris and from Sharon K.
Morris, another attorney at Mr. Morris’s firm. The Petition is also supported by a
declaration from MRI’s damages expert, Robert P. Gray. Mr. Gray’s declaration
addresses increased expert fees incurred as a result of receiving so few financial records
from the defendants. [ECF Nos. 324–26.] In addition, Mr. Morris submitted a Declaration
4
On October 3, 2019, Mr. Moore withdrew from representation of the defendants, and is
apparently no longer with the Stoltmann law firm. [ECF No. 339 at 1 n.1.]
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dated June 23, 2019 setting forth the fees MRI incurred in connection with the June 3,
2019 motion to compel. [ECF No. 240.] Mr. Morris’s June 23, 2019 Declaration indicates
a total of $48,900 in attorney’s fees and an additional $1,018.93 in costs was incurred in
connection with the motion to compel. However, Mr. Morris broke this total down into
separate categories based on a lack of certainty regarding the particular fees the Court
would consider awarding in connection with the June 3, 2019 motion to compel. [ECF
No. 240 ¶¶ 21, 28–30, 33.] These two fee petitions remain pending and are addressed in
this decision.
MRI’s Second Motion for Dispositive Sanctions
On September 23, 2019, the Court again held a telephonic discovery dispute
conference. [ECF No. 320.] The Court informed the parties that future discovery
disagreements should be raised through formal motion practice.5 MRI’s counsel
withdrew a motion for protective order based on defense counsel’s agreement not to seek
certain discovery; and the Court extended the deadline for filing nondispositive motions,
admonishing defense counsel of the “importance of completing their discovery
obligations thoroughly and as quickly as possible.” [Id. at 1–2.]
Through most of October 2019, the Court’s attention to this litigation shifted
briefly from the defendants’ failure to comply with their discovery obligations to
Mr. Loftus’s and Wendy Brown’s brazen violations of the Protective Order entered in the
early days of this case. [See ECF Nos. 311–16, 321–23; Order (Oct. 22, 2019), ECF No
339.] Mr. Loftus and Ms. Brown violated the Protective Order by mishandling
information designated confidential and attorneys’-eyes-only by non-party Peter Berg.
[ECF No. 339.] Eventually, the Court required Mr. Loftus, Ms. Brown, or both, to pay
$12,567 for the fees and expenses their violations caused Mr. Berg to incur. [Order (Nov.
11, 2019), ECF No. 357.]
On October 24, 2019, MRI filed another motion seeking to compel discovery,
dispositive sanctions, and an order of contempt. [ECF No. 344.] This request for
5
Despite this admonition, the Court has since attempted once again to resolve some
discovery matters informally in a seemingly futile attempt to bring this case to a
conclusion.
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sanctions also remains pending and is addressed in this decision. MRI asserted that
despite prior instructions from the Court to fully comply with their discovery obligations,
the defendants still had not produced documents post-dating December 31, 2017;
defendants had failed to provide bank records, tax returns, profit and loss statements,
financial statements, revenue or expense reports, and defendants had failed to disclose
communications exchanged with MRI’s former customers or with Defendant A.W.
Companies’ employees. [ECF No. 345 at 2–3.] MRI’s memorandum listed a total of 14
separate categories of documents that MRI sought to compel. [Id. at 5–6.]
The Court held a hearing on MRI’s motion on November 14, 2019. [ECF
No. 358.] The following day, the Court entered an Order granting MRI’s motion to
compel and taking the issues related to sanctions under advisement. [Order (Nov. 15,
2019) (“11/15/19 Order”), ECF No. 359.] In the Order compelling discovery, the Court
provided specific rulings in seventeen numbered paragraphs. [11/15/19 Order at 2–6.]
These included the following instructions:
• The defendants were required to conduct complete searches of A.W.
Companies, Inc.’s employees’ emails regarding discussions of MRI and
MRI’s customers and to produce responsive documents;
• The defendants were required to conduct full searches of four personal email accounts used to discuss business matters between late 2017 and early
2018 and produce responsive documents;
• The defendants were required to produce communications between the
defendants and any former or current MRI customer from September 1,
2017 through March 2018;
• The defendants were required to produce employee-related documentation,
including employee lists, employee databases, agreements, employee
reviews, employment files, salary and commission information, relevant
correspondence with employees, manuals, handbooks, letters, contracts and
other communications related to terms and conditions of employment;
• The defendants were required to produce financial reports, tax returns,
monthly bank account statements, earning records, invoices, and any other
documents reflecting AW’s income and earnings;
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• The defendants were required to produce communications between Al
Brown or Wendy Brown sent or received from September 1, 2017, to the
present regarding MRI, including text messages, and emails from any
account;
• The defendants were required to produce all communications between the
defendants and any former or current employee of MRI from September 1,
2017 through March 2018;
• The defendants were required to produce Wendy Brown’s and Al Brown’s
federal and state income tax returns, including W-2 forms, any and all
schedules and attachment for 2016 to the present, and any related
amendments;
• The defendants were required to produce copies of records that were filed
and produced in connection with a related state court case in Hennepin
County District Court;
• The defendants were required to produce documents showing all
compensation Milan Batinich received from A.W. Companies from 2017 to
the present;
• The defendants were required to produce Mr. Batinich’s communications
sent or received from September 1, 2017 to the present regarding MRI;
• The defendants were required to produce Mr. Batinich’s communications
sent to or received from Wendy Brown, Eric Berg, Allan Brown, or any
former or current customer or employee of MRI between September 1,
2017 and the present;
• The defendants were required to provide sworn affidavits to support any
claim that the documents compelled were not in their possession, custody,
or control;
• The parties were required to meet and confer immediately, in person or by
telephone, to reach an agreement as to search terms to facilitate the location
of responsive records in the defendants’ electronically stored information;
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• The defendants’ request for reciprocal use of search terms by MRI was
rejected because the defendants’ opportunity to take discovery had come
and gone;6
• The defendants were required to make the document production required by
the Order by January 6, 2020; and
• The defendants were required to make the document production in a
manner that complies with the Fed. R. Civ. P. and with prior Court Orders.
[11/15/19 Order ¶¶ 2–18.] Unfortunately, this detailed Order did not end the issues with
the defendants’ discovery responses.
More Recent Events
On January 24, 2020, the Court held a telephonic status conference regarding
additional issues with the defendants’ production of documents following the November
15, 2019 Order. [ECF No. 378.] Following that call, the Court issued an Order again
noting that the discovery issues being raised involved “basic discovery that should have
been provided by the Defendants many months ago.” [Order (Jan. 29, 2020) (1/29/20
Order) at 4, ECF No. 380.] Mr. Loftus was also “advised that the Court expects him to
engage in the meet and confer process with an eye toward addressing Mr. Morris’s
concerns about the state of discovery, reaching compromises where they can be attained,
and avoiding the snarky and irreverent tone that has pervaded his communications
throughout this matter.” [Id.] The Court found that it was inappropriate for Ms. Brown
herself to have conducted searches for responsive documents without adequate
supervision by Mr. Loftus. [Id. at 5.] Mr. Loftus was required to provide an affidavit or
declaration regarding his involvement in the process of complying with the November
15, 2019 Order compelling the defendants to provide discovery, and the Court listed five
items that the affidavit was required to address. [Id. at 6.] Ms. Brown was also required to
provide a similar affidavit describing her role in search for documents. [Id.] The Court
In Paragraph 16, the Court noted “[t]he unilateral discovery obligations imposed by this
Order are warranted by extraordinary difficulties experienced by the plaintiffs in
obtaining essential and plainly relevant information from the Defendants. Past orders of
the Court, as well as forthcoming ones, have addressed this pattern of discovery
misconduct, and it need not be repeated here.” [11/15/19 Order ¶ 16.]
6
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required further meeting and conferring by counsel concerning the defendants’ redactions
of text messages based on responsiveness objections. [Id. at 7–9.] And the Court found
that it was inappropriate for the defendants to have withheld financial information solely
because those documents are poorly organized or stored in a non-traditional manner. [Id.
at 9–10.] The Court required the defendants to fully comply with Paragraph 6 of the
November 15th Order (regarding production of financial documents) by February 11,
2020, noting that failure to do so may yet again warrant sanctions. [Id.]
On February 13, 2020, the Court held another telephonic discovery conference.
[ECF No. 386.] Mr. Loftus had failed to comply with the Court’s requirement in the
January 29, 2020 Order that he provide an affidavit or declaration describing his
involvement in the search for and review of the defendants’ documents. [Order (Feb. 13,
2020) (“2/13/20 Order”) ¶ 1, ECF No. 387.] He suggested during the phone conference
that he did not do so because he believed it was unnecessary. Ms. Brown’s own affidavit
or declaration was also non-compliant. [Id. ¶ 2.] The Court was even required to issue an
Order mandating that the defendants affix Bates labels to documents they provided
through the Dropbox website. [Id. ¶ 4.] The Court scheduled a follow-up telephone
conference “to discuss the progress toward eliminating the ongoing discovery problems
in this case.” [Id. ¶ 6.]
The next conference was held on February 21, 2020. [ECF No. 390.] Prior to that
call, Mr. Morris communicated that, although the defendants had produced additional
financial documents following the February 13th Order requiring them to do so,
Mr. Loftus marked each with a Bates number preceded by the following tag: “Irrelevant
Non-Responsive Misc. Invoices.” [Order (Fen. 24, 2020) (“2/24/20 Order”) at 1–2, ECF
No. 391.] In the Order that followed the call, the Court repeated the history of the
defendants’ failure to provide basic financial information relevant to MRI’s damages
claims. [Id.] During the call and in the Order that followed, the Court again admonished
Mr. Loftus for his shockingly unprofessional conduct. [Id.] The Court noted its authority
to issue sanctions under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and its repeated consideration of revoking
Mr. Loftus’s pro hac vice admission to practice before this Court. [Id. at 2–3.]
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II.
Discussion
Though the Court’s efforts to manage this litigation toward a decision on the
merits have seemed Sisyphean, unlike the Greek myth, nothing supernatural has created
the difficulty in achieving that goal. Instead, nearly every attempt MRI’s counsel and the
Court have made to obtain necessary discovery and bring the pretrial stage of this case to
a close has been thwarted by the obstinance and lack of cooperation of defendants and
their counsel. For their repeated, almost perpetual failures to comply with the Court’s
discovery orders and in light other unjustified conduct in this case, the Court concludes
that significant sanctions are warranted. However, the Court does not recommend that
dispositive sanctions be entered.
Federal courts’ power to sanction parties or their counsel is derived from several
sources, including the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. § 1927, and the
courts’ inherent power to manage the cases that appear before them. The Court first
examines the propriety of sanctions against the defendants and their counsel pursuant to
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 and then turns to the other bases for sanctions. The
Court concludes that significant monetary consequences against the defendants and their
counsel are justified in this case, although the total sanction imposed is a fraction of the
dollar value sought by the plaintiff.
A. Sanctions for Violations of Discovery Orders
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 provides the district courts authority to enter a
variety of sanctions for discovery misconduct. In relevant part, the Rule provides:
(A) For Not Obeying a Discovery Order. If a party … fails to obey an
order to provide or permit discovery, including an order under Rule 26(f),
35, or 37(a), the court where the action is pending may issue further just
orders. They may include the following:
(i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated
facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing
party claims;
(ii) prohibiting the disobedient party from supporting or opposing
designated claims or defenses, or from introducing designated matters in
evidence;
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(iii) striking pleadings in whole or in part;
(iv) staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed;
(v) dismissing the action or proceeding in whole or in part;
(vi) rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party; or
(vii) treating as contempt of court the failure to obey any order except
an order to submit to a physical or mental examination.
….
(C) Payment of Expenses. Instead of or in addition to the orders above,
the court must order the disobedient party, the attorney advising that party,
or both to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees, caused by
the failure, unless the failure was substantially justified or other
circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A), (b)(2)(C).
The application of Rule 37(b) is left to the district court’s discretion, including
“the decision to impose a sanction, the nature of the sanction imposed, and the factual
basis for the court’s decision.” Chrysler Corp. v. Carey, 186 F.3d 1016, 1019 (8th Cir.
1999). However, “the district court’s discretion narrows as the severity of the sanction or
remedy it elects increases.” Wegener v. Johnson, 527 F.3d 687, 692 (8th Cir. 2008). To
impose an “extreme sanction,” such as entering default against a defendant or dismissing
a party’s claim, the “strong policy in favor of deciding a case on its merits” demands a
showing of egregiousness that justifies depriving the litigant of its chance to be heard.
See Chrysler Corp., 186 F.3d at 1020–21. “To justify [such a sanction], Rule 37 requires:
‘(1) an order compelling discovery, (2) a willful violation of that order, and (3) prejudice
to the other party.’” Sentis Gr., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., 559 F.3d 888, 899 (8th Cir. 2009)
(quoting Schoffstall v. Henderson, 223 F.3d 818, 823 (8th Cir. 2000)). The court is not
required to impose “the least onerous sanction available, but may exercise its discretion
to choose the most appropriate sanction under the circumstances.” Chrysler Corp., 186
F.3d at 1022.
A finding of willfulness is not required to impose sanctions less severe than
dismissal, default judgment, or striking of pleadings. See Card Tech. Corp. v. DataCard,
Inc., 249 F.R.D. 567, 570–71 (D. Minn. 2008) (explaining that for lesser sanctions “it is
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not a requirement that the party ‘willfully’ refuse to obey the Court’s discovery order”).
In determining an appropriate sanction, a court “must balance the goals of enforcing the
process of discovery and ensuring adherence to policy aims of discovery with the right of
a party to have its case heard on the merits.” Id. at 571. The court’s “‘discretion is
bounded by the requirement of Rule 37(b)(2) that the sanction be ‘just’ and relate to the
claim at issue;’” in the court’s order. Hairston v. Alert Safety Light Prods., Inc., 307 f.3d
717, 719 (8th Cir. 2002) (quoting Avionic Co. v. General Dynamics Corp., 957 F.2d 555,
558 (8th Cir. 1992)).
An award of reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, “to reimburse the
opposing party for expenses caused by the failure to cooperate” is the least severe of all
the sanctions authorized by Rule 37(b). Ofoedu v. St. Francis Hosp., 234 F.R.D. 26, 33
(D. Conn. 2006). Such sanctions are appropriate where the offending parties’ conduct
required their opponents to spend their time “‘hounding’ [them] for discovery instead of
preparing the case.” A.O.A. v. Rennert, Case No. 4:11 CV 44 CDP, 2018 WL 1251827, at
*3 (E.D. Mo. Mar. 12, 2018) (quoting Schoffstall v. Henderson, 223 F.3d 818, 824 (8th
Cir. 2000)). A party or attorney against whom an award of expenses including attorney’s
fees is sought can avoid sanctions where the conduct was “substantially justified or other
circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C).
After careful review, the Court finds that there were several violations of its
discovery Orders and concludes that monetary sanctions should be imposed to Fed. R.
Civ. P. 37(a)(5) and 37(b)(2)(C). However, the Court first briefly explains why it declines
to recommend terminable sanctions.
1. Dispositive Sanctions
The record of the defendants’ and Mr. Loftus’s discovery misconduct is
disturbing, pervasive, and cannot be excused as mere accident. They have unreasonably
delayed production of documents, conducted inadequate searches, failed to produce
information required by the Court for spurious reasons, and flouted the Court’s
instructions on several occasions. Though this record may support the entry of a
dispositive sanction pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(vi), the Court declines to make such a
recommendation at this time. As the Court has repeatedly recognized in its
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communications with counsel in this case, there is a preference in federal court for
resolution of cases on their merits. Chrysler Corp., 186 F.3d at 1020–21. Despite the
misconduct marring the record before the Court, that policy can still be served in this
litigation.
2. Attorney’s Fees
Though the Court declines to recommend terminable sanctions under Rule
37(b)(2)(A), it concludes that the defendants and Mr. Loftus must pay MRI’s reasonable
expenses, including attorney’s fees, caused by the failures to comply with the
undersigned’s discovery orders. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C). In addition, the Court
concludes that MRI is entitled, under Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5), to an award of the
expenses and fees incurred in bringing its June 3, 2019 and October 24, 2019 motions to
compel. In determining whether to impose an attorney’s fee sanction against the
defendants and their counsel, the Court must consider whether the noncompliance
discussed above is substantially justified and whether the circumstances make an award
of expenses unjust. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C).
A party’s failure to obey a discovery order is substantially justified when it is
“justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person.” Smith v. Bradley Pizza, Inc.,
File No. 17-cv-02032 (ECT/KMM), 2019 WL 2448575, at *10 (D. Minn. June 12, 2019)
(Order overruling plaintiff’s objections to Rule 37(b)(2)(C) order denying in part motion
for sanctions) (quotations omitted). This requires a party’s position to have a “reasonable
basis in law and fact.” Id. (quotations omitted). The party resisting sanctions bears the
burden of showing that its position was substantially justified. Bah v. Cangemi, 548 F.3d
680, 684 (8th Cir. 2008).
General Absence of Substantial Justification
The Court finds that the defendants have not shown that their repeated failures to
comply with multiple discovery orders in this case has been substantially justified. In
their October 31, 2019 memorandum opposing MRI’s fee request, the defendants argued
that “voluminous correspondence” shows that Mr. Morris failed to meet and confer with
Mr. Loftus before requesting sanctions. They also asserted that the motion was moot to
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the extent it sought to compel production of additional documents. [ECF No. 349 at 1–2;
ECF No. 349, Ex. A.] These arguments do not provide substantial justification for the
defendants’ and Mr. Loftus’s failure to comply with the Court’s discovery orders
discussed below, and they are frankly belied by the record.
First, the communications between Mr. Loftus and Mr. Morris referenced in the
defendants’ response took place between October 22, 2019 and October 29, 2019.
Though those communications show that Mr. Loftus finally became somewhat more
serious about addressing the technical issues Mr. Morris raised months earlier, such
belated engagement does not begin to explain why the defendants and their counsel failed
to comply with discovery orders that had been issued long before. Second, events after
October 29, 2019, including the Court’s November 15, 2019 Order granting MRI’s
motion to compel and other subsequent discovery orders demonstrate that the production
that the defendants finally made did nothing to moot the substantive issues that
Mr. Morris identified. Indeed, the defendants’ production was woefully inadequate,
prompting the Court to note several times that it was incredible to be addressing the
defendants’ failure to provide basic information to MRI so long after the discovery period
began.
The defendants’ response could be read to imply that neither they nor their counsel
bear any responsibility for any of the technical issues that plagued their document
production for several months.7 To the extent the defendants argue that this substantially
justifies non-compliance with the Court’s Orders requiring the defendants and their
counsel to take steps to remedy the technical problem, they are mistaken. Specifically, in
the July 31, 2019 Order, the Court unambiguously placed the responsibility for resolving
the technical issues with the defendants’ ESI production on the defendants and their
counsel. That obligation was not only not fulfilled in a timely manner, but it was not even
taken seriously until weeks later. The Court acknowledges that civil litigators are not
expected to be computer or data-storage experts. But, by the terms of the July 31st Order,
the Court did not require the defendants and their counsel to do something unreasonable
See ECF No. 349 at 5 (“The technical issues were eventually all resolved and
unfortunately the parties have yet to discuss any substantive concerns.”).
7
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or personally solve hyper-technical problems. It required them to facilitate direct
communication between the parties’ e-discovery experts and verify that the necessary
steps were taken to resolve the issues or that technical issues prevented a resolution of the
issues. Instead of fulfilling those very reasonable obligations, defense counsel shifted the
burden to Mr. Morris and neither verified that technical issues were resolved, nor
informed the Court that the issue could not be fixed. This again delayed the plaintiff’s
access to the defendants’ documents and prevented MRI’s counsel from learning just how
unreasonably narrow that production was, further causing MRI to incur unnecessary
expenses and attorney’s fees in the litigation.
The defendants also cite Ramirez-Cruz v. Chipotle in support of their suggestion
that no sanctions should be issued at all. Case No. 15-cv-4514-ADM-KMM, 2017 WL
8947191 (D. Minn. May 11, 2017). This Court is particularly familiar with the RamirezCruz decision, having authored the report and recommendation on which the defendants
rely. This case is not comparable. There, the Court found that counsel for Chipotle
violated Rule 34 by failing to identify that it was withholding a specific document from
Ms. Ramirez-Cruz while telling her counsel that the document did not exist. Essentially,
because Chipotle believed that its timekeeping software did not provide an accurate
record of when Ms. Ramirez-Cruz was or was not scheduled to work during the relevant
timeframe, defense counsel determined that no records existed. But they did not explain
this in their written discovery responses and only provided the previously undisclosed
documentation after the issue came to a head during a deposition. Though defense
counsel’s conduct was unreasonable in interpreting the records that they did not believe
to be reliable as functionally nonexistent, the Court found that no attorney’s fees should
be imposed. It reached this conclusion because plaintiff’s counsel engaged in a quixotic
effort to investigate unrelated cases without first conferring with defense counsel about
the undisclosed records, refused to accept Chipotle’s offer to remedy the situation at its
own cost, brought unsupported motions for spoliation sanctions, and attempted to
leverage a sanctions motion against counsel to obtain a more favorable settlement offer.
See id., 2017 WL 8947191, at *15-16 (describing plaintiff’s improper handling of the
defendant’s discovery violations).
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Here, although Mr. Morris has been unrelenting in his efforts to obtain broad
discovery from the defendants, there is no indication that he, or anyone else at his firm,
have engaged in disproportionate or unreasonable acts comparable to plaintiff’s counsel
in Ramirez-Cruz. Indeed, Mr. Morris’s actions in this case have been necessary to force
the defendants and Mr. Loftus to participate meaningfully in the discovery process.
Mr. Morris has had to repeatedly bring discovery disputes to the Court’s attention to
obtain even the most basic discovery for a case of this nature. Despite those efforts, there
is still a serious question even today whether the defendants have conducted reasonable
searches of their electronically stored information for documents responsive to MRI’s
discovery requests. No comparison of this case to Ramirez-Cruz justifies the defendants’
or their attorneys’ failure to comply with discovery orders.
December 19, 2018 – June 24, 2019
Following the Court’s December 19, 2018 Order regarding the format of the
defendants’ production, the defendants and Mr. Pins failed to produce documents in
compliance with that Order. In particular, Mr. Pins acknowledged that the defendants’
original ESI production was sent with a corrupt file, and he promised to re-issue the
production. By March 13, 2019, it appeared that Mr. Pins and Mr. Morris were on their
way to resolving the problem of defendants’ non-compliance, but then Mr. Pins withdrew
from representation; it later became clear that the issues had not been resolved.
As noted above, in response to MRI’s June 3, 2019 motion to compel, the
defendants argued that there was no court order specifying the form of production.8 [ECF
No. 228 at 2.] However, “[o]ral proceedings compelling discovery that ‘unequivocally
give a litigant notice’ of the discovery required are a sufficient basis for Rule 37(b)(2)
sanctions.” Avionic Co. v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 957 F.2d 555, 558 (8th Cir. 1992)
(citing Henry v. Sneiders, 490 F.2d 315, 318 (9th Cir. 1991)). Here, the Court
acknowledges that terms of the December 19, 2018 Order specifying the form of
production for the defendants are not clearly reflected a written order or in the Court’s
The Court notes that Mr. Morris’s June 3, 2019 declaration accurately set forth the
substance of the December 19, 2018 Order. [ECF No. 228 at 2; 6/3/2019 Morris Decl.
¶ 26.] The defendants provided no evidence to contradict Mr. Morris’s affidavit.
8
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minute entry. [ECF No. 173.] However, Mr. Pins certainly had notice of the December
2018 Order regarding the form of defendants’ production and must be presumed to have
communicated those obligations to his clients.
On the other hand, the Court notes that Mr. Pins withdrew from representation a
few months after that Order was entered and during a period when it appeared the
technical issues with the production were being addressed. Mr. Loftus was not counsel of
record at the time of the December 19, 2018 phone conference, and so he did not
participate in the call. Moreover, given the difficulties Mr. Loftus admitted to
experiencing in reviewing the initial document discovery his own clients provided to
MRI, the record suggests the transition of the responsibility for the litigation from
Mr. Pins to Mr. Loftus was less than ideal and contributed to the discovery problems at
the outset of Mr. Loftus’s involvement in this case.
Ultimately, the Court need not decide whether these facts show substantial
justification for the initial period of non-compliance with the December 19, 2018 Order
regarding the form of defendants’ production. At least until the Court’s June 24, 2019
Order, the Court concludes that the unique circumstances of this case would make an
award of expenses caused by the failure to comply unjust. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C).
The Court appreciates MRI’s concerns that it incurred significant expense during this
period. However, prior to the Court’s June 24, 2010 Order, the absence of a clear
reflection of the December 19, 2018 Order in the record and the messy, but largely
unexplained, transition of the case from Mr. Pins to Mr. Loftus make an expenses and
attorney’s fees sanction pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)(C) inappropriate. Cf. Aviva Sports, Inc.
v. Fingerhut Direct Mktg., Inc., Civil No. 09-1091 (JNE/JSM), 2013 WL 3833065, at *4
(D. Minn. July 23, 2013) (declining to hold a party’s subsequent counsel responsible for
client’s disobedience of discovery orders before subsequent counsel entered the
litigation). For these reasons, the Court declines to award MRI the expenses and fees
incurred between December 2018 and June 24, 2019 that could be attributed to the failure
of the defendants to produce ESI in compliance with the December 18, 2018 Order.
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June 24, 2019 Order
Whatever latitude the Court affords the defendants’ discovery conduct in the
Spring of 2019, there can be no dispute that such patience was at its end by the summer.
When the Court issued its June 24, 2019 Order granting MRI’s first motion to compel,
the Court instructed MRI to submit an application for the expenses, including attorney’s
fees, incurred in making the motion pursuant to Rule 37(a)(5). This Order specifically
stated that the Court was not going to award the excess expenses and fees that MRI
believed it incurred due to six-month discovery morass that preceded the Order, but that
fees for the motion to compel were recoverable by MRI. MRI seeks to recover $48,900 in
attorney’s fees and an additional $1,018.93 in costs for this motion. [ECF No. 240.] The
Court concludes that an award of expenses, including attorney’s fees, that MRI incurred
in making the motion to compel is warranted, but concludes that the amount requested
should be reduced substantially.
First the Court addresses the defendants’ opposition to the award of any fees
incurred in the June motion and finds their arguments to be unpersuasive. The defendants
assert that MRI’s motion raised “vague, extremely technical, complaints about the form
of documents produced.” [ECF No. 248 at 2.] The Court disagrees. Prior to filing the
motion, Mr. Morris informed the defendants and Mr. Loftus that the format of production
was non-compliant with the Court’s December 19th Order because, among other things,
the documents were not indexed or otherwise linked to the discovery requests.
Mr. Morris also informed the defense that their ESI production was almost entirely
unusable due to documents failing to render, containing unexplained blank spaces and
unreadable text, bearing inaccurate and duplicate Bates labeling, among other issues.
Mr. Loftus acknowledged the existence of such problems during email exchanges as
early as May 2, 2019. [ECF No. 225-4 at 1.] Mr. Morris was painstakingly specific about
what the technical issues were and made numerous attempts to meet and confer with
defense counsel prior to filing the motion. [ECF Nos. 225-6, 225-7, 225-8, 225-9.]
However, defendants and their counsel did not work promptly to solve the issues,
ultimately requiring MRI to bring its motion to compel. Indeed, even in its response to
the motion, defendants remained belligerent, arguing to the Court that the production was
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fine. These facts do not support a finding of substantial justification for the defendants’
actions.
Additionally, the Court disagrees with the defendants’ claim that their financial
condition precludes an award of fees. In a declaration submitted in opposition to MRI’s
request for fees in connection with the June 3, 2019 motion to compel, Ms. Brown asserts
that expenses and attorney’s fees should not be awarded because the expense of this
litigation and her own monthly income make such an award unjust. [ECF No. 248-2.]
Though the Court recognizes that a party’s financial considerations may make an award
of expenses unjust in some cases, the Court finds that Ms. Brown’s declaration fails to
provide a sufficient basis for declining to issue such an award in this case. Ms. Brown is
not the only defendant in this action, and hers is not the only conduct that is relevant to
the Court’s Orders applying to all defendants. The defendants have cited no evidence that
A.W. Companies or any other defendant lacks the means to pay a reasonable fee-shifting
award.
Although the Court finds that requiring the defendants and Mr. Loftus to
compensate MRI for the fees and costs associated with its June 3rd motion to compel is
appropriate, the Court concludes that MRI’s request for nearly $50,000 is excessive.
Admittedly, Mr. Morris arrived at the $50,000 figure based on a lack of certainty
regarding the scope of the Court’s Order regarding the type of fees that the Court
considered compensable. However, having carefully reviewed the time records and the
hourly rates claimed in connection with MRI’s June 3, 2019 motion to compel, the Court
concludes that MRI is entitled to a reasonable award of attorney’s fees in the amount of
$15,000 for: researching, preparing, and drafting the motion to compel and supporting
documents; attending the hearing and arguing the issues; and submitting MRI’s fee
application. The Court specifically finds that the hourly rate Mr. Morris has claimed
($500 per hour) is reasonable given his experience, the nature of this litigation, and
prevailing market rates. In addition, the Court’s June 24, 2019 Order was intended to
limit an award of expenses and fees to those reasonably incurred in researching,
preparing, and drafting the motion to compel and the fee application. Further, the Court
concludes that the $1,018.93 in expenses incurred in connection with the motion to
compel is reasonable. Accordingly, the Court orders the defendants and their counsel to
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pay $16,018.93 in the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, MRI incurred in
making its June 3rd motion to compel.
MRI’s September 27, 2019 Fee Petition
MRI’s broader request for attorney’s fees and expenses caused by the problems
with the defendants’ production of ESI and other discovery conduct is embodied in the
September 27, 2019 fee petition. There, MRI requests over $460,000 in attorney’s fees,
discovery-related costs, and expert expenses. [ECF No. 327.] The Court notes that a
substantial portion of the attorney’s fees sought by MRI concern actions taken by the
defendants and their counsel during the period between December 19, 2018 and June 24,
2019, and the Court has already declined to award fees and expenses from this timeframe.
[ECF No. 326 at 3–12 (chart of time entries dated 9/25/2018 through 6/11/2019).] Entries
corresponding to this period total more than $171,000 in attorney’s fees and paralegal
time. Although very sympathetic to MRI’s frustration with the defendants’ conduct that
necessitated these expensive efforts, the Court does not Order the defendants to pay these
fees and expenses pursuant to Rule 37(b).
However, the Court finds that the defendants and Mr. Loftus caused MRI to incur
fees unnecessarily by continuing to fail to cooperate in providing discovery and
disobeying several discovery orders even after the June 24th Order shifting fees. On July
31, 2019, the Court issued an Order explaining that the parties’ letters regarding the
persistent technical issues did not reassure the Court that the defendants had complied
with the June 24, 2019 Order. [7/31/2019 Order at 2.] Accordingly, on July 31, 2019,
“the defendants [were] required to ensure that the third-party discovery vendors for both
sides have direct communication concerning the ongoing technological issues with the
defendants’ document production.” [Id.] The defendants were also required, no later than
August 12, 2019, to verify that they fully complied with the Court’s June 24, 2019 Order
regarding their document production. [Id.] The defendants neither verified full
compliance by the August 12th deadline, nor indicated that they were unable to truthfully
verify that they had fully complied with the June 24, 2019 Order. As discussed above,
there is no basis in the record to justify or excuse the defendants’ non-compliance with
the June 24, 2019 or July 31, 2019 Orders. Instead, the record demonstrates a troubling
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continuation of discovery misconduct and flouting of the Court’s efforts to get this
litigation back on track.
The fees in MRI’s September 27, 2019 time spent between June 24 and September
26, 2019, total more than $65,000. [ECF No. 32.] Having reviewed these entries and the
overall record carefully, the Court finds that the hourly rates at issue for Mr. Morris
($500/hour), Ms. Morris ($500/hour), paralegals ($100/hour), and law clerks ($150/hour)
are reasonable, a fact which has not been disputed by the defendants. However, the time
entries include some tasks the Court concludes are non-compensable under Rule 37(b)(2),
including: certain communications concerning depositions; review of some
correspondence not clearly related to this Court’s discovery orders; ordinary
communication with opposing counsel regarding the scope of discovery; and work in
connection with the defendants’ motion to dismiss.9 Pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)(C), MRI’s
fee petition [ECF No. 327] is granted to the extent that the defendants and their counsel
should be required to pay a $50,000 sanction for the attorney’s fees caused by their
failure to comply with the Court’s discovery Orders dated June 24, 2019, and July 31,
2019. Fox v. Vice, 563 U.S. 826, 838 (2011) (“The essential goal in shifting fees … is to
do rough justice, not to achieve auditing perfection.”).
MRI also seeks over $80,000 in discovery-related expenses it has incurred from its
e-discovery vendor, LogikCull, and reimbursement of $22,000 in expert-related costs
associated with the work of Robert P. Gray, its damages expert. In addition, MRI seeks to
recover $74,500 in additional expert-related costs that it anticipates it will incur in this
case. [ECF No. 327.] Though the Court appreciates that the costs associated with MRI’s
e-discovery vendor and its damages expert have likely been increased as a result of the
defendants’ delays in producing documents and failures to provide usable information
earlier in the litigation, it is not clear from the plaintiffs’ showing that these expenses are
9
Such tasks were part of the same time entries that involved other matters that were
connected to the defendants’ discovery order violations, so it was not inappropriate for
plaintiff’s counsel to submit them as part of their fee petition. Nevertheless, the Court
clarifies here that further reduction of the appropriate sanction is necessary because the
Court finds such matters are not a part of the sanctionable conduct in this case.
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caused by violations of the Court’s discovery orders. Accordingly, the Court declines to
order the defendants or their counsel to pay such expenses based on the record before it.
October 24, 2019 Motion for Sanctions
MRI’s October 24, 2019 motion seeks several types of relief. First, MRI asked for
dispositive sanctions, which the Court declines to recommend for the reasons stated
above. MRI also asked the Court to hold defendants and their counsel in contempt of
court. Though the Court has considered making a finding of contempt on more than one
occasion in this case, it also declines to recommend any party or counsel be held in
contempt at this time.
The Court does, however, grant monetary sanctions as requested in MRI’s October
24th motion, seeking an award of the fees and expenses incurred in making its motion.
MRI prevailed on that motion to compel, obtaining a broad Order on November 15th,
requiring the defendants to conduct searches for and otherwise produce many categories
of documents that should have been provided much earlier in the case. As a result, the
Court concludes that MRI is entitled to the reasonable fees and expenses incurred in
bringing the October 24, 2019 motion pursuant to Rule 37(a)(5).
MRI has not submitted a fee petition concerning the October 24, 2019 motion to
compel and for sanctions. Although “[t]he determination of fees should not result in a
second major litigation,” Fox, 563 U.S. at 838, that ship has long since sailed.
Accordingly, within seven days of this decision, MRI shall submit an application for the
reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees incurred in bringing the October 24, 2019
motion.
B.
Section 1927 Sanctions
Congress has statutorily provided courts with the power to issue sanctions against
attorneys who multiply the proceedings.
Any attorney or other person admitted to conduct cases in any court of the
United States … who so multiplies the proceedings in any case
unreasonably and vexatiously may be required by the court to satisfy
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personally the excess costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees reasonably
incurred because of such conduct.
28 U.S.C. § 1927. Sanctions under this provision are designed to “‘limit[] the abuse of
court processes.’” Vallejo v. Amgen, Inc., 903 F.3d 733, 749 (8th Cir. 2018). “‘The
decision as to whether to award attorneys’ fees and costs under Section 1927 is within
this Court’s discretion.’” Bernstein v. Extendicare Health Servs., Inc., 653 F. Supp. 2d
949, 954 (D. Minn. 2009) (quoting Gundacker v. Unisys Corp., 151 F.3d 842, 849 (8th
Cir. 1998)).
Sanctions are warranted under § 1927 “when, viewed objectively, an attorney’s
conduct manifests either intentional or reckless disregard of the attorney’s duties to the
court.” Stenilage v. Mayo Clinic Rochester, 235 F.R.D. 668, 672-73 (D. Minn. 2006)
(internal quotation marks omitted). “‘Behavior is ‘vexatious’ when it is harassing or
annoying, regardless of whether it is intended to be so. Thus, if an attorney’s conduct in
multiplying proceedings is unreasonable and harassing or annoying, sanctions may be
imposed under section 1927.’” Sherman v. Sunsong Am., Inc., No. 804-cv-300, 2007 WL
1310057, at*1 (D. Neb. Mar. 27, 2007) (quoting Cruz v. Savage, 896 F.2d 626, 632 (1st
Cir. 1990)). Sanctions are not appropriate under § 1927 where the issues raised “are
subject to reasonable dispute.” Misischia v. St. John’s Mercy Health Sys., 457 F.3d 800,
806 (8th Cir. 2006).
Mr. Loftus’s Vexatious Conduct
The Court finds that Mr. Loftus has engaged in behavior that has vexatiously
multiplied these proceedings and caused MRI to incur attorney’s fees unnecessarily.
Indeed, it is difficult to come up with a word that better describes Mr. Loftus’s handling
of this case. The list of Mr. Loftus’s conduct warranting sanctions in this matter is long,
but a discussion of the most egregious examples follows.10
This list does not include the substantial ESI-related conduct detailed above, but this is
not intended to suggest that Mr. Loftus himself bears no responsibility for delaying the
production of usable ESI to the plaintiff. Instead, because the Court has already
determined that Mr. Loftus and his clients are responsible for that unnecessary expense
10
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First, on April 26, 2019, before even reviewing the extent of the information that
MRI had provided in response to the defendants’ discovery requests, Mr. Loftus filed a
sweeping motion to compel. When the Court instructed Mr. Loftus to meet and confer
with opposing counsel to attempt to narrow the requests for relief in the motion to
compel, he simply refused. His subsequent meet and confer statement misrepresented the
substance of his communications with opposing counsel and the Court has already found
that he failed to meet and confer with Mr. Morris in good faith. [ECF No. 203.]
Second, on June 14, 2019, Mr. Loftus filed another motion to compel on behalf of
the defendants despite having failed to review the information that MRI had produced.
[ECF No. 231; ECF No. 235.] The meet-and-confer statement accompanying the motion
accused Mr. Morris of refusing to meet and confer. However, defense counsel had failed
to timely raise issues with MRI’s discovery responses during the fourteen-day timeline
that had been previously established by the Court. Nor did defense counsel ask the Court
for additional time to complete the meet-and-confer process. [ECF No. 233; ECF
No. 235.] Mr. Loftus withdrew the motion to compel four days later during a June 18,
2019 hearing on MRI’s motion to compel, only after MRI had objected to the defendants’
meet-and-confer statement. [ECF No. 246.] Though Mr. Loftus did not himself sign the
meet-and-confer statement, he was the direct supervisor of the associate who did, and he
failed to take prompt remedial action to correct its misrepresentations regarding
Mr. Morris’s conduct.11
Third, on September 3, 2019, Mr. Loftus filed a motion to strike MRI’s modified
request for sanctions after MRI had been specifically invited by the court to narrow the
request for sanctions in a previously filed motion. [ECF No. 292.] MRI was forced to
respond to this wholly unnecessary and unreasonable submission, incurring additional
under Rule 37(b)(2), the Court does not recommend additional sanctions for that conduct
under its inherent power or 28 U.S.C. § 1927.
11
See D. Minn. LR 83.6(a) (adopting the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct);
Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.1(c) (“A lawyer shall be responsible for another lawyer’s
violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct if … the lawyer … has direct supervisory
authority over the other lawyer, and knows of the conduct at a time when its
consequences can be avoided or mitigated but fails to take reasonable remedial action.”).
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attorney’s fees. It is difficult to fathom what purpose Mr. Loftus thought such a motion
would serve other than to annoy the Court, harass plaintiff’s counsel, or to force MRI to
incur further expense.
Fourth, Mr. Loftus failed to comply with the January 29, 2020 Order’s
requirement that he provide an affidavit or declaration describing his involvement in the
search for and review of the defendants’ documents pursuant to the November 15, 2019
Order. [2/13/20 Order ¶ 1.] His only explanation during the February 13, 2020 phone
conference for this failure was that he unilaterally determined that preparing the affidavit
or declaration was unnecessary. This too was an intentional or reckless disregard of
Mr. Loftus’s duties as an officer of the Court and caused MRI to incur additional
attorney’s fees preparing for and participating in yet another phone conference on
February 13, 2020.
Fifth, the Court finds that Mr. Loftus engaged in vexatious conduct that multiplied
these proceedings when he unreasonably added a tag line to several documents produced
by his clients. Specifically, his Bates labeling included the phrase “Irrelevant NonResponsive Misc. Invoices” before Bates numbers attached to the documents. This act
followed a lengthy battle by MRI to gain access to the defendants’ financial records and
the defendants attempts, at every turn, to prevent this basic discovery. In the November
15, 2019 Order, the Court, in no uncertain terms, had found that discovery of such
documentation was appropriate. [11/15/19 Order ¶ 6.] Mr. Loftus explained that he added
this tag line to identify the financial documents and keep them separate from other
documents. The Court found this explanation was disingenuous and “an astonishing
demonstration of arrogant petulance … to express his frustration at having to produce
clearly relevant documents and comply with discovery obligations.” [2/24/20 Order at 2.]
The Court concludes that Mr. Loftus should be sanctioned under § 1927 for these
acts. The impropriety of this conduct is not subject to reasonable dispute and Mr. Loftus’s
behavior has veered far afield from zealous advocacy on behalf of clients. He has
demonstrated a persistent disrespect for the undersigned’s authority over discovery
matters and intentionally multiplied these proceedings for no legitimate purpose. An
assessment of attorney’s fees against Mr. Loftus personally is an appropriate sanction that
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will, hopefully, discourage further conduct of a similar character in this proceeding.
Therefore, the Court will recommend that Mr. Loftus be sanctioned pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1927
There is no petition before the Court for the specific attorney’s fees attributable to
the vexatious conduct the undersigned has determined is sanctionable under § 1927.
Accordingly, the Court requires MRI’s counsel to submit a fee petition within seven days
of this decision for the fees MRI has reasonably incurred as a result of the vexatious
conduct identified above. MRI shall also include in its application the fees reasonably
incurred in preparing and filing that fee petition. Mr. Loftus shall have seven days to
respond to that fee petition. Upon receipt of the fee petition and Mr. Loftus’s response,
the Court will issue a supplemental report and recommendation setting forth the amount
of fees it determines represent an appropriate sanction.
Finally, the Court previously required that local counsel for the defendants, Justin
A. Bruntjen, to “become engaged in the litigation and to ensure compliance with Court
orders and the Local Rules.” [Order (Oct. 22, 2019) at 13 ¶ 4, ECF No. 339.] The Court
also required Mr. Bruntjen “to review and sign every pleading that is filed with the Court
by the defendants.” [Id.] As noted, the Court has also previously considered revoking the
pro hac vice admission that allows Mr. Loftus to practice before this Court. [Id. at 11-12.]
However, the Court concludes that doing so would only further delay resolution of this
case and again declines taking such action here. Instead, the Court concludes that it is
necessary for Mr. Bruntjen to become even more involved in the litigation to ensure that
similar issues to those discussed here do not continue to plague the proceedings. The
Court hopes that his active participation in this litigation might curb future misconduct by
Mr. Loftus. Therefore, in addition to the requirement that he review and sign every
written submission filed on behalf of the defendants in this case, Mr. Bruntjen must be
copied on all correspondence between the parties’ counsel, and he must attend all
hearings, telephonic or otherwise.
C.
Inherent Power: Nonmonetary Sanctions
Federal courts have the inherent power to “‘fashion an appropriate sanction for
conduct which abuses the judicial process.’” Aviva Sports, Inc. v. Fingerhut Direct Mktg.,
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Inc., 2013 WL 449775, at *17 (D. Minn. Jan. 8, 2013) (quoting Chambers v. NASCO,
Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 44–45 (1991)). This includes the power to enter a sanction with
dispositive effect, including the entry of default judgment. Chrysler Corp., 186 F.3d at
1022. In exercising their inherent power, courts may impose sanctions ranging from the
most severe—dismissal—to less severe “assessment[s] of attorney’s fees.” Chambers,
501 U.S. at 44–45. Other available sanctions include exclusion of evidence or testimony
and imposition of an adverse inference instruction to the jury. See Dillon v. Nissan Motor
Co., 986 F.2d 263, 266–69 (8th Cir. 1993); Stevenson v. Union P. R.R. Co., 354 F.3d 739,
746–50 (8th Cir. 2004). Courts are required to exercise their inherent powers “with
restraint and discretion.” Chambers, 501 U.S. at 44. Sanctions imposed pursuant to the
court’s inherent power are permitted where “a litigant act[ed] in ‘bad faith, vexatiously,
wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.’” Aviva Sports, 2013 WL 449775, at *17 (quoting
Chambers, 501 U.S. at 44–45).
The Court finds that the defendants’ and their counsel’s approach to providing
discovery in this case has frequently been unreasonable and has not been conducted in
good faith. They have unreasonably interpreted the proper scope of discovery, delayed
production of plainly relevant documents, repeatedly failed to engage in meaningful
discussions with MRI regarding its discovery requests, and disobeyed several court
orders.
MRI had to go to extraordinary lengths to obtain even the most basic discovery in
this case. Though the defendants provided ESI in response to MRI’s initial discovery
requests, they did so based on an indefiensibly narrow view of the scope of relevant
discovery. And although discovery commenced shortly after the entry of the original
Scheduling Order in January 2018, the fact the defendants unilaterally took such a narrow
view did not even come to light until August 2019, when the massive technical problems
with the defendants’ document production were at last overcome and its contents could
be examined. That delay was overwhelmingly caused by the defendants’ failure to
address MRI’s concerns about the state of the defendants’ ESI production and MRI’s
counsel was forced to hound the defendants and seek the Court’s intervention on
numerous occasions. Though MRI had specifically identified the omissions in the
defendants’ discovery prior to a hearing on September 10, 2019, the defendants were
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completely and inexplicably unprepared to discuss the specifics of any discovery-related
matters during that hearing.
Even after the Court issued a broad Order on November 15, 2019 compelling the
defendants to provide basic discovery that should have been produced months before, the
defendants dragged their feet, chose not to produce financial records because they were
poorly organized, and conducted searches of their ESI for responsive information without
adequate oversight or supervision from their counsel. Because the defendants’ production
remains inadequate to this day, MRI was forced to bring discovery issues to the Court’s
attention on several occasions after that Order was issued.
In short, the history of this litigation reveals that the defendants have abused the
judicial process by disobeying court orders, failing to comply with discovery obligations,
and delaying production of relevant information. Even today, neither MRI nor the Court
has any confidence that the defendants have provided all or even most of the discovery to
which MRI is entitled. Because the defendants have not participated in discovery in good
faith, the undersigned recommends that the District Court enter an Order pursuant to its
inherent power sanctioning the defendants for such vexatious discovery behavior.
Specifically, the Court recommends that the jury be instructed that the defendants failed
to cooperate in discovery during this litigation, a fact from which they may infer that the
defendants attempted to conceal information that would not have been helpful to their
position.
III.
Time for Objections
Because this decision both: (1) orders the payment of certain sanctions and
recommends nonmonetary sanctions; and (2) determines that two fee petitions must be
submitted for the Court to issue additional orders and recommendations concerning
monetary sanctions, the timing of objections to the Court’s conclusions will be adjusted.
See D. Minn. LR 72.2(a)(1), (b)(1) (providing that the Court may set a different deadline
or a party to file and serve objections to a nondispositive order or a recommended
disposition of a dispositive matter). After MRI submits the additional fee petitions
discussed herein and the defendants and Mr. Loftus have filed their responses, the Court
will promptly issue a supplemental Order and Report and Recommendation to address
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those matters. Accordingly, any objection to this decision, the supplemental decision, or
both shall be filed within 14 days after the Court files its supplemental Order and Report
and Recommendation, rather than 14 days from today’s date.
IV.
Order
Based on the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1. Plaintiff MRI’s fee application [ECF No. 240] is GRANTED IN PART to the
extent that the defendants and their counsel are required, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ.
P. 37(a)(5), to pay $16,018.93 in the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s
fees, that MRI incurred in making its June 3, 2019 motion to compel.
2. Plaintiff MRI’s fee petition [ECF No. 327] is GRANTED IN PART to the extent
that the defendants and their counsel are required, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(b)(2)(C), to pay $50,000 in the reasonable attorney’s fees caused by their
failures to comply with the Court’s discovery orders dated June 24, 2019 and July
31, 2019.
3. Plaintiff MRI’s October 24, 2019 motion [ECF No. 344] is GRANTED IN
PART to the extent it seeks an award of the reasonable expenses, including
attorney’s fees, incurred in making the motion. Within seven days of this decision,
MRI shall submit a petition for its reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees,
incurred in making the October 24, 2019 motion. Within seven days after such a
petition is filed, the defendants and Mr. Loftus may file a response to that fee
petition. Unless the parties are notified otherwise, the Court will issue a
supplemental Order regarding the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees,
that will be imposed pursuant to Rule 37(a)(5) without further briefing or oral
argument.
4. Within seven days of this decision, plaintiff MRI shall submit a petition for the
reasonable attorney’s fees caused by Mr. Loftus’s vexatious conduct discussed in
Part II.B.1 of this Order and Report and Recommendation. Within seven days after
such a petition is filed, Mr. Loftus may file a response to that fee petition. The
Court will issue a supplemental Report and Recommendation regarding the
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appropriate attorney’s-fees sanction it recommends be imposed pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1927.
5. Local counsel for the defendants, Justin A. Bruntjen must be copied on all
correspondence between the parties’ counsel, and he must attend all hearings,
telephonic or otherwise.
V.
Recommendation
Based on the discussion above, IT IS HEREBY RECOMMENDED THAT:
1. MRI’s October 24, 2019 motion [ECF No. 344] should be DENIED IN PART to
the extent it seeks dispositive sanctions.
2. The District Court should issue an Order, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1927
sanctioning counsel for the defendants, Alexander Loftus. Mr. Loftus should be
required to pay MRI’s reasonable attorney’s fees caused by the conduct discussed
in Part II.B.1 of this Order and Report and Recommendation. The Court will issue
a supplemental Report and Recommendation regarding the amount of such a
sanction upon receipt of the fee petition and response required by Paragraph 4 of
the Order in Part IV above.
3. The District Court should issue an Order, pursuant to its inherent powers,
sanctioning the defendants as follows: the jury should be instructed that the
defendants failed to cooperate in discovery during this litigation, a fact from which
they may infer that the defendants attempted to conceal information that would not
have been helpful to their position.
Date: April 20, 2020
s/Katherine Menendez
Katherine Menendez
United States Magistrate Judge
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