Fidelity National Title Insurance Company v. Captiva Lake Investments, LLC
Filing
280
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER: IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that defendants motion for sanctions [Doc. #257] is granted. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendant shall have until February 10, 2015, to file verified statements of the attorneys fees defendant incurred in bringing the instant motion for sanctions and the costs associated with Mr. Whitledges inspection. Signed by District Judge Carol E. Jackson on 1/7/2015. (KMS)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI
EASTERN DIVISION
FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
vs.
CAPTIVA LAKE INVESTMENTS, LLC,
Defendant.
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Case No. 4:10-CV-1890 (CEJ)
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on defendant’s motion for sanctions for spoliation
of evidence and misrepresentation. Plaintiff has filed a response in opposition and the
issues are fully briefed.
I.
Background
This dispute concerns the availability of coverage under a loan policy of title
insurance issued in conjunction with a construction project. Defendant Captiva Lake
Investments, LLC (Captiva) claims that it is entitled to defense and indemnification with
respect to mechanics’ liens and for unmarketability of title. Plaintiff Fidelity National
Title Insurance Company (Fidelity) asserts that it has provided a defense for the
mechanics’ liens, that a policy exclusion bars coverage, and that the policy does not
provide coverage for Captiva’s alleged unmarketability of title. Both parties seek
declaratory relief. Captiva additionally asserts counterclaims for breach of contract,
vexatious refusal, and tortious interference.1
1
Fidelity retained the firm of Sauerwein Simon & Blanchard (SSB) to represent
Captiva in the mechanics’ liens litigation. Captiva alleges that Fidelity instructed SSB
to withhold information from Captiva and thwarted potential avenues of defense
against the amount of the liens. In addition, Captiva claims that Fidelity refused to
This is Captiva’s fourth discovery-related motion in a dispute that is now several
years old. In May 2011, Captiva served requests for production of all documents
related to its claims, triggering a lengthy negotiation over materials Fidelity claimed
were protected under the attorney-client privilege and the work-product doctrine. In
early 2012, Captiva became aware of two sets of materials that Fidelity had not
produced or listed in its privilege log: materials in Fidelity’s computer-based “Claims
Processing System” (CPS) and monthly Major Claims Reports (MCRs).2 In June 2012,
Captiva filed a motion to compel production of these materials. After an in camera
review, the court found that Fidelity had waived its attorney-client privilege and workproduct protections to these materials by failing to properly include them in its privilege
logs. The court directed Fidelity to produce the MCRs and materials in CPS no later
than September 4, 2012. [Doc. #113].
Fidelity did not fully comply with the order -- it produced only partial information
from CPS and failed to produce four MCRs from 2010. Accordingly, on September 17,
2012, Captiva filed a motion for sanctions, seeking dismissal of Fidelity’s claims or, in
the alternative, a forensic examination of its computer systems. Fidelity denied that
its conduct was sanctionable and stated that it was consulting with a specialist to
collect more data from CPS. On November 16, 2012, the court denied Captiva’s
motion for sanctions and ordered Fidelity to file a status report addressing the progress
of its consultation with e-discovery specialists. [Doc. #177].
issue a formal denial of coverage in an effort to limit its potential liability in this action.
2
Defendant deposed former claims handler Mark Dickhute on May 23, 2012. In
the course of his testimony, he testified that he prepared MCRs every month. In
addition to being new information for Captiva, counsel for Fidelity has attested that he
did not know about MCRs before Dickhute’s deposition. Briner Aff. ¶¶12-13 [Doc.
#121-1].
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The parties submitted cross-motions for summary judgment on January 14,
2013.3 On February 7, 2013, Captiva filed a motion to compel production, stating that
Fidelity concealed or withheld relevant documents, made unfounded privilege claims,
and withheld documents until after depositions had been completed. Captiva also
moved for the appointment of a specialist to examine Fidelity’s computer system.
After a hearing on April 23, 2013, the court appointed William A. Whitledge to inspect
Fidelity’s computer systems and directed the parties to develop a protocol for the
inspection. [Doc. #229].
Mr. Whitledge completed his report on June 16, 2014. [Doc. #254-1]. His
findings are summarized as follows: (1) as of the date of his report, Fidelity had not
instituted a litigation hold, id. at 2; (2) Fidelity did not conduct a systematic search of
its computer systems, including its email archive, for discoverable information before
May 5, 2013, id. at 2-3; (3) in 2011 and 2012, a contractor lost as many as 13 million
email messages while implementing an email retention program, id. at 4; (4) Fidelity
was able to recover files on the computer assigned to former claims handler Mark
Dickhute, but did not preserve any of his network share, id. at 4-5; and (5) new
entries into the CPS overwrite existing data without retaining a copy and logs
generated by the system are destroyed after a month, id. at 6-8.
II.
Discussion
Captiva seeks sanctions pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 37 and the court’s inherent
power, which includes the discretionary “ability to fashion an appropriate sanction for
conduct which abuses the judicial process.” Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32,
44-45 (1991); see also Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 354 F.3d 739, 750 (8th Cir.
3
The court denied both motions on April 22, 2013.
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2004); Ameriwood Indus. v. Liberman, No. 4:06CV524DJS, 2007 WL 5110313, at *4
(E.D. Mo. July 3, 2007); Process Controls Int’l, Inc. v. Emerson Process Mgmt.,
4:10CV645 CDP, 2011 WL 5006220 , at *5 (E.D. Mo. Oct. 20, 2011). Captiva alleges
that Fidelity has engaged in spoliation of evidence, caused prejudicial delay in the
production of evidence, and made egregious misrepresentations to the court.
A.
Spoliation
A spoliation-of-evidence sanction requires “a finding of intentional destruction
indicating a desire to suppress the truth.” Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Wade, 485 F.3d
1032, 1035 (8th Cir. 2007) (quoting Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 354 F.3d 739,
746 (8th. Cir. 2004)). “Intent is rarely proved by direct evidence, and a district court
has substantial leeway to determine intent through consideration of circumstantial
evidence, witness credibility, motives of the witnesses in a particular case, and other
factors.” Greyhound, 485 F.3d at 1035 (quoting Morris v. Union Pac. R.R., 373 F.3d
896, 902 (8th Cir. 2004)). An explicit finding of bad faith is not required to impose
sanctions on a party that destroys specifically-requested evidence after litigation has
commenced.
Gallagher v. Magner, 619 F.3d 823, 845 (8th Cir. 2010) (quoting
Stevenson, 354 F.3d at 749-50). The obligation to preserve evidence begins when a
party knows or should have known that the evidence is relevant to future or current
litigation. E*Trade Sec. LLC v. Deutsche Bank AG, 230 F.R.D. 582, 588 (D. Minn.
2005).
Fidelity did not issue a litigation hold with respect to Captiva’s claims, though the
record establishes that it does issue holds in some instances. See Pl. Ex. B, Grube Aff.
[Doc. #269-2]; Pl. Ex. J, Dec. 15, 2011 Memorandum regarding “legal hold” process.
Fidelity asserts that a litigation hold was unnecessary here because it has a “document
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collection procedure.” See Pl. Ex. F “Major Claims Department Document Collection
Procedures” [Doc. #269-6] (for each claim, MCD staff retain hard copies of documents
in physical file, and emails and electronic documents in separate electronic folders).
The mere existence of a procedure is insufficient to satisfy Fidelity’s obligations to
preserve discoverable evidence, if it does not actually preserve evidence. See E*Trade,
230 F.R.D. at 589 (“When litigation is imminent or has already commenced, ‘a
corporation cannot blindly destroy documents and expect to be shielded by a
seemingly innocuous document retention policy.’”) (quoting Stevenson, 354 F.3d at
749). As discussed below, the failure to impose a litigation hold resulted in the deletion
of unknown numbers of emails. The court finds that Fidelity’s failure to implement a
litigation hold establishes the necessary intent to support the imposition of sanctions.
See Doe v. Norwalk Cmty. Coll., 248 F.R.D. 372, 378-79 (D. Conn. 2007) (defendants
subject to sanctions for loss of electronic information when they failed to issue litigation
hold); E*Trade, 230 F.R.D. at 592 (imposing sanctions where company failed to issue
litigation hold on emails in reliance on its backup tapes, which it then destroyed
pursuant to retention policy); Zubulake v. UBS Warburg LLC, 220 F.R.D. 212, 221
(S.D.N.Y. 2003) (defendant’s failure to include backup tapes in preservation order after
onset of litigation was sanctionable).
There must be a finding of prejudice to Captiva before the court can impose a
sanction for destruction of evidence. Hallmark Cards, Inc. v. Murley, 703 F.3d 456,
460 (8th Cir. 2013) (citing Stevenson, 354 F.3d at 746). Captiva asserts that it has
been prejudiced by the loss of three categories of evidence.
1. Emails
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After this litigation commenced, a contractor for Fidelity caused two mass
deletions of emails while trying to institute a company-wide email retention policy. On
September 13, 2011, nearly 8,000,000 unique emails covered by legal holds were
deleted.
Grube Aff. ¶19.
This incident did not result in the loss of information
discoverable in this case because all of the deleted emails predated September 13,
2006, well before Captiva submitted its claim for coverage on July 29, 2009. Id. at ¶
21. However, between December 13, 2011, and July 22, 2012, Fidelity began deleting
emails that were older than 180 days and that were not covered by legal holds. Id. at
¶¶22, 27.
As noted, there was no litigation hold with respect to Captiva’s claim,
resulting in the probable loss of discoverable emails sent or received by claims handlers
Mark Dickhute, Gregory Dawley,4 and more than a dozen other employees who were
involved with the Captiva claim. See Def. Reply at 10 n.6 (listing employees outside
the Major Claims department who worked on the Captiva claim) [Doc. #275].
Fidelity asserts that Captiva was not prejudiced by the loss of emails, because
it still has nearly 33,000 emails sent or received by Dickhute and 1,900 sent or
received by Dawley before December 23, 2011. Pl. Ex. G, Williams Aff. ¶8 [Doc.#2697]. The fact that Fidelity retained some emails from the deletion period is meaningless
because Fidelity does not know the quantity or contents of emails that were deleted.
See Process Controls, 2011 WL 5006220, at *6 (while remaining evidence “may be an
accurate representation of the documents that were destroyed, there is simply no way
to tell.”); Ameriwood Indus., Inc. v. Liberman, 4:06CV524DJS, 2007 WL 5110313, at
*7 (E.D. Mo. July 3, 2007) (“The fact that plaintiff cannot show exactly what
4
Gregory Dawley took over the Captiva claim in November 2012. Dawley Aff.
¶17 [Doc. #121-9].
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information and documents were destroyed, as defendants argue, is precisely the
problem.”)
Captiva has demonstrated that discoverable communications occurred via email.
For example, on May 4, 2011, Dickhute emailed coverage counsel Jay Levitch,
discussing matters relevant to the defense of the mechanics’ liens.5 Def. Ex. 10 [Doc.
#257-10]. The material in this email is relevant to Captiva’s tortious interference and
vexatious refusal claims and supports its contention that other discoverable material
was lost. The court finds that Captiva was prejudiced because the loss of the emails
“impaired [Captiva’s] ability to go to trial or threatened to interfere with the rightful
decision of the case.” Apple Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 888 F. Supp. 2d 976,
993 (N.D. Cal. 2012) (citing Leon v. IDX Systs.Corp., 464 F.3d 951, 959 (9th Cir.
2006)). Appropriate sanctions will be discussed below.
2. CPS
CPS is a database system developed in-house by Fidelity’s software developers.
Whitledge Rept. at 6; Pl. Ex. A, Miller Aff. ¶¶ 22-23 [Doc. #269-1]. It is a “single state
system” that tracks only current data for a claim and does not keep historical data.6
5
Communications with coverage counsel are generally privileged and Fidelity
asserts that disclosure of this document was inadvertent and demands its return.
However, Fidelity has been on notice since September 4, 2013, that it had produced
email messages from coverage counsel. Def. Ex. 1 [Doc. #275-1]. Fidelity did not
respond to this notification by requesting return of any privileged documents that were
inadvertently disclosed, nor has it sought relief from the court. Thus, any claim that
the document is privileged has been waived by the failure to timely act. See
Fed.R.Evid. 502(b) (inadvertent disclosure does not result in waiver if holder of
privilege “promptly took reasonable steps to rectify the error.”)
6
Some Captiva entries in CPS have not been changed since they were entered.
See Han Aff. ¶¶ 9-12, 16-17 (text for “coverage brief” screen unchanged since entry).
The text in other fields can be revised or deleted, but the original author’s name and
date stamp remain. Id.
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Rini Suppl. Aff. ¶4 [Doc. #178-2]. While changes in CPS data are logged, the logs are
destroyed after a month. Whitledge Rept. at 7.
Fidelity creates a file in CPS for every claim. Dawley Aff. ¶8 [Doc. #98-1].
Several “screens” or “buttons” are available within each claim file; e.g.,“Analysis,”
“Tasks,” “Liens.” Rini Aff. ¶ 7 [Doc. #121-6]; Han Aff. ¶¶ 7, 13, 19 [Doc. #269-5].
CPS assists the claims handlers in their preparation of MCRs, but the reports are not
recorded within CPS. Whitledge Rept. at 6. Documents stored outside CPS can be
linked to claims in CPS. Han Aff. ¶¶ 26-27, 31.
Captiva complains that Fidelity allows data in CPS to be constantly overwritten,
thereby destroying discoverable evidence.
Captiva fails to identify a category of
evidence that was available only through CPS and has been lost. For example, MCRs
and emails (other than those deleted in 2012) have been produced through other
means. Captiva cites an email dated February 9, 2012, indicating that the agency
contract between Fidelity’s predecessor and LandChoice Company LLC was “uploaded
to CPS Doc Manager” in the Captiva claim. Def. Ex. 12 [Doc. #257-12]. Captiva
claims that this document was not produced and presumably was deleted from CPS.
However, Young Han, Fidelity’s Legal Systems Developer, attests that the agency
contract is still located in CPS Documents Manager. Han Aff. ¶30.
Rule 37(e), Fed.R.Civ.P., provides that, “[a]bsent exceptional circumstances, a
court may not impose sanctions . . . on a party for failing to provide electronically
stored information lost as a result of the routine, good-faith operation of an electronic
information system.” As the rules committee explained, “[m]any steps essential to
computer operation may alter or destroy information, for reasons that have nothing
to do with how that information might relate to discovery.” Committee note to 2006
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amendment. The potential overwriting of data that defendant complains about here
is part of the routine operation of CPS. There is no indication that Fidelity could have
preserved relevant CPS data without significant intervention in a major computer
system. While “the advent of litigation may require intervention to alter the operation
of a [computer information] system to prevent loss of discoverable information[,] . .
. attempting to prevent all overwriting or deleting of electronically store information .
. . might cripple a computer system.” 8B Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice
and Procedure § 2284.1 (3d ed.). In the absence of a compelling claim that relevant
evidence was lost, the Court declines to sanction Fidelity for its failure to preserve CPS
data.
3.
Mark Dickhute’s files
Dickhute was required to maintain separate electronic folders for the Captiva
claim. Pl. Ex. F at p.4. His electronic files were copied and stored in 2011, when he
changed positions, and in 2012 when he left the company. Pl. Ex. C, Goosen Aff.¶¶
8, 12 [Doc. #269-3]. There is no evidence that electronic documents in Dickhute’s
control on the day he left the company were deleted. Captiva argues that, without a
litigation hold, Dickhute was free to alter or delete records before his departure. In the
absence of any evidence that Dickhute destroyed records, any claim of prejudice is
entirely speculative.
B.
Prejudicial Delay
Captiva argues that it has been harmed by Fidelity’s failure to timely produce
discoverable documents.
Captiva made its first request for documents in May 2011. Fidelity did not
inform Captiva of the existence of MCRs by either producing them or listing them in a
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privilege log and Captiva first learned of MCRs at Dickhute’s deposition in May 2012.
It then filed a motion to compel production. On August 17, 2012, the court ordered
Fidelity to produce MCRs not later than September 4, 2012. On September 17, 2012,
Captiva filed a motion for sanctions based in part on Fidelity’s failure to produce MCRs
for four months in 2010.
Fidelity vigorously opposed Captiva’s sanctions motion, calling it unwarranted
at best and in bad faith at worst. [Doc. #121]. With respect to the failure to turn over
all MCRs, Fidelity’s counsel Shawn Briner explained that he was unaware of their
existence before Dickhute’s deposition on May 23, 2012. Following the deposition,
counsel searched for and located several reports. These were provided to the court
for in camera review. Briner Aff. ¶¶ 12-13 [Doc. #121-1]. On September 4, 2012,
Fidelity gave Captiva all the reports it had produced to the court. Id. at ¶24. On
September 7th, Captiva informed Mr. Briner that reports were missing and he
undertook another search. Id. at ¶¶25-26.
Dickhute’s successor, Gregory A. Dawley, did know about MCRs because he
produced his own every month, but he assumed that Dickhute had produced all
discoverable materials in his possession. After Dickhute’s deposition in May 2012,
Dawley gathered as many electronic copies of Dickhute’s reports as he could find.
Dawley Aff. ¶16. He asked administrator Helen Hammond to search for additional
reports but she did not find any in the archives she could access.7
She thought
Dickhute might not have completed MCRS every month and Dawley decided that this
adequately explained the missing reports. Although Dawley had received Dickhute’s
7
Electronic copies of the missing MCRs were eventually located in an archive
which Hammond could not access. Dawley Aff. ¶21.
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paper files, he did not examine them until September 2012, at which point he found
excerpts of some of the missing reports and several pages of handwritten notes. On
September 18, 2012, Dawley turned the paper files over to Fidelity’s counsel. He then
made further inquiries to locate additional electronic copies of the missing reports,
which were found in a previously unsearched archive. Dawley Aff. ¶¶ 6, 16-21 [Doc.
#124-1]. Captiva finally received all MCRs in May 2013, see Pl. Ex. I, Correspondence
dated May 28, 2013 (September 2010 MCR to be produced) [Doc. #269-9], three
months after the parties’ summary judgment motions were fully briefed.
Fidelity argues that Captiva cannot establish it was prejudiced by any delay in
production of MCRs and other documents.
The court disagrees.
First, Fidelity
disclosed 40,000 pages of new documents after April 2013.8 Fidelity contends that
75% of the “new” pages are duplicates, impertinent or immaterial; even crediting that
estimate, that means that there are approximately 10,000 new pages to be scrutinized.
Second, in November 2013, Fidelity produced a document that would have been helpful
to Captiva’s summary judgment motion.
Def. Ex. 8, Dawley Nov. 5, 2012
memorandum requesting counsel [Doc. #257-8].9 Fidelity asserts that this document
would not have altered the outcome of the parties’ summary judgment motions
because the court’s order was consistent with Captiva’s construction of the document.
The court does not intend to reanalyze the summary judgment issues, but the
8
In its reply memorandum, Captiva states that it just received approximately 1
million additional pages and that 150,000 pages of documents were added to Fidelity’s
privilege log. Reply at pp. 8-9 [Doc. #275]. Fidelity asserts that 97% of the new
documents consist of duplicates and largely-redacted multipage spreadsheets. [Doc.
#279].
9
The memorandum includes information regarding the absence of certain
required exceptions from the issued policy.
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memorandum could have aided the court with respect to its analysis of coverage
issues, and may have been relevant to Captiva’s vexatious conduct and tortious
interference claims, consideration of which the court deferred until trial. The court finds
that Fidelity’s unexcused delay in producing relevant documents caused prejudice to
Captiva.
C.
Misrepresentations
Fidelity asserted in September 2012 that it had done “everything possible” to
find discoverable material and made similarly inaccurate statements in subsequent
filings. Captiva characterizes these statements as egregious misrepresentations. The
court disagrees. It is evident that the discovery debacle arose in large part because
Fidelity’s counsel was not aware of discovery materials in Dickhute’s possession until
May 2012. The court finds that Fidelity’s statements were the product of its incomplete
grasp of its own documents.
In summary, the Court finds that Fidelity is subject to sanctions for failing to
secure emails relevant to the Captiva claim and for prejudicial delay in production of
discoverable material.
D.
Sanctions
The type of sanctions available for spoliation include entry of default judgment,
an adverse inference instruction to the jury, exclusion of evidence, and the imposition
of the prejudiced party’s attorneys’ fees or other monetary sanction. Am. Builders &
Contractors Supply Co. v. Roofers Mart, Inc., 1:11-CV-19 CEJ, 2012 WL 2992627, at
*3 (E.D. Mo. July 20, 2012). Captiva asks the court to strike Fidelity’s pleadings, issue
an adverse inference instruction, and order Fidelity to pay its attorneys’ fees and costs
associated with Mr. Whitledge’s inspection.
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“This court ‘is not constrained to impose the least onerous sanction available,
but may exercise its discretion to choose the most appropriate sanction under the
circumstances.’” Liberman, 2007 WL 5110313 at *4 (quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Carey,
186 F.3d 1016, 1022 (8th Cir. 1999)). Although a finding of bad faith “is not always
necessary to the court’s exercise of its inherent power to impose sanctions,” there
must be a finding of “intentional destruction indicating a desire to suppress the truth”
in order to dismiss a claim.
Process Controls, 2011 WL 5006220, at *7 (citing
Stevenson, 354 F.3d at 745, and quoting Menz. v. New Holland N. Am., Inc., 440 F.3d
1002, 1006 (8th Cir. 2006)).
Dismissal is not an appropriate sanction in this case. “The sanction of striking
pleadings should be used sparingly because in this system of justice the opportunity
to be heard is a litigant’s most precious right.” Id. (internal quotations and citations
omitted). “There is a strong policy in favor of deciding a case on its merits, and
against depriving a party of his day in court.” Id. (citation omitted). Such a drastic
sanction is typically reserved for the most egregious offenses. See, e.g., Liberman,
2007 WL 5110313 (defendant deleted computer hard drives that were subject of
litigation); Global Traffic Techs., LLC v. Tomar Elecs., Inc., No. 05–756, 2007 WL
4591297 (D. Minn. Dec. 27, 2007) (defendant repeatedly violated court orders, despite
having been sanctioned on four previous occasions in the case); Ashton v. Knight
Transp., Inc., 772 F. Supp. 2d 772 (N.D. Tex. 2011) (defendants intentionally
destroyed evidence that was “critical” to the case and litigation was reasonably
foreseeable). The spoliation in this case does not rise to such a level.10
10
The court is mindful that Captiva received privileged documents it otherwise
would not have obtained, but for Fidelity’s mishandling of discovery.
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Captiva also asks for a sanction in the form of an adverse inference instruction.
An adverse inference instruction for “the ongoing destruction of records during
litigation” is allowed “even absent an explicit bad faith finding.” Stevenson, 354 F.3d
at 750. Here, Fidelity implemented an email retention program that deleted emails
after litigation commenced and, thus, a finding of bad faith is not required.
Accordingly, the court will instruct jurors that they may, but are not required to,
assume the contents of the deleted emails would have been adverse to Fidelity. The
court will also allow Fidelity an opportunity to put on rebuttal evidence “as an innocent
explanation for its conduct.” Id.
Captiva also seeks an award of its attorneys’ fees and costs associated with
bringing its sanctions motions, including all costs associated with Mr. Whitledge’s
services. While Fidelity asserts that Captiva has not suffered significant prejudice, it
concedes that its handling of discovery issues culminated in Mr. Whitledge’s
appointment and it stands ready to pay a portion of Mr. Whitledge’s fees, subject to
an opportunity to review the reasonableness of those fees. The court believes that this
is an appropriate sanction. In determining the proportion of inspection costs Fidelity
should pay, the court is mindful that the inspection resulted in the production of a
comparatively modest number of new documents, none of which amounts to a
“smoking gun.”
On the other hand, the inspection revealed that Fidelity deleted
emails, failed to institute a litigation hold, and delayed completing a comprehensive
search of its electronic files, events which Captivity and the court would not have
known about but for the inspection. Thus, the court will require Fidelity to pay one-half
of the reasonable costs of the inspection. In light of the prejudicial delay caused by
Fidelity’s mishandling of discovery, the court will also require it to pay Captiva’s
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reasonable attorneys’ fees associated with bringing this sanctions motion.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2).
Accordingly,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that defendant’s motion for sanctions [Doc. #257]
is granted.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendant shall have until February 10,
2015, to file verified statements of the attorneys’ fees defendant incurred in bringing
the instant motion for sanctions and the costs associated with Mr. Whitledge’s
inspection.
___________________________
CAROL E. JACKSON
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Dated this 7th day of January, 2015.
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