Ingersoll et al v. Farmland Foods, Inc.
Filing
228
ORDER denying 206 plaintiffs' motion for a preservation order; and the relief requested through plaintiffs' discovery dispute letter dated February 4, 2013, is DENIED. Signed on 2/6/13 by Chief District Judge Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr. (Enss, Rhonda)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI
ST. JOSEPH DIVISION
Jacob Ingersoll, et al., on behalf of
themselves and others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Farmland Foods, Inc.
Defendant.
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) No. 10-6046-CV-SJ-FJG
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ORDER
Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for an Evidence Preservation Order (Doc.
No. 206), in which plaintiffs seek to have defendant “enjoined . . . from implementing or
completing any changes to the current operational or compensation policies and practices at
its hog slaughter and processing plant located in Milan, Missouri . . . without first providing
Class Counsel thirty (30) days advanced notice of said changes.” Doc. No. 206, pp. 1-2.
Plaintiffs further seek an order “requiring Farmland to allow Class Counsel access to the
Milan plant within the third (30)-day notice window referenced above to observe, photograph,
video and otherwise document class members’ off-the-clock work activities as these activities
normally occur during a given workday. . . .” Id. at p. 2. Also before the Court is Plaintiffs’
letter dated February 4, 2013, requesting a discovery dispute teleconference, wherein
plaintiffs request the Court to order defendant to provide immediate access to the Milan plant
to video and photograph class members. The Court is able to resolve this issue on the
parties’ letters, and will not hold a teleconference.
I.
Background
Plaintiffs filed their complaint on April 29, 2010, and their amended complaint on May
6, 2010. Plaintiffs are a group of current production and support workers employed by
Defendant Farmland Foods, Inc. (AFarmland@) at its pork processing plant located in Milan,
Missouri. Plaintiffs allege that defendant has a policy of not fully compensating employees for
all the time spent working at defendant=s plant, specifically by not fully compensating plaintiffs
for time spent donning and doffing personal protective equipment (APPE@). Plaintiffs assert
claims under the Fair Labor Standards Act (AFLSA@) as well as the Missouri Minimum Wage
Law (AMMWL@). On February 9, 2012, plaintiffs= motion for class certification as to the Rule
23 class action for Missouri Minimum Wage Law (AMMWL@) claims was granted.
Plaintiffs’ counsel indicates that, based on conversations with class members,
plaintiffs’ counsel “became concerned that Farmland was once again rapidly changing
operational and/or compensation policies and procedures at the Milan plant relating to class
members off-the-clock work activities.” Doc. No. 207, p. 7. On December 6, 2012, class
counsel requested defendant supplement discovery. At a December 10, 2012, meet-andconfer, class counsel advised they intended to obtain video of areas in the Milan plant where
class members engage in off-the-clock activities. Plaintiffs served a Request for Entry Upon
Land for Inspections and Other Purposes on Farmland on December 14, 2012. Doc. No.
207, Ex. S. Notably, the Request for Entry states, “Plaintiffs will be conducting multiple
inspections and data collection activities at this location throughout the course of this
litigation. This Notice does not set forth the only dates and time periods for which Plaintiffs
may seek access to the Milan plant.” Id.
In a joint status report filed with the Court on December 13, 2012, plaintiffs argue
defendant “for the first time confirmed that additional changes to employee practices
concerning donning, doffing and related activities were in fact being evaluated and
implemented by Farmland.”
See Status Report, Doc. No. 197, pp. 6-7.
Farmland
supplemented its discovery on these issues on December 21, 2012. Doc. No. 207, Ex. T.
Plaintiffs’ counsel indicates these changes go back as far as September 2012:
Farmland states that the Milan Facility adopted a new policy
effective September 19, 2012 allowing employees to wear or
take hard hats, footwear, ear plugs, hairnets, safety glasses, and
steels home after shifts instead of keeping such items in lockers.
The use of lockers by employees is optional and solely for their
convenience. . . .
Farmland also states that the Milan facility is in the process of
implementing a new policy under which employees will not be
required to wear uniforms. Instead, they will wear their own
street clothes under frocks provided by Farmland. . . . This
policy is being implemented in phases by department. The
policy was implemented on November 28, 2012 for production
employees working in the Export Hallway . . . and on December
3, 2012 for production employees working on . . . the Cut Floor.
Effective November 30, 2012, Box Shop employees are not
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required to wear beard nets. . . .
Doc. No. 207, Ex. U, at 2.
II.
Standard
The Eighth Circuit has not spoken definitively on the standard used to evaluate
motions for preservation orders. However, the standards used by other federal courts appear
to have been taken in large part from the standards for obtaining injunctive relief. Under
Eighth Circuit law, the standards for obtaining a temporary restraining order or preliminary
injunction are a showing of: (1) the threat of irreparable harm to the movant; (2) the state of
balance between this harm and the injury that granting the injunction will inflict on other
parties litigant; (3) the probability that the movant will succeed on the merits; and (4) the
public interest. Dataphase Systems, Inc. v. C.L. Systems, Inc., 640 F.2d 109 (8th Cir. 1981).
However, certain courts relax the standard so that plaintiffs do not have to demonstrate
likelihood of success on the merits of the litigation, as such consideration is not appropriate
for evidence preservation. See Treppel v. Biovail Corp., 233 F.R.D. 363, 370-71 (S.D. N.Y.
2006); Capricorn Powers Co., Inc. v. Siemens Westinghouse Power Corp., 220 F.R.D. 429,
433-34 (W.D. Penn. 2004); Pueblo of Laguna v. U.S., 60 Fed. Cl. 133, 138, n.8 (Fed. Cl.
2004). Plaintiffs suggest the majority of federal courts examine and balance these three
factors in considering a motion to preserve evidence: (1) the level of concern for the
maintenance and integrity of the evidence in the absence of a preservation order; (2) any
irreparable harm likely to result to the party seeking such order; and (3) the capability of the
party to maintain the evidence sought to be preserved. Haraburda v. Arcelor Mittal USA,
Inc., No. 11-93, 2011 WL 2600756, at *2 (N.D. Ind. June 28, 2011); Washington v. City of
Detroit, No. 05-72433, 2007 WL 788909, at *1 (E.D. Mich. Mar. 14, 2007); Treppel, 233
F.R.D. at 370-71; Capricorn, 220 F.R.D. 433-34; U.S. ex rel. Smith v. The Boeing Co., No.
05-1073, 2005 WL 2105972, at *2 (D. Kan. Aug. 31, 2005); In re African-Am. Slave
Descendants’ Litig., No. 1491, 2003 WL 24085346, at *2 (N.D. Ill. July 15, 2003).
III.
Discussion
On December 28, 2012, Plaintiffs filed the pending motion for evidence preservation
order. Plaintiffs seek an order:
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. . . enjoining Defendant Farmland Foods, Inc.
(“Farmland”), and all persons acting on its behalf, from
implementing or completing any changes to the current
operational or compensation policies and practices at its hog
slaughter and processing plant located in Milan, Missouri,
relating to employee donning, doffing, walking, waiting, plant
floor shift preparations and other off-the-clock work activities
(hereinafter referred to as “off-the-clock work activities”),
performed before and after class members’ work-shifts and
unpaid meal periods, including but not limited to changes to
“gang time,” plug or “PPE” time, swipe policies, rounding
policies, pre-shift or post-shift policies, pre-break or post-break
policies, or break times, without first providing Class Counsel
thirty (30) days advanced notice of said changes [and] . . . .
requiring Farmland to allow Class Counsel access to the Milan
plant within the thirty (30)-day notice window referenced above
to observe, photograph, video and otherwise document class
members’ off-the-clock work activities as these activities
normally occur during a given workday. Plaintiffs request that
Class Counsel be allowed access to all areas of the Milan plant
and plant grounds to which members of the certified class have
access during their workday and perform off-the-clock work
activities, including but not limited to areas wherein time clocks,
personal protective equipment, locker rooms, break rooms,
supply rooms, work stations, and sanitation and clean up areas
are located.
Doc. No. 206, pp. 1-2. Plaintiffs request that this evidence preservation order last until the
Court has entered a final judgment in this action. Doc. No. 206, p. 3.
Plaintiffs indicate that an evidence preservation order is needed because defendant’s
“plant obviously contains visual evidence concerning the company’s current operational and
compensation policies and practices . . . [and] [s]uch evidence must be secured, videoed and
otherwise documented before it is altered or destroyed through changes to policies and
practices implemented by Farmland after the commencement of this lawsuit.” Doc. No. 206,
pp. 2-3. Plaintiffs suggest a preservation order is needed to “prevent the irreparable injury
that will continue to occur from Farmland’s serial changes mid-litigation to its operational and
compensation policies . . . and to allow the Court to render effective relief if Plaintiffs prevail
at trial.” Id. at p. 3.
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In particular, plaintiffs state they have identified significant past, present, and future
threats to the availability of video evidence concerning class members’ off the clock activities.
Plaintiffs argue that defendant “has repeatedly demonstrated its propensity for making
significant changes to some of the very policies and procedures being challenged in this case
without providing Class Counsel any advance notice or warning so that Class Counsel may
access the plant to video and otherwise document current conditions before implementation
of the changes by Farmland.” Doc. No. 207, p. 11. Plaintiffs argue that if defendant has its
way, class counsel will only learn of the specifics of changes to policies and practices afterthe-fact, and will not have an opportunity to preserve and video the plant’s prior practices and
conditions.
Plaintiffs assert there will be irreparable harm if they are not granted the requested
relief, as Farmland possesses evidence that is critical to establishing plaintiff’s claims, and “it
becomes a judicial duty to protect a party from likely harm by acting to prevent the loss or
destruction of evidence, thereby ensuring that the party may prosecute or defend its case in a
court of law.” Capricorn, 220 F.R.D. at 435. Plaintiffs assert that defendant’s most recent
policy changes “conveniently” came “one week after Plaintiffs’ [sic] filed a motion for partial
summary judgment on the compensability of the retrieval, inspection, delinting and disposal
of the Farmland-issued uniforms.” Doc. No. 107, pp. 12-13 (emphasis in original). Plaintiffs
argue that this timing suggests the changes were made in order to compromise plaintiffs’
case. Plaintiffs state that without being given a chance to document these activities, plaintiffs
will be unable to present the best evidence of their off-the-clock work during various stages
over the course of the relevant class period. Plaintiffs further assert that there would be
“absolutely no hardship” to Farmland if this order was entered to the extent that Farmland
made no further changes to its policies, and there would only be a slight hardship if Farmland
continues to make additional changes.
Defendant responds, characterizing plaintiffs’ motion as not one for evidence
preservation, but as a motion for a “mandatory injunction compelling Farmland to continue
the very employment policies and practices Plaintiffs claim are unlawful.” Doc. No. 216, p. 1.
Defendant further notes that none of the legal authority cited by plaintiffs supports granting
such a request. Defendant notes plaintiffs have had over two and a half years to obtain this
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evidence, and if they do not have the video they want, that is due to their own lack of
diligence.1
Defendant indicates that evidence preservation standards do not apply to plaintiffs’
motion, as the motion does not seek to preserve evidence (existing, tangible things, such as
records or objects), and all the cases cited by plaintiffs involve requests for preservation of
relevant tangible items. Further, none of the cases stand for the proposition that defendant
has a duty to provide advance notice of management decisions. Defendant also argues that
plaintiffs have not shown that the preservation order is necessary and not unduly
burdensome (see Pueblo, 60 Fed. Cl. at 138), as (a) there is no showing that defendant has
destroyed evidence; (b) to the extent that plaintiffs call the changes “unannounced,” plaintiffs’
counsel learned of the changes through their clients, with whom they are obligated to
communicate; (c) defense counsel is unaware of any case where a court allowed multiple,
open-ended video inspections like plaintiffs request, and plaintiffs are trying to circumvent
Fed. R. Civ. P. 34 by making this request; and (d) plaintiffs have had ample opportunity over
several years to obtain the video they needed. Additionally, defendant asserts that plaintiffs
have not demonstrated a threat of irreparable harm, as their contention of irreparable harm is
“completely undermined by their lack of diligence in seeking to videotape employee activities
since this lawsuit was filed – over two and a half years ago.” Doc. No. 216, p. 12 (emphasis
in original). Finally, defendant argues that the requested procedure is overbroad and places
undue burdens on Farmland, as giving 30-day notice and allowing plaintiffs to videotape
every time a change is made would be unnecessarily disruptive to defendant’s operations
and its employees’ work.
After considering the parties’ respective arguments, the Court finds that plaintiffs’
motion for evidence preservation order (Doc. No. 206) should be DENIED. In particular, the
Court finds that (1) what plaintiffs are seeking to preserve by virtue of this motion is not
“evidence,” but the status quo at the plant—and the defendant is under no obligation to
1
Defendant notes that at the scheduling hearing with the Court on May 4, 2012, plaintiffs’
counsel asserted they would be videotaping defendant’s processes “very soon” so they
would have a record if the processes changed. Doc. No. 216, Ex. B. However, plaintiffs
did not pursue video evidence for another 7 months.
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create video evidence for plaintiffs, who should have sought to do so themselves; (2)
plaintiffs’ assertions of irreparable harm are undermined by their failure to attempt to obtain
video evidence for a time-motion study at any previous time in the over two-and-one-half
years this lawsuit has been pending, even though they have already had one prior Rule 34
entry on land (see Doc. No. 91)2; and (3) the procedure requested by plaintiffs is overbroad
and places undue burdens on defendant’s control of its business operations, and plaintiffs
have not shown that such an order is necessary under the circumstances.
It should have come as no surprise to plaintiffs’ counsel that defendant may from time
to time make changes in its business operations that could affect the claims of the class. In
light of this obvious observation and given class counsel’s representations as to the
importance of preserving this evidence for trial and for the use of their time-motion study
expert, class counsel should have considered requesting another Rule 34 entry upon land a
long while ago (at least shortly after class certification was granted on February 9, 2012 (Doc.
No. 140), if not sooner). If defendant objected to such discovery, the Court could have held a
discovery dispute teleconference at that time. It appears, instead, that plaintiffs were under
the mistaken belief that defendant would not make policy changes affecting their claims, and
therefore did not timely seek to obtain discovery they believe they need to prove their case.
Only now, after policy changes already have been made and after over two-and-one-half
years of litigation, does class counsel seek to not only enter land to make video evidence, but
also to impose a thirty-day notice period on every policy change that could affect the class
members’ claims and a renewable right to enter land. The Court cannot enter such an
injunctive order under the circumstances presented by plaintiffs here.
Further, with respect to plaintiffs’ discovery dispute letter, requesting immediate
access to the Milan plant, plaintiffs’ request for immediate access will be DENIED. The Court
finds that defendant’s objections to plaintiffs’ Rule 34 request have merit. These objections,
2
See also Doc. No. 132, Exhibit J, PowerPoint containing digital video and photographs
taken by plaintiffs’ counsel on their May 23, 2011 inspection. Plaintiffs’ counsel indicate in
their suggestions in support of the motion for preservation order that upon their May 23, 2011
inspection, they “observed that wireless video cameras could be mounted in various areas of
the plant to capture employees’ off-the-clock work activities.” Doc. No. 207, p. 7, n. 4.
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in particular, are (1) that the request was not properly limited in time and place, (2) that
placing wireless video cameras for 24-hour taping is unnecessary as most of the captured
evidence would not be of donning and doffing and related activities, (3) that the Rule 34
request stated that plaintiffs’ counsel would enter the facility for unspecified “periodic time
periods” throughout a two-week window; and (4) that plaintiffs would conduct “multiple
inspections and data collection activities . . . throughout the course of this litigation.” The
Court finds, therefore, that plaintiffs have not demonstrated entitlement to the relief sought in
their discovery dispute letter. Furthermore, given plaintiffs’ dilatory efforts in seeking to
request a Rule 34 entry upon land, the Court will deny any further attempts at entry upon land
absent plaintiffs making a sufficient showing of need for the evidence sought.
IV.
Conclusion
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, (1) plaintiffs’ motion for a preservation order
(Doc. No. 206) is DENIED; and (2) the relief requested through plaintiffs’ discovery dispute
letter dated February 4, 2013, is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Date: February 6, 2013
Kansas City, Missouri
/s/ Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr.
Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr.
Chief United States District Judge
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