Quarrie v. Wells et al
Filing
308
ORDER by Magistrate Judge Gregory B. Wormuth granting in part and denying in part 278 Motion to Compel; granting in part and denying in part 286 Motion to Compel. (ts)
Case 2:17-cv-00350-MV-GBW Document 308 Filed 05/04/20 Page 1 of 24
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO
LINDSAY O’BRIEN QUARRIE,
Plaintiff,
v.
STEPHEN WELLS, et al.,
Defendants.
Civ. No. 17‐350 MV/GBW
ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART
PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS TO COMPEL DISCOVERY RESPONSES
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel
Discovery (doc. 278) and Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel (doc. 286). Having considered
both motions, the parties’ briefing (docs. 284, 302, 287, 301, 304), and the relevant law,
the Court will GRANT IN PART Plaintiff’s first motion (doc. 278) and GRANT IN PART
Plaintiff’s second motion (doc. 286).
I.
BACKGROUND
On January 13, 2020, Plaintiff served his Fifth Set of Interrogatories on Defendant
Board of Regents of the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (“NMT”).
Doc. 278 at 1. Defendant NMT served its Objections and Answers on February 10, 2020,
accompanied by a privilege log. See id. at 2; doc. 278‐2. Following an email
communication from Plaintiff, Defendant NMT supplemented the date of the
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memorandum listed on its privilege log, but made no other, substantive amendments.1
See doc. 278‐4. Despite several further communications between the parties, they were
unable to reach an agreement. However, in light of Plaintiff’s good faith efforts to
confer and the recent withdrawal of his attorney, the Court granted an extension until
March 16, 2020, for Plaintiff to file a motion to compel based on Defendant NMT’s
responses. Doc. 274. Plaintiff timely filed his motion. Doc. 278.
Meanwhile, on February 1, 2020, Plaintiff served his Sixth Set of Interrogatories
on Defendant NMT. Doc. 286‐1. Defendant NMT served its Objections and Answers on
March 9, 2020. Doc. 286‐2. This set of interrogatories (consisting of a single discovery
request, Interrogatory No. 18) is the subject of Plaintiff’s second motion to compel (doc.
286).
Some additional background information is necessary in order to understand the
parties’ current disputes. All four of the discovery requests in Plaintiff’s Fifth Set of
Interrogatories (doc. 278‐1), as well as Interrogatory No. 18 from Plaintiff’s Sixth Set of
Interrogatories (doc. 286‐1), relate to Plaintiff’s academic records at NMT and Defendant
NMT’s actions with respect to those records. On October 8, 2015, prior to the filing of
the current suit, Plaintiff and Defendant NMT entered into a Settlement Agreement in
The supplemented Amended Privilege Log (doc. 278‐4 at 3–4) was evidently intended to correct a
typographical error in the original Privilege Log, which read: “Memorandum prepared by attorney Robin
Goble dated 22, 2017 regarding Plaintiff’s student records and compliance with Settlement Agreement.”
Doc. 278‐2 at 6. The Amended Privilege Log lists the relevant date as August 22, 2017. Doc. 278‐4 at 4.
1
2
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which Plaintiff agreed, inter alia, that he would not re‐apply for enrollment at NMT
“now or in the future.” Doc. 278‐6 at 3. The instant suit for racial discrimination is, of
course, premised on Defendants’ denial of Plaintiff’s several reapplications for
enrollment in 2016. See doc. 150 at 20. However, Plaintiff asserts that the Settlement
Agreement is “void, invalid, and unenforceable” due to Defendants’ own non‐
compliance. Id. at 14. Specifically, Plaintiff believes that Defendants violated the
following provision of the Settlement Agreement:
The parties agree that [NMT] will permanently remove the words
“TERMINATED FROM GRADUATE PROGRAM” (or any similar
language) from Plaintiff’s NMIMT transcript, as well as from any other
related documents in Plaintiff’s academic and/or administrative files at
NMIMT[.]
Doc. 278‐6 at 3; see doc. 150 at ¶ 55. Defendants deny this. Doc. 151 at ¶ 55. Obviously,
the enforceability or non‐enforceability of the Settlement Agreement may be critical to
the success of Plaintiff’s suit, though the Court expresses no opinion on that question
here.
Plaintiff has pursued the issue of the Settlement Agreement’s enforceability
throughout the discovery period. Of particular relevance to the instant dispute,
Defendant NMT provided the following response to Plaintiff’s Request for Production
No. 20:
While certain documents were transferred to a legal file pursuant to the
terms of the Settlement Agreement (e.g., the termination letter and
associated communications), no documents were destroyed. Subject to
said objection and without waiving the same, to the extent this Request
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seeks the termination letter, this has already been produced. No other
responsive documents.2
Doc. 278‐1 at 3. Plaintiff’s Fifth and Sixth Sets of Interrogatories are focused mainly on
this prior response and the details of the referenced transfer of documents to Plaintiff’s
“legal file.” Defendant NMT alleges that the information requested by Plaintiff is either
privileged or unduly burdensome. Both motions are now before the Court.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A. Scope of Discovery
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide the following general standard of
discoverability:
Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is
relevant to any partyʹs claim or defense and proportional to the needs of
the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the
amount in controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information,
the parties’ resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the
issues, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery
outweighs its likely benefit.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Evidence is relevant if it has any tendency to make a material
fact more or less probable. Fed. R. Evid. 401. Information “need not be admissible in
evidence to be discoverable,” Fed R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1), and discovery rules “are to be
accorded a broad and liberal treatment,” Herbert v. Lando, 441 U.S. 153, 177 (1979).
However, “Rule 26 vests the trial judge with broad discretion to tailor discovery
2
Neither party attached Plaintiff’s Request for Production No. 20 as an exhibit to the briefing, but
Defendant NMT does not dispute that this is an accurate quotation of its response.
4
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narrowly.” Murphy v. Deloitte & Touche Group Ins. Plan, 619 F.3d 1151, 1163 (10th Cir.
2010) (quoting Crawford‐El v. Britton, 523 U.S. 574, 598 (1998)).
In addition, the court “must limit the frequency or extent” of otherwise
permissible discovery where:
(i) the discovery sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or
can be obtained from some other source that is more convenient,
less burdensome, or less expensive;
(ii) the party seeking discovery has had ample opportunity to obtain
the information by discovery in the action; or
(iii) the proposed discovery is outside the scope permitted by Rule
26(b)(1).
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C).
Where one party improperly fails to respond to another party’s discovery
requests, the requesting party may move to compel disclosure and for appropriate
sanctions. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(3)(A).
B. Information Protected from Discovery
As stated in Rule 26, privileged information is protected from discovery. The
attorney‐client privilege “protects confidential communications by a client to an
attorney made in order to obtain legal assistance from the attorney in his capacity as a
legal advisor.” In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 616 F.3d 1172, 1182 (10th Cir. 2010) (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted). Operating in the other direction, the privilege
“protect[s] at least those attorney to client communications which would have a
tendency to reveal the confidences of the client.” Id. (quoting Kenneth S. Brown,
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McCormick on Evidence § 89 (6th ed. 2006)). Courts have also protected attorney‐to‐client
communications that “constitute legal advice.” Id. (quoting United States v. Defazio, 899
F.2d 626, 635 (7th Cir. 1990)); see also Lluberes v. Uncommon Prods., LLC, 663 F.3d 6, 24 (1st
Cir. 2011) (extending the privilege to communications of “legal advice based on . . .
client confidences”). The attorney‐client privilege must be “strictly construed,” Trammel
v. United States, 445 U.S. 40, 50 (1980), and the burden of establishing its applicability
“rests on the party seeking to assert it,” In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 616 F.3d at 1183
(quoting In re Grand Jury Subpoena Subpoena Duces Tecum Issued on June 9, 1982, 697 F.2d
277, 279 (10th Cir. 1983)).
Attorney work product is similarly protected. The work‐product doctrine “only
prevents disclosure of information that was prepared by the attorney in anticipation of
litigation or for trial.” Id. at 1184 (citing Grand Jury Proceedings v. United States, 156 F.3d
1038, 1042 (10th Cir. 1998)). See also Grace United Methodist Church v. City of Cheyenne,
451 F.3d 643, 668 (10th Cir. 2006) (“[W]ork product protection only applies to attorneys’
or legal representatives’ mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories
authored in anticipation of litigation.”). As with attorney‐client privilege, “[t]he party
asserting a work product privilege as a bar to discovery must prove the doctrine is
applicable.” Resolution Trust Corp. v. Dabney, 73 F.3d 262, 266 (10th Cir. 1995).
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Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a party withholding otherwise
discoverable information by asserting either attorney‐client privilege or the work‐
product doctrine must:
(i)
(ii)
expressly make the claim; and
describe the nature of the documents, communications, or tangible things
not produced or disclosed—and do so in a manner that, without revealing
information itself privileged or protected, will enable other parties to
assess the claim.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5)(A). The privilege or protection must be established as to “specific
questions or documents, not by making a blanket claim.” Forest v. Hill (In re Foster), 188
F.3d 1259, 1264 (10th Cir. 1999) (citation omitted).
III.
ANALYSIS
A. Interrogatory No. 14
Interrogatory No. 14 asks Defendant NMT to:
Describe in detail each of the “certain documents” referenced [in
Defendant NMT’s response to Request for Production No. 20] that “were
transferred to a legal file pursuant to the terms of the Settlement
Agreement,” when exactly they were transferred (day, month, and year),
what files they were transferred from, who transferred them, and who
authorized their transfer.
Doc. 278‐2 at 2–3. Defendant NMT responded as follows:
Objection, this Interrogatory seeks materials protected from disclosure by
the attorney‐client privilege and/or work product doctrine. Subject to said
objection and without waiving the same, see attached privileged log.
These documents have previously been produced to include the
termination letter and related correspondence identified by bates number
(NMT.00066, NMT.00275–00285, NMT.00287–00301, NMT.00303–00305,
7
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NMT.00308, NMT.00314 and NMT.00421). The termination letter was
contained with Plaintiff’s academic files maintained by the Registrar and
by Graduate Studies.
Id. at 3. The attached privilege log identified one item: a memorandum “prepared by
attorney Robin Goble dated August 22, 2017 regarding Plaintiff’s student records and
compliance with Settlement Agreement.” Doc. 278‐4 at 4.
Plaintiff concedes that “the Memorandum itself may be privileged.” Doc. 278 at
6. The Court agrees that it is. Based on the description provided by Defendant NMT,
the memorandum contains confidential legal advice from counsel to Defendant,
rendering it subject to attorney‐client privilege. In addition, it appears that the
memorandum may constitute protected work‐product in the form of counsel’s mental
impressions of the case, though this is less clear. In any event, the Court finds that the
memorandum itself is non‐discoverable. Plaintiff argues, however, that the
memorandum itself is not responsive to any of his interrogatories, and that the
information actually requested is not privileged.
By the Court’s count, Interrogatory No. 14 requests approximately five related
pieces of information: (1) a detailed description of the documents transferred to the
legal file; (2) the date of transfer; (3) what file(s) the documents were transferred from;
(4) who transferred them; and (5) who authorized the transfer. Defendant NMT’s
response addresses two of these five subparts. On subpart (1), Defendant NMT
identified the transferred documents as “the termination letter and related
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correspondence,” which were previously produced, and identified each document by
bates number. Doc. 278‐2 at 3. To subpart (3), Defendant NMT responded that “[t]he
termination letter was contained with Plaintiff’s academic files maintained by the
Registrar and by Graduate Studies.” Id. at 3. Defendant NMT provided no response to
subpart (3) as it applied to the “related correspondence.” Moreover, Defendant NMT
provided no response whatsoever to subparts (2), (4), or (5).
Though the exact contents of the August 22, 2017 memorandum are unknown to
the Court, it seems obvious that the memorandum itself is not directly responsive to
any part of Interrogatory No. 14.3 Instead, Defendant NMT’s argument appears to be
that because it undertook certain actions based on the privileged recommendations of
counsel, those actions are likewise privileged and undiscoverable. See doc. 284 at 5 (“the
attorney‐client privilege arises based upon communications between counsel and the
client regarding how the termination letter should be treated”). It is difficult for the
Court to understand how this could be the case. It certainly is not true, as a general
principle, that actions undertaken on the advice of counsel are privileged. If, for
example, a party initiates a lawsuit or files a motion on the recommendation of counsel,
the factual details surrounding that action (date, location, etc.) are not automatically
At the risk of stating the obvious, Interrogatory No. 14 is not a request for production to which a
document would be responsive. In addition, Plaintiff himself has stated that his Fifth Set of
Interrogatories do not “seek[] to know the contents of the Memorandum cited in the Privilege Log.” Doc.
278 at 6.
3
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covered by attorney‐client privilege. Likewise, the factual details of a party’s
compliance with a settlement agreement are not generally privileged or protected—on
the contrary, they are frequently considered by courts in evaluating whether the
agreement has been complied with. See, e.g., McClendon v. City of Albuquerque, 328
F.R.D. 567, 570 (D.N.M. 2018) (outlining a detailed plan of monitoring and reporting to
ensure compliance with settlement agreement); Fender v. Kan. Soc. & Rehab. Servs., 168 F.
Supp. 2d 1216, 1221–22 (D. Kan. 2001) (analyzing defendant’s compliance with
settlement agreement).
The burden was on Defendant NMT to establish the applicability of either
attorney‐client privilege or work‐product doctrine to the information requested, In re
Grand Jury Proceedings, 616 F.3d at 1183 (citation omitted), and Defendant has cited no
law to support the sweeping proposition that actions based on the privileged advice of
counsel are also privileged. The Court therefore concludes that the information
requested by Interrogatory No. 14 is privileged only if it so closely mirrors the contents
of the privileged memorandum that it would be impossible to disclose the information
without also divulging the contents of the memorandum.
Indeed, Defendant NMT argues that “to disclose in detail what was done and by
whom in response to specific communications and recommendations of counsel would
in turn, disclose the heart of the communications themselves.” Doc. 284 at 6. But the
Court finds that none of the individual subparts of Interrogatory No. 14 so closely
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mirror the contents of the memorandum as to receive the protection of privilege or
work‐product doctrine. Based on the amended privilege log (doc. 278‐4) and
Defendant’s briefing (doc. 284), the Court concludes that the memorandum contained
recommendations and advice from counsel regarding what should be done with
Plaintiff’s records—in particular, with the termination letter—in order to comply with
the Settlement Agreement. None of the questions posed by Interrogatory No. 14
requests information about counsel’s recommendations or even the reasons behind
Defendant NMT’s decision to transfer certain documents to a legal file. Instead,
Interrogatory No. 14 asks for concrete factual information regarding Defendant NMT’s
actions. Defendant NMT’s objections that the requested information is protected by
attorney‐client privilege and/or work product doctrine are therefore OVERRULED.
The only question remaining is whether Defendant NMT has already provided a
sufficient response to the interrogatory. As noted above, Defendant NMT made no
effort whatsoever to respond to subparts (2), (4), or (5), requesting the date of transfer,
the identity of the transferor, and the identity of the individual(s) who authorized the
transfer. Defendant NMT is therefore ORDERED to respond to these individual
questions.
Though Defendant NMT did not provide much substantive description of the
transferred documents in response to subpart (1), Defendant NMT did specifically
identify each already‐produced document by bates number. The Court finds that this
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constitutes a sufficient response to subpart (1), which requested a “detailed description”
of the documents transferred to the legal file.
Finally, while Defendant NMT satisfactorily answered subpart (3)—which asked
which file(s) the documents were transferred from—with respect to the termination
letter, it provided no response with respect to the “related correspondence” previously
identified and referenced by bates number above. Therefore, Defendant NMT is
ORDERED to provide this information with respect to all documents transferred to
Plaintiff’s legal file.
B. Interrogatory No. 15
Interrogatory No. 15 reads as follows:
Describe in detail why and how the transfer of the “certain documents”
referenced [in Defendant NMT’s response to Request for Production No.
20] “to a legal file” was “pursuant to the terms of the Settlement
Agreement.” In other words, what was it about these “certain
documents” that the terms of the Settlement Agreement required their
transfer to a legal file? Include in your answer which terms exactly of the
Settlement Agreement you are referring to.
Doc. 278‐2 at 3. Defendant NMT responded with the following objection:
Objection, this Interrogatory seeks materials protected from disclosure by
the attorney‐client privilege and/or work product doctrine. As worded,
this Interrogatory seeks the mental impressions of counsel and/or
recommendations made by counsel, which is improper and falls outside
the scope of Rule 26.
Id. at 3–4.
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Based on the available information, the Court infers that Defendant NMT
transferred the referenced documents to a legal file based specifically on the
recommendations of counsel communicated through the August 22, 2017
memorandum. Any more detailed answer, therefore, would effectively require
Defendant NMT to divulge the contents of the memorandum. Defendant NMT’s full
answer to Interrogatory No. 15 would look virtually identical to its answer to the
question: “What were counsel’s August 22, 2017 recommendations regarding
compliance with the Settlement Agreement?” That information is non‐discoverable.
It is certainly true, as Plaintiff urges, that neither attorney‐client privilege nor the
work‐product doctrine protects underlying facts from disclosure merely because they
are contained in a privileged or otherwise protected communication. See Upjohn Co. v.
United States, 449 U.S. 383, 395–96 (1981). Defendant NMT would not, simply by virtue
of the August 22, 2017 memorandum, be protected from disclosing the existence of the
Settlement Agreement, the precise terms of the Settlement Agreement, or the concrete
actions taken in order to comply with the Settlement Agreement. What Plaintiff is not
entitled to, however, are the mental impressions and legal analysis of counsel that
guided Defendant NMT in its attempt to comply with the Settlement Agreement.
The Court finds that Defendant NMT cannot be compelled, either directly or
indirectly, to disclose the contents of the privileged memorandum. Accordingly,
Defendant NMT’s objections to Interrogatory No. 15 are SUSTAINED.
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However, Defendant NMT is ORDERED to supplement its answer to reflect, if
true, the assumption noted above: that Defendant NMT’s transfer of the referenced
documents to the legal file was undertaken upon the legal analysis and
recommendations of counsel contained in the August 22, 2017 memorandum.4 Having
so certified, Defendant NMT need not disclose the specifics of those recommendations.
C. Interrogatory No. 16
Plaintiff’s sixteenth interrogatory reads:
It is presumed that by “termination letter” [in Defendant NMT’s response
to Request for Production No. 20,] Defendant NMT is referring to the
April 27, 2012 letter from Lorie Liebrock to Plaintiff. Describe in detail
how many copies of the April 27, 2012 letter from Lorie Liebrock to
Plaintiff (including all variations of it) are currently in each of Plaintiff’s
academic, administrative, and legal files at NMT. Include in your answer
the total number of variations of this letter—i.e., signed or unsigned,
stamped or unstamped, and with or without letterhead—that are
currently in each of Plaintiff’s academic, administrative, and legal files at
NMT.
Doc. 278‐2 at 4. Defendant NMT objected to the request in its entirety and provided no
substantive response, stating:
Objection, this interrogatory is harassing, overbroad, burdensome, and
cumulative. Multiple copies of this letter have been produced. There is
no dispute over the contents of the termination letter. Over the course of
multiple disputes among the parties since 2012 . . . multiple copies of this
letter have been generated. Because there is no dispute over the contents
of the letter, seeking NMT to review its files to count the number of copies
If Defendant NMT’s treatment of the referenced documents was not based on the recommendations of
its counsel, then no basis for attorney‐client privilege or work‐product doctrine has been asserted, and
Defendant NMT must provide a full response to Interrogatory No. 15.
4
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of this letter, and whether it contains a stamp, signature, etc., serves no
purpose and is cumulative and burdensome.
Id.
The Court is unpersuaded by Defendant NMT’s argument that the request is
objectionable because the contents of the termination letter are not in dispute. No part
of Interrogatory No. 16 asks Defendant NMT to describe or provide the substantive
contents of the termination letter, and establishing the letter’s contents is quite evidently
not Plaintiff’s aim in requesting this information. Rather, Plaintiff clearly believes that
the number of copies of the termination letter present in his various NMT files bears on
the validity and enforceability of the Settlement Agreement. To the extent that
Plaintiff’s ability to sue is premised on Defendant NMT’s failure to remove the
termination letter from his academic and other administrative files within five business
days of the Settlement Agreement,5 the relevance of any current copies of that
termination letter—including their total number and specific locations—is self‐evident.
The relevance of ascertaining whether such copies are “signed or unsigned,
stamped or unstamped, and with or without letterhead,” doc. 278‐2 at 4, is less readily
apparent. As best the Court can tell, Plaintiff’s aim is to better identify each individual
copy such that he has a complete knowledge of which letters are currently in which
The Court expresses no opinion about whether Defendant NMT’s failure to remove the termination
letter would, in fact, constitute a material breach of the Settlement Agreement, as that issue has not been
properly raised or briefed.
5
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files. This aim might have been better achieved by requesting all copies of the
termination letter in a request for production, and then asking Defendant NMT to
identify the file location of each copy by bates stamp. However, Defendant NMT has
presented no specific argument about the relevance of this request as it relates to
establishing the number or current location of copies. Instead, Defendant NMT’s
objections and arguments appear to relate solely to the hypothetical purpose of
establishing the letter’s contents. See doc. 278‐2 at 4 (“Because there is no dispute over the
contents of the letter . . . [the request] serves no purpose and is cumulative and
burdensome.”) (emphasis added). The Court declines to construct additional
arguments on Defendant’s behalf. See, e.g., Gheesling v. Chater, 162 F.R.D. 649, 650 (D.
Kan. 1995) (citing McLeod, Alexander, Powel & Apffel, P.C. v. Quarles, 894 F.2d 1482, 1484 –
85 (5th Cir. 1990); Panola Land Buyers Ass’n v. Shuman, 762 F.2d 1550, 1559 (11th Cir.
1985); Josephs v. Harris Corp., 677 F.2d 985, 992 (3d Cir. 1982)) (the party resisting
discovery must “show specifically” how the request is irrelevant, immaterial, unduly
burdensome, or overly broad).
Furthermore, Defendant NMT has provided no reason why this additional step
of identifying whether the copies are signed, stamped, or on letterhead would be
particularly or unduly burdensome. Objections of undue burden must be supported by
“sufficient detail and explanation about the nature of the burden in terms of time,
money, and procedure required to produce the requested documents.” Dentsply Int’l,
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Inc. v. Lewis & Roca, LLP, 2013 WL 12246642, at *3 (D.N.M. May 21, 2013) (unpublished)
(citing Gen. Elec. Capital Corp. v. Lear Corp., 215 F.R.D. 637, 641 (D. Kan. 2003)). In the
absence of any such explanation, the Court finds that the apparently minimal difficulty
of providing this information does not outweigh its possible relevance to the case.
Finally, as to Defendant NMT’s objections that Interrogatory No. 16 is
“harassing,” “overbroad,” and “cumulative,” these are largely unexplained and appear
generally without basis. For the reasons explained above, the Court finds that the
request—at least in the absence of specific, persuasive argument to the contrary—is
reasonably proportional to the needs of the case, and therefore is neither “harassing”
nor overbroad. There is still less indication of the request’s being cumulative.
Certainly, Defendant NMT asserts that “multiple copies of this letter have been
generated,” doc. 278‐2 at 4, and the Court sees no reason to doubt it. But Interrogatory
No. 16 does not ask Defendant NMT to generate copies of the termination letter.
Instead, it requests identification of the location and other details of all currently
existing copies of the termination letter. The Court therefore finds no evidence that
Plaintiff has made this specific discovery request before, and does not consider it
cumulative.
For these reasons, Defendant NMT’s objections to Interrogatory No. 16 are
OVERRULED, and Defendant NMT is ORDERED to provide a full and complete
answer.
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D. Interrogatory No. 17
Interrogatory No. 17, which requests information similar to that sought by
Interrogatory No. 16, reads as follows:
On May 26, 2016, Plaintiff personally checked his academic and
administrative files at NMT and found therein four (4) different copies of
the April 27, 2012 letter from Lorie Liebrock to Plaintiff. Upon request,
Plaintiff received a copy of each of the four different copies of the April 27,
2012 Liebrock letter on May 26, 2016 from NMT administrators. See
Plaintiff’s attached affidavit (Exhibit A). These four different copies of the
April 27, 2012 Liebrock letter are attached hereto as Exhibits 1–4 in
attached Exhibit A. The watermarks, handwritten dates, and Plaintiff’s
signature were added to these four different copies of [the] April 27, 2012
Liebrock letter for security reasons.
Describe in detail how many copies of each of these four different
copies of the April 27, 2012 Liebrock letter (attached hereto as Exhibits 1–4
in attached Exhibit A) are currently located in Plaintiff’s academic,
administrative, and legal files at NMT, when these copies of the April 27,
2012 Liebrock letter were first placed in each of those files, who placed
them there, and who authorized them to be placed there.
Doc. 278‐2 at 5. Defendant NMT responded with the single line: “See Objection to
Interrogatory No. 16.” Id.
As Plaintiff acknowledges, see doc. 302 at 9, Interrogatory No. 16 and
Interrogatory No. 17 are facially similar. Consequently, Defendant NMT’s referenced
objection that the discovery request is “cumulative,” though insufficiently explained in
the specific context of Interrogatory No. 17, merits closer consideration. See Fed. R. Civ.
P. 26(b)(2)(C)(i) (establishing courts’ independent duty to consider cumulativeness).
Plaintiff points out that Interrogatory No. 16 targets “only those copies of the April 27,
2012 Liebrock letter . . . that Defendant NMT referenced in its response to Plaintiff’s
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Request for Production No. 20,” while Interrogatory No. 17 asks specifically about the
four copies of the termination letter attached as exhibits. However, it appears to the
Court that Interrogatory No. 16 must encompass all copies of the termination letter
contained in any of Plaintiff’s files at NMT, including the four exhibit copies, as
Defendant’s response to Request for Production No. 20 referenced the termination letter
generally.
Nevertheless, the Court finds that Interrogatory No. 17 is not cumulative because
it requests additional historical information about the copies not addressed in
Interrogatory No. 16. Unlike Interrogatory No. 16, Interrogatory No. 17 asks Defendant
NMT to “[d]escribe . . . when these copies of the April 27, 2012 Liebrock letter were first
placed in each of those files, who placed them there, and who authorized them to be
placed there.” See doc. 278‐2 at 5. Therefore, the request is not cumulative or
duplicative.
Defendant NMT’s remaining objections are meritless for the reasons explained
with reference to Interrogatory No. 16. Broadly speaking, the relevance of determining
which copies of the termination letter were in which files, at which time, is clear.
Plaintiff additionally explains in his briefing that he
has serious concerns that Defendant NMT has spoliated Plaintiff’s NMT
academic and/or administrative files by removing/transferring copies of
the April 27, 2012 Liebrock letter from those files since the instant case
began in March of 2017 in an attempt to hide the evidence that Defendants
have been in violation of the Settlement Agreement.
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Doc. 278 at 15. Whatever the truth or falsity of these allegations, Plaintiff is certainly
entitled to explore the possibility through discovery, at least in the absence of any
specific and persuasive objections to the contrary. Defendant NMT has articulated no
such objections. Therefore, Defendant NMT’s objections are OVERRULED and it shall
provide a complete response to Interrogatory No. 17.
E. Interrogatory No. 18
Interrogatory No. 18 of Plaintiff’s Sixth Set of Interrogatories references a January
30, 2020 email by Defendant NMT’s counsel, which provided specific bates numbers of
all the “copies of the termination letter” and “correspondence about this letter” already
produced. Doc. 286‐7 at 2. Plaintiff’s interrogatory requests the following:
Describe in detail when (day, month, and year) each of [the documents
cited in the January 30, 2020 email] (i.e., NMT Bates number 64, 65, 66, 83,
275–285, 287–293, 295–301, 303–305, 308, 309, 311, and 314) was transferred
or removed from Lindsay O’Brien Quarrie’s academic and/or
administrative files at NMT, what file each document was
transferred/removed from, what file each document was transferred to,
who transferred them, and who authorized their transfer.
Doc. 286‐2. at 3. Defendant NMT responded:
Objection, this Interrogatory seeks materials protected from disclosure by
the attorney‐client privilege and/or work product doctrine. As a further
objection, this Interrogatory misconstrues NMT’s prior Answer to the
Interrogatory as well as clarification by counsel to suggest that the above
bates stamped documents were contained within Plaintiff’s administrative
files. Subject to said objections and without waiving the same, see
Amended Privilege Log produced in Answer to Interrogatory Nos. 16 and
17. The termination letter was contained within Plaintiff’s academic files
maintained by the Registrar and by Graduate Studies and transferred to a
legal file upon recommendations of counsel.
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Id.
For the same reasons recited at length with respect to Interrogatory No. 14, the
Court hereby OVERRULES Defendant NMT’s objections as to attorney‐client privilege
and work‐product doctrine. Although the August 22, 2017 memorandum is itself
protected by attorney‐client privilege, that privilege does not extend to the actions taken
by Defendant NMT pursuant to counsel’s advice; it protects only the advice itself. As
for Defendant NMT’s further objection that the request “misconstrues NMT’s prior
Answer to the Interrogatory as well as clarification by counsel to suggest that the above
bates stamped documents were contained within Plaintiff’s administrative files,” id., the
Court finds that this would be more appropriate as a substantive response to the
interrogatory than as a legally cognizable objection to answering it. Defendant NMT
provides no legal support for the idea that such misconstruction would relieve it from
its obligation to answer. The objection is therefore OVERRULED.
However, even absent a targeted objection by Defendant, the Court must
consider the extent to which Interrogatory No. 18 is cumulative or duplicative. See Fed.
R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(i) (the Court, on its own, must limit discovery if “the discovery
sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative”). Interrogatory No. 18 is
substantively almost identical to Interrogatory No. 14. Despite differences in wording,
both interrogatories refer to the same documents. The documents identified by bates
number in Interrogatory No. 18 were previously identified by Defendant NMT, in a
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supplemented response to Plaintiff’s Request for Production No. 20, as being among the
“certain documents . . . transferred to a legal file pursuant to the terms of the Settlement
Agreement.” See doc. 286 at 7. Interrogatory No. 14 does not identify documents by
bates number, but refers directly to the “certain documents . . . transferred to a legal
file” that were first identified in Defendant NMT’s response to Request for Production
No. 20. Doc. 278‐2 at 2. The Court therefore concludes that the same documents are
covered by both interrogatories.
There are, however, minor differences in the details requested. While both
interrogatories ask who transferred the documents and who authorized their transfer,
see id.; doc. 286‐2 at 3, Interrogatory No. 18 asks for the date of transfer from Plaintiff’s
academic and/or administrative file, as well as the specific file location to which they
were transferred, while Interrogatory No. 14 asks only for the date of transfer to
Plaintiff’s legal file. It is conceivable that some documents might have been transferred
from Plaintiff’s academic and/or administrative files without being transferred to
Plaintiff’s legal file, and vice versa. Therefore, the Court will grant Plaintiff’s motion to
compel Defendant NMT’s response on the following two questions only: (1) On what
date was each document transferred from Plaintiff’s academic and/or administrative
file; and (2) to what file was each document transferred? The Court finds that the
remaining subparts of Interrogatory No. 18 are duplicative of Interrogatory No. 14, and
will not compel additional responses.
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Because Defendant NMT’s response to Interrogatory No. 18 is manifestly
deficient as to these two questions, Defendant NMT is ORDERED to respond to each of
these questions in full, with respect to any and all documents previously identified in its
response to Request for Production No. 20 as being “transferred to a legal file pursuant
to the terms of the Settlement Agreement,” i.e., “the termination letter and associated
communications.” Doc. 278‐1 at 3. If in fact the “associated communications” were
never in Plaintiff’s academic and/or administrative files at NMT, then Defendant NMT
must say so in its certified response.
IV.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiff’s first Motion to Compel Discovery (doc. 278) is GRANTED as to
Interrogatory No. 14, Interrogatory No. 16, and Interrogatory No. 17. It is DENIED as
to Interrogatory No. 15. However, Defendant NMT must supplement its response to
Interrogatory No. 15, as described above, to certify that its transfer of the referenced
documents to the legal file was pursuant to the legal analysis and recommendations of
counsel.
Plaintiff’s second Motion to Compel (doc. 286) is GRANTED IN PART. As
explained, Defendant NMT must provide the date of transfer of each document from
Plaintiff’s academic and/or administrative file, and identify the file to which each
document was transferred. Defendant NMT need not provide responses to the
additional questions contained in Interrogatory No. 18.
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IT IS ORDERED that Defendant NMT shall provide its updated responses, as
delineated herein, no later than May 18, 2020.
Each party has requested an award of its expenses pursuant to Rule 37(a). See
doc. 284 at 9; doc. 301 at 5; doc. 304 at 12. Because the Court grants Plaintiff’s motions in
part and denies them in part, Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(C) provides the applicable
standard. Pursuant to that rule, the court “may, after giving an opportunity to be heard,
apportion the reasonable expenses of the motion.” Id. (emphasis added); see also
Benavidez v. Sandia Natʹl Labs., 319 F.R.D. 696, 730 (D.N.M. 2017). Upon consideration
and in the exercise of its discretion, the Court finds an award of expenses to either party
inappropriate.6 Both requests are therefore DENIED, with each party to bear its own
expenses.
_____________________________________
GREGORY B. WORMUTH
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
Moreover, the Court notes that Plaintiff requested expenses for the first time in the reply brief to his
second motion. See doc. 304 at 12. Consequently, Defendant NMT has not received sufficient opportunity
to be heard on Plaintiff’s request.
6
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