MATTHEWS INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION v. LOMBARDI et al
Filing
393
ORDER granting in part 379 Motion for Protective Order; granting in part 380 Motion for Sanctions; granting in part 381 Motion for Protective Order. Signed by Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan on 01/28/2025.(ny)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
MATTHEWS INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
v.
ANTHONY A. LOMBARDI,
RONALD STOVEKEN, MICHAEL
ANDREWS, GAETANO ESPOSITO,
CHRISTOPHER BROWN, JAMES
NORTON, JARROD GOGEL,
IMPLANT RECYCLING, LLC, IR
ENVIRONMENTAL SOLUTIONS,
LLC, and BRADLEY WASSERMAN,
Defendants.
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2:20-CV-89
MEMORANDUM ORDER
Before the Court are Plaintiff Matthews International Corporation’s motion for
protective order (ECF 379) to prevent Brett Creasy from testifying in anything other
than his expert capacity, Defendants’ motion for sanctions against Matthews (ECF
380) for failure to produce Mr. Creasy for a scheduled Rule 30(b)(6) deposition, and
Defendants’ motion for protective order (ECF 381) to relieve Implant Recycling, LLC
and IR Environmental Solutions, LLC of the obligation to produce a witness to testify
on Topic No. 28 in the Rule 30(b)(6) notice they received from Matthews. For the
following reasons, the Court GRANTS the motions in part, as follows.
BACKGROUND
On January 26, 2025 and January 27, 2025, the parties raised several
discovery disputes with the Court, and the Court ordered the parties to file motions
on the disputes. ECF 378. On January 27, 2025, the parties filed three motions.
Matthews moved for a protective order to permit Mr. Creasy, its forensic
expert, to testify only in his expert capacity. 1 ECF 379. Matthews argues that Mr.
Creasy cannot testify as a Rule 30(b)(6) witness because the only information that he
can testify on is either “expert in nature or duplicative of testimony that Matthews
has already provided.” Id. at ¶ 8. As Mr. Creasy “does not and cannot offer any facts
that are outside of his forensic expertise[,]” Matthews is only willing to offer Mr.
Creasy to testify in his capacity as an expert. Id. at ¶ 12. Defendants argue that the
topics in their Rule 30(b)(6) notice, specifically Matter Nos. 1, 2, 5, 11, 12, and 15,
weren’t designed to elicit expert testimony, and that it was Matthews, not
Defendants, who identified Mr. Creasy as a Rule 30(b)(6) witness. ECF 390.
Defendants move for sanctions against Matthews for failing to produce Mr.
Creasy as a Rule 30(b)(6) witness on January 27, 2025. ECF 380. They contend that
Matthews had agreed to produce Mr. Creasy for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition on January
27, 2025, and that in reliance on Matthews’s position, they had agreed to reschedule
the deposition of bix-x-bit, which was originally scheduled for January 27, 2025. Id.
1 In Matthews’s objections and responses to Defendants’ Rule 30(b)(6) notice, which
sought testimony about the details regarding the alleged trade secrets and
confidential information that Matthew contends Defendants improperly acquired,
including the date that the acquisition, use, or disclosure occurred and the identity of
any devices or accounts involved, Matthews had indicated that it would produce Mr.
Creasy to testify for Matter Nos. 1, 2, 5, 11, 12, and 15, but noted that Mr. Creasy’s
testimony would be in his capacity as an expert. See ECF 379-4.
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at ¶¶ 7, 9. Matthews disputes that it reached an agreement with Defendants to
produce Mr. Creasy for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. ECF 388, pp. 3-4.
Lastly, Defendants Implant Recycling, LLC and IR Environmental Solutions,
LLC move for a protective order relieving them of the obligation to produce a witness
to testify on Topic No. 28 in the Rule 30(b)(6) notice they received from Matthews.
ECF 381. Both Implant’s and IR Environmental’s Rule 30(6)(b) depositions are
scheduled for this week. On January 22, 2025, Matthews served amended notices of
Rule 30(b)(6) deposition to Implant and IR Environmental, in which (for the first
time) it required them to produce a corporate designee to testify on Implant/IR
Environmental’s “acquisition, possession, use, access, disclosure, copying, movement,
and/or deletion of each of Matthews’ designated confidential information and trade
secrets, which were produced on December 31, 2024 (which…Defendants produced as
part of the Forensic Protocol in this matter and were reproduced to Defendants with
labels) and the previous list (which…were produced by Defendants to Matthews with
labels).” Id. at ¶ 4. Defendants argue that it would be an undue burden on them to
produce a witness to testify about Topic No. 28 with little more than a week’s notice
and that Matthews has failed to identify the matter for examination with reasonable
particularity. Id. at ¶¶ 5, 6.
The parties filed response briefs as to each motion filed. ECF 388, 389, 390.
The motions are now ready for disposition.
DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS
A party resisting discovery may seek a protective order after attempting to
resolve the dispute in good faith. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). The court may grant the
protective order “for good cause” in order to “protect a party or person from
annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense.” Id. “Good
cause is established on a showing that disclosure will work a clearly defined and
serious injury to the party seeking closure. The alleged injury must be shown with
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specificity; broad allegations of harm, unsubstantiated by specific examples or
articulated reasoning, do not establish good cause.” Fifth Third Bank v. Westwood
Zamias Ltd. P’ship, No. 18-143, 2019 WL 1383713, at *1 (W.D. Pa. Feb. 6, 2019)
(Gibson, J.) (cleaned up).
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(d)(1)(A)(i), the Court may order sanctions if a person
designated under Rule 30(b)(6) fails to appear for the deposition, after being served
with proper notice. A failure to produce a Rule 30(b)(6) witness “is not excused on
the ground that the discovery sought was objectionable, unless the party failing to
act has a pending motion for a protective order under Rule 26(c).” Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(d)(2). Instead of or in addition to the sanctions listed in Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(i)—(vi),
the Court must require the party failing to act and/or its attorney “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(d)(3). “The court has broad discretion to decide whether
to award sanctions under Rule 37(d). In deciding whether to award sanctions under
Rule 37, courts should weigh several factors, including: (1) the extent of a party’s
personal responsibility; (2) a history of dilatoriness; (3) whether the party’s or
attorney’s conduct was willful or in bad faith; (4) the meritoriousness of the claims;
(5) prejudice to the other party; and (6) appropriateness of alternative sanctions.”
Spellman v. Am. Eagle Exp., Inc., No. 2:10-01764, 2012 WL 1719204, at *2 (E.D. Pa.
May 16, 2012) (cleaned up).
The Court addresses each motion, in turn.
I.
Matthews’s motion for protective order permitting Mr. Creasy to
testify only in his expert capacity.
To begin with, “[t]here is no impediment to expert witnesses serving as a Rule
30(b)(6) representative[].” Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Galan-Alvarez, No. 12-1029,
2018 WL 11417748, at *5 (D.P.R. June 8, 2018). However, the Court recognizes that
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there is a distinction between an expert witness and a Rule 30(b)(6) witness. Namely,
“[c]orporate witnesses under Rule 30(b)(6) are representatives of the organization and
are charged with testifying on behalf of the organization about facts known or
reasonably known[,]” but “expert witnesses are not are not called upon to testify as
to facts known to an organization, but are instead called upon to offer opinion based
on facts provided.” MP NexLevel, LLC v. Codale Elec. Supply, Inc., No. 2:08-727, 2012
WL 2368138, at *2 (D. Utah June 21, 2012).
Matthews represents that the only information that Mr. Creasy can testify on
is expert in nature and that he does not offer any facts that are outside of his forensic
expertise. ECF 379, ¶ 12. Specifically, Matthews has offered Mr. Creasy’s expert
testimony about examples of the alleged trade secrets and confidential information
improperly acquired, used, or disclosed by Defendants, about “how he knows from the
examples that he selects that different Defendants improperly acquired, use or
disclosed the Matthews documents at issue[,]” and about “specific examples of the
locations of where certain trade secrets originated from at Matthews.” Id. at ¶ 11;
ECF 379-4, pp. 5-6, 8.
Moreover, Mr. Creasy “has already provided multiple
affidavits, declarations, and an expert report upon which he testified at the
preliminary injunction hearing in December 2020[.]” ECF 382, p. 6. Therefore, the
Court is satisfied that Mr. Creasy’s testimony is likely to be expert in nature.
The Court will therefore grant Matthews’s motion for a protective order.
Matthews does not need to produce Mr. Creasy as a Rule 30(b)(6) witness, per se.
And the Court can understand the need to ensure that Mr. Creasy is preserved as an
expert witness, given his role in this case. However, the information within the topics
is discoverable, and given Matthews’s prior representation that Mr. Creasy is
knowledgeable on these topics as an expert, Matthews must make Mr. Creasy
available to testify on these topics in his capacity as an expert. The deposition (should
Defendants choose to proceed with one) must cover the topics for which Matthews
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had indicated Mr. Creasy would testify on, e.g., Matter Nos. 1, 2, 5, 11, 12, and 15 in
the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice. If Defendants wish to complete this deposition
within the period for fact discovery, then they are authorized to do so, and it is without
prejudice to Defendants to depose Mr. Creasy again in the course of expert discovery
after he submits a written report. 2
II.
Defendants’ motion for sanctions.
Defendants move for sanctions for Matthews’s failure to produce Mr. Creasy
as a Rule 30(b)(6) witness on January 27, 2025. Because Matthews didn’t file a
motion for protective order until after Mr. Creasy’s deposition was scheduled to take
place, its failure to produce Mr. Creasy isn’t excused. But in decided whether to
award sanctions under Rule 37, the Court also weighs several factors.
Extent of the party’s personal responsibility. There’s no evidence that
either Matthews or Mr. Creasy was responsible for his failure to appear at the
deposition—rather, it seems the decision to not appear was made by Matthews’s
counsel.
History of dilatoriness. The record doesn’t indicate that Matthews has a
pattern of dilatoriness in this case.
Willfulness or bad faith. The record doesn’t indicate that Matthews acted
in bad faith. The Court recognizes that the parties’ counsel appear to dispute whether
they reached an agreement last week to produce Mr. Creasy as a Rule 30(b)(6)
witness, and finds (based on counsels’ email exchanges) that, while Matthews’s
conduct “amounts to more than mere inexcusable negligent behavior[,]” there is no
2 Alternatively, Matthews may designate someone else on these topics now, and/or
Defendants may elect to forego taking Mr. Creasy’s deposition until the expertdiscovery period. Matthews argues that it has fulfilled its obligations under Rule
30(b)(6) by “providing more than 21 hours of corporate representative testimony over
the last week about areas that are within its organizational knowledge[,]” but this is
inapposite as there is no indication that the corporate representatives testified on the
specific topics at issue. ECF 382, p. 3.
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indication that Matthews’s failure to produce Mr. Creasy was strategic, self-serving
conduct. Spellman v. Am. Eagle Exp., Inc., No. 2:10-01764, 2012 WL 1719204, at *2
(E.D. Pa. May 16, 2012) (“Willful conduct requires strategic, self-serving conduct that
amounts to more than mere inexcusable negligent behavior.” (cleaned up)); see ECF
379-5.
As the Court is unable to make a
Meritoriousness of the claims.
determination as to the merits of Matthews’s claims at this time, this factor is
neutral.
Prejudice to the other party.
The Court finds there is prejudice to
Defendants due to Mr. Creasy’s failure to appear at the deposition. In particular,
Defendants had agreed to reschedule the deposition of bix-x-bit in reliance upon
Matthews’s agreement to produce Mr. Creasy for the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition.
Appropriateness of alternative sanctions. At this juncture, the Court
finds that awarding Defendants their attorney’s fees and costs of $4,936.00 associated
with arguing this issue, preparing this Motion, and cancelling the January 27, 2025
deposition is sufficient to correct the prejudice caused by Matthews’s failure to
produce Mr. Creasy. The Court hereby orders this payment to be made within 30
days of this order. Defendants also request that the Court prohibit Matthews from
offering any testimony as to Matter Nos. 1, 2, 5, 11, 12, and 15 beyond the testimony
provided to date by Matthews’s 30(b)(6) corporate representatives, but the Court finds
that this sanction is not warranted.
III.
Defendants’ motion for protective order on Topic No. 28.
Implant and IR Environmental move for a protective order relieving them of
the obligation to produce a witness to testify on Topic No. 28, which relates to
testimony on Implant and IR Environmental’s alleged acquisition of confidential
information and trade secrets produced by Matthews (1) on December 31, 2024 in two
spreadsheets containing a list of almost 30,000 file names and (2) in another list of
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Bates ranges covering thousands of pages of documents that Matthews contends are
the alleged trade secret or confidential information.
A Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice “must describe with reasonable particularity
the matters for examination,” and the persons designated “must testify about
information known or reasonably available to the organization.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
30(b)(6). “[C]ourts, including courts in the Third Circuit, have ruled that deposition
topics lacking any metes and bounds are facially overbroad and unduly burdensome.”
Occidental Chem. Corp. v. 21st Century Fox Am., Inc., No. 18-11273, 2023 WL
2300652, at *11 (D.N.J. Feb. 28, 2023) (collecting cases). “[T]he concept of reasonable
availability requires the court to weigh the parties’ respective knowledge, including
the relative abilities of the parties to develop the information, the burden that
preparing a witness on the particular topic would impose on the organization, and
the importance of the requested information.” Brit. Telecommunications PLC v.
IAC/Interactivecorp, No. 18-366, 2020 WL 1043974, at *4 (D. Del. Mar. 4, 2020); see
also Fed. Trade Comm’n v. Am. Future Sys., No. 20-02266, 2022 WL 1437562, at *2
(E.D. Pa. Apr. 8, 2022) (noting that proposed topics that “would require a witness to
master an unreasonably large body of knowledge” may fail the “reasonable
particularity” standard, as would topics that may “require a corporate representative
to devote unreasonable time to preparation, to master detailed data-based subject
matter, or testify about all of an organization's answers to one or more sets of
discovery covering varied subject matter”); In re Asbestos Prods. Liab. Litig., No. 1163953, 2012 WL 3104833, at *2 (E.D. Pa. July 31, 2012) (“Noticing a 30(b)(6)
deposition to obtain testimony from a defendant identifying all asbestos products it
supplied, sold or distributed over a sixty plus year period is not proper.”); Michilin
Prosperity Co. v. Fellowes Mfg. Co., No. 04-1025, 2006 WL 1441575, at *2 (D.D.C. May
23, 2006) (plaintiff’s 30(b)(6) notice failed to describe with reasonable particularity
the matters on which examination was requested where the subject matter was
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approximately 2,000 pages of documents defendant produced, which deponent would
have to review); Pres. Techs. LLC v. MindGeek USA, Inc., No. 17-08906, 2020 WL
10965163, at *2 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 19, 2020) (plaintiff’s Rule 30(b)(6) topic requesting
testimony about 2.4 terabytes of source code that defendant produced was unduly
burdensome because learning enough to discuss each file would require “painstaking
preparation”).
The Court finds that Topic No. 28 poses an undue burden on Defendants, given
the large amounts of files and documents that the corporate representatives would
have to review in preparation for this particular topic, and the short amount of time
that they would have to do so. Accordingly, the Court will limit the scope of Topic No.
28 as follows: Matthews must identify by January 29, 2025 at 3:00 p.m. (or by a time
and date mutually agreed to by the parties), no more than 100 sample documents
(total) from Exhibits 13A, 13B, and 14 that it seeks to depose Implant and IR
Environmental’s corporate representatives on. 3
*
*
*
3 To be clear, when the matter of trade secrets comes before the Court, the Court has
no intention of pouring over 30,000 files, and the parties should consider, even now,
how they intend to describe with reasonable particularity the trade secrets at issue
for the Court (or jury). See Oakwood Lab’ys LLC v. Thanoo, 999 F.3d 892, 906 (3d
Cir. 2021) (noting, at motion-to-dismiss stage, that “the subject matter of the trade
secret must be described with sufficient particularity to separate it from matters of
general knowledge in the trade or of special knowledge of those persons who are
skilled in the trade, and to permit the defendant to ascertain at least the boundaries
within which the secret lies” (cleaned up)); Mallet & Co. Inc. v. Lacayo, 16 F.4th 364,
385 (3d Cir. 2021) (on a preliminary-injunction motion, “it is first and foremost the
plaintiff’s burden to specifically identify what it contends to be its trade secrets and
to demonstrate with record evidence a significantly better than negligible chance, of
establishing the existence of those trade secrets” (cleaned up)); Dow Chem. Canada
Inc. v. HRD Corp., 909 F. Supp. 2d 340, 346 (D. Del. 2012) (noting, at summaryjudgment stage, that the party claiming misappropriation must “ show the existence
of a trade secret with reasonable degree of precision and specificity such that a
reasonable jury could find that plaintiff established each statutory element of a trade
secret” (cleaned up)), aff’d, 587 F. App’x 741 (3d Cir. 2014).
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Therefore, after careful consideration and consistent with the foregoing, it is
hereby ORDERED that Matthews’s motion for protective order (ECF 379),
Defendants’ motion for sanctions (ECF 380), and Defendants’ motion for protective
order (ECF 381) are GRANTED IN PART, as set forth in this Order. 4
DATED: January 28, 2025
BY THE COURT:
/s/ J. Nicholas Ranjan
United States District Judge
4 The Court notes that fact discovery must be completed by January 31, 2025 (ECF
370), but the Court has not yet set a schedule for expert discovery. At the status
conference on February 5, 2025, the parties should be prepared to discuss the
schedule for expert discovery (as well as the briefing schedule for summary-judgment
motions).
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