Felman Production, Inc. v. Industrial Risk Insurers
Filing
566
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER granting in part and denying in part 451 MOTION for Default Judgment Sanctions; granting 480 MOTION for Leave to Supplement Reply in Support of Motion for Sanctions; Plaintiff's claim for business interrupti on coverage is dismissed with prejudice; defendants are entitled to an adverse instruction, and defendants may seek an award of attorney fees to cover their expenses related to the motion. Signed by Judge Robert C. Chambers on 9/29/2011. (cc: attys; any unrepresented party) (dcm)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA
HUNTINGTON DIVISION
FELMAN PRODUCTION, INC.,
a Delaware corporation,
Plaintiff,
v.
CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:09-0481
INDUSTRIAL RISK INSURERS,
an unincorporated association, et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Pending before the Court are Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions of Default Judgment and
Dismissal of Felman’s Claims (Doc. #451) and Motion for Leave to Supplement Reply in Support
of Motion for Sanctions (Doc. #480). For the following reason, the motion for default judgment
sanctions is GRANTED, in part, and DENIED, in part, and the motion to supplement is
GRANTED. Plaintiff’s claim for business interruption coverage is DISMISSED with prejudice,
Defendants are entitled to an adverse inference instruction, and Defendants may seek an award of
attorney fees to cover their expenses related to this Motion.1
1
Contemporaneously with this ruling, the Court by separate order is granting summary
judgment to Defendants on the business interruption claim based on the merits. The Court regrets
the length of delay in resolving the instant motion but find it nonetheless appropriate to grant the
relief herein as an alternate basis for dismissing the business interruption claim.
I.
BACKGROUND
Since Felman initiated this case, the Court has spent little time addressing the merits of the
claim. Instead, the Court’s time—in particular, that of United States Magistrate Judge Mary E.
Stanley—has been consumed by numerous adversarial discovery disputes between the parties. The
instant motion is a result of a litany of discovery-related disputes, and is the culmination of one of
the most contentious discovery periods ever before this Court. International Risk Insurers (“IRI”),2
an unincorporated association of two insurance companies—co-defendants Westport Insurance
Company (“Westport”) and Swiss Reinsurance America Corporation (“Swiss Re”)—base their
motion for sanctions on three grounds: (1) Felman’s violation of the Court’s August 19 and October
19, 2010 Orders; (2) Felman’s spoliation of critical evidence; and (3) Felman’s pattern of discovery
misconduct. Def.’s Reply, Doc. #471, at 1–2. The Court will first review the factual background
to the case, including a detailed background to the discovery period, before turning to its analysis
of whether these facts satisfy the Fourth Circuit standard for terminating sanctions under Rule 37(b)
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
A.
Factual Background to the Case
This action, initially filed in May 2009, is an insurance case. Felman Production, Inc.
(“Felman”) operates a silicon manganese plant in New Haven, West Virginia. The plant utilizes
three furnaces, designated Furnace #2, Furnace #5, and Furnace #7, in its production process. On
or about April 27, 2008, Furnace #2 failed and was rendered inoperable. Prior to the furnace failure,
IRI had issued a property insurance policy to Felman. As a result of the damage sustained to the
2
Felman informs the Court that IRI may no longer exist. Pl.’s Resp., Doc. #464, at 6, n.1.
Regardless, the Court will refer to the defendants as IRI throughout this Opinion.
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furnace and the resulting interruption to the plant’s production, Felman filed an insurance claim
under this policy seeking an estimated $39 million, including a $38 million business interruption
claim stemming from the eight months it took to repair Furnace #2. The specifics of the coverage
provided under the policy are irrelevant to the motion currently before the Court; what is relevant
is IRI investigated the claim for a full year, and still refused to settle the claim. As a result of the
delay in settlement, Felman filed the instant action seeking payment under the insurance policy in
addition to other damages.
From the beginning, IRI had doubts as to the veracity of the business interruption claim, and
this has remained a hotly contested issue in this action. Following extensive discovery, IRI amended
its answer to include a counterclaim for fraud. IRI based this claim on multiple documents
uncovered during the discovery period that included communication between Felman and Privat
Intertrading (“Privat” or “PIT”)3 discussing the possibility of backdating contract orders and other
efforts in order to bolster Felman’s business interruption claim. Several discovery disputes in this
action are the progeny of Privat’s connection to Felman’s insurance claim at issue in this case.
3
Privat is a Ukrainian entity that is intimately related to Felman and its operations. Felman
is 100% owned by Haftseek Investments Limited, which is 100% owned by Divot Enterprises, Ltd.,
the stock of which is 100% owned by Igor Kolomoiskiy. Aug. 19, 2010 Mem. Op. & Order, Doc.
#398, at 4. He is one of three shareholders of Privat Bank, and one of the Privat representatives
whose relevant documents play a critical role in this motion for sanctions. Id. at 11. As Judge
Stanley summarized, based on this corporate structure, “Privat, Privat Intertrading and the
Ukrainians who own all that stock” will be the recipients of any settlement of the insurance claim.
Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 48.
Therefore, Privat and Felman are closely intertwined, and Privat’s role operating and decisionmaking for Felman is highly relevant to this action.
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B.
Overview of the Discovery Period
IRI contends that Felman has abused the discovery process, resulting in severe prejudice to
IRI’s ability to raise defenses to Felman’s claims and to support its counterclaims against Felman.
The abuses range from the minor, such as delaying responses to discovery requests, to the major,
including the spoliation of relevant evidence. A review of Judge Stanley’s orders, deposition
testimony, discovery responses by both parties, and other documentation supports IRI’s contention
that Felman has failed to fulfill its discovery obligations pursuant to the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. Since Felman first anticipated this litigation on May 28, 2008,4 it has delayed issuance
of litigation hold memos, and completely failed to issue holds to certain key individuals; delayed
its production of electronically stored information (“ESI”); violated this Court’s Protective Order
by marking every single page of its ESI production “CONFIDENTIAL”; produced an excessive
number of irrelevant documents; failed to fully respond to interrogatories; misled IRI and this Court
in its interrogatory answers; filed a motion to reconsider found by this Court to not be “substantially
justified”; exhibited a lack of candor with both IRI and this Court; and, as a result of the delay in or
failure to issue the litigation holds, permanently destroyed evidence material to this case.
In its motion for terminating sanctions, IRI focuses on the most recent failure of Felman to
comply with its discovery responsibilities. Magistrate Judge Stanley issued two orders in August
and October of 2010 requiring Felman to produce documents held by identified custodians who are
part of Privat, located in the Ukraine. IRI sought these documents as Privat has been identified as
the controlling entity with respect to all decisions relating to Felman during the relevant time period
4
Felman asserted work product protection for materials created by a non-testifying expert
as early as this date. Defs.’ Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 17.
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of the furnace failure and the filing of the insurance claim. Although directed by Judge Stanley to
produce any relevant documents in the hands of these individuals, Felman produced a limited
number and, further, reported that several of these custodians had deleted many of the relevant
documents. Before examining Felman’s failure to comply with these Orders, it is helpful to review
the history that led to this most recent failure by Felman to comply with its discovery obligations.
From the beginning through the present, the parties’ interactions during the discovery period
have been contentious. From October 14, 2009, the date of the first discovery related-motion, until
the end of 2010, the parties filed approximately thirteen motions regarding the opposing party’s
failure to comply with discovery requests.5 One of these, IRI’s motion to compel ESI, can be
viewed as the first inclination of Felman’s disregard for the discovery process. In this motion, IRI
sought the production of ESI responsive to its first request for production, which was filed on
August 7, 2009. Defs.’ Mot. to Compel ESI, Doc. #86, at 1. Over three months later, Felman had
yet to produce a single ESI document in response to the request for production. Id. Then-Magistrate
Judge Taylor granted IRI’s motion—but not the accompanying motion for sanctions—requiring
Felman to produce responsive ESI by December 31, 2009.6
Felman eventually produced over one million pages, which it provided to IRI from December
2009 through January 2010. Defs.’ Mot. to Compel to Identify by Bates Number, Doc. #197, at 1.
However, of these documents, approximately thirty to forty percent were completely irrelevant to
5
The Court notes that not all the discovery motions were filed by IRI. Felman filed a
number of motions to compel IRI to fully respond to various discovery requests, some of which were
granted. See, e.g., Mar. 25, 2010 Order, Doc. #296. However, these do not arise to the egregious
level of behavior exhibited by Felman.
6
This date was later extended into January 2010 at Felman’s request.
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this case. In addition, Felman stamped each and every page, including the irrelevant documents, as
“CONFIDENTIAL.” Among examples of irrelevant—and clearly non-confidential—documents
are a picture of kitten, a picture of apparently naked men, advertisements, vacation arrangements,
and spam. Mar. 25, 2010 Mem. Op. & Order, Doc. #297, at 1 n.1. In her Order sanctioning Felman,
Judge Stanley observed:
that Felman’s marking of each page of discovery
documents as “Confidential” violates this Court’s
Local Rule 26.4 and makes a mockery of the Court’s
form protective order [used by the parties in this
action].
It is apparent that Felman cannot
demonstrate with specificity that the documents
qualify for protection under FR Civ P 26(c) and that
good cause exists for restricting dissemination
because harm would result from their disclosure. The
Court further FINDS that Felman failed to proceed in
good faith when it marked all the documents or other
materials as “Confidential.”
Id. at 4.7
The Protective Order requires the parties to mark as confidential only those documents that
“a party has a good faith belief” were confidential. Protective Order, Doc. #24. Felman’s belief,
that stamping all pages of the document production as “CONFIDENTIAL” was appropriate, is
therefore especially disturbing. No competent attorney could entertain a “good faith belief” that
either a picture of a kitten in a shoe or a picture of apparently naked men in cowboy hats are
confidential. In light of Felman’s abuse of the Protective Order, Judge Stanley found that Felman
7
Judge Stanley further observed that in signing the Protective Order in this action, local
counsel certified “that the Protective Order was not ‘being presented for any improper purpose’” and
that, by signing discovery responses, counsel certified that the responses comported with the
requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Mar. 25, 2010 Mem. Op. & Order, Doc.
#297, at 5–6.
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violated the Protective Order and Local Rule 26.4 by marking each page of its ESI production as
“CONFIDENTIAL.”8 Judge Stanley sanctioned Felman for these violations, but limited sanctions
to the reimbursement of “the defendants’ reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ fees relating to”
IRI’s motion to compel Felman to identify by Bates number. Apr. 9, 2010 Order, Doc. #319, at 4.
These amounted to a total of $25,000.9 June 25, 2010 Order, Doc. #357, at 4.
Felman’s utter disregard for good faith with respect to discovery responses is further
exemplified by IRI’s motion to compel an answer to its Interrogatory No. 1 (Doc. #176). In
Interrogatory No. 1, IRI sought information regarding Furnace No. 2—the furnace at the center of
this action—and Felman’s efforts to replace or repair it. This information already had been
identified by then-Magistrate Judge Taylor as discoverable, yet Felman nonetheless refused to
produce the information. Feb. 24, 2010 Mem. Op. & Order, Doc. #223, at 3. Further, prior to filing
the motion, IRI met and conferred with Felman in hopes of avoiding the Court’s involvement in their
dispute. Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Stanley concluded that Felman’s refusal to provide the
requested information “was not substantially justified” and therefore granted IRI reasonable
expenses incurred in making the motion.10 Id. Within a one month span Felman was sanctioned
8
Local Rule 26.4(a) requires a party to “demonstrate with specificity that (1) the information
qualifies for protection under FR Civ P 26(c) and (2) good cause exists for restricting dissemination
on the ground that harm would result from its disclosure” when seeking the entry of a protective
order.
9
Felman challenged this conclusion by Judge Stanley. This Court concurred with Judge
Stanley’s Order, and ordered Felman to pay the full $25,000. July 15, 2010 Order, Doc. #370.
10
In a further waste of the parties’ and the Court’s resources, Felman filed a motion to
reconsider. Judge Stanley denied this motion, concluding there was “no purpose or function [to] the
motion to reconsider and considers it to have been a waste of resources.” Mar. 30, 2010 Order, Doc.
#304, at 7–8. Accordingly, she yet again required Felman pay IRI’s reasonable costs for opposing
the motion. Id. at 8. Felman was ordered to pay IRI’s counsel a total of $7,716.75 for costs
(continued...)
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twice for its failure to comport itself within the guidelines of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure—once for a violation of its good faith obligation under the Protective Order.11
At the same time Felman was dragging its feet and failing to properly respond to discovery
requests, Felman also actively concealed its relationship with Privat. Throughout most of this case,
Felman has insisted that it was the sole decision-maker with respect to the insurance claim.
However, through inadvertent production by Felman, IRI obtained a May 14, 2008, email between
the Human Resource Manager at Felman, attorneys at Marks Sokolov & Burd, LLC (outside counsel
to Felman), and Katerina Vatutina of PIT.12 May 18, 2010 Order, Doc. #334, at 2. On the basis of
this email, on March 11, 2010, IRI amended its Answer to include a fraud counterclaim. Mot. to
Amend Answer, Doc. #265. Felman sought to claw-back this document as privileged; it was one of
approximately 377 attorney-client communications that Felman inadvertently produced and
subsequently claimed as privileged. May 18, 2010 Order, Doc. #334, at 6, 25. In the ensuing
dispute regarding whether IRI was obligated to return all copies of the email,13 Felman sought to
10
(...continued)
associated with these two motions. Apr. 9, 2010 Order, Doc. #319, at 13.
11
Felman may have withheld additional requested information. IRI has requested Felman’s
2008 tax return since August 2009, but Felman’s counsel has informed IRI that Felman has yet to
file its 2008 tax return. However, Felman’s CFO testified during his deposition that he believes it
has filed this return. Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 19–20.
12
In this email, the Felman Human Resources Manager wrote attorneys at Marks, Sokolov
& Burd, Felman’s outside counsel advising the company with respect to the insurance claims.
Among other issues, the email discussed Felman’s discussions with its customers about possibly
backdating sales contracts. May 14, 2008 E-mail, Ex. E to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-6.
13
Judge Stanley ultimately concluded that “Felman and Venable [Felman’s counsel] did not
take reasonable steps to prevent disclosure of the May 14 email, that Felman and Venable have not
satisfied all three subsections of Rule 502(b) [of the Federal Rules of Evidence], and that they have
waived protection for the May 14 email.” May 18, 2010 Order, Doc. #334, at 26. Felman requested
(continued...)
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assert attorney-client privilege over the email. Felman therefore submitted several affidavits from
Mr. Burd, one of the attorneys at Marks Sokolov & Burd, and one from Ms. Vatutina, both
indicating “that in 2007 and 2008, Felman was managed by Privat Intertrading, which oversaw
Felman’s operations, including sales of Felman’s silicomanganese product.”14 Id. at 16.
Prior to this admission, Felman had failed to disclose that PIT was the controlling entity,
dictating the major operational decisions for Felman during the relevant time period leading to this
case. Demonstrating an extreme lack of candor with IRI and this Court, in verified interrogatory
responses, Felman stated that “there are no individuals from the Privat Group that have first-hand
knowledge of any facts pertaining to Felman’s Claim.” Pl.’s 2d. Am. Answers to IRI’s Interrogs.,
Resp. No. 17, Ex. A, Tab 2 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2.15 Felman also indicated that
no one outside of Felman had any role in the development of Felman’s business plans. Id., Resp.
No. 12. Both these assertions have been refuted by multiple documents obtained by IRI through
discovery. See, e.g., Ex. A, Tabs 3, 31, 32, Exs. E, F, J to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2.
13
(...continued)
that this Court review Judge Stanley’s decision; it did, and affirmed her conclusion. July 23, 2010
Mem. Op. & Order, Doc. #376.
14
Felman later attempted to discount this assertion in order to avoid production of documents
held by key Privat individuals who are custodians of documents relevant to this case. In spite of
asserting, several times, that Privat was closely related to Felman and therefore the inclusion of
individuals like Ms. Vatutina on communications did not destroy privilege, Felman later claimed
it did not have control over Privat documents. This is just one example of how Felman has altered
its story based on what was most convenient to its purposes at the time.
15
According to the docket sheet, the second amended answers were filed on October 23,
2009. Certificate of Service, Doc. #63. IRI’s request for interrogatories was filed on August 7,
2009. Certificate of Service, Doc. #20. Accordingly, Felman has been actively working to conceal
Privat’s role in the insurance claim since at least these dates. This is a year prior to the sale of
Privat’s computers and the permanent destruction of potentially responsive ESI. See infra. It is also
a year prior to the date Felman finally issued a litigation hold memo to Privat employees—even
more startling, this litigation hold only went to two of the nine relevant Privat individuals.
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Despite clear evidence to the contrary, as late as May 12, 2010, counsel for Felman asserted that
“[w]hen we answered the interrogatories that nobody at Privat had firsthand knowledge with regard
to the claims related to the insurance coverage issue, that’s a hundred percent correct.” May 12,
2010 Transcript, Ex. A, Tab 6 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 31–32.
Despite Felman’s subterfuge, IRI uncovered the existence of PIT, the key individuals
working at PIT, and the extent of PIT’s control over the Felman operation—but only by weeding
through the aforementioned document dump of one million-plus pages and other document
productions. See, e.g., E-mail from A. Kuharuk, PIT, to S. Pragnell, Felman, Aug. 7, 2008, Ex. A,
Tab 3, to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2 (“. . . decisions concerning distribution and
expending money [regarding Felman] will be taken in Ukraine [at PIT].”). On the basis of the
extensive documentation uncovered through its discovery efforts, IRI submitted a motion to compel
Felman to produce documents from ten Privat representatives16 (Doc. #372). Judge Stanley found
that the evidence pieced together by IRI supported the motion for nine out of the ten PIT
representatives and, therefore, ordered Felman to produce all relevant documents maintained by
these individuals.17 Aug. 19, 2010 Order, Doc. #398, at 15, 20–21. In reaching this conclusion,
Judge Stanley found that the exhibits submitted by IRI
establish that direct control over Felman’s operations
was exercised by the Privat representatives . . . . The
16
The Court uses the term “Privat representatives” as it was defined in the August 19, 2010
Order. Doc. #398. This includes the following individuals: Katerina Vatutina, Sergiy Maximenko,
Anastasiya Kuharuk, Gennadiy Bogolyubov, Igor Kolomoiskiy, Alexey Martynov, Mordechai Korf,
Velvel Lozynskyy, and Robert Powell.
17
Again, Felman filed a motion to reconsider this Order, here with respect to two of the nine
representatives. And again, Judge Stanley declined this request. See Oct. 19, 2010 Order, Doc.
#415.
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Privat representatives were intimately involved in
decisions regarding sales and pricing of Felman’s
production, thereby directly affecting Felman’s
business interruption claim and net profits; Messrs.
Korf and Powell [two PIT associated custodians] are
significantly involved in this insurance litigation.
After review of these exhibits, it is troubling indeed
that Defendants advise that in verified discovery
responses, Felman has stated that “there are no
individuals from the Privat Group that have first-hand
knowledge of any facts pertaining to Felman’s
Claim.”
Id. at 15–16 (internal citation omitted).
In spite of its already troubling record with respect to discovery candor and responsiveness,
Felman nevertheless has failed to fully comply with Judge Stanley’s August 19, 2010 Order, and her
subsequent October 19, 2010 Order denying Felman’s motion to reconsider. It is this most recent
failure that led to IRI’s filing of the instant motion.
C.
Felman’s Failure to Comply with the August 19 and October 19, 2010 Orders
In the August 19 and October 19, 2010 Orders, Judge Stanley directed Felman to obtain all
relevant documents from nine Privat representatives. In so doing, she observed: “While it is highly
likely that the Privat representatives will produce documents and ESI which are duplicates of
previously produced materials, it is reasonable to believe that they will have additional, highly
relevant materials concerning Felman and its insurance claim, which were not shared with Felman
executives.” Aug. 19, 2010 Order, Doc. #398, at 25. Further, Judge Stanley made the explicit
finding that each of the nine Privat representatives “are custodians of documents which are relevant
to the claims and defenses of the parties in this action.” Id. at 15 (emphasis added).
In spite of this clear language, Felman failed to collect responsive documents from all the
representatives. Instead, Felman conducted custodial interviews in order to ascertain whether these
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individuals had any responsive documents. Nov. 24, 2010 Letter, Ex. A, Tab 23 to Defs.’ Mot. for
Sanctions, Doc. #451-2. It concluded, in direct conflict with Judge Stanley’s Orders,18 that two of
the identified custodians, Mr. Bogolyubov and Mr. Kolomoiskiy,19 did not have responsive
documents on the basis of these interviews; it included the same with respect to Mr. Martynov
without even conducting an interview.20 Id. Felman determined that there was “no reasonable
likelihood that either Mr. Bogolyubov or Mr. Kolomoiskiy ha[d] potentially responsive information,
particularly any responsive information that has not already been produced in this case.”21 Larkin
Aff., Ex. A, Tab 9, to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #452-1, ¶ 6. Mr. Larkin based these
conclusions on representations made by these individuals that they only received Felman reports
18
As observed by Judge Stanley at the December 8, 2010 status conference: “I didn’t tell you
to go interview them and ask them if they had anything; I said, ‘I find that they have it.’” Dec. 8,
2010 Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 45.
19
The Court is astounded that Felman believed custodial interview of these two individuals
was appropriate. Felman filed a motion to reconsider regarding these two individuals, which Judge
Stanley denied in her October 19 Order. Defs.’ Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 8. Therefore, Felman
reached this decision in spite of two direct orders from Judge Stanley stating that Mr. Kolomoiskiy
and Mr. Bogolyubov were custodians of documents material to this case.
20
Apparently Mr. Martynov was unreachable at the time as he was in the United Arab
Emirates. Nov. 24, 2010 Letter, Ex. A, Tab 23 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2.
21
The Court refers to Mr. Larkin, counsel for Felman, throughout this section as his affidavit
contains significant assertions relating to Felman’s compliance with the August 19, 2010 Order.
However, the Court notes that many of these statements are based on representations made by
various Privat representatives. Judge Stanley has previously observed that “the Court has become
increasingly skeptical of these gentlemen [at Privat] and the credibility of their statements. And, in
fact, the intervening complaint filed by Mt. Hawley raised questions about the credibility of
executives at Felman. And the discovery problems that we’ve had in this case have not helped that
matter at all.” Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2,
at 25.
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orally, and neither read or sent emails.22 Id. Further, Mr. Larkin was unable to reach Mr. Martynov,
and concluded—even without an interview—that he had no responsive documents.23 Id. ¶ 5.
Following the December 2010 hearing at which Judge Stanley expressed her displeasure with
Felman’s efforts to comply with her August 19 and October 19, 2010 Orders, Felman revisited these
three custodians, and it has now completed a physical search of all their files.24 Decl. of G.
Caouette, Ex. H to Pl.’s Resp., Doc. #464-8. Felman stated that this “unduly burdensome effort
[which] costs tens of thousands of additional dollars in travel expenses and attorney time . . . yielded
a total of seven new Felman-related documents, none of which contains information material to this
case.”25 Pl.’s Resp., Doc. #464, at 14.
22
Felman also submitted an affidavit by Mordechai Korf in an effort to excuse their failure
to search these individuals’ files. Mr. Korf stated that he only communicates orally with Mr.
Molomoisky and Mr. Bogolyubov regarding Felman; however, Mr. Korf was not associated with
Felman during the relevant periods to this case—in 2008 and early 2009—and accordingly, Judge
Stanley found the affidavit “utterly unpersuasive.” Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5, to
Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 6, 9 (“Mr. Korf obviously lacks personal knowledge of
what Mr. Bogolyubov and Mr. Maximenko and Mr. Pragnell were doing the year before he arrived
on the scene.”).
23
Felman states that it misunderstood Judge Stanley’s Orders. Rather than reading the
August 19 and October 19 Orders as requiring a physical search of each custodian’s hard copy and
electronic files, Felman interpreted the Order as a directive to conduct its usual review of potential
custodians’ files. Pl.’s Reply, Doc. #464, at 12–13.
24
IRI also challenges the search parameters used by Felman in searching the Privat
custodians’ files. According to Mr. Caoulette’s declaration, an employee of Felman’s vendor, Kroll
on Track, the computers of Messrs. Kolomoiskiy, Bogolyubov, and Martynov’s were searched for
the word “Felman.” Decl. of G. Cauolette, Ex. H to Pl.’s Resp., Doc. #464-8, ¶¶ 8, 11, 13. IRI
asserts that a search based solely on the word “Felman” will miss key documents, and it is not aimed
at getting all documents responsive to IRI’s requests. See Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 5. IRI points
to several key documents in this case which do not contained the word “Felman.” See Ex. A to
Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471-1.
25
The Court notes that if Felman had properly fulfilled its obligations under the August 19
and October 19 Orders, the extent of the additional expense would have been much less as Felman
(continued...)
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In addition to informing IRI and the Court that it had elected to forego reviewing the
documents and ESI maintained by these three custodians, Felman also informed the Court and IRI
that two of the remaining six custodians—Mr. Maximenko and Ms. Kuharuk—had deleted Felmanrelated materials.26 Nov. 24, 2010 Letter, Ex. A, Tab 23 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2.
According to Mr. Larkin’s affidavit, deletions of potentially responsive ESI by PIT custodians Mr.
Maximenko and Ms. Kuharuk “occurred either before the filing of this lawsuit, or at the latest, prior
to the filing of Defendants’ counterclaims” and the deletions were merely administrative and
unrelated to the instant action.27 Larkin Aff., Ex A., Tab 9 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2,
¶ 10.
No documents whatsoever were produced from Ms. Kuharuk as she deleted all Felmanrelated emails a month or two after being transferred to a different department within PIT in around
25
(...continued)
would not have had to travel overseas for a second time. Nonetheless, the Court does recognize that
Felman did attempt to comply with Judge Stanley’s Orders—albeit, several months late and only
after being reprimanded by the Court.
26
In spite of the foregoing, Felman did produce documents in response to the August and
October Orders. According to IRI, Felman produced 17,455 documents between November 12 to
23, 2010; however, “only 219 came from Ukrainian custodians and there were no internal Privat
communications.” Defs.’ Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 3.
27
Mr. Larkin attempts to downplay the severity of the spoliation by stating that “no
materially new or different information was lost because the same or similar information appears
in the documents already produced to Defendants in this case.” Larkin Aff., Ex A., Tab 9 to Defs.’
Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, ¶ 10. This is a self-serving statement that cannot be proven or
disproved as any supporting or contradicting evidence clearly has been destroyed. Further, Judge
Stanley specifically addressed this possibility in her August 19 Order, finding that while documents
obtained could be highly duplicative, the Privat representatives also would be likely holders of
previously undiscovered relevant documents.
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April to June of 2009.28 Id. ¶¶ 10–11. Mr. Larkin posits that no documents are new or different than
those already produced. He bases this supposition on Ms. Kuharuk’s representation that while she
created reports related to Felman, these reports were provided to Ms. Vatutina and Mr. Maximenko,
often times orally. Id. Further, Mr. Larkin contends that as she communicated with a number of
other people at PIT, these communications are therefore preserved elsewhere. Id.
In February 2011, Felman reported that in addition to these two custodians, Ms. Vatutina and
Mr. Bogolyubov also deleted Felman-related documents. Ms. Vatutina29 destroyed hard copy files
of Felman-related documents approximately “six months after completion of PIT’s work on the
Felman project in early 2009.” Aff. of K. Vatutina, Ex. D to Pl.’s Resp., Doc. #464-4, ¶ 7.
Subsequent to this revelation, on March 3, 2011,30 Felman informed IRI that in its production of
28
This is well after the date Felman stated it anticipated litigation, in May 28, 2008. Def.’s
Mem. of Law at 17. While Felman argues that it did not anticipate that PIT materials would be found
relevant to this case or that Felman had control over these documents, these arguments only exist
because Felman concealed the existence of PIT and its role in the decision-making with respect to
the insurance claim. Felman should not benefit from its subterfuge; the delay in the PIT custodian
production is of its own creation.
29
Felman previously had reported to the Court that Ms. Vatutina had not deleted any
Felman-related material. Instead, it asserted in open Court that the limited amount of documents
produced was a result of Felman’s deduplication of the production. Dec. 8, 2010 Hr’g Tr., Ex. A
to Defs.’ Mot. to Supplement, Doc. #480-1, at 54–55.
30
March 3, 2011 is after the briefing on the motion for sanctions closed. Accordingly, IRI
moved to supplement its briefing in order to include this new information. Felman argues IRI is
precluded based on a single sentence it had included in its response, which states: “Felman’s further
investigation suggests, however, that few documents were removed as duplicates.” Pl.’s Resp. to
Defs.’ Mot. to Supplement, Doc. #488, at 4. Further, Felman contends that its statements during the
December 8, 2010 hearing were based on a good faith belief that the deduplication was the reason
for the limited production from Ms. Vatutina. Id. Regardless of Felman’s basis for its statements
during the December hearing, the Court concludes that the information provided to IRI by Felman
on March 3, 2011 is relevant and is new information that goes to the grounds for IRI’s motion for
sanctions. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS IRI’s motion for leave to supplement.
-15-
documents obtained from Ms. Vatutina’s files, it only deduplicated31 seven documents.32 Felman
previously had produced “several thousand emails” between Ms. Vatutina and individuals at Felman
located in Felman’s own records, yet Felman only produced approximately 150 documents—in
addition to the seven deduplicated—from Ms. Vatutina’s PIT files. Dec. 8, 2010 Hr’g Tr., Ex. A
to Defs.’ Mot. to Supplement, Doc. #480-1, at 37.
Given the large disparity between the
Vatutina/Felman communications previously produced and the lack of documents uncovered in the
Privat files, the logical conclusion is that the spoliation of relevant evidence is larger than Felman
initially reported. Ms. Vatutina played a significant role in Privat’s oversight of Felman; she was
responsible for drafting reports for other Privat individuals, including Mr. Maximenko. Dep. of K.
Vatutina, Ex. A. to Defs.’ Reply in Support of Mot. to Supplement, Doc. #489-1, at 60, 115–16;
Vatutina Decl., Ex. B, Doc. #489-2, at ¶ 5. None of these internally distributed documents authored
by Ms. Vatutina from Privat have been produced. Defs.’ Reply in Support of Mot. to Supplement,
Doc. #489, at 4–5. As to Mr. Bogolyubov, his email account produced an error message, indicating
it was “closed due to non-use, its contents (letters, folders, addresses, settings) were deleted in
accordance with the conditions of the user’s agreement. If you wish to continue to use it, press
unblock.”33 Feb. 15, 2011 Letter enclosing error message, Ex. C. to Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471-3.
31
This refers to the process by which “Felman initially limited its production of documents
collected from [PIT] to documents that Felman had not previously disclosed from its own files.”
Pl.’s Resp. to Defs.’ Mot. to Supplement, Doc. # 488, at 1, n.1.
32
Felman previously had indicated to the Court that the deduplication of Ms. Vatutina’s files
had resulted in the small number of documents produced. See supra, n.28.
33
IRI reports that “[t]he customer service materials for mail.ru indicate that messages can
be deleted upon 60 days of nonuse of the account, but that an individual may reactive his or her
account. Felman has not stated whether it took any steps to try to recover this material or reactive
the account.” Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 8, n.6.
-16-
Further, during the entire time it was uncovering the spoliation of evidence and conducting
its “custodial interviews”—to reemphasize, in direct conflict with Judge Stanley’s
direction—Felman failed to communicate these salient facts to IRI until November 24, 2010, when
it informed the Court and IRI regarding its failure to comply with the Orders. Nov. 24, 2010 Letter
from E. Larkin to J. Chin & J. Warring, Ex. A, Tab 23 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2.
Judge Stanley, when addressing the August 19, 2010 Order during a September 15, 2010 hearing,
requested “the parties discuss with each other the issues that they have with respect to documents
as they come up.” Sept. 15, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 27 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc.
#451-2, at 16. During this period, Felman represented that it was undertaking efforts to comply with
the August 19 Order, and, according to IRI, did not disclose that “it had chosen not to collect
documents as ordered or that documents had been deleted.” Def.’s Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 3.
Felman’s failure to comply with Judge Stanley’s August 19 and October 19, 2010 Orders
was inevitable in light of the lack of care Felman exercised. Felman initially anticipated litigation
against IRI on or about May 28, 2008,34 and filed this action on May 1, 2009. Yet, Felman failed
to provide timely litigation hold memos to either the PIT representatives and Felman employees
located at the West Virginia plant. Felman did not provide litigation hold memos to the West
Virginia Felman staff until four months after this case was filed. Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 2; Ex.
G to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-8. Felman also admitted that the Ukrainian custodians
were not instructed to preserve their documents and that Mr. Maximenko and Ms. Vatutina were
only provided litigation hold memos on August 10, 2010—one day prior to the hearing on IRI’s
34
Felman claimed work-product Protective over work done by a Dr. Kusic, who was retained
on May 28, 2008 as a non-testifying consultant in relation to Felman’s insurance claim with IRI.
Defs.’ Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 17.
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motion to compel their documents, and almost a month after IRI filed its motion to compel. Dec.
8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A., Tab 5, to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 54; IRI’s Mot.
to Compel, Doc. #372. None of the other Privat custodians were ever provided litigation holds. This
occurred in spite of warnings by the Court regarding Felman’s responsibility to preserve these
documents. As early as June, 2010, Magistrate Judge Stanley bluntly instructed that Maimenko and
Vatutina documents, “ in whatever form,” be promptly turned over to Defendants.35 Felman’s
decision to disregard its obligation to issue litigation hold memos resulted in the permanent
destruction of relevant Privat ESI: PIT sold their computers in the summer of 201036 as part of a
systems upgrade, making all information unrecoverable. Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A., Tab
5, to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 54.
As a result of Felman’s varying and extensive abuses of the discovery process, Defendants
have filed the instant motion for sanctions. Pursuant to Rule 37, Defendants seek dismissal, with
prejudice, of all Plaintiff’s claims. In the alternative, at a minimum, IRI requests dismissal of
Felman’s business interruption and bad faith claims and that the Court issue an adverse inference
instruction stating that the deleted documents and those that Felman has refused to collect from its
Shareholders would have contradicted Felman’s business interruption claim and supported IRI’s
fraud claim. The Court will now review the legal standard governing Rule 37(b) sanctions for
discovery abuses, before turning to an analysis of the merits of IRI’s argument.
35
Judge Stanley also cautioned Felman of its obligations to preserve these documents, stating
on June 30, 2010: “I hope all those [Privat] entities have gotten good advice about preservation of
documents. . . . [T]hey’ll be sorry if they don’t.” June 30, 2010 Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 4 to Defs.’
Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 28 and 80–81.
36
The exact date is unknown.
-18-
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
A.
Standard for Default Judgment Under Rule 37(b)
Under Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a party may move for sanctions
where the opposing party has “fail[ed] to obey an order to provide or permit discovery . . . .” Fed.
R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2). Among the sanctions a party may seek is a “rendering [of] default judgment
against the disobedient party.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(vi). A district court has discretionary power
to issue sanctions pursuant to Rule 37(b), “derive[d] from the district court’s ‘broad inherent power
to protect the administration of justice by levying sanctions in response to abusive litigation
practices.’” S. New England Tel. Co. v. Global NAPs, Inc., 251 F.R.D. 82, 90 (D. Conn. 2008)
(quoting Penthouse Int’l Ltd. v. Playboy Enters., Inc., 663 F.2d 371, 386 (2d Cir. 1981)). It is,
however, subject to certain limitations.
The Fourth Circuit states that it is a power never to be exercised “when it has been
established that failure to comply has been due to inability, and not to wilfulness, bad faith, or any
fault of (the non-complying party).” Wilson v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc., 561 F.2d 494, 503 (4th Cir.
1977) (quoting Societe Internationale v. Rogers, 357 U.S. 197, 212 (1958)). A default judgment is
the most severe sanction under Rule 37(b) as it “represents in effect ‘an infringement upon a party’s
right to trial by jury under the seventh amendment,’” and decides a case on grounds other than the
merits. Id. at 503–04 (quoting Note, Standards for Imposition of Discovery Sanctions, 27 ME. L.
REV. 247, 266 (1975)). Accordingly, a district court must be at its most cautious and its “range of
discretion is more narrow” when considering a motion for default judgment. Id. at 503 (quoting Fox
v. Studebaker-Worthington, Inc., 516 F.2d 989, 993 (8th Cir. 1975)). On the basis of these concerns,
the Fourth Circuit has concluded that the severe sanction of default judgment for discovery abuses
-19-
should be reserved for only the “flagrant case in which it is demonstrated that the failure to produce
materially affect(s) the substantial rights of the adverse party and is prejudicial to the presentation
of his case.” Id. at 504 (international quotations and citations omitted).
The Fourth Circuit has established a list of four factors a court must consider prior to issuing
a sanction of default judgment:
(1) whether the noncomplying party acted in bad
faith; (2) the amount of prejudice the noncompliance
caused the adversary; (3) the need for deterring the
particular type of noncompliance; and (4) the
effectiveness of less drastic sanctions.
Hillig v. Comm’r, 916 F.2d 171, 174 (4th Cir. 1990) (citing Mut. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Richards
& Assocs., 872 F.2d 88, 92 (4th Cir. 1989)). In addition, the Fourth Circuit requires that, prior to
issuing default judgment sanctions, the district court must communicate the possibility of these
sanctions to the offending party. Hathcock v. Navistar Int’l Transp. Corp., 53 F.3d 36, 40 (4th Cir.
1995). Last, the Court notes that “[s]anctions must be weighed in light of the full record in the
case.” S. New England Tel. Co., 251 F.R.D. at 95 (quoting Penthouse Int’l Ltd., 663 F.2d at 388).
Accordingly, “[t]o warrant dismissal, the offending party’s conduct in the litigation must
demonstrate a ‘pattern of indifference and disrespect to the authority of the court.’” PVD Plast
Mould Indus. Ltd. v. Polymer Grp., Inc., 2001 WL 1867801 (D.S.C. 2001), at *4 (quoting Mut. Fed.
Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 872 F.2d at 92).
III.
DISCUSSION
A.
Felman’s Spoliation of Material Evidence
Defendants’ motion for terminating sanctions is based on Plaintiff’s discovery abuses, as a
whole. Defendants, however, do place significant weight on Plaintiff’s spoliation of relevant
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evidence in this case, and the resulting violation of the August 19 and October 19, 2010 Orders.
Accordingly, the Court will first review the Fourth Circuit standard for terminating sanctions for
spoliation, and determine whether the spoliation that occurred in this case merits default judgment
on its own.
1.
Standard for Sanctions for Spoliation of Material Evidence
“Spoliation refers to the destruction or material alteration of evidence or the failure to
preserve property for another’s use as evidence in pending or reasonably foreseeable litigation.”
Silvestri v. Gen. Motors Corp., 271 F.3d 583, 590 (4th Cir. 2001) (citing West v. Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co., 167 F.3d 776, 779 (2d Cir. 1999) (citing Black’s Law Dictionary 1401 (6th ed. 1990))).
Spoliation of evidence, like a party’s disregard for a court’s discovery order, gives rise to a trial
court’s power to issue sanctions. “The policy underlying this inherent power of the courts is the
need to preserve the integrity of the judicial process in order to retain confidence that the process
works to uncover the truth.” Silvestri, 271 F.3d at 590. The Fourth Circuit cautions, however, that
while a trial court has discretion in imposing sanctions, “dismissal should be avoided if a lesser
sanction will perform the necessary function.” Id. (citing West, 167 F.3d at 779). In the Fourth
Circuit, to warrant sanctions for spoliation, the following must be shown:
“(1) [T]he party having control over the evidence had
an obligation to preserve it when it was destroyed or
altered; (2) the destruction or loss was accompanied
by a ‘culpable state of mind;’ and (3) the evidence
that was destroyed or altered was ‘relevant’ to the
claims or defenses of the party that sought the
discovery of the spoliated evidence, to the extent that
a reasonable factfinder could conclude that the lost
evidence would have supported the claims or defenses
of the party that sought it.”
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Goodman v. Praxair Servs., Inc., 632 F. Supp. 2d 494, 509 (D. Md. 2009) (quoting Thompson v.
U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., 219 F.R.D. 93, 101 (D. Md. 2003)). For terminating sanctions,
“the district court must consider both the spoliator’s conduct and the prejudice caused and be able
to conclude either (1) that the spoliator’s conduct was so egregious as to amount to a forfeiture of
his claim, or (2) that the effect of the spoliator’s conduct was so prejudicial that it substantially
denied the defendant the ability to defend the claim.” Silvestri, 271 F.3d at 593.
2.
Terminating Sanctions are Not Warranted Based on Felman’s Spoliation Alone
i.
Duty to Preserve
Whether spoliation of evidence occurred depends on when a party’s duty to preserve material
evidence arose, i.e., “when a party reasonably should know that the evidence may be relevant to
anticipated litigation.” Silvestri, 167 F.3d at 591. A party subject to this duty must “identify, locate,
and maintain, information that is relevant to specific, predictable, and identifiable litigation.” Victor
Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe, Inc., 269 F.R.D. 497, 522 (D. Md. 2010) (Mag.) (internal citation
omitted). In ascertaining whether a party has fulfilled its duty to preserve, a court must “determine
reasonableness under the circumstances . . . . [which] ‘in turn depends on whether what was
done—or not done—was proportional to that case and consistent with clearly established applicable
standards.’” Id. (quoting Rimkus Consulting Grp., Inc. v. Cammarata, 688 F. Supp. 2d 598, 613
(S.D. Tex. 2010). “If a party cannot fulfill this duty to preserve because he does not own or control
the evidence, he still has an obligation to give the opposing party notice of access to the evidence
or of the possible destruction of the evidence if the party anticipates litigation involving that
evidence.” Silvestri, 167 F.3d at 591 (citing Andersen v. Schwartz, 179 Misc.2d 1001, 687 N.Y.S.2d
232, 234–35 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1999)). In the Fourth Circuit, “‘documents are considered to be under
-22-
a party’s control when that party has the right, authority, or practical ability to obtain the documents
from a non-party to the action.’” Victor Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 523 (quoting Goodman, 632 F. Supp.
2d at 515).
Felman claimed work-product Protective for material produced as early as May 28, 2008,
when Felman retained Dr. Kusic, a non-testifying expert. Defs.’ Mem. of Law, Doc. #452, at 17.
Felman stated that it retained Dr. Kusic as it anticipated that litigation might be necessary in order
to receive payment on the insurance claim. Id. at 17, n.26. Accordingly, Felman’s duty to preserve
relevant evidence arose no later than that date. Judge Stanley, in her August 19, 2010 Order,
concluded that Felman did, in fact, have control over the Privat documents. Further, in light of the
extensive control exercised by Privat over Felman operations and, more importantly, the insurance
claim, Judge Stanley concluded that these materials were relevant. The Court agrees with both these
conclusions. Based on the foregoing, Felman had a duty to preserve the files of the Privat
representatives.
Felman, however, attempts to convince the Court that “it was not unreasonable for Felman
to believe before August 2010 that it did not have legal control over the PIT documents.”37 Pl.’s
Resp., Doc. #464, at 25. At the time the suit was filed, the consulting relationship between Privat,
a Ukrainian organization, and Felman, a Delaware corporation, had ended. Further, while the
relationship was ongoing, Privat was the entity that exhibited control over Felman, and not the other
way around. While these statements may be true, this argument has no merit.
37
The claim that it was unaware that it had control over Privat’s documents is troubling as
the end recipients of any money paid under the IRI insurance policy are the Privat shareholders, who
are the ultimate, indirect owners of Felman. Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5 to Defs.’
Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 48.
-23-
Marks, Sokolov & Burd, the firm currently representing the Privat individuals in this action,
is outside corporate counsel for Felman. Aff. of G. Burd, Doc. #323-5, ¶ 3. This is also the firm that
communicated with both Felman and Privat individuals while aiding Felman with the insurance
claim that is the subject of this action. Dep. of S. Protashchuk, Ex. E to Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471-5,
at 168. Mr. Burd has stated that during the relevant time period, Felman was managed by PIT
personnel.38 The date Felman first anticipated litigation, May 28, 2008, falls within the time period
in which Privat controlled Felman’s operations. Further, as IRI points out, “Felman has claimed
work-product Protective and attorney-client privilege over documents to and from Ms. Vatutina, Ms.
Kuharuk, Mr. Maximenko, and Mr. Bogolyubov dated well before they deleted their documents.”
Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 10–11 (citing supporting documentation).
Felman cannot have it both ways. Either the duty to preserve arose on May 28, 2008, or
work product protection does not apply to Dr. Kusic’s materials. Either Felman and Privat are
wholly separate entities, or the communications between Felman, its counsel, and Privat are still
protected under attorney-client privilege. The Court finds particularly relevant that Felman’s
counsel was aware of the extent of Privat’s involvement in decisions relevant to Felman’s insurance
claim. Marks Sokolov & Burd was involved in the preparation of the insurance claim, and
communicated with both Felman and Privat representatives during this time period. Felman and
Privat were significantly intertwined during the relevant time period and, as Judge Stanley
concluded in her August 19 Order, Felman had, at a minimum, a “practical ability to obtain the
38
“Privat regularly oversaw Felman’s operations and participated in key decisions regarding
those operations, including decisions regarding sales of Felman’s silicomanganese product. . . . Ms.
Vatutina on behalf of Privat was charged with overseeing Felman’s operations.” Aff. of G. Burd,
Doc. #323-5, ¶¶ 3–5.
-24-
documents” from Privat. Victor Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 523 (quoting Goodman, 632 F. Supp. 2d at
515).
Further, it was not an unreasonable or disproportional effort for Felman to issue a litigation
hold to the key Privat players. Felman’s outside counsel was in communication with the key Privat
individuals and could have issued a litigation hold without significant effort. Privat’s location in
the Ukraine represents a minimal barrier to preserving or producing these documents. As Judge
Stanley observed: “Your clients need to understand that they chose this country to do business, and
they chose this court to file a lawsuit, and they will be held to the standards of this [country] and
these rules, not their culture and their rules.” Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex A, Tab 5 to Defs.’
Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 50.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court FINDS that Felman had a duty to preserve the Privat
documents that arose at the latest on May 28, 2008.
ii.
Culpability
In the Fourth Circuit, “there are three possible states of mind that can satisfy the culpability
requirement: bad faith/knowing destruction, gross negligence, and ordinary negligence.” Goodman,
632 F. Supp. 2d at 518. The level of sanctions issued against a party depends on the level of
culpability. Victor Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 529. In Victor Stanley, Judge Grimm provides a detailed
overview of the levels of culpability. Negligence “is ‘[t]he failure to exercise the standard of care
that a reasonably prudent person would have exercised in a similar situation[.]’” Id. (quoting Black’s
Law Dictionary 846 (Bryan A. Garner ed., abridged 7th ed., West 2000)). Negligence has been
found in cases where a party failed to properly preserve, collect, and review evidence, resulting in
-25-
the destruction of relevant materials. Id. In contrast, gross negligence “differs from ordinary
negligence only in degree, and not in kind.” Id. (citations omitted).
In the instant case, the Court concludes that Felman’s failure to issue litigation holds to the
Privat representatives until August 2010—and then, only to two of them—constitutes gross
negligence. Felman did more than fail to meet the standard of care of a “reasonably prudent person”
to preserve evidence. Instead, Felman’s failure occurred in spite of a direct warning from Judge
Stanley, and only after Felman hid the relevance of the Privat representatives from IRI and the Court
since at least August 2009, when IRI issued its requests for interrogatories.39 Outside of the fact that
the duty to preserve began in May 2008, Felman had sufficient forewarning that the Privat
documents were relevant to this action, yet it nonetheless failed to take critical steps to preserve this
evidence. Lastly, the damage done is permanent—Privat has now completely replaced its computer
system, rendering all ESI irretrievable. This clearly amounts to more than mere negligence. Id. at
529–30 (contrasting negligence and gross negligence spoliation cases).
On the facts before it, however, the Court cannot conclude that Felman’s behavior was
willful or in bad faith. To be willful, the behavior must be “intentional, purposeful, or deliberate.”
Id. at 530. To be in bad faith, the destruction must be “‘for the purpose of depriving the adversary
of the evidence.’” Id. (quoting Powell v. Town of Sharpsburg, 591 F. Supp. 2d 814, 820 (E.D.N.C.
2008)). There is no evidence that Privat destroyed the relevant material or permanently rendered
39
The Court considers this behavior almost sufficient to find Felman’s conduct to be willful.
For Felman to hide the extent of the relationship of Privat to this action from IRI and the Court for,
at the minimum, a year, and to fail to issue litigation holds even after a warning by Judge Stanley
comes close to qualifying as “intentional, purposeful, or deliberate” behavior. Victor Stanley, 269
F.R.D. at 530.
-26-
it unavailable by replacing all the computers in its office deliberately or in order to deprive IRI
access. Accordingly, the Court FINDS that Felman’s behavior amounted to gross negligence.
iii.
Relevance of Destroyed or Altered Evidence
“Lost or destroyed evidence is ‘relevant’ if ‘a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that the
lost evidence would have supported the claims or defenses of the party that sought it.’” Victor
Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 531 (quoting Thompson, 219 F.R.D. at 101). The lost relevant material must
be prejudicial to the party alleging spoliation for a court to issue sanctions. Id. It is considered
prejudicial if the loss of the evidence compromises “a party’s ability to present its case or to defend.”
Id. at 532 (citing Silvestri, 271 F.3d at 593–94). If the spoliation was willful, relevance is presumed
in the Fourth Circuit. Id. As the Court has determined that the spoliation here amounts to gross
negligence, IRI must establish the relevance of the lost materials and the prejudicial effect the loss
of the materials had on its case. Id.
There is no question whether the materials deleted by Privat were relevant. Ms. Vatutina,
during her deposition, testified that she authored hard copy reports regarding production at Felman
which are no longer in existence. Dep. of K. Vatutina, Ex. A to Defs.’ Reply in Supp. of Mot. to
Supplement, Doc. #489-1, at 60, 109, 115–16. Information regarding production levels at Felman
clearly goes to the veracity of Felman’s business interruption claim, and is therefore highly relevant.
Privat controlled Felman’s pricing and other features of the business, including balancing Felman’s
sales with other Privat related holdings. Moreover, much of the documentation already provided
indicates that Felman suffered from an overabundance of inventory during the relevant time period
in spite of the Furnace #2 failure. See, e.g., Defs.’ Reply, Doc. #471, at 15–16 (citing reporting
documentation). The Privat managers, such as Maximenko and Vatutina, exercised considerable
-27-
oversight and were well aware of the market difficulties Felman faced. They must have made their
own reports and communicated internally about Felman’s business, if not the insurance claim itself.
Yet, many of these documents have not been produced but, instead, were permanently destroyed.
Felman has recognized that the deleted documents were relevant, stating that various custodians
have permanently deleted “Felman-related” documents. See, e.g., Aff. of E. Larkin, Ex. A, Tab 9,
Doc. #451-2, ¶ 11. What is more difficult to ascertain, however, is the level of prejudice suffered
by IRI as a result of the spoliation alone.
In Victor Stanley, Judge Grimm provided guidance with respect to what confluence of factors
should receive a case-dispositive sanction:
Where intentionally egregious conduct leads to
spoliation of evidence but causes no prejudice
because the evidence destroyed was not relevant, or
was merely cumulative to readily available evidence,
or because the same evidence could be obtained from
other sources, then the integrity of the judicial system
has been injured far less than if simple negligence
results in the total loss of evidence essential for an
adversary to prosecute or defend against a claim. In
the former instance, the appropriateness of a casedispositive sanction is questionable despite the
magnitude of the culpability, because the harm to the
truth-finding process is slight, and lesser sanctions
such as monetary ones will suffice. In contrast, a
sympathetic though negligent party whose want of
diligence eliminates the ability of an adversary to
prove its case may warrant case-dispositive sanctions,
because the damage to the truth-seeking process is
absolute.
Victor Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 526.
Here, IRI has done an admirable job sifting through the discovery produced by Felman. In
spite of Felman’s efforts to dissemble Privat’s relation to this litigation, IRI has uncovered multiple
-28-
documents that support its defenses and its counterclaim that Felman has attempted to fraudulently
claim a $38 million business interruption claim. Accordingly, the Court only can conclude that IRI
is not sufficiently prejudiced to warrant dismissal of all Plaintiff’s claims based on the spoliation of
the Privat documents alone. IRI’s ability to prove its counterclaim has not been severely damaged
by the loss of these documents alone, but the prejudice to its defense of the business interruption
claim is significant. It is this latter finding that justifies a partial dismissal of Felman’s claims.
Further, in spite of Felman’s protestations that IRI’s motion is limited to the violations of the August
19 and October 19, 2010 Orders, the Court’s decision to partially grant the motion for sanctions is
based on Felman’s discovery conduct as a whole. See S. New England Tel. Co., 251 F.R.D. at 95
(quoting Penthouse Int’l Ltd., 663 F.2d at 388); PVD Plast Mould Indus. Ltd., 2001 WL 1867801,
at *4 (quoting Mut. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 872 F.2d at 92). Felman’s behavior throughout the
discovery period in combination with the spoliation of the Privat documents is more than sufficient
for this Court to conclude that a terminating sanction is justified in this action.
B.
Factors for Partial Dismissal Sanction
As a preliminary matter, in order to issue sanctions pursuant to Rule 37(b), a court must
determine that a party has violated a court order to provide or permit discovery. As already
determined by Judge Stanley, Felman violated this Court’s Protective Order by making every page
of its ESI production “CONFIDENTIAL” irrespective of the actual content of the documents.
Protective Order, Doc. #24. In addition, in light of the extensive spoliation40 by Privat and Felman’s
40
As detailed above, while the spoliation alone is not enough to warrant sanctions, combined
with Felman’s extensive and continuing disregard for its discovery obligations, it is more than
sufficient for this Court to partially grant IRI’s motion. In particular, the Court again emphasizes
Felman’s subterfuge in hiding the extent of the role Privat played in running Felman and organizing
(continued...)
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initial failure to search the files of Messrs. Martynov, Bogolyubov, and Kolomoiskiy, the Court only
can conclude that Felman also violated the August 19 and October 19 Orders, thereby triggering this
Court’s ability to issue sanctions. Accordingly, what remains is for the Court to determine whether
Felman’s discovery abuses satisfy the Fourth Circuit standard for terminating sanctions. The Court
is convinced that they do.
1.
Bad Faith
Throughout this action, Felman has demonstrated a significant disregard for the discovery
process and its duty of candor to this Court. Since discovery began in 2009, Felman repeatedly has
failed to up uphold its obligations. First, Felman failed to produce its ESI pursuant to IRI’s
discovery request. Accordingly, IRI filed—and was granted—a motion to compel the production.
Rather than complying in good faith with the Court Order, Felman chose to respond by producing
over a million pages of ESI, at least thirty percent of which was irrelevant. Even more egregious,
Felman also opted to abuse this Court’s Protective by marking each and every page as
“Confidential” in direct violation of this Court’s Protective Order. This marked the first time
Felman was sanctioned for its behavior, and its first direct violation of one of the Court’s orders.
Further, use of the Protective Order requires a “good faith belief” that the material is, in fact,
confidential. Protective Order, Doc. #24. Felman’s utter disregard for this obligation and for this
Court’s authority is therefore highly offensive to the “integrity of the judicial process.” Silvestri,
167 F.3d at 590.
40
(...continued)
its insurance claim. Further, the Court notes the failure of Felman to issue hold notices to Privat
representatives, even after the Court warned Felman of possible consequences for failing to do so.
-30-
In addition to dragging its feet with document production, Felman also created obstacles with
respect to other discovery obligations. In spite of the Court finding that information regarding
Furnace 2 production was relevant, Felman refused to provide the information in response to IRI’s
First Interrogatory, even after a meet and confer with IRI. Judge Stanley was ultimately required
to issue an order compelling compliance, and she could only conclude that Felman’s recalcitrance
was not substantially justified, leading her to yet again sanction Felman. Felman then had the
temerity to file a motion to reconsider Judge Stanley’s finding, leading to yet another sanction for
wasting the Court’s time and resources with a pointless motion.
Meanwhile, while failing to comply with its document production obligations and flouting
this Court’s authority, Felman also was exhibiting an extreme lack of candor. In two verified
interrogatory responses, Felman outright misrepresented the role of Privat with respect to Felman
operations. Further, Felman continued to maintain this misrepresentation in open court when in May
2010 its counsel stated that these interrogatories were truthful. This ongoing subterfuge and
Felman’s failure to issue litigation holds resulted in the extensive spoliation of material evidence
by Privat and inexcusably delayed the progression of this action.
In addition, on several occasions, Felman has made statements to cloak its failure to fully
comply with its discovery obligations. For example, during the December 2010 hearing, Felman
represented that the reason for the small production from Ms. Vatutina was because a large number
of documents had been deduplicated. Clearly, counsel for Felman did not know what it was talking
about. If the production had been checked, it would have been apparent that only seven documents
had been deduplicated, and that a much more likely (and ultimately proven) reason for the small
production was due to the spoliation of evidence.
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As discussed above, the Court concluded that Privat’s failure to issue a litigation hold to all
the key Privat representatives until August 2010—and at that point, only to two of the nine
representatives—amounted to gross negligence, borderline willful, behavior. The Court is severely
troubled by the fact that this occurred despite a direct warning from Judge Stanley on June 30, 2010,
regarding potential consequences if the Privat individuals had not been instructed regarding the
preservation of their documents. Despite this warning, Felman did not consider it important or
necessary to issue preservation memos to these individuals until just prior to the August 19 Order.
And even then, Felman nonchalantly neglected to issue the hold to the majority of these individuals.
Regardless of the reason for the spoliation or delay in production relating to the August 19 and
October 19 Orders, the end result is the same: Felman violated the Orders.
Felman has been recalcitrant throughout the discovery process, attempted to conceal the true
facts behind its operations and Privat’s controlling role, and generally neglected its duties of candor
and truthfulness to this Court. Felman also has wasted this Court’s time and resources, the time and
resources of IRI, and has significantly delayed case proceedings. Instead of addressing the merits
of Felman’s claim and IRI’s fraud counterclaim, this Court has instead had to deal with numerous
discovery motions and disputes over more than two years of litigation. While Felman has exhibited
signs of reformation in its recent attempt to respond to Judge Stanley’s doubts with respect to its
compliance with the August 19 and October 19 Orders, the extensive spoliation is, without a doubt,
the direct result of Felman’s complete failure to comply with its discovery obligations. As the
Fourth Circuit has observed: “Even though the defendants may have made efforts to comply, the
attempts were last-ditch and only offered when it became crystal clear that they were going to lose
the case unless they did something. In the context here, the things done did not add up to an
-32-
adequate ‘something.’” Mut. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 872 F.2d at 94. Taken as a whole, the Court
only can conclude that Felman has acted in bad faith. There is no other explanation for the ongoing
discovery abuse exhibited by Felman.
2.
Prejudice to IRI
For two years, Felman has consistently indicated an utter disregard for its duty of candor to
this Court, and to the integrity of the truth-seeking process central to the judicial system. Felman
has tried on multiple occasions to prevent IRI from uncovering the depth of Privat’s involvement
in Felman’s operations. Felman provided false interrogatory responses, delayed its production of
relevant material, and completely disregarded its obligation to preserve Privat documents. The
Court concludes that Felman’s consistent effort to conceal the relevance of the Privat documents was
aimed at delaying or completely preventing IRI’s access to relevant material that undermines
Felman’s business interruption claim.
Felman, in addition to its lack of candor, has exhibited an egregious disregard for the good
faith that is expected in the interactions by parties during the discovery period. The document dump
and perversion of this Court’s Protective Order was prejudicial to IRI. This resulted in yet another
delay in the discovery process, requiring additional time and expenditures by IRI to get Felman to
comply with its discovery obligations. The delaying of discovery and the effort to conceal relevant
information also were reflected in Felman’s effort to withhold responsive information regarding
Furnace 2 in response to IRI’s First Interrogatory, in spite of a finding by the Court that information
was relevant to the case.
Further, Felman’s discovery abuses have resulted in a delay in the case proceedings. The
discovery deadlines were pushed back, and later suspended, in light of the “plethora of discovery
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disputes.” Mar. 25, 2010 Order, Doc. #294. Meanwhile, the parties were subject to ongoing status
hearings, which likewise increased the expense required of IRI. All of this has necessitated
incurring an exorbitant amount of additional expenses and attorney time by IRI. As a result of
Felman’s efforts to conceal the Privat role in this action, IRI had to sift through innumerable pages
of discovery production to support its motion to compel the Privat documents, costing IRI an untold
amount of attorney time and expense.
Yet, despite IRI’s extraordinary efforts to overcome Felman’s egregious discovery abuses,
Felman’s actions were ultimately successful. Felman’s dissembling resulted in the permanent
destruction of materials relevant to this case, a result prejudicial to IRI’s ability to defend against
Felman’s insurance claim. Compounding the additional expenses Felman’s abuses have caused, IRI
is now faced with the possibility of having to defend its claims without full access to all relevant
material. The unnecessary and substantial expense Felman’s behavior has cost IRI is unduly
burdensome, and it is beyond outside the realm of acceptable behavior under the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.
The effort by Felman to conceal Privat’s role, the repeated delays in the discovery period,
Felman’s filing of unjustified motions, Felman’s document dump and abuse of the Protective Order,
Felman’s failure to preserve evidence, and Felman’s disregard for this Court’s directives and Orders,
combined, have resulted in prejudice to IRI. All of Felman’s actions reflect a disregard for its
obligations of truthfulness and candor to this Court, and to the truth-seeking process that is central
to the judicial system. Victor Stanley, 269 F.R.D. at 526. Accordingly, the Court FINDS IRI
suffered significant prejudice.
3.
Deterrence and Less Severe Sanctions
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The Fourth Circuit has observed that “[t]he deterrence and lesser sanctions factors are
somewhat intertwined.” Anderson v. Found. for Advancement, Educ. & Emp’t of Am. Indians, 155
F.3d 500, 505 (4th Cir. 1998). Where, as here, a court has utilized lesser sanctions to achieve
compliance to no avail, the need for deterrence relates to the “repeated misconduct never wholly
remedied in the future.” Id. (quoting Mut. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 872 F.2d 88, 94). The Court has
sanctioned Felman on three different occasions. Despite these multiple showings of displeasure by
the Court, and in spite of several verbal warnings by the Court, Felman has exhibited an inordinate
level of disrespect for its discovery obligations. For example, in spite of Judge Stanley’s warning
regarding preservation of the Privat custodian’s files in June 2010, Felman still failed to issue full
litigation holds to all relevant Privat custodians, which were already two years overdue at that stage.
In addition, rather than fully complying with the August 19 and October 19 Orders on its own, full
compliance only occurred subsequent to an additional warning and expression of justifiable
frustration by Judge Stanley during the December 2010 hearing.
IRI challenges even Felman’s most recent performance with respect to the August 19 and
October 19 Orders. IRI questions the search terms used in the most recent document production,
pointing to several documents key to IRI’s fraud claim that do not contain the word “Felman”, the
main word utilized by Felman in its search of the Privat custodians’ files. Clearly, the prior
sanctions and warnings directed at Felman have not been sufficient to ensure proper discovery
conduct. Felman has shown a “disregard for court orders that require disclosure of information
directly related to claims and damages[.]” PVD Plast Mould Industries Ltd., Inc., 2001 WL 1867801,
at *12. “In such cases, not only does the noncomplying party jeopardize his or her adversary’s case
by such indifference, but to ignore such bold challenges to the district court’s power would
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encourage other litigants to flirt with similar misconduct.” Mut. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 872 F.2d
at 92. Accordingly, the Court concludes that for the purpose of future deterrence, and in light of the
failure of prior less severe sanctions to achieve compliance, a partial dismissal is required in this
action.
The sanctionable conduct of Felman and the resulting prejudice to Defendants merits
dismissal of the business interruption claim because the unavailable evidence and improper conduct
related predominantly to it. As to Defendants’ counterclaim, the unavailable evidence is less
prejudicial and an adverse inference instruction is an adequate remedy. Finally, Plaintiff’s spoliation
of evidence and overall poor conduct in the course of discovery justified Defendants’ Motion. The
Court finds Defendants are entitled to reasonable attorney fees for their efforts to seek a remedy for
Plaintiff’s conduct.
4.
Notice to Felman
Magistrate Judge Stanley warned on several different occasions that Felman could be subject
to sanctions as a result of its discovery conduct. On September 15, 2010, Judge Stanley stated
during a discovery-related hearing the following:
But the dark cloud that hangs over that ruling
[requiring production of documents from the Privat
individuals] is the issue of sanctions.
And
because—my guess is, and I want to have a candid
discussion about this, is that if documents and/or
witnesses are not produced, then the first thing the
defendants are going to do is try to dismiss the case or
impose all kinds of sanctions on Felman because they
haven’t produced the documents and witnesses.
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Sept. 15, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 27 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 24–25.41
She also stated the following during a December 8, 2010 motions hearing:
Well, the defendants are going to do whatever they’re
going to do. I don’t have a motion in front of me.
Ultimately, it may well be that this will land in Judge
Chambers’ lap, because he’s going to be the one
which will be—who will decide what gets put into
evidence and what doesn’t; whether or not the jury
gets an instruction on adverse inference; whether he
enters some kind of judgment or dismisses claims or
whatever. None of that is teed up before any judicial
officer right now. I am sure that you have read and
are familiar with Judge Grimm’s recent decision in
Victor Stanley v. Creative Pipe? . . . 269 F.R.D. 497,
September, 2010. The price of not playing by the
rules is high, and I don’t have to tell you that. . . . One
of the outstanding things that Judge Grimm does is he
talks about the enormous burden on the court when
we have cases that go off the track, but he also talks
about counsel’s duty of candor, preservation orders,
litigation holds, and the incredibly complexity of
litigating in a global economy, in an electronic global
economy. Your clients need to understand that they
chose this country to do business, and they chose this
court to file a lawsuit, and they will be held to the
standards of this company—country and these rules,
not their culture and their rules.
Dec. 8, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 5 to Defs.’ Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at 49–50. The
Court is uncertain how much clearer Judge Stanley could have been in putting Felman on notice of
the possibility of a motion for sanctions.
41
Judge Stanley also notes that she was particularly reluctant to issue the order allowing
production of the Privat documents as they were foreign witnesses and production “potentially sets
up the dark cloud of sanctions if—and I guess this is one reason why I was so reluctant to rule as
I did.” Sept. 15, 2010 Mots. Hr’g Tr., Ex. A, Tab 27 to Defs. Mot. for Sanctions, Doc. #451-2, at
24. Accordingly, Judge Stanley made this statement in an effort to avoid deciding this matter on the
basis of sanctions for discovery abuses and, instead, decide the case on the merits. Id. at 25.
Nevertheless, this warning by Judge Stanley was not heeded by Felman.
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IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions is GRANTED, in part, and
DENIED, in part. Accordingly, the business interruption claim contained in the Complaint is
DISMISSED with prejudice. Additionally, Defendants may file a motion for the award of attorney
fees with supporting documentation and explanation, in accordance with this decision, within thirty
days.
The Court DIRECTS the Clerk to send a copy of this written Opinion and Order to counsel
of record and any unrepresented parties.
ENTER:
September 29, 2011
ROBERT C. CHAMBERS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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