Adolph Coors Co. v. American Insurance

164 F.R.D. 507, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3732
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMarch 4, 1993
DocketCivil A. No. 92 N 61
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 F.R.D. 507 (Adolph Coors Co. v. American Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adolph Coors Co. v. American Insurance, 164 F.R.D. 507, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3732 (D. Colo. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

NOTTINGHAM, District Judge.

Adolph Coors Company has filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment against various insurance companies which have insured it over the years. Coors seeks a ruling that the insurance companies are obligated (1) to defend Coors in certain environmental litigation arising out of Coors’ disposal of wastes at the Lowry Landfill near Denver, Colorado and (2) to pay any damages awarded against Coors in this underlying environmental litigation. The case, originally filed in Colorado state court, was properly removed pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 1441(a) (West Supp.1992). Jurisdiction is based on 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332(a) (West Supp.1992).

This matter is currently before the court on “Plaintiff Adolph Coors Company’s Notice of Motion to Impose Sanctions Against Liberty Mutual Insurance Company” filed on January 29, 1993. I held a hearing on this motion on February 18, 1993. After reviewing the lengthy briefs and considering oral argument, I conclude that Liberty Mutual has willfully violated the court’s discovery rulings and that issue preclusion is an appropriate sanction for the violations. In particular, I hold that Liberty Mutual can no longer deny the existence of a duty to defend Coors from claims asserted against Coors in the underlying environmental litigation.

From the start, this litigation has been extremely acrimonious. Numerous discovery disputes have resulted in a plethora of motions to compel and motions for protective orders filed by all sides. Each motion was normally accompanied by a staggering amount of paper in the form of exhibits. Many of the motions involved petty squabbling that should have been resolved among the attorneys without the court’s involvement. Refereeing these fights has been very time-consuming and vexing for the court.

To be sure, Liberty Mutual has not been involved in each and every discovery dispute which has come before the court. The disputes in which it has been involved, however, have differed from disputes involving other parties. After ruling on a dispute involving other parties, I rarely, if ever, heard of the dispute again. I infer from this circumstance that the litigants satisfactorily complied with the ruling and moved the litigation forward, even though they might well have disagreed with the ruling. As to Liberty Mutual, however, my review of the file and the events of the past eight months leaves me with the firm conviction that Liberty Mutual’s approach to the discovery process as a whole involves delay, obstruction, obfuscation, and disingenuity. Its interpretation and treatment of discovery rulings — which, viewed in a light most favorable to Liberty Mutual, has been airily and haughtily cavalier — is but one aspect of this overall approach. If the name of the game is “hardball litigation,” Liberty Mutual qualifies as a major league team.

I make this preliminary observation primarily to explain that the specific discovery dispute underlying Coors’ current motion for sanctions must be viewed against the background of Liberty Mutual’s other behavior during the discovery phase of this lawsuit. Liberty Mutual’s central contention concerning the current motion for sanctions is that its acknowledged failure to produce documents is the product of good-faith misunderstanding, understandable confusion, and inadvertent failure to focus on the terms of the document request — not a willful and intentional disregard of the court’s orders. A party’s state of mind, of course, must be gleaned from all the circumstantial evidence, not just from counsel’s self-righteous protestations of innocence when caught in the glare of a motion for sanctions which ineluctably demonstrates a failure to comply with discovery orders. When reciting the facts concerning this specific discovery dispute, I will occasionally animadvert to other events which are relevant only because they shed light on the [510]*510state of mind with which Liberty Mutual approaches its discovery obligations.

FACTS

The long and tortured history of this particular discovery dispute stretches back to June 1992. On June 3, Coors’ counsel deposed Mr. William Urmston, a Liberty Mutual senior claims supervisor. Counsel attempted to question Mr. Urmston about alleged admissions made by Liberty Mutual concerning insurance which Liberty Mutual had sold to United Technologies Corporation (“UTC”). Liberty Mutual’s counsel instructed Mr. Urmston not to answer, since Liberty Mutual’s counsel was unsure whether any protective orders were in force in certain litigation involving UTC and Liberty Mutual. Counsel for Liberty Mutual represented that he would try to resolve this issue before the deposition resumed the next day. Plaintiff Adolph Coors Company’s Notice of Motion to Impose Sanctions Against Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, ex. B, Deposition of William E. Urmston at 191-96 (filed Jan. 29, 1993) [hereinafter Coors’ Motion ].

The deposition continued the next day without any further information having been obtained regarding the UTC matter. At that point, Coors’ counsel marked, as Exhibits B-13 through B-16, four Liberty Mutual documents which referenced claims against UTC for pollution at “dump sites.” These memo-randa also set forth Liberty Mutual’s position on coverage. Coors had not obtained these documents from Liberty Mutual. Mr. Urm-ston was once again instructed not to answer any questions about these documents. These documents were sealed and placed in the custody of the court reporter so that the status of the documents could be determined. Coors’Motion, ex. B at 202-05.

As of June 2, when Coors’ first commenced examination concerning the UTC documents and the UTC claims in general, the four documents identified in the previous paragraph were not in fact the subject of any protective order or “confidentiality” order in any litigation, although their status appears to have been unclear to those attending the deposition. Coors’ counsel voluntarily truncated his examination on June 2 upon the express representation of Liberty Mutual’s counsel that Liberty Mutual would, before Mr. Urmston’s deposition resumed at 3:00 o’clock p.m. on June 3, clarify whether the documents were covered by a protective order. Coors’ Motion, ex. B at 195-96. As I have previously noted, the issue remained unresolved as of June 3, so the four documents were sealed in the hands of the shorthand reporter.

Although Coors did not know it at the time, much more than “clarification” was occurring. On June 3, Liberty Mutual’s counsel in UTC’s litigation with Liberty Mutual was writing to other counsel in that litigation, claiming that the four documents in question had been “inadvertently produced by Liberty Mutual without having been designated CONFIDENTIAL.” Coors’ Motion, ex. D, Letter from Kim Marrkand to Numerous Counsel dated June 3, 1992. Apparently acting pursuant to a protective order in the UTC litigation which permitted parties to designate whatever they wanted as “confidential” (subject, presumably, to review by the UTC court in the event of a dispute), Liberty Mutual’s counsel demanded that other counsel stamp their copies of the document “confidential” — making the documents thenceforward subject to a confidentiality order in the UTC litigation.

Subsequent to the Urmston deposition, Coors served Liberty Mutual with a formal request for the production of documents. Request A2 pertained to the UTC documents:

A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 F.R.D. 507, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adolph-coors-co-v-american-insurance-cod-1993.