AIU Insurance Co. v. Mehaffy

942 S.W.2d 796, 1997 WL 184033
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1997
Docket09-97-090 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 942 S.W.2d 796 (AIU Insurance Co. v. Mehaffy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AIU Insurance Co. v. Mehaffy, 942 S.W.2d 796, 1997 WL 184033 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

BURGESS, Justice.

This is a mandamus action involving discovery. The underlying suit is between Bristol-Myers Squib Company and Medical Engineering Corporation (Plaintiffs) and various insurance companies (Defendants) to determine whether the breast implant claims of thousands of women are covered by insurance. This dispute is only a small snapshot in the pre-trial procedure. On February 21, 1997 1 , plaintiffs filed a motion for sanctions alleging defendants, through a holding company, AIG, had engaged in a corporate policy of obstructing the discovery process, violated court orders, misrepresented whether documents were in its custody or control, lost documents that refute its coverage defenses, unjustifiably refused to produce relevant documents and ignored a special master’s recommendations. Plaintiffs sought four remedies: 1) an order striking all defenses, 2) the appointment of “an outside auditor to investigate the completeness of AIG’s document productions and the veracity of AIG and its counsel’s representations regarding the existence of responsive documents and the efforts made to locate same,” 3) all attorneys’ fees, court costs and other expenses incurred by plaintiffs in connection with pursuing the discovery and 4) a monetary fine. The trial court conducted a hearing on February 26, which only involved argument of counsel. The court orally informed counsel he would order Walter Crawford:

... to take evidence on the question of whether or not there was a deliberate withholding of the documents. That is, the degree of contumacy and culpability, if there was any.
And, finally, what an appropriate sanction might be, any evidence that the parties have to offer about that — what sanctions would be appropriate and efficacious under Rule 215.

Later, with Mr. Crawford in the court room, the judge stated:

On the sanctions, the plaintiffs claim that various materials were not submitted.
... [t]he materials were first a draft report to American International Adjustment Company of January 1991; secondly, a claims handling manual; third a policy draft form and perhaps the policy — a copy of the policy in question.
... The records retention policy are the four subject matters of the Motion for Sanctions.
I thought that the first inquiry should be a factual one into whether or not the materials in question were properly responsive to the discovery request.
I’m not sure as I sit here now, without looking at it in much greater detail, that the materials factually fit the discovery request and whether or not they either arguably or undeniably should have been produced.
There is no issue of privilege as I understand it; so, the next question is: If there was a failure to comply with the discovery obligation, was it contumacious, was it sanctionable; and finally, if so, then what — what is an appropriate sanction under Rule 215, taking into account things like the character of the conduct involved, without controversy, the degree of contumacy or culpability and so forth.
I thought there should be a full eviden-tiary hearing on these matters.

On March 5, defendants filed their opposition to the Motion for Sanctions. The next day, Special Master Crawford conducted a hearing. On March 19, the trial judge re *799 sumed the hearing on the motion. The judge invited argument “in light of the testimony adduced at the hearing over which Mr. Crawford presided but, again, emphatically, without any input from him as to that testimony, but simply taken under him as the referee or the officer who presided to maintain order and decorum.” The judge, at one point, stated:

At this point, the Court simply finds that there has been a discovery abuse with reference to the nonproduction of the SOMA report. 2 The Court levies, as a temporary and partial sanction, the full funding of the audit which I will order conducted into this matter to get to the bottom of it and to find out exactly what pattern of abuse may or may not exist.

Defendants’ counsel expressed concern over the parameters of the audit. The judge requested their views on possible auditors and parameters of the audit within 24 hours. Consistent with that request, defendants filed a proposed order regarding the appointment of an auditor. The defendants also filed objections to the plaintiffs’ proposed order.

On March 21, the trial court signed an Amended Appointment of Discovery Auditor. 3 That order states, in pertinent part:

The auditor shall attempt to determine and report to the Court as to: why the AIG Companies did not make discovery as outlined in plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions and to Compel and Production of Documents dated February 21,1997; what procedures were in place for assuring compliance with the Court’s discovery process; and, what steps were and were not reasonably taken by AIG employees to assure that discovery was made pursuant to the Court’s process. Such inquiry would include, but not be limited to, what written procedures are normally followed; what normal procedures were and were not followed by AIG Companies in this instance; why such written and otherwise normal procedures were not followed, if indeed they were not; and, what individuals were directly and indirectly responsible for making the discovery responses.
AIG shall produce Jeff Johnson, Ron Ryan, Megan Brill and such other agents, servants, employees and former employees under its control of the several AIG companies as and when the auditor deems nécessary. Such persons are hereby directed to answer fully, under oath, any questions submitted by the auditor and to present such documents to him as he requests. Any documents which are claimed to be confidential and not subject to disclosure to the auditor, shall be photocopied, sealed and handed to the auditor for delivery to the Court in camera.
Bristol-Myers Squibb and AIG shall be entitled to have a lawyer present during the inquiry and investigation. Neither shall impede or interfere with the auditor’s inquiry.
The auditor shall submit his report to the Court with copies to Bristol-Myers Squibb and AIG parties on or before 5:00 P.M. Thursday, March 27, 1997. Each party shall file written exceptions to the auditor’s report in accordance with the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure on or before 5:00 P.M. Monday, March 31, 1997.
All costs and fees of the auditor shall be submitted to the Court for approval and shall thereafter be paid by the AIG Companies forthwith, as a partial discovery sanction for failure to produce the Soma report....

On March 24, defendants filed this mandamus action, along with a request for temporary relief. We granted Motion for Leave and entered an order temporarily staying the March 21 order.

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Bluebook (online)
942 S.W.2d 796, 1997 WL 184033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aiu-insurance-co-v-mehaffy-texapp-1997.