Allstate Insurance Company v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 31, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-01031
StatusUnknown

This text of Allstate Insurance Company v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc. (Allstate Insurance Company v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance Company v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc., (D. Conn. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

Allstate Insurance Co., Civil No. 3:22-cv-01031 (OAW) Plaintiff,

v.

Electrolux Home Products, Inc., July 31, 2023 Defendant.

RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL (ECF No. 39) The plaintiff, Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”), has filed a motion to compel raising seven principal issues with the document production served by the defendant, Electrolux Home Products, Inc. (“Electrolux”) in this insurance subrogation case arising out of a dryer fire. (“Motion,” ECF No. 39.) Electrolux has filed a short and thinly argued objection responding to some, but not all, of Allstate’s issues. (“Objection,” ECF No. 48.) The presiding District Judge, the Hon. Omar A. Williams, referred the motion to me, Magistrate Judge Thomas O. Farrish. I heard oral argument on July 6, 2023. (Minute Entry, ECF No. 55.) For the following reasons, Allstate’s motion is GRANTED as to Issues One through Six, and DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE on the current record as to Issue Seven. 1. Issue One – Manner of Production Allstate first complains about the “manner in which Electrolux produced its documents.” (Pl.’s Memo. of L., ECF No. 39-1, at 7) (“Memo.”). It says that Electrolux's 400,000-page production is difficult to search and haphazardly organized. It seeks orders directing Electrolux to (a) “produce its documents in a manner where Plaintiff can search by bates label” and (b) “index its document production” to the corresponding production requests. (Id. at 9.) In its Objection, Electrolux does not seriously dispute that its production is disorganized and difficult to navigate. But it argues that “there is no Federal practice provision that requires a defendant to collate and organize, at its own expense, materials produced in discovery to a plaintiff for that plaintiff's ease of use.” (Objection at 5.) The Court agrees with Allstate on Issue One. Rule 34 provides two options for producing

documents – the producing party may “produce documents as they are kept in the usual course of business,” or it may “organize and label them to correspond to the categories in the request.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(E). There is no third choice; the producing party must do one or the other. See, e.g., Hannah v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. 3:12-cv-1361 (JCH) (HBF), 2014 WL 2515221, at *2 (D. Conn. June 4, 2014) (holding that, because plaintiffs had not shown that they produced as kept in the usual course, they must index their production). In its Objection, Electrolux does not argue that it complied with the first option. Moreover, at oral argument its counsel could not explain how the documents were maintained at the company’s offices, let alone confirm that they were produced to Allstate that way. Because Electrolux did not comply with the first option, the

Court will order it to comply with the second by “organiz[ing] and label[ing]” its document production “to correspond to the categories in the request.” Rule 34 also provides that electronically stored information must be produced “in a form or forms in which it is ordinarily maintained or in a reasonably usable form or forms.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(E)(ii). Because Electrolux has not shown that it produced its information as it is “ordinarily maintained,” it must produce it in “a reasonably useful form,” and the Court is persuaded that it has not. Electrolux will therefore be ordered to re-produce the production to Allstate in a reasonably useful form that is, at a minimum, searchable by Bates number. 2. Issue Two – Request for Production No. 59 Allstate and Electrolux have litigated several other dryer fire subrogation cases. One such case, Allstate Insurance Co. v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc., No. 5:16-cv-4276 (EGS) (E.D. Pa.), went to a jury in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in 2019. In Request for Production No. 59 in this case, Allstate essentially asked Electrolux to re-produce the roughly 100 documents that

composed its exhibit list in the Pennsylvania trial. (Memo. at 9-13.) Electrolux objects to re- producing the documents on the ground that they “are already in possession of this plaintiff.” (Objection at 3.) Allstate acknowledges that it likely still has the materials, but it says that re- production is necessary in part because of the slapdash way in which Electrolux produced its documents. (Memo. at 9) (contending that “[t]his style of request is necessary because . . . it is cumbersome and time consuming to find specific documents within Electrolux’s 400,000 page document production”). Issue Two appears to have been mooted by the disposition of Issue One, because once Electrolux indexes its production, Allstate’s problem should be solved. Nevertheless, because Electrolux’s Objection does not dispute the relevance of the 100-odd documents;1 and because no

affiant has confirmed that all such documents have been produced; and because Electrolux has not shown that re-production would impose any meaningful burden – let alone an undue burden –

1 When it responded to Allstate’s production requests, Electrolux objected to Request No. 59 on the ground that it sought “information that is neither relevant to the claims or defenses of any party to this action, nor proportional to the needs of the case[.]” (ECF No. 39-5, at 40.) But it did not brief that objection, and “[c]ourts around the country have held that failure to brief an objection constitutes an abandonment of that objection.” Huseby, LLC v. Bailey, No. 3:20-cv-167 (JBA) (TOF), 2021 WL 723319, at *4 n.1 (D. Conn. Feb. 24, 2021) (“Huseby I”); U.S. Equal Emp. Opp. Comm’n v. Yale New Haven Hosp., No. 3:20-cv-187 (SALM) (TOF), 2022 WL 2290633, at *9 n.3 (D. Conn. June 24, 2022) (same). Electrolux did attach a single sentence to the end of its brief, purporting to “reiterate[]” and “incorporate[]” its Rule 34(b)(2)(C) objections (Objection at 6), but that is insufficient to preserve those objections. when the documents are presumably close at hand from the earlier case; the Court will order Electrolux to produce any heretofore-unproduced documents that are responsive to Request No. 59. 3. Issues Three and Five – Discovery Requests Concerning Similar Incidents Issues Three and Five have a common thread: in each instance, Allstate asks Electrolux

to produce information on other dryer fires that are said to be like the one at issue in this case. (Memo. at 13-16, 18-19.) In Issue Three, Allstate seeks an order compelling compliance with Interrogatory 8 and Requests for Production Nos. 27, 29 and 31, all of which inquired in one way or another about “other similar fires in Electrolux ball-hitch dryers.” (Memo. at 13; see also ECF No. 39-5.) In Issue Five, Allstate seeks to compel compliance with Request for Production No. 8, which demanded transcripts of deposition or trial testimony by Electrolux employees or experts “in any lawsuit alleging a fire originating in Electrolux Ball-Hitch Clothes Dryers due to a failure to isolate the heat source from lint, a mechanical failure of the rear bearing or the failure to contain a fire within the appliance.” (ECF No. 39-5, at 6.)

The parties’ dispute over these discovery requests implicates well-settled principles. “When a party files a motion to compel, it bears the initial burden to show the relevance of the information it seeks.” Huseby, LLC v. Bailey, No. 3:20-cv-167 (JBA) (TOF), 2021 WL 3206776, at *6 (D. Conn. July 29, 2021) (“Huseby II”). At the discovery stage, “relevance is an extremely broad concept.” Id. Once the moving party makes “a prima facie showing of relevance,” “it is up to the responding party to justify curtailing discovery.” Id.

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Allstate Insurance Company v. Electrolux Home Products, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-company-v-electrolux-home-products-inc-ctd-2023.