Atlanta Shipping Corp. v. Cross & Brown Co.

113 F.R.D. 108, 6 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 603, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17621
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 17, 1986
DocketNo. 84 Civ. 2454 (GLG)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 113 F.R.D. 108 (Atlanta Shipping Corp. v. Cross & Brown Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta Shipping Corp. v. Cross & Brown Co., 113 F.R.D. 108, 6 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 603, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17621 (S.D.N.Y. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

GOETTEL, District Judge:

On July 22, 1986, this Court ruled that unless the plaintiff, on or before August 14, 1986, complied with certain discovery demands of the defendants, this action would be dismissed with prejudice.1 Plaintiff not having complied with these discovery demands, defendants submitted a proposed order dismissing the action with prejudice.

In lengthy, rambling, and not entirely comprehensible papers, plaintiff opposes the entry of the proposed order on numerous grounds. First, plaintiff argues that defendants’ submission of a proposed order was improper because pursuant to local rules, a conference with the Court should have been requested to dispose of what plaintiff refers to as a “discovery issue.” Initially, we note that matters in this case have advanced far beyond what could be characterized as a simple discovery dispute. Further, what had been a discovery dispute was resolved and terminated by the Court’s July 1986 order. Accordingly, the defendants acted properly in seeking dismissal by formal papers rather than requesting a conference.

An alternative procedural argument advanced by the plaintiff is that defendants’ submission of a proposed order was improper because defendants should have proceeded by motion. Plaintiff suggests that defendants proceeded as they did in order to procure a summary dismissal on short notice. Whether defendants should have proceeded by submission of an order or by motion may be debatable; what is not debatable is that plaintiff in any event was given adequate time to respond to defendants’ action. In order to assure the plaintiff a proper opportunity to argue its case against the proposed sanction, U.S. Freight Co. v. Penn Central Transportation, 716 F.2d 954, 955 (2d Cir.1983) (“Penn Central ”), the Court granted plaintiff a lengthy extension of time in which to respond and to file what it claimed was a necessary memorandum of law. A further extension was granted upon plaintiff's counsel’s application, which pleaded various personal tales of woe. Plaintiff has thus been afforded not merely adequate, but generous time in which to frame its opposition to the entry of the proposed order.

Plaintiff also offers several substantive arguments against the proposed order. First, the plaintiff argues that it did not produce the “Monaco documents” requested by the defendants because the defendants had previously indicated no interest in seeing them. In fact, the record establishes that the plaintiff never previously advised defendants of the existence of the requested documents, although more than a year ago plaintiff’s counsel had stated that he would advise defendant whether there were pertinent records in Monaco. Indeed, at various other times plaintiff’s counsel represented that all of the plaintiff’s documents were in New York. We therefore do not accept this excuse.

Next, plaintiff's counsel argues that he fully complied with the July 1986 order.2 This argument is without merit. Plaintiff’s [111]*111counsel props his claim on the 62 pages he filed in response to the interrogatories, and urges the Court to review each answer in detail. This review, which the Court has been compelled to conduct, reveals that only one-quarter of the 62 pages contain what can remotely be construed as answers. The first five and one-half pages contain aught but general objections. These are supplemented by scores of specific objections scattered throughout other pages, so that unresponsive objections occupy approximately 13 of the 62 proffered pages. Restatements of the interrogatories, rather than answers to them, take up another 17 pages. At least 15 pages are comprised of either references (often very general) to documents and depositions, or the response that plaintiff cannot answer an interrogatory because it has insufficient discovery or because it does not understand the interrogatory. What remains is largely argument and inference, so that the amount of factual material actually disclosed is minute. For these reasons, we find plaintiffs argument to be unfounded.

Plaintiff argues that its objections3 should not be discounted as unresponsive under the July 1986 order because it was justified in reserving its objections until this time. Plaintiff bases this claim on the peculiar theory that what constitutes a satisfactory response as required by the July 1986 order can be determined by reference to this Court’s letter dated October 11, 1984.

The letter in question was written in response to plaintiff’s motion for a protective order. The requested protective order pertained to a then-pending motion which, if granted, might have mooted certain of the interrogatories. To that extent, the plaintiff was allowed to reserve its answers until the motion was decided. With respect to the remainder of the interrogatories, plaintiff’s counsel was advised that an appropriate response would be to either answer them or specify objections where they existed.

Plaintiff intimates that this advice constituted a sort of carte blanche, so that however long delayed, an objection would always constitute an appropriate response to defendants’ interrogatories. We disagree. In response to the Court’s letter, the plaintiff did nothing—it neither answered the interrogatories nor objected to them. Even after the motion to strike the affirmative defenses was denied in July of 1985, the plaintiff continued to fail to file answers to interrogatories. The time for plaintiff to make objections to the interrogatories is now two years past. Nothing in the Court’s letter in any fashion justifies the contumacious manner in which the plaintiff has proceeded.

Plaintiff’s counsel next suggests that because defendants had access to a number of boxes of plaintiff’s documents, those answers made by referring to these documents constitute sufficient responses to defendants’ interrogatories. Ironically, he in the same breath complains that except by hours of investigation of each document he would himself be unable to provide more specific responses.4 (Indeed, one of the defects of the answers to the interrogatories is the fact that they were given by counsel rather than by someone with knowledge of the facts.)

Plaintiff’s broad references are clearly inadequate to comply with either Rule 33(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or Local Civil Rule 46. Rule 33(c) requires that where the answer to an interrogatory is a specification of records from which the answer may be derived, such specification must be “in sufficient detail to permit the interrogating party to locate, ... as readily as can the party served, the records from which the answer may be ascertained.” Plaintiff’s specifications only rarely sufficiently indicate where in its documents answers to defendants’ [112]*112interrogatories can be found; the majority refer defendants to various categories of documents which include from 50 to 200 file boxes. Where, as here, plaintiffs counsel himself bemoans the impossible task of extracting answers to interrogatories from this mass of documents, he cannot suggest that he has adequately directed the defendants to the pertinent documents so as to comply with Rule 33(c).

Plaintiff’s specification of documents also ignores the requirement of Local Civil Rule 46(f)(1) that it

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113 F.R.D. 108, 6 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 603, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-shipping-corp-v-cross-brown-co-nysd-1986.