Attala Steel Industries, LLC v. The Travelers Indemnity Company of America

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 8, 2026
Docket4:24-cv-00053
StatusUnknown

This text of Attala Steel Industries, LLC v. The Travelers Indemnity Company of America (Attala Steel Industries, LLC v. The Travelers Indemnity Company of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attala Steel Industries, LLC v. The Travelers Indemnity Company of America, (N.D. Miss. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI OXFORD DIVISION

ATTALA STEEL INDUSTRIES, LLC PLAINTIFF

v. CAUSE NO.: 4:24-cv-53-SA-JMV

THE TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY OF AMERICA DEFENDANT

ORDER DENYING MOTION TO COMPEL This matter is before the court on the motion of Defendant, The Travelers Indemnity Company of America, to compel production of wrongfully withheld/redacted documents by Plaintiff and by nonparty RSC Insurance Brokerage d/b/a Risk Strategies [Doc. 236]. Specifically, Defendant seeks, “pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a) and Local Rule 26(a)(3) and 37 . . . an order compelling Plaintiff . . . to fully and immediately comply with Travelers’ First Set of Requests for Production dated December 2, 2024, and non-party RSC Insurance Brokerage d/b/a Risk Strategies (“Risk Strategies”) to fully and immediately comply with Travelers’ March 2025 subpoena duces tecum.” [Doc. 236] at 1. For the reasons detailed below, the Court finds that the motion to compel is not well-taken and shall be denied. Background The procedural history of this litigation has been recounted in various filings. Thus, and for efficiency purposes, I will not do so again here except as is critical to an understanding of undersigned’s ruling on the instant motion. The record will reflect that on August 22, 2025, long after the suit was filed, Defendant sought leave to amend its affirmative defenses to include three additional ones (16-18), each alleging, in one form or another, that Plaintiff had knowingly breached their disclosure obligations under the subject policy, thereby voiding coverage [Doc. 132]. The motion for leave to amend was vigorously opposed by the Plaintiff who argued, principally, that coming, as it did, so late in the discovery period (approximately 50 days before the then current close of discovery set to run on October 10, 2025), it would unfairly prejudice Plaintiff to permit it [Doc. 155; 156]. In reply, Defendant argued (and I found persuasively so), that the failure to have brought the motion to

amend on previously was due to Plaintiff’s own conduct, including withholding disclosure of the information and documents giving rise to the additional defenses [Doc. 162]. Consequently, I granted the motion to amend on September 29, 2025 [Doc. 171]. The newly added affirmative defenses are as follows: • Sixteenth Affirmative Defense-Attala Steel violated the “Concealment, Misrepresentation or Fraud” condition of the Policy, and that coverage is voided as a result; • Seventeenth Affirmative Defense (in reference to the property and records section of the Policy) Attala Steel concealed documents from Travelers and by doing so, it materially breached the “Duties in the Event of Loss or Damage” condition; and

• Eighteenth Affirmative Defense, (in reference to the cooperation clause of the Policy) Attala Steel concealed documents and breached the “Duties in the Event of Loss. Amended Answer [Doc. 172]. As of the time of the amendment—and relevant to the instant motion—Defendant had long since propounded (on December 2, 2024) its first set of requests for production of documents, comprising 38 separate requests [Doc. 57]. A labyrinth of document productions in response, including a privilege log or logs were produced.1 A second set of requests for production of

1 It appears from the docket that on January 16, 2025, Plaintiff filed its original notice of objection and responses to these requests for production [Doc. 60]. On February 4, 2025, Plaintiff filed a notice of objection and responses to the first set of interrogatories [Doc. 69], and filed a supplemental production of documents on February 12, 2025 [Doc. 70], March 13, 2025 [Doc. 83; 85], March 20, 2025 [Doc. 89], April 1, 2025 [Doc. 100], and April 28, 2025 [Doc. 109]. documents was propounded by Defendant to Plaintiff on August 22, 2025 [Doc. 135].2 A copy of the responses and objections dated January 16, 2025, are attached to the motion to compel as Exhibit 21 (of a total of 26 exhibits). Defendant had also served, as of April 11, 2025, a subpoena for document production on

non-party RSC, which had also been responded to prior to allowance of the aforesaid amendment. A copy of the subpoena is attached as Exhibit 23 to the instant motion.3 The subpoena was objected to in a number of respects by letter from Plaintiff’s counsel, but apparently some documents were subsequently produced, while others were withheld or redacted. No additional discovery was propounded following the September 30, 2025, amended answer, but on the last day of the discovery period, October 10, 2025, Plaintiff moved to extend the discovery deadline, arguing in support that it needed additional time to conduct discovery on the subject of the three new affirmative defenses [Doc. 191]. Defendant opposed the motion arguing that no discovery was needed [Doc. 198]. On October 21, 2025, the undersigned entered an order [Doc. 201] granting the motion in part, and extending the discovery deadline, but did so

in a narrowly tailored fashion, as follows:

2 A notice of responses and objections to the second set of requests for production of documents was filed on September 19, 2025 [Doc. 166], and on October 10, 2025 [Doc. 183]. 3 The subpoena seeks: 1. All communications, contracts, agreements, memoranda of understanding, invoices, and other documents constituting or concerning any consulting, advisory or other service provided, or proposed to be provided, by RSC to Attala Steel or MiddleGround. This request seeks documents created at any time during the period January 1, 2020 to the date of RSC’s response to this Subpoena. . . . 3. All communications and other documents concerning the Kettle Failure… 5. All communications and other documents concerning any investigation into the cause(s) of the Kettle Failure. . . . 9. All communications and other documents concerning insurance coverage under the Policy for any loss, damage, or expense caused by or attributed to the Kettle Failure. 10. All communications and other documents concerning Travelers’ denial of coverage for the Insurance Clain, or any response to that denial of coverage. 11. All communications and other documents concerning the Insurance Claim. . . . 13. To the extent not otherwise responsive to the above requests, the complete contents of all electronic and hard copy files created or maintained by RSC concerning the Kettle Failure, any loss or damage claimed by Attala Steel, the Insurance Claim, or the Litigation. The undersigned grants a 70-day extension of the fact discovery deadline to begin on the date of this order and extend through December 30, 2025. Each party may propound no more than seven (7) interrogatories, seven (7) requests for production, and seven (7) requests for admission, as well as notice two depositions; provided however, any witness who was deposed between September 29, 2025, and October 11, 2025, may not be deposed again. Discovery, and discovery-related motions, are further limited to only such matters as are relevant to establishing or disproving the three new affirmative defenses or their relevance to the merits of this case.

[Doc. 201] at 4.

Though Plaintiff thereafter filed a notice on the docket to indicate service of additional discovery on the subject of the new affirmative defenses, the defendant did not propound any additional discovery related to the three new affirmative defenses. Rather, the Defendant filed, on November 26, 2025, only the instant motion to compel responses to its first set of document discovery requests to Plaintiff, and its subpoena of Risk Strategies.

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Bluebook (online)
Attala Steel Industries, LLC v. The Travelers Indemnity Company of America, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attala-steel-industries-llc-v-the-travelers-indemnity-company-of-america-msnd-2026.