BARHAM v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES LTD.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 26, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-22627
StatusUnknown

This text of BARHAM v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES LTD. (BARHAM v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES LTD.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BARHAM v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES LTD., (S.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA MIAMI DIVISION

CASE NO. 20-22627-CIV-MORENO/GOODMAN

LAUREN BARHAM and MATTHEW UREY,

Plaintiffs,

v.

ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES, LTD.,

Defendant. ____________________________________/

ORDER ON PLAINTIFFS’ REQUEST TO COMPEL PRODUCTION OF WORK PRODUCT WITNESS STATEMENTS

On August 11, 2022, the Undersigned held an in-person discovery hearing on the parties’ multiple discovery disputes, including Plaintiffs’ renewed request to compel the production of ten witness statements of current and former RCCL employees. [ECF Nos. 123-24; 139; 151]. Following the hearing, the Undersigned issued a Post-Discovery Hearing Administrative Order directing the parties to file legal memoranda responding to six questions posed by the Court concerning counsel’s obligations (if any) in preparing a client for a fact witness deposition (i.e., a non-Rule 30(b)(6) deposition) and in refreshing that witness’s recollection when he or she testifies that she does not recall a fact and a work product protected document would refresh his or her recollection. [ECF No. 152].1 The Undersigned’s Order further directed Plaintiffs to “file a list (page and line)

specifically quoting the questions and the responses, on a witness-by-witness basis, where the deponent testified to a lack of recall and that reviewing the witness statement would, could, or might refresh his or her recollection.” Id. at 2 (emphasis

added). The Undersigned also issued two Orders requiring Defendant to file under seal the event timelines (also deemed work product) prepared by two of the deponents. [ECF

Nos. 171; 185]. Plaintiffs filed deposition excerpts for the ten witnesses [ECF No. 158], the parties filed their post-hearing memoranda [ECF Nos. 159; 166], and Defendant filed under seal the two event timelines [ECF Nos. 175; 186].

Having carefully reviewed the filings, the Undersigned orders as follows: I. Overview From an overarching, 30,000-feet overview, a substantial part of this discovery

dispute is, to use the line from Shakespeare, “much ado about nothing.” That is because much of the relief Plaintiffs urge is illusory.

1 The Undersigned also ruled on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Defendant, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., to Provide Better Responses to Plaintiffs’ Fifth Supplemental Request for Production [ECF No. 123] and Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Defendant, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., to Provide Better Responses to Plaintiffs’ Third Supplemental Request for Admissions and Sixth Supplemental Request for Production [ECF No. 124]. Plaintiffs contend that the ten defense witnesses should have been shown their witness statements or timelines (which Defendant contends are protected by the work

product doctrine) before the deposition or during the deposition to refresh their recollections about certain points. But a careful and comprehensive in camera examination of all the witness statements and event timelines reveals that the reviews would mostly

have been unhelpful -- because most of the witness statements and event timelines do not discuss or even mention the details for which the witnesses asserted a lack of recall. II. Background

A. Request for Production No. 23 This is Plaintiffs’ third attempt to compel the production of witness statements. On June 10, 2021, Plaintiffs propounded on Defendant Initial Interrogatories, Initial Requests for Admissions, and Initial Requests for Production. [ECF No. 72, ¶ 1]. These

discovery requests included Request for Production No. 23, which sought: “[a]ny and all statements given by any witness or any other person who may have knowledge of relevant facts with respect to the subject incident, including, but not limited to, those

given at or near the time of the incident by Defendant’s employees and/or ship’s medical personnel.” [ECF No. 77-2, p. 8]. On August 27, 2021, RCCL objected to, among other things, Request for Production No. 23, asserting that these statements “were created, prepared, and/or

obtained in anticipation of litigation at the direction of defense counsel, and [were] protected by the attorney-client and/or work product privileges.” Id. RCCL also produced two privilege logs. [ECF Nos. 77-3; 83-1].

Notwithstanding RCCL’s invocation of the attorney-client privilege in its answer to Request for Production No. 23, Defendant’s privilege logs sought to protect the listed items based only on the work product doctrine (and not the attorney-client privilege).

RCCL’s initial privilege log is dated September 28, 2021 and consists of 15 items: 13 statements from 12 witnesses2 and two event timelines.3 [ECF No. 77-3]. RCCL’s amended privilege log is dated October 29, 2021. [ECF No. 83-1]. It is a

truncated version of the initial privilege log. It lists four items which had already been listed in the initial privilege log: the statements from Shore Excursion Team Member Yao Chen and Assistant Front Desk Manager Laura Bernard and the two event timelines. [ECF No. 83-1].4

2 Gavin Smith, Vice President and Managing Director of RCL, provided two statements. [ECF No. 77-3 (items 5-6)].

3 The event timelines were created by Chief Security Officer Craig Darling and Staff Captain James Nazar. Id. (items 14-15).

4 RCCL amended its privilege log in order to comport with the Local Rules, which require a privilege log for “all documents, electronically stored information, things and oral communications withheld on the basis of a claim of privilege or work product protection except . . . written and oral communications between a party and its counsel after commencement of the action and work product material created after commencement of the action.” S.D. Fla. L.R. 26.1(e)(2)(C) (emphasis added). B. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel [ECF No. 77] On October 15, 2021, Plaintiffs filed a motion seeking to compel, among other

things,5 the 13 witness statements responsive to Request for Production No. 23. [ECF No. 77]. Plaintiffs argued that the 13 statements were “outside the scope of the work product doctrine because” these types of statements “are routinely prepared as a matter of course

following any incident,” were not prepared in anticipation of litigation, did not contain an attorney’s mental impressions, and “likely contain[ed] a recording of objective facts[.]” Id. at 7. Plaintiffs also argued that, at least with respect to the October 22, 2020 statement

provided by Gavin Smith, Defendant had waived the work product doctrine when it gave a copy of the statement to WorkSafe, a New Zealand government agency. Id. Lastly, Plaintiffs argued that they had a substantial need for the 13 statements because: (1) they were “unable to obtain the substantial equivalent of the statements

without undue hardship due to the passage of time since the incident” and (2) because Defendant failed to disclose the location of some of the witnesses, Plaintiffs were uncertain whether they would be able to subpoena those witnesses for deposition. Id. at

7-8.

5 Although Plaintiffs’ motion sought to compel additional discovery, at the time of Defendant’s response, the only remaining discovery dispute concerned the 13 witness statements being withheld based on the work product doctrine. See [ECF No. 83, p. 1 (“As evident from Royal Caribbean’s response, the only remaining discovery dispute pertains to Plaintiffs’ Initial Request for Production No. 23, wherein Plaintiffs request all witness statements concerning the subject incident.”)]. Defendant filed a response in opposition to Plaintiffs’ motion to compel. [ECF No. 82]. Defendant argued that the witness statements were obtained in anticipation of

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