Barnes v. Confidential Party

628 So. 2d 283, 1993 Miss. LEXIS 527, 1993 WL 485704
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1993
Docket91-CA-0092
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 628 So. 2d 283 (Barnes v. Confidential Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Confidential Party, 628 So. 2d 283, 1993 Miss. LEXIS 527, 1993 WL 485704 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

628 So.2d 283 (1993)

A. Emmett BARNES, IV
v.
A CONFIDENTIAL PARTY.

No. 91-CA-0092.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

November 24, 1993.

*284 William O. Luckett, Jr., Stephen A. Brandon, Patricia W. Burchell, Luckett Law Firm, Clarksdale, for appellant.

James R. Hall, Jr., Robertson M. Leatherman, Jr., Memphis, for appellee.

Before DAN M. LEE, P.J., and PITTMAN and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., JJ.

JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., Justice, for the Court:

This appeal arises from a deposition taken in conjunction with a divorce pending in Georgia between A. Emmett Barnes IV (Emmett) and Leslie Lamar Barnes. Deponent C.C. was a resident of Coahoma County, Mississippi, and the deposition was taken there. C.C. refused to answer certain questions posed to him by counsel for Emmett, and the deposition was terminated. Emmett filed a Motion to Compel Discovery in the Coahoma County Circuit Court, and C.C. filed a Motion for Protective Order, To Place Documents under Seal, and Request for Attorney's Fees and Expenses. The court denied Emmett's motion, and granted C.C.'s motion. Emmett's Motion for Reconsideration of the court's order was denied, and he appeals, citing the following errors:

I. WHETHER THE TRIAL JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN DENYING EMMETT BARNES' MOTION TO COMPEL.
II. WHETHER THE TRIAL JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN GRANTING C.C.'S MOTION FOR PROTECTIVE ORDER.
III. WHETHER THE TRIAL JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN DENYING EMMETT BARNES' REQUEST FOR ATTORNEY'S FEES AND EXPENSES AND GRANTING C.C.'S REQUEST *285 FOR ATTORNEY'S FEES AND EXPENSES.
IV. WHETHER C.C.'S DEPOSITION, THE SUBSTANCE OF WHICH IS MATERIAL TO THIS APPEAL AND ALREADY A MATTER OF PUBLIC RECORD, SHOULD BE PLACED UNDER SEAL.

Finding that the circuit judge correctly granted C.C.'s motion, and denied Emmett's motion, we affirm.

A.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Emmett Barnes and Leslie Lamar Barnes were married in June 1985 and separated in November 1987. Emmett filed for divorce in February 1988 in the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia. Pursuant to the divorce, Emmett sought to depose C.C., a resident of Clarksdale in Coahoma County, Mississippi.[1]

He obtained an order dated January 30, 1989 in the Fulton County Superior Court, appointing a Commissioner to take C.C.'s deposition in Mississippi. The order provided that "all procedure in connection with the deposition" would be in accordance with §§ 26 and 30 of the Georgia Civil Practice Act (O.C.G.A. § 9-11-26, and § 9-11-30).[2] The order further provided that the deposition would be placed under seal.

A Notice to Take Deposition was filed in the Fulton County Superior Court on February 27, 1989, stating that C.C. would be deposed on March 3, 1989 in Clarksdale, Mississippi, and that he would be "examined under the provisions of O.C.G.A. § 24-9-81 ... as if he had testified in his own behalf, and was being cross-examined, with full right to examine and the privilege of impeachment."[3] A subpoena was issued on March 1, 1989 by the Coahoma County Circuit Court, commanding C.C. to appear at the Luckett Law Firm offices in Clarksdale on March 3.

C.C. appeared at the appointed time and place on March 3, accompanied by counsel. Also present were counsel for Emmett Barnes and for Leslie Barnes. Emmett's counsel questioned C.C. about his relationship with Leslie, which had lasted for several years while the two were in college at Ole Miss, and had ended just prior to Emmett and Leslie's courtship. He also questioned C.C. about a chance meeting which had taken place between Leslie and C.C. in Aspen, Colorado, in December of 1986. According to C.C., the two drank wine in a bar, discussing friends and "old times at school."

During the deposition, C.C. declined to answer a certain question, invoking a privilege afforded to witnesses under the Official Code of Georgia Annotated § 24-9-27. The statute states in relevant part:

Privilege of witnesses

(a) No party or witness shall be required to testify as to any matter which may criminate or tend to criminate himself or which shall tend to bring infamy, disgrace, or public contempt upon himself or any member of his family.

Invoking this privilege, C.C. also declined to answer certain other questions of an intimate, private, and personal nature.

On May 5, 1989, Emmett filed a Motion to Compel discovery pursuant to M.R.C.P. 37. The motion sought an order requiring C.C. to respond to the questions which he had declined to answer. Appended to the motion were excerpts from C.C.'s deposition, including the questions posed to him by Emmett's counsel. The motion contended that the Georgia privilege asserted by C.C. was not available to him in these proceedings.

On May 26, 1989, C.C. filed a Motion for Protective Order, To Place Documents Under Seal, and Request for Attorneys' Fees and Expenses in the Coahoma County Circuit Court. C.C. argued that he was entitled to assert the Georgia privilege, and that Emmett's Motion to Compel had violated a January *286 4, 1989, Order of the Fulton County Superior Court by making portions of C.C.'s deposition a matter of public record.[4] On June 9, 1989, C.C. supplemented his Motion with a copy of an Order issued by the Fulton County Superior Court on May 31, 1989. This Order denied Emmett's Motion to compel Leslie to testify concerning her relationship with C.C. The court stated that it would not order Leslie to testify regarding this matter, or any conversation during her marriage concerning it, as she had asserted the privilege afforded by O.C.G.A. § 24-9-27, and that it would draw the most negative adverse inference allowed by law from her invocation of the privilege.

On June 26, 1989, the Coahoma County Circuit Court denied Emmett's Motion to Compel Discovery, and granted C.C.'s Motion for Protective Order, to Place Documents Under Seal, and Request for Attorneys' Fees and Expenses. Pursuant to M.R.C.P. 37, the court held that C.C. was entitled to recover his expenses in opposing Emmett's Motion to Compel and in bringing his own Motion. Emmett and his attorneys, the Luckett Law Firm, P.A., were ordered to pay C.C.'s attorneys the amount of $4279.00 in fees, plus $215.39 in expenses. The court also held that all other costs in the case were to be assessed against Emmett.

Emmett Barnes, W.O. Luckett, and the Luckett Law Firm, P.A. filed a Motion for Reconsideration on July 5, 1989. On July 18, 1989, Judge Pearson issued an Order Taking Under Advisement the Motion for Reconsideration, tolling the time for filing an appeal of the June 26, 1989, Order. By order of the Coahoma County Chancery Court dated October 18, 1989, a hearing was set for November 16, 1989. On December 27, 1990, Judge Pearson denied the Motion for Reconsideration, holding in part:

1) C.C. should have been protected from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, undue burden and expense in this matter, and it was therefore necessary for this Court to issue a protective order under Rule 26(d) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure protecting him from further discovery and placing documents filed in this matter under seal;

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Bluebook (online)
628 So. 2d 283, 1993 Miss. LEXIS 527, 1993 WL 485704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-confidential-party-miss-1993.