Bobalik v. BJ's Restaurants, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 2020
Docket3:19-cv-00661
StatusUnknown

This text of Bobalik v. BJ's Restaurants, Inc. (Bobalik v. BJ's Restaurants, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobalik v. BJ's Restaurants, Inc., (W.D. Ky. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE DIVISION CASE NO. 3:19-CV-0661-RGJ-LLK

SANDRA BOBALIK, et al. PLAINTIFFS

v.

BJ’S RESTAURANTS, INC., et al. DEFENDANTS

OPINION & ORDER

Chief Judge Greg N. Stivers referred this matter to U.S. Magistrate Judge Lanny King for resolution of all litigation planning issues, entry of scheduling orders, consideration of amendments thereto, and resolution of all non-dispositive matters, including discovery issues. [DN 5]. On March 23, 2020, Chief Judge Stivers recused and reassigned this matter to Judge Rebecca Grady Jennings. [DN 23]. This matter is currently before the Court on Defendants BJ’s Restaurants, Inc. and BJ’s Restaurant Operations Company’s (“the BJ’s Defendants”) Motion for Protective Order, [DN 33], to which Plaintiffs and Defendant Central Cleaning, LLC (“Central Cleaning”) responded, [DN 34, 38], and to which the BJ’s Defendants replied, [DN 40]. This Motion is now fully briefed and ripe for adjudication. For the reasons herein, the BJ’s Defendants’ Motion for Protective Order, [DN 33], is DENIED. BACKGROUND This premises liability case arises from a slip and fall incident that occurred at a BJ’s restaurant in Louisville, Kentucky on September 4, 2018. That day, Plaintiff Sandra Bobalik and her friend, Linda Savage, went for lunch at the BJ’s Restaurant & Brewhouse at 7900 Shelbyville Road, Louisville, Kentucky. [DN 1-1, DN 22]. As they were being led to a booth, Mrs. Bobablik fell and was injured. [DN 22]. Plaintiffs allege that Mrs. Bobalik’s fall and subsequent injury was caused by the floor being slippery or slick at the time of the subject incident. Id. Mrs. Bobalik and her husband, Joseph Bobalik, then brought suit in the Commonwealth of Kentucky’s Jefferson Circuit Court, asserting claims for negligence and loss of consortium against the BJ’s Defendants and Central Cleaning, the cleaning company used at this BJ’s location. [DN

1-1]. As part of those claims, Plaintiffs seek punitive damages, amongst other things, arguing that “BJ’s longstanding knowledge of the floors being slick, greasy, and/or wet, their less than adequate safety measures despite this knowledge, and the high frequency of the falls all go towards the likelihood of a patron falling and being injured.” [DN 22 at 117]. In response, the BJ’s Defendants asserted a cross-claim against Central Cleaning, LLC, for indemnity, apportionment, and contribution. [DN 1-1 at 48-52]. Central Cleaning then removed this action from Jefferson Circuit Court to the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) and 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a).

In discovery, a dispute arose over whether the BJ’s Defendants should be required to produce certain incident reports. With leave of this Court, Plaintiffs moved to specifically compel the production of the BJ’s incident reports from January 2014 through present for slip and falls on the wooden floors of the dining area where the subject incident allegedly occurred. Id. The BJ’s Defendants objected, arguing that if they are required to produce those documents, the scope should be limited to incident reports from one year prior to the subject incident and that anything beyond that one-year period would be irrelevant and inadmissible. Id. Despite the BJ’s Defendants’ arguments to the contrary, this Court found that the requested incident reports both prior and subsequent to the subject incident could be relevant to Plaintiffs’ claims or the defenses thereto and were, therefore, discoverable [DN 28]. Accordingly, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel and required the BJ’s Defendants to produce the requested documents within two weeks. [DN 28]. Now, a dispute has arisen over the BJ’s Defendants’ compliance with that Order. On June 5, 2020, Plaintiffs’ counsel contacted the Court claiming that the BJ’s Defendants were

withholding certain pages of the incident reports that the BJ’s Defendants deemed “internal investigation notes.” On June 9, 2020, the Court conducted a telephonic status conference to discuss this dispute. [DN 32]. At that time, the BJ’s Defendants’ counsel informed the Court that, as a standard practice, the BJ’s Defendants never produce their investigation notes. Further, the BJ’s Defendants take the position that such notes are separate and apart from the incident reports at issue. While the BJ’s Defendants did disclose the investigation notes for the subject incident in this matter, they claim that such disclosure was inadvertent and that such inadvertent disclosure should not require the production of investigation notes for other slip and fall incidents. Notably, the BJ’s Defendants

disclosed that they never produced a privilege log documenting the existence of those investigation notes and explaining the nature of the privilege asserted. Following that status conference, the Court entered its June 11, 2020, Order granting the BJ’s Defendants leave to file a motion for protective order by June 23, 2020. [DN 32]. Any response thereto was to be filed by no later than fourteen days thereafter. Id. No reply was permitted at that time. Id. On June 23, 2020, the BJ’s Defendants filed their Motion for Protective Order seeking an order from this Court determining that the BJ’s Defendants are not required to produce their Guest Incident Investigation reports/questionnaires (“investigation notes”) on the basis that those documents are protected by the attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine. [DN 33]. In their Motion, the BJ’s Defendants contend that that they have already complied with this Court’s Order requiring the production of certain incident reports by producing both the manager incident report and the guest incident report, when available, for the thirty-two different slip and

falls that occurred on the wood floor in the dining room from January 1, 2014, though the date of this Court’s Order. Id. The BJ’s Defendants argue that, while both are prepared by the restaurant manager, the manager incident report and the investigation notes at issue in this dispute are separate documents that serve different purposes and contain different information. Id. The manager incident report “was created by [the] BJ’s Defendants to document an incident and for the purpose of providing information to BJ’s Risk Management department about an incident. It is transmitted to BJ’s Risk Management in anticipation of litigation and, if needed, to attorneys.” Id. at 308 (internal citations omitted).

In contrast, the investigation notes, the BJ’s Defendants argue, are comparable to a plaintiff attorneys’ intake questionnaire. Id. at 309. It “was drafted and created with the input, assistance, and guidance of outside defense counsel, for [the] BJ’s Defendants to use in gathering information that its defense attorneys will need if the claim goes into litigation.” Id. at 308 (internal citations omitted). As such, the BJ’s Defendants argue that this form “reflects the processes, mental impressions, and conclusions” of the BJ’s Defendants’ outside counsel. Id. at 309. The investigation notes are then completed by the restaurant manager on the “confidential form, for the purpose of transmitting information from employees to defense counsel as part of evaluating the claim, and to secure answer to specific questions drafted by [the] BJ’s Defendants[’] outside counsel in anticipation of litigation.” Id. at 309 (internal citations omitted). In support of all of this, the BJ’s Defendants attached and cited to the affidavit of Crystal Wang, the Director of General Liability Claims for BJ’s Restaurants, Inc. [DN 33-1].

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Bobalik v. BJ's Restaurants, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobalik-v-bjs-restaurants-inc-kywd-2020.