Bradley J. Delp Revocable Trust Dated January 8, 1992 v. MSJMR 2008 Irrevocable Trust Dated December 31, 2008

665 F. App'x 514
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2016
Docket16-3321
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 665 F. App'x 514 (Bradley J. Delp Revocable Trust Dated January 8, 1992 v. MSJMR 2008 Irrevocable Trust Dated December 31, 2008) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley J. Delp Revocable Trust Dated January 8, 1992 v. MSJMR 2008 Irrevocable Trust Dated December 31, 2008, 665 F. App'x 514 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

*516 CLAY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs Bradley J. Delp Revocable Trust, dated January 8, 1992, as amended (“Delp Trust”), and Bradley J. Delp, individually and as trustee of the Delp Trust (“Bradley”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), appeal the judgment entered by the district court dismissing Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Complaint with prejudice and denying Plaintiffs’ post-judgment motions. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, this Court AFFIRMS the district court’s judgment.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

a. Factual Background

This action arises from a business dispute between two brothers. Bradley and Cleves R. Delp (“Cleves”) are brothers who were joint owners of a family business, The Delp Company, in the early 1990s. Each brother owned, through trusts, 49 percent of The Delp Company, with the remaining two percent owned by the Delp Independence Trust. Additionally, each brother owned, through trusts, 50 percent DelHold, LLC, a holding company for the family’s business interests. Plaintiffs primarily claim that Cleves and Christopher Erblich (The Delp Company and DelHold, LLC’s attorney), among others, breached their fiduciary duties by wrongfully misappropriating Bradley’s 49 percent interest in the family business.

b. Procedural History

On March 18, 2014, Plaintiffs filed a complaint against eight defendants, including: Cleves, individually and as trustee of both the MSJMR 2008 Irrevocable Trust dated December 31, 2008, as amended, and the Cleves R. Delp Revocable Trust dated July 4, 1992, as amended; and Christopher Erblich, individually and as trustee of the KASL 2008 Irrevocable Trust, dated December 31, 2008, as amended, and the Christopher E. Erblich Revocable Trust, dated December 1,1998, as amended.

The parties engaged in several rounds of motions practice relating to the sufficiency of the allegations in the initial Complaint, First Amended Complaint, and Second Amended Complaint. On December 5, 2014, the district court held a status conference to generally discuss an efficient way to determine the threshold issue in the case at that poinfr-whether Bradley sold his interests in the two family businesses, The Delp Company and DelHold, LLC. On December 12, 2014, the district court entered an order, with the agreement of counsel, which dismissed certain defendants without prejudice and directed the remaining parties to engage in focused discovery related to threshold issues, including Bradley’s ownership interest in The Delp Company and DelHold, LLC. 1 The court set a deadline for the exchange of discovery requests and responses and set a status conference on the matter for March 27, 2015.

1. Bradley’s Production of Privileged and Confidential Documents

On February 27, 2015, Bradley produced roughly over 65 pages of documents, some of which Defendants argue that Bradley stole. These “stolen” documents contained Defendants’ attorney-client communications, Defendants’ counsel’s legal analyses and memoranda, and detailed conference call agendas of attorney calls pertaining to this action. Several of these documents were labeled “Attorney-Client Privileged Communication,” or “Confidential Information For Attorneys’ Eyes Only,” and *517 several of these documents were emails referencing an attached CaseMap with Defendants’ litigation strategy- and an ex parte mediation statement. (Pis.’ Ápp. Joint Exs. 2-5, PagelD# 36-37, 38-39, 105.) On March 27, 2015, Defendants informed the district court that Plaintiffs had produced several confidential documents and requested'permission to investigate this data breach. The district court granted Defendants’ request, stayed all deadlines, and ordered Plaintiffs’ counsel to deliver the identified documents to the district court.

2.Bradley’s Deposition

On April 28, 2015, Defendants deposed Bradley, who was represented by his counsel and a separate criminal attorney. During the deposition, he refused to answer any questions relating to the amount of privileged and other materials in his possession, the scope of the materials he reviewed, how he obtained the privileged and confidential materials, and whether he still had access to those materials. Bradley asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination over 70 times during the deposition.

3.Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions

Due to his refusal to answer Defendants’ questions, Defendants moved the district court to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Complaint as a sanction pursuant to its inherent authority. In response to the Motion for Sanctions, Plaintiffs moved the district court to appoint a special master to review the privileged and confidential documents and requested a continuance to file the opposition to the Motion for Sanctions. Defendants opposed Plaintiffs’ special master appointment and continuance motion, arguing that such appointment was unnecessary since the district court had reviewed the documents and determined that they had been accurately classified as privileged and confidential. The district court denied Plaintiffs’ continuance request, and set the Motion for Sanctions and special master appointment motion for hearing on July 28, 2015. The district court later continued the hearing.

On August 10, 2015, Bradley requested permission from the district court to withdraw his Fifth Amendment assertions and to supplement the record with an affidavit, which would “provide the truth” about the privileged and confidential documents. (R. 78, Pis.’ Mot. to Withdraw, PagelD# 813 (stating that “the affidavit will provide the truth surrounding the possession of the at-issue documents”).) He also requested an evidentiary hearing on the matter in order “to uncover the facts necessary to determine the issues of willful behavior, privilege, and undue prejudice to the defendants” so Plaintiffs could oppose the Motion for Sanctions. (Id. at 819-20). The district court granted Bradley’s motion to supplement the record with his affidavit and his request for an evidentiary hearing.

4.Three-Day Evidentiary Hearing

The evidentiary hearing was held for three days in October 2015. In both the affidavit and at the hearing, Bradley explained. how, when, and why he obtained the privileged documents, the scope of his review, and the extent of his unauthorized access to Cleves’ computer at The Delp Company’s office in Maumee, Ohio. The Court notes the following discrepancies between Bradley’s affidavit and the testimony presented at the hearing.

First, Bradley explained in his affidavit that he found certain documents in the company’s main conference room during the weeks of March 28, 2011 and June 6, 2011. At the hearing, he claimed that these documents were left on a shelf under the *518 phone. Defendants provided testimony from the company’s longtime employee, Beth Loy, that the company had a protocol for keeping track of and removing any documents or papers that were left behind in conference rooms. The protocol involved morning and evening reviews of all the conference rooms, and an inspection of the room after each meeting. The documents that Bradley claimed he took from the conference room on Tuesday, March 29, 2011, were dated February 15 and 18, 2011.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 F. App'x 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-j-delp-revocable-trust-dated-january-8-1992-v-msjmr-2008-ca6-2016.