Catherine Trinh

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedMay 31, 2022
Docket2:18-bk-11475
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
Catherine Trinh, (Cal. 2022).

Opinion

2 FILED & ENTERED

3 MAY 31 2022

4 CLERK U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT 5 Central District of California BY l l e w i s DEPUTY CLERK 6

7 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

8 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

9 LOS ANGELES DIVISION 10 In re: Case No. 2:18-bk-11475-RK 11 CATHERINE TRINH, Chapter 11 12 Debtor. SEPARATE STATEMENT OF DECISION 13 ON MOTION OF RESPONDENT CATHERINE TRINH TO QUASH 14 DOCUMENT SUBPOENAS, OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE, FOR A PROTECTIVE 15 ORDER

16 Hearing Date: May 26, 2022 17 Time: 11:00 a.m. Place: Courtroom 1675 18 (and via ZoomGov) Roybal Federal Building 19 255 East Temple Street Los Angeles, CA 90012 20

21 22 TO HOWARD GROBSTEIN, PLAN TRUSTEE, MOVANT, CATHERINE TRINH AND 23 KEVIN VOONG, RESPONDENTS, AND THEIR COUNSEL OF RECORD, AND 24 INTERESTED PARTIES: 25 The court hereby provides this separate statement of decision to explain its rulings 26 on the motion of Respondent Catherine Trinh to quash subpoenas, or in the alternative, for 27 a protective order. 1 In this case, the court issued an order to show cause to Respondents Catherine 2 Trinh and Kevin Voong to appear and show cause why they should not be held in contempt 3 upon the motion of the Plan Trustee with respect to four actions alleged to be in violation of 4 the court’s orders in this case, including the plan confirmation order and the automatic stay, 5 specifically: (1) failure to promptly turn over the Las Flores residence, property of the 6 estate, required by plan confirmation order; (2) postconfirmation vandalism of the Las 7 Flores property; (3) unauthorized postpetition lease out of the Las Flores residence to a 8 third party in violation of stay; and (4) unauthorized sale or transfer of the estate’s interest 9 in the BBV limited liability company. Finding that the Plan Agent made a prima facie 10 showing for issuance of the order to show cause pursuant to Local Bankruptcy Rule 9020- 11 1, the court issued an order to show cause to respondents and set an expedited 12 evidentiary hearing on the order to show cause for May 31, 2022. On May 5, 2022, the 13 Plan Agent served subpoenas on third parties for production of documents on May 19, 14 2022 for discovery pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45, made applicable to this 15 contested matter by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9016. 16 On May 24, 2022, Respondent Catherine Trinh filed a motion to quash the 17 subpoenas or for protective order on grounds of privilege based on California privacy law 18 and overbreadth, and the court conducted a hearing on the motion to quash on shortened 19 notice on May 26, 2022. Having heard from the parties at the hearing on May 26, 2022, 20 the court overruled the objection based on privilege under California privacy law because 21 in this case to determine a federal question, privilege is governed under federal common 22 law, which was not shown to encompass California privacy law, pursuant to Federal Rule 23 of Evidence 501, but sustained the objection that the subpoenas were overbroad and 24 burdensome as all but two of the subpoenas sought information not related to facts at 25 issue in this contested matter of the order to show cause re: contempt, that is, the four 26 alleged acts in violation of the court’s orders which were cited by the Plan Agent as the 27 1 basis for contempt.1 Counsel for the Plan Trustee acknowledged that not all of the 2 document production requests in the subpoenas were relevant to these four alleged acts, 3 that is, some requests were intended to discover other acts by respondents in addition to 4 those identified in the contempt motion and the order to show cause, which might also 5 constitute contempt of court. The court overruled the Plan Agent’s objection that 6 Respondent Trinh lacked standing to object to production of subpoenaed documents of the 7 nonparties. The court also stated that alternatively, the subpoenas should be quashed 8 because the time for production of the subpoenaed documents was unreasonable because 9 they did not meet the 30-day time period of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34 for 10 response to a document production request. See Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 34(b)(2)(A) 12 “The purpose of a subpoena duces tecum is to compel the production of documents 13 or things relevant to the facts in issue in a pending judicial proceeding.” 9A Wright and 14 Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil (3d ed.) § 2456 (online edition, April 2022 15 update), citing inter alia, United States v. Santiago-Lugo, 904 F. Supp. 43 (D. Puerto Rico 16 1995) (citing text). “The subpoena duces tecum is the only way to compel a nonparty to 17 produce documents or other materials.” Id. Many of the document production requests in 18 the Plan Agent’s subpoenas were not relevant to the facts in issue in the pending contempt 19 proceeding, that is, whether either respondent or both of them: (1) failed to promptly turn 20 over the Las Flores property; (2) were responsible for the vandalism of the Las Flores 21 property; (3) made an unauthorized lease of the Las Flores property to a third party; and 22 (4) made an unauthorized sale or transfer of the estate’s interest in BBV. These document 23 production requests sought discovery of facts not relevant to the facts in issue before the 24 court in this contempt proceeding in order for the Plan Agent to assert new claims against 25 the respondents, which is not a proper purpose for such discovery. Thus, it appeared to

26 1 The court ruled that the two subpoenas to the escrow companies for documents relating to the sale of real property owned by BBV, which related to the unauthorized sale or transfer of the estate’s interest in BBV, 27 were not overbroad because the information is relevant to the facts in issue in this contempt proceeding. 1 the court that the subpoenas were overbroad and “abusively drawn,” Mattel, Inc. v. Walking 2 Mountain Productions, 353 F.3d 792, 813 (9th Cir. 2003), because they sought discovery 3 of documents not “relevant to the facts in issue” in this judicial proceeding, 9A Wright and 4 Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil (3d ed.) § 2456, and “[n]o attempt had been 5 made to tailor the information request to the immediate needs of the case,” Mattel, Inc. v. 6 Walking Mountain Productions, 353 F.3d at 813. In Mattel, Inc. v. Walking Mountain 7 Productions, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision granting a nonparty 8 witness’s motion to quash a document subpoena as overbroad demanding production of 9 documents relating to its own internal policies and practices that had no bearing on the 10 litigation between the parties. 353 F.3d at 813. In that case, the Ninth Circuit also upheld 11 the finding of the district court that the subpoena at issue was “served for the purpose of 12 annoying and harassment and not really for the purpose of getting information.” Id. at 813- 13 814. 14 Mattel, Inc. v. Walking Mountain Productions is instructive here because it is case 15 precedent that stands for the proposition that a document subpoena to a nonparty witness 16 may be quashed if it is overbroad in seeking information that had no bearing on the 17 litigation between the parties, although the court does not consider this case to be a 18 situation that the purpose of the subpoenas is to annoy or harass.

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