Ceil Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 2018
Docket17-6078
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ceil Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc. (Ceil Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.) 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
Ceil Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc., (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0248n.06

No. 17-6078

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

CEIL WALKER NORRIS, in her role as co- ) ) trustee and beneficiary of the Walker Marital FILED ) Trust #2, the Vernon Walker Trust for Cecilia May 22, 2018 ) Walker and The Vernon Walker Trust for Deloss DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Walker, as principal and Beneficiary of the Ceil Walker Rollover IRA; WALKER ) & ASSOCIATES, INC.; CEIL T. WALKER ) ON APPEAL FROM THE REVOCABLE TRUST, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF ) TENNESSEE v. ) ) MK HOLDINGS, INC., dba Regions Morgan: ) Keegan Trust Company; REGIONS FINANCIAL ) CORPORATION, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. )

BEFORE: GIBBONS, BUSH, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Ceil Walker Norris, individually and in her

role as a trustee of several family trusts, and on behalf of her business, Walker & Associates,

Inc., (individually and collectively “Walker”) initiated this action against MK Holding, Inc.

(“MK Holding”) and Regions Financial Corporation (“Regions FC”), alleging that they breached

their duties as trustees of the various family trusts by investing Walker’s assets in certain bond

funds and not withdrawing those investments when instructed to do so by Walker, resulting in

financial loss. During the course of discovery, MK Holding and Regions FC filed two motions

for sanctions and a motion to exclude expert testimony due to Walker’s repeated violations of No. 17-6078, Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.

discovery rules and court orders. The motions were referred to the magistrate judge, who

recommended granting them and dismissing the suit as an appropriate sanction. Following an

objection by Walker, the district court agreed, granting the motions, excluding the expert

testimony, and dismissing the action. Because the district court was correct in finding that

Walker repeatedly and flagrantly violated discovery rules and court orders and that the expert

testimony should be excluded, and because it was not an abuse of the district court’s discretion to

dismiss the suit as a sanction for Walker’s violations, we affirm.

I.

On September 10, 2002, Walker transferred various accounts from a non-party financial

institution to Regions Morgan Keegan Trust, F.S.B. (“Regions MK Trust”), a wholly owned

subsidiary of MK Holding, which is itself a wholly owned subsidiary of Regions FC. In July

2003, those accounts were invested in two bond funds, Regions Morgan Keegan Select High

Income Fund and Regions Morgan Keegan Select Intermediate Bond Fund (the “RMK Funds”).

Regions MK Trust was subsequently merged into Regions Bank on September 29, 2005, and all

operations of Regions MK Trust became the operations of Regions Bank, which assumed all of

Regions MK Trust’s assets and liabilities. Regions Bank is also a wholly owned subsidiary of

Regions FC.

Walker alleges that the RMK Funds were heavily concentrated in high-risk mortgage-

backed securities, and, therefore, at the start of the housing crisis in 2007, the RMK Funds began

to lose significant value. Walker further alleges that in July 2007, she met with two Regions

Bank trust officers, and after learning that the RMK Funds had lost approximately $30,000 in

value, instructed them to sell the RMK Funds to minimize further loss. Regions Bank, however,

2 No. 17-6078, Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.

only began selling the RMK Funds in August 2007 and did not sell Walker’s entire share until

October 2007, with total losses of approximately $500,000.

Walker initiated the present action on December 1, 2008, alleging MK Holding and

Regions FC had breached their duties as trustees by first investing in and then delaying in selling

the RMK Funds. On July 10, 2009, the case was consolidated into the Multidistrict Litigation In

Re: Regions Morgan Keegan Securities, Derivative and Employment Retirement Income Security

Act (ERISA) Litigation.

On February 5, 2016, the defendants served Walker with their First Interrogatories,

Requests for Production of Documents, and Requests for Admissions. Under Federal Rule of

Civil Procedure 33, Walker’s responses to the discovery requests were due on March 7. Walker,

however, failed to respond by the deadline. On March 11, the defendants sent Walker’s counsel

a letter notifying Walker that the Requests for Admissions were deemed admitted due to her

failure to respond and asking her to respond to the Requests for Production and Interrogatories

by March 28. Walker did not respond to that letter nor did she respond to a subsequent letter on

March 31 again asking for discovery responses.

A status conference was held on April 4, during which the district court directed the

parties to exchange additional discovery by April 18. Walker, however, failed to provide any

responses by the court’s deadline.

On April 25, the defendants sent Walker’s counsel a third letter via email seeking the

past-due discovery responses and stating that if she did not respond they would file a motion to

compel. On May 5, Walker provided her first responses to the interrogatories and some

responsive documents but did not provide any written response to the Requests for Production.

On May 23, the defendants sent a fourth letter pointing out deficiencies in Walker’s answers and

3 No. 17-6078, Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.

production and asking her to produce additional documents by May 27. Walker did not respond

to this letter.

On May 31, the defendants’ counsel contacted Walker’s counsel over the phone in an

attempt to resolve the various discovery issues. During the call, Walker’s counsel agreed to

produce written responses to the defendants’ Requests for Production and to produce additional

responsive documents. On June 8, Walker finally provided responses to the defendants’

Requests for Production, but even these responses were deficient.

Between June 9 and June 28, Walker’s pattern of intransigence continued. During that

time, the defendants’ counsel sent numerous emails and had several phone calls with Walker’s

counsel in an effort to obtain additional responsive documents and answers to interrogatories to

which Walker had objected. When these efforts proved fruitless, on June 28, the defendants filed

a motion before the district court to compel Walker to respond. Walker did not respond to the

motion, which was subsequently granted on July 21. In granting the motion, the district court

ordered Walker to “(1) produce responsive documents to each of Defendants’ Requests for

Production or to confirm in writing that, following a good faith search, no responsive documents

exist; and (2) provide Defendants with the information sought in Defendants’ Interrogatories

Nos. 22 & 23” by August 4. DE 67, Order Granting Mot. to Compel, Page ID 1036. The order

concluded that Walker is “warned that, henceforth, failure to comply with proper discovery

requests, discovery obligations, or orders of this court will lead to dismissal of the complaint.”

Id.

On August 2, Walker produced additional documents to the defendants. Walker did not,

however, comply with the order to provide written confirmation that she had conducted a good

faith search and produced all responsive documents or the order to provide written responses to

4 No. 17-6078, Norris v. MK Holdings, Inc.

Interrogatories Nos. 22 & 23.

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