CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC. v. BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedJuly 12, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-01064
StatusUnknown

This text of CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC. v. BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC. (CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC. v. BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC. v. BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC., (S.D. Ind. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION

CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC., ) ) Plaintiff/ ) Counter Defendant ) ) v. ) No. 1:21-cv-01064-JPH-MKK ) BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC., ) ) Defendant/ ) Counter Claimant )

ORDER ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR SANCTIONS

Court orders must be followed. Parties who knowingly fail to do so proceed at their own peril. Here, in cross motions for sanctions of contempt, the parties accuse each other of deliberately failing to comply with a discovery order. Having considered the entire record and the parties' courses of conduct, the Court concludes that Clifton Jett Transport, Inc., ("CJT") violated the Court's orders by failing to produce records that it had been ordered to produce; that the conduct of CJT and its counsel, Benjamin Ellis, was objectively unreasonable and in flagrant disregard of the Court's orders; and that Barrette Outdoor Living, Inc., did not violate the Court's orders. Therefore, as explained in more detail below, Barrette's motion against CJT, dkt. [72] is GRANTED to the extent that Barrette is awarded its reasonable attorney's fees and costs as outlined in Section V of this Order. CJT's motion against Barrette, dkt. [127], is DENIED. I. Background

A. CJT's lawsuit against Barrette

CJT agreed to transport goods for Barrette for three years pursuant to an "Agreement for Transportation Service." Dkt. 85-1. Barrette closed its Indianapolis facility midway through the Agreement's three-year term. Dkt. 1- 1 at 4 (CJT's Complaint Aug. 22, 2021).1 In response, CJT sued Barrette for breach of contract. Id. at 5. CJT alleged that Barrette "breached the Agreement by failing to pay CJT the remaining value of the Agreement when it terminated the contract without cause." Id. at 5-6. CJT seeks to recover $370,003.26 in damages. Dkt. 125 at 2 (Statement of Claims and Damages). B. Barrette's discovery request to CJT for evidence of mitigation

Early in the case, Barrette served CJT with an interrogatory for information regarding "all steps Plaintiff has taken in an effort to mitigate any of [its] damages." Dkt. 73-1 at 11 (Interrog. No. 14). CJT objected to the Interrogatory as "overly broad, unduly burdensome" and "vague and ambiguous as to the term 'mitigate.'" Id. (CJT's response to Interrog. No. 14). CJT also responded that "it has performed work for AMAZON beginning in November 2020." Id. Barrette then tried, without success, to learn how much money CJT had earned from Amazon. See, e.g., dkt. 73-5 (Rule 30(b)(6) deposition). C. The Magistrate Judge's orders

1 CJT filed its Complaint in Marion Superior Court, dkt. 1-1, and Barrette later removed it to this Court, dkt. 1. The parties then had a discovery conference with the Magistrate Judge on May 23, 2022, to discuss Barrette's "communications and documents requests" to CJT. Dkt. 53. Following that conference, the Magistrate Judge

issued an order ruling that CJT's records relating to "damages, including profits, income statements, balance sheets, etc." were relevant to Barrette's mitigation defense and therefore discoverable. Id. at 1 (the May Order). The May Order did not set a specific deadline for CJT to produce those records but ordered that "production shall be expedited and occur as soon as reasonably possible." Dkt. 53 at 2. The May Order informed Barrette that it could raise the issue with the Court if it believed that production was "being unnecessarily delayed." Id.

Barrette took the Magistrate Judge up on this offer and on July 14, 2022, the parties appeared for another discovery conference. Dkt. 63. Barrette argued that in the nearly two months that had passed since the May Order, "CJT ha[d] not produced any documents relating to its alleged lost revenue and other damages, nor its subsequent work for Amazon." Dkt. 64 at 2. The Magistrate Judge ordered CJT to produce within seven days: (1) Documents showing CJT's revenues, expenses, and profits in 2019, 2020, 2021, and early 2022;

(2) Documents and other records relating to lost revenue or other damages suffered by CJT; and

(3) Documents relating to CJT's subsequent work for Amazon.

Id. (the July Order). The Magistrate Judge squarely rejected CJT's argument that it couldn't produce the records without Amazon's consent: "[t]he existence of a contractual obligation for CJT to seek Amazon's permission before releasing any documents does not preclude this Court from issuing an order requiring CJT to produce these otherwise admissible documents." Id. at 2–3.

The July Order further explained that CJT could designate materials as confidential according to the procedures laid out in the Protective Order. Id. (citing dkt. 42). Meanwhile, at the same discovery conference, CJT argued that Barrette had not satisfied its obligations with respect to CJT's request for "more detailed information about [Barrette's] discovery efforts." Id. at 3. Specifically, CJT argued that Barrette had "not confirmed whether text messages had been searched, what search terms were used, or whether any other custodians were

requested to provide any information." Id. In response, the July Order required Barrette to supplement its discovery responses within 14 days with "the following limited documents": (1) Confirmation whether text messages have been searched;

(2) Information regarding search terms used during the searching of text messages and computer files; and

(3) Information regarding the timing and parameters of searches of text messages, computer files, and physical documents.

Id. A few days later, CJT sought an extension of time to comply with the July Order's requirement to produce documents related to its work for Amazon because CJT was "working with Amazon’s counsel to secure authorization to release these documents." Dkt. 65 (July 22 motion for enlargement of time to produce Amazon documents). Barrette objected to CJT's request for additional time to comply with the

July Order. Dkt. 68. Barrette asked the Court to "sanction Plaintiff and its counsel for Plaintiff's blatant disregard for the Court's orders by ordering Plaintiff to immediately comply with the Court's Discovery Conference Order and to reimburse Barrette's attorneys' fees and costs incurred in compelling the production of the documents." Id. at 6. Then on August 1, 2022, explaining that it had just received authorization from Amazon to release "confidential" documents, CJT produced documents related to its work for Amazon that it "had gathered in May and

June." Dkt. 114 at 10. That production included screenshots of Amazon invoice lists, an Amazon "rate sheet," and CJT's contract with Amazon, dkt. 114-4, but no documents that showed how much Amazon had paid CJT during the relevant period. On August 2, Barrette sent CJT a verified letter that confirmed it had "searched for text messages" and "searched for text messages, emails, and other documents and files regarding the Agreement. . . from November 1, 2018 through September 28, 2020." Dkt. 128-9 at 1–2. The letter also explained

steps that Barrette had taken to search for records regarding "the Agreement, the performance of the Agreement, the closure of Defendant's Indianapolis facility, the closure's effect on the parties' Agreement, and Defendants requests for Plaintiff to continue to provide transportation services to Defendant." Id. at 2–3. The Magistrate Judge granted CJT's motion for an enlargement of time

on August 8, 2022, giving CJT until August 9 to produce the Amazon documents. Dkt. 71 at 3. The August 9, 2022, production deadline came and went with no additional Amazon documents produced by CJT. See dkt. 74 at 9.

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Bluebook (online)
CLIFTON JETT TRANSPORT, INC. v. BARRETTE OUTDOOR LIVING, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clifton-jett-transport-inc-v-barrette-outdoor-living-inc-insd-2023.