Desrosiers v. Mag Industrial Automation Systems, LLC

675 F. Supp. 2d 598, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120931
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 23, 2009
DocketCivil WDQ-07-2253
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 675 F. Supp. 2d 598 (Desrosiers v. Mag Industrial Automation Systems, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Desrosiers v. Mag Industrial Automation Systems, LLC, 675 F. Supp. 2d 598, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120931 (D. Md. 2009).

Opinion

SUSAN K. GAUVEY, United States Magistrate Judge.

Dear Counsel:

Pending before the court is the scope of permissible discovery of other incidents involving G & L products in this product liability case. See Motion to Modify Discovery Order or, in the Alternative, for Extension of Time. (Paper No. 109). For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the motion.

Plaintiffs brought this case pleading negligence, breach of warranty, and strict liability counts. (Paper No. 4-2). Specifically, plaintiffs assert that decedent “was operating near the point of operation of the Defendants’ unguarded and unsafe machine tool product [the HBM Model No. 340-T] and was caused to encounter the whirling shaft of [the machine.]” Plaintiffs allege that the machine was without requisite safety device or adequate warning. (Paper No. 4-2, ¶¶ 3, 5-7).

Plaintiffs further describe the subject incident as follows: “Mr. Desrosiers’ clothing became entangled in the unguarded rotating spindle of a G & L Model 340-T Horizontal Boring and Milling Machine. The decedent was reeled into the rotating shaft of the G & L product and he was killed. This action focuses upon the unguarded rotating shaft and upon how, had a guard or another known safety device been used to preclude Mr. Desrosiers’ contact with the rotating spindle, or to arrest the spindle rotation in the event of human contact, Mr. Desrosiers would be alive today.” (Paper No. 122, 2).

Defendants further describe the incident, stating that: “Mr. Desrosiers, instead of using the available safety device, the draw key, to hold a tool in place in the spindle, as he should have, instead inserted the drift pin into the draw key slot. The drift pin in this instance was a nine inch piece of metal that was wedge shaped and came to a point at the end. The spindle was approximately three inches in diameter so the nine inch drift pin extended from the surface of the spindle several inches on either side.” (Paper No. 120, 2).

For purposes of determining the proper scope of discovery (and in the absence of any factual stipulations or findings), the Court shall consider the facts as alleged by plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs served a request for production in conjunction with a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition asking for documents regarding 11 open product liability cases referred to in G & L congressional testimony and documents related to occurrences involving entanglement of clothing or body parts of operators and bystanders in the spindle or rotating shaft of a G & L horizontal boring machine. (Paper No. 120, 3-4).

Defendants objected to the production of these documents on the grounds of irrelevance, attorney/client privilege, self critical analysis privilege, and work product doctrine, but failed to provide any privilege logs or to provide any legal or factual support for its irrelevance and other objections.

By Letter Order dated September 29, 2009, in conjunction with a ruling on the scope of the Sitterly deposition, I ordered defendants to prepare a privilege log on all responsive documents withheld on the basis of privilege. Thereafter, defendants filed a Motion to Modify Discovery Order or in the Alternative for Extension of Time (Paper No. 109), stating inter alia, that preparation of the privilege log (then underway) was extraordinarily time consuming and that many of the documents were completely irrelevant to the case. (Id.). While defendants had failed to raise and *601 support a burdensomeness objection or support the irrelevance objection previously, the briefing (and argument) suggested that indeed the request was possibly impermissibly broad, imposing a burden on defendants unjustified by any appropriate definition of relevance. Defense counsel can be faulted for his seriatim raising of objections-resulting in delay in the litigation. At the same time, plaintiffs’ counsel’s failure to reasonably tailor its requests necessarily engenders defendants’ objection. Why for example, plaintiffs’ counsel would press for documents relating to cases of asbestos exposure in this case is entirely mystifying and unsupportable.

By Order dated December 1, 2009, the Court ordered, for all of the above referenced cases or occurrences, that defendants provide the make and model of the machine involved, description of the incident and whether the incident was substantially similar to the subject incident, and if not, why not. Defendants did so. (Paper No. 120). 1 Plaintiffs filed a memorandum on the issue, but despite the Court’s invitation to address the specific incidents that defendants had identified on the substantial similarity question, plaintiffs declined to do so. (Paper No. 122).

Analysis

This Court faced a very similar discovery issue several years ago and decides this issue under the framework and authorities set out in United Oil Company, Inc. v. Parts Associates, Inc., 227 F.R.D. 404 (D.Md.2005). 2

The burden is on the party resisting discovery to explain specifically why its objections, including those based on irrelevance, are proper given the broad and liberal construction of federal discovery rules. Id. at 411. By contrast, at trial it is the offering party that bears the burden of demonstrating relevance, including, in this context, the “substantial similarity” of other incidents, claims, or lawsuits. Id. at 411-12. However, when challenged, threshold or apparent relevance must be established and, if established, the burden shifts back to the resisting party to show “lack of relevance by demonstrating that the requested discovery (1) does not come within the broad scope of relevance as defined under Fed. R.CivP. 26(b)(1), or (2) is of such marginal relevance that the potential harm occasioned by discovery would outweigh the ordinary presumption of broad discovery.” United Oil, 227 F.R.D. at 412.

Here, defendants failed initially to explain their boilerplate relevance objection; only belatedly explaining when the burden of preparation of a privilege log on what they clearly perceived as irrelevant incidents became apparent. The Court might have found the objection waived had not some of the requests appeared on first glance to lack even threshold relevance.

Unlike some other courts, see, e.g., Barcenas v. Ford Motor Co., Civ. No. 03-4644-RMWE, 2004 WL 2827249, *5, 2004 U.S. Dist LEXIS 25279, *8 (N.D.Cal. Dec. 9, 2004), this Court does not impose on the requesting party the burden of establishing the substantial similarity of the requested incidents and lawsuits subject at the discovery stage of the litigation. That is a very rigorous process, often necessitating expert testimony. Ordinarily, that can and should be reserved for trial, or by *602 motion in limine. At the same time, this Court is not prepared to compel discovery of incidents which bear no apparent relationship to the issues of “notice, the magnitude of, the danger involved, the opposing party’s ability to correct a known defect; the product’s lack of safety for its intended uses ...

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675 F. Supp. 2d 598, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/desrosiers-v-mag-industrial-automation-systems-llc-mdd-2009.