Dorn v. Vivint, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedFebruary 16, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-00258
StatusUnknown

This text of Dorn v. Vivint, Inc. (Dorn v. Vivint, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorn v. Vivint, Inc., (M.D. Ala. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE

MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ALABAMA, NORTHERN DIVISION

TIFFANY DORN, et al., ) individually and on behalf ) of all others similarly ) situated, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) CIVIL ACTION NO. v. ) 2:19cv258-MHT ) (WO) VIVINT, INC., ) ) Defendant. )

OPINION AND ORDER Now pending before the court are the plaintiffs’ motion for leave to supplement the reply brief to their motion for class certification with the supplemental expert report of Lindsay Gill and defendant Vivint, Inc.’s motion to exclude the expert report and testimony of Lindsay Gill. For the reasons below, the court will grant the plaintiffs’ motion for leave to supplement and deny without prejudice Vivint’s motion to exclude. I. BACKGROUND The plaintiffs disclosed the expert report of

Certified Fraud Examiner Gill in compliance with the deadlines in the uniform scheduling order. Vivint was provided with a copy of this report and deposed Gill. Gill noted in her report and stated during her

deposition that her analysis was based on the limited information the company had disclosed and that she required additional data to complete her work. The

plaintiffs requested this information from Vivint as part of their third set of discovery requests. The company objected to the request, and the plaintiffs subsequently filed a motion to compel responses. The

parties eventually reached an agreement under which the company agreed to produce the requested data, but only for a subset of its accounts. The company provided these data to Gill and, the following day, filed a

motion to exclude her expert report and testimony.

2 Several weeks later, the plaintiffs submitted to Vivint an updated version of Gill’s expert report,

which had been revised based on the additional customer data. The company deposed Gill again regarding the contents of the supplemental report. The plaintiffs also filed the motion to supplement now before the

court, seeking to include Gill’s supplemental report in support of their motion for class certification. The company opposes this motion.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 dictates that the parties must disclose their testifying experts and

sets the deadlines and requirements for doing so. A party’s expert report must include “a complete statement of all opinions the witness will express and the basis and reasons for them.” Fed. R. Civ. P.

26(a)(2)(B)(i). Under Rule 26(e), parties have a duty to supplement their expert reports “in a timely manner

3 if the party learns that in some material respect the disclosure ... is incomplete or incorrect.” Fed. R.

Civ. P. 26(e)(1)(A). These “additions or changes” “must be disclosed by the time the party's pretrial disclosures under Rule 26(a)(3) are due.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(2).

If a party violates Rule 26(a) or (e), Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(c) allows the court to prevent the party from using the expert evidence “unless the

failure was substantially justified or is harmless.” See also OFS Fitel, LLC v. Epstein, Becker and Green, P.C., 549 F.3d 1344, 1363 (11th Cir. 2008). The court has “broad discretion” to exclude untimely expert

analysis, even if the party has designated the analysis as a “supplemental report.” Guevara v. NCL (Bahama) Ltd., 920 F.3d 710, 718 (11th Cir. 2019).

4 III. DISCUSSION Vivint argues that Gill’s updated report cannot

accurately be considered a supplement because it contains new opinions based on new methodology. The company says that the report should instead be considered an untimely effort to shore up Gill’s

analysis long after the deadline for expert disclosures passed. And this untimeliness, according to the company, is self-inflicted: plaintiffs should have

asked for the relevant data earlier, before Gill produced her original report. Rule 26(e) does not give a party license to supplement a previously filed expert report merely to

remedy a deficiency or address criticisms. Supplementation is appropriate “for the narrow purpose of correcting inaccuracies or adding information that was not available at the time of the initial report.”

Companhia Energetica Potiguar v. Caterpillar Inc., No. 14cv24277, 2016 WL 3102225, at *6 (S.D. Fla. June 2,

5 2016) (Goodman, M.J.). Courts must carefully distinguish between this sort of “true supplementation”

and mere “gamesmanship.” Gallagher v. Southern Source Packaging, LLC, 568 F. Supp. 2d 624, 631 (E.D.N.C. 2008) (Dever, J.). It is clear this supplemental report is not the

result of gamesmanship. Indeed, the major source of delay in this case has been Vivint, not the plaintiffs. The company drew out the discovery process for months,

leaving plaintiffs without access to the data relevant to Gill’s second report until after the deadline for expert disclosures had passed. Receiving this additional information certainly did not give Gill

carte blanche to overhaul completely her report or fundamentally change her conclusions. However, the supplemental report offered by the plaintiffs merely builds on and refines the conclusions of the initial

report based on Gill’s analysis of the new data. Because this is exactly the type of additional

6 information that courts have found to be acceptable as supplementation, see Guevara v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd., 920

F.3d 710, 719 (11th Cir. 2019) (finding that the district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing portions of a supplemental report that “incorporated or relied upon [the other party’s] late discovery”); Deere

& Co. v. FIMCO Inc., 260 F. Supp. 3d 830, 837 (W.D. Ky. 2017) (Russell, J.) (holding that a supplement containing over 700 pages of new evidence was

acceptable because it did not change the earlier opinions or theories), the plaintiffs were required to produce it under Rule 26(e). It is true that, as Vivint points out, the

plaintiffs failed to request the data Gill relies on in her supplemental analysis before her initial report was due. However, the court is convinced that this was neither mismanagement of the case nor a deliberate

effort to spring new evidence on the company after the deadline for expert reports had passed. Instead, the

7 delay is the predictable result of Vivint’s failure to respond to discovery requests in a timely and thorough

manner. The plaintiffs have produced numerous communications with opposing counsel in which they objected to the company’s slow and deficient discovery responses in the months before Gill produced her

original report, revealing a pattern of foot-dragging by the company that undermined the plaintiffs’ ability to identify and obtain the information they needed.

There is no indication that the plaintiffs were dilatory in trying to obtain the data used in Gill’s supplemental report: they requested it far before the close of discovery, and the company delayed responding

for so long that the plaintiffs filed a motion to compel.

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Related

OFS FITEL, LLC v. Epstein, Becker and Green, PC
549 F.3d 1344 (Eleventh Circuit, 2008)
Pablo Guevara v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd.
920 F.3d 710 (Eleventh Circuit, 2019)
Deere & Co. v. FIMCO Inc.
260 F. Supp. 3d 830 (W.D. Kentucky, 2017)
Abdulla v. Klosinski
898 F. Supp. 2d 1348 (S.D. Georgia, 2012)
Rockhill-Anderson v. Deere & Co.
994 F. Supp. 2d 1224 (M.D. Alabama, 2014)

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