ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2018
Docket17-6124
StatusUnpublished

This text of ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC (ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC) 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
ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

Nos. 17-6067 / 17-6123 / 17-6124 / 17-6125

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED ECIMOS, LLC and ELECTRICAL CONTROLS, ) Jun 01, 2018 INC., ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiffs-Appellants / Cross-Appellees, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF ) TENNESSEE NORTEK GLOBAL HVAC, LLC f/k/a NORTEK, ) LLC, LOGICAL SYSTEMS, INC., LOGICAL ) SYSTEMS, LLC, GAIL WAYNE ROANE, ) MICHAEL GRAY, and DAVID TESLUK ) ) Defendants-Appellees / Cross-Appellants.

Before: BOGGS and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; HOOD, District Judge.*

HOOD, District Judge. At first glance, this case appears complicated. It languished for

years in the district court as the magistrate judge and district judge held countless hearings and

conferences and issued dozens of rulings. All told, this case sprawled over more than 250 docket

entries. But a closer look reveals that the core issue boils down to a simple life lesson: play by the

rules. This fundamental concept comes with an often-unpopular corollary: those who fail to follow

the rules face consequences. One need not search far and wide for a real-world application of this

principle. Drivers who exceed posted speed limits know all too well its importance.

* The Honorable Joseph M. Hood, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Kentucky, sitting by designation. Case Nos. 17-6067 / 6123 / 6124 / 6125, ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC, LLC, et. al.

Federal court is no exception. Especially here, the rules matter. Parties are obliged to

comply, and when they don’t, they risk repercussions. Such consequences often come by way of

sanctions imposed by the district court. Possible sanctions include: admonition, censure,

disqualification, attorneys’ fees, and dismissal. In fashioning these penalties, district judges enjoy

broad discretion, but their power is not unlimited. For minor offenses, a judge cannot dismiss an

action with prejudice. And a fee award must be reasonable. Put simply, the punishment must fit

the crime.

Plaintiffs-Appellants ECIMOS, LLC and Electrical Controls, Inc. (collectively,

“ECIMOS”) argue that the district court was too harsh when it dismissed this case with prejudice

and levied tens of thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees. But the district court did so only after

ECIMOS failed time and again to comply with discovery rules and court orders. Because ECIMOS

declined to play by the rules, despite being told several times to do so, we affirm.

I.

At one point this was an intellectual-property case. More than two decades ago, ECIMOS

went into business with Defendant-Appellee Nortek Global HVAC, LLC (“Nortek”). ECIMOS

had developed an integrated process-control system that contained valuable proprietary software

and hardware. For fifteen years, ECIMOS licensed the system to Nortek, which used the system

in its HVAC manufacturing process.

Over time, the business relationship soured, and the acrimony began. ECIMOS alleges

that Nortek hired Logical Systems, Inc. (“Logical”), a company employing former ECIMOS

employees with intimate knowledge of the control system to modify and adopt the control system

for Nortek’s products. Wanting to protect its intellectual property, ECIMOS terminated Nortek’s

-2- Case Nos. 17-6067 / 6123 / 6124 / 6125, ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC, LLC, et. al.

right to use the control system and notified Nortek that the modification of the control system

violated the licensing agreement. ECIMOS filed suit in Tennessee state court against Nortek,

Logical, and the individual defendants in May 2013. Defendants removed the case to federal court

in September 2014 after ECIMOS added a federal cause of action to its complaint.

That is about the time this case ceased to be about copyright infringement and started taking

form as a discovery dispute. Nortek and the other defendants began complaining that ECIMOS

was not turning over documents, produced items in improper forms, and was not responsive to

requests. So Nortek filed a motion to compel in July 2015. Over the next month, defendants made

three additional motions to compel.

The motions to compel contained two key issues: (1) ECIMOS’s failure to provide

complete responses to specific interrogatories and to requests for production of documents, and

(2) deficiencies in the form of production by ECIMOS. Documents from ECIMOS allegedly came

in confusing and jumbled formats without proper labeling. Defendants also claimed that ECIMOS

did not make efforts to remedy problems with documents. ECIMOS responded to three of the

motions, but not the fourth, arguing that the interrogatories were unduly burdensome and intended

to harass. At a hearing in front of the magistrate judge, ECIMOS argued that it had complied with

discovery rules because (1) it produced more than 18,000 emails and (2) it was willing to allow all

defendants to rifle through its offices to search for the documents requested. The magistrate judge

disagreed and granted, in whole or in part, all four motions to compel.

Among her numerous rulings, the magistrate judge ordered ECIMOS to (1) supplement

responses to interrogatories and document requests, (2) re-produce or produce documents and all

email correspondence in specified, usable formats with Bates Numbers, (3) produce a sample of

100 emails to defendants with attachments and searchable text, (4) properly mark specific

-3- Case Nos. 17-6067 / 6123 / 6124 / 6125, ECIMOS, LLC v. Nortek Global HVAC, LLC, et. al.

documents as confidential, as opposed to labeling entire files confidential, and (5) disclose to

defendants the search methodology used to locate documents responsive to defendants’ requests.

The magistrate judge further cautioned: “Plaintiffs are warned that, henceforth, failure to comply

with proper discovery requests, discovery obligations, or orders of this court will lead to dismissal

of their complaint.”

Finally, the magistrate judge awarded attorneys’ fees. Defendants’ counsel filed affidavits

outlining their hours and fees. ECIMOS filed no objections. The magistrate judge found the

requests reasonable and granted the following fees: $42,142.83 to Nortek, $13,669 to Logical, and

$7,526.21 to David Tesluk. Again, ECIMOS did not object to the fee amounts but instead objected

only to the requirement that the fees be paid within twenty-eight days. The district court affirmed

the magistrate judge’s ruling.

ECIMOS struggled to comply with the magistrate judge’s order. The email sample from

ECIMOS did not contain the proper attachments, had illegible documents, and was missing

metadata. Counsel discussed the issues during two teleconferences, but ECIMOS cancelled a third

teleconference. Nortek and Logical then complained that ECIMOS failed to supplement its written

responses to discovery requests, and that ECIMOS’s counsel failed to respond to defendants’

request for clarification. ECIMOS’s counsel then withdrew from the case. That same day,

ECIMOS sent defendants a DVD containing about 18,000 pages of documents—three times what

ECIMOS had previously produced.

Nortek and its codefendants filed the first motion to dismiss as a discovery sanction in

September 2015, arguing that ECIMOS had not complied with the court’s orders. The district

court then held two telephonic status conferences regarding that motion in late September and

early October.

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