Ellis v. Salt Lake City Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedApril 15, 2022
Docket2:17-cv-00245
StatusUnknown

This text of Ellis v. Salt Lake City Corporation (Ellis v. Salt Lake City Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Salt Lake City Corporation, (D. Utah 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF UTAH

MARTHA ELLIS, MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DENYING MOTION TO QUASH Plaintiff, OR LIMIT SUBPOENA DUCES TECUM

v.

SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION, a Case No. 2:17-cv-00245-JNP-JCB political subdivision of the State of Utah; BRIAN DALE, an individual; KARL LIEB, an individual; and ROBERT McMICKEN, an individual, District Judge Jill N. Parrish

Defendants. Magistrate Judge Jared C. Bennett

District Judge Jill N. Parrish referred this case to Magistrate Judge Paul M. Warner under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A).1 Due to Judge Warner’s retirement, Magistrate Judge Jared C. Bennett was assigned the case.2 Before the court is Plaintiff Martha Ellis’s (“Ms. Ellis”) motion to quash or limit a subpoena served on Jacqualin Friend Peterson (“Ms. Peterson”) under Fed. R. Civ. P. 45.3 For the reasons stated below, the court denies Ms. Ellis’s motion. BACKGROUND On January 11, 2022, Ms. Ellis served Defendants Salt Lake City Corporation, Brian Dale, Karl Lieb, and Robert McMicken (collectively, “Defendants”) with her Supplemental

1 ECF No. 19. 2 ECF No. 95. 3 ECF No. 141. Initial Disclosures in which Ms. Ellis revealed that her prior attorney, Ms. Peterson, would testify as a fact witness. These Supplemental Initial Disclosures provided that Ms. Peterson will testify: (1) “as to the facts and circumstances she personally observed at the time of Ms. Ellis’[s] termination and, more specifically, her efforts to engage in an interactive dialogue with [Salt Lake City] regarding Ms. Ellis’s request for reasonable accommodation”; (2) “that Ms. Ellis did not reject a reasonable accommodation prior to her termination”; and (3) “that Ms. Peterson had requested a meeting to ask questions about the reasonableness of a proposed accommodation one day prior to the wrongful termination.”4 When Defendants received Ms. Ellis’s Supplemental Initial Disclosures and saw that Ms. Peterson was going to testify about whether Ms. Ellis had rejected a “reasonable

accommodation,” they understood that to mean that Ms. Peterson was going to provide her opinion that even though the Defendants had offered Ms. Ellis accommodations for her purported disability, those accommodations were not “reasonable.” Consequently, Defendants believed that they were entitled to discover the bases for Ms. Peterson’s testimony. Based on this understanding, Defendants’ counsel asked Ms. Ellis a series of questions at her deposition specifically seeking information that Ms. Peterson had communicated to Ms. Ellis about the reasonableness of Defendants’ offered accommodations and the process to discuss accommodations. Specifically, Defendants’ counsel asked: Question: Did Ms. Peterson tell you that she believed the accommodations offered by the city were not reasonable?

Answer: Yes, I do believe she believed that.

4 ECF No. 143-1 at 3 of 3 (emphasis added). Question: What about them did she believe was not reasonable?

Answer: I believe she thought the whole proceeding was not reasonable because we couldn’t engage in a legitimate conversation about the limitations that the city’s mental health care provider put on me held up against what norms have been in the fire department and what was being offered.

Question: You mean because the city was engaging you in writing?

Answer: Well, yeah, that’s part of it. . . . But, clearly, there were miscons [sic] and she was bearing witness to me, trying to get a legitimate process going, and she never felt like the process was ever really legitimized because there were so many things slipping through the cracks with just the e-mail communications. And so it was very atypical than the other ADA accommodations discussions I think she had been privilege to engage in prior.

Question: Did she tell you that it was very different than the other ADA discussions she had had?

Answer: Yes, she did say that this does not—this is not normal, that normally people are much more reasonable and willing to sit down and actually come to some understanding about how to preserve the employee, if it’s possible.

Question: Did she tell you why she did not believe the accommodations offered by the city were reasonable?

Answer: You know . . . she probably did. I mean, we spoke at length about all of this, but I . . . will defer to her because she’s going to say in her testimony—I mean—is going to be based on her memory and her recollection of those exchanges, not mine.

Question: I understand, but I’m asking you for your memory and recollection of your exchanges with her.

Answer: She did not believe that the process was legitimate, and she understood that . . . the actual accommodation that was initially given by Chief Lieb, in comparison to what Gail Szykula put forth—I think that she truly made me feel like—like the process wasn’t anything like she had ever experienced before.

Question: Did she recommend that you not accept the accommodation offered by the city?

Answer: No, she—it was not about that. Those discussions were 100 percent between myself and Gail, because it was about my mental health, it wasn’t . . . about the actual procedure as much as it was, well . . . I stand corrected. That is not exactly what I meant to say.

What I mean to say is she was watching the procedure and saying the procedure does not feel like something I’ve ever seen before. . . . [S]he has seen lots of people come to the table and talk about these things in a reasonable and fruitful and productive way, so she was looking at that aspect of it. But she never told me to decline any of the offers. . . . [T]hat was really more for Gail to measure and . . . evaluate than an attorney.

Question: So she wasn’t telling you whether or not an accommodation was reasonable?

Answer: . . . . She was looking at what Gail had asked for. She was looking at my mental health issues and, yes, she felt like there was a gross miscommunication because the—what was offered with the shadowing position was very incongruent with, you know, the framework under which Gail had requested the accommodation. So her concern was that we need to get here so we’re actually talking to each other and clarifying so that we’re not completely misfiring over each other and spinning our wheels in a process that is not going to be productive.5

Conspicuously absent from the testimony quoted above is an objection based on attorney- client privilege and an instruction to the witness not to answer.6 Ms. Ellis’s counsel stated at oral argument on the instant motion that he declined to object during the deposition because, in his view, Ms. Ellis did not reveal any privileged information. Based on Ms. Ellis’s Supplemental Initial Disclosures and her deposition testimony, Defendants served Ms. Peterson with a subpoena (“Subpoena”) under Fed. R. Civ. P. 45. The Subpoena sought: (1) “[a]ll documents and communications related to Ms. Ellis’s separation and/or termination from employment with Salt Lake City,” and (2) “[a]ll documents related to

5 ECF No. 141-4 at 254-58 of 318. 6 Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(c)(2) (allowing an attorney to instruct a witness not to answer a deposition question to preserve a privilege). any request for accommodation made by Ms. Ellis to Salt Lake City, including any documents or communications from Salt Lake City pertaining to or responding to such requests.”7 Ms.

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Ellis v. Salt Lake City Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-salt-lake-city-corporation-utd-2022.