Endurance Freight Logistics, LLC and Glad Rents, Inc. v. Jetonga Reddick

2021 Ark. App. 470, 638 S.W.3d 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 1, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 470 (Endurance Freight Logistics, LLC and Glad Rents, Inc. v. Jetonga Reddick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Endurance Freight Logistics, LLC and Glad Rents, Inc. v. Jetonga Reddick, 2021 Ark. App. 470, 638 S.W.3d 859 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 470 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION II 2023.08.01 09:25:19 -05'00' No. CV-21-25 2023.003.20244

ENDURANCE FREIGHT LOGISTICS, Opinion Delivered December 1, 2021 LLC AND GLAD RENTS, INC. APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, V. TWELFTH DIVISION [NO. 60CV-19-3744]

JETONGA REDDICK APPELLEE HONORABLE ALICE S. GRAY, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

This appeal concerns the circuit court’s October 2020 order imposing sanctions for

discovery violations. In summary, appellants provided extremely tardy and incomplete

responses to interrogatories and requests for production of documents. The circuit court

struck appellants’ answer to the complaint, which resulted in a default judgment on the issue

of liability. Arkansas Rule of Appellate Procedure-Civil 2(a)(4) (2020) provides that an

appeal may be taken from an order that strikes out an answer or any part of an answer.

Appellants argue on appeal that this was too harsh a penalty to impose on either of them.

We affirm.

In April 2019, appellee, Jetonga Reddick, was injured when the car she was driving

collided with a commercial truck on University Avenue in Little Rock. Donald Martin

was driving the commercial truck for Endurance Freight Logistics, LLC, a company owned by Glad Rents, Inc., which provides party-equipment rentals. In May 2019, Reddick filed

a personal-injury lawsuit in Pulaski County Circuit Court and claimed that Endurance, Glad

Rents, and Martin were responsible for the accident and her resulting damages. Martin is a

resident of Missouri, and Endurance and Glad Rents are companies based in Missouri. In

July 2019, Benjamin Brenner, an Arkansas attorney, moved to dismiss Reddick’s complaint

on behalf of Endurance, Glad Rents, and Martin. Brenner had been hired as local counsel

for purposes of this litigation, and Brenner collaborated with the defendants’ Missouri

attorneys, Katie Battisti and Jay Morris.

On August 16, 2019, Reddick served discovery requests on the defending parties. 1

On September 16, Brenner requested that the circuit court stay their obligation to respond

to discovery until after resolution of their motion to dismiss. On September 27, the circuit

court denied the request to stay the discovery-response time. On October 1, Reddick’s

attorney sent an email to opposing counsel asking for responses to discovery, which were

overdue, but no response was forthcoming.

On October 4, Reddick moved to compel the defending parties to answer the

propounded discovery requests and cited Ark. R. Civ. P. 37 as a basis to impose sanctions.

On October 7, the circuit court conducted a hearing on the pending motion to dismiss,

which was denied. Also on October 7, Brenner sent Reddick an email stating that he was

1 Reddick served 51 interrogatories and 150 requests for production to Endurance and Glad Rents that covered all aspects of the accident itself, their driver, company policies and procedures, company records, insurance, expert testimony, lay testimony, etcetera. Reddick served separate interrogatories and requests for production to Martin. Ultimately, Martin was not sanctioned for his failure to properly respond to discovery. Only the companies, Endurance and Glad Rents, were sanctioned, so our discussion on appeal about the imposition of sanctions is limited to Endurance and Glad Rents.

2 “working on” getting answers and responses to discovery. On October 16, Reddick sent

Brenner an email asking when to expect discovery responses, to which Brenner replied that

he would check. The defending parties filed an answer to Reddick’s complaint on October

22. On October 28, Reddick emailed again to check on the progress of providing discovery

responses. On October 29, Brennan replied that he would again check. On November

11, Reddick replied that it was understood that Brennan was waiting on the “main office,”

but responses needed to be provided, or the motion to compel would have to be pursued.

At Reddick’s request, on November 22, the circuit court entered an order

compelling the defending parties to deliver their discovery responses to Reddick’s attorney

within ten business days. Brenner was provided a copy of this order but did not respond.

On December 11, Reddick moved for sanctions, up to and including striking of the

defendants’ answer, for failure to comply with the November 22 order. Reddick’s counsel

stated that he had reached out to opposing counsel by correspondence, telephone, and email,

but got no response whatsoever, and discovery had been pending since August 16.

On January 16, 2020, H. Barret Marshall, Jr., an Arkansas attorney, entered an

appearance on behalf of the defending parties. On January 22, 2020, Katherine Battisti and

James C. Morris (both Missouri attorneys) requested to be admitted pro hac vice, which the

circuit court granted on January 29. Also on January 29, Battisti, Morris, and Marshall filed

an objection to sanctions being imposed. They contended that Brenner had failed to keep

them apprised of the events in this litigation, which constituted excusable neglect in

responding to discovery; they requested at least ten additional days in which to respond to

discovery. Reddick filed a response the same day, opposing the request for more time and

3 asking that the court enter sanctions. Reddick disagreed that Missouri counsel were

unaware of the pending discovery and pointed to their numerous interactions (mainly by

email) with Brennan that supported the opposite conclusion. This, Reddick claimed, did

not constitute excusable neglect but rather failure to attend to business.

The circuit court convened a telephone conference on January 29 during which

Reddick complained that, even now, not one document had been sent to her by the

defending parties. The Missouri attorneys asked for more time to restore their firm’s

reputation in Arkansas. The circuit court decided to delay consideration of the motion for

sanctions. In March, Endurance and Glad Rents provided 300 pages of documents and

written discovery responses, although they promised to supplement with more. A week

after receiving discovery, Reddick communicated that there were numerous deficiencies.

In May, the circuit court set deadlines for pretrial matters over the next eight months

in preparation for a week-long jury trial. In June, the circuit court conducted a hearing on

the pending motion for sanctions. Defendants’ counsel stated an open commitment to work

toward fulfilling discovery and moving the case along. In the end, the circuit court decided

to postpone a decision on the motion for sanctions until it convened another hearing.

The parties agreed to meet July 30-31 in Missouri to depose five people associated

with the defendants (owners and employees). One of those persons was Glad Rents’ general

manager, Craig Chambers, whose answers during his deposition demonstrated that multiple

documents such as drivers’ logs, invoices, load documentation, and an audit “would be” in

the company files but had not been provided; that photographs Martin had taken at the

accident scene had not been provided; that a traffic citation Martin had been issued in 2018

4 had not been provided; and that a department of transportation audit had been conducted

with a negative outcome, which had also not been provided.

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2021 Ark. App. 470, 638 S.W.3d 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/endurance-freight-logistics-llc-and-glad-rents-inc-v-jetonga-reddick-arkctapp-2021.