F.C. Cycles International, Inc. v. Fila Sport, S.p.A.

184 F.R.D. 64, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21878, 1998 WL 901571
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 12, 1998
DocketCivil No. AMD-96-107
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 184 F.R.D. 64 (F.C. Cycles International, Inc. v. Fila Sport, S.p.A.) 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
F.C. Cycles International, Inc. v. Fila Sport, S.p.A., 184 F.R.D. 64, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21878, 1998 WL 901571 (D. Md. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

GAUVEY, United States Magistrate Judge.

Pending before the undersigned is Plaintiffs Motion to Compel Production of Allegedly Privileged Documents and Deposition Testimony.1

A hearing was held on this motion on Tuesday, October 27, 1998, and the Court invited additional submissions due on Wednesday, October 29, 1998, and Tuesday, November 3, 1998.

A review of the pretrial history of this case provides an important backdrop to the current discovery disputes and the Court’s rulings thereon.

Pretrial Scheduling

On May 15, 1996, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(b) and Local Rule 103.9, the Court entered a Scheduling Order, jointly proposed by the parties, to govern the pretrial management of this case. (Paper No. 20). That Order provided in part for the close of non-expert discovery on November 15, 1997, the designation of expert witnesses by both parties on December 15, 1997, the exchange of witness reports on March 15, 1998, a discovery deadline of May 15, 1998, the requests for admission on June 15, 1998, and filing of dispositive pretrial motions on April 15, 1998. The Order further provided that the schedule would not be changed except for “good cause.”

By Order dated September 29, 1997, based on stipulation of the parties, all of the above dates were extended by 90 days. (Paper No. 74).2

As a result of a January 14, 1998 status conference, further changes were made in the Scheduling Order, most pertinently providing for the close of non-expert discovery on May 13, 1998; designation of expert witnesses on May 15, 1998; exchange of expert reports on July 24, 1998; a discovery deadline of September 8, 1998; request for admissions deadline of October 8, 1998; and dispositive pretrial motion deadline of December 7, 1998. The trial date of April 5, 1999 was set.3 (Paper No. 100). At that status conference and consistently thereafter, the Court has stated that the dispositive pretrial motion deadline and trial date were fixed.

On May 26, 1998, Fila requested that the designation and exchange of expert witness reports be collapsed into a single, extended deadline of July 24, 1998. (Paper No. 115).

On July 21, 1998, both parties requested a further extension of the deadlines: the designation of expert witnesses and exchange of reports to August 24, 1998, discovery dead[67]*67line to October 8, 1998, and requests for admissions deadline to October 15,1998, with response to requests for admissions due November 9,1998.

On September 22, 1998, Fila moved to substitute Paul Mark Sandler, Freishtat & Sandler, Jeffrey J. Greenbaum, Mark E. Duckstein and Philip R. White as its counsel in place of Lawrence H. Wechsler, S. Robert Sutton and Janis, Sehuelke & Wechsler and Harley I. Lewin, Mitchell C. Stein, G. Roxanne Elings, Richard B. Verner and Lewin & Layton, P.C.

On October 5, 1998, three days before the expert discovery deadline, new counsel for Fila requested that the deadline for completion of expert discovery and the service of requests for admission be extended for 45 days, which F.C. Cycles vigorously opposed. By Order dated October 7, 1998, the undersigned extended the discovery deadline to October 22, 1998, the service of requests for admission to October 29, 1998, and the response to requests for admission to November 16, 1998, to afford a limited courtesy to new counsel without affecting the dispositive pretrial motion deadline or trial date.

• While both parties have requested modifications to the pretrial schedule, Fila has been responsible for more of the pretrial extensions and certainly, its October 5 request for an extension of the pretrial deadlines (which the Court granted in part) has resulted in an extraordinarily tight pretrial schedule, even before consideration of the multiple, additional discovery requests Fila has now made.

Discovery Disputes

There have been a significant number of discovery motions filed. To date, the Court has granted in part all three motions filed by F.C. Cycles.4 On the other hand, to date the Court has denied three of Fila’s motions and granted in part only one of Fila’s motions.5

Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel Production of Allegedly Privileged Documents and Deposition Testimony

The plaintiff requests that the Court compel the production of allegedly privileged documents listed on the defendant’s privilege log as document Nos. 8, 26, 27, 28, 29 and any other withheld documents discussing or mentioning the value of F.C. Cycles’ license, the possible use of the license as a leverage tool against Mr. Mordo or GMS in any way, or any link between F.C. Cycles’ license and GMS, Fila USA or Fila Canada; that the Court compel the deposition testimony of Kenneth Tabler, Luigi Gregotti, and Stan Martindell concerning the contents of those communications and related subjects; and that the Court compel the production of any other documents and testimony the existence of which is revealed in either the written communications or the further deposition testimony of Tabler, Gregotti, or Martindell.

Factual Background

Pursuant to its claim of improper termination of its license, F.C. Cycles issued document requests to Fila seeking all documents mentioning F.C. Cycles, its principal owner, Alex Mordo, or Gabriel A. Mordo & Sons Ltd. (GMS), a former distributor of Fila products in Canada of which Mr. Mordo is also a principal. Discovery was undertaken pursuant to a Confidentiality Stipulation and Protective Order signed on December 30, 1996 by Judge Andre M. Davis. The Order stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

12. It is expressly recognized that inadvertent production of privileged or arguably privileged matters shall not be [68]*68deemed to be either: (a) a general waiver of the Attorney-client privilege; or (b) a specific waiver of any such privilege with respect to documents being produced or the testimony given. Notice of any claim of privilege as to any document claimed to have been produced inadvertently shall be given within a reasonable period of time after discovery of the inadvertent production, and, on request by the producing party, all inadvertently produced materials as to which a claim of privilege is asserted and any copies thereof shall be returned promptly.

(Paper No. 140; plaintiffs reply memorandum, Ex. 1 at 5-6).

Fila responded to F.C. Cycles’ requests and produced in excess of 64,000 pages of documents. Among these documents was a two page memorandum, dated July 27, 1995, authored by Ian MacNeil, the controller of Fila Canada, and addressed to Michael Giese, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Fila Canada.

The memorandum was a summary of recommendations made by Geoffrey Belsher, in-house General Counsel for Fila Canada, regarding a dispute that had arisen between Fila Canada and GMS. The memorandum stated as follows:

TO: M. GIESE
FROM: I. MacNEIL
RE: MORDO ACQUISITION
DATE: July 27,1995
C.C.: G. SPAGLIARDI K. TABLER S. MARTINDELL

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Bluebook (online)
184 F.R.D. 64, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21878, 1998 WL 901571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fc-cycles-international-inc-v-fila-sport-spa-mdd-1998.