Gaby's Bags, LLC v. Mercari, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 8, 2021
Docket3:20-cv-00734
StatusUnknown

This text of Gaby's Bags, LLC v. Mercari, Inc. (Gaby's Bags, LLC v. Mercari, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaby's Bags, LLC v. Mercari, Inc., (N.D. Cal. 2021).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 GABY’S BAGS, LLC, Case No. 20-cv-00734-WHA (TSH)

8 Plaintiff, DISCOVERY ORDER 9 v. Re: Dkt. Nos. 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 10 MERCARI, INC., 244, 245 11 Defendant.

12 13 The parties have filed discovery letter briefs at ECF Nos. 237-42 & 244-45. This order 14 resolves ECF Nos. 237-40 and 244-45 and requires further briefing for ECF Nos. 241-42. 15 A. ECF No. 237 16 Mercari has named Gaby’s Bags, Kody Yates, Gaby Yates, Kole Yates, Kimberly Yates 17 and Donald Yates as Counterclaim Defendants (or “CCDs”). It served 25 interrogatories (“rogs”) 18 on each Yates CCD,1 which were met solely with objections. ECF No. 237-2. Mercari now raises 19 five arguments. First, it challenges the numerosity objection that is based on the case law 20 concerning nominally separate parties. Second, Mercari raises an unclear argument concerning 21 privileges. Third, Mercari challenges the Yates CCDs’ objections that the requests are overly 22 broad, burdensome, vague and ambiguous, and seek irrelevant information. Fourth, Mercari 23 challenges the Yates CCDs’ objection that the requests seek confidential information. Fifth, 24 Mercari seeks leave to move for attorneys’ fees. The Court addresses each argument in turn. 25 26

27 1 When referring to one or some of the Yates CCDs, the Court uses their first names for the sake 1 1. Nominally Separate Parties 2 Rule 33(a)(1) states that “a party may serve on any other party no more than 25 written 3 interrogatories,” but courts sometimes limit that when two parties are only nominally separate. 4 “[C]ommentary and caselaw” have “noted that permitting the maximum number of allowable 5 interrogatories on each named defendant does not always accord with the purpose of Rule 33’s 6 limitation.” 21X Capital Ltd. v. Werra, 2007 WL 2852367, *1 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 2, 2007) (citations 7 omitted). “The 25 interrogatory limit per side rule is often applied when parties to an action are 8 nominally separate. Parties may be considered nominally separate when represented by a single 9 attorney, when there is a unity of action, or when there is a legal relationship between the parties.” 10 Id. (citation omitted); see also Vinton v. Adam Aircraft Indus., Inc., 232 F.R.D. 650, 664 (D.Colo. 11 2005) (“Here, the Plaintiff has taken the position that AAI and Defendant Adam are alter egos, 12 and, in essence, should be treated as a single, unified entity. In such circumstances, the Court 13 cannot say that the Magistrate Judge abused his discretion in limiting the Plaintiff to 25 14 interrogatories in total.”); Stiles v. Walmart, 2020 WL 264420, *4 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 17, 2020) 15 (“Where separate parties are represented by the same counsel and are acting in unison, they may 16 be treated as one ‘party’ for purposes of the limit on interrogatories.”); Freedom Foundation v. 17 Sacks, 2020 WL 1914902, *3 (W.D. Wash. April 20, 2020) (“While Rule 33(a)(1) allows up to 25 18 interrogatories to be served upon each party, some courts have observed that multiple parties on 19 the same side may be treated as one if they are only ‘nominally separate.’ In Vinton v. Adam 20 Aircraft Indus., Inc., for example, the court upheld the magistrate judge’s limitation of 21 interrogatories when the plaintiff had taken the position that the corporate defendant and one of its 22 representatives were alter egos and should be ‘treated as a single, unified entity.’”). 23 In this case, Gaby’s Bags and Kody are nominally separate parties. Mercari’s amended 24 counterclaim alleges that “Gaby’s sole member and principal, who is authorized to manage the 25 company, is Florida resident Kody Yates.” CC ¶ 2. In their jointly filed Answer to the 26 Counterclaim, Kody and Gaby’s Bags admit that to be true. ECF No. 163 ¶ 2. The significance of 27 this undisputed fact is that Kody and Gaby’s Bags do not have different information or documents 1 by him and his counsel. Allowing Mercari serve 25 rogs on Gaby’s Bags and another 25 rogs on 2 Kody would in practice force him to answer 50 rogs, contrary to the intent of Rule 33. Further, 3 Mercari also alleges that Kody and Gaby’s Bags are alter egos, CC ¶ 3, which under the case law 4 cited above also supports finding that they are nominally separate parties and limiting Mercari to 5 25 rogs as to both of those parties. Accordingly, the Court sustains Kody’s numerosity objection 6 to all 25 of the rogs propounded on him, as Gaby’s Bags was previously served with 25 rogs.2 7 However, the Court overrules the numerosity objection for the other Yates CCDs. In 8 paragraph 56 of the Counterclaim and prayer for relief paragraph (e), Mercari sort of alleges that 9 Donald, Kimberly, Gaby and Kole share alter ego liability, but the allegation is pretty threadbare. 10 Paragraphs 14 and 38 suggest that although they were in league with Kody, they took actions 11 themselves. As a matter of common sense, they are different people from Kody, so each of them 12 may know different things. See 21X Capital Ltd., 2007 WL 2852367, at *1 (father and son not 13 nominally separate parties because they are “actually separate individuals”). Further, there is no 14 reason to think any of them played a role in answering the prior rogs served on Gaby’s Bags. 15 There is no reason to apply the nominally separate parties rule to Donald, Kimberly, Gaby and 16 Kole, and the Court declines to do so. 17 2. Privileges 18 Next, Mercari argues: “Each CCD also objects to each Rog ‘Objection. Work product and 19 attorney client privilege,’ but each ‘reserves the right to assert any privilege and submit any 20 applicable privilege log to the extent necessary.’ No objections can be ‘reserved,’ and thus are 21 waived. Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b)(4). Further, each Rog requests different non-privileged factual 22 information, and because CCDs refuse to provide a log or even explain the basis for any privilege 23 or work product claim, Mercari is entirely unable to review or challenge same. These objections 24 should be overruled (ECF 201 at 26-28), or at least a log should be ordered as in ECF 144, which 25 CCDs astonishingly ignored.” The Yates CCDs respond: “GB did not waive any objections 26 2 In the event the Court applies the nominally separate parties rule, Mercari alternatively requests 27 leave to serve more than 25 rogs. Mercari has made this request for more than 25 rogs at least 1 (including confidentiality), work product or privilege. As explained in the objections and during 2 conferral, CCD did not need to respond to Mercari’s Rogs given the numerosity objections. 3 However, out of an abundance of caution to avoid any possible waiver argument, CCD made, 4 preserved and reserved their objections. Mercari’s suggestion otherwise would render numerosity 5 objections meaningless. CCD’s counsel attempted to explain the basis for the privilege objections 6 and indicated that CCD is not currently withholding discovery in response to these Rogs that 7 would need to be logged per the case law in DE 194, p. 4-5. This is the same issue Mercari has 8 been vexatiously litigating, and again Mercari’s arguments/case law are meritless.” 9 The Court has skimmed the 125 rog responses at issue and believes the issue relates to how 10 the Yates CCDs responded to each rog. Each response begins by asserting the numerosity 11 objection. Then the answer states that the responding party should not have to respond further. 12 Then the responding party states that out of an abundance of caution, it “hereby reserves, and, to 13 the extent necessary, hereby makes the following objections,” and the next paragraph is a list of 14 objections. Mercari is right that any objections that were not stated are waived, see Fed. R. Civ. 15 Proc.

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Related

Vinton v. Adam Aircraft Industries, Inc.
232 F.R.D. 650 (D. Colorado, 2005)

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