Hays v. Equitex, Inc. (In Re RDM Sports Group, Inc.)

277 B.R. 415, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 468, 2002 WL 971219
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 2, 2002
Docket15-21901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 277 B.R. 415 (Hays v. Equitex, Inc. (In Re RDM Sports Group, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hays v. Equitex, Inc. (In Re RDM Sports Group, Inc.), 277 B.R. 415, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 468, 2002 WL 971219 (Ga. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER

W. HOMER DRAKE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Motion to Compel filed by Smith, Gambrell & Russell L.P., David Harris P.C., and David Harris (hereinafter the “SGR Defendants”) in the above-captioned adversary proceeding. The plaintiff, William G. Hays, Jr. (hereinafter the “Plaintiff’), in his capacity as Liquidating Agent for the consolidated bankruptcy estates of RDM Sports Group, Inc., et al. (hereinafter the “Debtors”), opposes the SGR Defendants’ motion. Also before the Court are the Motions for Protective Order, filed by Arthur Andersen (hereinafter “Andersen”) and General Electric (hereinafter “GE”), which have been joined by the Plaintiff.

Background

In August 2000, the Plaintiff initiated the instant adversary proceeding by filing a complaint against the SGR Defendants. The complaint seeks damages for breach of fiduciary duty, legal malpractice and negligence, civil conspiracy/acting in concert with others, and the receipt of preferential payments. 1 Essentially, the Plaintiff alleges that the SGR Defendants should be held liable for actual and punitive damages for their role in causing the Debtors’ financial demise.

The Plaintiff filed a lawsuit against GE for damages resulting from allegedly defective motors, which were sold to the Debtors by GE and were placed in certain treadmills manufactured and sold by the Debtors. The Plaintiff hired special counsel to litigate the case. At some point during the litigation of the GE matter, the parties agreed to mediate their dispute with a third-party, neutral mediator, which eventually resulted in their reaching a settlement. The Plaintiff also pursued claims against Andersen for damages arising from the accounting and auditing services provided to the Debtors by Andersen and for the recovery of certain potentially preferential transfers. The Plaintiff did not file a lawsuit against Andersen, but the parties worked toward settlement of the dispute and eventually entered mediation. Both the GE mediation and the Andersen mediation were conducted under the rules and terms of the American Arbitration Association. Prior to entering the mediation, all parties agreed to maintain the confidentiality of the mediation discus *420 sions, including any documents that were generated during the mediation.

The Andersen mediation resulted in a settlement agreement, under which Andersen agreed to pay $18 million. However, the agreement was contingent upon the entry by this Court of an order that would prevent the SGR Defendants and the SGR Defendants’ co-defendants (hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Nonsettling Defendants”), from seeking contribution or indemnification from Andersen in the event the Nonsettling Defendants were found liable to the Plaintiff for damages. The Nonsettling Defendants objected to the entry of an injunction against their interests (hereinafter the “Bar Order”). To deal with these objections, the Plaintiff filed an adversary proceeding, in which he asked the Court to grant his request for injunctive relief (hereinafter the “Bar Order Proceeding”). However, the Nonset-tling Defendants continued to object to the entry of the Bar Order on the ground that the Bar Order required them to relinquish their rights to pursue Andersen for its share of the damages. The Nonsettling Defendants and the Plaintiff agreed that the Court could not approve the settlement and enter the Bar Order without making a finding that the entry of the Bar Order would be fair to the affected parties. On that ground, the parties agreed that the Bar Order should include a judgment reduction credit provision, which would provide that, in the event the Nonsettling Defendants were determined to be liable for damages, the Nonsettling Defendants would be entitled to a reduction of those damages to account for the fact that the Plaintiff had already recovered a portion of the damages from Andersen. While the parties agreed that a judgment reduction credit was required, they could not agree as to how the credit should be determined. The Plaintiff was willing to give the Non-settling Defendants a credit that would either be equivalent to the $18 million received from Andersen, or could be based on Andersen’s share of the liability, as determined at trial. The Nonsettling Defendants, however, insisted upon a credit that would be equal to the greater of $18 million or an amount based on Andersen’s share of the liability.

Since the terms of the settlement agreement between Andersen and the Plaintiff were contingent upon the entry of the Bar Order by a certain date, which was fast approaching at the time the Plaintiff filed the Bar Order Proceeding, the Court approved an expedited trial schedule. This schedule required the Nonsettling Defendants to file an answer and conduct discovery in a very short time. The Nonsettling Defendants served the Plaintiff with five interrogatories and requests for production of documents. These requests sought the production of any and all documents related to the Plaintiffs settlement agreement with Andersen (hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Mediation Documents”). The Plaintiff refused to produce the Mediation Documents, claiming that the documents were protected by a mediation privilege, attorney-client privilege, and the work product doctrine.

After unsuccessfully attempting to resolve the discovery dispute with the Plaintiff, the SGR Defendants filed a motion to compel production. The Court heard oral arguments from the parties’ counsel. By the conclusion of the hearing, the parties were largely in agreement that, subject to certain conditions, the Plaintiff would turn over the Mediation Documents, with the exception of certain inflammatory slides used in a presentation during the mediation. The Court then ordered the Plaintiff to turn over all of the documents, with the exception of the inflammatory slides, with the provision that the SGR Defendants could not use the documents for any pur *421 pose other than the Bar Order Proceeding. Subsequent to the entry of the Court’s Order, but before the Plaintiff produced the documents, the parties settled the Bar Order Proceeding. The Plaintiff agreed to give the Nonsettling Defendants the judgment reduction credit of their choice, and the Nonsettling Defendants dropped their opposition to the entry of the Bar Order. The parties presented a consent order, at which time the Court approved the settlement and granted the requested injunctive relief.

Shortly after the settlement of the Bar Order Proceeding, the SGR Defendants filed a motion to compel in the instant adversary proceeding, in which the SGR Defendants sought the production of the same documents. Following the settlement of the GE litigation, and after the SGR Defendants’ motion to compel had been set for a hearing, the SGR Defendants broadened the scope of their discovery to include documents pertaining to the GE mediation. In response, Andersen and GE filed similar motions for protective orders, seeking to maintain the confidentiality of any documents prepared for or during their respective mediations. Immediately prior to the hearing on the motions, the SGR Defendants reached a settlement with GE and Andersen, pursuant to which the SGR Defendants agreed to seek only those documents prepared by the Plaintiff and his counsel for or dining the mediation and to not seek any documents prepared by either GE or Andersen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 B.R. 415, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 468, 2002 WL 971219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-equitex-inc-in-re-rdm-sports-group-inc-ganb-2002.