Hughes v. Bobich

875 P.2d 749, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 54, 1994 WL 249581
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1994
DocketS-5432
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 875 P.2d 749 (Hughes v. Bobich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Bobich, 875 P.2d 749, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 54, 1994 WL 249581 (Ala. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice Pro Tem.

Alvie and Wanda Hughes sued Matthew Bobich for back wages and damages resulting from Bobieh’s alleged failure to provide medical insurance. The superior court dismissed the Hughes’ suit due to a discovery violation; alternatively, the court granted Bobich’s summary judgment on the Hughes’ claim for back wages. The Hughes appeal, challenging the superior court’s use of litigation ending sanctions. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

The Hughes were employed by Matthew Bobich and his business partners at the partnership’s storage facility, Publix Storage (hereinafter collectively Bobich). 1 In 1991, the Hughes filed a complaint alleging that Bobich had failed to pay them overtime wages and had breached a promise to provide medical insurance during their employment.

On August 6,1991, Bobich served interrogatories, requests for production of documents, and requests for admissions upon the Hughes. Included in the discovery documents was a request for the Hughes to admit that they had in fact been paid all of their overtime wages. The Hughes did not respond. Instead, their attorney, Kenneth Le-gacki, verbally agreed with Bobich’s attorneys, Donald McClintoek and James McCol-lum, to “hold off discovery” while they attempted to settle the case. By a letter dated August 15, Legacki provided McClintoek with an itemized account of all overtime for which the Hughes claimed they had received no compensation.

By fall of 1991, efforts toward an informal resolution of the case had failed. Legacki notified Bobich’s counsel that “settlement discussions were over and [Legacki] was about to file discovery and set [the case] for trial.” Some time thereafter, McClintoek and McCollum withdrew from the case, and attorney C.R. Kennelly entered an appearance on behalf of Bobich. On February 5, 1992, Bobich, through Kennelly, served new interrogatories, requests for production of documents, and requests for releases of information on the Hughes. The Hughes submitted vague and incomplete answers to the interrogatories; they did not respond to the requests for production or to the requests for release of information.

*751 As a result, on April 21, 1992, Bobich filed a motion to compel discovery. On June 1, 1992, the superior court granted the motion and issued an order compelling the Hughes to answer the February 1992 interrogatories fully, to respond to the requests for production of documents, and to provide the requested releases of information within fifteen days. The Hughes failed to comply with the court’s order.

Based on the Hughes’ failure to comply with the June 1 order, Bobich filed a motion for sanctions pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 37. A short time later, Bobich also filed a motion for summary judgment on the Hughes’ claim for overtime wages. The summary judgment motion was based on the Hughes’ failure to respond to Bobich’s August 6, 1991 request for admission, which called on the Hughes to admit that they had been paid all of their overtime wages. In his summary judgment motion, Bobich argued that, under Alaska Civil Rule 36(a), the Hughes’ failure to file a timely response to his request should be construed as an admission that they had already been paid. Relying on this admission, Bobich maintained that he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

The Hughes opposed Bobich’s motion for Civil Rule 37(b) discovery sanctions, asserting that Bobich had filed the motion to harass them and claiming that they had already conveyed all requested discovery documents to Bobich’s former counsel. The Hughes also opposed Bobich’s motion for summary judgment, arguing that Legacki’s August 15, 1991 letter to McClintock and McCollulm amounted to an answer to the August 6 request for admissions, because the letter itemized overtime work for which the Hughes claimed Bobich still owed them $108,008.92.

Superior Court Judge Karl M. Johnstone heard Bobieh’s motions for discovery sanctions and summary judgment on August 17, 1992. With respect to the motion for Civil Rule 37 discovery sanctions, Bobich acknowledged that the parties had initially agreed to defer discovery pending settlement negotiations, but pointed out that settlement efforts had clearly ended by the time of Legacki’s November 1991 letter to McClintock and McCollum, which stated that the Hughes were about to file discovery and set the case for trial. Bobich argued that even if the Hughes were excused from engaging in discovery prior to November of 1991, they had no excuse for violating the court’s June 1, 1992 order, which compelled their compliance with the discovery requests propounded on February 5, 1992.

With respect to the Hughes’ failure to answer his August 6, 1991 request for admissions, the basis for the summary judgment motion, Bobich asserted that Legaeki had never been told that his August 15, 1991 letter to McClintock and McCollum concerning the Hughes’ claim for overtime compensation would be treated as a “substitute for formal discovery responses.” This assertion was supported by deposition testimony McClintock had recently provided.

When the court questioned Legaeki concerning the Hughes’ failure to comply with the June 1 discovery order, Legaeki advanced a variety of partially conflicting claims, including that (1) he was the victim of a “paper war” initiated by Bobich’s counsel; (2) Bobich’s counsel had refused to meet with him to exchange discovery documents; (3) he was prepared to give the releases of information to Bobich’s counsel the next day; and (4) he had already given all the documents to Bobieh’s counsel.

The court rejected these explanations, concluding that Legaeki had failed to comply with its June 1 discovery order. The court noted that Legacki’s abuse of the discovery process went beyond his failure to comply with the June 1 order. Other violations mentioned by the court included Legacki’s failure to answer Bobich’s August 6, 1991 request for admissions, his failure to appear for a scheduled deposition of Wanda Hughes, his scheduling of depositions of Bobich’s former attorneys on unduly short notice, and his failure to cure the Hughes’ noncompliance with the June 1 discovery order during the interim between the filing of Bobich’s motion for sanctions and the sanction hearing itself. In addition, the court took judicial notice that Legaeki had recently been reprimanded in an *752 unrelated case for conduct the court deemed abusive. 2

In the superior court’s view, all of these occurrences were indicative of Legacki’s ongoing abuse of the discovery process. Based on this pattern of conduct, the court found that Legacki’s failure to comply with its June 1 discovery order was willful and that litigation ending sanctions were justified.

In addition, the court decided that Le-gaeki’s failure to answer Bobich’s August 6, 1991 request for admissions justified granting Bobich’s motion for summary judgment on the Hughes’ claim for overtime wages. The court found that Legacki’s August 15, 1991 letter to McClintock and McCollum concerning the Hughes’ claim for overtime wages did not comply with the formal requirements for a response to a request for admission, as set out in Civil Rule 36.

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Bluebook (online)
875 P.2d 749, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 54, 1994 WL 249581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-bobich-alaska-1994.