in Re Howard K. Stern

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2010
Docket01-09-00438-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Howard K. Stern (in Re Howard K. Stern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Howard K. Stern, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 25, 2010





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-09-00438-CV





IN RE HOWARD K. STERN, Relator






Original Proceeding on Petition for Writ of Mandamus





O P I N I O N ON REHEARING


          On July 12, 2010, a panel of this Court conditionally granted relator, Howard K. Stern’s, petition for writ of mandamus. Real party in interest, Virgie Arthur, moved for rehearing on July 26, 2010. We deny Arthur’s motion for rehearing, but we withdraw our July 12, 2010 opinion and issue this opinion in its place.

          In this petition for writ of mandamus, relator, Howard K. Stern, requests that we direct the trial court to vacate its May 11, 2009 order requiring Stern to produce his computer hard drive to a special master for forensic examination. In five issues, Stern contends that the trial court abused its discretion by (1) ordering Stern’s surrender of his hard drive even though Stern is a non-resident defendant with a special appearance pending, (2) ordering the surrender of Stern’s hard drive to a special master when there has been no showing that Stern was noncompliant with responding to discovery or responded in bad faith, (3) authorizing a forensic examiner to determine the relevancy of the documents on Stern’s hard drive, (4) authorizing a forensic examiner for discovery requests that are overbroad and irrelevant to the issue of personal jurisdiction, and (5) ordering Stern to comply with an overbroad order for which there is no adequate remedy by appeal.

Background

          On April 28, 2008, Virgie Arthur filed the underlying proceeding against Howard K. Stern, Bonnie Stern, Lyndal Harrington, Art Harris, Nelda Turner, Teresa Stephens, Larry Birkhead, Harvey Levin, and TMZ Productions, Inc., alleging that certain syndicated television broadcasts and internet publications defamed her and harmed her efforts to seek custody and visitation of her granddaughter, who is the child of Vickie Lynn Marshall, also known as Anna Nicole Smith. Howard K. Stern is Marshall’s former attorney and companion.

          In her “Original Petition,” Arthur alleged that Stern conspired with the other defendants, internet bloggers, and the celebrity and entertainment gossip website, TMZ, to defame her by providing Stern with a tape and transcript of an interview in which Marshall accused Arthur of being complicit in alleged abuse of her as a child, which he distributed to the news media, and by broadcasting the interview. Arthur further alleged that because she ‘opposed HOWARD STERN’s false assertion that he was the biological father of [Marshall’s infant daughter] and [was] entitled to custody of the infant girl,” Stern “was infuriated over this and worked with the defendants and others to continue a plot and a conspiracy to destroy VIRGIE and anyone else he perceived was standing in his way of gaining custody of [the infant].”

          Arthur alleged that defendant Harris republished the defamatory statements made by Marshall on his website and in an article. She contended that “Harris has claimed to be in direct contact with Defendant HOWARD STERN, who, HARRIS says, shares with HARRIS’s secret thoughts [sic].” She further alleged that, in connection with the alleged conspiracy, “HARRIS has received from HOWARD STERN’s representatives and has published certain documents that were under protective order in a related case”; that Harris has had a “conspiratorial relationship with [defendant Nelda (Rose)] TURNER”; and that that relationship and the expectation that he would leak documents are demonstrated by e-mails. Arthur alleged that “HARRIS was aware that TURNER and other co-conspirators live in Texas”; that he “directed his defamatory statements at Plaintiff’s reputation, which is entered in Texas”; and that “HOWARD STERN communicated and led the conspiracy by using his sister, defendant BONNIE STERN . . . to find what they considered ‘VIRGIE ARTHUR dirt.’” The results of these searches were then published on a blog run by Turner, on Harris’s website, or on a web log moderated by defendants Lyndal Harrington and Theresa Stephens.

          In her “First Amended Original Petition” and “Second Amended Original Petition,” Arthur alleged more specific jurisdictional facts. In her “Second Amended Original Petition,” she alleged that Texas has specific personal jurisdiction over Stern because he used a Texas resident, Turner, as his agent to defame Arthur through his sister, Bonnie Stern, who sent emails to Turner in Texas allegedly informing Turner of Stern’s “wishes and other work being done on this behalf by the CONSPIRATORS to defame VIRGIE ARTHUR and others.”

          On August 1, 2008, Arthur served Stern with requests for production. The requests for production instructed Stern to “[p]roduce documents and tangible things in the forms as they are kept in the ordinary course of business” and to “[p]roduce electronically stored information in native format.” The instructions in the request for production further stated that, for any electronically stored information, Stern should:           [P]roduce a discovery log that details the type of information, the source of information, the discovery request to which the information corresponds, and the information’s electronic ID number.

          [W]rite all of the electronically stored information to reasonably usable storage media, such as CD, DVD, or flash drive.

          [I]dentify every source containing potentially responsive information that [Stern] is not searching for production . . . . [and,] [f]or any materials that [Stern] claim[s] no longer exist or cannot be located, provide all of the following:

          (1)     A statement identifying the material.

          (2)     A statement of how and when the material passed out of existence or when it could no longer be located.

          (3)     The reasons for the material’s nonexistence or loss.

          (4)     The identity, address, and job title of each person having knowledge about the nonexistence or loss of the material.

          (5)     The identity of any other materials evidencing the nonexistence or loss of the material or any facts about the nonexistence or loss.

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