in Re: Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc. D/B/A Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
Docket13-11-00197-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re: Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc. D/B/A Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez (in Re: Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc. D/B/A Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez) 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: Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc. D/B/A Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-11-00197-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

IN RE WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC. WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC. D/B/A WASTE MANAGEMENT, PHARR, TEXAS, AND JOHN MARTINEZ

On Petition for Writ of Mandamus.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Garza, Vela, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Vela

Relators, Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc.

d/b/a Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez (collectively ―Waste Management‖), filed a petition for writ of mandamus and a request for temporary stay in

the above cause on April 7, 2011, seeking to compel the trial court to vacate an order

compelling discovery on grounds of relevance, overbreadth, and burdensomeness. On

April 8, 2011, this Court granted the request for temporary stay, stayed the trial court‘s

order compelling discovery, and requested that the real party in interest, Romeo Garza

Jr., file a response to the petition for writ of mandamus, and such response has now been

filed. We deny the petition for writ of mandamus.

I. BACKGROUND

The underlying litigation concerns a vehicular collision between Garza and

Martinez, who was driving a garbage truck in the course and scope of his employment as

a driver for Waste Management. According to Garza‘s first amended original petition,

Martinez pulled away from a stop sign directly into Garza‘s lane of travel. Garza brought

suit against relators for personal injuries. Garza served various forms of discovery

requests on Waste Management, but the only one at issue in this proceeding is the

following request for production:

Produce pleadings, discovery (including corporate representative depositions, answers to: interrogatories, requests for disclosure, requests to produce documents, and requests to admit), on all other lawsuits involving incidents in which Waste Management of Texas, Inc. has been sued in Texas and in which unsafe driving on the part of a Waste Management of Texas, Inc. driver has been alleged and/or in which it is alleged Waste Management of Texas, Inc. did not employ proper safety and/or was negligent with regard to its policies for the operation of its vehicles, the training of its drivers, or in setting safety policies.

Waste Management objected to the request as follows:

2 Defendant objects that the request is overly broad, not relevant, not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence and not reasonably limited in subject matter, geography or time. . . . Further, this request is unduly burdensome and harassing because the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefits, taking into account the needs of the case the amount in controversy, and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issues . . . . Finally, Defendant objects that this request is compound and confusing.

Waste Management did not otherwise respond to this request for production. 1 Garza

filed a motion to compel regarding this response, stating that the ―[p]arties are currently

working on resolving the discovery dispute; however, court intervention is necessary if the

parties do not reach an agreement.‖ Attached to the motion to compel was

correspondence from Waste Management‘s counsel stating that ―[a]s we discussed, we

will continue to search for information related to Waste Management litigation in the

South Texas region and beyond.‖

Waste Management filed a response to the second motion to compel discovery,

supported by the January 26, 2011 affidavit of Carrie Schadle, an attorney for Waste

Management. Ms. Schadle testified as follows:

My firm has represented Waste Management since 2001. During that time, there have been approximately 100 cases which have gone into litigation. In order to determine whether such cases are responsive to Plaintiff‘s request, counsel for Defendant will have to identify the existing computer files relating to those cases, order whatever files may exist for those cases from archives, identify documents which may exist in this office, and request a search at Waste Management for documents relating to litigated matters.

After those documents and files have been collected, it will take a minimum of 2-2.5 hours per file to determine whether the case falls within 1 We note that the rules of discovery required Waste Management to ―comply with as much of the request to which the party has made no objection unless it is unreasonable under the circumstances to do so before obtaining a ruling on the objection.‖ TEX. R. CIV. P. 193.2; see also id. R. 193 cmt.2.

3 the scope of the request and what, if any documents might be responsive. At $300 per hour, the cost of identifying, collecting, searching, evaluating and producing responsive documents for the approximately 100 files since 2001 could easily exceed $70,000.00.

This cost will not include copying costs, or the costs to Waste Management of pulling its employees away from their regular work to search for documents.

These estimates will not include the time and cost associated with documents handled by other attorneys or firms. An inquiry to Waste Management revealed that there are approximately 90 other files that may represent suits filed against Defendant. The only way to identify documents for cases filed before the involvement of the undersigned firm would be to query insurance companies that carried policies of insurance for the relevant periods of time. Depending on the information available from the insurance carriers, the next step would be to seek out those files, most likely from attorneys who handled those cases. Those attorneys will have to search and will incur attorney‘s fees which will have to be reimbursed. While it would be impossible to determine exactly how much time such a search would take, the cost will be very high. Tracking down these documents will be far more complicated than reviewing those handled by this firm and it would be reasonable to assume that the cost of tracking down these earlier cases would be double that of the those files handled by the undersigned firm.

The text of Waste Management‘s response to the second motion to compel differs in

some respects from Schadle‘s affidavit. The response says, ―Waste Management has

190 cases flagged as ―litigation‖ cases in the claims database,‖ and ―[a]pproximately 100

of these cases have been handled by the undersigned firm since 2001.‖ The response

speculates that ―it is likely the volume of documents will be in the hundreds of thousands

of pages,‖ and further speculates that the costs of copies alone could conservatively

exceed $25,000. The response asserts that these estimates do not take into account the

90 other suits handled by other firms, and speculates that it might cost ―somewhere in the

neighborhood of $75,000 or more‖ to recover those files.

4 Garza filed a reply to Waste Management‘s response to the motion to compel

contending, among other things, that the discovery sought pertaining to other accidents

involving Waste Management‘s garbage trucks and vehicles was relevant vis-à-vis his

claims for faulty safety practices and training and that there was a direct relationship

between the claims at issue and the discovery sought.2

The trial court heard the motion to compel at a non-evidentiary hearing on January

27, 2011. At the hearing, the trial court ordered Waste Management to respond to the

request for production, but directed that the response should be limited to those litigation

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in Re: Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management of Texas, Inc. D/B/A Waste Management, Pharr, Texas, and John Martinez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-waste-management-of-texas-inc-waste-manageme-texapp-2011.