Juice Creative Group, LLC v. UncommonGood, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 24, 2025
Docket3:22-cv-01175
StatusUnknown

This text of Juice Creative Group, LLC v. UncommonGood, Inc. (Juice Creative Group, LLC v. UncommonGood, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juice Creative Group, LLC v. UncommonGood, Inc., (D. Conn. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

Juice Creative Group, LLC,

Plaintiff, Civil No. 3:22-cv-01175-JCH

v.

UncommonGood, Inc.,

Defendant.1 July 24, 2025

ORDER RE: MOTION FOR AN ORDER TO COMPEL DISCOVERY Plaintiff Juice Creative Group, LLC (“Juice”) moves the Court to (A) compel Defendant UncommonGood, Inc. (“UG”) to supplement its responses to Juice’s written discovery requests, (B) compel UG’s chief executive officer, Carolyn Driscoll, to resume her deposition from May 8, 2025 (the “Driscoll Deposition”), and (C) grant any other relief that the Court deems “just and proper.” ECF No. 254, at 1. UG urges the Court to deny Juice’s Motion “in its entirety.” ECF No. 256, at 10. I have carefully reviewed the record before the Court, including the Parties’ memoranda of law, the nearly six-hour long recording of the Driscoll Deposition and its corresponding three-hundred-and-fifty- eight-page transcript, the Court’s previous discovery orders in this case, and transcripts of the Court’s previous hearings and discovery status conferences. See, e.g., ECF Nos. 68, 81, 102, 211, 229, 231, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258. Based on this voluminous record, I am not persuaded by UG’s arguments.

1 As discussed infra, Juice is also a Counterclaim-Defendant, and UG a Counterclaim-Plaintiff, as of October 28, 2024. ECF No. 190. For the reasons that follow, I GRANT in part and DENY in part the Motion for an Order to Compel Discovery. I. Background Juice brought this case against UG on September 16, 2022, shortly after UG brought a related case against Juice in Connecticut Superior Court (the “State Action”). ECF No. 254-1, at

2; see also UncommonGood, Inc. v. Juice Creative Grp., LLC, No. FST CV 22-6058173-S (Conn. Super. Ct. Sept. 8, 2022).2 UG eventually brought another related case in Connecticut Superior Court against its former counsel, Elizabeth DiRusso (the “DiRusso Action”). ECF No. 256, at 3; see also UncommonGood, Inc. v. DiRusso Corp. Counsel, et al., FST-CV-23-6060595-S (Conn. Super. Ct. Mar. 31, 2023). The Parties have conducted “consolidated, concurrent discovery” in these cases. ECF No. 254-1, at 2-3; see also ECF No. 256, at 3. Because I assume their familiarity with the underlying facts, I will not restate them here except as necessary to explain my reasoning for granting in part and denying in part the instant Motion. Discovery in this case closed on September 20, 2023. ECF No. 135. However, “due to

this case’s long and winding procedural history,” UG did not file its counterclaims against Juice until more than a year later, on October 28, 2024 (the “Counterclaims”). ECF No. 231; see also ECF No. 190. Juice subsequently moved to modify the Scheduling Order “for the limited purpose of permitting [it] to conduct narrowly tailored discovery into facts and issues” underlying the Counterclaims, see ECF No. 198-1, at 1, including that UG suffered “damages in an amount not less than $7 million” because of Juice’s alleged conduct, see ECF No. 190, at 23-30. Juice specified eight topics in its Motion to Modify the Scheduling Order on which it requested to obtain

2 The Connecticut Superior Court eventually granted Juice’s summary judgment motion in the State Action. See UncommonGood, Inc. v. Juice Creative Grp., LLC., No. FST CV 22-6058173- S, 2024 WL 1068963, (Conn. Super. Ct. Mar. 6, 2024). additional discovery.3 ECF No. 198-1, at 4. On March 21, 2025, I granted Juice’s “requests” for such discovery from UG and Ms. Driscoll, “limited to the allegations underlying UG’s counterclaims.”4 ECF No. 231. Consistent with my order, Juice propounded interrogatories and requests for production on UG on March 28, 2025, and deposed Ms. Driscoll on May 8, 2025. ECF No. 254-1, at 4-5.

At the request of the Parties, I held a discovery status conference during the Driscoll Deposition with UG’s counsel, Spencer Dreier, UG’s local counsel, Robert M. Fleischer, Juice’s counsel, Emily B. Kirsch, and Ms. Driscoll (the “Conference”). ECF No. 251. Based on their representations, I clarified that the “scope” of the Driscoll Deposition “is the [C]ounterclaims, liability and damages.” ECF No. 253, at 9, 11. I ordered Attorney Dreier to cease making “speaking objections” and limit any further objections to “two words maximum,” and I reminded him that “attorneys who are defending depositions should [generally] say nothing” under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the “Federal Rules”). Id. at 10-11, 15. I explained to Ms. Driscoll that “coaching during a deposition” or “during breaks” is not permitted under the Federal

Rules, and that “all [she] ha[s] to do is tell the truth and answer [Juice’s] questions.” Id. at 12, 14.

3 The eight topics are: (i) “UG’s calculation of damages, including its revenues, expenses, profits, and losses from 2021 through present day;” (ii) “the history of fundraising, investment, and valuation of UG;” (iii) the “winding up” of UG; (iv) “the circumstances surrounding the retention of Attorney DiRusso and the alleged work that she performed for UG;” (v) “communications between UG and Attorney DiRusso . . . concerning the issue of intellectual property . . . and legal advice sought or obtained in connection therewith;” (vi) “communications with third-parties concerning UG’s understanding of its ownership or non-ownership of the intellectual property created by Juice . . . and legal advice sought or obtained in connection therewith;” (vii) “confidential or proprietary information told to Attorney DiRusso by Ms. Driscoll that UG alleges may have been improperly disclosed to Juice;” and (viii) “documents and information received during discovery in the DiRusso Action.” ECF No. 198-1, at 4. 4 However, I did not grant Juice’s request to depose UG’s counsel, Spencer Dreier. ECF No. 231. Nor did I grant UG’s request for additional discovery. Id. UG filed an objection to my order on April 4, 2025. ECF No. 241. It is currently pending before U.S. District Judge Janet C. Hall. ECF No. 242. Furthermore, I advised “everybody” to “lower the temperature” of the Driscoll Deposition so that it could “be concluded” in a single day. Id. at 14. Contrary to my advice, the deposition did not conclude. ECF Nos. 254-1, at 9-10; 256, at 6-10. After conferring with UG about resuming the Driscoll Deposition and supplementing its responses to Juice’s written discovery requests—to no avail—Juice filed the instant Motion. ECF

No. 254-1, at 5-6. It alleges that UG’s responses to Requests for Production Nos. 3, 23, and 24, and Interrogatory No. 17 are insufficient. Id. at 7-9. It also alleges that Attorney Dreier “improperly coached” Ms. Driscoll and engaged in “minutes-long speaking objections” throughout the Driscoll Deposition, even after I ordered him not to do so. Id. at 10. Accordingly, Juice moves the Court to compel UG to supplement its responses, compel Ms. Driscoll to resume her deposition, and grant any other “just and proper” relief. ECF No. 254, at 1. UG opposes the Motion “in its entirety.” ECF No. 256, at 10. It argues that its responses to Juice’s requests for production and interrogatories are sufficient. Id. at 1-5. It also argues that Attorney Kirsch frustrated the Driscoll Deposition by “refusing to limit her questioning” to the

“eight topics” specified in the Motion to Modify the Scheduling Order and ultimately “walk[ing] out” of the deposition room before she had concluded her questioning. Id. at 6-10. II. Legal Standard Under Rule 26 of the Federal Rules, a party may generally obtain discovery into any non- privileged matter that is relevant to any other party’s claim or defense. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1).

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Juice Creative Group, LLC v. UncommonGood, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juice-creative-group-llc-v-uncommongood-inc-ctd-2025.