Kopnicky v. Citgo Petroleum Corp.

215 So. 3d 746
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 2008
DocketNo. CW 07-01483
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 So. 3d 746 (Kopnicky v. Citgo Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kopnicky v. Citgo Petroleum Corp., 215 So. 3d 746 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

^MOTION TO STRIKE DENIED. The instant motion has been rendered moot by the Relator’s filing of an amended writ application in response to a prior order of this court.

RULE TO SHOW CAUSE DENIED.

WRIT GRANTED AND MADE PEREMPTORY: We find that the trial court erred in finding the Relator in contempt of court for failure to comply with its orders regarding the Plaintiffs’ demand for a La. Code Civ.P. art. 1442 deposition. The Relator was ordered, on two occasions, to provide “one or more” persons of its choice to appear for the deposition, and the Relator designated and provided such persons in compliance with these orders.

The Plaintiffs’ Notice or Re-Notice of Deposition did not demand that any specific person or persons be deposed and neither were any such persons listed or mentioned in the orders of the trial court regarding these notices. Further, no additional notices for deposition of these other persons have been made by the Plaintiffs and there are, therefore, no grounds for prospectively holding Mr. Kevin Stockstill, Mr. Jeff Bednar, or the Relator in contempt for failure to so provide such names.

Accordingly, the ruling of the trial court finding the Relator in contempt of court is hereby reversed, vacated and set aside. Additionally, we set aside the order compelling the specific attorneys to provide their client’s names, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

REHEARING GRANTED

|,This- matter first came before this court when CITGO Petroleum Corporation (CITGO) filed an application for supervisory writs, seeking to have a trial court judgment finding it in contempt of court set aside. The underlying litigation arises from a June 2006 chemical spill that occurred at the CITGO facility in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. The plaintiffs in these consolidated cases seek to recover damages they claim to have sustained as a result of the chemical spill. The issues now before this court relate to matters that occurred in the discovery process. By a judgment dated January 8, 2008, this court vacated the trial court’s order finding CITGO in contempt of court and set aside the order compelling specific attorneys to provide their clients’ names. The matter is now before us on an application for rehearing filed by the plaintiffs. For the following reasons, we grant the plaintiffs’ motion for rehearing, vacate our prior judgment, and enter a new judgment as explained below.

|2On April 16, 2007, the plaintiffs served CITGO with a notice of corporate deposition, listing twenty-five items' or areas for examination. The notice further requested that, pursuant to La.Code Civ.P. art. 1442, CITGO “designate one or more officers, directors, managing agents, or other persons who consent to testify and/or are competent to testify on its behalf, regarding the [twenty-five areas of examination], as well as to such other relevant information as the witness may possess” and to produce any and all documents relating to these twenty-five areas.

[749]*749CITGO responded to the notice by producing its environmental manager, David Hollis, as its Article 1442 designee. On April 25, 2007, the plaintiffs deposed Mr. Hollis. In that deposition Mr. Hollis testified concerning ten of the twenty-five areas of examination listed in the original notice. However, he could provide no information concerning the remaining fifteen areas.

The day after taking Mr. Hollis’ deposition, the plaintiffs filed a second notice of deposition seeking discovery of information regarding the fifteen items not addressed the day before. In their notice, the plaintiffs again requested that, pursuant to La.Code Civ.P. art. 1442, CITGO “designate one or more officers, directors, managing agents, or other persons” to be deposed on these remaining areas, and to produce all documents related to these areas.

CITGO responded to this filing on August 17, 2007, by filing a motion seeking to limit the scope of discovery and to quash the Article 1442 deposition. In its motion, CITGO asserted that it was facing hundreds of legal actions involving thousands of plaintiffs in both state and federal forums, and that the United States Department of Justice had begun an investigation to determine if federal laws were violated in the incident. Asserting that because its employees had become the subject of the federal investigation, and because these employees might require separate |scriminal counsel and might find it necessary to invoke the self-incrimination provisions of U.S. Const, amend. V during any deposition testimony, CITGO sought a stay order from the trial court prohibiting the plaintiffs from taking the testimony of any person under criminal investigation. However, CITGO did not identify these persons or explain how an individual employee’s testimony could be subject to criminal inquiry.

At a September 24, 2007 hearing on its motion, CITGO presented no evidence in support of the assertions in its August 17 motion despite the fact that the trial court gave the litigants specific evidentiary matters it would consider in determining whether a protective order should be issued.1 Instead, CITGO’s counsel asserted that the corporation would be hamstrung in responding to the litigation or in addressing settlement issues because of the federal criminal consequences of anything it might do in civil litigation. However, when questioned by the trial court, counsel for CITGO acknowledged that he had no information that anyone with CITGO had received a target letter from the federal prosecutors.

During the proceedings, counsel for CITGO deferred to a number of criminal defense attorneys who were present in the court room during the hearing.2 Although their status in the litigation lends little to the resolution of the issue now before us, [750]*750one of the defense attorneys, Mr. Kevin Stockstill, acknowledged that his twenty-five clients were specific persons notified by CITGO that they were its Article 1442 Udesignees, although counsel for CITGO never made such an assertion.3

In denying CITGO’s request for a protective order, the trial court stated:

Normally, when I usually get these situations where the law enforcement agency is asking that we hold off because they’re conducting an investigation is normally what happens. And it’s not happening in this case. The defendants are asking for this. Have you found that case? Where’s it at? Give it to me. I know it’s not important what the facts are, but a lot of times—it’s not a real big case. Okay, in this case, this Thibodeaux v. Thibodeaux this 538 So.2d 688 [ (3d Cir.1989) ], and it’s a Third Circuit Court of Appeal Louisiana Case. In this case, there was apparently a questioning of a witness. And that witness took the fifth and the Court of Appeals granted the writs and held that the District Court was to review each question to which the defendant exercised his privilege against self-incrimination in order to determine if privy was properly invoked. The trial court acted improperly in ordering defendant to answer all questions propounded at oral deposition and written interrogatory, insofar as, questions could have resulted in defendant incriminating himself in criminal activity. So, it seems like it comes to the trial judge’s responsibility to determine whether, or not, at some point, whether, or not, the question that they he took the fifth on could have involved some criminal conduct. That’s what it seems to say. Which I don’t have a problem with that. I thought that was the law anyway.

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215 So. 3d 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kopnicky-v-citgo-petroleum-corp-lactapp-2008.