LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC v. DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 13, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-02446
StatusUnknown

This text of LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC v. DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL. (LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC v. DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC v. DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL., (E.D. La. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC * CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS * NO. 24-2446

DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ * SECTION “D” (2) ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL.

ORDER AND REASONS

Pending before me is a Motion to Compel filed by Defendant Dragados/Hawaiian Dredging/Orion, Joint Venture. ECF No. 98. Plaintiff LAD Services of Louisiana, LLC timely filed an Opposition Memorandum, and Defendant timely filed a Reply Memorandum. ECF Nos. 101, 102. No party requested oral argument in accordance with Local Rule 78.1, and the Court agrees that oral argument is unnecessary. Having considered the record, the submissions and arguments of counsel, and the applicable law, Defendant’s Motion to Compel is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART for the reasons stated herein. I. BACKGROUND On October 10, 2024, Plaintiff LAD Services of Louisiana, LLC filed this diversity action against Defendant Dragados/Hawaiian Dredging/Orion, Joint Venture asserting claims for breach of contract, detrimental reliance, unjust enrichment, and deceptive trade practices relating to a contract to build a floating dry dock for the U.S. Navy’s use and placement in Pearl Harbor, Honolulu, Hawaii. ECF No. 1 §§ I, III ¶ 7, VI ¶¶ 34-57. Plaintiff filed an Amended Complaint on October 25, 2024, a Second Amended Complaint on February 19, 2024, and a Fourth Amended Complaint on December 31, 2025, with its request to file a Third Amended Complaint being denied as a result of the request to file the Fourth Amended Complaint. ECF Nos. 8, 23, 43, 51, 56, 79. The Fourth Amended Complaint added a sixth cause of action for Misappropriation of Trade Secrets. ECF No. 80 ¶¶ 53-79. The Court issued a Scheduling Order on April 23, 2025, and later continued certain dates. ECF Nos. 35, 41, 42, 95. The current discovery deadline is July 21, 2026, with Plaintiff’s expert

reports due May 22, 2026, Defendant’s expert reports due June 24, 2026, and Plaintiff’s rebuttal reports due July 7, 2026. ECF No. 95. II. THE PENDING MOTION Defendant has filed this Motion to Compel requesting that the Court order Plaintiff to produce, within 7 days, (a) all discoverable documents and electronically stored information not yet produced in this litigation in response to Defendant’s initial discovery requests propounded in July 2025, and (b) comply with Local Rule 26.3’s initial disclosures requirements to produce the information, documents, materials, and electronically stored information concerning the Fourth Amended Complaint’s “Misappropriation of Trade Secrets” claim, requested through Defendant’s second set of discovery requests propounded in February 2026. ECF No. 98. Defendant asserts

that Plaintiff’s production omitted internal communications (specifically Mr. Dragna’s texts and messaging applications), has failed to preserve and maintain all electronically stored information, failed to deliver a Trade Secret Identification Statement as required by Local Rule 26.3, and provided only cursory responses to discovery directed to the trade secret claim. Id. ¶¶ 6-7, 11, 15. Defendant’s supporting memorandum repeats the history recited in its motion and argues that Plaintiff’s failure to produce all responsive information is evidenced by the discrepancies between its initial pdf production versus its later native format production, with the native format version containing over 800 documents with only 30-40 overlapping documents, and the failure to produce “routine and standard internal documents that can be expected” from any organization. ECF No. 98-1 at 1-7, 10-11. Specifically, Defendant contends that Plaintiff gathered files in support of its claim and then produced its “claim file” rather than produce all responsive information. Id. at 11. Defendant asserts that Plaintiff’s failures relate to First Set of RFP Nos. 1- 2, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 15-21 and Second Set of RFP No. 13. Id. at 8-9. Defendant objects to Plaintiff’s

failure to deliver the Rule 26.3 identification statement as well as its ambiguous discovery responses identifying a category of documents, asserting Plaintiff’s alleged trade secret is “undefined and nondescript.” Id. at 12-15. In Opposition, Plaintiff asserts that it has produced all responsive, non-privileged documents and ESI in its possession, custody and control, including both pdf and native format productions, and supplemented when concerns were raised, and Defendant mischaracterizes the discovery history, overstates the alleged deficiencies, and conflates ESI production with Rule 26.3’s identification statement requirement. ECF No. 101 at 1. Plaintiff argues that a 7-day response deadline is unreasonable because Defendant does not identify, with specificity, what categories of documents it believes exist but were not produced. Id. at 8. Plaintiff asserts the

parties’ waiver of initial disclosures included the Rule 26.3 statement and, in any event, it sufficiently identified its trade secrets by specifying categories of (a) proprietary conceptual design for constructing and transporting concrete floor units and (b) proprietary structural design and engineering specifications for floating dry dock pontoon system, including but not limited to the dimensional layout, freeboard calculations, ballast system configurations, and load distribution methodology developed by Plaintiff, and producing engineering data and design documents. Id. at 8-10. Plaintiff asks that, if a Rule 26.3 statement is required, it should be allowed 21 days to provide same. Id. at 11. Plaintiff contends that its native format production was not simply a “claim file” but included all emails, documents and ESI dating back to 2009, including external communications relevant to the dispute, engineering documents, design materials and related correspondence. Id. at 4. It also asserts that the alleged “discrepancies” between the native format and pdf productions

resulted from predictable differences from converting the documents, not deliberate omissions. Id. at 5. Plaintiff argues that Defendant has not identified any omitted material, and a motion to compel based on suspicion and inference is improper. Id. However, Plaintiff appears to concede it has not searched for and produced all electronic communications (e.g., texts or messaging app communications), stating only that it produced all internal emails and later asserting that a search for text messages and other communications from personal devices would entail lengthy forensic efforts and a review that could not be accomplished in 7 days. Id. at 6, 8. Plaintiff also asserts that it has not deleted or failed to preserve ESI, only that its vendor did not retain the search terms it ran to gather the information. Id. at 6-7. In Reply, Defendant asserts that the requests properly seek relevant evidence (i.e., internal

communications about the project, lawsuit, claims and defenses) proportional to the needs of the case, and Plaintiff’s relevance and proportionality objections must fail. ECF No. 102. Defendant disputes Plaintiff’s assertion that file formatting differences explain the inconsistent productions because the initial production only covered July 2022 forward, whereas the second production went back to 2009 and included 350 more documents. Id. at 3. Defendant reiterates that the requests sought all communications but Plaintiff continues to limit its discussion to emails, that there was no waiver of the Rule 26.3 trade secret identification statement because that claim had not been urged when they agreed to waive initial disclosures required by Rule 26, and Plaintiff’s responses to the second set of discovery directed to trade secrets are insufficient. Id. at 4-7. III. APPLICABLE LAW AND ANALYSIS The parties appear to agree that the requests at issue seek relevant information within the scope of permissible discovery. See FED. R. CIV. P. 26(b)(1).

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LAD SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, LLC v. DRAGADOS/HAWAIIAN DREDGING/ORION JOINT VENTURE, ET AL., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lad-services-of-louisiana-llc-v-dragadoshawaiian-dredgingorion-joint-laed-2026.