Lorraine McGuire Wife Of/and Jack Valley v. Sigma Coatings, Inc., James Veach, Movant-Appellant

48 F.3d 902, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 531, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 6791, 1995 WL 110639
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1995
Docket94-30267
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 48 F.3d 902 (Lorraine McGuire Wife Of/and Jack Valley v. Sigma Coatings, Inc., James Veach, Movant-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorraine McGuire Wife Of/and Jack Valley v. Sigma Coatings, Inc., James Veach, Movant-Appellant, 48 F.3d 902, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 531, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 6791, 1995 WL 110639 (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Appellant James Veach (Veach) appeals an order of the district court sanctioning him for destroying documents responsive to discovery requests. Because we hold that the district court did not acquire personal jurisdiction over Veach, we vacate the order.

Facts and Proceedings Below

In June 1991, Fina Oil and Chemical Company (Fina) was sued in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana for alleged environmental contamination of a Harvey, Louisiana, site leased to Sigma Coatings, Inc., a division of Fina, for operation of a paint manufacturing facility. 1 Veach, who is in-house counsel specializing in environmental matters for Fina in its Dallas, Texas, office, was not counsel for Fina in connection with this litigation. Fina was represented in the litigation by outside counsel.

In the litigation, which has since been' settled, plaintiffs served several document requests on Fina. The first request, served June 3, 1991, with the original complaint, asked Fina to provide, inter alia, “[a]ll documents relating or referring to the conducting of any environmental assessment or environmental testing of Sigma Coatings, Inc.’s facility in Harvey, Louisiana, from 1980 through the present.” Fina responded that it would provide the requested documents to the extent they were not protected by the attorney-client privilege. On October 16, 1991, plaintiffs requested additional documents from Fina, including “[a]ny and all questionnaires drafted by the defendants in Dallas, delivered to longtime Sigma Coatings, Inc.’s employees ... that request information concerning the environmental practices and/or consequences at the facility at 3300 River Road in Harvey, Louisiana.” Fina objected to this request on the basis of the attorney-client privilege and the attorney work product doctrine. On December 10, 1991, Veach, in Dallas, destroyed certain questionnaires issued to various Fina employees as part of Fina’s 1991 environmental audit. It is the destruction of these documents that gives rise to the present controversy.

In addition, as part of a notice of deposition served on Fina on January 17, 1992, plaintiffs requested that deponent Richard Charter (Charter), head of Fina’s Environmental Affairs Department, provide “[a]ny and all memoranda, notes, letters or reports prepared or received by Rick Charter regarding any and all inspections or audits made by him, or any other representative of Fina Oil and Chemical Company, or their insurers, of the Sigma Coatings facility at 3300 River Rd., Harvey, Louisiana.” Veach, who attended the January 21, 1992, oral deposition of Charter, stated that the pre-audit questionnaires were not being produced because they were covered by the attorney-client privilege. This was the first time plaintiffs learned that Fina had conducted environmental audits.' At the deposition, Charter was questioned about Fina’s document retention policies, and he stated that the company’s usual procedure was to destroy all intermediate-' documentation comprising the audit report after the audit report was issued. The final 1991 audit report was issued in April 1992; as previously noted, however, Veach had destroyed his copies of the pre-audit questionnaires in December 1991,' around the time the draft report was issued.

On July 17, 1992, the plaintiffs filed a motion to compel production, specifically requesting the pre-audit questionnaires. The magistrate judge held a hearing on this motion on July 21 and 23. The minute entry that resulted from that conference, filed July 27, 1992, directed Fina- to produce for in camera inspection its 1989 and 1991 environmental audits and a list of all documents responsive to plaintiffs’ document requests over which Fina claimed privilege. Having reviewed the audit reports Fina provided for in camera inspection, the magistrate judge determined that Fina had unnecessarily in-> jected counsel into the audit process in a deliberate attempt to bring the resulting documents under the attorney-client privilege; *904 the magistrate judge therefore ordered the audits produced. The pre-audit questionnaires, however, were not provided, and in its minute entry of August 12, 1992, the magistrate judge ordered the questionnaires produced for in camera inspection and cautioned that, if Fina could not locate the questionnaires, it was to provide an affidavit explaining why. In response, Fina submitted the affidavit of Charter,' which stated that it was Fina’s general policy to destroy the questionnaires after the final audit report was issued, but that Fina’s files did not reflect exactly when the documents were destroyed.

On October 6, 1992, 2 plaintiffs filed a motion for default judgment and other appropriate sanctions against Fina; they sought no sanctions against any individual attorney or officer of the company. 3 The magistrate judge held a hearing on this motion on November 5. Veach was the principal witness in that hearing. Under questioning by opposing counsel, Veach testified that he had destroyed the pre-audit questionnaires on December 10, 1991, the date a draft - audit was issued. This was the first time that either plaintiffs or the court learned exactly when the questionnaires had been destroyed and who had destroyed them. Asked to explain why he had failed to produce these documents despite plaintiffs’ first and second requests for production, Veach testified that there was not nor had there ever been an outstanding request for these documents. With regard to plaintiffs’ first request for production, only “environmental assessments” had been requested. , In the terminology of the industry, Veach explained, “environmental assessments” and “environmental audits” were two very different things; therefore, he did not consider the audit materials relevant to the discovery request. With regard to plaintiffs’ second request for production, which sought questionnaires regarding environmental practices at the Harvey, Louisiana, facility, Veach testified that Fina had produced a separate set of questionnaires that fit the description in plaintiffs’ request, but that the pre-audit questionnaires were not responsive to the request and therefore had not been produced. Veach also testified that he believed the pre-audit questionnaires to be privileged and that it was his understanding of the law that he could destroy documents over which privilege was claimed. 4

The magistrate judge issued her report and recommendations on August 19, 1993, in which she recommended that Fina be sanctioned in connection with the destruction of the pre-audit documentation, which she found to be directly responsive to plaintiffs’ first request for production. 5 In that regard, she noted,

“But more importantly and completely impossible to condone is the action of Fina’s chief in-house counsel for environmental matters, James Veach, who ordered the destruction of documents specifically responsive to discovery requests....
Mr. Veach blatantly testified at the time of the hearing that he had a right to destroy these documents without first bringing them to the attention of the court for in camera

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48 F.3d 902, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 531, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 6791, 1995 WL 110639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorraine-mcguire-wife-ofand-jack-valley-v-sigma-coatings-inc-james-ca5-1995.