McKellips v. Kumho Tire Co.

305 F.R.D. 655, 91 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 781, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49390, 2015 WL 1706564
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedApril 15, 2015
DocketCase No. 13-cv-2393-JTM-TJJ
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 305 F.R.D. 655 (McKellips v. Kumho Tire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKellips v. Kumho Tire Co., 305 F.R.D. 655, 91 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 781, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49390, 2015 WL 1706564 (D. Kan. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

TERESA J. JAMES, United States Magistrate Judge.

This product liability case is before the Court on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Discovery (ECF No. 65). Plaintiffs request an order, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(a)(1), overruling Defendant Kumho’s objections and compelling Kumho to answer Plaintiffs’ First Interrogatories and produce documents responsive to Plaintiffs’ First Request for Production. As explained below, the motion is granted in part and denied in part.

I. RELEVANT FACTS

Plaintiffs allege that on September 12, 2011, in Miami County, Kansas, Plaintiff Megan McKellips, who was 32 weeks pregnant, was riding in a 2001 Ford F-250 pickup truck driven by Jennifer Heisman. Plaintiffs allege that Heisman lost control of the truck when its right front tire suffered a sudden, unexpected, and catastrophic tread and belt separation. The truck left the roadway and rolled over, ejecting Ms. McKellips. She sustained life-threatening injuries and underwent an emergency Caesarean section delivery of her son, who died three hours later. The tire that allegedly separated and caused the accident was a Kumho Road Venture All Terrain (“AT”) tire KL78, size LT235/85R16, DOT K2ORYD4A3508, manufactured by Kumho Tire (Vietnam) Co., Ltd. at its Binh Duong plant in Vietnam, during the 35th week of 2008 (hereinafter referred to as the “Subject Tire”).

Plaintiffs commenced this action on August 7, 2013, claiming that Defendants defectively designed and manufactured the Subject Tire. In their First Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs allege that the Subject Tire was defective in that it “lack[ed] proper adhesion between the steel belts, and/or between the steel belts and the surrounding materials.”1 Plaintiffs further allege that Defendants’ negligence in connection with the Subject Tire consisted of:

(a) Inadequate and/or improper belting; (b) Failure to design and manufacture the tire to account for the effects of ozone, oxygen and/or moisture; (c) Using inadequate and improper specifications and formulas; (d) Inadequate consideration of the ambient temperatures to which the tire would be subjected in ordinary road operation in the Midwestern United States; (e) Designing the tire with an inadequate margin of safety to prevent tread and belt separations in ordinary road operations or under expected and anticipated road conditions; (f) Inadequate sizing or compounding of the belt wedges and/or insulation strips; (g) Excessive use of fillers or other ingredients in inner liner compound(s) and/or the use of an inappropriate inner liner eompound(s); and (h) Utilization of improper compounds for, or ingredients in, the ply rubber stocks, belt rubber stocks and tread base rubber stocks to achieve a cost savings at the expense of adequate adhesion of tire components.2

Before the parties began serving their discovery requests, they proposed an agreed upon protective order limiting the disclosure [659]*659and use of confidential information, but they disagreed on the inclusion of a sharing provision. After a hearing, the Court denied Plaintiffs’ request for a sharing provision, finding it a preemptive sharing provision that would essentially allow discovery of Defendants’ designated confidential information by as-yet unnamed plaintiffs or potential plaintiffs in other litigation without any court supervision, and without any opportunity for Defendants to object to the disclosure.3 The provision as proposed also would have given Plaintiffs’ counsel the sole discretion to determine who met the criteria for disclosure. On July 22, 2014, the parties submitted and the Court entered a Protective Order (ECF No. 43) without any sharing provision.

On June 26, 2014, Plaintiffs served their First Request for Production and First Interrogatories upon Defendant Kumho Tire Co., Inc. (“Kumho”), consisting of 120 requests for production of documents and 16 interrogatories. On September 5, 2014, Kumho served its Responses and Objections to Plaintiffs First Request for Production (111 pages), and its Answers and Objections to Plaintiffs’ First Interrogatories (13 pages). Kumho also produced nearly 500 documents responsive to these discovery requests (149 of which are English translations), but objected to nearly every request. Kumho unilaterally limited the scope of its discovery responses and limited its production to responsive information that it identified as pertaining to “the Subject Tire and the subject model and size tire.”4

On September 23, 2014, Plaintiffs’ counsel sent a five-page “Golden Rule” email to Kumho’s counsel pursuant to D. Kan. Rule 37.2, identifying and attempting to resolve what Plaintiffs believed to be deficiencies in Kumho’s responses to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests. Kumho responded to that email on October 6, 2014. Plaintiffs thereafter made further attempts to confer as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(a) and D. Kan. Rule 37.2, and ultimately filed their Motion to Compel Discovery on November 14, 2014. Kumho filed its Response (ECF No. 68) on December 12, 2014, and Plaintiffs filed their Reply (ECF No. 71) on January 9, 2015.

The Court held a non-evidentiary motion hearing on February 17, 2015 to address issues related to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Discovery. Among the issues discussed at length during the hearing were Kumho’s trade secret objections to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests. Because Kumho asserted one or more trade secret objections of varying degrees to nearly every one of Plaintiffs’ Requests for Production, the Court inquired during the hearing whether and to what extent Kumho claimed Plaintiffs’ discovery requests sought documents or information warranting such a high level of protection that such documents or information could not safely be disclosed even under the terms of a protective order. Kumho’s counsel indicated there are certain “crown jewels” trade secrets that fall into this category.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Discovery under advisement and ordered Kumho to: (a) serve amended responses to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests, identifying those responses/answers for which responsive documents or information may have existed at one time, but which were no longer available at the time of its response/answer due to Kumho’s document retention or destruction policy; (b) serve amended responses to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests specifically identifying those requests which Kumho contends seek to discover its “crown jewels” trade secrets that could not safely be produced, even under the terms of a protective order; and (c) provide information on the number of subject model tires (Kumho Road Venture AT, APT, and MT)5 that would have the same belt skim stock formulation and the number with the same inner liner halobutyl content as the Subject Tire.

[660]*660On February 24, 2015, Kumho served its First Supplemental Responses and Answers, in which it claims that 50 of Plaintiffs’ Requests for Production and three Interrogatories seek documents and information that could not safely be produced even under the terms of a protective order.6

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305 F.R.D. 655, 91 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 781, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49390, 2015 WL 1706564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckellips-v-kumho-tire-co-ksd-2015.