MMI Products, Inc. v. Long

231 F.R.D. 215, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21431, 2005 WL 2334158
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 15, 2005
DocketNo. CIV PJM 03-2711
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 231 F.R.D. 215 (MMI Products, Inc. v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MMI Products, Inc. v. Long, 231 F.R.D. 215, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21431, 2005 WL 2334158 (D. Md. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MESSITTE, District Judge.

The Court considers Plaintiff MMI Products, Inc.’s Objection to Magistrate Judge Connelly’s Order of April 1, 2005 and Defendant Dale Long’s Opposition to same.1 The Magistrate Judge proposes to sanction MMI pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(g)(3), by ordering MMI and its counsel to pay the fees of Long’s expert because MMI and counsel failed to make reasonable inquiries into the reliability of their own expert’s report as incorporated by reference into MMI’s answers to interrogatories.

The Court SUSTAINS MMI’s objection.

I.

The salient facts found by the Magistrate Judge are these:

In its Second Amended Complaint, MMI alleges, inter alia, that on or about March 25, 2003 when he left MMI’s employ, Long misappropriated a laptop computer that had been assigned to him while employed by [216]*216MMI. When MMI demanded the return of the laptop and Long complied, MMI employed a computer expert, Jason Velasco of Renew Data Corporation, “to preserve the contents [of the hard drive] in a forensically sound manner, recover deleted electronic files, and provide an analysis of the contents of the [hard drive].” In his investigation, Velasco discovered e-mail fragments which he suggested were indicative of deleted and/or overwritten files. He also found that the computer’s internal time clock was off by some 18 months. From this, he concluded that “there was an attempt to overwrite data through a selective restoration from previous backup session or a reinstallation of Microsoft Windows 2000” and that the selective restoration was performed at a backup session that possibly took place on December 10, 2002.

On August 12, 2004, MMI submitted Velas-co’s report, as well as the requisite Rule 26(a)(2) initial expert disclosures, to Long.

In September 2004, Long retained his own forensic computer expert, Peter Wolf of Kroll Ontrack, Inc., to evaluate the Velasco Report. On September 24, 2004, Wolf received a mirror image of the laptop.2 On October 26, Long also sent MMI a document request seeking all documents relating to the laptop and on November 2, he sent interrogatories seeking, inter alia, information as to the chain of custody of the laptop dating from the time Long returned it to MMI to the present.

MMI formally objected to the document production and thus did not immediately produce responsive documents, but on January 10, 2005 it did provide answers to the interrogatories, incorporating the Velasco report by reference.3 Since the answers still did not contain information relative to the chain of custody of the laptop, on January 18, 2005, MMI submitted — albeit in unverified form— supplemental answers to the interrogatories indicating that, from July 2003 to June 16, 2004, MMI’s counsel (Klett Rooney) possessed the laptop and that no one from his office ever turned it on. ,

Wolf, Long’s expert, submitted his expert report to MMI on January 24, 2005. In it, Wolf agreed that the laptop’s internal time clock was out of sync, which he attributed to a loss of battery power after Long returned the laptop to MMI. But Wolf challenged Ve-lasco’s suggestion of possible restoration activity, having discovered on his own on a Dell computer support website that the laptop in question had been shipped to MMI on December 21, 2002, after the date Velasco surmised that the restoration activity might have taken place. Wolf criticized Velasco for failing to determine the manufacture or shipping date of the computer. Wolf also concluded that any deletions or overwrites were the result of normal processes, not efforts by a user to delete information, and that the same was true with respect to the e-mail fragments and other data found in unallocated space. Wolf opined that this “should not imply malicious activity by a user absent other evidence.”

He closed by noting that the “laptop [had been] imaged by Renew Data [Velasco’s firm] after at least two sessions of non-forensic access when the laptop was in the custody of MMI’s lawyers.”

On January 25, 2005, MMI supplemented its January 18 answers to interrogatories— this time verified — indicating that while the laptop was in possession of its counsel, a representative of MMI had in fact turned on [217]*217the computer but was unable to access any files.

On January 27, pursuant to the Magistrate Judge’s Order to produce documents relating to the laptop, MMI produced documents showing that it had indeed ordered the laptop in question from Dell Computer on December 17, 2003, and that Dell had issued an invoice relative to it on December 20, 2002.

On January 28, 2005, at the deposition of MMI’s Rule 30(b)(6) representative, the representative admitted that in fact two MMI representatives, instead of one, had attempted to access the laptop while it was at the office of MMI’s counsel.

Long thereupon demanded that MMI withdraw its claim against him relating to the laptop, which MMI refused to do. Instead, on February 11, 2005, MMI announced that it was withdrawing the Velasco report, that it would not call him at trial, and that it intended to rely solely on Long’s own admission that he took the computer and the indisputable fact that the computer was retrieved from Long’s counsel after Long left MMI’s employ.

II.

Long then asked the Magistrate Judge to award him both expert and attorney’s fees incurred in connection with refuting the Ve-lasco report, arguing as follows that there was no substantial justification for the allegation in MMI’s experts disclosure:

In this ease, there was no substantial justification for the allegation in Plaintiffs expert disclosure that Dale Long attempted to overwrite data on his Laptop through a backup session on or about December 10, 2002. Had MMI conducted a reasonable inquiry into the facts underlying this allegation, it would have discovered that no alleged backup session could have taken place on or about December 10, 2002 because the Laptop was not even manufactured and shipped out of Dell Computer until December 21, 2002! Plaintiff had documents in its possession confirming these facts, and despite request from Defendants made as early as October 2004, Plaintiff did not produce these documents until January 27th. Indeed, MMI had every opportunity to correct this purported factual finding in its expert disclosure on December 24th but chose not to do so. (Emphasis in original).

Before the Magistrate Judge MMI took the position and now before the Court contends that Long made the decision to engage a computer expert on his own in pursuit of a collateral issue, since the Second Amended Complaint alleges only that Long misappropriated the computer, not that he misappropriated information stored in it; that MMI’s expert was engaged out an abundance of caution since MMI was unsure what role the laptop would play at trial; that the Velasco report did not attempt to say who might have overwritten or deleted data; that the dates on the computer were indisputably off by 18 months, which is to say, they were unreliable; and that chain of custody issues after Long returned the computer are irrelevant because MMI seeks only to prove that Long took the computer when he left its employ.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Young v. FCI Beckley
S.D. West Virginia, 2025
Reynolds v. Young
S.D. West Virginia, 2023
Brown v. Chapman
S.D. West Virginia, 2023
Sky Angel U.S., LLC v. Discovery Communications, LLC
28 F. Supp. 3d 465 (D. Maryland, 2014)
Genger v. TR INVESTORS, LLC
26 A.3d 180 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2011)
Chao v. Tyson Foods, Inc.
568 F. Supp. 2d 1300 (N.D. Alabama, 2008)
Furmanite America, Inc. v. T.D. Williamson, Inc.
506 F. Supp. 2d 1126 (M.D. Florida, 2007)
Neighborhood Development Collaborative v. Murphy
233 F.R.D. 436 (D. Maryland, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 F.R.D. 215, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21431, 2005 WL 2334158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mmi-products-inc-v-long-mdd-2005.