Mountainville Commerce v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedNovember 26, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00700
StatusUnknown

This text of Mountainville Commerce v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company (Mountainville Commerce v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mountainville Commerce v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company, (D. Utah 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION

MOUNTAINVILLE COMMERCE, LLC, et al., MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART [23] Plaintiffs, PLAINTIFF’S SHORT FORM DISCOVERY MOTION v.

AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE Case No. 2:23-cv-00700-AMA-CMR COMPANY, District Judge Ann Marie McIff Allen Defendant. Magistrate Judge Cecilia M. Romero

This matter is referred to the undersigned in accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A) (ECF 9). Before the court is Plaintiff Mountainville Commerce, LLC’s (Plaintiff) Short Form Discovery Motion (Motion) (ECF 23) requesting an order compelling the production of documents in response to Plaintiff’s Request for Production No. 1.1 The court considered Defendant Auto- Owners Insurance Company’s (Defendant) response (ECF 24), and Plaintiff’s reply (ECF 32). The court heard oral argument on the Motion at a hearing on June 27, 2024 (ECF 37), and the court has considered the supplemental briefs submitted after the hearing by both Defendant (ECF 39) and Plaintiff (ECF 40). Having carefully considered the relevant filings, case law, and oral argument, the court GRANTS IN PART Plaintiff’s Motion. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff is a game company and, in May 2022, was sued by a competitor alleging that Plaintiff “copied its trade dress in marketing and otherwise copied marketing ideas” (ECF 23 at

1 The request at issue states: “REQUEST FOR PRODUCTION NO. 1: A copy of [Defendant’s] claims file relating to the CLAIM” (ECF 23-1 at 9). 1). Thereafter, Plaintiff sought insurance coverage under its policy with Defendant, which Plaintiff alleges “provided advertising injury liability coverage” (id. at 2). According to Plaintiff, Defendant “wrongfully denied the claim,” prompting Plaintiff to file the present action (id.). Originally, the Complaint was filed in Utah County District Court “[o]n or about September 6, 2023” (ECF 1 at

2). On October 3, 2023, Defendant sought and was granted removal of this matter to federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 on the basis that this court has diversity jurisdiction over the litigation pursuant to U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) (id.). After the matter was removed, Plaintiff submitted its discovery requests which included Production No. 1 (ECF 23-1 at 9). Production No. 1 sought a copy of Defendant’s claims file relating to the claim at issue (id.). While Defendant provided responsive documents to Plaintiff’s request, Plaintiff indicates that the documents were “heavily redacted;” thus, Defendant’s “claims file reveals next to nothing about [Defendant’s] adjustment and handling of the insurance claim” (ECF 23 at 2). Plaintiff objects to the redaction of these documents because “[v]irtually all substantive information about why [Defendant] denied the claim is redacted as privileged

communications to or from [Defendant’s] coverage counsel” (id.). Accordingly, Plaintiff requests that the court order Defendant to produce an unredacted claims file with all associated documents or, at a minimum, submit those documents for in camera review (id. at 3). In response, Defendant states that Plaintiff has theorized “without proof” that Defendant’s counsel was involved in “quasi-fiduciary tasks,” including the investigation of Plaintiff’s claim (ECF 24 at 1–2). Defendant avers that in April 2023, one of their adjusters was assigned Plaintiff’s claims and shortly thereafter contacted a representative of Plaintiff to discuss the claims in the underlying lawsuit that had been brought against Plaintiff (id. at 2). After reviewing the relevant documents, Defendant’s adjuster submitted a report regarding Plaintiff’s claim and ultimately recommended denying coverage (id.). According to Defendant, it was only after it completed its own investigation of Plaintiff’s claim that it decided to retain “outside coverage counsel to provide legal advice regarding [Defendant’s] obligations under the policy” (id.). These communications with counsel, according to Defendant, are protected by attorney-client privilege and are precisely

the information that Plaintiff seeks in its Motion (id.). Moreover, Defendant states that the work product doctrine also protects these documents from discovery and need only be produced if Plaintiff can demonstrate a substantial need for the information (id. at 3). Because Plaintiff “cannot demonstrate a substantial need for [Defendant’s] counsel’s legal research and advice thereof,” Defendant argues the relevant documents should remain redacted (id.). For those reasons, Defendant requests that the Motion be denied. On June 27, 2024, the court held a hearing on the Motion, during which the court directed Defendant to file a supplemental brief addressing “the claim file production issue under attorney- client privilege” and to produce the unredacted documents for in camera review (ECF 37). The court also gave Plaintiff an opportunity to respond to Defendant’s supplemental brief (id.).

Defendant took the opportunity to file a supplemental brief (ECF 39), as did Plaintiff (ECF 40). In its supplemental brief, Defendant argues that it “would never be entitled to Plaintiffs’ communications with their attorneys, and there is no reason for the rule not to apply to [Defendant]” (ECF 39 at 2). Defendant further points out that “state law supplies the rule of decision on attorney-client privilege in diversity cases,” and Utah’s attorney-client privilege law therefore applies (id.). Related to the current situation, Defendant states that “[t]here does not appear to be a clear binding decision from a Utah state court deciding whether a coverage opinion is a privileged attorney-client or work-product communication” (id. at 3). But Defendant believes that the Utah Supreme Court’s decision in Fire Insurance Exchange v. Oltmanns, 416 P.3d 1148 (Utah 2018) demonstrates that the court would “likely hold that coverage opinions are attorney- client privileged communications” (ECF 39 at 3). Furthermore, Defendant argues that surrounding jurisdictions have reached similar outcomes and encourages this court to do the same (id. at 4). In Defendant’s view, this would lead to the conclusion the “work-product and attorney-client

privilege protects the discussions and communications about how to prepare for litigation” after Plaintiff disputed Defendant’s coverage position that Defendant took based on the advice of legal counsel (id. at 4–6). Furthermore, in relying on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26, Defendant states that work product covers “documents and tangible things prepared in anticipation of litigation . . . by or for another party or his representative . . . unless the party seeking discovery can show both a substantial need for the materials, and that he is unable, without undue hardship, to obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials by other means” (id. at 3) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)). According to Defendant the information sought falls directly within this definition of work product and is therefore not discoverable by Plaintiff. In Plaintiff’s supplemental brief, it first takes issue with what it characterizes as

Defendant’s “attempt to take another bite at the work-product apple” (ECF 40 at 2). Plaintiff points to the minute entry from the June 2024 hearing (see ECF 37) and argues that the court only directed the parties to address “the claim file production issue under attorney-client privilege” and the court should therefore ignore Defendant’s arguments related to work-product (ECF 40 at 2) (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
Mountainville Commerce v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mountainville-commerce-v-auto-owners-insurance-company-utd-2024.