MPAY Inc. v. Erie Custom Computer Applications, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 14, 2020
Docket0:19-cv-00704
StatusUnknown

This text of MPAY Inc. v. Erie Custom Computer Applications, Inc. (MPAY Inc. v. Erie Custom Computer Applications, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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MPAY Inc. v. Erie Custom Computer Applications, Inc., (mnd 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

MPAY, Inc., Civ. No. 19-704 (PAM/BRT)

Plaintiff,

v.

Erie Custom Computer Applications, Inc.; ORDER RE: PLAINTIFF’S PayDay USA, Inc.; Payroll World, Inc.; MOTION TO COMPEL Proliant, Inc.; Proliant Technologies, Inc.; and Kevin Clayton,

Defendants.

Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel (Doc. No. 87) relates to a privilege log that was initially served by the Defendants on July 1, 2019. Defendants’ privilege log was associated with document requests served in May 2019, and Defendants’ responses to those requests were served in June 2019.1 After receiving the first privilege log from Defendants, Plaintiff’s counsel immediately complained that it was inadequate. Thereafter, on July 19, 2019, counsel for the parties met and conferred about the deficiencies and an amended privilege log was produced on August 6, 2019. (Id.) Plaintiff was not satisfied with the amended log and alerted the Court of a dispute in September 2019, pursuant to the Pretrial Scheduling Order. In correspondence dated September 19, 2019, Plaintiff requested that the Court direct Defendants to produce the withheld documents or order them to deliver a conforming privilege log. (Doc. No. 82.) Defendants’ counsel responded with a letter claiming that their amended

1 Defendants state that they “agreed to produce hundreds of pages of unprivileged documents.” (Doc. No. 96, Resp. in Opp’n to Mot. to Compel 6.) privilege log was sufficient. (Doc. No. 83.) The Court held a conference call on October 10, 2019, and, without assessing the quality of what Defendants had served, discussed the importance of a compliant privilege log relating to the multiple Defendants, especially because

Lead Counsel, Kevin C. Young, wore many different hats in his work with each Defendant. The Court gave Defendants’ counsel a third opportunity to deliver a compliant privilege log. Defendants served their Second Amended Privilege Log on November 12, 2019. After further meet and confer, Plaintiff filed its Motion to Compel on November 18, 2019. Defendants opposed the Motion and a hearing on Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel was held on

December 19, 2019. (Doc. No. 107.) At the hearing, Plaintiff’s counsel argued that Defendants had, up to that point, refused to address Plaintiff’s concerns about redactions, email attachments, and email chains. Based on this concern—and the fact that all but one of the challenged Log entries listed emails—the Court asked one of Lead Counsel for Defendants whether any emails included attachments that were not identified in the

description. In response, and on the record, Defendants’ counsel represented that attachments were not withheld: THE COURT: Well, tell me about these documents and then I’ll -- I promise I’ll let you go through and walk through your responses. I do want to hear them. But are these single e-mails? And what about the argument that this doesn’t reflect whether there’s e-mail strings so you can’t put it together, and doesn’t reflect whether there are attachments to any of these e-mail documents? So tell me a little bit about that so I have a feel for it as we begin.

MR. MILLER: These, as you noticed, Your Honor, are predominantly e-mails. There’s a couple of legal memoranda that are in there that are identified. There are no attachments withheld from production so there could be -- there could have been an attachment being an operating agreement, a member agreement, and questions about it. The member agreement, of course, is produced. I believe to the degree it’s a string, it’s back and forth, Kevin to Kevin and Kevin back to Kevin, in that sort of format. The documents that I reviewed, and I can’t say I went through in detail all 400 plus, but the documents that I have reviewed are short. Memoranda are the longer ones being five, six pages; the e-mails are a page or two each, and pretty to the point.

THE COURT: Great. Well, you have answered my questions that were pressing so that I’m oriented, so just feel free to walk through the points that you wanted to make sure to make, and respond to the points that were made by Plaintiff’s counsel. (Doc. No. 113, Tr. 44–45 (emphasis added).) Plaintiff’s counsel responded that this was the first time that they had heard from Defendants about attachments and that all of the attachments were produced: MS. PHILLIPS: . . . I don’t think we’ve ever seen a privilege log that deficient. So this is something where enough is enough. You know, again, this is the first time we heard about attachments, that all the attachments were produced. We didn’t know that. We raised it several times. We didn’t -- nobody said in any log of any letter that no attachments would be withheld.

(Tr. 53 (emphasis added).) After hearing Plaintiff’s response, Defendants’ counsel did not seek to clarify Plaintiff’s counsel’s understanding that “all the attachments were produced.” Then, assuming that any attachments had already been produced, the Court ordered an ex parte submission to determine whether the withheld emails were privileged or protected by the work-product doctrine: THE COURT: So I’ll look forward to just getting the documents in separate red ropes and you only have to send me one set of documents. And I see these are e-mails so it doesn’t look -- I don’t need the attachments if those attachments have been produced. Just the e-mails and your description will be sufficient. (Tr. 57 (emphasis added).) As the Court made clear, Defendants were to submit the challenged emails and any attachments not already produced for in-camera review if Defendants claimed they were privileged or protected.

The Court received Defendants’ ex parte submission on January 6, 2020, including an annotated log and two binders with a Tab for each of the challenged Privilege Log entries. Importantly, no attachments were included with the submission. The Court understood this to mean that any attachments had already been produced, and no privilege or work product protection was claimed with respect to the attachments. The Court reviewed the withheld

emails and noted that many of the emails clearly referenced attachments. Since counsel had assured the Court that they were not withheld, on January 15, 2020, the Court ordered Defendants’ counsel to explain—via lawyer certifications—why any withheld cover emails to the produced attachments could remain privileged or protected when all of the attachments were produced. The Order stated:

In its review of the documents, the Court has identified a significant number of attachments that, if disclosed, would implicate possible waiver of a privilege or work product protection because disclosure of the attachments means either:

• Defendants have taken the position that an attachment to the withheld emails was not privileged or protected; or • Defendants waived any privilege or protection that might apply to the attachment. Assuming this is the case, then the email corresponding to the attachments might not still be privileged or protected under the work product doctrine. Further, if any privilege or work product was waived by disclosing the attachment, the Court may also need to review the scope of the waiver to determine whether the corresponding email remains privileged or protected. Accordingly, the Court seeks additional information before completing its in-camera review. (Doc. No. 110.) Pursuant to this Court’s Order, the attorney certifications were due by January 28, 2020. But Defendants’ January 28, 2020 certifications raised additional—and significant— concerns. The certifications disclosed for the first time that the attachments had not been

produced as represented at the December 19, 2019 hearing. Lead Counsel Kevin C.

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