New London Tobacco Market Inc., et al. v. Kentucky Fuel Corporation, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJuly 10, 2026
Docket6:12-cv-00091
StatusUnknown

This text of New London Tobacco Market Inc., et al. v. Kentucky Fuel Corporation, et al. (New London Tobacco Market Inc., et al. v. Kentucky Fuel Corporation, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New London Tobacco Market Inc., et al. v. Kentucky Fuel Corporation, et al., (E.D. Ky. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY SOUTHERN DIVISION LONDON

NEW LONDON TOBACCO ) MARKET INC., et al., ) ) Civil No. 6:12-cv-00091-GFVT-HAI Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) OPINION ) & KENTUCKY FUEL CORPORATION, et ) ORDER al., ) ) Defendants. *** *** *** ***

This matter is before the Court on the submission of additional briefing, pursuant to Judge Hanly A. Ingram’s November 12, 2025, Order. [R. 830.] The history of this dispute is long and storied; the post-judgment discovery dispute at the core of this opinion has itself remained ongoing for more than a decade. Reams of paper and drums of ink have been expended on addressing the unfortunately ongoing struggles in obtaining necessary documentation to permit the Plaintiffs’ recovery in this matter. This Court has long cautioned the Defendants that continued intransigence could result in the ultimate disposition imposed by this Order. This caution having gone unheeded, those “some-day” warnings ripen today. The avoidance of accountability through blatant disregard of Court orders, premised on inexplicable and irresponsible business practices, and bolstered by paper-thin declarations, betrays the very concept of our American system of justice. Accordingly, and for the reasons that follow, the Defendants’ Motion to Vacate Sanctions [R. 781] is DENIED, and, instead, additional sanctions are imposed upon the Defendants. I The Court need not overly belabor much of the case’s factual history, which has been recounted effectively time and time again. As relevant here, the Court entered a default judgment against the Defendants as a sanction for their failure to comply with discovery. [R.

206.] Subsequently, Magistrate Judge Hanly A. Ingram conducted a hearing on damages, and the Court subsequently adopted a modified version of his recommended disposition and entered final judgment. [R. 445; R. 446.] While this was argued on appeal, post-judgment discovery commenced. [R. 471; R. 473.] Naturally, the Plaintiffs’ focus in post-judgment discovery was toward collection, and they sought information pertinent to potentially fraudulent transfers of assets, as well as evidence that the Defendant entities are merely alter-egos of members of the Justice family. [R. 512 at 1-2.] Almost immediately, the Parties became deadlocked over post- judgment discovery disputes, which continues largely unabated to this day. [See R. 489; R. 565 at 3.] For purposes of this opinion, it is worthwhile to recount, in detail, the gradual progression

of post-judgment discovery disputes, and the resulting sanctions. At an initial hearing regarding discovery, Judge Ingram advised the Defendant entities of their duty to comply with discovery requests, instructed them to document their efforts to comply, directed them to provide audio of the hearing to their clients, and to preserve all documents related to the discovery at issue, regardless of whether they had deigned to produce them yet. [R. 491.] Judge Ingram also permitted the Plaintiffs to file a motion to compel. [Id.] Unsatisfied with the initial progression of post-judgment discovery, the Plaintiffs moved to compel the Defendants to respond fully to ten interrogatories and eighteen requests for production. [R. 495.] Although the Defendants objected to certain aspects of this motion, Judge Ingram disagreed and determined that New London and Fivemile were entitled to full discovery as to the relationship between the Defendant entities because of the complexity of their ownership and interrelationship. [R. 505 at 2.] This culminated in the Discovery Order, entered by Judge Ingram on April 16, 2021, the compliance with which remains in issue. [Id.] The

Discovery Order also required the Plaintiffs to file a status report “describing the extent of Defendants’ compliance with this order.” [Id.] The Plaintiffs filed a timely status report, and opined that the Defendants failed to comply with the Discovery Order. [R. 507.] Shortly thereafter, Plaintiffs also moved for sanctions and specifically requested a finding of contempt against the officers of the Defendant entities. [R. 510; R. 512.] Judge Ingram addressed Plaintiffs’ motion in a March 23, 2022, Order. [R. 565.] Specifically, Judge Ingram required that Stephen Ball, Jay Justice, Summer Deane, and Jill Justice submit to a deposition by the Plaintiffs, required that the Defendants file a notice that includes any and all privilege logs from the case’s outset, and required the Defendants to file a notice of compliance with the Court’s prior directive regarding the preservation of documents in

this matter. [Id. at 18.] Judge Ingram did not, however, hold Jay and Jill Justice personally in contempt, and denied Plaintiffs’ request for conclusive factual findings as a form of sanction. [Id.] Judge Ingram denied these requests without prejudice, and explicitly provided that they “can be renewed by motion following the depositions.” [Id.] Following the depositions, Plaintiffs did, in fact, renew those requests, arguing that, based on the depositions and related discovery, further sanctions and a finding of contempt against three officers/directors were warranted. [R. 673 at 2.] Again, Judge Ingram prepared a recommended disposition and order which recommended an increased regimen of sanctions. [R. 697 at 37.] The undersigned adopted several of Judge Ingram’s recommendations, and rejected others in his July 26, 2024, opinion and order. [R. 744.] For the first time, the Court held Jay Justice and Stephen Ball in civil contempt for failing to direct the Defendant entities to cooperate with the Discovery Order, pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(vii) and 28 U.S.C. § 636(e)(6). [Id. at 25-26.] At this juncture, Ball and Jay Justice were ordered to pay sanctions in the amount of

$250.00 per day to the Court until such time as the Defendant entities were in full compliance with the Discovery Order. [Id.] The Court stopped short, however, of adopting Judge Ingram’s recommendation that Defendants be sanctioned under Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(i), by holding that the Justice companies and their shareholders are alter egos. [Id. at 9.] Further, while the Court determined that the magistrate judge lacked the jurisdiction to directly order sanctions under 37(b)(2)(A)(i), it still found that his “recommendation provides an accurate rendition of the record.” [Id. at 5-9.] Although the Court did not adopt this highly consequential factual finding as a sanction at that time, the Court provided: The purpose of the post-judgment discovery was to discover facts that would support a finding of alter ego. The Defendants then engaged in abusive practices for the sole purpose of frustrating the Plaintiffs’ ability to extract the discovery. Despite these facts, the Court will abstain from sanctioning the Defendants under Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(i). Although the Defendants’ conduct is egregious, declaring a factual finding of alter ego at this particular juncture is premature. That does not mean, however, that alter ego will never be found. It may very well be the case that, down the road, the Court will make a finding of alter ego. The Court will welcome a future motion by the Plaintiffs for an alter ego finding if the Defendants continue to evade discovery after the entry of this Order. The Defendants are hereby warned that if they fail to cooperate, the Court may deem it appropriate to enter a finding of alter ego as a discovery sanction.

[R. 744 at 9.] Unfortunately, the post-judgment discovery abuses did not abate after the imposition of sanctions. Several months later, the Plaintiffs filed a second renewed motion for contempt and sanctions, arguing that the Defendants still failed to comply with the Discovery Order. [R. 770.] The Court addressed these renewed motions in its February 10, 2025, memorandum opinion and order.

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New London Tobacco Market Inc., et al. v. Kentucky Fuel Corporation, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-london-tobacco-market-inc-et-al-v-kentucky-fuel-corporation-et-al-kyed-2026.