Perrong v. Sperian Energy Corp

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedJanuary 17, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-00115
StatusUnknown

This text of Perrong v. Sperian Energy Corp (Perrong v. Sperian Energy Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrong v. Sperian Energy Corp, (D. Nev. 2020).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA

3 * * *

4 ANDREW PERRONG, Case No. 2:19-cv-00115-RFB-EJY

5 Plaintiff, ORDER 6 v.

7 SPERIAN ENERGY CORP., et al.,

8 Defendants.

9 10 I. BACKGROUND 11 Before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Notice of Emergency Motion and Memorandum of Points and 12 Authorities in Support of Emergency Motion for Sanctions Directed to Defendant Energy Group 13 Consultants, Inc. (ECF No. 113), and Plaintiffs’ Notice of Motion and Memorandum of Points and 14 Authorities in Support of Motion to Seal (ECF No. 114). Responses to Plaintiffs’ Emergency 15 Motion were filed by Defendants Energy Group Consultants (“EGC”)1 and Tomorrow Energy FKA 16 Sperian Energy (“Sperian”). ECF Nos. 119 and 120. On January 9, 2020, the Court held a lengthy 17 hearing on Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion and Motion to Seal. 18 At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court granted the Motion to Seal (ECF No 114) and 19 denied, without prejudice, Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion for Sanctions to the extent Plaintiffs asked 20 the Court to order an adverse inference instruction against EGC and Plaintiffs sought discovery 21 regarding whether EGC and Team Integrity are alter egos. The Court granted Plaintiffs’ Motion to 22 the extent it ordered an expansion of the inspection scheduled to occur on January 14, 2020, and 23 ordered that to the extent EGC servers are imaged, file names for images relating to call records

24 1 Sperian, in its opposition to Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion, distinguishes between Energy Group Consultants, Inc., sued by Plaintiffs, and Energy Group Consultants, LLC, sued by Sperian. ECF No. 119 at 2. However, Energy 25 Group Consultants, Inc., in its response to Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion, does not raise this issue and has not raised this issue in any of the numerous hearings before the Court. ECF Nos. 104, 106, 120, and 121. There is no evidence that 26 Energy Group Consultants, Inc. has objected to any discovery based on Plaintiffs propounding requests on Energy Group Consultants, Inc. rather than on Energy Group Consultants, LLC as this is not raised anywhere in their EGC’s opposition 27 brief or in the emails attached to Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion. Even the employee who conducted the electronically 1 were to be provided to the parties. The Court also ordered that if the computers of John Williams 2 and Tyde Bonaparte, of Team Integrity, were available at EGC, those computers would also be 3 imaged based upon the representations made to the process server at the time of service of subpoenas 4 duces tecum on Williams and Bonaparte. The Court made clear to EGC that it was now on notice 5 regarding the alter ego allegation and to preserve all evidence that may exist that would prove or 6 disprove this contention. The transcript of the hearing details these orders. 7 The remainder of Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion was taken under advisement in light of the 8 Court’s order requiring Defendant EGC to provide to Plaintiffs’ counsel information confirming or 9 denying the existence of a contractual relationship between EGC and Team Integrity (irrespective 10 of the type or form of the contract), the date the contract was formed, and whether EGC has a 11 “dialer.” Plaintiffs were then to file the information with the Court. Counsel for EGC has instead 12 filed a supplemental declaration directly with the Court confirming a contractual relationship 13 between EGC and Team Integrity dating back approximately four years. ECF No. 122 ¶ 4(a). 14 EGC, through counsel, further confirms Team Integrity was to provide “call center services 15 to EGC” and, that on February 12, 2019, EGC took steps to ensure “Team Integrity saved and 16 protected all data and information relative to Plaintiff’s [sic] allegations and the Sperian campaign.” 17 Id. ¶¶ 4(b) and (c). The Court notes that no copy of a communication to this effect was provided. 18 Nonetheless, EGC contends that all documents and data related to the Sperian campaign that “was 19 available” to Team Integrity was provided in a file folder to EGC, which EGC has produced. Id. ¶¶ 20 4(d)-(f). EGC also contends that Team Integrity provided to EGC all documents and data that G- 21 Energy had with respect to the Sperian campaign, and that this too has been produced. Id. ¶ 4(d). 22 EGC contends that Mr. Bonaparte of Team Integrity confirmed that the Team Integrity dialer made 23 no calls to Mr. Perrong because Team Integrity’s dialer “could not call a number on the “Do Not 24 Contact list.” Id. at 4(i). Finally, counsel for EGC states that “Mr. Bonaparte stated that G-Energy 25 made the call to the number identified as Mr. Perrong’s number and that that information has been 26 provided as well.” Id. ¶ 4(j). 27 1 In sum, EGC appears to argue that it has never had any call records of its own, and that all 2 records, including calling records that they were “available” from Team Integrity and Team 3 Integrity’s downstream contractor G-Energy, have been produced.2 Despite this fact, Plaintiffs 4 make clear that they are in possession of no calling records. Moreover, EGC does not state whether 5 the supposed “server in India” on which call records may have at one time existed, and which must 6 be owned by some company, was ever informed by EGC or its downline contractor to preserve call 7 records. See ECF Nos. 113-7 at 3 and 122. No attempts to identify the entity to whom the “server 8 in India” appears to belong seems to have been made, and no attempt to identify phone companies 9 that may have calling records relevant to this case has been made. The mystery of the responsibility 10 for preserving calling records continues with various proffers with no party taking responsibility for 11 preservation of such records. Calling records in this TCPA case are obviously records that any entity 12 who is a party to this case must have known had to be preserved as of January 23, 2019, the date an 13 email was sent by Sperian’s Chief Legal Officer to Matt Alexander at EGC. ECF No. 113-5. 14 II. ANALYSIS 15 Preservation of relevant evidence is not optional. “A party must preserve evidence it knows 16 or should know is relevant to a claim or defense by any party, or that may lead to the discovery of 17 relevant evidence. . . . The duty to preserve arises not only during litigation, but also extends to the 18 period before litigation when a party should reasonably know that evidence may be relevant to 19 anticipated litigation.” Gonzalez v. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Dept., 2012 WL 1118949, *5 20 (D. Nev. Apr. 2, 2012) (internal citations omitted). “[I]f relevant evidence has been shown to exist, 21 and if the possessor of that evidence was on notice that the evidence was potentially relevant to 22 litigation which was reasonably foreseeable, and if that party failed to take reasonable steps to 23 preserve it, sanctions may be imposed upon that party.” Fernandez v. Centric, No. 3:12-cv-00401- 24 LRH-WGC, 2014 WL 2042148, *4 (D. Nev. May 16, 2014). Importantly, “[t]he preservation

25 2 Despite its recent representations, at one point in time prior counsel for EGC told Plaintiffs’ counsel that EGC did have calling records that would be produced. That same counsel, just before withdrawing from representation of 26 EGC, communicated that it appeared EGC did not have calling records applicable to this case; rather, such records belong to Team Integrity. ECF No. 113 at 6 (citing Declaration of Anthony Paraonich ¶¶ 6-9). Current EGC counsel 27 seemed to believe not only that EGC does not have calling records, but that EGC also does not have a “dialer” (as stated 1 obligation runs first to counsel, who has a duty to advise his client of the type of information 2 potentially relevant to the lawsuit and of the necessity of preventing its destruction.” Surowiec v.

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