Rockman Co. (USA) v. Nong Shim Co.

229 F. Supp. 3d 1109, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7748, 2017 WL 275405
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJanuary 19, 2017
DocketCase No. 13-cv-04115-WHO
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 F. Supp. 3d 1109 (Rockman Co. (USA) v. Nong Shim Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockman Co. (USA) v. Nong Shim Co., 229 F. Supp. 3d 1109, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7748, 2017 WL 275405 (N.D. Cal. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTIONS FOR SANCTIONS

WILLIAM H. ORRICK, United States District Judge

INTRODUCTION

Plaintiffs1 want sanctions imposed on defendants2 for the alleged spoliation of evidence following the inception in June 2008 of an investigation by the Korean Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) into allegations of price-fixing in the Korean Ra-men Noodle market. Defendants oppose, arguing that an obligation to preserve documents relevant to the antitrust claims asserted in this case arose only after the inception of this litigation in 2013, and that if any documents were destroyed, that destruction occurred without any intent on the part of defendants to deny plaintiffs access to them in this litigation.

The central issue that I decide on these motions is whether a duty to preserve arose in 2008 in light of the KFTC’s investigation. In other words, should that investigation have put these companies on notice that litigation in the United States was [1112]*1112reasonably foreseeable such that they were required to depart from their normal course of conduct where ESI, including email, was routinely destroyed and hard copy documents were maintained for only a few years. I conclude that given the case law and the facts alleged, defendants did not have a duty as of 2008 to preserve evidence for potential use in litigation in the United States.

Plaintiffs do not put forward any case law to support their argument that in the context of a foreign government’s investigation focused primarily if not exclusively on domestic price fixing, defendants in Korea and their affiliates in the United States had a duty to preserve evidence that would normally otherwise be destroyed because litigation in the United States could someday be commenced. In absence of apposite case law, I decline to reach that far. While Nongshim and Ottogi may have had a duty not to interfere with or impede the KFTC’s investigation—assuming the scope of that investigation was known by the defendants and that investigation imposed an affirmative duty to preserve evidence relevant to that investigation, matters very much in dispute—that duty ran to the KFTC and does not translate into a duty to preserve evidence that can be enforced through an award of sanctions by a court in the United States.

Plaintiffs may be able to argue in this action the negative implications of the evidence they believe they have uncovered, that Nongshim intentionally destroyed information relevant to the KFTC investigation and that Ottogi altered information in response to the KFTC’s investigation. I detail plaintiffs’ allegations in this Order, and some raise questions. But those alleged actions were not targeted, aimed, or done with knowledge that they might impede this litigation. Therefore, they cannot support the sanctions plaintiffs seek.3

BACKGROUND

I. INCEPTION OF INVESTIGATION OF AND LITIGATION AGAINST NONGSHIM

A. KFTC’s Investigation and Nongshim’s Notice

On June 3, 2008, the KFTC conducted an onsite investigation at Nongshim Korea. Declaration of Stephanie Cho [Dkt. No. 456-9], Ex. 20 p. 12.4 Nongshim employees and attorneys were prevented from observing what the KFTC employees were doing and what information they were gathering. Id. pgs. 12-13. Nongshim contends that the KFTC is not required to and did not inform Nongshim about what documents it took or what it was investigating. Deposition of Joong Rak Lee, Exs. 4A & 4C to Declaration of Joseph P. Gras-ser [Dkt. No. 436-1]. Nongshim Korea’s Vice President at the time, Joong Rak Lee, testified that he was asked about Nongshim’s price increases by the KFTC in connection with the onsite visits, see id., but that he was not aware that alleged price collusion between Nongshim and the other defendants was the target of the KFTC investigation until Nongshim received the KFTC’s examination report in January 2012. Declaration of Joong Rak Lee [Dkt. No. 432-10] ¶ 5.5

Plaintiffs allege that Nongshim had adequate notice that price-fixing was the focus [1113]*1113of the KFTC investigation in June 2008. Plaintiffs rely on a letter that they assert the KFTC sent Nongshim Korea regarding its investigation on or around June 27, 2008. In that letter—whose recipients are listed as Nongshim, Samyang, Ottogi, and Yakult Korea, and which was produced in this litigation by Ottogi but not by Nongshim—the KFTC informed the recipients that its “Service Cartel Department” was investigating potential violations of Korean antitrust law in the “ramen market.” Cho Decl, Ex. 12. The letter requested that Nongshim and the other recipients produce 13 categories of ramen-related documents, including pricing documents. Id. Nongshim Korea’s executives, including Joong Rak Lee deny receipt of the June 27, 2008 letter. Joong Rak Lee Decl. ¶ 7. Lee questioned the authenticity of the copy of the June 27, 2008 letter presented to him at his deposition (Cho Ex. 12, OTGKR-0018191), because it was not produced by Nongshim, the letter lacks information (e.g., a blank “from” line), and the letter lacks a “chop,” an official KFTC seal or stamp. Id. ¶ 7.

Plaintiffs contend that other documents produced by Nongshim demonstrate that Nongshim received the June 27th letter and Nongshim was, therefore, on notice of the government’s investigation into price collusion in the ramen market. For example, plaintiffs rely on a document with the filename “The Price Structure of Ramen for Overseas Regions (Planning Team_KFTC),” which lists prices (export, landing, and local sales) for export products and which, according to its metadata, was created in June 2008 and last modified in early July 2008 (prior to the date the KFTC’s June 27th letter requested production of documents by). Cho Exs. 14 & 15. Nongshim’s former Vice President Lee argues that the “Price Structure” document could not have been created in response to the KFTC investigation because (i) that document is from Nongshim Korea’s export department which in Lee’s view was not a target of KFTC investigation and is separate from the unit that sets domestic prices, and (ii) the document does not indicate on its face that it was prepared in response to a request for information from the KFTC. Lee Decl. ¶ 8.6

Plaintiffs point to a July 22, 2008 document (Cho Ex. 16), that noted that Lee was responsible for providing “additional materials upon the KFTC’s 2nd request.” Lee responds that this document relates to a different KFTC investigation (of large ramen distributors, including E-mart mentioned in the entry at issue), and does not relate to the price-fixing allegations investigated by the KFTC. Lee Decl. ¶ 10.

Plaintiffs next rely on a document they claim is from “August 2008,” titled “2008 Planning Team Performance Review,” which notes action items including a response to “KFTC’s cartel investigation” and the “Cartel policy department’s onsite investigation (June 3) and written investigations (July, August).” Cho Ex. 17. Nongshim responds by pointing to the deposition testimony of Nongshim witness Bo Gyoo Kim who testified (when shown a version of this document) that the document did not appear to be final because it lacked signatures, and was more likely a work in progress. Kim Deposition at 149-151, Ex. 12 to Grasser Decl.7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 F. Supp. 3d 1109, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7748, 2017 WL 275405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockman-co-usa-v-nong-shim-co-cand-2017.