Sanjeev Lath v. BMS CAT and Amica Mutual Insurance Company

2018 DNH 146
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 17, 2018
Docket16-cv-534-LM
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 DNH 146 (Sanjeev Lath v. BMS CAT and Amica Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanjeev Lath v. BMS CAT and Amica Mutual Insurance Company, 2018 DNH 146 (D.N.H. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Sanjeev Lath

v. Civil No. 16-cv-534-LM Opinion No. 2018 DNH 146 BMS CAT and Amica Mutual Insurance Company

O R D E R

In document no. 313, defendant BMS CAT seeks leave to file

a second amended answer which asserts an affirmative defense

that first became available as a result of events that took

place after it had filed its first amended answer. Defendant

invokes Rule 15(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

(“Federal Rules”), which provides that, under the circumstances

of this case, “[t]he court should freely give leave [to amend]

when justice so requires.” In lieu of filing an objection to

BMS CAT’s motion, plaintiff Sanjeev Lath moves to strike

defendant’s proposed second amended answer on grounds that the

corporate disclosure statement that BMS CAT filed, in compliance

with Rule 7.1 of the Federal Rules, is defective. See doc. no.

315. Defendant objects. For the reasons that follow, BMS CAT’s

motion for leave is granted, and Lath’s motion to strike is

denied. As noted, Rule 15(a)(2) provides that leave to amend a

pleading should be freely given when justice so requires. Here,

it is difficult to see how justice does not require the court to

grant BMS CAT leave to file its proposed second amended answer.

Lath filed his original complaint on December 15, 2016. In it,

he did not assert any claims against BMS CAT. On January 25,

2017, Lath filed, as of right, his First Amended Complaint

(“FAC”), which asserts claims arising from conduct that took

place after he had filed his original complaint. Some of those

claims are based on the manner in which BMS CAT performed its

duties under three contracts with Lath in which it agreed to

clean and restore possessions that were damaged in a fire at

Lath’s unit at the Oak Brook Condominium.

In his FAC, Lath alleges that BMS CAT took a number of

items from his unit for cleaning, disposed of some, and retained

the rest, due to a dispute with him over payment for its

services. After trying unsuccessfully to recover his property,

Lath asserted a claim for conversion against BMS CAT. BMS CAT

filed its answer to Lath’s FAC on March 21, 2017. On that same

day, BMS CAT filed a disclosure statement, pursuant to Rule 7.1,

in which it stated that “BMS Cat Inc. is a subsidiary of BMS Cat

Group Inc. [and that] BMS Cat Group Inc. is itself a subsidiary

of The BMS Enterprises, Inc.” Doc. no. 68 at ¶ 2. BMS CAT

2 further stated that “[w]hile it does not appear that they were

even intended to be a party to this case, BMS Catastrophe Inc.

is a subsidiary of Utech Inc. which in turn is also a subsidiary

of The BMS Enterprises, Inc.” Id. at ¶ 3. On August 17, 2017,

with the court’s leave, BMS CAT filed its first amended answer.

In the motion now before the court, BMS CAT seeks the

court’s leave to file a second amended answer. BMS CAT says

that in January 2018, it offered to return the property that is

the subject of Lath’s conversion claim, and that Lath refused to

take possession of it. On that basis, BMS CAT wishes to file a

second amended answer that asserts failure to mitigate as an

affirmative defense to Lath’s conversion claim.

Rather than filing an objection to BMS CAT’s motion and

explaining why justice does not require the court to grant it,

see Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2), Lath has filed a motion to strike

BMS CAT’s proposed second amended answer. However, rather than

relying on any of the grounds listed in Rule 12(f), which

pertains to motions to strike, Lath contends that BMS CAT’s

proposed second amended answer should be stricken because of

purported defects in the disclosure statement that BMS CAT filed

pursuant to Rule 7.1. Lath appears to have first described

those purported defects in a motion for leave to file certain

motions, including a “Motion to enter defective corporate

3 disclosure statement by BMS Cat Inc.” Doc. no. 291 at 3.1

According to Lath:

BMS Cat in its disclosure statement pursuant to F.R.Civ.P Rule 7.1 identified “UTech” as the parent company. Such a disclosure is incorrect as the true parent company for BMS Cat Inc. is “Steamatic Inc.” Defendant BMS Cat in this disclosure statement failed to identify a multitude of other companies that it operates throughout the United States, which may be the parent company of BMS Cat.

Id. (citation to the record omitted).2 The key assertion in the

foregoing paragraph is Lath’s assertion that BMS CAT’s parent

company is Steamatic Inc.

The problem with Lath’s motion to strike is that he has

identified no authority for the proposition that an error or

omission in a Rule 7.1 disclosure statement would give the court

grounds to strike a document such as BMS CAT’s proposed second

amended answer. In his motion to strike, after outlining the

1 Action on Lath’s motion for leave was deferred because he did not file it in accordance with the standing procedural order in this case. See Apr. 2, 2018 endorsed order.

2 BMS CAT did not identify UTech as its parent company; it identified BMS Cat Group Inc. as its parent company, and it identified Utech Inc. as the parent company of BMS Catastrophe. Also, while Lath appears to suggest that BMS CAT was obligated to disclose the companies it operates, it is far from clear that any company that BMS CAT operates could, at the same time, be its parent. A company that BMS CAT operates would appear to be a subsidiary, and Rule 7.1 does not require the disclosure of subsidiaries. Indeed, Lath himself quotes the Advisory Committee notes to Rule 26.1(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, which explain that “disclosure of a party’s subsidiaries . . . is ordinarily unnecessary.”

4 basis for his belief that Steamatic Inc. is BMS CAT’s parent

company, Lath cites Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(iii) for the proposition

that the court may sanction a party for failing to obey a

discovery order by “striking pleadings in whole or in part.”

In Lath’s view, he is entitled to the relief described in

Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(iii) because BMS CAT’s failure to provide a

truthful corporate disclosure statement, pursuant to Rule 7.1,

somehow ran afoul of the court’s June 6, 2017, scheduling order

which, among other things, set a deadline for BMS CAT to make

its mandatory disclosures under Rule 26. Lath, however, seems

to conflate the disclosures required by Rule 26 and those

required by Rule 7.1. As for the latter, “[t]he corporate

disclosure statement [required by Rule 7.1] is not a discovery

device in the sense that failure to file ordinarily does not

carry sanctions.” Bernardi Ortiz v. Cybex Int’l, Inc., Civ. No.

15-2989 (PAD), 2018 WL 2448130, at *6 n.9 (D.P.R. May 30, 2018)

(citations omitted). While Bernardi is not directly on point,

because it was a case in which a defendant appears not to have

filed any Rule 7.1 statement at all, it is sufficient to take

the Rule 37(b)(2)(A) sanctions off the table as possible relief

for the filing of an erroneous Rule 7.1 disclosure statement.3

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