Sciara v. Campbell

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedNovember 9, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-01700
StatusUnknown

This text of Sciara v. Campbell (Sciara v. Campbell) 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
Sciara v. Campbell, (D. Nev. 2022).

Opinion

2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 3 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 4 * * * 5 Brian Sciara, Case No. 2:18-cv-01700-DJA 6 Plaintiff, 7 Order v. 8 Stephen Campbell, 9 Defendant. 10 11 12 This is a business dispute arising out of a venture between Defendant Stephen Campbell 13 and Plaintiff Brian Sciara. Sciara—who owns CapFund Enterprises, Inc.—and Campbell—who 14 owns MiCamp Solutions, LLC—worked together to create a third company, Sprout Financial, 15 LLC. After the business venture fell apart, Sciara sued Campbell in the instant case. (Case No. 16 2:18-cv-01700-DJA). Sprout Financial then sued CapFund, Sciara, Sciara’s wife Jennifer Sciara, 17 and Funded LLC (another of Sciara’s businesses) in a case that was transferred and eventually 18 consolidated with this case. (Case No. 2:21-cv-00309-JAD-NJK, ECF No. 1-3). Sciara sues 19 Campbell for damages and injunctive relief, alleging breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and 20 seeking declaratory relief.1 (ECF No. 1). Sprout sues Sciara, Jennifer Sciara, and Sciara’s 21 businesses for fraud, fraud in the inducement, breach of fiduciary duty, and seeks declaratory 22 relief. (Case No. 2:21-cv-00309-JAD-NJK, ECF No. 1-3). 23 Now, Campbell moves for sanctions, asserting that Sciara violated the protective order 24 governing the exchange of confidential and highly confidential “Attorneys’ Eyes Only” 25 documents. (ECF No. 165). The Court ordered a forensic examination of Sciara’s devices in 26

27 1 The Court dismissed Sciara’s tort claims on jurisdiction grounds, which dismissal the Ninth 1 connection with Campbell’s motion. (ECF No. 124). Now that the forensic exam has concluded, 2 Campbell asks for dispositive sanctions, or in the alternative, a mix of monetary sanctions, 3 evidentiary sanctions, and injunctive relief. (ECF No. 165). Because the Court finds that Sciara 4 did violate the protective order, but that those violations do not support the certain of the 5 sanctions Campbell requests, it grants in part and denies in part Campbell’s motion for sanctions. 6 Campbell also moves to seal exhibits to his motion for sanctions. (ECF No. 164). Sciara 7 does not oppose the motion. Because the Court finds that Campbell has demonstrated good 8 cause, and because Sciara does not oppose, the Court grants Campbell’s motion to seal. (Id.). 9 I. Background. 10 A. Campbell’s motion for an order to show cause and initial sanction motion. 11 The parties stipulated to, and the Court entered, a protective order governing the exchange 12 of sensitive information in this case on February 7, 2019. (ECF No. 22). On December 23, 2020, 13 Campbell moved for an order to show cause why Sciara should not be held in contempt of court 14 for violating the protective order. (ECF No. 59). In that motion, Campbell argued that Sciara had 15 violated the protective order by sending three emails in September of 2020 containing 16 confidential documents to an unauthorized party: Sciara’s counsel in a separate state court action 17 Sciara had filed against Campbell’s company. (Id. at 5-6). Because Sciara had not yet retained 18 his state-court counsel—the law office of Sgro and Roger—in the federal action at the time, his 19 state-court counsel were unauthorized parties. (Id. at 5-6). Sciara’s counsel in the state court 20 action then emailed the documents to Campbell’s business partners, also unauthorized parties. 21 (Id.). Finding that Sciara had violated the protective order, the Court granted Campbell’s motion 22 in part, enjoined Sciara from violating the protective order in the future, and ordered Sciara to pay 23 Campbell’s attorneys fees for the motion. (ECF No. 88). 24 On April 9, 2021, Campbell again moved for sanctions after discovering that, on May 15, 25 2020 Sciara had emailed confidential documents to more unauthorized parties. (ECF No. 99). 26 The recipients included Shift4—a company with whom Campbell does business—Kellie 27 McGhee—a detective with the Phoenix police department—and the Arizona Attorney General’s 1 99-6 at 2-3). Campbell pointed out that, because Sciara had emailed these unauthorized parties 2 even before Sciara’s September 2020 emails to his then-unauthorized counsel, he should have 3 disclosed the May 15, 2020 email at the hearing on Campbell’s motion for order to show cause. 4 (ECF No. 99 at 6). Instead, at that hearing, Sciara’s counsel represented that they “confirmed and 5 would expect [Sciara] to testify under oath if necessary that he did not disclose the information to 6 anyone other than our office and the experts in this case pursuant to the terms of the protective 7 order.” (Id. at 6). Campbell argued that this constituted a lie to the Court. (Id. at 12-13). 8 The Court granted Campbell’s request for a forensic examination of Sciara’s devices to 9 determine whether Sciara had violated the protective order on any other occasions. (Id. at 17). It 10 deferred ruling on the sanction request until the conclusion of the exam. (ECF No. 124). It later 11 asked Campbell to renew his motion for sanctions upon the conclusion of the exam so that the 12 motion would incorporate any additional violations of the protective order. (ECF No. 158). 13 B. Results of the forensic exam. 14 The forensic exam revealed violations that fall into two categories: (1) disclosure 15 violations where Sciara or his counsel sent confidential documents to unauthorized parties; and 16 (2) possession violations where Sciara had highly confidential documents marked “Attorneys’ 17 Eyes Only” in his possession. (ECF No. 165 at 12-23). The exam uncovered eleven more 18 disclosure violations than the five which Campbell had already brought up in his motion for order 19 to show cause and initial motion for sanctions. Compare (ECF No. 59 at 5-6) (identifying four 20 disclosures) with (ECF No. 97 at 6-7) (identifying one disclosure) and (ECF No. 165 at 12-23) 21 (identifying eleven disclosures).2 Each of the disclosure violations occurred in either 2019 or 22 2020, before Campbell’s original motion for an order to show cause. (ECF No. 59 at 5-6); (ECF 23 No. 97 at 6-7); (ECF No. 165 at 12-23). The exam also uncovered six possession violations 24

25 2 For the sake of simplicity, the Court refers to each individual email that Sciara sent to unauthorized parties containing confidential information as a separate disclosure. However, it 26 recognizes that, in many instances, the individual email constituted multiple violations because it 27 was sent to multiple unauthorized parties and/or contained multiple confidential documents. See (ECF No. 165 at 15) (describing Sciara’s May 15, 2020 disclosure of thirteen confidential 1 spanning from April 2019 to July 2021. (ECF No. 165 at 12-23). The exam demonstrated that 2 Sciara violated the protective order on at least twenty-two occasions. (Id. at 26). 3 C. Campbell’s renewed motion for sanctions. 4 Now that the exam is complete, Campbell asks for either case dispositive sanctions or a 5 mix of injunctive relief, evidentiary sanctions, and monetary sanctions. (ECF No. 165). Arguing 6 for case dispositive sanctions, Campbell points out that Sciara is a direct competitor of Campbell, 7 making his violations—which involve sending Campbell’s confidential information to business 8 partners and government agencies and possessing “Attorneys’ Eyes Only” information—more 9 egregious. (Id. at 26, 28-29). Worse, Campbell asserts, Sciara then lied about his use of this data 10 to the Court when his attorney stated that “no other documents that are subject to the Protective 11 Order in this matter have been disclosed to any third-party.” (Id. at 29). Because Sciara 12 intentionally used Campbell’s information to attack his business relationships and urge business 13 partners and government agencies to initiate investigations, Campbell asserts that dispositive 14 sanctions are warranted. (Id. 30-33).

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Sciara v. Campbell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sciara-v-campbell-nvd-2022.