Security National Bank v. Jones Day

800 F.3d 936, 2015 WL 5042248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
Docket14-3006
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 800 F.3d 936 (Security National Bank v. Jones Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security National Bank v. Jones Day, 800 F.3d 936, 2015 WL 5042248 (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Security National Bank .of Sioux City, Iowa, acting as conservator for minor J.M.K., brought this products liability action against Abbott Laboratories, alleging *938 that Abbott’s baby formula caused permanent brain damage to J.M.K. After the trial jury found in favor of Abbott, the district court ordered defense counsel June K. Ghezzi to show cause why she should not be sanctioned under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(d)(2) for obstructing each deposition in which she had participated. Defense counsel was subsequently ordered 1) to produce a discovery training video dealing with the impropriety of form objections, witness coaching, and excessive interruptions and 2) to distribute the video to most of the attorneys in her national law firm. Ghezzi and Jones Day appeal. After careful review of the entire record, we reverse. 1

I.

Security National Bank (the Bank) filed this action on February 15, 2011, alleging that Abbott’s baby formula contained a harmful bacteria called enterobacter sakazakii which caused J.M.K. meningitis and permanent brain damage. The Bank sought $16 million in compensatory damages as well as punitive damages. Because the parties could not agree on discovery deadlines, the Bank filed a motion requesting “a scheduling or planning conference with [a] magistrate judge,” which was granted, and a scheduling conference was held on April 4, 2011. A scheduling order, discovery plan, and trial management order were entered one week later. After certain amendments to the scheduling order, the magistrate judge set a November 30, 2012 discovery deadline and a March 20, 2013 dispositive motion deadline. Beyond setting those deadlines, granting a joint motion for a protective order, and denying the Bank’s motion to extend the amended discovery deadline, the magistrate judge was apparently not involved in any other aspect of the case.

On August 13, 2012 the Bank deposed Dr. Bridget Barrett-Reis, a research scientist in Abbott’s nutrition department, and then on August 22 it deposed Sharon Bottock, an assurance manager in one of Abbott’s manufacturing facilities. The depositions were taken by the Bank’s lead counsel, Stephen Rathke, and defended by Ghezzi, a partner at Jones Day who had never been sanctioned in her 31 year career. During the discovery period no complaint was ever raised about any of the objections by defense counsel, nor did plaintiffs counsel suggest that he needed more time to complete the depositions or was unable to depose the witnesses fairly and fully. Of the seven hours permitted by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(d)(1), the Bottock deposition lasted four hours and ten minutes; the Barrett-Reis deposition took three hours and two minutes. By the close of discovery, neither party had requested judicial intervention from the magistrate judge or the assigned senior district judge regarding any counsel’s deposition conduct.

The case was transferred to the trial judge on May 21, 2013, and he subsequently granted Abbott’s motion for summary judgment in part while denying its “motion to exclude or limit [the Bank’s] proposed expert testimony on medical and scientific causation.” The trial judge also criticized defense counsel and her firm for failing “to cite a contrary, but non-controlling decision” and warned that “[h]ide and seek litigation strategy seldom works and did not work here.” The judge also commented that defense counsel’s “lack of candor” was “not an auspicious beginning for counsel before a judge newly assigned to the case.” After a status conference at which the trial judge denied a joint motion for a brief postponement, the court emailed defense counsel, directing them to *939 think “about reasonable [trial] time limits” because in his experience “out of state large firms waste tons [of] time.” The court emphasized the point by including a picture of a clock at the bottom of the message. Later at an August 16, 2013 pretrial conference, the court commented that “large-firm lawyers” had to be “put on the clock” because the “only thing they know [how to do is] to obstruct things.” Defense counsel were also criticized for attempting to present too many trial exhibits “just because [they had] a lot of associates to keep busy” and asked if pretrial stipulations were “some kind of novel concept [since they apparently didn’t learn] that at Rambo litigation school.”

In preparation for trial, the parties filed their deposition designations, counter designations, and objections. The trial judge overruled all of defense counsel’s objections on December 30, 2013, finding them “reprehensible,” “frivolous,” and “among the most obstructionist [he had] ever seen in over 35 years in the legal profession.” A sanctions hearing was to be held during trial to determine whether the court had “the authority to and should order appropriate sanctions against defense counsel for ... incredible obstructionist conduct.” Trial began on January 6, 2014. On the third day of trial the judge ordered defense counsel to show cause why Rule 30(d)(2) sanctions should not be imposed against her “for making numerous objections that lacked a good faith basis in law or fact and which impeded, delayed, or frustrated the fair examination of [each] deposition which [she had] defended.”

Plaintiff Bank asked the court to prevent Abbott’s manager Sharon Bottock from testifying at trial because of defense counsel’s interruptions at her deposition. Defense counsel responded that it was “standard procedure” for both parties to use questions and comments to clarify technical subjects and to help ensure a clear record. She also offered examples of depositions in which she had previously used this procedure. The district judge responded that he had “read some of them” and that “sometimes [she did] an admirable job of asking a better question.” Defense counsel explained that “the reason we did it a lot was to move things along,” as it was her “job to sort of facilitate that.” After reviewing the cited portions of the Bottock deposition, the trial judge stated that he “didn’t see anything remotely improper” and that he “wasn’t really critical of anything in [that] portion” since counsel “did exactly what she said she did yesterday afternoon.” She was “trying to assist with the exhibit numbers and all and just trying to move things along.” While she “had a form objection in there,” he concluded that “it was one of the few that [had] some basis in fact.” The district court denied the Bank’s request to prohibit Bottock from testifying at trial.

The depositions came up again on the sixth day of trial after plaintiffs counsel asked an expert witness: “Here’s page 327 from [the deposition transcript of J.M.K.’s mother].

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Bluebook (online)
800 F.3d 936, 2015 WL 5042248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-national-bank-v-jones-day-ca8-2015.