Semich, Daniel v. AT&T Services, Inc.

2024 TN WC App. 2
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedJanuary 22, 2024
Docket2021-06-0997
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 TN WC App. 2 (Semich, Daniel v. AT&T Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Semich, Daniel v. AT&T Services, Inc., 2024 TN WC App. 2 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Jan 22, 2024 02:43 PM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Daniel G. Semich, Decedent, ) Docket No. 2021-06-0997 by Dixie Semich, Surviving Spouse ) ) State File No. 33804-2021 v. ) ) AT&T Services, Inc., et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Kenneth M. Switzer, Chief Judge )

Affirmed and Remanded

This interlocutory appeal involves the trial court’s denial of the employer’s motion for an extension of time to produce certain cell phone records responsive to a subpoena issued on behalf of the decedent’s surviving spouse. Prior to this motion, the employer filed a motion to quash the subpoena duces tecum seeking the decedent’s work and personal cell phone records. During the hearing, Employer argued the requested information was under the control of a separate corporate entity. The court denied the employer’s motion to quash, noting it offered no proof in support of that assertion. The court further rejected the employer’s arguments that it was unable to comply with the subpoena due to retention policies concerning text messages and lack of knowledge regarding the identity of the users of the requested cellular phone numbers. Finally, the court rejected the employer’s arguments that the records were irrelevant, contained confidential information, and that the production of these records would reveal private communications. The court ordered the employer to provide the requested information by certain deadlines, and that order was not appealed. The employer later obtained two extensions of time to comply with the subpoena, ultimately filing a notice of partial compliance and another motion for an extension. The trial court denied the most recent motion, noting the previous extensions, the employer’s changing position as to why it could not produce the records, and the employer’s failure to provide evidence of its inability to comply. Upon careful consideration of the record, we affirm the trial court’s order denying the motion for an extension of time and remand the case.

Judge Pele I. Godkin delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Timothy W. Conner and Judge Meredith B. Weaver joined.

1 Adam C. Brock-Dagnan and W. Troy Hart, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the employer- appellant, AT&T Services, Inc.

Jill T. Draughon, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Daniel G. Semich by his surviving spouse, Dixie Semich

Factual and Procedural Background

This is the second appeal in this case concerning a dispute over discovery issues. Daniel George Semich (“Employee” or “Decedent”) was working for AT&T Services, Inc. (“Employer”) on April 16, 2021, when he fell from a ladder and suffered a fatal head injury. Employee’s surviving spouse, Dixie Semich (“Claimant”), filed a petition for benefit determination in August 2021 seeking death benefits. Employer denied the claim, asserting that Employee’s willful misconduct caused the accident. After a dispute certification notice was issued, the parties engaged in written discovery and proceeded with depositions prior to the initial scheduling hearing in October 2022.

During one such deposition, the names of other potential witnesses were discussed, and Employee subsequently sought contact information for those witnesses from Employer. After a dispute arose regarding whether Employer was required to provide personal contact information for the potential witnesses, the trial court ordered Employer to provide the information. Employer appealed, asserting the trial court made procedural errors in holding a hearing and in issuing an order concerning discovery when no motion to compel had been filed. Employer also questioned whether the court’s order was in compliance with regulations applicable to the Court of Workers’ Compensation Claims, whether the personal contact information of a non-party employee is discoverable, and whether it would be an abuse of discretion to allow Claimant’s counsel to speak with non- managerial employees outside the presence of Employer’s counsel. Upon review, we concluded there was no abuse of discretion and affirmed the trial court’s order in part but modified the trial court’s deadline for Employer to provide the disputed information.

On May 19, 2023, while the previous appeal was pending, Claimant’s counsel issued a subpoena seeking Decedent’s personal and work cell phone records. 1 Thereafter, Employer filed a motion in the trial court to quash that subpoena, arguing at the hearing that it did not have access to this information because it is a “separate division” from the entity that might have such records. 2 Following our remand of the case in the previous

1 Claimant’s counsel asserts she obtained information for proper service of the subpoenas directly from Employer’s counsel. 2 From our review of the record, the nature of the business relationship between Employer, AT&T Services, Inc., and other AT&T business entities remains unclear. To date, Employer has offered no evidence concerning such business entities and/or the name of the precise entity that maintains cell phone records of

2 appeal, the court denied Employer’s motion to quash, noting it offered no proof of the purported separation between it and whoever has access and controls the records. The court also noted that counsel for Claimant had received an invoice from Employer for the production of such records despite Claimant’s counsel not having received them. The court rejected Employer’s arguments that it was unable to comply with the subpoena due to retention policies related to text messages and because it did not know the identities of the individuals who utilized the cellular phone numbers in question. 3 The court also rejected Employer’s assertion that the records were irrelevant and contained confidential information and that the production of these records would reveal private communications, observing that the “stakes are high” in this “contentious” death case. It determined that the phone records Claimant sought, including possible communications between Decedent and a supervisor prior to the accident, were “relevant to show the circumstances leading up to the injury that resulted in his death and [Employer’s] defense.” Further, the court determined that Claimant “has stepped into her deceased husband’s shoes and is essentially asking on his behalf for his own records. She is waiving any privacy interest she might have.” The court ordered Employer to provide the requested information by July 28 and set a scheduling hearing for August 31. 4 This order was not appealed.

Thereafter, at the August 31 hearing, the parties notified the court that Claimant’s attorney had agreed to an extension of time for Employer to comply with the court’s order.5 During this hearing, counsel for Employer advised that he had discussed the issues with other AT&T attorneys who had expressed “serious privacy concerns” with the request for the personal cell phone records sought by Claimant. As a result, he informed Claimant’s counsel that she would need to contact “Asset Protection,” which is apparently a division of an AT&T business entity, so that they could “verify the individual seeking the information is entitled to it.” 6 In response, Claimant argued that the subpoena was

AT&T customers. Employer has, to date, failed to offer any evidence concerning whether it has access to the personal cell phone records of its employees. 3 In Claimant’s response to Employer’s motion to quash the subpoena duces tecum, she argued that counsel for Employer had already been informed that both phone numbers assigned to the data in question belonged to Decedent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 TN WC App. 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semich-daniel-v-att-services-inc-tennworkcompapp-2024.