St. Luke's Hospital of Bethlehem v. Vivian

28 Pa. D. & C.5th 401
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
DocketNo. 2011-C-1182
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Pa. D. & C.5th 401 (St. Luke's Hospital of Bethlehem v. Vivian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Luke's Hospital of Bethlehem v. Vivian, 28 Pa. D. & C.5th 401 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

REIBMAN, J.,

In these actions, which center on plaintiff’s claims of wrongful use of civil proceedings and RICO violations, defendants move to strike plaintiff’s objections to various interrogatories and/ or to compel more complete responses than those provided thus far by plaintiff. In response, plaintiff argues that the bulk of defendants’ 131 interrogatories, which they have served in each case, amount to “contention interrogatories” that are, at best, premature at this phase of the litigation in which discovery has recently gotten underway in earnest after a court-imposed stay.

As plaintiff correctly indicated at oral argument, so-called “contention interrogatories,” in which a party requests all information supporting a party’s particular allegation in a pleading, have been the subject of critical commentary in the Rules of Civil Procedure. Specifically, the 2008 explanatory comment to Pa.R.C.P. 4005 states in pertinent part as follows:

Contention interrogatories, like all forms of discovery, can be susceptible to abuse. Among other things, they can be used as an attempt to tie up the opposing party rather than to obtain discovery. The legitimate purpose of contention interrogatories is to narrow the issues for trial, not to force the opposing side to marshal all its evidence on paper. * * *
The potential for overreaching is particularly present when interrogatories seeking the detailed underpinnings of the opposing party’s allegations are served early [403]*403in the case. Although, when used with discretion, interrogatories served near the outset of the case can be useful in narrowing the issues to define the scope of necessary discovery, contention interrogatories ordinarily are more appropriate after the bulk of discovery has already taken place. At that point, the party on whom the interrogatories are served should have the information necessary to give specific, useful responses....

(Internal quotation marks omitted.)

Federal courts have also viewed this discovery device with considerable circumspection. In the case of In Re Convergent Technologies Securities Litigation, 108 F.R.D. 328, 338 (N.D. Cal. 1985), the court described so-called “contention interrogatories” as consisting of those which propound wide-ranging questions that ask an opposing party to indicate, inter alia, all of the facts upon which it bases some particular contention — as “distinguished from interrogatories which seek the identification of witnesses or of documents that support or contradict any of the controverted allegations.” Relying on Convergent Technologies, the District court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania has more recently instructed:

A party filing contention interrogatories early in the pretrial period, before substantial documentary or testimonial discovery has been completed, has the burden of justification. It must present specific, plausible grounds for believing that securing early answers to its contention questions will materially advance the goals of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The burden [404]*404cannot be met by vague or speculative statements about what might happen if the interrogatories were answered. To meet the burden,... a party must show...that there is good reason to believe that answers to its well-tailored questions will contribute meaningfully to clarifying the issues in the case, narrowing the scope of the dispute, or setting up early settlement discussion, or that such answers are likely to expose a substantial basis for a motion [for sanctions or summary judgment] under Rule 11 or Rule 56.
...Moreover,...special vigilance in the evaluation of the proffered justification is required when a complaint is not facially infirm and when defendants appear to have control over or adequate access to much of the evidence to their alleged misconduct.
... [T]here is substantial reason to believe that the early...filing of sets of contention interrogatories that systematically track all of the allegations in an opposing party’s pleadings is a serious form of discovery abuse.

Fischer and Procter Co. v. Tolson, 143 F.R.D. 93 (E.D. Pa. 1992) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

In Tolson, the court determined that the complaint was not facially infirm and that the defendants appeared to have control over, or adequate access to, much of the evidence of their alleged misconduct. Ibid. The court also observed that substantial discovery remained to be conducted. Ibid. Tolson held, therefore, that the defendants had failed to meet the conditions required to compel their adversary to answer contention interrogatories, “except to the extent [405]*405that the interrogatories seek the identity of witnesses or of documents or other tangible evidence.” Ibid.

Turning back to the present matters, it will quickly be noted that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not govern actions proceeding in the courts of common pleas in this commonwealth. Flowever, it will also be readily observed that in the federal system, so-called “notice pleading” prevails, while in Pennsylvania, a more rigorous system of “fact-pleading “obtains. As one commentator has intimated, inasmuch as the latter regime requires the parties to flesh out the factual underpinnings of their claims in greater detail, this distinction renders the use of contention interrogatories even more suspect in fact-pleading jurisdictions. See Douglas C. Rennie, The End of Interrogatories: Why Twombly and Iqbal Should Finally Stop Rule 33 Abuse, 15 Lewis & Clark Law. Rev. 191, 250-55 (2011); also see Pa.R.C.P 1028 (affording remedy through request for more specific pleading if any confusion results from insufficient specificity in complaint).

Here, as held in Tolson, it appears that, at least at this preliminary phase of discovery, there lacks a sufficient basis to compel plaintiff to respond to the contention interrogatories propounded by defendants. Indeed, perusal of the sets of 131 interrogatories reveals that a significant number of them, particular numbers 39 through 131, merely track the allegations of plaintiff’s complaints, thereby bordering on the “serious form of discovery abuse” referenced in Tolson. Typically, those queries consisted of variations of the following: “Provide the basis for and identify what information you relied upon (including a full description of all documents and the [406]*406identity of all witnesses) in preparing the allegations found in Paragraphs [x-y] of the Complaint.” (See defendants’ first set of interrogatories, included in defendants’ motion to compel). Also, as in Tolson, discovery in this matter, as a consequence of the recently lifted stay, has not nearly run its course.

Fairly viewed, defendants’ contention interrogatories, numbers 3 9-131, do not appear reasonably aimed to narrow the issues for trial, but instead seem to be a patent attempt to force the opposing side to marshal all its evidence on paper.

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Related

In Re Convergent Technologies Securities Litigation
108 F.R.D. 328 (N.D. California, 1985)
Fischer & Porter Co. v. Tolson
143 F.R.D. 93 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
28 Pa. D. & C.5th 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-lukes-hospital-of-bethlehem-v-vivian-pactcompllehigh-2013.