Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 19, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2022-0460-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias (Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE MORGAN T. ZURN LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER VICE CHANCELLOR 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734

August 19, 2022

Via File & ServeXpress Via U.S. Mail & Electronic Mail Jeffrey L. Moyer, Esquire Michael D. Kolias Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A. 17581 Quail Lane 920 North King Street Fort Myers, FL 33913 Wilmington, DE 19801 MichaelDKolias@gmail.com

RE: Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Civil Action No. 2022-0460-MTZ

Dear Counsel and Mr. Kolias:

In this restrictive covenant dispute between a Florida fire suppression business and its former employee, a Florida resident, I write to address the pending motion to compel filed by plaintiff Summit Fire & Security LLC (“Summit”), and the motion for protective order filed by defendant Michael D. Kolias (“Kolias”). Because the motions overlap, I take each form of relief sought in turn.

I. Kolias’s Interrogatory Responses Summit’s motion to compel seeks an order “compelling Kolias to respond to Summit’s First Set of Requests for Production Directed to Defendant Michael Kolias and Summit’s First Set of Interrogatories Directed to Defendant Michael Kolias.”1 This request is now partially moot, as Kolias filed responses on August 7, 2022.2 I will address the remaining issues relating to this request, which concern the timing and substance of Kolias’s responses.

In its August 10 reply, Summit asserts Kolias “has waived any objections to the scope and/or relevance of Summit’s discovery requests” because his discovery responses were untimely.3 I decline to conclude that the timing of Kolias’s pro se

1 Docket Item (“D.I.”) 54, at 1 [hereinafter “Summit Mot.”]. 2 D.I. 64; D.I. 65. 3 D.I. 67 ¶ 4. Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Civil Action No. 2022-0460-MTZ August 19, 2022 Page 2 of 11

responses has waived his defenses. Summit has made compliance with these deadlines more difficult by barraging Kolias with discovery requests and notices of subpoenas.4 That said, going forward, Kolias must comply with Court-imposed deadlines or risk negative consequences.

As for the substance of Kolias’s interrogatory responses Summit contests in its reply, I take each in turn.

• Interrogatory No. 6: Kolias’s objection to this interrogatory as overbroad is sustained. No further response is required.

• Interrogatory Nos. 11 and 12: Kolias shall answer these questions to the best of his ability within 30 days. His objection misstates the question. Interrogatory 11 simply asks Kolias to identify those persons whom he has contacted about the Business,5 except for those he contacted on Summit’s behalf. Similarly, Interrogatory 12 simply asks Kolias to describe the date of any such contact, and what Kolias said.

• Interrogatory No. 16: I interpret Kolias’s responses to be relying on and identifying specific documents he knows to be in Summit’s possession. In this pro se matter, with this particular procedural history, I deem this response adequate. No further response is required.

• Interrogatory No. 17: Kolias has answered the question to the best of his ability. No further response is required.

4 In addition to its interrogatories and requests for production of documents, Summit has served no fewer than twenty-three subpoenas, seeking both documents and testimony, on various entities. See D.I. 17; D.I. 18; D.I. 19; D.I. 20; D.I. 21; D.I. 22; D.I. 23; D.I. 24; D.I. 25; D.I. 26; D.I. 27; D.I. 28; D.I. 32; D.I. 35; D.I. 43; D.I. 44; D.I. 46; D.I. 47; D.I. 48; D.I. 45; D.I. 58; D.I. 59; D.I. 61. 5 As defined by Plaintiff Summit Fire & Security LLC’s First Set of Interrogatories Directed to Defendant Michael Kolias. Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Civil Action No. 2022-0460-MTZ August 19, 2022 Page 3 of 11

• Interrogatory No. 18: Kolias has disputed the factual premise of this interrogatory. No further response is required.

• Interrogatory No. 19: Kolias has responded to this interrogatory. No further response is required.

Summit’s motion is GRANTED IN PART.

II. Summit’s “Notice of Inspection” and Kolias’s Document Production Summit’s objection to Kolias’s document production brings me to Summit’s second form of requested relief: an order “compelling Kolias to provide his cell phone and personal computer for a forensic collection by a third-party vendor.”6 Kolias was served with Summit’s first set of requests for production on June 14, 2022.7 Before his responses were due, Summit served on Kolias a “Notice of Inspection” (the “Notice”) in which Summit “requests” that Kolias “permit Plaintiff to inspect his cell phone and personal computer for purposes of making a forensic copy.”8 The Notice concludes with a vague statement: “The inspection will be attended by a third-party ESI collection vendor, Setec Investigations.”9

On the date of Summit’s proposed inspection, Kolias did not appear, and instead emailed Summit’s counsel saying he could not agree to the inspection of his cell phone.10 Summit responded, explaining it intended the vendor to keep the collection in confidence until Summit and Kolias agreed on a search protocol, but that if Kolias would not agree, Summit asked him to share how he proposed to collect information from his devices.11 Kolias did not respond. On July 11, 2022,

6 Summit Mot. at 1. 7 D.I. 17. 8 Summit Mot. at Ex. 3; D.I. 42. 9 See Summit Mot. at Ex. 3; D.I. 42. 10 Summit Mot. at Ex. 5. 11 Id. Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Civil Action No. 2022-0460-MTZ August 19, 2022 Page 4 of 11

he filed a motion seeking a protective order against the inspection of his phone and stating that he does not have a computer.12 Kolias filed his response to Summit’s request for production on August 7.13

Summit’s reply in support of its motion to compel bemoans Kolias’s production of “three pages of self-collected text messages” between Kolias and his friend John Stanford, the owner of a Summit competitor for whose benefit Summit asserts Kolias has breached his restrictive covenants.14 Summit complains that metadata and attachments were not produced, and speculates that some text messages must be missing.15 Finally, Summit contends Kolias did not produce documents responsive to all of its requests.16 Summit concludes it is entitled to have a vendor image Kolias’s phone.17 I disagree.

The Notice is not a valid discovery request under this Court’s rules. The wording of the Notice appears to contemplate providing Plaintiff unfettered access to Kolias’s phone and computer. Its language sounds in discovery rules allowing a requesting party to “enter upon land or other property . . . for the purpose of inspection and measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling the property or any designated object or operation thereon.”18 But the plain language of Court of Chancery Rules 26 and 34 differentiates requests to inspect documents from requests to inspect tangible things or land;19 the Notice appears to wrongfully conflate the two. Requesting to inspect Kolias’s phone for purposes of obtaining

12 D.I. 51 ¶ 16 [hereinafter “Kolias Mot.”]. 13 D.I. 64. 14 D.I. 67 ¶¶ 4–5. 15 Id. ¶ 8. 16 Id. ¶¶ 8–9. 17 Id. ¶ 7. 18 See Ct. Ch. R. 34(a)(1); accord Ct. Ch. R. 26(a). 19 Rule 26(a) identifies several discrete methods of obtaining discovery, differentiating production of documents from production of “tangible things or permission to enter upon land or other property.” Rule 34(a) divides the Rule’s “Scope” into two parts: (1) production of documents, and (2) entry upon land or other property. Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Civil Action No. 2022-0460-MTZ August 19, 2022 Page 5 of 11

documents effectively circumvents Rule 34 document discovery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Summit Fire & Security LLC v. Michael Kolias, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summit-fire-security-llc-v-michael-kolias-delch-2022.