Tardiff v. County of Knox

246 F.R.D. 66, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81355, 2007 WL 3226843
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
DocketNo. 07-10-P-H
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 246 F.R.D. 66 (Tardiff v. County of Knox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tardiff v. County of Knox, 246 F.R.D. 66, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81355, 2007 WL 3226843 (D. Me. 2007).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM DECISION ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO [67]*67COMPEL1

DAVID M. COHEN, United States Magistrate Judge.

The defendants have moved to compel three individuals to answer certain questions posed to them (or to be posed to them) at deposition. I grant the motion in part.

The history of this case is familiar and I will not recite it here. For present purposes, it suffices to say that the plaintiff in this action formerly served as the class representative in an action against Knox County and its sheriff which began on November 19, 2002 and ended with Judge Carter’s approval of a class settlement on April 24, 2007. Tardiff v. Knox County, et al., Docket No. 02-251-P-C (Docket Nos. 1 & 400). In the interim, Tar-diff withdrew as class representative, id Docket Nos. 356 & 367, and opted out of the settlement, Defendants’ Answer to Plaintiffs Complaint and Counterclaim (“Answer and Counterclaim”) (Docket No. 7) 1126; Plaintiff Laurie L. Tardiffs Answer to Counterclaim (Docket No. 10) ¶ 26. She then brought this action, in which Knox County has raised defenses and counterclaims based, inter alia, on her alleged approval of the settlement agreement, including breach of contract, estoppel and waiver. Answer and Counterclaim at 1-2, 10-12.

The motion to compel concerns the defendants’ depositions of the plaintiff and two of the attorneys who represented the plaintiffs in the class action, Robert Stolt and Sumner Lipman. Defendant’s [sic] Motion to Compel Testimony of Plaintiff, Robert Stolt, Esq., and Sumner Lipman, Esq. (“Motion”) (Docket No. 39). The motion asked this court to compel these individuals to “answer[ ] questions relating to” 17 listed “areas in inquiry[.]” Id. at 21-22. In response, the plaintiff pointed out, Plaintiffs Response and Objection to Motion to Compel (“Opposition”) (Docket No. 51) at 1, that this court’s Local Rule 26(b) requires a party seeking an order to compel answers to questions to quote in full each question and the response or objection stated by the opposing party, Local Rule 26(b), which the defendants’ initial submission did not do. The defendants contended that their motion complied with Local Rule 26(b) and asserted that, due to the large number of deposition questions involved, “quoting each deposition question and response was simply impractical and unnecessary.” Defendant’s [sic] Reply to Plaintiffs Response and Objection to Motion to Compel (Docket No. 53) at 2. I ordered the defendants to comply with the literal requirements of Local Rule 26(b) by submitting a list of the actual deposition questions and responses at issue. Docket No. 54. The defendants filed that list (Docket No. 56) and the plaintiffs have now responded to it.

Indicating to counsel only the general “areas in inquiry” in which deposition witnesses are to answer questions simply provides another opportunity for dispute between or among them. The local rule requiring the party seeking the court’s assistance in obtaining answers to deposition questions to identify each such question separately avoids the almost certain eventuality that otherwise counsel would come back to the court, asking it to clarify the way in which each such “area in inquiry” applies to specific questions. For a similar reason, this court will not order a deponent to answer questions in an “area in inquiry” before he has been deposed, as is the case with Lip-man here. Unless and until Lipman has been asked specific questions and directed not to answer those questions, this court will not “compel” him to answer anything. The motion as to Lipman is denied. My rulings as to specific questions posed to Stolt during his deposition should serve as a guide to counsel for Lipman’s deposition as well.

The defendants’ supplemental filing lists 43 questions and responses from the Stolt deposition and 22 questions and responses from the plaintiffs deposition. Defendants’ Supplementation to Motion to Compel (Docket No. 56). In her response to the defendants’ supplemental filing, the plaintiff “withdraws several of her objections,” Plaintiffs Re[68]*68sponse to Defendants’ Supplementation to Their Motion to Compel (“Supplemental Response”) (Docket No. 65) at 1, specifically to listed questions numbered 5 and 6 posed to Stolt, id. at 8, and questions numbered 8 and 9 to the plaintiff, id. at 29-30. The motion to compel accordingly is granted as to those questions.

I. Stolt Deposition

Some of the objections and directions not to answer interposed by counsel for the plaintiff during this deposition require me to revisit my earlier decision on the plaintiffs motion to quash subpoenas for documents served on Stolt and Lipman by counsel for the plaintiff. See Memorandum Decision and Order on Motion to Quash (“Memorandum Decision”) (Docket No. 24). In resolving that dispute, I found that the plaintiff had waived the attorney-client privilege as to documents she submitted to the court in the class-action case and all related exchanges. Id. at 4. To the extent that her lawyer in the present action invoked the attorney-client privilege in directing Stolt not to answer a particular question, I will review that question in light of its relationship to the documents submitted to the court by the plaintiff in connection with the earlier ease. My discussion of the work-product doctrine in the memorandum dealt only with documents, see id. at 5-6, so I will have to deal with the subject anew to the extent that it is the asserted basis for any objections or directions that the witness not answer a particular question. The best way in which to make my rulings on each of the disputed questions sufficiently clear so as to provide guidance for the parties with respect to the Lipman deposition is to repeat each question and objection here before setting out my ruling.2

Question 1

Q: So you’d agree with me that as of at least October 11, 2006, you were telling Judge Carter that you did not believe that Laurie Tardiff could remain as the class representative?
A: That was my answer to him, yes.
Q: And why did you feel that way?
[Plaintiffs Counsel, hereafter “PC”]: Objection, instruct you not to answer, work product, mental impressions.

[Transcript of Deposition of] Robert Stolt, Esq. (“Stolt Deposition”) (Docket No. 44) at 17. “The attorney-work-produet privilege ... protects from disclosure materials prepared by attorneys in anticipation of litigation.” State of Maine v. United States Dep’t of Interior, 298 F.3d 60, 66 (1st Cir.2002) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The First Circuit observed in 1988 that

[t]he draftsmen of Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3) ... recognized a distinction between types of work product: even where the need/hardship hurdle has been cleared, the court must continue to afford protection against disclosure of the mental impressions, conclusions, opinions or legal theories of an attorney[.]

In re San Juan Dupont Plaza Hotel Fire Litig., 859 F.2d 1007

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Bluebook (online)
246 F.R.D. 66, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81355, 2007 WL 3226843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tardiff-v-county-of-knox-med-2007.