Vista Food Exchange, Inc. v. Lawson Foods, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 1, 2019
Docket1:17-cv-07454
StatusUnknown

This text of Vista Food Exchange, Inc. v. Lawson Foods, LLC (Vista Food Exchange, Inc. v. Lawson Foods, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vista Food Exchange, Inc. v. Lawson Foods, LLC, (S.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

USDC SDNY —<—==J UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK | DOC #: wren nnn nnn nnn nnn nnn nnn nnn nen XK DATE Fiep:__1112019 □ VISTA FOOD EXCHANGE, INC.,

Plaintiff, 17-CV-07454 (ALC)(SN) -against- OPINION & ORDER LAWSON FOODS, LLC, Defendant.

SARAH NETBURN, United States Magistrate Judge: The Court has been supervising pretrial matters in this action since April 2018. For much of this period, Plaintiff Vista Food Exchange, Inc. (“Vista”) has complained that Defendant Lawson Foods, LLC (“Lawson”) has failed to comply with its discovery obligations, including by hiding certain records behind a shell company, Fortress Foods, LLC. These issues came to a head on April 18, 2019, when the Court found that Lawson had failed to produce responsive documents, potentially entitling Vista to an adverse inference at trial, and ordered Fortress Foods and its alleged managing member Hong Lin to show cause why they should not be held in contempt for failing to comply with a subpoena. The Court held an evidentiary hearing on July 16, 2019, to determine whether Fortress Foods should be held in contempt, and whether Lawson, Simon Law or both should also be held in contempt under an alter ego theory. A finding of contempt against Fortress Foods, Lawson and Simon Law is justified considering the overwhelming evidence that Lawson and Law control (or, are) Fortress Foods.

BACKGROUND The Court assumes the parties’ familiarity with this case and discusses only those facts necessary to support the Court’s conclusion. Vista is a wholesaler and distributor of various foods, including pork supplied by

Smithfield Farmland Corp./Smithfield Foods (“Smithfield”). Fifth Am. Compl. ¶ 38 (“FAC”) (ECF No. 160). For decades, Smithfield had been one of Vista’s most valuable suppliers. FAC ¶ 5. Vista regularly purchased significant quantities of pork from Smithfield for re-sale to Vista’s customers, including Lawson. Id. ¶ 5. Vista’s relationship with Smithfield soured in May 2016. Id. ¶ 10. Around that time, Smithfield learned that some of its pork, which was certified for domestic consumption only, had been exported to China by Lawson, who had purchased it from Vista. Id. The export of pork that was not certified for Chinese consumption potentially exposed Smithfield to penalties under Chinese law. See FAC, Ex. 2 (ECF No. 160-2). Smithfield promptly notified Vista that if any pork purchased and resold by Vista was again exported to China, it would stop selling its

products to Vista. Id. ¶ 10. In response, Vista put all of Lawson’s orders on hold and informed Lawson that Vista would not resume sales to Lawson unless Lawson promised not to export Vista-Smithfield pork to China. Id. ¶ 62. In order to renew business relations, Simon Law, on behalf of Lawson, sent a letter agreement to Vista and Smithfield “promising not to ship Smithfield Farmland pork to PRC [the People’s Republic of China], under any circumstance . . . .” FAC, Ex. 15. This letter, signed by Law, is dated May 20, 2016 (the “May 20 letter agreement”). This lawsuit is about Lawson’s compliance with the May 20 letter agreement. Vista filed this lawsuit on September 9, 2017, after concluding that Lawson had breached the May 20 letter agreement. See ECF No. 1. It served its first discovery request on April 6, 2018. See ECF No. 140-1. Since then, there have been multiple motions and hearings over Lawson’s discovery obligations and obfuscation regarding Lawson’s business. See, e.g., ECF

Nos. 60, 66, 123, 124, 126. For example, at a June 26, 2018 conference, counsel for Lawson stated that Lawson “never” exported pork, stating: “we don’t export, we sell.” June 26, 2018 Hearing, Tr. 20:16. This statement directly contradicted Lawson’s counsel’s statement to the Court on April 3, 2018, when he stated that product that “came from Smithfield through Vista to us [Lawson] and we shipped it to China.” Apr. 3, 2018 Hearing, Tr. 15:21-22. To clarify its position, the Court ordered Lawson to produce a sworn affidavit attesting whether it exported or shipped Smithfield pork products directly to customers in China. In addition, the Court ordered Lawson to produce all documents related to sales to third parties of Smithfield pork products purchased from Vista.

This process produced the First Law Declaration, in which Simon Law attested that Lawson did not maintain any shipping, export, sales or labeling records related to its purchase of Smithfield pork products from Vista. Law asserted that the only records Lawson retains are invoices and bills of lading organized by date (without notation of whether the product was purchased from Vista or another provider) and journal entries listing amounts paid for products sold to China. ECF No. 77-1, ¶¶ 16,19-20. The First Law Declaration also did not state—in violation of the Court’s order—whether Lawson Foods had exported or shipped directly to China Smithfield pork product purchased from Vista. See Aug. 6, 2018 Hearing, Tr. 19:22-25 (finding that the First Law Declaration “in my opinion does not answer the questions that I asked related to [Lawson’s] involvement in the sale of pork products, Smithfield pork products, intended for shipment to China. I don’t believe this declaration does that.”) The Court also authorized a “Records Deposition” to further explore Lawson’s record retention policies. Days before the Records Deposition was scheduled, Lawson filed a Corrected Law Declaration. In part, the Corrected Law Declaration acknowledged that Lawson retained

numerous relevant and responsive records that it had previously claimed not to possess. ECF No. 101-1, at ¶ 3. In the Corrected Law Declaration, Law stated that “Lawson has not sold any pork products to China since mid-2017 due to unfavorable political and economic conditions.” Id. at ¶ 10. However, Law later stated that “Lawson shipped product to China through a captive intermediary called Fortress Foods, LLC.” Id. at ¶ 41. The Corrected Law Declaration further described business relations with a China-based customer named Ling Zhao. Id. at ¶¶ 13-15. Law also supplemented his prior statements about Lawson’s record retention policies. Id. at ¶¶ 16-40. The discovery disputes culminated in Vista’s motion, filed on February 4, 2019, seeking an order: (1) compelling Lawson to produce all documents related to tracking and shipping exports of pork to China from January 1, 2015, to the present; (2) compelling Lawson to produce

all documents related to the export of pork to China that Lawson was required to create and retain under various Federal laws; (3) compelling Lawson to produce log-in information for an online portal account that it used to submit information to Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”); and (4) finding that Defendant’s production of documents on January 15, 2019, did not comply with its obligations under Rule 34. See ECF No. 138. The motion also requested that the Court order Fortress Foods, managing partner Hong Lin, and Ada Law, Simon Law’s wife, to show cause why they should not be sanctioned and held in contempt for failing to comply with Vista’s subpoena. Id. As relevant here, the Court granted in part this relief, finding that “Lawson’s production has been inadequate and that it has failed to produce the documents that it should have maintained under both the regulatory schemes that govern its exporting business and its obligations to preserve documents once it is aware of the possibility of litigation over the subject

matter.” ECF No. 149, at 3. The Court ordered Lawson “to produce all records that reflect its purchase and exporting of Smithfield-Vista Food pork products to the PRC from January 1, 2015, to the present.” Id. The Court further held that “if Lawson fails to comply with this order, Vista Food is entitled to an adverse inference at trial regarding Lawson’s failure to maintain its records.” Id.

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Vista Food Exchange, Inc. v. Lawson Foods, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vista-food-exchange-inc-v-lawson-foods-llc-nysd-2019.