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

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 30, 2020
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. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT USDC SDNY SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ao RONICALLY FILED VISTA FOODEXCHANGE,INC, □□ :~—sDaT -L13O/3020— Plaintiff, : v. 1:17-cv-07454-ALC-SN >: OPINION AND ORDER LAWSON FOODS, LLC, : Defendant.

ANDREW L. CARTER, JR., District Judge: On November 1, 2019, a Contempt Order was issued against Defendant Lawson Foods, LLC (“Lawson”), Simon Law, managing member of Lawson, and non-party Fortress Foods LLC (“Fortress”). Fortress failed to respond to a subpoena, and, upon an evidentiary hearing, Law and Lawson were held responsible as alter egos or in light of their control of Fortress. A fine was also imposed for each additional day Fortress did not answer the subpoena, for which Law and Lawson were held jointly and severally liable. To date, the subpoena remains unanswered and the fine has not been paid. The Court now reviews a Report and Recommendation in which Judge Netburn recommends granting in part a motion by Plaintiff Vista Food Exchange (“Vista”) for further sanctions, including striking Lawson’s answer and entering default judgment. For the reason that follow, the Court ADOPTS the Report and Recommendation.

BACKGROUND

The instant matter arises from the relationship between Vista, a wholesaler and distributor of various foods, and Lawson, a company to which Vista sold pork.

In May 2016, Smithfield Farmland Corp./Smithfield Foods (“Smithfield”), a company that supplied pork to Vista, learned that Lawson had purchased some of its pork, which was certified

for domestic consumption only, from Vista, and exported it to China. The export of pork that was not certified for Chinese consumption potentially exposed Smithfield to penalties under Chinese law. 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. 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. On May 25, 2016, Simon Law, CEO of Lawson, signed an agreement certifying that Lawson Foods would not “export. . . .non-certified Smithfield pork products directly or through any third party where there is any reason to believe such product is destined for export to the PRC”. Letter Agreement (ECF No. 160-2). The crux of the instant lawsuit, initiated on September 29, 2017, is that Lawson did not comply with this Letter Agreement. Instead, Vista alleges that Lawson

used Fortress as a shell company to continue to sell pork to China in violation of the Letter Agreement without being detected by Vista and Smithfield. Smithfield, upon discovering further unauthorized sales by Lawson to China, terminated its relationship with Vista. Vista seeks, in part, to recover lost profits from the termination by Smithfield. The Contempt Order

Over the course of discovery, Vista complained that Lawson had failed to comply with its discovery obligations, including by hiding certain records that were allegedly in the custody and control of Fortress Foods, Inc. The details of these compliance issues are laid out in detail in transcripts of discovery conferences and orders by Judge Netburn, to whom this matter was referred for general pre-trial proceedings. See e.g., ECF Nos.79, 99, 149, 179. Relevant here is the obfuscation that led to the Contempt Order with which Lawson has not complied. At a June 26, 2018 conference, Lawson represented to Judge Netburn that it did not export or ship pork to China or Chinese customers, and therefore had no documents responsive to certain of Vista’s discovery requests. Judge Netburn ordered Lawson to file “an affidavit from the president or CEO or whoever is the appropriate person of Lawson, indicating that Lawson has not

exported or shipped directly to customers in China Smithfield products. . . that Lawson purchased from Vista [from] January 1st, 2015 to. . . 12/31/2017” and, if Lawson had done so, “to include whatever identifying information [it] ha[d] about that product”, such as “. . . serial numbers. . ., the description of the product, to whom it was exported, the date on which it was exported, and the names of any other non-parties that were involved in that exporting.” ECF No. 79 at 29:13- 30:12. In response, Lawson submitted a declaration by Mr. Law. ECF No. 76-2. Therein, he

attested that “the only records Lawson maintains concerning products sold to China are: (1) invoices and bills of lading reflecting Lawson’s purchases and (2) journal entries reflecting amounts paid for product sold to China.” ECF No. 76-2 ¶ 19. The declaration did not answer whether Lawson exported pork to China during the relevant period, or identify any such shipments or third parties involved, if so. Therefore, at an August 6, 2018 conference, Judge Netburn ordered a records deposition to answer these outstanding questions. ECF No. 99 at 31:23-32:16.

On August 28, 2018, Lawson filed a Corrected Declaration of Simon Law. ECF No. 101- 2. Therein, Law admitted to selling pork to China. “By way of explanation” for prior representations to the contrary, Law stated that “Lawson ha[d] not sold any pork products to China since mid-2017 due to unfavorable political and economic conditions”. ECF No. 101-2 at ¶ 10. Law admitted that “Lawson shipped product to China through a captive intermediary called Fortress Foods, LLC” and “listed Fortress as the product’s shipper.” ECF No. 101-2 at ¶ 41. He further admitted that “[t]he original declaration left out the fact that Lawson handled the arrangements to have the shipping container transported from the United States to China and paid for the shipping” for Fortress Foods shipments, ECF No. 101-2 at ¶ 39. Law conceded that his initial declaration “failed to identify electronic records that [he] now realize[d] were in Lawson’s

possession, custody, or control”. ECF No. 101-2 at ¶ 42. On September 10, 2018, after the records deposition, Vista sought an extension of time for discovery, in part to secure discovery of Fortress Foods. ECF No. 104 at 3. Lawson issued a subpoena for Fortress Foods to produce documents on October 15, 2018. ECF No. 104-2. Fortress did not reply to the subpoena. Thereafter, Vista requested that Judge Netburn issue an order to show cause why Fortress should not be sanctioned for failure to comply with the subpoena. ECF No. 124. Vista also argued to Judge Netburn that Fortress was a “front or alter ego for Lawson”

and that Law “prepared the withheld records in Fortress’s name”. ECF No. 124 at 1. On January 8, 2019, Judge Netburn ordered a status report including a summary of “Plaintiff's requests for documents and the extent to which the requested documents were provided to Vista.” ECF No. 131 at 1. Lawson reported that it had made substantial progress in producing documents. ECF No. 131 at 2. However, Vista reported the production included “no pleading indicating to which demands the documents [were] purportedly responsive”, “were produced in a

format that is not searchable and [had no] load file for review in Vista’s discovery platform, as required by the parties’ ESI Protocol.” ECF No. 132. Vista therefore required an extension of time to review the documents prior to filing any response on the status of discovery, which Judge Netburn granted. ECF No. 133.

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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-2020.