Wagner v. Miller

555 N.W.2d 246, 1996 Iowa App. LEXIS 95, 1996 WL 649100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 30, 1996
Docket94-1501
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 555 N.W.2d 246 (Wagner v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Miller, 555 N.W.2d 246, 1996 Iowa App. LEXIS 95, 1996 WL 649100 (iowactapp 1996).

Opinion

VOGEL, Judge.

On November 17, 1992, Gary L. Wagner brought suit against Edward D. Jones & Co., a securities brokerage firm, E.D.J. Holding Company, Inc., its corporate general partner, and Greg Miller, an investment representative employed by Edward D. Jones & Co. 1 Judith Wagner, Wagner’s wife, was added as a plaintiff in late 1993. 2 The Wagners sought damages for losses they claim to have sustained in connection with the investment in four limited partnerships which were purchased through Jones. The Wagners’ claims are essentially based upon negligent misrepresentation and breach of fiduciary duty. 3

*248 On December 24, 1992, Jones served its First Request for Production of Documents and Notice of Service of First Set of Interrogatories on Gary Wagner. Among the twenty-six written interrogatories was interrogatory 21 which stated:

For each item of damages alleged in your Petition, please state the total amount of such damages; state the basis for and the calculations used to arrive at such amount alleged as damages; state whether there are any alternative methods by which you contend damages might be computed as to any claim against Defendants, and, if so, state such method and the total amount of damages using such method which you claim to have suffered; identify all documents that relate to your claimed damages, or were used in connection with preparing your responses to this Interrogatory; identify all persons having any knowledge of your damages or the computation thereof.

Also Interrogatoiy No. 19 requested information regarding any expert witnesses, in a fairly standard form. The Wagners asked for and were given an additional month to respond to the interrogatories and the document requests. On February 22, 1993, the Wagners responded to the interrogatories. The responses were designated as “draft” responses and were not verified or signed. The responses included six general objections to the interrogatories and specific objections to all of the interrogatories.

Upon reviewing the Wagners’ responses, Jones determined the draft responses were deficient and contained improper objections. Jones conveyed dissatisfaction with the draft responses during the following month through communications with the Wagners’ attorneys. On March 25, 1993, the Wagners submitted another set of responses which were again not verified.

Verified responses were finally submitted on April 12, 1993. Jones determined the prior complaints regarding the sufficiency of the responses had not been met and the responses were still deficient. In response to Interrogatoiy 21, the Wagners stated:

Plaintiff objects to that portion of this interrogatory which asks him to identify documents that relate to damages. Plaintiff will produce any such documents which are in his possession and the burden of deriving or ascertaining the answer to that portion of this interrogatory is substantially the same for the defendants as for these plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs have not computed damages in this matter at this time. However, plaintiffs believe their damages are the total amount of their investment, less distributions received, plus lost use of funds. Plaintiff is not aware of any alternative methods for computing damages at this time.

Jones continued to complain to the Wagners, during the following months, regarding the sufficiency of the responses. In an order dated July 14, 1993, the district court determined discoveiy was to be completed by February 15, 1994, and the trial was to commence on May 24,1994.

The Wagners produced a set of documents for the first time in August 1993. Jones found this production to be not only deficient but also improperly produced since the documents were commingled with documents produced by Logan in his separate lawsuit, which made it extremely difficult for Jones to determine which plaintiff produced which documents. The Wagners filed supplemental responses to the interrogatories on December 21, 1993. Once again, Jones found these responses to be deficient. Jones filed a Motion to Compel Answers to Interrogatories and Production of Documents on January 12, 1994.

On January 24, 1994, the district court ordered the Wagners to file “full, fair and complete answers” to fourteen of the twenty-six interrogatories and to produce all documents responsive to the request for the production of documents. The district court ordered the foregoing to be accomplished no later than February 1,1994.

The Wagners filed additional supplemental answers to the interrogatories on February 1. Regarding Interrogatoiy 21, the Wagners set out the same method for calculating damages, and listed the amount invested in each of the four investments. The Wagners indi *249 cated the burden was on Jones to determine the distributions received from the produced documents but estimated it to be approximately $2500. The Wagners made no attempt to provide calculations for lost use of the funds.

Jones filed a motion for sanctions on March 10, 1994. The motion was based on the Wagners’ failure to comply with the January 24 order of the district court regarding responses to interrogatories and the production of documents. On March 29, 1994, the district court found the Wagners had failed to comply with the previous January 24 order and ordered the Wagners, once again, to “fully, fairly, completely and accurately” answer the interrogatories with respect to the Wagners’ claimed measure of damages. The Wagners did not file any additional responses after the district court’s March 29 order.

Jones filed a motion to dismiss on May 9, 1994, two weeks prior to when the trial was scheduled to begin. This motion was based on the Wagners’ repeated failures to comply with discovery requests and the repeated failures to comply with court orders. Then, on May 11, 1994, the Wagners filed a motion in limine concerning damages. The Wagners argued they should be allowed to have their expert testify as to damages under the “benefit of the bargain” rule as well as testify as to consequential damages. The motion to dismiss came on for hearing May 17, 1994, one week prior to the scheduled jury trial. The district court found multiple discovery abuses occurred during the course of this ease. It found the inadequate response to the damages interrogatory to be a delay tactic. The court found that the “benefit of the bargain” damage calculation differed substantially from the prior theory of “lost use of the funds,” which amounted to a new theory being sprung on the Jones on the eve of the trial. It also found the delayed responses to the expert witness interrogatory, tied with the theory of damages, effectively eroded Jones’s discovery efforts and trial preparation. The court further found the case could have been dismissed at the previous motion for sanctions hearing but the Wagners were given one more opportunity to comply. Since they did not, and combined with the many discovery abuses, the court determined the Wagners’ conduct was willful and dismissal was the only appropriate sanction.

The Wagners appeal.

Our review of discovery sanctions is for an abuse of discretion. Kendall/Hunt Pub.

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555 N.W.2d 246, 1996 Iowa App. LEXIS 95, 1996 WL 649100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-miller-iowactapp-1996.