Walsh v. Cornerstone Health Care, P.A.

829 S.E.2d 513, 265 N.C. App. 672
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 4, 2019
DocketCOA18-925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 829 S.E.2d 513 (Walsh v. Cornerstone Health Care, P.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Cornerstone Health Care, P.A., 829 S.E.2d 513, 265 N.C. App. 672 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

ZACHARY, Judge.

*673 Defendant Cornerstone Health Care, P.A. appeals from the trial court's order striking Defendant's answer as a sanction for discovery violations. We vacate and remand.

Background

Plaintiffs Thomas Raymond Walsh, M.D. and James Dasher, M.D. filed the instant action against Defendant, their former employer, on 20 November 2014 asserting claims for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of contract, common law unfair competition, and quantum meruit. A protracted discovery dispute thereafter arose between the parties, which, for purposes of the instant appeal, primarily involves Plaintiffs' claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.

As part of the basis of their claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, Plaintiffs alleged that "[i]n recent years, defendant ... became fundamentally unprofitable, and was able to pay its business debts only by arbitrarily reducing the compensation of certain disfavored physicians." Plaintiffs maintain that they were included among said group of "disfavored physicians," and that when Plaintiffs expressed dissatisfaction with their decreased compensation, Defendant retaliated by essentially demoting Plaintiffs in an effort to further reduce their compensation. On 20 September 2014, Plaintiffs voluntarily resigned from their employment with Defendant. Plaintiffs maintained that "Defendant's capricious, malicious, and retaliatory actions" constituted a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in their employment contracts.

Defendant served its initial response to Plaintiffs' First Set of Interrogatories and Request for Production of Documents on 4 May *674 2015. Interrogatory 7 directed Defendant to "[i]dentify, with specificity, all relevant documents that you or your attorney have which pertain to any issues or facts in this suit." Plaintiffs' Request 7 sought

[a]ll statements, summaries of statements, correspondence, letters, memoranda, documents, records, notes, telephone logs, electronic mail, ms word documents, pdf files, or other papers, whether in written, printed, or electronic format, in your possession or control or to which you, your counsel, or representatives have access regarding or pertaining to the professional performance, competency, or personal opinions or views of either or both plaintiffs by [Defendant].

(Hereafter "professional and personal opinion documents"). Defendant objected to Request 7 on the grounds of privilege, 1 but nevertheless responded that it had nothing to produce. 2 Defendant's CEO verified under *515 oath that the response to Request 7 was "true of her own knowledge and belief except those matters therein stated upon information and belief, and, as to those, she believe[d] them to be true."

On 26 July 2016, following the parties' fourth discovery-related motion, the Honorable Mark E. Klass entered an order requiring the parties to "confer and select ... a qualified and capable forensic e-discovery vendor for the purpose of collecting and cataloging electronically stored communications, specifically e-mails, generated by" six of Defendant's corporate officers ("the e-discovery order"). According to Plaintiffs, when Defendant's e-discovery database became available to them in August 2017, Plaintiffs learned that Defendant had "intentionally withheld a vast number of highly relevant and damaging documents"-namely, e-mails between Defendant's officers-"which squarely pertain" to Defendant's professional and personal opinions of Plaintiffs, despite the CEO having attested, under oath, that no such documents existed. Accordingly, on 21 September 2017, Plaintiffs filed a motion for mandatory sanctions "pursuant to Rule 26(g) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure." Plaintiffs maintained that "[t]he discovery responses signed and attested to under oath by [Defendant's CEO] were interposed for the improper purpose of intentionally withholding a substantial cache of damaging *675 documents, which has served to harass plaintiffs, cause unnecessary delay, and has needlessly and exponentially increased the cost of litigation." Plaintiffs argued that "[a]t this juncture, only the severe sanction of striking [Defendant's] answer is appropriate."

Plaintiffs' motion came on for hearing on 2 October 2017. The professional and personal opinion documents that Plaintiffs alleged were responsive to Interrogatory 7 and Request 7 were presented to the trial court for in camera review. Plaintiffs argued:

Rule 26(g) is cited in our brief in full. ... [It] essentially addresses the issue of improper purpose and that is to use the discovery process for a number of different improper reasons, but in this case to use the discovery process to wear down the opponent to needlessly increase the cost of litigation so eventually the party collapses under its weight.
We think that's exactly what has occurred in this case. ... The discovery responses that were signed by the defendant's CEO, falsely, were for the clear purpose of improperly withholding a substantial number of damaging documents pertaining again to our claims for breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
....
They denied the existence of these documents under oath twice ....
....
So what we say essentially is this; the defendant's discovery misconduct is one of the most egregious examples that a Court will find to justify severe sanctions of striking their answer; otherwise, this pattern of false swearing of recalcitrants in discovery, it goes unpunished. That's why wisely Rule 26(g) was placed into effect in this jurisdiction ....

In response, Defendant argued that it did not produce the e-mails that Plaintiffs presented for in camera review because they were neither relevant nor responsive to Interrogatory 7 or Request 7, in that they "have nothing to do, there's nothing regarding the professional competence of these doctors as surgeons. ... We commend those [e-mails] to your reading .... That will shed a lot of light on why we did not consider those to be relevant and responsive to any issue in the case." "[N]evertheless," Defendant noted, "they have now been produced."

*676 On 21 March 2018, more than five months after the hearing, the trial court entered its order, finding that Plaintiffs' motion was filed "specifically for failure to supplement as required under Rule 26(e) of the N.C. Rules of Civil Procedure." The trial court found that the documents that Plaintiffs presented for in camera review were both relevant and responsive to Interrogatory 7 and Request 7, 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
829 S.E.2d 513, 265 N.C. App. 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-cornerstone-health-care-pa-ncctapp-2019.