LOUISE W. FLANAGAN, District Judge.
This matter is before the court on renewed motion of plaintiff, judgment creditor herein, to compel responses to post-judgment interrogatories and request for production of documents (DE 722).
On July 15, 2016, the court entered judgment in this matter awarding plaintiff, in pertinent, part, total damages of $79,129,905.00, comprising compensatory damages based upon breach of contract, fraudulent inducement to contract, and the North Carolina Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act ("UDTPA"), as well as trebled damages based upon the UDTPA.
Plaintiff initially filed on October 31, 2016, a motion to compel responses to post-judgment interrogatories and requests for production of documents, which motion the court denied without prejudice pending the outcome of appeal in this matter. On October 24, 2017, the court of appeals affirmed this court's July 15, 2016 judgment in pertinent part.
Plaintiff filed the instant renewed motion on December 11, 2017, seeking an order compelling defendant to respond fully to plaintiff's "First Post-Judgment Interrogatories," and "First Post-Judgment Request for Production of Documents," served July 11, 2016, which are attached to plaintiff's memorandum. (
In opposition to plaintiff's motion to compel, defendant argues that the court should deny plaintiff's motion to the extent it relates to assets located outside the United States, and that its other objections are valid. Defendant suggests that the court should grant relief consistent with a prior proposal to place in a "lockbox" defendant's ongoing United States revenue. Defendant relies upon a declaration of counsel Wayne F. Dennison; declaration of defendant's company director, Oliver Robinson; and defendant's responses to prior discovery requests during pendency of the lawsuit.
In reply, plaintiff relies upon correspondence regarding the "lockbox" proposal, as well as additional documentation regarding corporate transactions involving defendant in the United Kingdom, further supplemented in filing made February 6, 2018. (
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 provides that "[i]n aid of the judgment or execution, the judgment creditor . . . may obtain discovery from any person — including the judgment debtor — as provided in these rules or by the procedure of the state where the court is located." Fed. R. Civ. P. 69(a)(2). "The rules governing discovery in postjudgment execution proceedings are quite permissive."
Although the Fourth Circuit has not opined on the scope of postjudgment discovery, district courts, including those within this circuit, have recognized a "presumption . . . in favor of full discovery of any matters arguably related to the creditor's efforts to trace the debtor's assets and otherwise to enforce its judgment."
Here, plaintiff contends that defendant improperly has limited its responses or raised inadequate objections in several respects, which the court will address in turn below.
Defendant limits several responses to information about assets or transactions in the United States, and it objects to discovery of information about assets or transactions outside of the United States. In particular, defendant limits its responses to interrogatories 3-10, 15, 19-21, and document requests 2-3, 11-17, 19, 21, 26-27, to the United States where those discovery requests otherwise are not so limited geographically. Defendant also asserts a blanket objection to each interrogatory and document request "to the extent that it seeks information regarding assets located outside of the United States and is therefore not relevant to executing the judgment in the United States." (DE 722-4 at 1-2; 722-5 at 1-2).
Plaintiff contends in its motion that defendant should be compelled to supplement its responses without such territorial limitation, to the full extent of the scope of the questions posed. The court agrees with plaintiff. The federal rules and applicable caselaw do not provide grounds for limiting postjudgment discovery to a defendant's assets or transactions in the United States, to the exclusion of any and all other locations in the world. Indeed such a limitation is contrary to the purpose of postjudgment discovery to identify the whereabouts of a defendants assets, to trace their movement, and to discover hidden or concealed assets.
Defendant suggests that the propriety of limiting postjudgment discovery to the United States is a question open for debate, given that the Supreme Court expressly declined to address the issue in
Defendant argues
Defendant suggests in its objection that this is not a "run-of-the-mill execution proceeding," in part because execution of the judgment in the United Kingdom will be challenging. The fact that plaintiff ultimately may not be able to execute all or part of the judgment in the United Kingdom, however, does not provide a basis for foreclosing discovery on information about the location of defendant's assets in the United Kingdom, or elsewhere in the world. The Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in
134 S.Ct. at 2257 (emphasis in original). Further, it noted:
Defendant also suggests that this court should decline in its discretion to compel discovery in the United Kingdom, in the interest of comity owed to the prior United Kingdom judgment in favor of defendant, and as a matter of deference to ongoing execution proceedings in the United Kingdom. This argument misses the mark on both fronts. First, the court of appeals in its decision affirming the judgment of this court put to rest the notion that this court's judgment is unenforceable due to comity owed to the prior United Kingdom judgment.
Second, the fact that execution proceedings are ongoing in the United Kingdom is not determinative to whether plaintiff should be entitled to postjudgment discovery in the instant matter in the United Kingdom or elsewhere in the world. As noted previously, the availability and course of postjudgment discovery under the federal rules is a separate question from the availability and scope of execution relief in any given country.
Accordingly, plaintiff's motion to compel is granted in this part, to the extent it seeks to remove the limitation to the United States in defendant's responses. Defendant is DIRECTED to respond to plaintiff's instant interrogatories and document requests without limiting its responses to the United States. The court considers next the propriety of additional limitations asserted in its responses and objections.
In its responses to certain discovery requests, defendant limits the time frame of documents or information provided, and it objects to discovery for the full time frame of documents or information requested. For example, plaintiff seeks in its request for production of documents the following:
(DE 722-3 at 5) In addition, for each request, plaintiff "specifically requests that WPL supplement its response to [the] request every 30 days." (
Defendant limits its responses to these requests to the date of production. For example, defendant responds to request No. 2., in pertinent part, as follows:
(DE 722-5 at 4) (emphasis added). Defendant objects to the full time frame requested because it is "overbroad, unduly burdensome, and includes previously-paid invoices that have no relevance to the execution of [the] judgment." (
Defendant's objection to the full time frame set forth in these discovery requests is unfounded. Transactional documents dated from January 1, 2015, to present are "arguably related to the creditor's efforts to trace the debtor's assets."
Defendant's general objection that the requests are unduly burdensome and out of proportion to the needs of the case is unavailing given the size of the judgment and the limited recovery by plaintiff to date of funds satisfying the judgment. Defendant also suggests that the discovery sought is duplicative of discovery already produced during the course of the litigation. However, the fact that the discovery sought overlaps with prior productions underscores its relevance. Further, Defendant need not reproduce documents already produced in prior discovery, but may refer by bates number to its prior discovery responses if they are responsive to the instant post-judgment discovery requests.
For the same reasons, the court finds that a 30-day ongoing supplementation requirement is reasonable. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(e) requires supplementation "as ordered by the court" or "in a timely manner if the party learns that in some material respect the disclosure or response is incomplete or incorrect, and if the additional or corrective information has not otherwise been made known to the other parties during the discovery process or in writing." Here, where defendant continues to receive, and expects to receive, revenue from various sources and in various locations, plaintiff must be kept apprised of updated information to aid in its execution efforts.
Defendant appears to suggest, as an alternative to ongoing discovery responses about its current and expected revenues, that it suffices to arrange for "all amounts otherwise payable to it by WPL's U.S. licensees to instead be payable to SAS Institute under a lockbox or similar arrangement," "until the judgment is satisfied in full." (Def's Resp. (DE 725) at 1). This suggestion is unavailing, however, because the issue for decision before the court is the scope of discovery to which defendant is entitled under Rule 69, not the source of funds from which plaintiff will be able to satisfy its judgment. A "lockbox" arrangement is not a discovery mechanism, and it does nothing to address plaintiff's entitlement to discovery in aid of execution.
Defendant also suggests that anything beyond a "lockbox" arrangement will amount to granting plaintiff the permanent injunctive relief that the courts have already considered and denied. This suggestion again conflates the post-judgment discovery issue with other aspects of the case. Plaintiff is entitled to post-judgment discovery to the full extent permitted under the rules, and to use such discovery in aid of execution of the judgment.
In sum, defendant's objections to the time frame of plaintiff's discovery requests are overruled. Defendant is DIRECTED to respond to plaintiff's discovery requests to the full time frame provided in each request.
For purposes of its post-judgment document production requests, plaintiff defines "WPL" to mean defendant "and any other companies under which it does business including without limitation any of those companies' representatives, heirs, assigns, attorneys, officers, directors, employees, subsidiaries, parents, shareholders, members, partners, partnerships, predecessors and successors." (DE 722-3 at 3). For its post-judgment interrogatories, plaintiff similarly defines "WPL" to mean defendant's "representatives, heirs, assigns, attorneys, officers, directors, employees, subsidiaries, parents, shareholders, members, partners, partnerships, predecessors and successors." (DE 722-2 at 1).
Defendant, by contrast, limits its definition of WPL for purposes of its responses to mean only defendant "and any parent and subsidiary companies of WPL." (DE 722-5 at 1; 722-4 at 1). Defendant explains its objection to the scope of definition of WPL, as follows:
(Def's Mem. (DE 725) at 5-6). In reply, plaintiff provides documentation of substantial corporate transactions and activities by entities affiliated with WPL, including involvement in such activity by individual WPL officers and directors. (
The proper scope for the definition of WPL for purposes of the instant requests lies between the two extremes proffered by the parties. On the one hand, as defendant notes, there is no justification for plaintiff "to pry into the lives and property of every one of WPL's employees, its attorneys and other third parties." (Def's Mem. (DE 725) at 5-6). A literal reading of plaintiff's proposed definition of WPL is too broad. On the other hand, the concerns raised by defendant do not justify limiting the scope of discovery responses only to defendant and any parent and subsidiary companies. In addition, the scope of discovery is not properly limited to only those individuals or entities who can be compelled to satisfy the judgment; rather, even individuals or entities who cannot be compelled to satisfy the judgment may still have discoverable information concerning defendant's movement and transfer of assets, as well as hidden or concealed assets.
Post-judgment discovery properly involves inquiry into "common relationships between a party and its related non-party entity, the ownership of the non-party, the overlap of directors, officers, and employees, and the financial relationship between the entities."
The court at this juncture does not undertake an exact redrafting of the definition of "WPL" for purposes of the discovery requests, recognizing that defendant is, in the first instance, in the best position to reasonably tailor its production to the foregoing directives. Nevertheless, the court grants in part and denies in part plaintiff's motion to compel in this respect without prejudice to revisiting issues of the scope in definition of "WPL" raised after a further round of discovery responses is completed, in the event of continuing dispute concerning this issue of scope.
In so holding, the court recognizes defendant's position that plaintiff "already repeatedly and unapologetically mishandled confidential materials in this case and been sanctioned by the Court for those breaches." (Def's Mem. (DE 725) at 6). Even accepting defendant's characterization of the record — which characterization is disputed by plaintiff — such past conduct does not provide a basis in this instance for limiting the scope of post-judgment discovery to the extent defendant has asserted in its discovery responses. Plaintiff remains obligated to the protective order (DE 106) in post-judgment discovery, and plaintiff can be subjected to a wide range of sanction for violations thereof, in the event a need for additional sanctions arises. If defendant believes there is a need for further amendment to the protective order governing the instant post-judgment discovery, defendant may confer with plaintiff for purposes of such amendment for presentation to the court.
In sum, the court grants in part plaintiff's motion to compel by requiring an expansion of the definition of "WPL" beyond that utilized by defendant in its prior discovery responses; the court denies in part plaintiff's motion to compel to the extent it does not mandate compliance with full definition of "WPL" set forth in plaintiff's discovery requests.
Defendant sets forth in its discovery responses additional limitations and objections to plaintiff's discovery requests, which are not discussed specifically in its memorandum in opposition to plaintiff's motion to compel. Rather, defendant contends generally that "SAS Institute's interrogatories and requests for production constitute nothing but an unacceptable fishing expedition for irrelevant or cumulative information." (Def's Resp. (DE 725) at 8). Given the "quite permissive" nature of post-judgment discovery rules, and the presumption in favor of "full discovery" therein,
Based on the foregoing, plaintiff's motion to compel is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART as set forth herein. Defendant is DIRECTED to supplement its responses to plaintiff's post-judgment interrogatories and requests for production of documents, on or before
SO ORDERED.