JOHN A. ROSS, District Judge.
This miscellaneous matter is before the Court on Defendants National Union Fire Insurance Company and AIG Domestic Claims, Inc.'s (collectively referred to as "National Union") Motion to Compel 30(b)(6) Deposition of Lyndon Property Insurance Company [ECF No. 1] and Lyndon Property Insurance Company's ("Lyndon") Motion to Quash. [ECF No. 5] The motions are fully briefed and ready for disposition. For the following reasons, National Union's motion to compel will be granted and Lyndon's motion to quash will be denied.
This matter concerns an adversary proceeding brought by the Centrix Financial Liquidating Trust and Trustee Jeffrey Weinman ("Plaintiffs") against National Union in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado. Plaintiffs seek coverage under a fidelity bond issued to Centrix Financial, LLC ("Centrix") by National Union on May 29, 2006, which provided coverage to Centrix for direct loss caused by the fraudulent or dishonest acts of its employees. (Doc. No. 1-3) Plaintiffs allege that certain Centrix officers defrauded Centrix of millions of dollars, which losses are covered under the bond.
Under the terms of the bond, a covered loss must have been "discovered" during the coverage period and reported to National Union within sixty days of discovery. Plaintiffs allege that Centrix discovered the loss when it was sued by non-party Lyndon Property Insurance Company ("Lyndon") on February 7, 2007,
On June 13, 2012, National Union served a Rule 30(b)(6) notice of deposition and subpoena on Lyndon seeking to ascertain when Lyndon first became aware of the factual allegations alleged in the Lyndon lawsuit.
On October 5, 2012, Lyndon served National Union with objections to the deposition topics on the grounds that (1) the requested testimony is duplicative of information already provided in this case; (2) providing the requested testimony would be unduly burdensome, particularly given Lyndon's third-party status in this case; and (3) the testimony sought is protected by the attorney-client privilege. (Doc. No. 1-8) Subject to its objections, Lyndon agreed to produce a witness to testify on the first and fifth topics. National Union filed the instant motion to compel because Lyndon's objections did not allow it to obtain the information necessary for its defenses. (Doc. No. 1, p. 5)
District courts are accorded wide discretion in dealing with discovery matters
Discovery sought via a subpoena issued pursuant to Rule 45 must fall within the scope of discovery permissible under Rule 26(b). In determining whether to enforce a Rule 45 subpoena, the issuing court must consider whether the subpoena subjects the person to an "undue burden." Fed.R.Civ.P. 45(c)(1), (c)(3)(A)(iv). This "undue burden" factor is "designed to track Rule 26(c), the principal protective order provision applicable in federal discovery."
In its motion to compel, National Union rejects Lyndon's attempts to cast itself as a disinterested non-party and urges the Court to consider Lyndon's objections in light of its longstanding business relationship with Centrix and direct interest in this litigation. National Union emphasizes that Lyndon, as an unsecured creditor for $165 million in the underlying bankruptcy action, is a primary beneficiary of any recovery from National Union in this case. Moreover, Lyndon has obtained an agreement from the Trustee that $11 million of its claim is "allowed" under the terms of the Chapter 11 plan entered by the Bankruptcy Court. (Doc. No. 1, pp. 6-7)
National Union asserts that Lyndon's testimony is not duplicative of information already produced in this case. Despite Lyndon's understanding that National Union has access to Centrix documents that would likely be the best evidence of when Lyndon may have become aware of any particular fact (Doc. No. 1-8, p. 4), the Trust claims to be unaware of any information known to Centrix at the time the Lyndon suit was filed, and the Trustee testified on deposition that he had no knowledge of the Lyndon lawsuit, or how the allegations in the Lyndon lawsuit contributed to Centrix's discovery of a covered loss. (Doc. No. 1, p. 8)
National Union further argues that Lyndon fails to meet its heavy burden of proving that the Rule 30(b)(6) subpoena is unduly burdensome. (
Lastly, National Union argues the testimony it seeks is not protected by the attorneyclient privilege since it is well established that a party is entitled to discovery of the documents that support the allegations in a complaint, citing Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(1)(A)(ii); Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1); Federal Procedure, Lawyers Edition § 26:127(2012) ("[A]n interrogatory calling for a description of all documents relied upon to support certain allegations contained in the complaint is not improper."). (
In opposition to National Union's motion to compel and in support of its motion to quash, Lyndon argues that when it learned of the facts giving rise to the allegations in its complaint (Lyndon lawsuit) is not relevant to establish Centrix's knowledge of the fraud; rather, what is relevant is when Centrix learned of it. (Doc. No. 5, pp. 9-10) Lyndon further asserts that its complaint was the product of outside counsel's investigation following the Centrix bankruptcy, which is work product/attorney-client privileged information. (
As for National Union's reliance on the Colorado bankruptcy court's ruling that Lyndon has relevant, discoverable information, Lyndon takes the position that because the Colorado bankruptcy court did not address the merits of the discovery National Union seeks from Lyndon, its denial of Plaintiffs' motion for a protective order is not relevant. (
National Union replies that Lyndon's arguments regarding the relevance of the testimony sought rests on a misunderstanding of the Fidelity Bond policy. Specifically, the Fidelity Bond does not require Centrix to have actual notice of the fraud or misconduct for discovery to occur. Instead, the Bond only requires Centrix to be "aware of facts which would cause a reasonable person to assume that a loss of a type covered by this bond has been or will be incurred . . . even though the exact amount or details of loss may not then be known." (Doc. No. 7, p. 3; Fidelity Bond at Sec. 3, Doc. 1-3) To the extent the facts learned by Lyndon that caused it to believe a fraud occurred are also facts that Centrix knew, these facts are sufficient to show Centrix was "aware of facts which would cause a reasonable person to assume that a loss of a type covered by this bond has been or will be incurred . . ." Thus, the facts Lyndon knew—and the documents that contain these facts—could be highly relevant to whether there is coverage under the bond. (
With regard to Lyndon's argument that National Union delayed seeking a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition from Lyndon, and has already deposed its two most knowledgeable witnesses, Gregg Cariolano and Kayleen Carmody (
National Union maintains that Lyndon's burden of producing a Rule 30(b)(6) witness does not outweigh the benefit to National Union, particularly since Plaintiffs claim to be without knowledge of the fraud alleged in Lyndon's lawsuit and unable to identify relevant documents.
Finally, National Union reiterates that the information it seeks is not privileged merely because the facts were at some point communicated to or by Lyndon's outside counsel. (
Lyndon submits an order from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, In re Centrix Financial, LLC, et al., No. 12-6471 (AET) (December 18, 2012), granting a motion to quash a subpoena issued by National Union to Everest National Insurance Company seeking to compel a third-party Rule 30(b)(6) deposition on "virtually identical" topics noticed in the subpoena issued to Lyndon in this case. (Doc. No. 8)
As discussed above, the factors required to be balanced by the trial court in determining the propriety of a subpoena are "the relevance of the discovery sought, the requesting party's need, and the potential hardship to the party subject to the subpoena."
Accordingly,