JENNIFER A. DORSEY, District Judge.
Luv N' Care, Ltd. (LNC) filed this action to compel Blue Basin Medical, LLC to produce documents responsive to a subpoena issued in a matter pending in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. After Blue Basin did not respond to the motion, Magistrate Judge Foley granted the motion to compel and awarded LNC attorney's fees and costs. Blue Basin and its managing member Bradley Laurain (collectively, respondents) object under Local Rule IB 3-1, arguing that Magistrate Judge Foley erred because (1) Blue Basin was a defunct entity, (2) Magistrate Judge Foley was required to find Blue Basin in contempt before awarding attorney's fees, and (3) Magistrate Judge Foley's order relied on factual determinations that were clearly erroneous. Respondents filed a reply in support of their objections without leave of the court; the parties filed countermotions to strike and accept the reply. I grant the motion to accept the reply brief, but I overrule the objections because they fail on their merits.
This action arises out of an intellectual property case pending in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, Luv N' Care, LTD. v. Lindsey Laurain, Eazy-PZ, LLC, No. 3:16-cv-00777-TAD-JPM. Laurain is the husband of a defendant in that case and was a managing member of Blue Basin.
In July 2018, LNC issued a subpoena to Blue Basin in the Louisiana case and now moves this court to enforce it in Nevada.
When a litigant challenges a magistrate judge's ruling on a pretrial matter like this one, he must show that the "order is clearly erroneous or contrary to law."
Respondents object that Magistrate Judge Foley erred by enforcing the subpoena against Blue Basin because the three-year statute of limitations applicable to dissolved entities expired before it filed this action. LNC responds that: (1) the revocation of a company's charter does not trigger the statute-of-limitations period to sue it; (2) the statute of limitations does not apply to subpoenas; (3) the statute of limitations does not "preempt" a federal subpoena; and (4) even if the statute of limitations applies, LNC served the subpoena before it expired.
Under Nevada Revised Statutes § 86.274(2), an LLC's "right to transact business is forfeited" when its charter is revoked. But "the right to transact business that is forfeited on charter revocation does not normally include an LLC's capacity to be sued and be sued."
Even assuming that the subpoena and subsequent motion to compel constitute a "remedy or cause of action" subject to the statute of limitations, LNC was timely. It served the subpoena on Blue Basin's registered agent before the three-year period expired on July 31, 2018.
Respondents argue that Magistrate Judge Foley erred by awarding attorney's fees without having first ordered compliance with the subpoena.
Respondents have not identified, and I have not found, any controlling authority requiring a court to order compliance with a properly-issued subpoena before making a contempt determination under Rule 45(g). LNC's original subpoena was a court order. By not responding to it, Blue Basin failed to obey a court order without adequate excuse.
Respondents object to three "factual determinations" made explicitly or implicitly by Judge Foley, arguing that (1) it was clear error to grant the motion to compel where Laurain had not been personally served with the subpoena, (2) LNC could not have met its meet-and-confer obligations because it did not serve Laurain, and (3) Blue Basin and Laurain are in compliance with the subpoena because they have no responsive records.
Respondents' first two arguments are inapposite. Magistrate Judge Foley's order compels Blue Basin to produce responsive documents and requires Blue Basin to pay attorney's fees and costs.
With regard to respondents' contention that they were in compliance with the subpoena because they have no responsive documents, this statement has no bearing on whether Magistrate Judge Foley erred because Blue Basin did not object or otherwise respond to the subpoena or motion to compel. Even if it mattered, respondents' conclusory statement that the documents do not exist "on information and belief" is not an adequate response to the subpoena, particularly because it is contradicted by prior statements made on behalf of Laurain.
Respondents submitted a reply brief in support of their objections to Magistrate Judge Foley's order without the leave of court required by Local Rule IB 3-1(a). The parties filed countermotions to strike and accept the reply.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Blue Basin and Bradley Laurain's objections
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that LNC's motion to strike Blue Basin and Bradley Laurain's reply in support of its objections