BOYD N. BOLAND, Magistrate Judge.
This matter arises on
The parties have argued that a crucial issue in this patent infringement case is whether MDx's accused products infringe the requirements of Health Grades' patent that "[t]he healthcare provider must provide `at least three' of a set of data elements . . . and the healthcare provider must `verify' the elements he provides." Order [Doc. # 711] at p. 1. In a motion to compel discovery directed at MDx's Interrogatory No. 2, Health Grades acknowledged that "claims 1 and 15 of the patent-in-suit require healthcare provider-verified information that includes at least three of the following: specialty information, medical philosophy, gender, age, years in profession, years in practice, awards, honors, professional appointments, professional memberships, publications, languages, and hobbies," Motion to Compel [Doc. # 126] at pp. 6-7, and complained that MDx's response about this provider-verified information was "conclusory and vague."
MDx's Second Supplemental Responses to Interrogatories [Doc. # 632-1], made pursuant to my order compelling discovery, included the following answer in connection with Interrogatory No. 2: "No physician has ever entered and/or modified any of the following information: age, years in profession, years in practice or publications. . . . MDx currently has no knowledge of any physician who has entered and/or modified three or more of [the provider-verified] information." MDx's Second Supplemental Responses to Interrogatories [Doc. # 632-1] at p. 3.
The significance of MDx's supplemental answer to Interrogatory No. 2 became clear when MDx sought summary judgment arguing that "Health Grades has no evidence that any healthcare provider has ever provided even two of the required data elements, let alone three." Motion for Summary Judgment of Non-Infringement [Doc. # 367/368] at p. 2. In particular, MDx argued that "[t]he only evidence collected by Health Grades relating to whether and to what extent physicians use the portal to modify this data is summarized in MDx's response to interrogatory 2," quoting MDx's discovery response that "[n]o physician has ever entered/or modified any of the following information: age, years in profession, year in practice, or publications," and that "MDx currently has no knowledge of any physician who has entered and/or modified three or more of [the provider-verified] information."
The supplemental response to Interrogatory No. 2 was false. MDx now admits that it subsequently produced emails and faxes contradicting the answer. Motion for Reconsideration [Doc. # 720] at p. 4. At the time of my Order imposing sanctions, the evidence indicated that "11,209 of the Verification Forms produced thus far show that MDx has received three or more of the types of Physician Information from physicians." Order [Doc. # 711] at p. 4.
MDx's counsel seeks to avoid sanctions arguing, first, that despite a reasonable inquiry, "counsel for MDx
Perhaps MDx counsels' argument based on the California local rules would have some strength if the supplemental response was provided simply to an interrogatory. Here, however, the supplemental response came after Health Grades' motion to compel, where Health Grades specifically argued that "claims 1 and 15 of the patent-in-suit require healthcare provider-verified information that includes at least three of the following: specialty information, medical philosophy, gender, age, years in profession, years in practice, awards, honors, professional appointments, professional memberships, publications, languages, and hobbies," Motion to Compel [Doc. # 126] at pp. 6-7, and complained that MDx's response about this provider-verified information was "conclusory and vague,"
Moreover, MDx counsels' argument is rendered incredible by the fact that MDx relied on the false interrogatory response in support of its withdrawn motion for summary judgment.
MDx's attempted sleight-of-hand renders its supplemental response to Interrogatory No. 2 misleading and false, and reasonable inquiry by MDx's lawyers certainly would have disclosed the falsehood (if, in fact, the lawyers were not fully aware).
MDx's counsel also argues that I was mistaken about whether the supplemental discovery responses were verified by its client. In my sanctions order, I relied on the evidence presented to me and found that they were not. Order [Doc. # 711] at p. 3 n.1. I was presented with incomplete evidence, and my conclusion apparently was not correct. Motion to Reconsider [Doc. # 720] at p. 2. The error does not alter my decision that sanctions properly are imposed on counsel and not the client. In particular, it is apparent to me that counsel, and not its client, drew the fine distinction and decided not to reveal the edits made by "physicians submitting data by fax or email" based on Health Grades infringement contentions and the California local rules. As I have said, that was an impermissible sleight-of-hand and is sanctionable.
IT IS ORDERED:
(1) The Motion to Reconsider [Doc. # 720] is DENIED; and
(2) The Motion for Enlargement [Doc. # 736] is GRANTED. Health Grades shall submit its fee application on or before May 14, 2014.