JOHN S. DALIS, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter came on for hearing on the Liquidation Trustee's Motion Regarding the Sufficiency of Kings Point Property Owners Association Inc.'s Response to the Liquidation Trustee's First Set of Requests for Admission, to Extend the Discovery and Summary Judgment Deadlines, and in the Alternative for an Expedited Hearing ("Motion"). As part of the discovery in this contested matter, the Liquidation Trustee served its first set of requests for admission ("Requests for Admission") on Kings Point Property Owners Association Inc. ("Kings Point POA"), to which Kings Point POA timely responded. The Liquidation Trustee then brought the Motion challenging the sufficiency of the responses.
Kings Point POA's responses to the Liquidation Trustee's Requests for Admission are sufficient except the responses to the requests numbered 34, 35, 47, 67, 68, 75, 90, 91, 104, and 114. Accordingly, Kings Point POA has 10 days from the date of this order to amend its insufficient responses so as to admit or deny the requests.
The Motion challenges the sufficiency of individual responses made by Kings Point POA to the Requests for Admission. (ECF No. 1368.) The Motion organizes the challenged responses into three groups represented by Appendix A, Appendix B, and Appendix C. (ECF No. 1368 at 6-7.) Each appendix contains responses that raise the same singular issue.
The responses and issues corresponding to the three appendices are as follows:
The Liquidation Trustee challenges the sufficiency of Kings Point POA's responses to the Requests for Admission set forth in Appendix A on the grounds that Kings Point POA did not make a reasonable inquiry of the third parties identified in the requests. Reasonable inquiry is required under Rule 36(a) (4) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(4).
The Liquidation Trustee focuses on the terms "reasonable inquiry" and "readily obtain" to argue that Rule 36 requires a responding party to perform a minimum level of third-party diligence as a form of reasonable inquiry. The Motion relies heavily on
Kings Point POA correctly identifies two important points
Central to the issue of the reasonable inquiry of the third parties involved in this particular set of facts is the element of control. Kings Point POA correctly defines control as "the legal right to obtain the documents requested upon demand."
The Liquidation Trustee's Requests for Admission set forth in Appendix A require Kings Point POA to admit or deny information that could only be verified as true or false by the third parties identified in those requests. Without control over the third parties, Kings Point POA does not have the legal right to obtain the necessary information from those parties. Nor do those parties have any obligation to turn the necessary information over to Kings Point POA.
The requirement for a shared identity of interest or control over the third party ensures that the respondent admits or denies with the requisite belief that the information provided is correct. Without a sufficient identity of interest with or level of control over any of the third parties in Appendix A, forcing Kings Point POA to admit or deny the requests would require third-party discovery with each of those third parties to compel and test the accuracy of any response. This task would extend beyond a "reasonable inquiry," and the requested information would go beyond what Kings Point POA could "readily obtain."
Kings Point POA does not have a shared identity of interest with or any level of control over the third parties identified in Appendix A; therefore Kings Point POA's responses are sufficient.
The Liquidation Trustee contends that Kings Point POA's responses to the Liquidation Trustee's Requests for Admission set forth in Appendix B contain improper conclusion-of-law objections. Rule 36(a) (4) states "[ijf a matter is not admitted, the answer must specifically deny it" and the "denial must fairly respond to the substance of the matter." Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a) (4).
Looking to Kings Point POA's responses contained in Appendix B, each and every request is initially objected to on the grounds that it seeks the admission of a matter that is a conclusion of law, followed by a statement of denial. In addition to denying the Requests for Admission in its responses, Kings Point POA again denied the requests set forth in Appendix B on the record at the hearing.
Notwithstanding the objections made by Kings Point POA, its responses to the Requests for Admission set forth in Appendix B stand as denials and are therefore sufficient.
The Motion raises two different challenges to Kings Point POA's responses set forth in Appendix C. First, the Liquidation Trustee asserts that Kings Point POA "cannot satisfy its `burden of persuasion to justify' the conclusion-of-law objections set forth in Appendix C." (ECF No. 1368 at 17.) Second, the Liquidation Trustee argues that the responses "[do] not `fairly meet the substance of the request[s].'" (ECF No. 1368-3.)
In its response opposing the Motion, Kings Point POA indicates that it did not object to the Requests for Admission in Appendix C, thus appropriately responding to the first challenge. (ECF No. 1380 at 17.)
However, in its reply in support of the Motion, the Liquidation Trustee states that Kings Point POA has ignored the challenge to its responses. (ECR No. 1388 at 21.) In fact, Kings Point POA did not ignore the challenge, but instead responded to one of the two challenges raised by the Motion.
Regardless of which challenge the Liquidation Trustee intended to raise, both challenges are without merit. Rule 36(a) (4) requires that "[a] denial must fairly respond to the substance of the matter; and when good faith requires that a party qualify an answer or deny only a part of a matter, the answer must specify the part admitted and qualify or deny the rest." Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(4).
Kings Point POA has appropriately admitted in part and denied in part each of its responses in Appendix C; therefore the responses are sufficient.
Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Kings Point POA is