TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Mylan's Motion to Compel Class Plaintiffs to Amend Their Responses to Mylan's Fourth Set of Interrogatories and Third Set of Requests for Admission (ECF No. 1909). Mylan seeks an order requiring Class Plaintiffs to amend their responses to four interrogatories and three requests for admission. Class Plaintiffs oppose the motion. As set forth below, the Court will deny the motion.
On July 1, 2019, Mylan served its Fourth Set of Interrogatories and Third Set of Requests for Admissions (RFAs) on Class Plaintiffs. Class Plaintiffs timely served their answers, responses, and objections. By letter dated August 8, 2019, Mylan advised Class Plaintiffs of deficiencies they perceived, and during the next forty days the parties met and conferred at least four times and exchanged additional correspondence. During this process, Class Plaintiffs twice amended their interrogatory answers and RFA responses. This motion followed. Based on the parties' efforts, the Court finds they have complied with the requirements of D. Kan. R. 37.2.
Pointing out that the consumer class cases have come to the end of the discovery period, Mylan asserts it served contention interrogatories and requests for admission for the appropriate purpose of narrowing the issues for trial. In its motion, Mylan contends Class Plaintiffs should be required to amend their answers to four interrogatories. With respect to Interrogatory Nos. 18-20, Mylan objects that Plaintiffs refuse to certify their answers are complete, but that instead they gave qualified responses that leave open the possibility of future discovery, even though discovery has closed. Mylan contends Plaintiffs' response to Interrogatory No. 23 is insufficient because it refers to named Class Plaintiffs' depositions without saying how the testimony is responsive or providing transcript citations. In responding to RFA Nos. 10, 12, and 13, all of which ask about settlement agreements with Intelliject or Sandoz, Plaintiffs object that the term "settlement agreement" is vague and ambiguous. Mylan asserts Plaintiffs have repeatedly used the same term and their objection should therefore be overruled. Mylan contends the Court should also overrule Plaintiffs' objection to the RFAs on the basis that they lack sufficient information to admit or deny the requests because discovery is closed. Mylan also denies having limited the phrase "settlement agreement" to a single document with respect to RFA No. 10.
Plaintiffs contend Mylan has likewise refused to certify the completion of its discovery responses. They explain their answer to Interrogatory No. 23 cannot contain citations to deposition testimony because their answer is based on the absence of testimony. Plaintiffs argue Mylan improperly asserts relief under Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and they explain the difficulty in admitting facts concerning "settlement agreements" arises from the phrase having inconsistent meanings and Mylan's refusal to better define the term. And Plaintiffs insist they have fulfilled their discovery obligation to make reasonable inquiry and provide responses to the extent they have or can readily obtain information.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) sets out the general scope of discovery and provides as follows:
Relevancy is to be "construed broadly to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to other matter that could bear on" any party's claim or defense.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 36 governs requests for admission. It allows a party to serve on any other party a written request to admit "the truth of any matters within the scope of Rule 26(b)(1) relating to: (A) facts, the application of law to fact, or opinions about either; and (B) the genuineness of any described documents.
Interrogatory Nos. 18-20 are contention interrogatories concerning Class Plaintiffs' pay-for-delay allegations. They state as follows:
In their amended responses and objections, Class Plaintiffs begin their answer to Interrogatory No. 18 with the following:
The answers to Interrogatory Nos. 19 and 20 contain the same or similar language to that highlighted in bold. Plaintiffs amended their answers to Interrogatory Nos. 18 and 20 to include certain responsive facts.
In its motion, Mylan asks the Court to require Plaintiffs to verify under oath that their responses to these interrogatories are complete. According to Mylan, the law of this district requires that in response to a contention interrogatory, a party must say when it has provided all material responsive facts. Mylan cites two cases in support, neither of which is directly on point.
Class Plaintiffs argue their answers and objections are sufficient because discovery is ongoing in part and they continue to review recently produced Mylan documents. Moreover, they assert Mylan refused to certify its discovery responses were complete and final, so they should not be held to a higher standard.
Although Class Plaintiffs filed their response before the deadline for additional discovery the Court allowed,
"An interrogatory may reasonably ask for the material or principal facts which support a party's contentions in the case."
In this interrogatory, Mylan directs Plaintiffs to "[d]escribe all principal and material facts on which you base your allegations in paragraphs 503-506 of the Complaint that Plaintiffs' claims are not barred by applicable statutes of limitations due to application of the discovery rule."
Plaintiffs explain they cannot cite deposition testimony because what they rely on is the absence of deposition testimony by any Class Plaintiff that they were aware of the schemes allegedly committed by Defendants. They further respond that if the Court were to compel them to provide a further response, they could not do so.
A motion to compel is not the place to decide who bears the burden of proof on a party's claim or defense. Mylan asks Plaintiffs to state facts on which they base allegations in four paragraphs of their complaint that Plaintiffs' claims are not barred by applicable statutes of limitations due to application of the discovery rule. Plaintiffs list facts and point out that Mylan elicited no testimony from Class Plaintiffs concerning their knowledge of Defendants' alleged misconduct. Plaintiffs are not relying on unspecified deposition testimony. Accordingly, the Court denies Mylan's motion with respect to Interrogatory No. 23.
Mylan challenges Plaintiffs' responses to the following RFAs:
Plaintiffs object that the term "settlement agreement" in each RFA is vague and ambiguous, and that it cannot admit or deny RFA Nos. 12 and 13 in part because they were not parties to the litigation or settlement agreement in the Sandoz case. Plaintiffs also respond to RFA No. 10 by referring to a settlement agreement they obtained in discovery, admitting the document recites the parties thereto (which includes unidentified affiliates of each), but stating they cannot verify all the parties thereto because Class Plaintiffs were not among them. In response to RFA Nos. 12 and 13, Class Plaintiffs admit the current docket of the case indicates the litigation is ongoing.
Mylan argues the Court should overrule Plaintiffs' objection that the term "settlement agreement" in these RFAs is vague and ambiguous because Plaintiffs have repeatedly used the term over the course of this litigation. Mylan also contends Plaintiffs raise a baseless objection that they lack sufficient information to admit or deny these requests because they were not parties to the settlement agreements or the referenced litigation. The relief Mylan requests is that the Court compel Plaintiffs to admit or deny the requests.
Plaintiffs stand by their objections. They assert the term "settlement agreement" could include "any number of side deals, riders, amendments, quid pro quos, or other understandings that may have been part of such an agreement."
Plaintiffs made clear which document they were construing as the relevant settlement agreement in RFA No. 10, and they provided an answer along with their objections.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Mylan's Motion to Compel Class Plaintiffs to Amend Their Responses to Mylan's Fourth Set of Interrogatories and Third Set of Requests for Admission (ECF No. 1909) is denied.
ECF No. 1472.
In response to Class Plaintiffs' argument that the Court should reject Mylan's motion, Mylan asks the Court to construe this portion of the motion as a motion regarding the sufficiency of an answer or objection pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(6). For the sake of efficiency and without determining which is the correct avenue, the Court will decide the issue.