MARK R. HORNAK, District Judge.
Victoria Bozic was a professional firefighter for the City of Washington ("City"). She was dismissed from that position based on events involved with an investigatory interview meeting convened by the City Solicitor, Lane Turturice, on February 26, 2009. Those two facts appear to be about the only things that the parties and their lawyers agree on.
Now before the Court is Ms. Bozic's Motion for Sanctions, ECF No. 25, in which she asks the Court to remedy a variety of alleged discovery violations by the City.
The parties have each provided extensive briefing on these issues, complete with multiple affidavits (many from Mr. Turturice) and depositions of a number of key witnesses. See ECF Nos. 25; 26; 33; 35; 36; 41; 43; 44; 45; 50; 53; 54; 56; 60; 62; and their respective attached exhibits. The Court conducted a hearing on October 23, 2012 specifically on the destruction of the audiotape, at which time all counsel adduced live testimony and presented additional evidence and argument in support of their respective positions. The Court has considered all of the briefing and accompanying exhibits, the live testimony of the witnesses, and the argument of counsel to the Court. For the reasons that follow, Plaintiff's Motion for Sanctions is granted in part and denied in part.
In order to effectively explain the nature of the pending Motion, it is necessary to first describe the basic facts of the case; second, the sequence of events surrounding Mr. Turturice's statements to the Court regarding when and why he destroyed the tape; and third, the circumstances of the tape's initial preservation and subsequent erasure. Because the erasure of the tape is the most serious of the actions which Plaintiff has challenged, it is addressed first and apart from the others.
Sometime in 2007, Ms. Bozic first applied to the City of Washington for employment
On May 20, 2011, Ms. Bozic brought this suit against the City, alleging unlawful discrimination on the basis of sex, hostile work environment, and unlawful retaliation related to her termination of employment and the sequence of events leading up to it, all allegedly in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq., as well as the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act, 43 P.S. § 951 et seq. See generally Compl. The City countered that Ms. Bozic was fired not because of her gender, nor in order to retaliate against her for prior protected activity, but because she was in violation of the City's requirement that firefighter employees
While the parties hotly disagree as to any number of details about that Meeting, they do not seem to dispute the following: the Meeting occurred in Mr. Turturice's private law office and lasted approximately one (1) hour. Compl. & Ans. ¶¶ 43, 49. Also present at the Meeting were (a) Tom Blackhurst, a City councilman, (b) Joseph Manning, a firefighters' union representative, and (c) Lynn Galluze, another City employee. Id. ¶ 43; Bozic Aff. ¶ 24 Aug. 6, 2012, ECF No. 45 Ex. 6. Ms. Bozic was questioned about her residency, id. ¶ 46, and in response, she provided a Pennsylvania driver's license she had obtained the day before which falsely listed a friend's address within the City as her own, id. ¶¶ 20, 45-46, and orally provided an elaborate and prolix false story about improvements to her residence and other details of her and her child's move into it, which would have appeared to make her representations about her residence all the more credible. Id. ¶ 61; Bozic Dep. 48-54, Mar. 29, 2012, ECF No. 33 Ex. 1. The Meeting was recorded by an audiotape recorder (a handheld office dictation recorder) that Mr. Turturice placed on the table at the beginning of the Meeting at Manning's suggestion. ECF No. 45 Ex. 6 ¶ 31; Turturice Aff. ¶ 2, Aug. 23, 2012, ECF No. 56 Ex. 5.
The parties are in disagreement as to at least the following: whether at the Meeting Mr. Turturice spoke in a "loud and gruff voice," "cross-examined" Ms. Bozic and implied that she "was having an affair," Def.'s Sur-Reply Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions and/or Evid. Ruling, ECF No. 60 at 8-9 (quoting Bozic Aff.), whether Ms. Bozic broke down crying at the end of the Meeting
Immediately following the Meeting, Councilman Blackhurst suspended Ms. Bozic, and on the next day City Council conducted a hearing at which it voted to continue her suspension without pay. Hr'g Officer's Adjudication, Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law, Def.'s Resp. Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 33 Ex. 13; Letter from Turturice to Bozic Mar. 4, 2009, ECF No. 33 Ex. 12, at 1-2. On March 5, 2009 a hearing was held on Ms. Bozic's termination, at which she admitted that she had been lying in her residency paperwork and in the Meeting. Id. at 5-6. The City Council, purportedly on the basis of Ms. Bozic's falsifications at and outside of the Meeting, ruled that she be terminated from service. Id. at 6-9.
In the months after the termination, Ms. Bozic filed for state unemployment compensation ("UC") benefits, which were denied. Ms. Bozic appealed this decision to a UC Referee, who conducted a hearing on August 31, 2009. See Pl.'s Timeline Relating to Destruction of Tape, ECF No. 56 Ex. 2; Turturice Dep. 126, Aug. 29, 2012, ECF No. 56 Ex. 10. At that hearing, Mr. Turturice made statements acknowledging that Ms. Bozic might be challenging the City's action as "disparate treatment" and "retaliatory." ECF No. 56-10 at 128-29. The UC Referee affirmed the local office decision denying Ms. Bozic benefits. See Unemployment Compensation Board of Review Decision Aug. 6, 2010, ECF No. 33 Ex. 14. Ms. Bozic then appealed that determination of the UC Referee to the State Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, which remanded the case to the UC Referee for consideration of whether Ms. Bozic suffered disparate treatment in her termination. Id.; ECF No. 56 Ex. 10 at 128-29. The remand hearing occurred on March 17, 2010, and a final decision was rendered by the Board of Review on August 6, 2010. Id.; ECF No. 56 Ex. 2; ECF No. 33 Ex. 14.
Additionally, Ms. Bozic filed an "Intake Questionnaire" with the EEOC on September 16, 2009, alleging unlawful discrimination on the basis of sex and retaliation for prior protected activity. Intake Questionnaire, ECF No. 56 Ex. 12. According to Plaintiff's counsel, an employee of the Pittsburgh EEOC, Susan Kelly, later informed him that on December 2, 2009, the EEOC provided notice of that questionnaire to the City and to Mr. Turturice. Decl. Jason Archinaco, Esq. 1, Sept. 31, 2012, ECF No. 56 Ex. 13. On June 7, 2010, Ms. Bozic filed a Charge of Discrimination with the EEOC, and notice of the Charge was provided to the City and to Mr. Turturice shortly thereafter. See ECF No. 56 Ex. 2; ECF No. 56 Ex. 10 at 131.
It appears that no inquiry was ever made as to the existence and status of Mr.
This testimony would be the first of several sworn statements in which Mr. Turturice, in response to allegations that he destroyed evidence relevant to reasonably foreseeable litigation, attempted to explain the timing and circumstances surrounding the destruction of the tape, and which has now been the subject of extensive legal briefing leading up to the hearing on October 23, 2012. Because a critical factor in the consideration of the Motion for Sanctions is the timing of the tape's erasure relative to whether and when litigation was reasonably foreseeable, an understanding of the following chronology is important:
When Mr. Turturice is asked about the December 2009 notice and any relationship it might have had to the May 2010 email, the following exchange occurred, id. at 20:
At the October 23, 2012 hearing before this Court, Mr. Turturice also explained with more detail the circumstances of the tape's preservation and destruction that he had already partially described in his serial affidavits. When asked about the circumstances of destruction, he stated that he frequently used the involved mini-cassette recorder for general law office dictation. 10/23 Hr'g Tr. 50. After the Meeting on February 26, 2009 was finished, he placed the tape of the Meeting in his desk drawer, and labeled it with a "sticky note" that said "`Bozic meeting' or something of that matter." Id. at 49. He kept it in the drawer until at some point when he needed a cassette and he did not have any blank ones handy. Id. at 50. According to Mr. Turturice, on a "momentary whim" when
Plaintiff argues that Mr. Turturice's destruction of the tape amounted to sanctionable spoliation of evidence. The decision to sanction parties rests in the sound discretion of the District Court. See Dunn v. Mercedes Benz of Ft. Washington, Inc., CIV.A. 10-1662, 2012 WL 424984, at *4 (E.D.Pa. Feb. 10, 2012) (citing Schmid v. Milwaukee Elec. Tool Corp., 13 F.3d 76, 78 (3d Cir.1994)). "[F]ederal courts have the inherent power `to fashion an appropriate sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial process.'" Scott v. IBM Corp., 196 F.R.D. 233, 248 (D.N.J.2000) (quoting Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 44-45, 111 S.Ct. 2123, 115 L.Ed.2d 27 (1991)).
In determining spoliation sanctions, the Court must follow a two-step approach. First, it must determine whether the conduct at issue constitutes spoliation of evidence. Second, if spoliation has occurred, the Court must determine the appropriate level of sanction to impose. See Bull v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 665 F.3d 68, 74 n. 5. (3d Cir.2012).
Spoliation includes "the destruction or significant alteration of evidence, or the failure to preserve [or produce] property for another's use as evidence in pending or reasonably foreseeable litigation." Mosaid Techs. Inc. v. Samsung Elecs. Co., 348 F.Supp.2d 332, 335 (D.N.J.2004) (internal quotation omitted). The Third Circuit has recently elaborated on its four-factor test to determine what actions constitute spoliation. "Spoliation occurs where: [1] the evidence was in the party's control; [2] the evidence is relevant to the claims or defenses in the case; [3] there has been actual suppression or withholding of evidence; and [4], the duty to preserve the evidence was reasonably foreseeable to the party." Bull, 665 F.3d at 73 (citing Brewer v. Quaker State Oil Refining Corp., 72 F.3d 326, 334 (3d Cir.1995)). Here, Brewer factors (1) and (2) are not in dispute: Mr. Turturice had exclusive control of the tape, which he kept in his desk drawer. The tape's contents are plainly relevant to the instant case, because the Meeting is at the very heart of the dispute over whether Ms. Bozic was fired for lying, or whether she was fired out of disparate treatment because of her gender and/or unlawful retaliation, and because Ms. Bozic alleges that the meeting itself constituted adverse employment action.
Whether a duty to preserve evidence is reasonably foreseeable is evaluated objectively. Bull, 665 F.3d at 78. "[T]he question of reasonable foreseeability is a `flexible fact-specific standard that allows a district court to exercise the discretion necessary to confront the myriad factual situations inherent in the spoliation inquiry.'" Id. at 77-78 (internal quotation omitted). "While a litigant is under no duty to keep or retain every document in its possession, even in advance of litigation, it is under a duty to preserve what it knows, or reasonably should know, will likely be requested in reasonably foreseeable litigation." Mosaid, 348 F.Supp.2d at 336 (internal quotation omitted). In the employment discrimination context, one court has observed, "[c]ommon sense would dictate preserving all helpful documentation when dealing with the discharge of a[n] employee with a litigious history." Scott, 196 F.R.D. at 249. Another has stated that a duty to preserve evidence arises "at the latest, when [Defendants] were served with [Plaintiff's] PHRC complaint." Dunn, 2012 WL 424984, at *5 n. 8 (emphasis added).
Even before Ms. Bozic was first hired as a City firefighter in 2007, she had challenged the City's firefighter employment practices as being gender discriminatory before the EEOC and the PHRC. Her termination hearing occurred on March 5, 2009. Her initial claim for unemployment compensation benefits was denied on April 19, 2009. An unemployment hearing was held on August 31, 2009. Her appeal of that decision was granted on December 29, 2009, and the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review ordered a remand hearing solely on disparate treatment issues. Mr. Turturice admitted that throughout that entire time there was still a threat of suit, because "the litigation was ongoing." 10/23 Hr'g Tr. 21-22; see ECF No. 56 Ex. 10 at 125-131. On March 17, 2010, the unemployment remand hearing occurred, which according to Mr. Turturice is the hearing that went so well that he felt the threat of litigation dissipated. See id. at 131; ECF No. 56 Ex. 2. Mr. Turturice also testified without equivocation that when Ms. Bozic was fired, he was confident she would file suit, presumably this Title VII lawsuit. Turturice Dep. 88:21-24, Mar. 19, 2012, ECF No. 56 Ex. 1.
This only leaves between March 17 (the date of the UC remand hearing) and mid-June of 2010 (when Defendant admittedly received Notice of the EEOC charge) as the period of time in which, according to Mr. Turturice, litigation was not foreseeable. Even when considered subjectively, this assertion does not appear to be accurate. His May 13, 2010 email plainly indicates that Mr. Turturice in his own words actually anticipated this civil litigation from Ms. Bozic in the intervening time. See Turturice Email, ECF No. 56 Ex. 11. Second, notwithstanding Mr. Turturice's subjective belief as to the dissipation of the threat of litigation during that period, such belief would not have been objectively reasonable. Though the second unemployment hearing had occurred on March 17, 2010 a final decision had not yet been handed down — that did not occur until August 6, 2010.
Given the fact that there was ongoing litigation by Ms. Bozic regarding her termination, and specifically on the matter of whether she was disparately treated by the City of Washington, and given the fact that she had already brought a Title VII Charge against the City to the EEOC once before in which Mr. Turturice had been personally involved, any subjective belief Mr. Turturice might have had about any
No matter the intricacies of the twists and turns of his explanations and recollections as detailed above, Mr. Turturice should have known (and in fact did know) that litigation, as to which the tape recording of the Meeting would be important, was likely from the moment of Ms. Bozic's dismissal until this suit was filed. Thus, the third Brewer spoliation factor is present here.
After the Third Circuit promulgated the four-part Brewer test in 1995, it did not thereafter describe what actions rise to the level of "actual suppression" (factor 4) until its Bull opinion in early 2012. See Brewer, 72 F.3d at 334; Bull, 665 F.3d at 79; see also Mosaid, 348 F.Supp.2d at 337-38 (collecting cases after Brewer and concluding that "actual suppression" permitted a "flexible approach" that included even negligent destruction of relevant evidence). In Bull, the court explained:
665 F.3d at 79 (emphasis added) (citing Brewer, 72 F.3d at 334). The Bull court held that the District Court "abused its discretion in determining that Bull intentionally withheld the[original] documents," id. at 79, that had been requested during discovery, and instead described the failure to produce documents as consistent
What remains to be determined after Bull is the requisite mental state or level of scienter for Bull "bad faith," i.e., whether the movant must demonstrate that the sanctioned party acted with the specific intent of hiding adverse information from a tribunal or from a litigation opponent, or whether other types of actions that are intentional in form, yet only highly reckless as to their consequences relative to evidence, also rise to that bad faith level. On the one hand, the Bull opinion placed heavy weight on the intentionality of the conduct. Id. at 79 ("Withholding requires intent."). This could be read to require only a more general "intent to act." However, the internal quote might also suggest a higher and more specific standard of scienter: "fraud and a desire to suppress the truth." Id.
This question goes to the heart of the matter. Bull states firmly that destruction that occurs as a result of inadvertence, routine practice, or accident is not spoliation at all. 665 F.3d at 79. Centering on the facts there present (the withholding of the originals but not copies of relevant documents from the defendant UPS), the Bull court also required evidence that the plaintiff "intended to actually withhold the original documents from UPS before we can conclude that sanctionable spoliation occurred." Id. (emphasis added). This would seem to require not only an intent to destroy or withhold evidence, but also an intent to do so for the specific purpose of denying it to the other party in litigation.
The touchstone of the Bull test, however, appears to this Court to be a finding of "bad faith." 665 F.3d at 79. Certainly, such would appear to be present when evidence is withheld or destroyed with the specific intent and purpose of keeping it out of the hands of a litigation adversary. The facts here present the more nuanced question of whether a reckless disregard for the consequences of an intentional and conscious destruction of evidence, previously specially preserved for purposes of subsequent litigation, at a time when litigation is necessarily foreseeable, meets that "bad faith" test. The Court concludes that it does.
The decided cases applying Bull have not offered much direct guidance to this point. To date, the Third Circuit has issued three (3) unpublished opinions in Bull's wake. First, that court held that a district court did not abuse its discretion in finding spoliation where the plaintiff, a licensed attorney, destroyed what she "knew ... would be essential evidence in her lawsuit against [Defendant]. In short, this court can think of no reason that justifies [Plaintiff's] deliberate disposal of the property." Capogrosso v. 30 River Court E. Urban Renewal Co., 482 Fed. Appx. 677, 682 (3d Cir.2012), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 133 S.Ct. 544, 184 L.Ed.2d 341 (2012).
Almost all of the district court cases applying Bull of which this Court is aware have declined to find spoliation where the party's conduct was no worse than negligent, or where the evidence was lost in the normal course of daily business or other similar activity. See, e.g., Harris v. Jacobs, CIV. A. 11-4685, 2012 WL 4109052, at *14-15 (E.D.Pa. Sept. 19, 2012) (negligence); Heck v. Mem'l Health Sys., 1:10-CV-1675, 2012 WL 3597175, at *2-3 (M.D.Pa. Aug. 20, 2012) ("merely been misplaced"); Tabon v. Univ. of Pa. Health Sys., 10-CV-2781, 2012 WL 2953216, at *4-5 (E.D.Pa. July 20, 2012) (ordinary practice); Victor v. Lawler, 3:08-CV-1374, 2012 WL 1642603, at *8-10 (M.D.Pa. May 10, 2012) (loss in ordinary course; efforts taken to preserve, but were not successful); Dunn v. Mercedes Benz of Ft. Washington, Inc., CIV.A. 10-1662, 2012 WL 424984, at *6 (E.D.Pa. Feb. 10, 2012) (conduct "at the very least, negligent," but no evidence of destruction "willfully or in bad faith"). But see Klett v. Green, 3:10-CV-02091, 2012 WL 2476368, at *11 (D.N.J. June 27, 2012) (finding spoliation though Plaintiff's conduct was only negligent). Thus, these cases are more illustrative of what actions do not constitute Bull bad faith than of what actions do.
The conduct displayed by Mr. Turturice here, considered as a whole, rises well above inadvertence, negligence, inexplicable foolishness, or part of the normal activities of business or daily living, any of which arguably fall outside of the spoliation definition set forth in Bull. Mr. Turturice admits to intentionally and consciously preserving the tape because of at least one type of anticipated litigation, assuming that Ms. Bozic would sue the City, and then admits to intentionally and consciously destroying the tape knowing what it was — he "thought about it," removed the "sticky note" labeled "Bozic," and recorded over the only concrete evidence of what actually transpired in the February 26, 2009 Meeting.
His explanation is that he did this at a fleeting moment in time when he did not believe there was an actual threat of litigation, although after numerous inconsistent attempts, he has given up on pinpointing when such a threat-free interval occurred. Even in the Court proceeding on October 23, 2012, after his latest Affidavit had stated that he knew only that the destruction occurred between April 2009 and June 2010, Mr. Turturice affirmed the March 2010 to June 2010 window as the timeframe for the destruction (though that assertion is already severely undercut by his statements regarding residency-related litigation by Ms. Bozic in his May 13, 2010 email). But he has also consistently maintained that he does not know whether he received notice from the EEOC in December 2009, but if he did, he would have destroyed the tape before then. ECF No. 60-1 ¶ 12.
The fact that Mr. Turturice cannot commit to having received or not having received the December 2009 EEOC notice at least suggests the conclusion that Mr. Turturice has recognized that if evidence arises that Notice was given back in 2009 (as suggested but not proven by the alleged telephone conversation of Plaintiff's counsel with the EEOC official), he would not have entirely painted himself in a corner by firmly sticking to his March to June 2010 timeframe. But still he proffers that that timeframe was the time in which he thought there was no longer a threat of litigation, and thus when the tape's destruction must have occurred. See 10/23 Hr'g Tr. 57-58; Turturice Dep. 8/29/12, ECF No. 56 Ex. 10, at 131-132. He cannot have it both ways. The Court declines
Given Mr. Turturice's knowledge of Ms. Bozic's 2007 gender discrimination claim, his involvement in its litigation and resolution, his recognition immediately after Ms. Bozic's dismissal that she would file suit against the City, the extensive and lengthy unemployment compensation litigation, his recognition in the May 2010 email that issues involving Ms. Bozic's residency were far from over, and the rambling and internally conflicted state of his testimony, the only plausible conclusion that can be drawn from Mr. Turturice's changing story is that he preserved the tape for litigation purposes, then intentionally destroyed it at a time when litigation was reasonably foreseeable, and at the very least, that he was reckless as to the consequence of that action on any future litigation involving Ms. Bozic. The Court believes that on these facts, the Bull "bad faith" standard has been met.
While the Court does not conclude that Mr. Turturice destroyed the tape with the specific malicious intent of keeping the record of the Meeting from Ms. Bozic or from the Court, his conduct runs counter to a wholly innocent explanation. This is particularly so in that he had specifically preserved and labeled it, outside of the normal course of his business activities, because of his anticipation that it might be relevant to subsequent litigation. Mr. Turturice's shifting testimonial accounts as new evidence regarding the destruction emerged, over three affidavits, two depositions, and two in-court representations — a total of seven statements — further amplifies this point. While it is unclear where the exact line of "bad faith" under Bull lies, the Court concludes that destroying the tape, after specifically preserving it for litigation purposes, knowing that it was the Bozic Meeting tape, and while anticipating this very litigation, goes well past any such line and fulfills the "bad faith" standard announced in Bull.
Having determined that spoliation has occurred, the Court must now determine what remedy is appropriate. Here, the test is to consider "(1) the degree of fault of the party who altered or destroyed the evidence; (2) the degree of prejudice suffered by the opposing party; and (3) whether there is a lesser sanction that will avoid substantial unfairness to the opposing party, and, where the offending party is seriously at fault, will serve to deter such conduct by others in the future." Bull, 665 F.3d at 74 n. 5 (citing Schmid v.
The Court believes that the "bad faith" scienter requirement of Bull also requires a parallel consideration of culpability in determining the scope and severity of the sanction to be imposed. First, the equitable nature of the three-factor balancing test for sanctions set forth by the Third Circuit in Schmid, 13 F.3d at 78, and reaffirmed in Bull, 665 F.3d at 74 n. 5, seems to presuppose different remedies crafted for different levels of misconduct. See Dunn, 2012 WL 424984, at *7 n. 10 (noting that while the Court found no bad faith and thus found the spoliation sanction of partial summary judgment inappropriate, because the movant "has not requested any other spoliation sanctions," the Court did "not determine whether other sanctions may be appropriate."). Second, district courts have long been instructed to take a flexible approach in crafting sanctions that are proportionate to the conduct at issue. See Republic of Phillippines v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 43 F.3d 65, 74 (3d Cir.1994) (citing Chambers, 501 U.S. at 44, 111 S.Ct. 2123). Third, the court in Bull, after finding that there was not sufficient evidence of spoliation to justify dismissal of the case, nonetheless went on to consider the Poulis v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 747 F.2d 863, 867 (3d Cir.1984) factors for sanctions.
As for the second Bull sanction factor, it is highly likely that Ms. Bozic is materially prejudiced by the absence of the Meeting tape (as is the truth-seeking process). As noted above, five (5) people were present in the Meeting, and all of them are employees (or Council Members) of the City except for Ms. Bozic. The tape would have certainly put to rest whether the Meeting contained evidence of the City's or Mr. Turturice's allegedly especially harsh treatment of Ms. Bozic, especially with regard to the other charges levied against her for poor work performance. Additionally, the fact that Ms. Bozic alleges that this Meeting itself constituted an adverse employment action further puts the Meeting at the center of the case.
The Third Circuit, quoting then-Judge Breyer's characterizations on the spoliation inference, has explained that:
Id. (quoting Nation-Wide Check Corp. v. Forest Hills Distributors, Inc., 692 F.2d 214, 218 (1st Cir.1982)) (internal marks omitted). Put in other words, "the spoliation inference serves a remedial function — leveling the playing field after a party has destroyed or withheld relevant evidence." Mosaid, 348 F.Supp.2d at 338.
While the Third Circuit characterized the spoliation inference as "itself a severe sanction," Bull, 665 F.3d at 82, it has also noted that outright dismissal or suppression of evidence are "far more serious" sanctions than the inference. Schmid, 13 F.3d at 79. Other District Courts have characterized the spoliation inference as a "more common penalty." Mosaid, 348 F.Supp.2d at 335. The reason for this is that a spoliation inference is generally only a permissive one, which allows, but does not require, the jury to arrive at its own conclusion about the content of the missing evidence based on the facts before them. See Kounelis v. Sherrer, 529 F.Supp.2d 503 (D.N.J.2008). Nor does it prevent a party from producing evidence at trial to counter that inference. Id.
This Court agrees that the spoliation inference is an appropriate remedy here,
In the Court's judgment, a remedy consisting only of a permissive inference does not fully "fit" the peculiar facts of this case in terms of restoring the evidentiary playing field to its pre-destruction status. To do that, the Court believes that the inference must be enhanced by including a directive from the Court to the fact-finder that Mr. Turturice was charged with having anticipated this litigation, and that as a representative of the City he had a duty to preserve the tape. The need for this enhancement is based on both the principles stated in Bull, and on common sense — a rational jury does not need an instruction to know that it may conclude that the facts of destruction presented here were premised on a concern of Mr. Turturice about the tape's content. Only by giving this enhanced instruction can the jury understand the preservation duties that Mr. Turturice had, and the context of that duty. Thus, this Court will instruct the jury at trial
Additionally, the Court finds that a focused monetary remedy is also necessary in this case in order to properly allocate the litigation costs resulting from the tape's destruction. Because of the wasted time and energy necessarily consumed in Plaintiff's dealing with the twists and turns of Mr. Turturice's explanations, Defendant shall be obligated to reimburse the Plaintiff for the transcript/reporter costs of Mr. Turturice's second deposition on August 29, 2012 (because such deposition was only necessitated to examine Mr. Turturice's actions) along with the Plaintiff's counsel's actual fees incurred in the preparation and conduct of such deposition at Plaintiff's counsel's regular hourly rate, not to exceed a total of ten (10) hours. Plaintiff's counsel shall file and serve a statement of such amounts within ten (10) days of the date of this Opinion and Order, and they shall be paid by Defendant within ten (10) days thereafter.
In her Motion, Plaintiff also seeks sanctions on the grounds of a number of other alleged discovery violations on the part of employees of Defendant and Defendant's counsel claiming that (1) Defendant failed to timely produce documents relating to a potential comparator, Firefighter/EMT Dustin Danley, and falsely stated that it had produced all documents relating to Mr. Danley when it, in fact, had not; (2) Defendant's counsel unilaterally ended a deposition of Fire Captain Blumer when he was in the middle of providing allegedly false testimony that he did not recall the existence of certain documents, of which his knowledge was later proven; and (3) Defendant's counsel falsely informed Plaintiff's counsel that searches for emails had been conducted, when not all of the relevant City representatives' email accounts regarding Mr. Danley had been searched. See Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 25, ¶ 2. The Court has had the benefit of copious briefing on these issues, as well
Plaintiff accuses Defendant of not producing a number of documents relating to Dustin Danley, a male firefighter who was disciplined (but not fired) for misrepresenting his status as a certified EMT to the City. While Mr. Turturice, when given Plaintiff's discovery requests, turned over a number of documents from his own file relating to Danley, he failed to deliver a September 2009 Stipulation and Settlement Agreement between Danley and the Pennsylvania Department of Health regarding Danley's "misrepresenting himself" as an active EMT. See Pl.'s Br. Support Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 26, at 4. Plaintiff then obtained those documents pursuant to a subpoena directly from the Pennsylvania Department of Health. See id. at 4. Defendant's representatives later acknowledged that a copy of that settlement agreement was also in the files of the City Fire Department, but that they did not previously know that such records of employees were kept there. See id. at 4-5; ECF No. 26 Ex. 8 at 3. Plaintiff asserts that Mr. Turturice and/or other members of City officialdom intentionally destroyed or withheld those documents; Defendant admits the documents were not delivered, but asserts that the failure to produce them was merely a mistake — moreover, it noted that it had produced a number of other documents relating to Danley's misrepresentations. See ECF No. 26 Ex. 8 at 3; Def.'s Resp. Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 33, at 15-16.
Additionally, Mr. Turturice failed to produce a letter dated June 18, 2009 that he had sent to the State Health Department, which at that time was considering permanently revoking Danley's EMT Certification. See Pl.'s Reply Def.'s Resp., Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 35, at 4. Mr. Turturice explained in the letter that the City was "quite desperate" for Danley to continue to serve as a firefighter, a position he could not serve without the EMT Certification, and requested that a decision regarding him be "fast track[ed]" and resolved in his favor. See id.; ECF No. 26 Ex. 21. Mr. Turturice also did not produce this document, which was also discovered via the Department of Health subpoena, and Defendant stated it "simply did not turn up in Mr. Turturice's search of his files." ECF No. 33 at 19.
At the July 12, 2012 hearing, the Court observed without contradiction from any counsel that all documents believed to be missing were at that point in the hands of Plaintiff. 7/12 Hr'g Tr. at 3-4, 10. It noted that, if any further depositions were to be conducted on the matter of these documents relating to Danley, it would be Plaintiff's prerogative to seek such further depositions, and the actual transcript/reporter costs of them would be borne by Defendant. Id. at 40-41. Additionally, the Court allowed the parties to arrange a search of Mr. Turturice's computer to see if any electronic documents relating to Danley could be recovered. Id. at 42, 49-52. The Court has received no filings that indicate that that search, if it occurred, has yielded any further evidence of relevance to these matters.
Plaintiff also levies accusations relating to the deposition of Nicklous Blumer, a Captain and EMS Coordinator for the City Fire Department. At the time of Captain Blumer's deposition on May 10, 2012, Plaintiff had been in possession of the September 2009 EMT Agreement for about fifteen days (having been provided it by the Pennsylvania Health Department), of which Captain Blumer had once received four copies. See ECF No. 33 at 9-10. When Captain Blumer was confronted with the Agreement at his deposition and asked a series of questions about his knowledge of it, the deposition grew hostile. See ECF No. 26 at 7-8; ECF No. 33 at 10-13; Blumer Dep. 24-33, May 10, 2012, ECF No. 26 Ex. 15. When Captain Blumer was unable to describe whether he recalled the Agreement's existence, what Defendant characterizes as "badger[ing] the witness," ECF No. 33 at 13, and an "ambush," 7/12 Hr'g Tr. 34:21, 35:2, transpired. Plaintiff's counsel describes Captain Blumer's reaction as proving conclusively that Captain Blumer was caught in "his lie" regarding denial of knowledge of the letter's existence. ECF No. 35 at 9. The following exchange occurred between counsel:
ECF No. 26 Ex. 15 at 29:7-17. Defendant's counsel ended the deposition shortly thereafter by walking out. At the July 12, 2012 hearing, the Court gave Plaintiff the prerogative to re-depose Captain Blumer (and other City representatives) regarding the September 2009 letter if she wanted to do so, with the City paying the transcript/reporter costs. 7/12 Hr'g Tr. at 39.
Plaintiff has also accused Defendant of failing to conduct a proper search of Captain Blumer's emails relating to Danley. See ECF No. 33 at 17. Plaintiff's counsel also accused Defendant's counsel of misrepresenting that all relevant email accounts had been searched, when Captain Blumer's (and a few other employees') personal email accounts had not yet been searched. See id. Defendant's counsel in response stated that this was an inadvertent mistake on his part, because Mr. Turturice had told the City's IT person to conduct certain searches, but not searches of personal email accounts. See id.; Def.'s Sur-Reply re: Pl.'s Mot. Sanctions, ECF No. 36, at 8, Ex. 2, 3. These personal accounts were searched in May and June 2012, and documents were retrieved from them and produced to Plaintiff. See id. At the July 12, 2012 hearing, the Court observed without contradiction from any counsel that all emails believed to be missing were also at that point in the hands of Plaintiff. 7/12 Hr'g Tr. at 5.
While the parties vehemently debate the "smoking gun" nature vel non of the Danley/EMT documents whose production was delayed, the Court finds the failure to produce the documents is susceptible to both innocent-yet-clumsy, and more sinister, explanations.
The Court believes that any prejudice that Plaintiff might have suffered as a result in the delay of production of these documents has now been remedied. Unlike the situation with the tape of the February 26, 2009 Meeting, none of these documents was permanently suppressed, and Plaintiff is now seemingly in possession of all such materials. The Court at the July 12, 2012 hearing also imposed focused remedial measures, permitting Plaintiff to conduct further inquiries into the Defendant's failure to produce these documents through follow-up depositions and searches for electronic documents, all at Defendant's expense. The parties have not since filed any supplemental briefing as to a failure to produce any of the documents other than the audiotape. Thus, the Court does not find it necessary to impose further measures beyond those noted above relating to the destruction of the audiotape.
The Court is troubled by the evidence of Defendant's failure to promptly and completely produce documents and other discovery when the case is viewed as a whole. The audiotape and the Danley documents are both important (if not critical) pieces of information in this case that, for some reason or another, went missing either for
The Court also notes with profound disapproval Defendant's counsel's conduct in unilaterally ending a deposition because he felt "ambushed" by the witness being confronted with documents he had not previously seen. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 30(d)(3), a party may "move to terminate or limit [a deposition] on the ground that it is being conducted in bad faith or in a manner that unreasonably annoys, embarrasses, or oppresses the deponent or party.... If the objecting deponent or party so moves, the deposition must be suspended for the time necessary to obtain an order." If Defendant's counsel believed the deposition had become so hostile to the witness that it could not and should not continue, the proper remedy was to suspend the deposition and seek an immediate protective order of this Court, rather than to engage in the self-help of simply walking out. The Court concludes that any harm that may have been done to Plaintiff's position was essentially remedied by allowing for the deposition of Mr. Blumer to be re-taken at Defendant's expense. While the Court in no way condones such activity, Defendant's counsel's actions do not support further independent sanctions.
In its Motion for Protective Order, Defendant seeks the protection of this Court from a barrage of biting correspondence from Plaintiff's counsel, Mr. Archinaco, and one letter in particular dated October 24, 2012. ECF No. 65; id. Ex. 3. That letter belittles, if not mocks, Mr. Turturice for no apparent purpose as to this litigation, and among other things seems to suggest, if not encourage, that Mr. Turturice sue Defendant's counsel. Since the letter begins by disclaiming that it is intended as an entreaty to now engage in settlement discussions, the Court can divine no litigation purpose whatsoever for the letter.
Plaintiff's Motion for Sanctions is granted with regards to the audiotape of the February 26, 2009 Meeting as described above, and denied with regard to all other alleged discovery violations on the part of Defendant. Defendant's Motion for Protective Order is denied without prejudice. An appropriate Order will issue.
If such motions become part of the routine of litigation (akin to the all-the-more-frequent summary judgment and Daubert motions), lawyers may begin to provide legal advice based less on a good faith sense of factual and legal proportionality regarding preservation obligations, and more out of a fear of hefty judicial sanctions if their judgment later turns out to have been incorrect when viewed with the benefit of hindsight. See generally Electronic Spoliation Sanctions: Delete at Your Own Risk, Presentation to ABA Labor & Employment Law Section, ERR Committee, Mar. 27, 2010 (David J. Carr ed.). If this comes to pass, no participant in our civil justice system will be well served. See Emery G. Lee III, Motions for Sanctions Based Upon Spoliation Evidence in Civil Cases, Report to The Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Civil Rules, Fed. Jud. Center 2011 at 5.
The societal costs of preventative "over-preservation" will be real, to both individuals and organizations, given the degree to which the global inventory of new data and other transmitted and stored information multiplies exponentially on an hourly basis. This is especially so in a world in which the discovery battle du jour often involves access to, and preservation of, ubiquitous electronically stored information ("ESI"). See Bull v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 665 F.3d 68, 78 n. 12. (3d Cir.2012). Organizational litigants will divert resources to "defensive preservation," and individual litigants may be faced with costly spoliation/sanctions battles that they simply do not have the economic resources to fight. Neither state of affairs is a good one. For these reasons, the Court enters the spoliation/sanctions thicket out of necessity, but with great caution.