ANDREW W. AUSTIN, Magistrate Judge.
Before the Court is Defendant PCSI's Motion for Protective Order (Dkt. No. 62) and Plaintiff's Response (Dkt. No. 68). The District Court referred the discovery dispute to the undersigned Magistrate Judge for resolution pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A), FED. R. CIV. P. 72, and Rule 1(c) of Appendix C of the Local Rules.
This is the latest in a series of discovery motions the parties have filed in this case, and one of two recent motions regarding the deposition of Jean Robinson (a number of additional motions concerning her deposition were filed in the Eastern District of Virginia between January and April). The first motion was filed by Robinson, and sought an order quashing Garcia's subpoena requesting a copy of a settlement agreement between Robinson and SourceAmerica. The undersigned granted that motion on June 20, 2017. Dkt. No. 72. The motion now under consideration was filed by the defendant, PCSI, and seeks to prevent Garcia from completing Robinson's deposition, and to strike the portion already completed.
The tortured background of the events surrounding Robinson's deposition—far more complicated than a single third party deposition deserves—is fundamental to this motion. Factually, the relevance of her testimony derives from the fact that Garcia spoke with Robinson while she was SourceAmerica's general counsel and raised complaints about PCSI, and she conveyed his allegations to the Ability One Commission. Garcia began attempting to locate Robinson in August 2016, and began making attempts to serve her with a subpoena in September 2016. He did not succeed in getting her served until January 20, 2017. Dkt. No. 62-15.
On January 28, 2017, SourceAmerica filed a motion in the Eastern District of Virginia seeking to quash the deposition or to obtain other relief to protect its interests. The motion was initially set for hearing on February 11, 2017, but SourceAmerica and Garcia reached an agreement to avoid a hearing. PCSI, Garica and SourceAmerica agreed that former Judge Ricardo Urbina would serve as a discovery master at the deposition for the limited purpose of resolving attorney-client privilege objections raised on behalf of SourceAmerica. Further, SourceAmerica and Garcia agreed that SourceAmerica would not attend the deposition. Dkt. No. 62-9 at 26 (2/9/17 letter); 34 (2/16/17 letter); and 38 (2/16/17 email).
Robinson's deposition went forward on March 30, 2017. Robinson and her attorney arrived 30 minutes late. SourceAmerica's counsel attended the deposition, and raised numerous objections, some of which went beyond claims of attorney-client privilege. Robinson's counsel then announced at 1:00 p.m. that Robinson intended to leave the deposition at 2:00. At that point, Garcia had not completed his examination of her. PCSI agreed to allow Garcia to schedule a second deposition session in April 2017. Garcia initially noticed Robinson for deposition on April 12, 2017, but she became unavailable because of her mother's illness. On April 21, 2017, Garcia served a subpoena and notice for the second session of Robinson's deposition for May 1, 2017, which was joined by PCSI. Then, shortly before May 1, Robinson's counsel informed all parties that Robinson was no longer available on May 1, and the parties agreed to once again reschedule the deposition. However, Garcia, SourceAmerica, and PCSI continued to disagree whether SourceAmerica could attend the second session of Robinson's deposition, and whether Garcia was entitled to review Robinson and SourceAmerica's settlement agreement.
PCSI then apparently had a change of heart regarding Robinson's deposition. In an email exchange in early June, PCSI informed Garcia that it no longer intended to take Robinson's deposition and that it would be filing a motion to quash it with this Court. That is the motion now before the Court.
PCSI's motion is made pursuant to Rule 26. For a protective order to issue, a party must show (1) good cause, and (2) a specific need for protection. Bucher v. Richardson Hosp. Authority, 160 F.R.D. 88, 92 (N.D. Tex. 1994). "Rule 26(c) confers broad discretion on the trial court to decide when a protective order is appropriate and what degree of protection is required." Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, 467 U.S. 20, 36 (1984); see also Harris v. Amoco Prod. Co., 768 F.2d 669, 684 (5th Cir. 1985). PCSI's argument is that good cause exists for this Court to enter a protective order because Garcia has not been diligent in attempting to reschedule a second deposition for Jean Robinson. When pressed at the hearing what the facts were to support its change of position on Robinson's deposition—after participating for nearly six months in efforts to get a deposition scheduled and taken—PCSI's counsel evaded the Court's questions, and pointed only to general concerns about how long the discovery process has taken in the case. Despite several requests that counsel explain what had happened since March 30, 2017, with regard to the Robinson deposition to merit preventing the deposition from being finished, counsel either could not, or would not do so. Audio Recording of 6/22/17 Hearing at 10:43:00 to 10:45:30.
The record before the Court shows that Garcia has been diligent in trying to complete Robinson's deposition, and that Garcia has done nothing since the March 30, 2017 first session to slow the process down. This case presents a unique situation where not only the parties and the third-party deponent have filed various motions regarding her deposition; but Robinson's former employer SourceAmerica has also moved to quash the deposition, and has injected itself into these issues. Garcia's counsel noticed Robinson's deposition before the close of discovery, held one deposition by agreement on March 30 2017, and re-noticed her deposition for April 12, 2017, and May 1, 2017. Garcia's attempts to obtain Robinson's deposition have been stymied by motions to quash or Robinson's inability or unwillingness to attend. PCSI has not objected to the continuation of the deposition until the present motion, thereby—at a minimum—acquiescing in the completion of the deposition. The Court is disappointed that PCSI was unable to state at the hearing a good faith basis for its eleventh hour motion seeking to prevent the deposition. PCSI has failed to show good cause for a protective order, and thus PCSI's Motion for Protective Order (Dkt. No. 62) is
An issue that has been a continuing problem is whether SourceAmerica should be allowed to be present at Robinson's deposition. SourceAmerica claims that it needs to attend because
Dkt. No. 62-9 at 92. This is apparently based on Robinson sharing information with Ruben Lopez in conversations which were recorded by Lopez without her knowledge. As the Court understands it, the argument is thus that, because when Robinson met with Lopez in what she believed were private conversations she shared allegedly privileged information with him, and despite having been sued and made the subject of three bar grievances by SourceAmerica for doing so, she is likely to do the same thing in a fully-recorded, adversarial deposition at which she is represented by counsel.
The Court believes SourceAmerica's fears are over-stated. Having reviewed the transcript of the deposition already taken, SourceAmerica's presence impeded the deposition, and it injected itself into matters beyond the protection of its privilege. In addition, Robinson has counsel, and is obviously capable of asserting, if not obligated to assert, her former client's privilege.
Based on this, and pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. 26(c)(1)(E), the Court
As the Court stated at the hearing, this case has garnered the unwelcome designation of being a "high maintenance" case. This is largely due to what the Court sees as gamesmanship and sharp tactics of counsel for both sides in this case. This must stop, or there will be a price to pay. Counsel are warned they must act professionally, courteously, and in good faith. A failure to do so will result in the Court applying sanctions against the offending party or attorney.