- 1 2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 3 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 4 * * * 5 MARTIN J. WALSH, Secretary of Labor, Case No. 2:20-cv-00510-KJD-DJA 6 United States Department of Labor, 7 Plaintiff, ORDER 8 v. 9 UNFORGETTABLE COATINGS, INC. et al., 10 Defendants. 11 12 This is an action arising out of Defendants’ alleged violations of the Fair Labor Standards 13 Act (FLSA). The Secretary of Labor sues Defendants for damages, injunctive relief, and costs, 14 claiming that Defendants violated the FLSA’s overtime regulations and retaliated against 15 employees to prevent them from cooperating with the Secretary’s investigation. The Secretary 16 filed two motions to compel (ECF Nos. 62 and 76), arguing that Defendants are withholding 17 information they already agreed to produce by demanding that the Secretary first sign a protective 18 order. Defendants Unforgettable Coatings, Inc.; Unforgettable Coatings of Idaho, LLC; 19 Unforgettable Coatings of Arizona, LLC; Shaun McMurray; Shane Sandall; Cory Summerhays; 20 and Galia Carrejo filed a motion to quash the Secretary’s subpoenas to its accountants, Todd 21 Newman and Frost Dana Newman, CPAs LLP (the “Newman CPAs”) (ECF No. 67) and a motion 22 for a protective order (ECF No. 75) arguing that it is entitled to a protective order before Defendants 23 or the Newman CPAs respond to the Secretary’s discovery requests. 24 Because the Court finds that the Secretary is entitled to the information he seeks—both 25 through his document requests and subpoenas—it grants the Secretary’s motions to compel (ECF 26 Nos. 62 and 76) and denies Defendants’ motion to quash (ECF No. 67). Because the Court finds 27 that Defendants have not shown the need for a protective order over the information they have and 1 protective order (ECF No. 75). The Court finds these matters properly resolved without a hearing. 2 LR 78-1. 3 I. Background. 4 The Secretary began investigating Defendants’ wage and employment practices in 2013. 5 After filing his complaint, the Secretary served his first set of requests for production on 6 Defendants. Defendants timely produced some responsive documents, after which the Secretary 7 requested a meet and confer. During the meet and confer process the parties agreed on search terms 8 for electronically stored information (“ESI”) to generate more documents responsive to the 9 Secretary’s requests. Defendants then sent their data to an ESI vendor to be searched. 10 During this process, Defendants requested a protective order covering documents that 11 Defendants had already produced and anticipated producing.1 The Secretary objected to the 12 protective order, and subsequent revisions, on multiple occasions. Defendants now argue that they 13 will not produce the agreed-upon ESI, or allow the Newman CPAs to respond to subpoenas without 14 a protective order in place. Both sides request attorneys’ fees and costs in their motions and assert 15 that the other side failed to meaningfully participate in the meet and confer process. 16 A. The Secretary’s motion to compel (ECF No. 62). 17 After not receiving the ESI to which the parties had agreed, the Secretary filed a motion to 18 compel. He argues that Defendants should produce all ESI—including text messages—without a 19 protective order which would give Defendants the ability to retroactively claw back information 20 they deem privileged. In response, Defendants argue that the parties never addressed text messages, 21 only emails, when determining search terms. The Secretary replies that text messages were 22 included in the definition of “communications” in his requests for production; the same requests 23 for production for which Defendants agreed to produce ESI under stipulated search terms. 24 25 26 27 1 Defendants also sought a protective order memorializing the protections under Federal Rule of 1 B. Defendants’ motion to quash (ECF No. 67). 2 After the Secretary filed his motion to compel, Defendants filed a motion to quash the 3 Secretary’s subpoenas to the Newman CPAs. The subpoenas request: (1) documents and 4 communications relating to processing payroll; (2) communications between the accountants and 5 Defendants which contain the terms “experience multiplier,” “EM,” “E.M.,” “tenure multiplier,” 6 “TM,” or “T.M.”; (3) documents related to Defendants containing the terms “experience 7 multiplier,” “EM,” “E.M.,” “tenure multiplier,” “TM,” or “T.M.”; (4) documents containing hourly 8 wage rates for Defendants’ employees during the relevant time period; (5) contracts between the 9 accountants and Defendants which cover the relevant time period; and (6) documents concerning 10 payroll that the accountants processed for Defendants. Defendants argue that these requests are 11 overbroad and violate Nevada’s accountant-client privilege. The Newman CPAs objected on the 12 same grounds. The Secretary responds that Defendants lack standing to assert the Newman CPAs’ 13 objections and argue that the information requested is vital to his claim. Defendants respond that 14 due to privacy concerns over the information and “Plaintiff’s active resistance to entry of a 15 stipulated protective order in this case, quashing Plaintiff’s subpoena is warranted.” 16 C. Defendants’ motion for a protective order (ECF No. 75). 17 Defendants eventually moved for the Court to enter their proposed protective order, arguing 18 that good cause exists to warrant it, partly because a non-party has been using information in “public 19 filings” to make accusations against Defendant Cory Summerhays. Defendants argue that the 20 public is not entitled to access to “something like a general ledger, which lists every minute business 21 transaction, where it is a near certainty that this information will be subject to public misuse and 22 has nothing to do with Plaintiff’s claims.” The Secretary objected, arguing: (1) Defendants did not 23 seek the protective order in a timely fashion, having already produced numerous documents without 24 one; (2) Defendants have improperly held their production hostage over the protective order; (3) the 25 order would improperly allow Defendants to unilaterally decide what is confidential; (4) the order 26 would put the burden of challenging confidential designations onto public resources; (5) the order 27 would prevent public access to court proceedings; (6) the order would prevent the Secretary from 1 information to other law enforcement agencies; and (7) that the Secretary is already prevented from 2 disclosing the items Defendants seek to protect—such as ledgers, tax returns, financial statement, 3 and banking records—under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”). Defendants respond that 4 they do not seek to withhold information through their protective order, but to prevent the public 5 dissemination of sensitive business and financial information. 6 D. The Secretary’s second motion to compel (ECF No. 76). 7 In his second motion to compel, the Secretary reiterates his objections to the protective 8 order and adds that Defendants withheld additional productions of their general ledgers and 9 disciplinary records on the condition that the Secretary sign the protective order. Defendants argue 10 in response that the Secretary could have raised this issue in response to Defendants’ motion for a 11 protective order. Defendants add that their disciplinary records are irrelevant to the action. 12 II. Discussion. 13 A. The Court grants the Secretary’s motions to compel. 14 The Court grants Secretary’s motions to compel because Defendants have not met their 15 burden of detailing why his requests are objectionable. If a party resists discovery, the requesting 16 party may file a motion to compel. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1). The motion must include a 17 threshold showing that the requested information falls within the scope of discovery under Rule 26. 18 Sanhueza v. Lincoln Technical Instiute, Inc., No. 2:13-cv-2251-JAD-VCF, 2014 WL 6485797, at 19 *2 (D. Nev. Nov. 18, 2014) (citing Hofer v. Mack Trucks, Inc., 981 F.2d 377, 380 (8th Cir. 1992)). 20 “The party opposing discovery has the burden of showing that the discovery is irrelevant, overly 21 broad, or unduly burdensome.” Fosbre v. Las Vegas Sands Corp., No. 2:10-cv-00765-APG-GWF, 22 2016 WL 54202, at *4 (D. Nev. Jan. 5, 2016) (citing Graham v. Casey’s General Stores, 206 F.R.D. 23 251, 253–4 (S.D. Ind. 2000)). To meet this burden, the objecting party must specifically detail the 24 reasons why each request is objectionable. See id. (citations omitted). 25 Here, Defendants have not met their burden of explaining why the Secretary’s requests are 26 objectionable. Defendants are resisting discovery, but on the limited grounds that the information 27 Plaintiff seeks should be covered by a protective order. Defendants largely do not dispute that the 1 information Plaintiff seeks is within the scope of discovery. Rather, they concede that the parties 2 agreed to search terms for Defendants’ ESI and that they would produce general ledgers under a 3 protective order. 4 The only items that Defendants’ dispute being within the scope of discovery are text 5 messages and disciplinary records. Yet the Court is unconvinced by Defendants’ arguments that 6 they did not realize that text messages would be considered “communications” responsive to the 7 Secretary’s requests for production. Defendants even produced a handful of texts in response to 8 the Secretary’s requests before the parties agreed to search terms. Defendants also do not make a 9 convincing argument that text messages are outside the scope of discovery by being irrelevant, 10 overly broad, or unduly burdensome. After all, Defendants have already employed an ESI vendor 11 which is likely capable of gathering phone data and applying the already agreed upon search terms 12 to that data. 13 The Court is also not persuaded that Defendants’ disciplinary records are irrelevant. The 14 Secretary has asserted that Defendants retaliated against employees that cooperated with the 15 investigation. And while Defendants assert that the Secretary already has payroll and time record 16 data, they make no mention of disciplinary records. Because Defendants have not shown that the 17 information the Secretary requests is objectionable, irrelevant, overly broad, or unduly burdensome, 18 the Court grants the Secretary’s motions to compel. 19 B. The Court denies Defendants’ motion to quash. 20 1. Defendants have standing to object to the Secretary’s subpoenas. 21 Defendants have standing to object to the Secretary’s subpoenas to their accountants. A 22 party lacks standing under Rule 45 to challenge a subpoena issued to a non-party unless the party 23 claims a personal right or privilege with respect to the documents requested in the subpoena. G.K. 24 Las Vegas Ltd. Partnership v. Simon Property Group, Inc., No. 2:04-cv-01199-DAE-GWF, 2007 25 WL 119148, at *4 (D. Nev. Jan. 9, 2007). There is no accountant-client privilege under federal 26 law, however, and Nevada’s accountant-client privilege does not apply to pure FLSA claims. See 27 Acosta v. Wellfleet Communications, LLC, No. 2:16-cv-02353-GMN-GWF, 2017 WL 5180425 at 1 has no standing to move to quash a subpoena on the ground that it is unduly burdensome when the 2 non-party has not objected on that basis. See Acosta, 2017 WL 5180425 at *5. 3 Here, Defendants have established standing to object to the Secretary’s subpoenas. 4 Defendants cannot assert the accountant-client privilege to protect these documents because the 5 Secretary has only asserted FLSA claims. Defendants have, however, asserted a personal right. 6 The Secretary has requested documents showing Defendants’ payroll and wage calculations, 7 communications between the Newman CPAs and Defendants, and contracts between the Newman 8 CPAs and Defendants. Defendants have a personal right in these documents, created and held by 9 the Newman CPAs on their behalf. And the Newman CPAs have objected on the same grounds, 10 albeit at Defendants’ request. Defendants thus have standing to object. 11 2. The Secretary’s requests are within the scope of discovery. 12 Although Defendants have standing to object, the Secretary’s subpoena requests are 13 properly within the scope of discovery. The party filing the motion to quash bears the burden of 14 showing the discovery is overly broad and unduly burdensome or not relevant. Painters Joint 15 Committee v. Employee Painters Trust Health & Welfare Fund, No. 2:10-cv-01385-JCM-PAL, 16 2011 WL 4573349, at *5 (D. Nev. Sept. 29, 2011) (compiling cases). The scope of discovery under 17 a subpoena issued under Rule 45 is the same as the scope of discovery allowed under Rule 26(b)(1). 18 See id. Under Rule 26(b)(1), parties are entitled to discover non-privileged information that is 19 relevant to any party’s claim or defense and that is proportional to the needs of the case. Fed. R. 20 Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Information within the scope of discovery need not be admissible in evidence to 21 be discoverable. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). 22 Here, the Secretary’s subpoena requests are within the scope of discovery. As a preliminary 23 matter, Defendants do not develop their arguments that the requests are irrelevant. The Defendants 24 do argue that the requests are overly broad and unduly burdensome, but the Secretary has included 25 specific search terms, examples of the information he seeks, and timeframes in his requests to the 26 Newman CPAs. While the Secretary’s first and sixth requests lack timeframes, the Secretary has 27 suggested limiting those requests from 2010 to the present to capture documents from the beginning 1 Crucially, the items that the Secretary seeks are discoverable at this stage, regardless of 2 whether they are admissible later. The Secretary alleges that Defendants have created an artificial 3 pay rate and bonus scheme. The Secretary’s questions asking for documents and communications 4 related to Defendants’ payroll and wage calculations—from the accountants that calculated and 5 processed those figures—are directly related to those allegations. The Court thus denies 6 Defendants’ motion to quash with the exception that the Secretary must limit his first and sixth 7 requests to items from 2010 to the present. 8 C. The Court denies Defendants’ motion for protective order. 9 The Court denies Defendants’ motion for a protective order because they have not shown 10 that their private interests outweigh the public’s interests. “Generally, the public can gain access 11 to litigation documents and information produced during discovery…” Phillips ex rel. Estates of 12 Byrd v. Gen. Motors Corp., 307 F.3d 1206, 1210 (9th Cir. 2002). The court may issue a protective 13 order that “a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial information” 14 be revealed only in a specified way upon a showing of good cause. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1); 15 26(c)(1)(G). The party seeking a protective order “bears the burden of showing, for each particular 16 document it seeks to protect, that specific prejudice or harm will result if no protective order is 17 granted.” Foltz v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 331 F.3d 1122, 1130 (9th Cir. 2003). Rule 26(c) 18 requires more than “broad allegations of harm, unsubstantiated by specific examples or articulated 19 reasoning.” Id. (citing Beckman Indus., Inc. v. Int’l. Ins. Co., 966 F.2d 470, 476 (9th Cir. 1992)). 20 If the court finds particularized harm will result from disclosure of information to the public, it 21 “balances the public and private interests to decide whether a protective order is necessary.” 22 Phillips, 307 F.3d at 1211. 23 Secretary of Labor v. Valley Wide Plastering Construction, Inc. stands for the proposition 24 that protective orders in FLSA cases must be narrowly tailored. See Secretary of Labor v. Valley 25 Wide Plastering Construction, Inc., No. CV-18-04756-PHX-GMS, 2020 WL 5439463, at *3-4 (D. 26 Ariz. Sept. 10, 2020). There, during the Secretary’s investigation of the defendants for FLSA 27 violations, the defendants provided copies of their general ledgers. See id. at *1. When the 1 order. See id. Through that order, the defendants sought to protect their “confidential commercial 2 and financial information from being disclosed to the public at large” and to prevent the Secretary 3 “from using the general ledger for purposes other than this litigation.” See id. at *1-2. The court 4 noted that, 5 In their definition of “confidential information,” Defendants include not only their current general ledger but also their past ledgers, as 6 well as “information from the general ledgers disclosed in any 7 materials, including documents, portions of documents, answers to interrogatories, responses to requests for admissions, trial 8 testimony, deposition testimony, and transcripts of trial testimony and depositions, including data, summaries, and compilations 9 derived therefrom.” 10 Id. 11 The court denied the defendants’ motion for a protective order for five reasons. See id. at 12 *2-3. First, the protective order would improperly apply to information already provided by the 13 defendants for which they did not seek a protective order. See id. Second, the definition of 14 confidential information was overly broad and would encompass everything in the general ledger— 15 including any data, summaries, compilations, depositions, testimony, and transcripts derived from 16 it—as confidential. See id. The court found this broad definition unworkable in light of the 17 Secretary’s assertion that defendants had mischaracterized its ledger entries to conceal wage 18 payments to employees. See id. Third, the court found that the entries would be a central part of 19 the government’s case, which should be accessible to the public as a matter of significant public 20 concern. See id. Fourth, the court found that the order would impermissibly shift the practical cost 21 of maintaining confidentiality on the government. See id. Finally, the court found that the order 22 would unreasonably restrict the Secretary from sharing the ledger with other law enforcement 23 agencies or in future cases. See id. 24 Here, Defendants have not demonstrated good cause sufficient to overcome the public’s 25 right of access to litigation documents. Defendants’ arguments are not particularized to each 26 document. Nor do they specify specific examples of harm outside of a broad statement that an 27 unidentified third party has been using unidentified “public filings” to make accusations against 1 Defendant Cory Summerhays. However, even if the Court did find particularized harm, the public 2 interests outweigh the Defendants’ private interests. 3 Moreover, Defendants’ proposed protective order is not narrowly tailored. Valley Wide is 4 almost factually identical and thus persuasive here. Just like the defendants in Valley Wide, here, 5 Defendants moved for a protective order when faced with a request for production for information 6 similar to that which the Defendants already produced. Also like the Valley Wide defendants, 7 Defendants seek to protect their commercial and financial information, including their general 8 ledgers, from the public and from the Secretary’s use in future litigation. And just as the Valley 9 Wide defendants sought to retroactively protect their disclosures and any information, testimony, 10 transcripts, and data derived from those past disclosures, Defendants seek to do the same. 11 The Valley Wide court’s five reasons for denying the defendants protective order also apply 12 here. First, Defendants’ proposed protective order would apply to information they already 13 produced without one. Second, even more so than the defendants’ definition of “confidential 14 information” in Valley Wide—which covered everything in the general ledger and the information 15 derived from it—here Defendants’ definition of confidential information would encompass 16 anything the Defendants deem “confidential,” along with anything derived from those unilateral 17 designations. This definition is unworkable here, even more so than in Valley Wide, because it 18 could encompass anything directly related to the Secretary’s claims. Third, the documents the 19 Secretary seeks—including Defendants’ general ledgers—are central to his case. Indeed, the 20 Secretary cannot determine how Defendants calculated wages without them. These items should 21 be accessible to the public as a matter of public concern. Fourth, should Defendants be able to 22 unilaterally deem items “confidential” and seal them, the burden will be on the government to 23 challenge those designations. Finally, the order would unreasonably restrict the Secretary from 24 sharing the information it gathers with other law enforcement agencies or to use it in future cases. 25 Because Defendants do not overcome these concerns with specific and particularized allegations 26 of harm, the Court denies their motion for a protective order. 27 1 ORDER 2 IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED the Secretary’s motions to compel (ECF Nos. 62 and 3 76) are granted. 4 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants’ motion to quash (ECF No. 67) is denied. 5 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that request numbers one and six in the Secretary’s 6 subpoenas to the Newman CPAs be limited from 2010 to the present. 7 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants’ motion for a protective order (ECF No. 8 75) is denied. 9 10 DATED: August 9, 2021 11 DANIEL J. ALBREGTS 12 UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Document Info
Docket Number: 2:20-cv-00510
Filed Date: 8/9/2021
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/25/2024